Will the EU succeed or fail?
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
And what will be the signs of failure? Other countries leaving the EU? It's possible some departures, such as the more fascist countries, might leave the EU stronger. Perhaps it's just got too big or is trying to do too much.
Lock 'em up - Eastman, Giuliani, Senator Graham, Meadows and Trump
- papafarang
- udonmap.com
- Posts: 4303
- Joined: August 2, 2013, 10:14 am
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
Daft question really, fail in what way ? by what measure ? The EU will just continue ever expanding ,you can check out anytime but you can never leave , as they say.
GDP: $19.1 trillion (nominal; 2019); $23.0 trillion
GDP per capita: $38,370 (nominal; 2018); $43,...
GDP growth: 2.4% (2017)
GDP: $19.1 trillion (nominal; 2019); $23.0 trillion
GDP per capita: $38,370 (nominal; 2018); $43,...
GDP growth: 2.4% (2017)
Hansa village clubhouse . Tel 0981657001 https://www.google.co.th/maps/place/Han ... 5851?hl=en
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
Some folks just can't stay consistent from one month to the next. Quite paradoxical. Cognitive dissonance comes to mind.so anyway back to the question . will the EU fail ? simple it has, one country is trying to leave that's failure.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.
- papafarang
- udonmap.com
- Posts: 4303
- Joined: August 2, 2013, 10:14 am
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
yes maybe it has failed for the British, but the EU is still expanding so for Europeans not a failure.
"Some folks just can't stay consistent from one month to the next" accepting unseen changes and adapting to the situation and the outcome has nothing to do with being consistent, the whole Brexit has no consistency, the fact that circumstances have changed and it looks like we can't leave means the EU has succeeded ..paradoxical , just a new analysis based on current information. even at this point no one can predict an outcome. but anyway good your using a thread to discuss me rather than the subject. How does it feel to be head cheerleader in my fan club
Hansa village clubhouse . Tel 0981657001 https://www.google.co.th/maps/place/Han ... 5851?hl=en
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
Stop it papafarang. You're making be jealous. I like cheer-leading. =D>
Many EU countries are in the top ten of the global happiness index yet again:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/eu ... 8df051c447
The EU STEADY WINNING
Many EU countries are in the top ten of the global happiness index yet again:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/eu ... 8df051c447
The EU STEADY WINNING
Lock 'em up - Eastman, Giuliani, Senator Graham, Meadows and Trump
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
So now it has failed only for the British and the EU hasn't failed -- despite "one country is trying to leave that's failure." I see.papafarang wrote: ↑March 22, 2019, 3:34 pmyes maybe it has failed for the British, but the EU is still expanding so for Europeans not a failure.
. . .
It's not about you. It's about your argument being on two sides of it -- and after that is exposed, now trying to be on all sides of it.
First, the EU has failed. Second, it hasn't failed and isn't failing. Third, now the EU has failed only for the British. Quite an evolution.
Have a great day and a great weekend!
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.
- papafarang
- udonmap.com
- Posts: 4303
- Joined: August 2, 2013, 10:14 am
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
exactly right mark, for us Brits it's failed, for Europeans it's not seen the same way.. there is no third.if you read the post and comprehended you might of noticed I said fail in what way ? by what measure ?those were questions i was posing in reply to the previous post . so tell me what mark do you give for success or failure ? , Do you think it's a failure just because I think so ? I was talking to GT ,I never rattled your cage. as I said ,it's more about you being my head cheerleader.Lone Star wrote: ↑March 22, 2019, 3:48 pmSo now it has failed only for the British and the EU hasn't failed -- despite "one country is trying to leave that's failure." I see.papafarang wrote: ↑March 22, 2019, 3:34 pmyes maybe it has failed for the British, but the EU is still expanding so for Europeans not a failure.
. . .
It's not about you. It's about your argument being on two sides of it -- and after that is exposed, now trying to be on all sides of it.
First, the EU has failed. Second, it hasn't failed and isn't failing. Third, now the EU has failed only for the British. Quite an evolution.
Have a great day and a great weekend!
