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A pint too far?
For those of us who value such things, as opposed to the vast majority who could not care less, this little article I spotted yesterday should give cause for concern. The faceless army of bureaucrats in Brussels are determined to expunge every scintilla of Britishness from our beloved country. Next on the list are the last vestiges of imperial measure, the 2LB loaf and the pint of milk.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article...014721,00.html Have they really so little to do with their time and our money? |
Re: A pint too far?
...just the tip of the iceberg. 70% of legislation introduced in this country now originates from Brussels.
And even more worrying...how long before they try to abolish pints of beer?:mad: |
Re: A pint too far?
How many of us still get milk in pint bottles though?
Blue tits used to love breaking through the foil and nicking the cream, when it was left on all our doorsteps. It's too hard for them to do now that it comes in boxes, from inside the supermarket. |
Re: A pint too far?
i think we are fighting a lost cause..... we have just been put in a big melting pot,and we dont have a say anymore,,,
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Re: A pint too far?
Saw this issue raised on the news this morning but the full article wasn't on until after I'd left home for work.
Knowing how 'those in power' act we'll probably have to fork out a pile of dosh just so as we can lose our daily pinta. :mad: Then what's next? Oh that's right we haven't got much left although I suppose they haven't issude EC guidelines for the size of offspring .........."That child is not of regulation size you will have to change it" |
Re: A pint too far?
i suppose with the longer drinking hours we could do with bigger glasses ...!
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because the motorway sighns , maps etc give distance in miles it only suits that the speed getting there should be as well
thats my theory and ime sticking to it :) |
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We can't really bame the EEC for metrification. It was Harold Wilson's Labour Government of 1965 that started a ten year plan for Britain to go metric. This really started in 1971, with the introduction of decimal coinage.
We didn't join the then Common Market until 1973, after we voted to join following a referendum. |
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I wasn't old enough to vote at the time but, if I had been, I would have voted No.
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I get mixed up with the abolition of slavery and women's sufferage, so I can't remember.:D |
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