Lohrenswald
世界的 bottom ranked physicist
UK makes things worse by joining, is this so bloody hard to understand
pedantry doesn't make you cool
pedantry doesn't make you cool
UK makes things worse by joining, is this so bloody hard to understand
pedantry doesn't make you cool
Takhisis said:You haven't explained how the UK makes things worse.
We're discussing Britain. Tea spoons are essential.maybe because I didn't think you needed to get things in with a tea spoon
seems I was wrong
Okay this is what EU more or less is as I see it
Federal europe - That is working agains national sovereignty and national democracy (which admittedly isn't the greatest thing ever but I contend is more democratic than intranational quatsch), as well as ending what for many countries has been a long and hard struggle for independence.
Neoliberalism - to benefit the upper classes and corporations, at the expense of the working classes. Freedom of movement is not expressed as movement of people, but of labour force.
This also works to change the prevelant thoughts for the worse, I'd say. At the expense of things like compadery, sharing and cooperation, liberal ideas on things like competition, isolationist individualism and a nonsense idea of progress works to make the human experience worse.
Free trade is also a bad thing. It works to hinder the poor, and furthers all the bad things about globalism: environmental, societal etc.
Now sure I am a lazy sod in one of the richest countries, I could probably ignore all this and surf effortlessly and thoughtlessly on top of this the rest of my life, but that is ethically despicable and it would be objectivily better if I killed myself
But it's not a problem that federalism is out as an end in of itself?Your objection to federal europe enshrines independence and national struggle as an end in itself, which is problematic. This from a Catalan independentist.
If neoliberals can bend the laws to benefit them, they willSecondly, Neoliberalism is not inherent to the European institutions. Indeed, the sort of economic transferences and agricultural subsidies that are one of the lynchpins of Europe are not really neoliberal policies, are they? Not saying that it is not the policy of the current roster of European leaders, but the EU predates neoliberalism as we understand it.
Still badThen, free trade has pros and cons for everyone involved, but it rarely truly exists. Nobody who claims for 'free trade' actually wants free trade, but rather they want to force their products into a market that cannot compete with them. In that sense yes, free trade is horrible, but at the same time it typically isnt all that free.
Finally, the last paragraph is hilariously naive and self-aggrandising. There are a million causes worthier of your life if you really have to lose it over something.
As far as I can tell, the EU would like:
1. Free movement of goods
2. Free movement of capital
3. Freedom to establish and provide services
4. Free movement of persons
5. The UK to pay its share of the costs for the EU. It's a smaller share if one is less bound to the EU, but it's still there.
Is it? I will concede that the EU is having trouble with its traditional narrative for the push for more integration, with the economic crisis having thrown a wrench into the machine. My point is not that federalism is good or not, but that independence is not inherently good either, and if people are willing to 'give up' some of that 'independence', there is no absolute reason that should force them to reconsider immediately.But it's not a problem that federalism is out as an end in of itself?
Moot point. It applies to virtually everybody.If neoliberals can bend the laws to benefit them, they will
The practice doesn't need its charade in lawform
What? Free trade or actual free trade?Still bad
Being a stupid leech is better than being dead?
Also there are more things than EU that I care about
JohannaK said:Moot point. It applies to virtually everybody.
JohannaK said:What? Free trade or actual free trade?
EDIT: the first is indeed horrible, the second does have its pros and cons, and in theory should give poorer countries an edge since cheaper labour, cheaper costs, cheaper products are supposed to be preferable to more expensive ones. Now does this incentivise cheaper prices for everyone? It would seem so, but even then what it does is level the playing field.
JohannaK said:No, saying "I could be a stupid leech but here I am fighting for something I feel strongly about with half-baked incomplete arguments nobody gets" (pssst, it's because they're half-baked and incomplete) makes your actual compromise with the issue doubtful at best.
And exactly who would THAT be? Even Mario Draghi is a disciple of Robert Solow, i.e. neo-Keynsian.It applies to everybody who is in a position to be able to bend, change and enforce laws, and that includes the neoliberals who run European institutions
So, social liberals...Ordoliberalism is the German variant of social liberalism that emphasizes the need for the state to ensure that the free market produces results close to its theoretical potential.
Protectionism for traders.
Protectionism for financiers.
Protectionism for corporations.
Suppression of communal national feelings so as to preclude political organization against the points above.
Taxing people to pay for the bureaucracy enforcing all of the above.
Alright then. But could you try to explain it to me again? What is it the UK wants
and what is it that it is willing to give in return (in your opinion, of course)?
As far as I can tell, the EU would like:
1. Free movement of goods
2. Free movement of capital
3. Freedom to establish and provide services
4. Free movement of persons
5. The UK to pay its share of the costs for the EU.
It's a smaller share if one is less bound to the EU, but it's still there.
This is possible both inside and outside the EU,
though the latter requires an EEC deal or similar.
And as far as I can tell, Brexit-UK would like the first
three ones, but not the 4th or 5th.
What can the UK offer in return to make the EU agree to that?
Quote:Self determination for our children, and food, houses and jobs too.
that seems a trifle melodramatic over a Yorkshire puddingOur lives.
Visa free access for tourists to visit Stonehenge, Isaac Newton's college, Scotland Yard and for the belgiums and french, Waterloo Station.
U.K. Told It Has Zero Chance of Having Brexit Cake and Eating It
The hardening position of the blocs 11 ex-communist members has narrowed Londons room for maneuver
Clemens Fuest, president of the Ifo economic institute in Germany, said the EU should give some leeway to the U.K. to avoid a hard break that he said would damage everyone involved.
Stretching from the Baltic to the Black Sea, the 100 million people in the 11 ex-communist states that have joined the EU since 2004 are tussling for a fair exchange of comparative advantage with their richer western counterparts. While companies from the U.K., Germany and elsewhere can snap up market share with value-added products in less-developed countries, the eastern members need free movement to trade their main advantage of cheap labor.
While a final deal has to be approved by a qualified majority comprising of 72 percent of the remaining members and 65 percent of the EU population, any member can veto the process while granting the negotiating mandate, a process that will be updated by the blocs leaders, Prouza said.
There will be a very clear rule: nothing is agreed until everything is agreed, Prouza said. Each member state will be able to veto any part of the negotiation mandate to make sure the mandate respects the interests of all EU members.
Having separate deals on trade and free movement is another idea totally disconnected from reality, Prouza said. They are leaving, not us, so it is up to them.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...ro-chance-of-having-brexit-cake-and-eating-it
Regarding your point (4); Yes, some Brits would find it nice to holiday in
Spain etc without first filling in a visa form but it is not really that critical.
We would certainly not want the wholesale deportations of the ex patriot
UK nationals, living abroard in the rest of the EU, back to the UK.