NickRW, on 2015-May-13, 05:32, said:
It is about a sense of identity.
Yeah I think that sums up most of it. There are, of course, practical considerations also, one could for example be in favour of retaining the Belgian federation for practical reasons even if one "feels" Flemmish or Valonian and not Belgian. But I think the practical issues are too complex for most (if not all) people to understand, never mind weighing the pros and cons.
Personally I "feel" very much European. It wouldn't occur to me to take into consideration whether the EU is a good thing for a particular member state because I don't identify with any member state in particular. I may be inclined to favour policies that are good for mathematicians, bridge players, cat owners or homosexuals, or just for me personally, but really that is a silly selfish attitude to politics which I would like to think I manage to stay above, most of the time at least. I am sure it would be beneficial for rich regions such as London, Baden-Wurttemberg and Catalonia to withdraw from UK/Germany/Spain and/or from the EU but I would prefer the decisions to be made on the basis of what is best for the common good.
Yesterday, I made a back-of-the-envelop calculations for the sensitivity of a proposed pondwater DNA test meant to detect crested newts on lands where a building permisson that could threaten the animals is pending. I came out at 85%. A colleague said that 85% would be good enough for the regulators. I joked that with the new UK government we might get away with 50%. "Oh but the regulators are in Brussels". At first it astonished me that such a thing which obviously ought to be optimized to local environmental conditions is centralized at that level. One could argue whether the optimal decision level would be the village council or the county council, in any case London would be mildly crazy and Brussels sounds like a bad joke.
But thinking more about it I can sorta understand. Vendors of the technology, such as the organization I work for, prefer to work towards European quality norms so that we can sell the same product everywhere. So of course our lobbyist in Brussels fight for getting those things centralized.
But my feelings about such things are mixed. On paper it sounds great to have everything centralized and benefit from the economy of scale. But we all know that the economy of scale doesn't work. Large organizations, whether public or private, work like a Dilbert cartoon or "Yes, minister!". Your local, independent bank is much more efficient than the international colossums. Of all the governments that control your life, probably the village council is the most efficient one and the UN the least efficient one.
There is something else: By pooling all our DNA test expertise in Bruseels we can make more qualified decisions than if each village council had to make their own policies based on the opinion of local amateur experts. But the consequence of this is that the experts in Brussels don't have to communicate in a way that is understandable for village council politicians, never mind for ordinary citizens. So centralization erodes democracy.
I used to favour centralization for the very oportunistic reason that the EU aparatus in general, and the EP in particular, happened to be more aligned with my personal political preferences than most national governments. Since the latest EP election, where the EP was filled up with xenophobic populist morons, I might will reverse that attitude.
But to be honest I will probably always support Brussels regardless of their policies. Because I just hate nation states.
The world would be such a happy place, if only everyone played Acol :) --- TramTicket