James Harris wrote:
> On 10/04/2016 18:33, Bernhard Schornak wrote:
>> James Harris schrieb:
>>> On 29/03/2016 08:01, Bernhard Schornak wrote:
>>>> James Harris wrote:
>>>>> On 09/03/2016 21:29, Bernhard Schornak wrote:
>>>
>>> In summary, forcing people into an undemocratic political union that
>>> they don't want is ultimately
>>> unsustainable. It would be better to help people work together without
>>> requiring that they head
>>> towards becoming a single state.
>>
>> The extreme rigthists like Le Pen (F), Wilders (NL), Kaczyński
>> or Szydło (PL) and Orbán (HU) always were and still are strict
>> enemies of a united Europe. As nationalist forces, a united EU
>> would destroy their patridiotic dreams of one nation (or race)
>> ruling the entire world.
>>
>> Watch the events in Poland - do you think they follow a proper
>> path as you cite their anti-democratic ideology as an argument
>> against a united Europe? Neighbours with common cultural roots
>> and common history should keep care of each other for *better*
>> reasons than disdainful mammonism.
>
> You seem to have misunderstood my comments on the rise of anti-EU feeling. I cited examples of
> increasing support for anti-EU parties as evidence of dissatisfaction with the EU. Nothing I said
> should be interpreted as endorsing those parties.
All of them want to pocket all benefits coming along with the
(otherwise attacked) EU regulation, but deny to share a small
piece of their wealth with poor(er) countries. In my opinion,
Brexit is the same thing wrapped in cloth of different colour
with slightly different muster.
Sorry, but that's my *personal* point of view (which probably
is not very objective)...
>>>> Especially because the London Stock Exchange
>>>> and Real Estate Business are the driving force behind acce-
>>>> lerated redistribution of property and growing poverty. Not
>>>> only in GB. The entire Western World assimilated their idea
>>>> to generate money without offering real values in exchange,
>>>> for example: Computer generated profits with *not existing*
>>>> shares (the faster your machine and internet conection, the
>>>> higher your profit).
>>>
>>> I don't like to see dominant big corporations of any sort. I wonder if
>>> you recognise that the EU
>>> helps large companies at the expense of smaller competitors.
>>>
>>>
http://pensites.com/politics/article-1072/Why-do-large-businesses-like-the-EU
>>
>> They will not ask you if you like them or not (as long as they
>> can make money they just will do it without asking any one for
>> permission).
>
> It is not a case of liking or not liking big businesses. The fact is that the EU gives them
> privileges and protections against their competitors. That makes them complacent. It also puts up
> prices we pay.
>
> As it happens, I do prefer to see much competition between smaller suppliers.
Have a look at the *real* world market: Smaller suppliers are
swallowed by large ones who are swallowed by huge ones and so
on. The current economic model knows just one (holy) paradigm
called "growth". Having a closer look at this paradigm shows,
that even healthy companies are sold out, because they do not
generate enough interest yield.
Example:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAN_SE
>> Let us talk about real things: I often delivered plastic parts
>> for Nissan Motors to Johnson Control in Sunderland (pressed in
>> Augsburg). With open borders and domestic EU commerce, there's
>> one EU-wide tax to pay, but no toll or other costs. Voting for
>> Brexit, you *also* vote for customs, import taxes and controls
>> when entering or leaving British territory.
>
> No one is suggesting imposing import tariffs. (I don't know why you would think that.)
>
> There are border controls in place now.
>
> Brexit is not about imposing trade barriers. The only ones talking of that are people who want to
> scare UK voters to remain in the EU. They say that if we leave then EU countries will want to impose
> tariffs on us as a punishment for leaving. Nice neighbours to have!
How do you think a break out works and why should the EU keep
their borders to any non-EU country open? If GB does not want
to belong to a united Europe, why should we want to keep open
borders to GB or dispense with collecting duty or taxes? With
Brexit, GB is just another trading partner like China, Russia
or the USA.
>> Any decision comes
>> at a cost and anything we do has consequences. In this case, a
>> car built in GB will get more expensive and it questionable if
>> Nissan will continue to build cars in the UK, because it costs
>> them a pound or two to compensate import taxes, customs, grown
>> transportation costs and other discomfort because a few people
>> voted to return to a time where the British Empire reached its
>> pinnacle (regardless of the fact that these times are over and
>> never will come back)...
