Oh, remember my local Tory MP said Britain needs to start reversing Brexit by (re)joining the EEA? He’a just got kicked out of the party conveniently while he’d been sent to visit the president of Moldova.
I wonder how that stacks up to membership of the other parties. I could see the UK just being full of officially-nonpartisan people. In the US, you have to belong to a party to vote in most states' primaries (Ohio being one of the exceptions), so there's incentive to sign up just to participate in the democratic process.Yeah. Was a bit weird. I guess it’s reinforcing the idea that the Tory party = British state in some way. Apparently less than 200,000 people are Tory party members, which is a small proportion of a country with seventy million people in it…
IIRC, the Labour Party has more registered members, but that’s more to do with Labour membership being given to people who join affiliated trade unions.I wonder how that stacks up to membership of the other parties. I could see the UK just being full of officially-nonpartisan people. In the US, you have to belong to a party to vote in most states' primaries (Ohio being one of the exceptions), so there's incentive to sign up just to participate in the democratic process.
Brexiteers actually told us that Brexit would only stop people coming in, and wouldn’t affect British people going out.Wait, you mean leaving the EU means... no longer being a member of the EU?
I'm reminded of what I thought at the time to be just a hyperbole meme - that English vacationers in Spain were complaining that everyone was speaking Spanish.Brexiteers actually told us that Brexit would only stop people coming in, and wouldn’t affect British people going out.
Pretty sure those were the British retirees.I'm reminded of what I thought at the time to be just a hyperbole meme - that English vacationers in Spain were complaining that everyone was speaking Spanish.
Retirees and working-age tourists both do that – it’s basically the default British behaviour when travelling to, or living in, non-English speaking countries.Pretty sure those were the British retirees.
North american unions USED to be very good, and very needed. Between years of corruption, fat living and the endless propaganda from the rich: unions are generally viewed at large as either bad for workers, or generally useless. It IS changing again, and attitudes are swinging back the other way, but it's hard to live through a poison pill.As a (German) union member, I wholeheartedly disagree. I'd argue that you simply have shitty unions.
Still, unions are not just a "necessary evil". They're necessary, and at least here in Germany, they offer additional benefits for their members, with one of the most important ones being legal protection (which is covered by the standard membership fee).
Eh, I'd argue the same applies in Germany.Police Unions are a living strawman of every bad stereotype about Unions.
Unions are ridiculously better in Germany by all accounts, in terms of what they offer as benefits of membership and being better organised…As a (German) union member, I wholeheartedly disagree. I'd argue that you simply have shitty unions.
Still, unions are not just a "necessary evil". They're necessary, and at least here in Germany, they offer additional benefits for their members, with one of the most important ones being legal protection (which is covered by the standard membership fee).