^ That's exactly how the EU started.![]()
And they wonder why it's falling apart just about as quickly...
^ That's exactly how the EU started.![]()
^ That's exactly how the EU started.![]()
And they wonder why it's falling apart just about as quickly...
^ That's exactly how the EU started.![]()
And they wonder why it's falling apart just about as quickly...
I'm so glad to hear some news about this novel . Christopher thank you so much for posting this news.If I remember correctly, the one this year is book 2 of a planned 4, but I could be wrong.
In fact, Mike Martin announced on Facebook yesterday that The Romulan War: To Brave the Storm is "the novel that encompasses the war's end." He also said, in a reply to someone else's status, that "It'll take you all the to the end of the war and beyond, with no cliffhanger this time."
^ <cough> democratic deficit <cough>
^ That's exactly how the EU started.![]()
And they wonder why it's falling apart just about as quickly...
Source?
Apart from a few economic issues that is also affecting the rest of the globe and began somewhere West of Europe and the normal infighting and disagreements, Europe is far from falling apart.![]()
^ That's exactly how the EU started.![]()
And they wonder why it's falling apart just about as quickly...
Maybe the Federation's famous lack of currency is to avoid the problems currently suffered by the Euro?![]()
I'm so glad to hear some news about this novel . Christopher thank you so much for posting this news.I can't wait to find out what happens on Vulcan after the cliffhanger in the last book and see how the story is continued in the book. I definitely the Founding of the Federation deserves it's own book too.
And they wonder why it's falling apart just about as quickly...
Source?
Apart from a few economic issues that is also affecting the rest of the globe and began somewhere West of Europe and the normal infighting and disagreements, Europe is far from falling apart.![]()
Well, not yet, anyway. But the European Union is certainly entering a very difficult phase right now. Greece is being forced by Germany and France, through the E.U., to adopt widely-despised austerity measures that the Greek populace as a whole opposes, and meanwhile, the Germans are resenting the hell out of the idea that they're expected the rescue the Greeks from their governments' bad decisions. And there are a lot of economists who think it's all for naught and that Greece will default on its loans and drag down Germany's, and, therefore, the rest of Europe's, economy with it. There's a very real question as to whether or not Greece will remain in the Eurozone, and whether the Eurozone itself will survive this crisis. And if the Eurozone does not, the continued viability of the European Union becomes an open question.
What we're seeing, in other words, is the inevitable result of countries joining a monetary union but not a fiscal union. It took the United States's states almost a hundred years and a civil war before they finally started to accept the idea that they were all in this together and had to stop being foreigners to one-another. It will be interesting to see if the European Union is able to survive -- or, if it does, if it ends up in a much-weakened form instead of becoming the super-state it was seemingly evolving into.
Source?
Apart from a few economic issues that is also affecting the rest of the globe and began somewhere West of Europe and the normal infighting and disagreements, Europe is far from falling apart.![]()
Well, not yet, anyway. But the European Union is certainly entering a very difficult phase right now. Greece is being forced by Germany and France, through the E.U., to adopt widely-despised austerity measures that the Greek populace as a whole opposes, and meanwhile, the Germans are resenting the hell out of the idea that they're expected the rescue the Greeks from their governments' bad decisions. And there are a lot of economists who think it's all for naught and that Greece will default on its loans and drag down Germany's, and, therefore, the rest of Europe's, economy with it. There's a very real question as to whether or not Greece will remain in the Eurozone, and whether the Eurozone itself will survive this crisis. And if the Eurozone does not, the continued viability of the European Union becomes an open question.
What we're seeing, in other words, is the inevitable result of countries joining a monetary union but not a fiscal union. It took the United States's states almost a hundred years and a civil war before they finally started to accept the idea that they were all in this together and had to stop being foreigners to one-another. It will be interesting to see if the European Union is able to survive -- or, if it does, if it ends up in a much-weakened form instead of becoming the super-state it was seemingly evolving into.
Being that I live in the EU and I follow the news and events of it, I am fully aware of all that.
You have some good points and we can always count on you to regurgitate a wiki post on a subject.![]()
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