It's not what you can do for Eurabia

It's what Eurabia can do for you.
A eurobarometer survey to be unveiled next week shows a drop in support for EU membership in Latvia, Austria and the UK, with economic and social concerns on top of people's agendas for the future of Europe.

While a high number of people praise peace among the member states (60%) and free movement (56%) as the EU's greatest achievements, the bloc is not seen as performing well in curbing unemployment which is the single most crucial issue for Europeans, according to the survey.

That sentiment is also portrayed in opinions about what the EU should focus on in future. For 51% of respondents "the most helpful thing" for Europe to succeed would be comparable living standards, followed by the introduction of the euro in all member states (26%) and a common constitution (25%).

Similarly, a "European social welfare system" would be a key element to strengthen people's feeling "about being a European citizen" for 32% respondents, with six in ten citizens favouring harmonization of the bloc's welfare systems, mainly in central and eastern Europe, such as Poland (86%), Latvia (82%) and Hungary (81%).
Yep, more welfare is what is needed, forget economic reforms, we need more welfare dammit.

While we are looking at what Eurabia can do for you, it seems the EU's courts are deciding what happens in Britian. I wonder how britons will feel after a few more of these rulings from far away courts.
The EU's highest court has ruled that a British law defining pension rights based on birth gender violated fundamental human rights.

The Luxembourg-based European Court of Justice on Thursday (27 April) ruled in favour of a transsexual woman's right to cash in her pension money, against British claims that member states have their own right to set pension rules.

60 year-old Sarah Margaret Richards, who was a man until 2001, was told by UK authorities she had to wait until the age of 65 to receive pension money, the age when all British men get their pensions. In the UK, women are entitled to cash in their pension funds at 60 years of age.

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