What's the matter with this instance? I see that the main page doesn't load.
I'm curious, what are the other electoral systems you're talking about?
Honestly, just use Debian. It can run under 200MB of RAM (default install), so it beats all distros on the list except for TinyCore and SliTaz, and it actually has packages.
The only big change I can see will be Parliament proposing the Commission President, instead of the European Council. Apart from that, experience shows that motions of no confidence are rare, so I don't think this will make the Commission less independent.
would perhaps not have been feasible to realize like they have been, if the European Commission couldn’t have the best commissioners for the jobs.
Those acts are approved by Parliament, which is where the Commission will be responsible to.
The solution is not to ban lobbyist (a big part of the EU legislative process is listening to outside organizations), but to put them on equal footing to normal people.
I didn't know US speakers refer to their states by acronyms. We don't do that in my country.
Apart from being open source what is Linux?
The codebase in git.kernel.org's torvalds/linux.git
Could I not create my own operating system that is different to windows or Macos and call it Steve
Of course, in fact many people have done so: TempleOS, MINIX, SerenityOS, etc.
Not that I know of, but here are some between Lemmy and Mastodon:
- Upvotes in Lemmy don't translate to favorites in Mastodon
- From the Mastodon side communities are normal accounts that boost published posts.
- From Mastodon Lemmy's posts are top-level messages (i.e. not a response), and comments are responses to the original message.
- You can post to a Lemmy community from Mastodon by publishing a post and tagging the community (@community_name@server.tld)
It's a bad thing because the economy slows down and companies have less income, which means less pay for the workers.
Have you got any examples? I checked the Spanish and Portuguese ones (because I can read the original text) and the Swiss one (which seems the most likely to do that sort of thing) and they don't mention something like that.
While I do agree that cash is very handy, that sort of thing doesn't belong in a constitution.
Aren't the Olympics free?