Does anyone in Europe other than Giorgia Meloni believe they live in a sovereign nation? No, the European "nations" are states of the European Union, not sovereign nations
So you're basically saying Angela Merkel and EU politicians did exactly what Hitler was attempting in 1930s and 40s. They did this without firing a shot. The people of Europe want to be ruled like sheep?
@@oliverhardy9464 Mate I'm not trying to be argumentative but the two most important things to any sovereign nation are control of monetary and fiscal policies. EU members have control over neither. The monetary policy (interest rates, etc) is set by the central ECB, the Germans can't print Deutschemarks, the French can't print Francs, etc. The fiscal policies are controlled again by central EU budgetary stipulations. Apart from fiscal/monetary concerns we also have control over borders and immigration, again, seriously lacking in the EU. Ask Ireland about it Further then there are legal and regulatory frameworks, all of which are controlled to some degree or another by the EU. Even the UK after having left the EU is still tied up in EU knots We could also consider military and security services. As it stands, several EU members do have strong independent militaries like France and Poland, but many do not, like Germany, Austria, Netherlands, etc. The future plan, according to Macron, Merkel, Scholz, etc, is to have "more Europe" and to eventually have an EU army. This has been the goal since the start of the European project as stated by Mitterrand and Kohl So tell me, how is it any EU nation can claim to be independent or sovereign when the greatest assets of any sovereign nation DO NOT BELONG to the individual nations but rather the central Supreme Soviet in Brussels? I reiterate my point - the EU countries are not sovereign nations, they are member states of the European Union
@@Pax_Veritas That's not really true. States could spend more money if they wanted to. Germany doesn't do it because they currently have something that stops their state dept embedded into their constitution (similar to the US, but they simply increase the limit every few years). They can also adjust their tax systems to their economy if they wanted to. Yes, taxes that effect the economy of other EU countries like a tax for digital tech companies are regulated through EU law. But it's not like that's a thing for all kinds of taxes. That aside the EU law mostly works as a set of guidelines for the national law which means that states can adjust it to their system. Aside from interest rates there isn't much that much that the ECB really dictates. The shared currency is actually a great benefit for most countries because it's not that likely to crash and makes trading between EU countries a lot easier. If all counties would switch back to national currencies it would be a disaster. Even GB which retained it's own currency had huge financial losses due to the Brexit because their financial situation was and still is tied hard to EU countries. Borders and migration should be a collective effort because we can't let countries that are direct neighbours to non-EU-countries like Italy and Greece handle everything alone. The distribution has to be fair towards countries. The EU is a package deal. You can't just take the benefits. Compromises must be made as well. And that aside the European parliament doesn't have say over all topics within their member countries. And that aside countries still have the power of veto to block things. And eventually the regulations that come from the EU aren't all bad. A lot of them ensure consumer safety regarding foods, technical standards, environmental aspects and a lot more. Shared standards make product designs easier because you only need to focus on one set of rules instead of adjusting your product to 40 different countries.
@@sully0001 yes the Commissioners are nominated by their democratically elected governments, since the member nations like to hold more power it’s done this way. Still EU parliament must approve Commission by majority vote.
This is by design. Giving power to unelected groups was a terrible idea.
Great interview. Will send it to all my business associates in Australia, South Africa and USA.
We had Brexit. Are we going to get Dutchout over this?
Truth
Thery good speech
Eva’s a beautiful woman… stunning beauty and fierce loyalty to the cause 🔥
we're toast!
You're only toast if you stand by and watch it happen
Does anyone in Europe other than Giorgia Meloni believe they live in a sovereign nation? No, the European "nations" are states of the European Union, not sovereign nations
So you're basically saying Angela Merkel and EU politicians did exactly what Hitler was attempting in 1930s and 40s. They did this without firing a shot. The people of Europe want to be ruled like sheep?
If you seriously believe this you don't know much about the EU
@@oliverhardy9464 Mate I'm not trying to be argumentative but the two most important things to any sovereign nation are control of monetary and fiscal policies. EU members have control over neither. The monetary policy (interest rates, etc) is set by the central ECB, the Germans can't print Deutschemarks, the French can't print Francs, etc. The fiscal policies are controlled again by central EU budgetary stipulations.
Apart from fiscal/monetary concerns we also have control over borders and immigration, again, seriously lacking in the EU. Ask Ireland about it
Further then there are legal and regulatory frameworks, all of which are controlled to some degree or another by the EU. Even the UK after having left the EU is still tied up in EU knots
We could also consider military and security services. As it stands, several EU members do have strong independent militaries like France and Poland, but many do not, like Germany, Austria, Netherlands, etc. The future plan, according to Macron, Merkel, Scholz, etc, is to have "more Europe" and to eventually have an EU army. This has been the goal since the start of the European project as stated by Mitterrand and Kohl
So tell me, how is it any EU nation can claim to be independent or sovereign when the greatest assets of any sovereign nation DO NOT BELONG to the individual nations but rather the central Supreme Soviet in Brussels?
I reiterate my point - the EU countries are not sovereign nations, they are member states of the European Union
@@Pax_Veritas That's not really true. States could spend more money if they wanted to. Germany doesn't do it because they currently have something that stops their state dept embedded into their constitution (similar to the US, but they simply increase the limit every few years). They can also adjust their tax systems to their economy if they wanted to. Yes, taxes that effect the economy of other EU countries like a tax for digital tech companies are regulated through EU law. But it's not like that's a thing for all kinds of taxes. That aside the EU law mostly works as a set of guidelines for the national law which means that states can adjust it to their system. Aside from interest rates there isn't much that much that the ECB really dictates. The shared currency is actually a great benefit for most countries because it's not that likely to crash and makes trading between EU countries a lot easier. If all counties would switch back to national currencies it would be a disaster. Even GB which retained it's own currency had huge financial losses due to the Brexit because their financial situation was and still is tied hard to EU countries.
Borders and migration should be a collective effort because we can't let countries that are direct neighbours to non-EU-countries like Italy and Greece handle everything alone. The distribution has to be fair towards countries. The EU is a package deal. You can't just take the benefits. Compromises must be made as well.
And that aside the European parliament doesn't have say over all topics within their member countries. And that aside countries still have the power of veto to block things.
And eventually the regulations that come from the EU aren't all bad. A lot of them ensure consumer safety regarding foods, technical standards, environmental aspects and a lot more. Shared standards make product designs easier because you only need to focus on one set of rules instead of adjusting your product to 40 different countries.
@@oliverhardy9464 OK, Karl
Why the U.K. left 😎
He might as well not be wearing a shirt at this point.
😅 he's projecting
Hilarious 😂
The button game is strong on the lad for Eva lol
Truth!
EU laws are signed into law by parliament of EU and the council of the EU - both being democratically elected!
EU representatives are nominated by their country, and then they're appointed.
@@sully0001 yes the Commissioners are nominated by their democratically elected governments, since the member nations like to hold more power it’s done this way. Still EU parliament must approve Commission by majority vote.
Brexit Nexit 🤷
Irexit🇮🇪
Super corrupt!
Agenda 2030
Full video: ruclips.net/video/WcIQ_A27LqM/видео.html