[TCTI 8.6.0-rc2]

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London is getting a muslim mayor!

Such a shame he'll be banned from entering the US in a few months.

231756
 
231757

We should keep him here anyway; he needs to undo all the damage Boris Johnson did and he can't do it from the US.
 
231758

An intriguing first for London.
 
231759. Yet to have a muslim mayor in any city in my state (that I am aware of, anyway). There's a member of the House of Representatives from my state who is a muslim, though. Keith Ellison. He's held his seat for 5 terms now. Of course, he got voted in from his district in the same year Michelle Bachmann did from her district, which was next door to his prior to district re-alignment.
 
231761

Yeah, I don't generally get involved in politics either. Still don't know which way I'll be voting in the EU referendum either...
 
231764

The EU has been an unmitigated disaster, really. I'm so glad we're not a part of the EMU, or we'd be well and truly screwed.
 
231767

Peacekeeping and economic exchange don't typically go hand-in-hand, that's why. You can't have it both ways.
 
231770

Look, Sverige. I know you've been working on it for a while and I appreciate a hard worker but...

Spoiler:

These designs...they take minimalism to the max. The characters lack color and flair- one might even call them featureless. And some of them blend together. They're expressive, sure, but that only goes so far. I mean...I'm trying, but if you want my attention you're really gonna have to paint the canvas.

Seriously, I expected more from you.

Spoiler:
 
231772

The EU has been an unmitigated disaster, really.

I disagree. There has been a lot of planning errors, but we are living in the longest period without wars in all of Europe's history. Not to mention that ten Eastern countries have (slowly and grudgingly) accepted to follow democratic rules after a century of different sorts of dictatorships. Boring and elitist as meetings in Brussels may be, political boredom tends to be far better than "excitement" and "revolution". My own country, Spain, had just come from a 40-year fascist dictatorship and had a terrible GDP and absurdly high levels of inflation (like 20% year after year) before joining on and being forced to control those stats to be allowed to join the Eurozone. And the Eurozone is, in fact, saving up millions of euros (or any other currency you want to use :P) in exchange rates and other trade costs.

Are there political issues between countries? Did the crisis show a lot of problems that need to be fixed? Yes, but just look at the other side of the pond. The EU has managed to integrate 28 countries, with different languages, history and traditions, with an amazing degree of success. Considering the US started as 13 almost-identical (identity-wise) colonies of the same country with the same basic law and the same language and history, and needed several decades and a civil war to achieve actual union, the EU has been a resounding miracle by comparison.

And, last but not least, any European country alone -even Germany- is tiny and irrelevant when negotiating anything with the US, China or Japan. Outside of the EU, the UK would struggle to make their voice heard at any level. On the other hand, the EU as a bloc has 500 million people and the largest GDP in the world. The difference is stark.
 
231774

You make some good points, but I think you underestimate just how much of a voice the UK would have outside of the EU. I highly doubt we'd struggle to make our voice heard. I'm not really interested in what the EU has done for other countries or how it holds together, all I care about is what the UK gets out of staying in it, and whether that should be enough to justify staying in it. I'm still not sure yet what I think of it.
 
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