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Joined 13 days ago
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Cake day: June 6th, 2026

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  • Jiral@lemmy.worldtoYUROP@feddit.orgTrue neighbors
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    35 minutes ago

    He does sing the whole song in what I assume is a noticeable Czech German accent. This accent has pretty much vanished from Vienna’s streets I think. Those families who used to be called “Behm” are now the true Viennese and they are calling now people with Serbo-Croatian accents names … ok, that’s a generalisation but the irony is there nonetheless.



  • Jiral@lemmy.worldtoYUROP@feddit.orgTrue neighbors
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    15 hours ago

    I do agree. The monarchy is back long enough that it is fading into the background. However, in Bratislava they are larping Habsburger coronations every year, but Slovaks are different in some ways ;)

    jk I have never experienced a problem getting around in Czechia but I have been mostly in Moravia close to the border or in cities like Brno or Praha. Young people can usually speak English well enough to make themselves understood on both sides of the border I think but maybe that’s my bubble.


  • Jiral@lemmy.worldtoYUROP@feddit.orgTrue neighbors
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    16 hours ago

    Not that anyone cares but I think Austrians view Czechs the same way that Czechs view themselves in that image. I don’t know how it is the other way round, if they hate Austrians for the counter reformation, the monarchy, Nazis or all of the above.

    Hey, but we all love powidl, don’t we?




  • I am talking about Austria because to compare it with other parliamentary democracies it helps to chose one concrete example, you can chose another one if you like. How about Germany, the largest member state. There Parliament’s position in this regard is actually weaker than in Austria.

    I have no idea where you are coming from but you seem to lack knowledge how parliamentary democracies work if you hold the completely outlandish view that they are on the same level as the Chinese system in terms of democracy.

    Back to the EU Commission. Its election is obviously a system where both, the Council / member states and the EP hold power. (“election” is the word in the treaties btw) This is by design. Power is not centralised. It is common in parliamentary democracies that parliaments elect/consent on members of the government but don’t choose them. However government with members that are not to the liking of a majority in Parliament won’t be elected/voted into power. The same is the case in the EU and there is precedent for that as well. The vote on VdL yielded a paper thin majority im the EP and only because VdL was giving the EP concessions in return. If the EP targets candidates as not acceptable they will not make it into the Commission. Again, there is precedent for that.

    If that sounds like Chinese “democracy” to you, half the democracies (ie all parliamentary democracies) on earth are in reality a Chinese style “democracy”. Seriously?


  • Mistral has recently shown a good trajectory of improvement. It is already an important thing that there is a European mid range open weight model that can compete. (Frontier models need a lot more resources, it is important to compare apples with apples) This is good enough for many applications were data security and sovereignity are prime concerns. Of course, it would be good to have a frontier model, lets see how Large 4 will perform when we get there.


  • The EU commission is elected by the directly elected European Parliament based on suggestions by the Council/member states. The Commission can be voted out of office anytime when it loses support in the European Parliament.

    The Austrian government is elected by Parliament based on suggestions by the Chancelor candidate (the latter chosen by the President). The parliament can vote the government out of office anytime.

    According to you the one thing is utterly undemocratic while the other is not. ok.

    The EU Commission is not the EU, but it is its executive and administration. I f you just kill that, you let everthing derail. Bureaucracy is a dirty word but there without it political entities implode.




  • “Materially speaking is more expensive to send a letter next town than a packet from something like aliexpress.”

    That is wrong, in many cases quite obviously. Microdeliveries are commonly sent as letters within Europe. So they are literally a letter(coming commonly from another European country) + a consolidated flight freight from the other side of the globe. The last leg alone creates more costs than the entire product plus shipment is purchased for.

    Sorry, but if you think this can be done for 0-1 EUR (the latter if we assume the 1 EUR product is worth exactly 0 EUR) I can’t help you.

    Of course this change will incentivise larger but fewer orders. If the platforms would care about that, 1 EUR products with free shipping wouldn’t even exist. They aren’t stupid or incompetent. If there is economic incentive for that, they’ll do it. Removing the advantage of <150 EUR orders, removes the incentives for smaller more frequent orders. This will do a lot to remove a lot of stress from logistic infrastructure, even if total amount of stuff bought in China remains the same. That’s the point. That and systematic mislabeling of shipments that lose their incentive to some extend as well.





  • It is madness to ship a 1 EUR order on its own across the globe, at zero extra costs. Are you seriously saying that this is not only a viable business model but also one that people should be entitled to? For this money you can’t even send an empty letter to the next village in a cost covering way. Every such mini order shipping is heavily cross subsidised by shipments of goods with the EU.

    You just strengthen the point that we need an end to tariff exemption under 150 EUR. Contrary to your claim this will not end direct sales from China, it will merely make it less costly and inefficient to our society by incentivising more aggregated orders.

    Magical drones aren’t a solution either (to the contrary mass deployment of drones is a nightmare)


  • It seems your beef is with democracy itself rather than the EU. Which party publishes an exhaustive detailed list of all coming laws with specific outlines for the coming legislative period, and of course predicting future coalition negotiations. You don’t see that your requirements are completely unworkable in reality, not just in the EU, anywhere, are you?

    Party programs are simplifications out of necessity and they focus on specific topics, depending on the party. That focus itself is a strong reason why to vote for them. Those few Euros of tariffs on orders from China was indeed not a big topic. Immigration, Russia, defense and Integration were big topics, understandably.

    3 EUR is not cutting off anyone from anything, especially as that is barely compensating the dumping prices on shipping. Or do you believe that 0 EUR shipping on a 2 EUR order is covering the actual shipping costs? Like I said, that shipping dumping is possible because of anachronistic international agreements that were never intended for what they are used now.

    I know some don’t care at all about the environment or costs to society. That avalanche of tiny packages is a huge strain on our infrastructure and driven by unsustainably low shipping rates. That legislation will have a positive effect by incentivicing more consolidated ordering and shipping at prices closer to real costs.

    Like I said, I am ordering myself in China and I support that. Chinese platforms will adopt fast when it is about money. So the positive effects will be seen soon. Maybe you don’t think as far but that shipping dumping is paid largely by us. At least everyone who is still ordering stuff also within the EU or paying taxes here for infrastructure.