Hansa village clubhouse . Tel 0981657001 https://www.google.co.th/maps/place/Han ... 5851?hl=en
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
So if you're talking to GT, why should I be expected to answer the questions? You're on both sides of your statements again.papafarang wrote: ↑March 22, 2019, 5:20 pm
. . . for us Brits it's failed, for Europeans it's not seen the same way.. there is no third.if you read the post and comprehended you might of noticed I said fail in what way ? by what measure ? those were questions i was posing in reply to the previous post . so tell me what mark do you give for success or failure ? , Do you think it's a failure just because I think so ? I was talking to GT ,I never rattled your cage. as I said ,it's more about you being my head cheerleader.
I was pointing out your multifaceted position on the EU, and nothing in your post changes its multifaceted content. You're still on 3 sides -- with or without the questions. The totality of your statements, not questions and not you, is what caught my attention.
Cheerleaders cheer FOR something or someone -- to either succeed or fail. I'm certainly not cheering for you and not cheering against you. Not cheering at all in your regard. I don't care about you personally, other than that I hope you have a great, successful life.
Have a great weekend!
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.
- papafarang
- udonmap.com
- Posts: 4303
- Joined: August 2, 2013, 10:14 am
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
"I don't care about you personally" shucks you hurt my feelings , that's what all stalkers say.as I said I was replying to GT. Here's something for you .as you don't seem interested in the subject , unless i'm the subject .
Hansa village clubhouse . Tel 0981657001 https://www.google.co.th/maps/place/Han ... 5851?hl=en
- jackspratt
- udonmap.com
- Posts: 16156
- Joined: July 2, 2006, 5:29 pm
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
The above meme omits - (said with mountains of condescension and insincerity):
Have a great weekend!
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
.
The majority of Europeans say EU leadership is “out of touch” with citizens
Source: Pew Research Center.
The EU seems to be failing many more citizens in many more countries than just the UK.
The highest negatives for the EU occurred most when Europeans were asked about how well the EU was able to deal efficiently with concrete problems.
54% believe the EU to be inefficient, mostly due to the EU’s handling of immigration.
In the survey, Pew found a “strong desire” for less immigration. Italy, Greece and Hungary had the highest percentages of citizens wanting fewer immigrants -- more than 70% in each of those countries.
In a poll conducted in 2018, over 75% of EU citizens wanted better border security. A majority believed that crime and terrorism increased due to immigration, and 57% said that immigration was changing the culture of their countries.
A majority are convinced that most migrants are attracted to the EU by economic and welfare benefits and if those benefits were cut off, migration would slow considerably.
A majority -- 51% to 43% -- believes that the EU is intrusive in the life of its member states. This data explains why many Europeans are supporting populist, pro-sovereignty political parties and movements that reject overbearing EU control.
A large majority -- 62% -- think that Brussels is “out of touch” with the needs of citizens.
Doesn't look as if anyone is very happy. Failing.
The majority of Europeans say EU leadership is “out of touch” with citizens
Source: Pew Research Center.
The EU seems to be failing many more citizens in many more countries than just the UK.
The highest negatives for the EU occurred most when Europeans were asked about how well the EU was able to deal efficiently with concrete problems.
54% believe the EU to be inefficient, mostly due to the EU’s handling of immigration.
In data gathered since 2014, over 1,000 people have been murdered or injured in the EU in violent attacks related to Islamist migrants.Majorities or pluralities in most nations want fewer immigrants allowed into their country. Many believe that immigrants tend to remain distinct from the broader culture and that immigration increases the risk of terrorism.
In the survey, Pew found a “strong desire” for less immigration. Italy, Greece and Hungary had the highest percentages of citizens wanting fewer immigrants -- more than 70% in each of those countries.
In a poll conducted in 2018, over 75% of EU citizens wanted better border security. A majority believed that crime and terrorism increased due to immigration, and 57% said that immigration was changing the culture of their countries.
A majority are convinced that most migrants are attracted to the EU by economic and welfare benefits and if those benefits were cut off, migration would slow considerably.
A majority -- 51% to 43% -- believes that the EU is intrusive in the life of its member states. This data explains why many Europeans are supporting populist, pro-sovereignty political parties and movements that reject overbearing EU control.
