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Let's say... free, open vote and secret ballot on law proposals (instead of being forced to give this power to chosen representatives).And if you have a better idea than free, open vote and secret ballot paired with seperation of power...![]()
For very selected things I guess.What about it?![]()
Isn't it ironic to be pro-EU and criticize America's military expansion and foreign interventions while simultaneously complaining that America no longer pays (as much) for the EU's defense? Isn't it also ironic that the nations of Europe fought two great wars to keep Germany from being in charge, only to give up their national sovereignty without a fight?
Unfortunately, since the 2016 election Americans are just voting for our least-hated politician rather than the one that represents us best. We're picking our preferred flavor of insane. That's my take from the conversations I've had with people. Neither first-party candidate was a desirable option seeing as they are both mentally/emotionally unbalanced in their own special ways. Trump is a compulsive liar and has little respect for the office of president preferring to believe he can run a country like a business. Clinton probably would have had government poking it's fingers in ALL the pots and mismanaging everything it touched....I am fed up of being told people who are pro Trump [..] are under-educated or didn't know what they were voting for. How patronizing.
That's been going on a lot earlier than 2016. Much of the problem revolves around how the candidates get nominated... they have to pander to their most rabid ideological members in order to secure the nomination, then somehow convince those of us who hate them all that they're somehow "reasonable" and "centrist" enough to deserve our vote more than the other guy (or in 2016, other girl).Unfortunately, since the 2016 election Americans are just voting for our least-hated politician rather than the one that represents us best.
It already is, for all intents and purposes.The EU is becoming - and has intentions of being - an empire.
Come on, "keep Germany from being in charge" sounds so nice. At least in WW2 the Germans invaded multiple countries and killed everyone not to their liking (jews, gays, disabled, ...). It was genocide. Not just "I want to tell you what to do".Isn't it also ironic that the nations of Europe fought two great wars to keep Germany from being in charge, only to give up their national sovereignty without a fight?
In the EU you vote for the people who rule you, too, the EU parliament. And you could argue that in the US it's similar as you vote your state government and for your USA government in Washington. There are things that Washington can decide and the states have to follow (there are even things that the president alone can decide without any vote). And there are things the states decide for their own. And I guess there's even a smaller division like county or city. Federalism.No. The US is its own country where its own electorate vote for the people who ultimately rule them - however flawed the system. The EU is a super state that supersedes actual countries. It would be like the Supreme Court making a ruling in the US and then the EU overruling it.
Imperialism is something different. If it would be an Empire it would be, e.g. Greece decides everything that's done in the EU. One country to influence/rule them all.The EU is becoming - and has intentions of being - an empire. There's a very big difference. You're comparing night to day.
Again, that's wrong, it is no dictatorship. Free elections and alternation of power. It can be improved, yes, but it is not a dictatorship.But you've got double standards since it's a socialist left dictatorship.
"Come on" proceeded by facts that everyone knows = best argument.Come on, "keep Germany from being in charge" sounds so nice. At least in WW2 the Germans invaded multiple countries and killed everyone not to their liking (jews, gays, disabled, ...). It was genocide. Not just "I want to tell you what to do"
This is a sad truth.Isn't it also ironic that the nations of Europe fought two great wars to keep Germany from being in charge, only to give up their national sovereignty without a fight?
I'm still trying to figure out how that happened... last I looked Europe (the continent) was made up of some 20 different countries (well, states, but using that term here would confuse most of my American brethren), each sovereign and separate. Some (like Germany) are federal unions just like the US, while others (e.g. Liechtenstein) have just a single government. But the part that gets me is where people vote for their local and national stuff, and that's all fine and dandy. And while the nationals figured unifying certain things (common currency, Schengen cross-border travel w/o visa headaches, etc.) made pretty good sense, I'm pretty sure nobody ever asked for a political union to supersede their national sovereignty. Which, from what little our addled mass media has fed us, seems to be the chip on the UK's shoulder... Brussels telling London what's best for London.If you are part of the EU, you have to obey their laws. If your country law conflicts with the EU - your law has to be amended. ... The EU supersede your laws.