bigvlada Posted February 16, 2016 Posted February 16, 2016 EU lifts most sanctions against Belarus despite human rights concerns 4/10, loši mu brkovi.
dig_chohano Posted February 16, 2016 Posted February 16, 2016 Kad će ova bagra sa ostrva da bude išćerana iz EU? Gledam vesti na BBC1 i mlazno mi se sere od njih.
Prospero Posted February 19, 2016 Posted February 19, 2016 The cartoon takes on the week’s news. First published on Caglecartoons.com, The Netherlands, February 18, 2016. | By Tom Janssen. First published in Der Standard, Austria, February 18, 2016. | By Oliver Schopf. “I come full of good intentions.” Drawn for POLITICO.eu and L’Vif L’Express. | By Nicolas Vadot. “And as the girl stood there alone in her nightgown, no star fell from the sky. It was just very very cold.” First published in Bonner Generalanzeiger, Germany, February 17, 2016. | By Heiko Sakurai. “Ukraine.” (L-R) Yatsenyuk, Poroshenko. “Get out! I don’t trust you anymore.” Drawn for POLITICO.eu. | By Rytis Daukantas. First published in Jyllands Posten, Denmark, February 5, 2016. | By Niels Bo Bojesen. “Mariano Rajoy and Pedro Sánchez.” First published in La Vanguardia, Spain, February 12, 2016. | By Kap.
Prospero Posted February 19, 2016 Posted February 19, 2016 “Portugal’s Finance Minister Mário Centeno.” Drawn for POLITICO.eu. | By Vasco Gargalo. First published in Kleine Zeitung, Austria, February 12, 2016. | By Petar Pismestrovic. First published on Caglecartoons.com, Greece, February 11, 2016. | By Michael Kountouris. First published on Caglecartoons.com, Bulgaria, February 18, 2016. By Christo Komarnitski. First published on Caglecartoons.com, The Netherlands, February 17, 2016. | By Joep Bertrams. First published on Caglecartoons.com, U.S., February 11, 2016. | By Daryl Cagle. First published in De Volkskrant, the Netherlands, February 11, 2016. | By Schot. First published in The Columbus Dispatch, U.S., February 15, 2016. | By Nate Beeler. First published on Caglecartoons.com, U.S., February 17, 2016. | By Bill Day.
Eraserhead Posted February 28, 2016 Posted February 28, 2016 Na protestu PEGIDe divljenje putinu: http://m.dw.com/en/in-dresden-russian-flags-of-protest-against-islam-and-merkel/a-18865803 Recite koliko jos treba da se pretvaramo da je svaki fasisticki sljam slucajno zaljubljen u ovog mafijasa.
Lezilebovich Posted February 28, 2016 Posted February 28, 2016 Ok, vole Putina... I sta sad ? Zar nije daleko problematicnije sto u Nemackoj ima toliko fasista od toga sto ti fasisti vole Putina ?
frn1782 Posted February 28, 2016 Posted February 28, 2016 Putin ih finansira to je hteo da kaze. Preko desnicara Putler rusi evro san.
dillinger Posted February 29, 2016 Posted February 29, 2016 Na protestu PEGIDe divljenje putinu: http://m.dw.com/en/in-dresden-russian-flags-of-protest-against-islam-and-merkel/a-18865803 Recite koliko jos treba da se pretvaramo da je svaki fasisticki sljam slucajno zaljubljen u ovog mafijasa. Dok ga Bataljon Azov ne zavoli.