>
> Goodness! This is nothing to do with Empire! Nor is it about Britain wanting to isolate itself. That
> is a myth put about by people who want to win this debate by devious means. We still want to be
> thought of as European and be good friends and neighbours, to work and travel in neighbouring
> countries etc.
>
> Why would Brits want to leave the EU? My answer is at
>
>
http://pensites.com/politics/article-1110/Why-would-Brits-want-to-leave-the-EU
I guess you still did not get the point what I told until now
(in several replies): Union = united = solidarity. Solidarity
includes to share in good times and to get help in bad times.
It does not mean to grab what you can get and to deny to give
if you have overspill. Union also includes common rules for a
variety of stuff sold on a single European market in economic
sense and common European Law in political sense.
Cancelling membership in a Union will (and should!) have con-
sequences - you cannot just pitch on those things you want to
get without giving or agreeing to compromises.
>>> Saying that their waste and luxurious living is a small percentage of
>>> GDP is quite beyond my
>>> comprehension. There is no excuse for EU leaders to pay themselves
>>> high salaries and live and work
>>> in luxury.
>>>
>>> It may be a small percentage of GDP but it is still a lot of money.
>>
>> Yes. On the other hand, these are *representatives* of a union
>> with 500,000,000 citicens. Calculating the "per head" share of
>> 44,400,000 Euro, each European pays 8.88 Cent per anno to feed
>> the "luxury" of her/his representatives. Not too much compared
>> to the 68.86 Cent per head "Brits" grant their royals per anno
>> (including the toll for Dartford crossing)... ;)
>>
>>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dartford_Crossing
>
> The royals don't set their own budget or expenses. That decision is made by politicians according to
> what they feel the royals need to pay their staff and expenses. The queen has public duties. The
> younger royals do also but often have their own secular employment.
>
> Unlike EU bureaucrats, UK politicians have to account for their expenses. Every penny. And all their
> claims are logged where anyone can see:
>
>
http://www.parliamentary-standards.org.uk/
>
> You can search there to find out exactly what expenses a politician claimed.
>
> By contrast, in addition to their enormous salaries, EU politicians are given _unchecked_ expenses.
> They get the money whether they need it or not. They don't have to justify what they spend. And
> anything they don't spend they keep, topping up an already large salary.
I (partially) agree with transparency regarding all income of
our politicians. On the other hand, we created bureaucracy if
we demand to claim each cent politicians spent and to monitor
if we shall grant payment or if we deny to pay, because a sum
was unnecessarily spent. I plead for a reasonable wage in the
range of an average salary in the cuntry where the politician
lives (probably Belgium or France).
About the snipped part: It makes a mountain out of a molehill
(I posted the real numbers in comparison to your royals in my
previous reply). Moreover, it seems the "Brexit" is discussed
quite one-sided in GB, so I doubt British people will come to
a well-considered decision because there is so much emotional
overload fueled by your media.
>>>> Come on, no one forced your parliament to sign any of those
>>>> contracts to connect all European countries and grow into a
>>>> Union like the UK or USA.
>>>
>>> True, though no one has asked _the people_ for over 40 years!
>>
>> Do you really claim to live in a *dictatorship* since 1976?
>
> Not a dictatorship, no. But the EU is an undemocratic form of rule. Perhaps an oligarchy.
>
>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oligarchy
You still didn't answer my original question. Telling "No one
asked the people for 40 years" *means* "No one was allowed to
vote for 40 years", *because* people in GB delegate their own
voice to vote to politicians who then make decisions for you.
>> If
>> your answer is no: You (the British people) voted for previous
>> parliaments - you were not forced to vote for those who follow
>> the European idea and sign pro-European contracts. Democracies
>> do not have to start a referendum for each political decision:
>
> In the UK, politicians are expected to set out in a manifesto what they will do if they win an
> election. The media test them against their manifesto promises both before and after they get power.
> People judge by the policies and the perceived character of the politicians.
>
> Personally, I think the UK's current fixed five-year terms are too long. Politicians should not have
> such a long mandate. They can get up to too much mischief in that time!
