Archive for November 5th, 2014

What Is Wrong With The EU?

Wednesday, November 5th, 2014

Its detractors will say plenty. Yet it remains the most successful grouping of independent nations in human history. Yes it is bureaucratic. It has too many restrictive rules which are hindering its competitiveness in global markets. It’s institutions of governance are peculiar and detached from the people governed. But all of that can be fixed. What cannot be fixed is a spoiler member who is forever out of step. That is Britain. To succeed long term the EU has to have two countries in it. One, Britain, it may be about to lose. The other, Russia, it has been slow to invite in and is now quarrelling with. A good measure of the shuddering halt to growth in the EU stems from its sanctions on Putin.

In judging what to do about these two countries at opposite ends of its landmass, the EU must begin by seeing that its own interests will be served by finding solutions and this will have to go further than laying down conditions. Britain runs a trade deficit with the EU, which is powerful ammunition for those who want it to leave. But Britain is also the EU’s biggest export market upon which four million of EU jobs depend, which is a powerful argument for Brussels to find a way to keep Britain in.

At the heart of the problem lies the failure to persuade the UK to join the single currency at the beginning. Had Britain joined the Euro, the two speed Europe argument would never have developed and with London partnering Frankfurt, a far better economic model for both the EU and the UK would have emerged. At present everybody in the UK lauds the fact that the country kept the pound. Yet the outcome has been exploding house prices and the inability to create economic growth without house price inflation as the driver, making Britain the world’s second most indebted country and debt per household the highest on the planet. Anybody who argues this is good is economically illiterate, however distinguished and lauded an economist they are.

These issues will soon have to be explored in much greater depth as Britain begins to seriously consider its exit. If judgements are made not on hard facts but emotional opinions founded on prejudice and driven by fear, the outcome is likely to be chaos for everybody, in or out of the EU.

 

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Get Purple Killing Now!

Wednesday, November 5th, 2014

MY LATEST BLOCKBUSTER THRILLER IS NOW AVAILABLE ON KINDLE AND IN PAPERBACK! GET IT NOW.

It is written in a modern style in a scene by scene format, with punctuation which follows reading flow rather than traditional rules. This creates a compelling  narrative, easy to read and hard to put down. This book is a work of fiction, but at its heart there is a real historical cover-up. This drives the plot, but almost all the events and characters are fictional. Some characters appear also in Hitler’s First Lady, but that is a novel much more closely linked to known historical facts and the true story of a family, which appears in both books as the Benedicts. Here most of their story is fiction, as are all the modern characters within the family and in the world beyond.

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About the Book

Dr. Rachael Benedict is an American historian and a best-selling author. She has a British connection through her estranged father Saul, an English thriller writer. Saul, whose parents were of Anglo-German origin, has spent much of his life plotting to expose secrets from World War Two, which are so sensitive they have been subject to an extensive cover-up lasting seventy years. As the time approaches for him to make his move to expose duplicity, murder and lies at the heart of the British State, he seeks Rachael’s help. This provokes a killing spree as parts of the security services of both Britain and the United States become engaged in the drama, with one side determined to get the secrets out and the other determined to keep them hidden.

Set equally in the United States and Britain, the narrative grips from the first page, transporting the reader to the heart of government both in Washington and London and on into the darkest corners of the secret states on each side of the Atlantic. Rachael battles forward to unearth the truth both from intrigues of the Nazi era, but also within her own family, surviving three attempts on her life, before finally achieving her goal. Not only does she expose the truth from history and from her own roots, she has to delve deep into her own emotions to find the truth about herself.