Eraserhead Posted February 29, 2016 Posted February 29, 2016 Dok ga Bataljon Azov ne zavoli. Prokletstvo malih razlika
Prospero Posted February 29, 2016 Posted February 29, 2016 February 28, 2016 12:01 pm Europe enters the age of disintegration Wolfgang Münchau There will not necessarily be a formal break-up of the EU, but it will become less effective ©Getty T here is now a real possibility that the EU system for border and immigration controls will break down in about 10 days. On March 7, EU leaders will hold a summit in Brussels with Ahmet Davutoglu, the Turkish prime minister. The idea is to persuade Ankara to do what Greece failed to do: protect the EU’s south-eastern border and halt the flow of immigrants. There is a lot of behind-the-scenes diplomacy going on between Germany and Turkey. The mood in Berlin, however, is not good. The action taken by Austria, Hungary and other countries to protect their national borders has shut the western Balkan route along which migrants had made their way to Germany. Refugees now find themselves trapped in Greece. Some may leave for Italy by boat. When those who survive the journey arrive there, I would expect Slovenia, Switzerland and France to close their borders. At that point, we should no longer assume that the European Council of heads of government is a functioning political body. A refugee crisis that spins out of control could tilt the vote in the British referendum. There is no way the EU will be able to deal with two simultaneous shocks of such size. Coming at a time like this, Brexit has the potential to destroy the EU. I do not expect such a doomsday scenario, but it is not implausible either. The EU is about to face one of the most difficult moments in its history. Member states have lost the will to find joint solutions for problems that they could solve at the level of the EU but not on their own. The EU’s population of more than 500m can easily absorb 1m refugees a year. No member state can do this alone, even Germany. The tendency towards national solutions is particularly pronounced in central and eastern Europe. Austria convened a western Balkan conference last week in support of its policies to restrict the number of refugees. Viktor Orban, Hungary’s prime minister, is holding a referendum to pre-empt a refugee quota-sharing agreement put forward by Brussels and Berlin. The Hungarians will surely support him. Ms Merkel must take much of the blame. Her open-door policy was anti-European in that she unilaterally imposed it on her own country and on the rest of Europe. She consulted only Austrian chancellor Werner Faymann. The EU is at risk of four fractures. I do not expect all of them to happen but I would be surprised if none did. The first is a north-south break-up over refugees. The so-called Schengen system of passport-free travel, in which 26 European countries take part, could be suspended indefinitely or become a miniature version comprising just Germany, France and the Benelux countries. Italy would not be part of it. A second north-south faultline is the euro. Nothing has changed here. Echoes of the eurozone crisis linger on and the Greek position is as unsustainable today as it was last summer. The third is an east-west divide. Will the open societies of western Europe want to be tied into an ever-closer union with the likes of Mr Orban or the other nationalists in central or eastern Europe? Finally, there is Brexit. There is no way of knowing the outcome of the British referendum. The opinion polls are as useless as they were during last year’s general election. More importantly, the debate has yet to start in earnest. Events will intrude; new facts or lies will emerge. A British vote to leave the EU may trigger referendums in Sweden or Denmark, adding further uncertainty. A refugee crisis spinning out of control is ultimately more dangerous for the EU’s future than a fragmenting euro. What makes the refugee crisis politically more fraught is that this time France and Germany are at opposite ends of the argument. At the Munich Security Conference earlier this month, I was not surprised to hear Manuel Valls, French prime minister, reaffirming his opposition to additional refugee quotas, but I was surprised to hear him criticise Ms Merkel directly. It was not France that invited the refugees, he said. The political impasse over migrants tells us that the EU’s open borders are inconsistent with national sovereignty over immigration. The member states will have to choose. They will choose sovereignty. After nearly 60 years of European integration, we are entering the age of disintegration. It will not necessarily lead to a formal break-up of the EU — this is extremely unlikely — but it will make the EU less effective. What is certain is that the refugee crisis adds a further layer of complexity to the British debate. It is not clear what kind of EU the British people are being asked to remain in, or to leave. Danger lies ahead. [email protected]
Budja Posted February 29, 2016 Posted February 29, 2016 Dobar clanak. Dok se seve nesuglasice EU-Britain mogu ispeglati, simulirati, medijski spinovati tako da Britanija ostane u EU, izbeglicka kriza je varijabla koja tome ne podleze: 1. Em nije jasno kako ce se razvijati do juna. 2. Em u EU ne postoji konsensus kako da se kriza barem zajednicki spinuje.
frn1782 Posted February 29, 2016 Posted February 29, 2016 Ako im je spinovanje i imidz glavni problem onda su ga ugasili. Problem je, kako se meni cini, sto ekonomska batina Nemacke u ovom slucaju ne moze da natera clanice da se prime kvota za "opste dobro".
ravena Posted March 10, 2016 Posted March 10, 2016 ne znam da li je bilo. u Slovackoj odrzani parlamentarni izbori. u parlament uslo 8 stranaka, sa takvim sarenilom, da ce biti jako tesko sastaviti vladu. vladajuci Smer i premijer Fico dobili su znatno manje nego sto su se nadali, 28,28% i 49 mandata. (76 potrebno za vecinu). opozicione partije ukupno su skupile 35% i 61 mandat. ostatak su dobile ultranacionalna SNS (Slovacka narodna stranka) - 15, Kotleba - L'SNS - 14 (neonacisticka partija koja se smatra naslednicom stare Slovacke narodne stranke) i Mi smo porodica - 11 (pokret jednog bogatog populiste). ovako izgleda vodja L'SNS. pri pravljenju vecine, sve stranke su odbacile saradnju sa Kotlebom, pa on i drugari nisu ni pozvani na razgovore. sad i SNS izgleda kao umerena partija.
Tribun_Populi Posted March 13, 2016 Posted March 13, 2016 Big Brother is coming. Barack Obama will jet into the UK next month and use his star power to convince Britons they should vote to stay in the European Union. The timing of the US President’s intervention, a major coup for the Remain campaign, is revealed by The Independent on Sunday, as a ComRes poll for this newspaper finds that Boris Johnson, unofficial leader of the Leave campaign, matches David Cameron on “trust” – suggesting that the referendum could be closely fought. Asked which of the two they trust more to do what is best for Britain, 35 per cent say Mr Cameron and 34 per cent Mr Johnson. "L" is for leave.
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