On this day, 69 years ago, six countries took a leap of faith and signed the Treaty of Rome.
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@EUCommission
The EU is obviously not perfect, but the way I see it it is possibly (not far from) the strongest its ever been. And that's with Orban's constant treason.@Gurre @EUCommission a bit of optimism does not harm
thanks -
@Gurre @EUCommission a bit of optimism does not harm
thanksA similar thought that struck me a while back:
Right now is probably the strongest and most functional the Kalmar Union has been.
Sure, the Nordics aren't in a union with one king now, but with all being in NATO now this is the most coordinated our militaries have ever been. And wwe're all EU+EEA, and freedom of movement since decades. etc.
Looks like a more solid "union" than we had in the 1400s. -
On this day, 69 years ago, six countries took a leap of faith and signed the Treaty of Rome.
They chose cooperation over division, laying the foundations for what would become today’s European Union.
From a shared market to shared ambitions, that vision has grown far beyond economics. It’s about connection, opportunity, and celebrating what makes each member country unique.
Different languages, cultures, and histories, one common journey.
United in diversity, then and now.

@EUCommission
nice -
On this day, 69 years ago, six countries took a leap of faith and signed the Treaty of Rome.
They chose cooperation over division, laying the foundations for what would become today’s European Union.
From a shared market to shared ambitions, that vision has grown far beyond economics. It’s about connection, opportunity, and celebrating what makes each member country unique.
Different languages, cultures, and histories, one common journey.
United in diversity, then and now.

@EUCommission Surely they weren't thinking of creating #ChatControl 1.0 & 2.0 and Digital Omnibus in that era.
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On this day, 69 years ago, six countries took a leap of faith and signed the Treaty of Rome.
They chose cooperation over division, laying the foundations for what would become today’s European Union.
From a shared market to shared ambitions, that vision has grown far beyond economics. It’s about connection, opportunity, and celebrating what makes each member country unique.
Different languages, cultures, and histories, one common journey.
United in diversity, then and now.

@EUCommission I wish the EU would focus more on free internal markets and less on digital surveillance..
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On this day, 69 years ago, six countries took a leap of faith and signed the Treaty of Rome.
They chose cooperation over division, laying the foundations for what would become today’s European Union.
From a shared market to shared ambitions, that vision has grown far beyond economics. It’s about connection, opportunity, and celebrating what makes each member country unique.
Different languages, cultures, and histories, one common journey.
United in diversity, then and now.

From a shared market to shared ambitions, that vision has grown far beyond economics. It’s about connection, opportunity, and celebrating what makes each member country unique.
Different languages, cultures, and histories, one common journey.
WITH EXCEPTION OF HUNGARY.....
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@kainisenni @EUCommission I knew *someone* would reply this. (and if they hadn't I would)
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A similar thought that struck me a while back:
Right now is probably the strongest and most functional the Kalmar Union has been.
Sure, the Nordics aren't in a union with one king now, but with all being in NATO now this is the most coordinated our militaries have ever been. And wwe're all EU+EEA, and freedom of movement since decades. etc.
Looks like a more solid "union" than we had in the 1400s.@Gurre @FrancoisPrague @EUCommission
i was thinking polish-lithuanian commonwealth
and i was thinking that because they had a democratic system where only one dissenting vote could stop everything
and even more amazingly, oftentimes the dissenting vote was because of a bribe from #russia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberum_veto#Zenith
but i'm not being pessimistic, i just find that parallel interesting. i like you think the #eu is stronger than its ever been, and will only get stronger
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On this day, 69 years ago, six countries took a leap of faith and signed the Treaty of Rome.
They chose cooperation over division, laying the foundations for what would become today’s European Union.
From a shared market to shared ambitions, that vision has grown far beyond economics. It’s about connection, opportunity, and celebrating what makes each member country unique.
Different languages, cultures, and histories, one common journey.
United in diversity, then and now.

