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Rotterdam police open fire as Covid protest turns into ‘orgy of violence’
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<blockquote data-quote="LightLoveHope" data-source="post: 76369001" data-attributes="member: 413618"><p>You raise an interesting emotional inheritence issue.</p><p>I would say as children we pick up on the emotional balances of our parents and our pier group at school. If over successive generations the governments have been emotionally trusted and delivered, that will be reflected in the cultural sensitivities expressed.</p><p></p><p>I think this is just an emotional measure of emotional turmoil, nothing more.</p><p>The emotional feeling from the US is distrust of government and criticism of any failure real or otherwise.</p><p>When you look at the level of medical regulation in the US compared to europe, the US has 1/3 the level of safety checks, areas that must be done than in Europe. Without these safety checks simply things will fail damaging health, which in turn will generate distrust in officials etc.</p><p></p><p>But I suspect the focus is wrong. It is the lack of safety that is at fault. Which is ironic as to correct this would take more government intervention, which is what the emotional balance is set up to resist.</p><p></p><p>Brexit in the UK shows the absurdity of these feelings. The economic reality is the UK economy needs large parts of Europe working here. Being integrated into the EU has decision issue problems, except almost zero failures of this process could actually be shown to be true. If anything the UK had benefited and blossomed from being part of the EU though slightly at a distance.</p><p></p><p>Now after brexit, nothing has got better, rather everything is more difficult and expensive and UK companies have lost market share as a result. It is amazing this whole process was driven by hatred of foreigners and people living in isolated non-integrated communities. Cities and graduates who knew the more modern world reality voted and saw how things have changed and voted likewise.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LightLoveHope, post: 76369001, member: 413618"] You raise an interesting emotional inheritence issue. I would say as children we pick up on the emotional balances of our parents and our pier group at school. If over successive generations the governments have been emotionally trusted and delivered, that will be reflected in the cultural sensitivities expressed. I think this is just an emotional measure of emotional turmoil, nothing more. The emotional feeling from the US is distrust of government and criticism of any failure real or otherwise. When you look at the level of medical regulation in the US compared to europe, the US has 1/3 the level of safety checks, areas that must be done than in Europe. Without these safety checks simply things will fail damaging health, which in turn will generate distrust in officials etc. But I suspect the focus is wrong. It is the lack of safety that is at fault. Which is ironic as to correct this would take more government intervention, which is what the emotional balance is set up to resist. Brexit in the UK shows the absurdity of these feelings. The economic reality is the UK economy needs large parts of Europe working here. Being integrated into the EU has decision issue problems, except almost zero failures of this process could actually be shown to be true. If anything the UK had benefited and blossomed from being part of the EU though slightly at a distance. Now after brexit, nothing has got better, rather everything is more difficult and expensive and UK companies have lost market share as a result. It is amazing this whole process was driven by hatred of foreigners and people living in isolated non-integrated communities. Cities and graduates who knew the more modern world reality voted and saw how things have changed and voted likewise. [/QUOTE]
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Rotterdam police open fire as Covid protest turns into ‘orgy of violence’
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