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Besides, there's more to life than a "market"...
Have a word with your mate LJ Monk.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on March 25, 2014, 11:21:03 amHave a word with your mate LJ Monk. They can't stand each other.
In the 5 years to 2004, Poland's growth rate per capita was 3%. In the ten years since joining the EU in 2004 (a period which has encompassed the worst European recession for at least 80 years), their growth rate per capita has been ~4.1%.
In the five years before Poland joined the EU, its population fell by half a million. In the ten years since, it's increased by half a million.Keep going. You'll stumble on a fact eventually, in a monkeys and typewriter stylee.
You completely ignore the fact that the growth figures look better because so many people left the country since it joined the EU! This is a ticking time-bomb for them that will explode with devastating consequences in years to come.
When I started this thread a month ago to discuss the protests in Kiev I certainly didn't expect it to morph into a discussion about the impact of EU membership upon the birth rate in Poland.
I blame Billy for selective use of statistics.
Quote from: IC1967 on March 25, 2014, 12:57:44 pmI blame Billy for selective use of statistics.The problem, once these chats descend into stats, is that anyone with a modicum of intelligence, can manipulate the numbers to suit their argument. It then turns into a war of attrition.
I didn't imply anything. I was merely countering your (demonstrably wrong) pub bore argument that "the growth figures look better because so many people left the country since it joined the EU!"
On population, Ukraine has truly experienced a mass emigration - they have lost over 2.5 million people in the last decade whilst Poland's population has grown.
Quote from: hoolahoop on March 25, 2014, 09:13:40 amOnly 58% of the 'Russian speaking' population could never supply a 97% Yes vote especially when many of these younger one's in interviews felt and wanted to be Ukrainian still..........42% of the non-Russian speaking wouldn't have voted at all. The chance of getting a 50% vote would have been strange let alone a 97% vote!!!Depends on how many voted though, doesn't it?I haven't seen the news lately, but if hardly any of the Ukrainian speakers voted and nigh on all the Russian speakers did, then that would be possible.Anschluss, anyone?
Only 58% of the 'Russian speaking' population could never supply a 97% Yes vote especially when many of these younger one's in interviews felt and wanted to be Ukrainian still..........42% of the non-Russian speaking wouldn't have voted at all. The chance of getting a 50% vote would have been strange let alone a 97% vote!!!