So when politicians of one party do not what you expected 'em
to do, you have the choice to vote for the other party or, if
no existing party meeted your expectations, you still had the
right to found your own party?
If so - why do you complain about a living democracy?
>> Isn't it up to the *citicens* to vote for candidates
>> who offer solutions matching their own political wishes? Don't
>> blame the majority not to care about wishes of minorities, but
>> blame politicians who promise political deeds just to increase
>> their personal might or wealth, but act completely contrary to
>> what they promised when they are elected and start to make de-
>> cisions.
>
> The system is imperfect but it is up to politicians to make the case for minorities. That has
> happened here a number of times so that the majority ends up supporting the minority.
Isn't that the point behind pondering pro's and con's between
competing interests to guarantee safety for minorities?
>>>> The future will show that we will
>>>> not survive if we don't work together as close as possible.
>>>
>>> We do not need the EU in order to work together!
>>
>> That is what you - one of more than 64 million British folks -
>> believe (as no one can know this for real, it's just one valid
>> belief of many).
>
> No, it is self evident. If you and I wanted to work together on something we could do. We wouldn't
> need someone else to tell us that we must.
>
> If European neighbours want to work together - lets say on science research or air quality
> improvement or anti-terror measures or third-world trade initiatives - they can still do so. We
> don't need to be in the same club to cooperate.
That's besides the point - we don't talk about you and me and
a few other friends or relatives, we talk about *500 million*
(516 million after Brexit and Turkey's membership as replace-
ment) people living in Europe.
>>> I guess most countries joined the EU or its predecessors for prosperity.
>>
>> Until the early 1970ies this is true. Thereafter, most leaders
>> advanced this pure commercial organisation into a cultural and
>> political Union with the final goal to found the United States
>> of Europe.
>
> Yes. That USoE single country is something that Brits don't want to be part of.
Sad, but okay.
>> Meanwhile, growing selfishness starts to divide the
>> mutually grown solidarity just to benefit from the weakness of
>> the poorest members of the Union. I am pretty sure the UK will
>> suffer from a "Brexit" as well as most other EU members, while
>> China, the USA and Japan will benefit from our faction.
>
> Yes, we /would/ all suffer from a Brexit if we stopped trading and cooperating. But that's not the
> plan. As I say, there is no need for any of us to stop cooperating or working together.
>
> The only talk of putting up barriers is coming from those who say that the EU will put up barriers
> to Brits if they leave the club.
See above - you cannot take without giving something back. If
a Union only is good to give, then it is better to get rid of
those who just want to take.
>> It already split Europe into parts. The damage done during the
>> last one or two years cannot be fixed in the coming decade...
>
> The EU's model of having unelected people imposing control from the centre is, I believe, not
> sustainable. If the EU wants to survive as a governmental system it needs fundamental democratic
> reform.
No one in the EU Parliament is "unelected":
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elections_to_the_European_Parliament
I do not know how this is handled in GB, but I have voted for
the EU Parliament as long as it exists. If you're not allowed
to vote for the EU Parliamant directly, something is wrong in
your country.
>> I am aware of those who want to return to Middle Age politics,
>> and I don't see any difference between fundamentalist Muslims,
>> fundamentalist Christians or fundamentalist patriots: They all
>> try to force the entire population to obey their rules. That's
>> nothing a democrat (or humanist) can agree with.
>
> That is what the EU does. It tries to force 500 million people to do what it thinks is right. And it
> gets away with it because it never has to put itself up for election.
>
> I don't know whether the UK will vote to stay in the EU or leave it. But people in Sweden and
> elsewhere have said that if the UK leaves then they want their own referenda so that they have a
> chance to get out too.
>
> People should not have to ask for a referendum on membership of a supranational union which has been
> granted political power. Periodic referenda should be a condition of its existence so that its
> leaders know they are accountable to the people.
As I have shown above - your arguments are no real arguments,
because they ignore all facts and erect a castle on a base of
foam. I think, British people have a major problem with their
politicians (as do most European countries at the moment). In
general, it is a problem of the accelerated redistribution of
wealth, making poor people poorer faster and faster (which is
a worldwide phenomenon). As long as politicians praise growth
as holy cow, this will not change, but lead to civil wars. If
we do not react now, it will be too late for a change.