"Shared ambitions" lmao... shared by whom?
Greek pensioners in 2012, Spanish youth unemployment at 50%, Eastern European wage arbitrage feeding German industrial supply chains?Let's be real, the EU as it was designed by the Treaty of Rome is a cartel arrangement designed for post-Marshall Plan Europe to allow capital to move freely from primarily trade deficit nations to trade surplus nations, and to then further moralise and inflict austerity on the same deficitary nations.
To the EC, federalise or die
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A similar thought that struck me a while back:
Right now is probably the strongest and most functional the Kalmar Union has been.
Sure, the Nordics aren't in a union with one king now, but with all being in NATO now this is the most coordinated our militaries have ever been. And wwe're all EU+EEA, and freedom of movement since decades. etc.
Looks like a more solid "union" than we had in the 1400s. -
@Gurre @EUCommission a bit of optimism does not harm
thanks -
From a shared market to shared ambitions, that vision has grown far beyond economics. It’s about connection, opportunity, and celebrating what makes each member country unique.
Different languages, cultures, and histories, one common journey.
WITH EXCEPTION OF HUNGARY.....
-
@EUCommission I wish the EU would focus more on free internal markets and less on digital surveillance..
-
@EUCommission Surely they weren't thinking of creating #ChatControl 1.0 & 2.0 and Digital Omnibus in that era.
-
@EUCommission
The EU is obviously not perfect, but the way I see it it is possibly (not far from) the strongest its ever been. And that's with Orban's constant treason. -
On this day, 69 years ago, six countries took a leap of faith and signed the Treaty of Rome.
They chose cooperation over division, laying the foundations for what would become today’s European Union.
From a shared market to shared ambitions, that vision has grown far beyond economics. It’s about connection, opportunity, and celebrating what makes each member country unique.
Different languages, cultures, and histories, one common journey.
United in diversity, then and now.

@EUCommission if we took a photo of the leaders of the EU now, it would look a lot more diverse - in gender, age, origins, social backgrounds, you name it. That's also something to celebrate!
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@jeffreyb @EUCommission They don't teach proper civics nor EU history in schools at national level and it shows. It's a pity that we don't have at least a miniseries about how Jean & Bob made it happen against all (considerable) odds because it was anything but smooth sailing. And the Be- in Benelux had to be bullied by Monnet into not sabotaging the European project's founding principles, btw.
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On this day, 69 years ago, six countries took a leap of faith and signed the Treaty of Rome.
They chose cooperation over division, laying the foundations for what would become today’s European Union.
From a shared market to shared ambitions, that vision has grown far beyond economics. It’s about connection, opportunity, and celebrating what makes each member country unique.
Different languages, cultures, and histories, one common journey.
United in diversity, then and now.

@EUCommission I expect you to not just utter these "fine words" but act upon them!
- By pushing for a #Europe that is unified and strong through diversity and pluralism and that bot only denounces #nationalism and #racism but universally welcomes everyone who &vows loyality to the values of the #EU*!
- Values like #Peace, #HumanRights, #CivilRights and #Democracy!
It's your turn…
- By pushing for a #Europe that is unified and strong through diversity and pluralism and that bot only denounces #nationalism and #racism but universally welcomes everyone who &vows loyality to the values of the #EU*!
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On this day, 69 years ago, six countries took a leap of faith and signed the Treaty of Rome.
They chose cooperation over division, laying the foundations for what would become today’s European Union.
From a shared market to shared ambitions, that vision has grown far beyond economics. It’s about connection, opportunity, and celebrating what makes each member country unique.
Different languages, cultures, and histories, one common journey.
United in diversity, then and now.

That unity, especially on climate action, has so infuriated the fossil fuel industry, they are funding a massive effort to dismantle the EU.
https://www.politico.eu/article/maga-friendly-european-think-tanks-donald-trump-funding/
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2025/12/trump-linked-think-tank-chief-calls-for-dismantling-of-the-eu/
https://www.desmog.com/2026/02/06/maga-gathers-in-european-parliament-to-attack-eu-laws/
The oil industry thinks it can keep its wealth by threatening its captive consumer markets.
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@Gurre @FrancoisPrague @EUCommission
i was thinking polish-lithuanian commonwealth
and i was thinking that because they had a democratic system where only one dissenting vote could stop everything
and even more amazingly, oftentimes the dissenting vote was because of a bribe from #russia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberum_veto#Zenith
but i'm not being pessimistic, i just find that parallel interesting. i like you think the #eu is stronger than its ever been, and will only get stronger
@benroyce @FrancoisPrague @EUCommission
That is a good analogy, can't deny that.
And still I'd say the overall state is pretty good. Nuance and complexity abound.But also: there's clear need for reforms. Less vetoes, kicking out lobbyists from the halls of power, etc.