A large majority -- 62% -- think that Brussels is “out of touch” with the needs of citizens.
Doesn't look as if anyone is very happy. Failing.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.
- papafarang
- udonmap.com
- Posts: 4303
- Joined: August 2, 2013, 10:14 am
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
i think that was a go at sarcasm ….fail. He seems to extrapolate my feelings towards the EU as being the truth about the EU for everybody. As for being consistent, what has been consistent in the whole Brexit comedy. Obviously the EU is way to big to fail , it's not like any brits want it to fail, can you imagine if it did. there are plenty more countries lined up to join too, and good luck to them . To me the EU will carry on regardless of my thoughts, But us Brits want out. His post wasn't about the EU , he's just a fan of mine .jackspratt wrote: ↑March 22, 2019, 7:41 pmThe above meme omits - (said with mountains of condescension and insincerity):
Have a great weekend!
Hansa village clubhouse . Tel 0981657001 https://www.google.co.th/maps/place/Han ... 5851?hl=en
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
Now THAT was funny (carry On cast & characters).papafarang wrote: ↑March 23, 2019, 8:07 ami think that was a go at sarcasm ….fail. He seems to extrapolate my feelings towards the EU as being the truth about the EU for everybody. As for being consistent, what has been consistent in the whole Brexit comedy. Obviously the EU is way to big to fail , it's not like any brits want it to fail, can you imagine if it did. there are plenty more countries lined up to join too, and good luck to them . To me the EU will carry on regardless of my thoughts, But us Brits want out. His post wasn't about the EU , he's just a fan of mine .jackspratt wrote: ↑March 22, 2019, 7:41 pmThe above meme omits - (said with mountains of condescension and insincerity):
Have a great weekend!
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
.
More unhappiness with the EU.
Tens of Thousands March Against EU Censorship Regulations
Source: Associated Press
Not new, but it's coming to a head as more and more Europeans realize the censorship that the EU intends to impose upon the Internet in Europe.
DPA News Agency is reporting that over 40,000 people marched in Munich. Thousands of others participated in Berlin, Cologne, Hannover and Hamburg.
Another in a long list of EU FAILS.
More unhappiness with the EU.
Tens of Thousands March Against EU Censorship Regulations
Source: Associated Press
Not new, but it's coming to a head as more and more Europeans realize the censorship that the EU intends to impose upon the Internet in Europe.
DPA News Agency is reporting that over 40,000 people marched in Munich. Thousands of others participated in Berlin, Cologne, Hannover and Hamburg.
Another in a long list of EU FAILS.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
.
The European Union has bigger problems to deal with than Brexit
Source: The Guardian
Oh my. Big problems.
The European Union has bigger problems to deal with than Brexit
Source: The Guardian
Oh my. Big problems.
What?!?!?! This is unbelievable based on the pro-EU crowd claims.The next recession will expose the eurozone as a half-baked project in need of leadership
As the clock has ticked down towards Brexit, the state of the UK has attracted even more attention than normal. Every scrap of official data and every survey of business opinion has been pored over by leavers and remainers alike.
Much less attention, understandably enough, has been paid to what is happening in the rest of the European Union, where the recent news has been poor. The frustration of the leaders of the other 27 EU countries towards Theresa May is that Europe has plenty of issues that need addressing, with Brexit not even the most serious of them.
The EU’s biggest problem is that its economic model has aged alongside its population. Europe has plenty of world-class companies but, unlike the US, none of them were set up in the past 25 years. In Europe’s golden age, Volkswagen was a rival to Ford, and Siemens could go toe to toe with General Electric. But there is no European Google, Facebook or Amazon and in the emerging technologies of the fourth Industrial Revolution, such as artificial intelligence, Europe is nowhere.
Tenuous.China is making faster progress than Europe in the development of machine learning and has companies that pose a threat to the giants of Silicon Valley. That’s why China rather than Europe is the main target for Donald Trump’s tariff war.
When plans for the euro were being drawn up 30 years ago, the assumption was that the single currency would make the single market work more efficiently and so generate faster growth. It hasn’t happened. The performance of the eurozone countries has got worse not better, but so much political capital has been invested in the monetary union project that there is an unwillingness to accept as much.
