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UKIP Nigel Farage MEP - October, 2009 after the Irish vote 'yes' in second lisbon referendum

UK Independence Party MEP Nigel Farage - BBC politics show  
 
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wedrinkmountaindew (1 month ago) Show Hide
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fucking cowards
WinterFist (2 months ago) Show Hide
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lol. The interviewer is obviously pro-EU and seems a little angry at Farage.
cornwallgeezer (2 months ago) Show Hide
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Go Nigel, i'll be voting UKIP in the general election as I think a lot of others will be!
dekonfrost7 (2 months ago) Show Hide
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you poor bastard will need guns to fix this before you all have v chips in your fucking heads......
Spenner56 (2 months ago) Show Hide
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The Irish yes vote means that all of Europe LOST and only the EU's wealthy burocrats (Barrosso gets 230,000 Euros a year) WON.
We Europeans lost democracy,accountability and sovereignty. Now we are at the mercy of the un-elected commission's 30,000 burocrats who work around the clock to think up more regulations for us serfs to obey.
So sad that Europe has surrendered it's values to a small "elite" of failed national politicians.

George Orwell is turning in his grave.
faggotkins (2 months ago) Show Hide
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00000Dean00000 (2 months ago) Show Hide
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Look up the true meaning - not he modern meaning which Ironically is meaningless.

Look it up and learn a true appreciation for what I am saying
JossefFritzl (2 months ago) Show Hide
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Do you have any source to back up your claims or are you implying that your personal belief of what the word nationalism means is more valid than English university dictionaries?

And what do you mean by looking it up on Google? Google would only give you an idea of how people use the word on the internet, which would be it's modern distorted meaning and not the original meaning.

I've never said that the UKIP is racist, but nationalism is what they are all about.
00000Dean00000 (2 months ago) Show Hide
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Although patriotism is used in certain vernaculars as a synonym for nationalism, nationalism is not necessarily considered an inherent part of patriotism. Among the ancient Greeks, patriotism consisted of notions concerning language, religious traditions, ethics, law and devotion to the common good, rather than pure identification with a nation-state.
00000Dean00000 (2 months ago) Show Hide
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Scholar J. Peter Euben writes that for the Greek philosopher Socrates, "patriotism does not require one to agree with everything that his country does and would actually promote analytical questioning in a quest to make the country the best it possibly can be."

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