• bipedalsheep@programming.dev
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    17 hours ago

    I dunno. We like being able to make our own decisions and self-govern. I’d be surprised if the majority voted in favor of joining the EU even now. As the article states, yeah it seems the common citizen want to distance themselves from the US now, but we live a pretty good life already and there are many unknowns regarding what joining the EU will mean for us in the long term. I don’t wanna join the EU just to spite the US, however tempting that is right now. Though I believe signaling the middle finger to the US government is important, – I will do it in other ways in the short term at least. I have started moving all personal products and services out of US companies and into the EU etc.

  • Wanpieserino@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    Come over here ya lil cunts, join the family

    We’ll basically show our worth for Norway and Switzerland based on how the EU handles Trump

    • Distractor@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      A big issue with Switzerland is that the EU lacks direct democracy i.e. the ability for the people to force a vote.

      It’s actually pretty awesome. I mean sometimes they end up forcing a vote on stupid things but generally it’s a safeguard that allows the people to block legal changes. So a situation like the Trump tariffs couldn’t happen in Switzerland if the majority of the population objected.

      Personally, I think the EU would be a stronger democracy if they added it, and the odds of Switzerland joining would increase substantially.

      • Baŝto@discuss.tchncs.de
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        18 hours ago

        The most direct tools the EU has is an European Citizens’ Initiative. With that citizens can directly propose a directive or regulation to the European Commission. If that goes well, citizens will meet EU officials, have a public hearing at the European Parliament to explain their initiative. Within half a year the commission has to reply, but they always can reject the proposal. It requires 1 million valid signatures and they have to be from at minimum 7 EU countries. That’s 0.2% of the voters and 25% of the member states.

        That indeed differs from how a popular initiative in Switzerland works. The % of needed signatures is 5 times higher, but if it gets rejected a popular vote would follow. That kind of vote would be hard to transform into EU rules. For this Swiss popular vote a majority of given votes has to be yes, but additionally there has to be a majority in the majority of the Kantons. Switzerland already has some population differences between their Kantons, Jura has less than half the population of Zürich. In EU that is a lot more extreme, Germany has 158 times the population of Malta. In EU half of the members would be 14 countries and the smallest 14 countries only represent 11.5% of the total population.

        EU doesn’t even have a uniform voting system. The elections to the European Parliament already are distorted because the value of a single vote depends on the size country it’s from. Generally it’s proportional voting, but the details differ by country and that includes whether they use open lists, semi-open lists or closed lists and they use different formulas to allocate the seats. In regard to the voting rules that is probably the most diverse vote in the world. Some countries split themselves further into parts, so different regions vote for only a part of their seats. Active (16-18) and passive (18-25) voting ages differ. Belgium has compulsory voting. When you reside in a different country you can either vote their or in your home country. Since the voting age differs, that means some can vote earlier than other citizens from their country. They don’t even vote on the same day, a few vote for longer than just one day. Availability and form of absentee voting differs. Some countries have compulsory voting. A few countries vote with single tranferable vote, some do panachage, but most do open lists.

    • albert180@piefed.social
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      18 hours ago

      No, please no.

      Switzerland is the last country in Europe which has really good working public transport system.

      Stupid EU Rules (for the sInGlE rAiL mArKeT nobody asked for) mandate that you have to tender everything out starting 2031 that you subsidize with tax money. We have that in Germany, and it fucking sucks quality wise, and takes you every bit of flexibility

  • tuntreet@feddit.org
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    1 day ago

    Norway doesn’t want to close down rural agriculture as Sweden has done in northern Sweden. Neither does Norway want to hand over its fishing areas to EU.

      • originaltnavn@lemm.ee
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        21 hours ago

        The climate here is not economically competitive, we have fairly large toll walls and subsidies to protect local farmers. In a completely free market, most food production would be outcompeted by foreign goods. This does of course make food much more expensive for us than strictly needed, but it also gives a safe supply.

        • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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          14 hours ago

          Food prices are ridiculous in Norway. While I can agree with the need to subsidise local food production, grocery bills really need to shrink.

  • David@piefed.social
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    1 day ago

    Come on, Norway, join us.
    We all know you always refused to join just to spite Sweden, but we live in different times now.

    • MoonlightFox@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Some of us really want to. Hopefully some politicians put it on the agenda, so the discussions of a new vote can begin.

      I do however think it’s good to have a little period for people to consider and publicly discuss it first, I think the majority is still negative or unsure. So it might be a couple of years

      • Valmond@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        You’d want to avoid the populist approach post joining that everything, including your lover left, is the EUs fault. So leavelheaded discussions beforehand is a good thing IMO.

        Swede living in France :-) not trying to stall at all ;-)

      • jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 day ago

        Since they are already in the EEA, not directly. The main benefit in that front is that they would get a vote in the rules they already need to follow.

        But the EU is not just economy.

        • uienia@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Norwegian consumers still have to pay tariff handling fees and VAT when buying stuff from the EU, making EU imports more expensive and a general hassle. That would go away.

          • jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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            18 hours ago

            Everyone pays VAT that’s the point of VAT. You might get away with paying a lower VAT if you buy something from a small store in another country but you are always suppose to pay the VAT of the country where you live - for example if you buy something from a German online store in Portugal you are supposed to pay the 23% rate to the Portuguese government not the 19% rate to the German government, and big online stores will do it for you automatically.