Return Styles: Pseud0ch, Terminal, Valhalla, NES, Geocities, Blue Moon.

Pages: 1-

ITT: we post why we love/hate europe

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-22 13:27

Love: Socialism is really good
Hate: Unfriendly douchebags, superiority complex, spoiled brats everywhere, europeans aren't very tolerant, no room to do anything, everything is packed

America has nice friendly people and a lot of room and nice weather. What is the fastest way to emigrate to the states? I hate England. England sucks and people that don't think so have that superior complex I talked about.

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-22 13:31

>>1
lol /g/ kopipe.

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-22 13:39

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-22 13:44

Laugh all you want. You wish you had the sophistication, education and heritage of a true Englishman.

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-22 13:51

English sophistication:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqyU2z-FJr8

lol!

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-22 14:04

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-22 18:32

Love: The history of Europe. Its old historic towns filled with half timber frame buildings, culture, etc.

Hate: They seem content in the liberty destroying supranational state that is forming right beneath their noses.

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-22 22:56

I like how the Brits are more understanding of people but Canadians are very childish and like to poke fun of people that are different and are the first to tell you you made a mistake in whatever you are doing like they are  excited to be the first one to expose you.

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-23 0:34

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-23 2:25

>>7
They seem content in the liberty destroying supranational state that is forming right beneath their noses.
The European unification? What's wrong with that?
There's a USA, why not a unified Europe? It's not like western European states are vastly different.

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-23 9:49

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-23 10:25

>>10
It seems that it will have enormous negative implications. It will slowly erode the power that the national parliaments have and some of those in Brussels are just simply appointed and not elected by the people and nations they're suppose to represent.

As for the USA, it was agreed upon by the thirteen original colonies to create a federal government, though we had some anti-federalists who criticized a formation of a federal government. Most of our Founding Fathers were against a strong, big central government, except for Alexander Hamilton and possibly one other individual.

One idea that has drifted away as our republic has aged is the idea of state sovereignty which has eroded over time to the point of almost near non existence. While not countries by themselves, they're suppose to be sovereign entities and the federal government is only suppose to step into individual state matters if they enact laws that infringe on the liberty of people in that particular state. But these days the federal government does much more than that. It forces states to do things and continues to regulate the lives of people to the point where you can't even do anything.

I feel something similar will happen with Europe, but on a much wider and larger scale. The potential for abuse of so much power in the hands of a few bureaucrats is frightening.

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-23 11:47

*grabs dick*

Name: Anonymous 2010-01-23 11:56

love

Don't change these.
Name: Email:
Entire Thread Thread List