Nice kill, Helen! ;-)
Accurate though - I was just clarifying the neutrality of the platform. I leave the fun content to you.
But I did just spot the earlier post by SandyRham, and thought I'd answer it as best I can:
Ok Mathew.
If an EU directive succeeds, unintentionally, in causing misery but doesn't redress the problem it was intended to solve, what methods do those affected have to effect a change in the legislation.
I'm interested to hear how you define debate, and the French and Dutch populace might be interested too ;)
Two pretty different points here.
On the first, you still seem to be assuming that I'm some sort of paid-up, EC-financed spin doctor. I'm not, so I won't give you some song and dance about the European parliament or the ombudsman or the Council being composed of your ministers, or any of that. These systems are not good enough. The EU is not democratic enough, and everyone knows it.
This is why I got into this, actually. I'm not some sort of starry-eyed EU idealist, and I'm certainly not a constitutional lawyer. I
have been building websites for a while, and have become really interested in using ICTs to improve democracy, at all levels, from the local parish to the EU.
The thing is, the EU is a really, really big challenge in the field of edemocracy, precisely because of the above democractic deficit. So for me it's a professional thing, I guess. If we ever do get funding from the EC - and I'm not ruling it out - it'd probably be in this field.
As for the second point, your question is pretty broad. Defining debate? I could send you to wikipedia, but the interesting thing is that the nature of debates seems to vary by country. At the event which started this thread, for example, one of the
speakers noted that the Dutch don't do referenda that much, and that this may have played a part in the result. Maybe. But it's interesting that they don't do referenda much. Neither do the British ;-) The Swiss do lots (and stay out of the EU).
Anyway, I don't personally think that debates about Europe will transcend national debates much for the foreseeable future, for practical as well as cultural and political reasons. It's entirely normal that most people in the Member States see the EU through their national lens.
So, to bring this longwinded reply to a close: the nature of the debate about the EU will be defined by the people having it, and that'll vary by country.
This is why blogactiv.eu is divided into language domains, incidentally (French people debating amongst themselves, Germans in another corner, etc). I'd like to explore how we can address multilingualism in a world of user-generated content to bridge these frontiers, as it's a neat technical challenge, but the demand may not actually be there.