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I don't know, but would a significant component of Poland's growth stem from the fact that it is still a significant net recipient of EU funding?

So are sluggish economies like Hungary.

Again, it is not the amount of money you receive as whether you can use them in a productive way. Poland invested heavily into infrastructure and was able to reduce the NIMBY problem that is so prominent in Czechia or Germany and leads to decade-long paper wars over every railway, road and housing project. Of course they now reap the benefits.

As a neighbour, I am a bit frustrated by the difference that is becoming ever more visible. CZ is stuck in a bad vetocracy, hopefully the new government, populist as it may be, will change it a bit. (One reason for my hope is that the Mayor party is in opposition. They were the biggest fans of the vetocracy, because it gave power to regional politicians.)

In general, if you can learn from somebody, adapt the good things and not the bad ones. If you are allowed to choose, of course. But that requires some degree of freedom.


For sure net funding isn't everything, but I am inclined to think it is something significant.

Sure, but significant != dominant. That is why you compare comparable countries which had comparable EU funding available and look at the outcomes.

I know Poles quite well. There is a can-do optimistic mentality present there that is long gone from Germany. Young people aren't afraid to start their own businesses etc. There is much, much less "climate depression", ideas like degrowth barely survive on the intellectual fringes.

This, too, makes quite a lot of difference. Strong Green movements seem to be rather dangerous to most industries, not just directly (through regulation and fees), but indirectly, by nudging young people away from industrial professions. For example, the pool of nuclear engineers in many countries of Western Europe has seriously shrunk, which limits the general ability to revive the sector, even though there is some political will now.


That's German propaganda. The Poles have more common sense when it comes to welfare and work ethic. Most Ukrainians that went there are working and not even complaining (I mean why would they? they are a normal hard-working people), while in Germany most of them are on welfare (one gets spoiled very fast when you get free money and have no obligations).

1% of GDP (assuming my calculation isn't nonsense) when growth is between 3-4% isn't insignificant.

Net EU funding appears to be roughly 1% of GDP (source being random internet searches and rough calculation).

What is the HS2 route these days? Difficult for a casual to keep track?

Get any satellite imagery of the UK, like on Google Earth. Even at a very zoomed out level, with London and Birmingham but an inch apart, you'll instantly spot the bit of HS2 they're building.

To this point; if you look at google maps satellite view and zoom in/out repeatedly over the UK the yellow line 'road' that doesn't disappear and reload is the construction site of HS2.

If you want confirmation, the easiest bits to "check" are Aylesbury and Coventry. London and Birmingham are too big for the features to stand out.

Here is the official HS2 map: https://www.hs2.org.uk/map/?mapView=9_52.0744_-1.8347


Wow, it really is easy to find. It reminds you of the scale of this project.

To be clear, it is currently really easy to find because major earthworks are being done, and that requires space to move in the equipment to do it, along with new roads to get to points that were previously inaccessible, being the middle of nowhere.

To see what it will look like afterwards, try to find High Speed 1, aka the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, now that it's had nearly 20 years to be landscaped and vegetation to grow back. If you don't know what you're looking for, you won't see it.


Sounds more like a company problem than a London problem. Wages also - the distribution is very wide.

India has literally just finished agreeing a significant new trade deal with the UK.

I guess I can only give anecdotal evidence as there aren't any surveys about it but India posseses a historical resentment towards UK.

I guess only time will tell how the Indian public perceives such deal.


Judging by the very large Indian community living in the UK, and the extensive community and business links between the two countries, I imagine “very well”.

It’s not trying to get back into the common market.

After blasting them to their knees, completely disbanding their society and writing their constitution for them. You up for that?

Which EU? The EU that continues to buy rebadged Russian oil and gas, the EU that sold them entire fleets of shadow tankers? Or the one that likes to pretend that states bordering Russia have suddenly acquired the exact same demand for expensive cars that Russia used to exhibit?

This has been going on from well before the Ukraine war. It has just intensified. The real question is: should the affected states develop some counter-capability to deter this opportunistic behaviour?

Fortunately Russia in their benevolence tries to limit the damage, so that we don't feel the destruction all at once. This means some people will be annoyed for day or two and everyone is reminded to increase security pretty constantly. Just recently we got news about ONE furnace (from several in that heating plant) being probably hacked. The furnace shut down. Operator didn't notice, because the display on furnace was already malfunctioning and operator just restarted it. They checked everything only after our "cybersecurity" forces notified them.

That was in local news this weekend. I know about it because I'm responsible for another city heating network, we take security pretty seriously. All devices are in vpn and if someone outside needs to login remotely, he is granted access only for the time needed, so window for actually worming the network through vendors is very small. All staff accessing the system has computer security training. But not every heat provider operates like this, some small ones (like the one affected) are a little more sloppy.


Everything except the import looks like standard c++ since at least 98.

C++ does not allow forward references outside of structs. The point-of-instantiation and point-of-declaration rules for templates produces all kinds of subtle problems. D does not have that issue.

Yes, you absolutely can get the job done with C and C++. But neither is an elegant language, and that puts a cognitive drag on writing and understanding code.


second vowel actually.


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