helene_t, on 2015-May-14, 03:05, said:
I agree with you, but I realize that it is a very elitist point of view.
You and I can think and live across borders, but most people are not capable of doing that. To them, different people are scary people. We can easily step over those differences and see what people have in common. And then those borders are a nuisance to us.
I live in the Netherlands and work in Germany, but part of the time from home. That makes life complicated.
When my boss and I had to deal with Dutch and German authorities on how to arrange this with taxes, social security, liability, insurances, etc. my boss at some point exclaimed: "I didn't draw that line on the map!" Her feeling was: "If Rik and I both think that it is a good idea that Rik works for me, and we can overcome our differences, then why are governments making life so difficult by drawing this imaginary line somewhere between us?"
The people I talk to, whether in the Netherlands or in Germany, are all perfectly fine with the idea that I work/live across the border. But most of them wouldn't do it themselves: the "others" are scary (fill in the various prejudices against Germans/Dutchies).
So, if we want to remove those borders, we should remove the prejudices and emphasize what we have in common.
When Vampyr writes about how the British supposedly pay for the sangria that the Spanish olive farmer is enjoying, my hands are itching to point out that the Dutch used to pay for the firemen (stokers) on electric train engines in the UK and that at least the Spanish olive farmer is working and growing olives whereas these firemen were just sipping tea and not working. But that isn't helping.
Instead, I should point out that people, whether in the UK, the Netherlands, Germany or Spain are people.
They pursue a happy, safe and secure life, for themselves and for their kids, neighbors and friends and should allow others to do the same.
Whether we drink tea or sangria doesn't matter. It is only superficial. What matters is our common ideal of happiness.
Rik