
Originally Posted by
Smuggo

Originally Posted by
Bartholomeus Crane

Originally Posted by
Smuggo

Originally Posted by
Bartholomeus Crane
Yes, I know Denmark doesn't have the Euro, but it is financially and economically so closely tied to Germany that even though they don't have the currency, any effect on the Euro will translate almost directly to the DDK anyway. So we can just as well lump it in with the rest of those 'core' EU countries I mentioned. (Basically the same situation with the pre-Euro DM and the Dutch Gulden).
Sweden, the UK and Switzerland are also closely tied to the eurozone but you're not suggesting they're a part of it.
Sweden, the UK, and Switzerland are nowhere near as closely tied to the eurozone as Denmark. Suggesting as much is one same level as suggesting the US is as closely tied to the eurozone as Denmark. It is basically on the same level as your earlier statement that the EU ultimate goal is to bring about a united states of Europe. Which is to say: pretty much retarded ...
You what? The majority of UK trade goes to eurozone countries and many of our companies have subsidiaries there, same for Sweden and Switzerland, so how are they not affected? And no it's nothing like saying the US is that closely tied to the Eurozone.
And given that the EU has, over the years, created single currency and central bank, unified its workforce, reduced barriers to cross-border trade, introduced regulation is a vast array of fields, created an effective head of state and a quasi-foreign minister. It has done this by continuously persuading member states to give up bits of their sovereignty and the EC is now suggesting, once again, that giving it a bit more can sort out this current problem (and most likely it can resolve the issue if it's agreed). I don't really see how it's retarded to say that the EU is moving towards greater and greater integration that might one day result in it become a large federal state. It's not exactly a new theory Bart and there's plenty of evidence to indicate this is the direction in which the EU is moving.
I see your rewriting this into "the UK will be unaffected", which is not even close to what I said. That's your strawman argument, so I wish you good luck in demolishing it.
My point is that because of its closeness to Germany you can just as well lump in Denmark (without the Euro) into the 'rump' Eurozone you'll be left with if/when the PIIGS fall out of the Eurozone. There's simply no need to set them apart to the same degree as you would the UK.
And no, the 'aim' of the EU was never to create a 'united state of Europe', nor was it to become a 'large federal state', as you now put it. Most of the things you mention, just as most of the policies from the EU are focussed on greater collaboration between the different sovereign member states, mostly for economic and financial gains. The creation of a supranational government with sovereignty over the member states was, is, and never will be on the books for the EU, there's no one who'd ever accept such a radical (and doomed) direction or policy (and there was never a big conspiracy to bring it about through the backdoor neither).
It doesn't matter how you rewrite, rephrase, backpedal or obfuscate: the notion that the integration within the EU was all along aimed at the creation of a united state of Europe is simple wrong (if not downright retarded).
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