It is the Commission who propose the laws based on the treaties.
And the national parliaments that decide whether or not they will accept those treaties. And the European Parliament that then votes on the specific measures that will be enforced because of those treaties.
As for the Commission not straying too far from the people just look at the out of touch and crass comments they have come out with over the years.
Which are pretty much the same as the out-of-touch and crass comments that national and regional elected officials in various countries come out with.
If you really think that's a valid response to what I'm talking about then you haven't got a clue and you're spouting just bull-squirt.
So the fact that the British membership of the European Parliament is more representative of the electorate in this country than Parliament is, to you, is not evidence that there's no democratic shortfall in Europe?
So no new powers have gone from our government/parliament in the last few decades?
No SIGNIFICANT new powers, no, not since Maastricht.
Still can't see what you are saying in that nonsense. Perhaps some examples would help.
In recent years times the European Union hasn't been attempting greater centralisation, hasn't been attempting to harmonise any further, but has instead increased its effectiveness by expanding to new territories rather than homogenising the ones it already has. I really can't see what's so difficult to grasp about that.
Post WWII isn't really that long which is why the stealth plan of the EU and corporatists won't work.
If we're talking about the EU then 'post-WWII' is the entirety of the EU - by definition that's not 'recently' in the context of the history of the EU.
Many older generations have seen how things have changed for the worsts or how life today is going the wrong way.
In their opinion, perhaps, but many older people have seen how much things have changed for the better, and many more older people have the option of having an opinion because so many fewer of them have been killed by malnutrition, disease and warfare.
The OP was not just about possible more conflicts etc. but the intensity, fanaticism or madness of the perpetrators.
And I pointed out that I don't see any more fanatacism in current fanatics than in previous fanatics.
I think there are more markers than just the numbers who die. What about quality of life and life style etc. I'm sure those in the refugee camps in Jordan etc. are not thrilled about the lives they are being forced to endure. Neither are the peoples of Libya sitting back and relaxing and enjoying the sunshine. And there are many, many, more I could list around the world such as N. Korea.
Infant mortality has halved in the last few decades. Several pandemic killers have been virtually eliminated, and medical treatments continue to extend average lifespan across the world. The number of people in subsistence living conditions is decreasing, quality and duration of life, on average, are up, education is more widely available than it has ever been, in addition to fewer people dying in conflicts. Things are on the up - it's far from perfect, and there are worrying trends in there, not least of which is the increasing gulf between the extremely rich and the rest, that economic inequality, both in terms of individual people and in terms of national economies.
I did say post WWII and relatively recently. As for Mao that was a confined event within an isolated country, horrible as it was.
That 'isolated country' is the world's largest exporter and home to a sixth of the world's population. Mao was 'post WWII' and earlier on 'post WWII' was considered recent by you.
The OP was also meant to be in reference to a general global threat or overall perceived shift worldwide. May be after the Cold War there was a feeling of things getting safer and optimism and it seems to me that things are being stirred up in a different to similar peaks we have seen in the past with say WWII and the like....?
There is a perception, particularly with Russia's increased territoriality and willingness to exert military authority, that a new cold war is coming, but we're far from the heady days of the Bay of Pigs, or the diplomatic empasse of the late 70s - that's not a guarantee that we won't head that way, of course, but we're nowhere near it yet.
But the fact is the democracy you are talking about moves about only the pawns in the game now.
Which isn't the fault of the mechanism, which can move the kings and queens, but the players who don't choose to.
As I said bodies like the EU Commission are unelected and weald the majority of the power and most of the shareholders are big players who are with the elites not the people.
The European Commission has no power - it can offer up treaties, and if national governments reject them nothing happens. If national governments accept them then the European Parliament decides how they will be implemented. If individuals do not like that implementation they can appeal to the European Courts.
The pension funds are like bulls with rings in their noses, they are led around like idiots because all the financial power is in the banking system and banks not with those investing their money where they are being ripped off as gullible fools.
Because the stakeholders in those pension schemes get their annual letter about voting at the AGM and ignore it - the bankers don't.
Finance is power because it buys the politicians off so they make the laws the financial elites want.
Which only works if we accept those politicians in the first place.
But I do agree most voters are idiots.
Some of them, perhaps many. Most? Most of them are disillusioned, because the mass media - which is, by and large, owned and directed by the rich vested interests - tells them that it doesn't really matter, that democracy is a largely failed experiment, that governing is all about ensuring the country is making a profit, regardless of the social costs. People aren't idiots, necessarily, idiots can't think: people are lazy, and either don't or won't think, and people spreading the doom and gloom message of 'it's a done deal, we're all owned by the megacorporations' are just helping that.
O.