I try to understand more about you in what little free time I have, and I get this graph thrown in my face.
https://i.imgur.com/XyrHU.png
Why don't you just admit that you make it difficult on purpose. :on_crying:
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I try to understand more about you in what little free time I have, and I get this graph thrown in my face.
https://i.imgur.com/XyrHU.png
Why don't you just admit that you make it difficult on purpose. :on_crying:
This was the first thing the graph reminded me of:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sj8W5LhvMtQ
It's apparent that European leadership is on the nyborg. :yes:
They are all the different treaties between the European nations.
Eurozone - The Euro single-currency countries.
European Union - Members of the European Union
Schengen Area - The area of free travel between nations that border eachother with lots of border crossing and check point stops.
European Economic Area - Countries who subscribe to being members of Europe economically.
European Free Trade - Free trade agreements of outside EU membership.
Customs Union - Common External Tariff.
Council of Europe - European Meet and Greet of 47 countries.
At a guess:
The European Council is just a miniature UN. Pretty much any country with territory on the European "continent" is invited.
The European Economic Area is a framework for common regulation and trade agreements.
The Schengen Area is the same but for travelers as opposed to goods/services.
The EU Customs Union is just that: to do with tariffs.
The European Union is what you evolve to as European Economic Area member.
The Eurozone is the countries which have adopted the Euro as the national currency and the monetary union.
Agreement with EU to mint Euro's are the city states of San Marino, the Vatican and Monaco which do not have a national currency of their own and use the Euro, but are not Eurozone members.
TA's correct as far as I know.
The Council of Europe is not actually Union related. It's the organisation behind the ECHR.
Other than that, you have the Council of the European Union - the EU government leaders + EU president Von Rompuy.
And there's the European Council, which is somewhat different from the former (since the Lisbon treaty, it was the same institution before that) as it's the ministers of health/finance/justice/whatever of the different member states, depending on the issue being discussed.
And there's the EP, a few EU depts, and then you have various smaller agreements and frameworks like the Benelux...
Graphs like that kinda makes you wish WW2 would have ended differently. Europe would be a lot easier to understand then, wouldn't it..
No, not in the world of today.
I prefer a multitude of individual nations loosely attached with very different monetary ideas, than the super power world with a world bank we are building as we speak.
I was being sarcastic with my comment, sure. But that is because I wanted to highlight the reasoning behind the European power map looking the way it does. It might, just MIGHT, be better that way.