Yes, I disagree with all enormous pensions for MEP's including Farage. I don't believe the large rewards are justified.
I'm afraid that you 'belief' doesn't make them unjustified, newnanny.
And we're not talking about Farage's pension (or the future BP MEP's pensions either). We;re talking about the fact that he has been drawing a very comfortable salary, plus expenses, from the EU for the last 20 years and has nothing at all to earn it. And the extreme likelihood that the BP MEPs intend to do exactly the same thing.
I suspect that you would be up in arms about a British MP, or peer, taking the money and doing nothing at all to 'earn' it.
As for the chlorinated chicken, it's not the chlorine that people object to, it's the reason for the chlorination. Which is that US chicken is produced in appallingly unsanitary conditions and the chlorine wash is an attempt to destroy the resulting high level of toxic bacteria they contain. Not terribly successfully, it seems as 1 in 6 Americans are likely to get food poisoning in a year. Whereas in the UK it is estimated that 1 million people per year (about 1 in 65) are likely to get food poisoning.
By my rough estimation 1 in 6 would be about just over 16% of the US population, whereas the UK's figure would be fewer than 2%.
Of course, under current EU regulations everyone in the UK, rich or poor, can be reasonably confident that the meat they eat is 'safe. Unregulated US meat is bound to be cheaper and so more likely to be bought by the poor. So, in effect you are saying that it's OK for poor people to be put at greater risk by eating it...