@FreeWayCS@GeneralMCNews When he stops supplying huthi rebels,friends with Iranian regime, prev. Syria's Bashar. Your next argument is that he can't because of Russia having the largest muslim population on European continent after Turkey and recognizes it as tradtional relgion of RU by law, subsidizes?
@kees_k56958@Basebollligan@itswpceo Yeah connected via the web abd either using vpn or temporary in NL with a dutch profile name.I know NL is net contributor, I'm born Dutch, lived there for 42 years except for a few break years and relocated 5km into BE 7 years ago. So i also know that country with ramping up debt
@clashreport Even though it doesn't work that way, still fun to look at:
RU gdp 2.66 trillion x 83.6% ("undebted") = 2.22 trillion
EU gdp 23 trillion x 18.3% = 4.21 trillion so still even double that of that Russia. The only thing Russia is big at is empty land mass and nukes.
@head99691@clashreport That's for the whole zone,eg there are ones below it and above it,for example Denmark 27.9, Estonia 24.1, Italy 137.1, Greece 146.1 my country of citizenship (NL) is also only 44.4 despite being net contributor to EU.There are leaders who understand, and others can't make it work
@kees_k56958@Basebollligan@itswpceo And more recently thanks to his orange partner in crime in the white house lifting sanctions on oil after causing a global oil price hike so that Vlad can make an extra penny.
@kees_k56958@Basebollligan@itswpceo The inflation of the EU is only about half of that of Russia. And keep in mind the only reason Russia's economy is still worth something is due to war time economy. Eg. thanks to your weapons production, ironically bought by its own government to immediately blow in Ukraine.
@OstapYarysh Ukraine keeps increasing the number of cards it has in its hand. Russia has several crises going on decreasing the support for the war. And Putin was made to look like a complete fool with the attack on St. Petersburg during his own "davos" conference, he can't even peotect that.
@erikfinman@hswift@RyanZinke She's sarcastic. But also it's about priorities, he keeps bragging about this and his ballroom endlessly when there's much bigger fish to fry and your national debt is already 120+% of gdp, over 1/3 of it added by Trump.
@Ravenismeee Most definitely, but only if i can set the order of countries. Ideally i want to have at least visited every country in the world, but still banana republics like the US are near the bottom of my bucket list.
@jnieto369@Capitalism4Me@rittenhouse2a I guess you replied to the wrong? I couldn't care less how the US handles its internal processes i just added to what was listed regarding voter ID requirements in the EU in the screenshot. Universal hc would require more money printing, your national debt is already 120+% of gdp
@Capitalism4Me@rittenhouse2a In addition to what's mentioned there, in most EU countries you need a voter card serial number, distributed to full citizens only, based on the registry. When going to vote they x-check in the system both that and the ID. Here in BE they even keep your ID until finished voting.
@conspiracyb0t That specific to the US? Here in EU it goes up and down all the time. My new contract for this year has a lower price per kwh than last year. If choosing dynamic rates there are even times of day that prices are negative, if not counting tax you could make money by using power.
@BenjaminDEKR Exactly that and it's not just the US. I don't travel to the US but i go to Thailand at least 1 month per year, sometimes longer and/or mote often, and this is how my body reacts to the constant oven to fridge temp switches:
@LiRM35@UziCryptoo Yeah in Denmark it varies between $4.50 and $8.50 Right now it appears to be 30% up and at $7.14 i also include the global Big Mac index:
@LiRM35@UziCryptoo So you post a screenshot of Swedish crowns, not Danish, coverted that to Euro using not the current real mid market rates and then to USD the same? 1) it's from the wrong country 2) converting currency 2x increases the price.
In Denmark, McDonalds workers make $25 an hour and, if they are over twenty, the company starts paying into a pension plan for them, and in addition they have a full 6 weeks of paid vacation.
Now how much do you think this costs customers? The Economist looked into this and found out that the Big Mac costs 76 cents less than it does here.
Don't believe the lies that raising the minimum wage would force prices to go up.