Separation (or other unilateral activities) cannot solve this
problem - it only relocates markets from one spot to another.
Europe cannot survive current and future challenges, if we do
not stick together, and those who separate themselves will be
the first who drown.
>>>>> I don't see the UK's potential separation from the EU as "division".
>>>>> Brits would still want to work
>>>>> together, trade, and cooperate with European neighbours. What many of
>>>>> us don't want is lack of
>>>>> democracy and rule from a supranational government.
>>>>
>>>> You can't demand the benefits if you deny to pay the price?
>>>
>>> Ask yourself /why/ supranational government is part of the price. No
>>> other trading bloc in the world
>>> has political integration as its aim. Only the EU has that as a core
>>> part of the "price" of membership.
>>
>>
>>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Economic_Community
>>
>> What you are talking about does no longer exist since 1993.
>
> I am puzzled. You yourself said that the United States of Europe was the goal.
Yes. The EEC (until 1993) was the predecessor of the EU (from
1993 until now), so where's the problem?
>> With the process of re-uniting both German states, the leaders
>> of the EEC (namely Kohl, Mitterand and Thatcher/Major) came to
>> the conclusion that only a united Europe might be fit to with-
>> stand the challenges of our future, so they ignited the "fire"
>> to develop the United States of Europe. It is based on solida-
>> rity and mutual assistance - the pillars of freedom and wealth
>> for all citicens. Now that many people throughout Europe don't
>> (want to) support this goal any longer, preferring nationalism
>> over solidarity
>
> I don't think people want to be nationalistic. If the EU satisfied their needs they would probably
> welcome it. But its disastrous policies have caused very high unemployment in Greece and Spain, for
> example, and people who cannot get work naturally become dissatisfied with the system which caused it.
The EU as such is not responsible for national tax reliefs in
its member countries. Which, by the way, was not just Greece,
Spain or other poorer countries, but rich like Germany and GB
as well. There is almost no country on this planet which does
not suffer from cheating international companies.
>> and neo-darwinism over assistance, we will get
>> oppression and poverty in the long run.
>
> The EU is helping to cause poverty now!
Definitely no. It still are the member states who are respon-
sible for their national budgets on their own. The money sent
to the EU is a minor portion of the entire budget (even in my
country which sends the largest sum to Bruxelles).
>> I don't know why folks
>> support mechanisms to shuffle the wealth of many onto accounts
>> of a few superrich,
>
> Again, that characterises the EU. It favours the superrich, the big corporates, the bigger fishing
> businesses etc. Oh, it says it is working for people and it responds when pushed but it is really
> designed to maintain protections on vested interests.
One more "no" - the member states flatter big business to get
jobs for their unemployed. Most taxes are collected from poor
workers and white collar employees, the least taxes are dona-
ted by international companies (whenever they are in the mood
to "do somethinmg good").
>> but they will earn their "price" (which is
>> total poverty with an optimized (= abolished) welfare system).
>> I hope I will die before this inhuman world is established...
>
> Not a good thing to talk about!
I'm writing from the shoulder... ;)
>> P.S.: Providing links to your own texts is a valid move, but I
>> did not see a single footnote citing independent sources
>> backing up your claims. As long as these are monologues,
>> they represent private *opinion* - nothing less, nothing
>> more. If you want to lend your words meaning, you should
>> furnish your claims with facts supporting the underlying
>> ideas.
>
> I don't claim my opinions as anything other than opinions. That's why I put my name at the bottom of
> a page - to indicate that it is just my comment.
>
> I would rather appeal to logic and reason than to cite a supposed authority.
>
> I have included links to facts where relevant, and embedded graphs etc. taken from reputable
> sources, and provided links to the originals.
It's not about "authorities", but, as I have shown, you often
build a logic building on bogus (assumed?) facts. With proper
citation of sources, erroneous assumptions could be avoided.
Well, it's still in progress, and I write some paragraphs per
decade or so. It's mainly about deception and how easy people
can be controlled with simple psychological tricks. Ads are a
good example how people are incited to buy things they do not
need. Separating people into classes and factions was another
field where psychological tricks bypass our consciuos logical
thinking - that's what is happening with Brexits, Grexits and
[whichever?-xits] at the moment: Humans are stirred up to act
against their true interests...