clv101 wrote:Is one English, British or a citizen of the EU?
Clear answer: we (most of the people involved in this discussion) are British citizens.
Most of us also consider ourselves to be English, Scottish, Welsh or Irish, but the Scots should not and generally do not call themselves "Scottish citizens", and will not do so unless Scotland votes for independence (which it won't.) We certainly aren't citizens of the EU.
Placing on the focus on the nation (the UK in yours and my case) is a problem. There is good argument that some issues should be dealt with at a smaller scale and also good argument that other issues should be dealt with a larger scale.
Yes, but things like state/religion separation or attitudes to marriage can't be settled at the UN. They are too culture-specific. What is "right" for Iran might not be the same as what is "right" for China or the UK.
We live in the real world, and in the real world "nation states" is the primary large-scale division.
It really isn't just about nation states any more, the multi-national corporation tax issue is a recent example.
Some problems, the most obvious of all being climate change, could only conceivably be solved by international co-operation. However, it is now very obvious that no such international co-operation is going to happen, because the organisational structures above the level of nation states are not capable of doing what is required.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)