The European Project: the future of the EU.

Ever since China put a ban on importing waste, UK waste processing
companies have been looking into dumping it in other countries.

Perhaps some of them may even have heard of Turkey.
 
Scientists of the Wuhan virology centre hunting bats for research in for example caves in Laos could also have brought the virus in Wuhan.
I saw an article telling that these hunting groups, going into bat caves, are not always self-protecting themselves 100% against bat virusses.
 
thank you all , for the concern or whatever . Am still alive , in this week when a North Korean missile test caused the airliners and private planes in the West side of US to be told to land , to clear the way for uninterrupted missile shots from defending USAF interceptors . The supposed hypersonic glide body has not yet been found , so naturally all hail Lockmart's mighty glorious F-35 and its tighty mighty hyper glorious onboard lazer batteries . Ably supported by the North Korean leader's call on the citizens to deliver more brown stuff from home , now that China has cut down on the fertilizer deliveries . So , considering Bill Gates would naturally not be put off by some TV station of New Turkey calling for his arrest , is there enough trouble in heaven (which is naturally THE West) to create another option for the origin of the coronavirus issue , considering my later stress on it has been not its being non-Chinese in origin but the slow response aka murderous non-response ? But then , am quite flexible and not that handicapped in memory as of yet . No doubt it was maybe it was in this very thread that Europeans had become concerned that their damping and dumping garbage here was not costing enough Republic effort in saving the Nature ?

saby-menyhei-lukexwing-ahch-to-final-16bit.jpg


can definitely live with the inlets , considering they are original McQuarrie and it is the fusion that does most of the thrust business anyhow ... So , do not act like people in places suddenly need yet even more clearer explanations of r16 intentions . Will deliver you people , out of CFC but yet in the West or whatever , some exciment or something .
 
and no , the press release during the night here does not exactly call me a liar . Typical American downplaying of the threat . Instead of civil aviation people in Hawaii calling for the military to launch the jets , it is indeed a glide thing that could ballistically reach anywhere from the Aleutians to Los Angeles because the world is round or something and it did not like totally veer just a little to overfly Area 51 and whatnot to end up in US nuclear test areas . Indeed the booster and glider both crashed between Korea and Japan . You know America plays wisely ; despite having UFOs since George Washington himself , they let poor and backwards countries like North Korea and China to have hypersonic stuff while America apparently doesn't . Luckily for Pentagon , the North Korean press release apparently includes Kim's sister , from which they can create a week's coverage that he is dying and she will be the next to rule .
 
Another good analysis of the evolution of the EU, by Wolfgang Streeck

[...]
To recapitulate: under current EU doctrine, protecting the rule of law requires in some countries repression of national courts by national governments, while in others it requires their liberation. The German government satisfied the Commission by promising to ‘actively’ discourage anti-European, pro-national tendencies on its highest court, thereby undermining domestic in favour of supranational rule of law; while the Polish government drew the ire of the Commission by encouraging anti-European, pro-national tendencies on the part of its constitutional court, thereby undermining domestic but also European rule of law, as interpreted by the CJEU. Whereas German undermining of domestic rule of law is forgivable because it serves European rule of law, Polish undermining of domestic rule of law is not because it undermines European rule of law.
[...]
In fact, the French political class seems increasingly disillusioned with the preferred German route to ‘Europe’, which it sees less and less as leading toward a ‘European sovereignty’ modelled on the French that can be projected worldwide. Instead the impression is growing that integration by law would end in nothing better than government by bureaucracy supervised by a supranational legal expertocracy – suited perhaps to building an international neoliberal market but unable to found an imperial state capable of acting on a global scale. Indications are that recent political pronunciamientos in the run-up to the French presidential elections on the value of national as distinguished from European sovereignty are related to growing doubts over German-style integration by law.
And there are further signs of fracture. Shortly before the holidays, two weeks after discontinuing the infringement procedure against Germany, the European Commission started several additional such procedures against Poland. At issue were various judgments of the Polish constitutional court that insist on the primacy of Polish constitutional law over European law where in the Treaties member states had not conferred specific competences to the EU and by implication the CJEU. Preparing the decision, von der Leyen was quoted by the EU’s PR office as saying that ‘EU law has priority over national law, including constitutional law’, a principle which according to her ‘had been accepted by all EU member states as members of the European Union’. Rhetoric like this has the potential of waking up hordes of sleeping dogs in national capitals, as it offers a taste of what a prominent, politically unsuspicious German European law specialist – a profession with a deeply rooted déformation professionnelle making it condone even the most daring deployment of law in furtherance of ‘ever closer union’ – has found himself prompted to call a ‘coup d’état from above’, by means of integration by law in its new, extended version.

Even the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, usually a faithful foot soldier for EU-Europe, took issue with the new infringement procedures against Poland. On December 23 it asked, under the title of ‘Political Justice’, and an extended quote seems justified here: ‘If the Polish constitutional court was in reality as independent as it is supposed to be, what should the Polish government then do against the court decision that is now the occasion for yet another infringement procedure? The government is after all not allowed to dismiss a decision of the constitutional court or to influence its future jurisdiction.’ And further: ‘Basically the EU Commission urges the Polish government to do that for which it rightly criticizes it sharply: to exert political influence on the judiciary, now only in the opposite direction’. It is indicative of the rotten state of the political public in the biggest and most important country of the EU that there is no mention in this comment of the amazing parallels with the infringement procedure against Germany that had been dropped only a few weeks ago, on assurances by the German government to the Commission that it will ‘actively prevent’ another ultra vires verdict of the constitutional court.