A real solution to Europe’s growth problems means fixing the design flaws in monetary union
Three separate events last week highlighted the extent of the economic challenges Europe faces. Firstly, the latest health check on the eurozone economy showed that growth remains chronically weak. Italy is suffering from its fifth recession in two decades, while Germany’s export-dominated economy is being hit hard by the slowdown in the global economy. Germany escaped recession only by the skin of its teeth in the second half of 2018 and early 2019 has seen little improvement. The eurozone as a whole appears to be on course to grow by 0.2% in the first three months of the year, unchanged on the last three months of 2018.
There was a brief period when heavy doses of stimulus from the European Central Bank (ECB) lifted the eurozone’s growth rate. But the impact of zero interest rates and the money-creation process known as quantitative easing (QE) has now worn off. A real solution to Europe’s growth problems means fixing the design flaws in monetary union, something that has been glaringly obvious since the financial crisis of a decade ago.
The lack of a political underpinning to the single currency proved costly back in 2008-09. While the US and the UK moved quickly to cut interest rates and embrace unconventional monetary policies such as QE, it took much longer for the eurozone to crank itself into gear. In part, that was due to the ultra-conservative nature of the ECB, which imported its culture from Germany’s Bundesbank, but it was also due to the fact that there was no real mechanism for taking the sort of speedy decisions made in Washington and London. Like any convoy, the eurozone moved at the speed of its slowest ship.
There were two important consequences of this: it took a lot longer for the eurozone to return to growth; and its banks were left saddled with large quantities of non-performing loans. The Americans socialised the bad debts of the big US banks, which enabled them to start lending again. Europe’s banks remain weak and highly vulnerable to another economic downturn, which is why the second significant event last week was the announcement by two of Germany’s biggest banks – Deutsche and Commerzbank – that they were in merger talks.
Italy has tired of waiting for monetary union to deliver. Its banks are in even worse shape than Germany’s, Rome has no control over monetary policy and its attempts to boost growth by running a bigger budget deficit have fallen foul of Europe’s hardline fiscal rules. Last week, Italy’s government announced it would be the first EU country to take part in China’s Belt and Road initiative – an attempt to link Asia, the Middle East, Africa and Europe with a series of ports, railways, bridges and other infrastructure projects. Italy’s willingness to take part in the attempt to recreate the old silk road reflects its desperation to revive its economy by any means available. It also reflects Europe’s diminished status in the global pecking order.
Emmanuel Macron is convinced the answer to Europe’s economic problems is closer integration. The French president wants the eurozone to have its own finance minister in charge of tax and spending policy for the single currency zone. But for the idea to catch on, Macron needs the support of Germany and Angela Merkel has not been wildly enthusiastic. It’s not hard to see why. German exporters have done well out of monetary union and Merkel knows that German taxpayers would be expected to bankroll spending in poorer eurozone countries.
Macron’s plan has a logic to it. The eurozone is a half-completed project, lacking the political structure that would give it a chance of working. What’s more, if Europe continues to underperform economically, the alternative to closer integration is disintegration. Not immediately, because returning to national currencies or moving to a hard and soft euro, would be fraught with difficulties. Crunch time will only come when the next recession blows in. It might not be all that far away.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
.
European rather than UK stocks would suffer more in a no-deal Brexit, fund manager says
Oh my. More bad news for the EU. This time it is if the UK moves on a no-deal Brexit. Such an eventuality would expose the EU even more toward failure.
Source: CNBC
European rather than UK stocks would suffer more in a no-deal Brexit, fund manager says
Oh my. More bad news for the EU. This time it is if the UK moves on a no-deal Brexit. Such an eventuality would expose the EU even more toward failure.
Source: CNBC
The shares of European firms outside of Britain would suffer more in the event of a poorly executed Brexit, a strategist told CNBC Tuesday.
Speaking to CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe,” Ralph Jainz, a fund manager at Centricus Asset Management, said a negative Brexit outcome had “for sure” been underpriced by investors.
