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Not how it's been recorded in history though:
^^from Irish Times in July, link to clickLibertas, the anti-treaty entity run by businessman Declan Ganley, spent more on commercial advertisements than all the political parties put together, according to the figures.
Also, bear in mind that Libertas today announced that they're running candidates in the European elections in as many Member States as they can. Ganley is touting those elections as countries' mini-referenda on the Lisbon Treaty. Hardly a publicity-prude thing to say. (more at libertas.eu)
That's the machine's structure and engine, the facts.
Nothing overly wrong with publicity per se. But IMO Libertas's campaign is predicated entirely on scare tactics: the oil driving the engine is dirty, there's very little of substance proffered by Ganley or his minions. It's all about the lack of transparency and accountability of Brussels, yet (and leaving aside the seeming hypocrisy of Ganley saying that) in the experience of my ears they haven't offered any examples of how that has manifested or how it might do so - what practical examples are there of the EU acting against the populace's wishes, or in the future, how the structure might be ameliorated (Ganley claims he doesn't want the disintegration of the Union). "The whole blasted thing is corrupt, damn it!" is the message I'm receiving. Seems to ignore worthwhile issues; and instead negatively prey on people's fears rather than positively appeal to our intellect.
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