So he thinks the balance of opinion is turning against EU by court decree. Several governments have now asserted the primacy of national law. And the EU still has no army, only the CJEU which cannot force government to obey. The ECB has a greater reach for exercising intimidation but that too is limited: several countries are out, several are too big to intimidate.
In the end it's up to national governments to assert sovereignty or not. As uusal in Europe, it depends on France...
 
What is the connection here? They are two different economic zones, europe and the US after all. Also, the goal for that trial was mostly to settle things and make the gameboard clear. There's also a cultural divide in how intellectual property is protected between the US and Europe, and I'm not sure where the English (not British) fall in here. Do they want Cheddar to be protected on the continent or not?
 
Cheddar has been generic for a very long time.

I think I can remember my mother buying Canadian Cheddar in the previous millennium.
 
Poland, Hungary lose legal challenge against EU rule-of-law tool

Poland and Hungary have lost their challenge against an EU mechanism that punishes rule-of-law violations in member states by withholding funds, according to a statement from the European Court of Justice.

The ECJ on Wednesday ruled the “mechanism was adopted on an appropriate legal basis” and dismissed the actions brought by Poland and Hungary “in their entirety”.

Hungary and Poland blocked the EU’s 2021-2027 budget because it had a clause that tied funding to countries’ adherence to the rule of law. They eventually agreed to the plan on the condition that the European Court of Justice would review it.

The decision was hotly anticipated by many who had accused the two nations of democratic backsliding and had seen the linkage measure as the EU’s most potent weapon to prevent a democratic legitimacy rift deepening within the bloc.

Poland and Hungary have faced criticism in the EU for years over allegations that they have been eroding judicial and media independence, among other democratic principles.

Finding itself unable to do much to alter the course of either nation, the EU turned to linking money to their adherence to democratic behaviour.

Respecting democratic rule-of-law principles is a major EU admission criterion and the court insisted that, once in, those principles should stick.

“The Court specifies, first, that compliance with those values cannot be reduced to an obligation which a candidate state must meet in order to accede to the European Union and which it may disregard after accession,” it said.

In Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orban has been pushing what he calls “illiberal democracy”, which his critics say amounts to stifling democracy.

In Poland, the Law and Justice Party overwhelmingly dominates government and has also increasingly faced criticism from other EU member nations.

The right-wing government has broken the nation’s own laws in order to gain political control over courts and judges.​
 
Poland, Hungary lose legal challenge against EU rule-of-law tool

Poland and Hungary have lost their challenge against an EU mechanism that punishes rule-of-law violations in member states by withholding funds, according to a statement from the European Court of Justice.

The ECJ on Wednesday ruled the “mechanism was adopted on an appropriate legal basis” and dismissed the actions brought by Poland and Hungary “in their entirety”.

Hungary and Poland blocked the EU’s 2021-2027 budget because it had a clause that tied funding to countries’ adherence to the rule of law. They eventually agreed to the plan on the condition that the European Court of Justice would review it.

The decision was hotly anticipated by many who had accused the two nations of democratic backsliding and had seen the linkage measure as the EU’s most potent weapon to prevent a democratic legitimacy rift deepening within the bloc.

Poland and Hungary have faced criticism in the EU for years over allegations that they have been eroding judicial and media independence, among other democratic principles.

Finding itself unable to do much to alter the course of either nation, the EU turned to linking money to their adherence to democratic behaviour.

Respecting democratic rule-of-law principles is a major EU admission criterion and the court insisted that, once in, those principles should stick.

“The Court specifies, first, that compliance with those values cannot be reduced to an obligation which a candidate state must meet in order to accede to the European Union and which it may disregard after accession,” it said.

In Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orban has been pushing what he calls “illiberal democracy”, which his critics say amounts to stifling democracy.

In Poland, the Law and Justice Party overwhelmingly dominates government and has also increasingly faced criticism from other EU member nations.

The right-wing government has broken the nation’s own laws in order to gain political control over courts and judges.​

It's up to the people in these countries to support the political governing elites or to give priority to their (majority) desire to stay in the EU.
These peoples cannot continue to limb on both legs, to have their EU cake and eat it.
They have had now many years because of EU political and court procedures to make up their minds.
I hope they choose well in coming elections and do not make the mistake the Turkish and British people made.
 
Of course not, they aren't Germany :)

You must be a real fan of Caesar.
He conquered the Gaul part of what is now France-Belgium offering vassalship to the Gaul tribes, though killing and enslaving the stubborn tribes.
But for the Germanic tribes South and West of the river Rhine, in what is now Belgium-Netherlands-Germany he only applied mass genocides and enslavery.
Selling the slaves for his own purse.
 
You must be a real fan of Caesar.
He conquered the Gaul part of what is now France-Belgium offering vassalship to the Gaul tribes, though killing and enslaving the stubborn tribes.
But for the Germanic tribes South and West of the river Rhine, in what is now Belgium-Netherlands-Germany he only applied mass genocides and enslavery.
Selling the slaves for his own purse.

Divide et Impera.
 
Divide et Impera.

yeah... and a lot of Habitat with empty fertile plots for the gaul tribes accepting Rome after roughly 40% of the people living in the new province were killed (or as slave sold somewhere in the empire).
Caesar describing those Germanic tribes as terrible beastly barbarians to overwhelm in the public mob opinion of Rome his personal financial gains from selling those slaves.
A combi of a good dux bellorum, succesful businessman and ambitious politician.

And all those young school children forced to learn Latin by reading De Bello Gallico indoctrinated for many centuries to come.
 
Dulce et decorum est anti Germania gory

TIL that the Latin word gory means (in English) gory.
All those bloody empires are the same.
 
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