“European markets are back to where they were in September and October,” he said. “We’ve seen a dramatic deterioration of the macro data since, and Europe as the (U.K.’s) largest trading partner will undoubtedly be negatively impacted (by a bad Brexit) — and after what has been a sensational start to the year for equity markets everywhere, for sure that risk is underpriced.”
Jainz told CNBC the U.K. was one of the most underweighted countries in the world, meaning there was “really interesting value to be had” from shares of domestically-operating firms.
I have full and complete confidence in the People of the UK to have a strong, prosperous economy and country outside of the control of the EU.Meanwhile, Francesco Curto, co-head of research at DWS, told CNBC’s “Capital Connection” Tuesday that he also saw value in the U.K. market.
. . .
Curto added that he saw value in the U.K.’s consumer cyclical stocks, as well as in British housebuilders.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
shame this shithouse off a government and opposition don't think so tried there hardest to remain in the scabs
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
.
German Asylum Application Numbers ‘Too High’
Source: Deutsche Welle
Well, the bad judgement that has affected all of the EU and Germany is finally admitted by the head of Germany's Federal Office for Migration (BAMF).
Since 2014, there have been over 200,000 migrants who entered Germany without any form of ID. That's almost a quarter of million UNKNOWNs. No travel documents. No form of ID. Insanity. And it doesn't get better. BAMF reports that over HALF of migrants from the past year also had no ID.
The number of asylum seekers in Germany is still on a huge scale -- over 150,000 in 2018. The head of BAMF said, it's "comparable to a big city that comes to us every year." Only about a third of those who enter receive some form of asylum status. They lie. They have no valid reason for asylum. Germany and other EU countries keep throwing the bread in the back yard, and the birds keep coming.
The EU is weakening every member, which makes the entire union incredibly weak in so many ways. Suicide watch.
German Asylum Application Numbers ‘Too High’
Source: Deutsche Welle
Well, the bad judgement that has affected all of the EU and Germany is finally admitted by the head of Germany's Federal Office for Migration (BAMF).
Since 2014, there have been over 200,000 migrants who entered Germany without any form of ID. That's almost a quarter of million UNKNOWNs. No travel documents. No form of ID. Insanity. And it doesn't get better. BAMF reports that over HALF of migrants from the past year also had no ID.
The number of asylum seekers in Germany is still on a huge scale -- over 150,000 in 2018. The head of BAMF said, it's "comparable to a big city that comes to us every year." Only about a third of those who enter receive some form of asylum status. They lie. They have no valid reason for asylum. Germany and other EU countries keep throwing the bread in the back yard, and the birds keep coming.
The EU is weakening every member, which makes the entire union incredibly weak in so many ways. Suicide watch.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
.
EU Migration Policies Continue to Enable Cultural Destruction
Source: Le Figaro
France is suffering an average of 3 church attacks per day
EU Migration Policies Continue to Enable Cultural Destruction
Source: Le Figaro
France is suffering an average of 3 church attacks per day
Any weakened member of the EU weakens the entire EU. Poland, Hungary, Italy and other anti-globalist countries have it correct.EXCLUSIVE - Homelessness, robbery, desecration ... Catholic places of worship are targeted throughout the country, with nearly three acts committed per day. LR elected representatives question the authorities.
"God will forgive me not": Bernard Carayon, mayor of Lavaur, in the Tarn, does not faint since the desecration on February 5, the Cathedral of Saint-Alain, jewel of southern Gothic. At the end of the day, two high school students, identified thanks to cameras located nearby, invest the place of worship, fire the altar of one of the chapels of the building as well as a nursery. A crucifix is returned, a second thrown while a third Christ on the cross has his arm twisted to make him take a grotesque pose in the confessional.
"This fundamentally anti-Christian act was perpetrated at the very moment when we had just completed five years of restoration work, for a bill of 2 million euros, is outraged the town of Tarn. It was necessary to call the fire department to suck the thick black smoke and about forty parishioners to restore order. "
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.
Re: Will the EU succeed or fail?
So the EU gets stronger with the dysfunctional UK out? Let's hope so. I don't want European lives getting worse.
Lock 'em up - Eastman, Giuliani, Senator Graham, Meadows and Trump