Of course. Renewable blows nuclear out of orbit when it comes to price. Nuclear plants take decades to build and are generally a lot more expensive than estimated.
Not really. I was scammed for a few hundreds of euro's last year. I knew the company, I knew the account but the bank was incapable of reacting because of 'reasons'.
They know where the money went but they can't follow where it got transferred to. So they can only follow one transaction and after that it's gone. (Except when you get a court order)
I started doing it years ago in Belgium and I see more people do it these days. I don't shout but wave at the mirror. Bus drivers watch the mirror to check when to close their doors.
After a while they get to know you and they trend to be more welcoming when you enter the bus.
My neighbour plays this game with us.
He has a pile of cards. Every card has a word on it. Short and long all mixed up. You shuffle the deck and he laysbdown the cards one by one. After he went throigh the cards he just szs the wordt in order from memory. He can get up to 150 card. He never rails before 100.
Belgium (theoretically) has 7 governments.
1 Federal
3 Regional (geographically)
3 communities (by language)
So you have a representation by subsidiarity.
If a matter is more related to 'hard' matters, the regions have jurisdiction.
If dealing with soft matters like education or culture, the communities wil be able to make legislation.
The federal government oversees matters they can't be delegated to the regions or communities like taxes, defense, foreign policy,...
In this system a geographical representation and a cultural representation is present but my goodness, it doesn't make things easier.
It seems that cultural matters aren't always aligning with geography.
Woosh. Yeah, it keeps feeling counterintuïtive to go from mili to centi