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As for the EU, I think the biggest issue is that the postwar generation who appreciate what the EU has achieved in terms of peace and prosperity (and the contrast with what went before) have now passed on and their children take the good the EU has done for granted and focus on the bad bits - ably abetted by a eurosceptic dominated media (at least in anglo-phone countries).
Also the early idealism has been replaced by a "what's in it for us" attitude which is naturally frustrated when the interaction of 27 different national interests and numerous commercial and advocacy interests results in outcomes not to their liking. So we have a permanent whinge fest where every complains about not getting everything they want.
Considering the above, the EU works remarkably well really... notes from no w here
Just a thought.
If I'm not mistaken, the EU really hasn't experienced this kind of bloc formation (though from what I'm reading, it exists). So the lack of drama and interest might be a blessing.
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As for the bandwidth issue, it might be a database issue as well. My installation relies on a MySQL database, which was free as well. As far as I know, only Oracle and PostGre are databases which pass the ACID test, and can handle large amounts of data and transactions. PostGre is free, but requires a Unix/Linux server. I've taken to writing my posts in a text file and dropping it into WordPress to preview. But I had screen issues which required this. Works fine for me, I have no plans to experiment with anymore blog apps. "It Can't Be Just About Us"--Frank Schnittger, ETian Extraordinaire
There are no structures to articulate any divergent interests that may exist between North/South, East/West, Protestant/Catholics although states can of course form alliances on an ad hoc basis - typically on a regional basis but their can also be regional rivalries and divergent interests.
Thus countries with a strong agriculture sector may ally in support of the CAP, countries with conservative Governments or pro-US policies/cultures may ally on certain issues. Social conservatives may ally via the Churches, but they really have very little direct power or influence.
One of the reasons Libertas is interesting is that it may be an alliance of pro-business/nationalist and social conservatives - all of whom want the EU to keep out of their free market business affairs/national affairs and to minimise social/secular influences on their state/religious politics.
I agree that sometimes boring politics can be a blessing... notes from no w here
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