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Why to Vote YES on Lisbon

Perceived ‘No’ Arguments

“We Lose a commissioner – We Lose our Voice”

This is misleading. Not every member state will have a commissioner all the time. They will be rotated. The EU is growing all the time, and we just can’t have as many commissioners as there are states.

However, the commission is only one part of European decision making. The other parts are the Council, made up of all the European governments, and the Parliment, made up of MEPs. Officially, the Commissioners are supposed to be neutral anyway, not representing their country but making decisions for the greater good of Europe. Technically we don’t really have a voice here, we just nominate someone to the job who must set aside their nationality.

Furthermore, under Lisbon the Council will be given more power over the Commission. We will still have a permanent voice here. We will also have our MEPs in the parliament.

“Wages will go down”

This is just rubbish. There’s nothing in Lisbon about minimum wages. Minimum wage is a matter to be set by each member state. This does not change under Lisbon. It’s simple scare-mongering

“Abortion Will Become Legal”

Again, there’s nothing in Lisbon about this. The law in Ireland regarding the right to life is guaranteed unalterable by the Maastricht Treaty

Reasons to Vote YES

To Help the economy

A lot of people are cynical about this one, but the fact is that a Yes on Lisbon would increase the stability of Europe, and allow it to react better to crises such as the current global recession. A No on lisbon will leave Europe reeling, and at an impass, something we can’t afford right now.

To Strengthen Workers Rights

Lisbon strengthens workers rights, ensuring the right to paid maternity leave and to fair and just working conditions. It also protects against unfair dismissal.

To Help Fight Climate change

The Treaty of Lisbon adds explicit sentences stating that combating climate change and global warming are targets of the Union

Who’s For Lisbon?

Fianna Fail, Fine Gael, The Labour Party, The Green Party, The IFA, SIPTU, The Catholic Church. You might not trust some of those groups, but if Lisbon was really a bad thing don’t you think the opposition (Fine Gael, Labour) would be at the throats of the Government about it?

Who’s against it?

Sinn Fein, COIR. COIR are a front for the extreme anti-abortion group, Youth Defence. In both campaigns they’ve put up misleading posters making outrageous claims and reprinting out-of-context quotes as fact.

Withdrawing

Finally, if all the worst nightmares of the No campaign actually happen, we can leave the EU. Lisbon finally introduces the ability for a member state to legally leave the EU which has been impossible thus far. If we vote No, not only do we cripple the EU and make our country the most hated place in Europe, we also won’t be able to leave.

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One Wheelie Bin = Ten Months

Our wheelie bin is almost full, for the first time since I moved to my new house last October! Here’s how we managed that:

Reducing

Well, its hard to ‘reduce’ in this country, but we do what we can. When I buy veg I usually forego the plastic bags if I can manage it (they only get chucked anyway). I bring my own shopping bags like everyone else, but other than that, there just aren’t too many ways to reduce the amount of rubbish one accumulates without simply reducing the amount of stuff you buy. If anyone has suggestions of course, I’d love to hear them. You often hear green blogs in the US and elsewhere talking about getting ‘refils’ on things, but its not something thats really been embraced here.

Reusing

We get the most use out of fast food containers – ie the plastic boxes you get from takeaways. Great for freezing, reheating, taking lunch to work, putting screws in – infinitely reuseable. We use larger plastic packaging (from things like bags of potatoes) as bin bags for the kitchen. When the container is smaller, you will put less into it. If you have a giant bin in the corner with a big black bag in it, it will fill up in no time. We reuse plastic bottles where possible, jars of course get reused a fair bit, especially honey jars with plastic screwtops.

Recycling

Cardboard, glass, paper, plastic, tin, steel, fabrics. All recyclable. The trick to getting the most out of recycling is to clean food containers before dropping them in the recycling bin – that way you can store them in a shed for the inevitable weeks before u get time to go to the recycling centre. And DO go to the centre if you have one nearby. A lot of stuff is not accepted in the collection bags despite being recyclable. Our local recycling centre even accepts soft plastic packaging and wrapping.

Composting

My folks have a large compost bin to which I make a weekly contribution. All the leftovers that don’t feed the dog go to the bin (although to be honest she spends a lot of time trying to dig a tunnel through the compost pile anyway, looking for rats).

The biggest impact has been the composting and recycling. I’d love to do more re-using, and I’m always on the lookout for new ways to use things, but most of the containers end up being recycled. Composting and recycling handles between 80-90% of our waste. The contents of the wheelie bin thus far are mostly things which are (to my knowledge) non recyclable, such as broken cups or plates, light bulbs, aerosol cans, etc.

A bin bag for a wheelie bin costs around €10, and without composting or recycling i’d say we would need to put out a bin at least once every month. So far thats a saving of €100, and a saving of a couple of tons of landfill every year. It’s also been very educational, seeing what can be recycled, seeing how much waste a household creates, and how much can avoid the wheelie bin.

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blog changes

finally got my act together on the blog front! Wahey! Have now imported most of about 4 years worth of blogger blogs into one. It makes more sense than trying to maintain all those other blogs

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