Random Poll of the Day! (694)

If you have some randomness to share that you can't post elsewhere, this is the place to do it.

In how many countries have you been?

Poll runs till September 9th, 2054, 10:29 pm

1
6
17%
2
7
20%
3
3
9%
4
2
6%
5
3
9%
6
3
9%
7
2
6%
8
2
6%
9
1
3%
10
3
9%
11
2
6%
12
1
3%
13
0
No votes
14
0
No votes
15
0
No votes
16
0
No votes
17
0
No votes
18
0
No votes
19
0
No votes
20
0
No votes
21
0
No votes
22
0
No votes
23
0
No votes
24
0
No votes
25
0
No votes
26
0
No votes
27
0
No votes
28
0
No votes
29
0
No votes
30
0
No votes
31
0
No votes
32
0
No votes
33
0
No votes
34
0
No votes
35
0
No votes
36
0
No votes
37
0
No votes
38
0
No votes
39
0
No votes
40
0
No votes
41
0
No votes
42
0
No votes
43
0
No votes
44
0
No votes
45
0
No votes
46
0
No votes
47
0
No votes
48
0
No votes
49
0
No votes
50
0
No votes
More than 50
0
No votes
 
Total votes: 35
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mangaluva
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Re: Random Poll of the Day! (694)

Post by mangaluva »

dilbertschalter wrote: it's certainly true as a matter de jure status that they are literally described as "countries", it's just that that aren't really what people think of as countries in any meaningful sense. as callid noted, you can technically referring to germany as being made up of constituent countries, even though that certainly isn't the case in practice. with the uk, it's a similar situation you have "countries" by name, but not bodies that can actually exercise power over their territory- indeed, until recently, the UK was much less devolved than germany, though that has changed recently in some ways.
Actually, Scotland has a largely devolved parliament that is currently pushing for independence. About the only reason that England is fighting so hard against it is the North Sea Oil. Wales and Nor'n Ireland also both have parliaments in varying degrees of devolution. Scotland also has an entirely separate legal system, a separate NHS and separate education system.

Some things still have to go up to Westminster, but less and less so as time goes on.
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Stopwatch

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Re: Random Poll of the Day! (694)

Post by Stopwatch »

^What Manga said.
N.Ireland is prob'ly the most independent (for obvious reasons :x), followed by Scotland with Wales lagging a bit behind.
(The Scottish education system sometimes confuses me with the names for the years though :x)
One thing all the Brits have in common though is that we tend to have generally awesome accents, though the variation in them is massive :P *hides*
Last edited by Stopwatch on May 7th, 2012, 7:27 am, edited 1 time in total.
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mangaluva
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Re: Random Poll of the Day! (694)

Post by mangaluva »

Well, Nor'n Ireland and RoIreland are separate countries from each other. Nor'n Ireland is in the United Kingdom, RoIreland isn't.
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Stopwatch

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Re: Random Poll of the Day! (694)

Post by Stopwatch »

[me=Stopwatch]headdesks[/me]
I thought I'd put the 'N.' in D: *edits*
Terry Pratchett wrote: The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
bash7353 wrote:I kind of always assumed that Haneda's parents might've had names.
Spoiler: Box full of stuff
Write a Will
Image
Some year's SS by Abs. :D
Image
DCW SS from Anime Girl 4 Eva]
Image
Thanks, cinna ^^
Image[/spoiler]
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mangaluva
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Re: Random Poll of the Day! (694)

Post by mangaluva »

The Scottish education system's simple. Seven years of primary school, six years of high school, free college and/or Uni. P1-P7, S1-S6, college/Uni. Simples!
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Stopwatch

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Re: Random Poll of the Day! (694)

Post by Stopwatch »

Exactly! That's why it's so confusing :P. Too used to complicatedness of Reception, Year 1 through to Year 11 with possible Year 12, 13 if you take Sixth Form and so on :x
Terry Pratchett wrote: The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
bash7353 wrote:I kind of always assumed that Haneda's parents might've had names.
Spoiler: Box full of stuff
Write a Will
Image
Some year's SS by Abs. :D
Image
DCW SS from Anime Girl 4 Eva]
Image
Thanks, cinna ^^
Image[/spoiler]
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Stopwatch

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Re: Random Poll of the Day! (694)

Post by Stopwatch »

It kinda is :x
Terry Pratchett wrote: The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
bash7353 wrote:I kind of always assumed that Haneda's parents might've had names.
Spoiler: Box full of stuff
Write a Will
Image
Some year's SS by Abs. :D
Image
DCW SS from Anime Girl 4 Eva]
Image
Thanks, cinna ^^
Image[/spoiler]
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dilbertschalter

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Re: Random Poll of the Day! (694)

Post by dilbertschalter »

mangaluva wrote:
dilbertschalter wrote: it's certainly true as a matter de jure status that they are literally described as "countries", it's just that that aren't really what people think of as countries in any meaningful sense. as callid noted, you can technically referring to germany as being made up of constituent countries, even though that certainly isn't the case in practice. with the uk, it's a similar situation you have "countries" by name, but not bodies that can actually exercise power over their territory- indeed, until recently, the UK was much less devolved than germany, though that has changed recently in some ways.
Actually, Scotland has a largely devolved parliament that is currently pushing for independence. About the only reason that England is fighting so hard against it is the North Sea Oil. Wales and Nor'n Ireland also both have parliaments in varying degrees of devolution. Scotland also has an entirely separate legal system, a separate NHS and separate education system.

Some things still have to go up to Westminster, but less and less so as time goes on.
as i said, "until recently". regardless, being devolved is still worlds away from sovereignty, though the current state of affairs may well not be very lasting. and the north sea oil is of much greater significance to scotland than it is to the UK as a whole, as there's not much left and the economic impact on 5 million of it is quite a bit greater than on 60+ million.
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mangaluva
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Re: Random Poll of the Day! (694)

Post by mangaluva »

I did point out that being a sovereign state is a different thing from being a country. Scotland, England, Wales, Nor'n Ireland and RoIreland are countries. The United Kingdom and RoIreland are sovereign states.
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Re: Random Poll of the Day! (694)

Post by Callid »

mangaluva wrote:
dilbertschalter wrote: it's certainly true as a matter de jure status that they are literally described as "countries", it's just that that aren't really what people think of as countries in any meaningful sense. as callid noted, you can technically referring to germany as being made up of constituent countries, even though that certainly isn't the case in practice. with the uk, it's a similar situation you have "countries" by name, but not bodies that can actually exercise power over their territory- indeed, until recently, the UK was much less devolved than germany, though that has changed recently in some ways.
Actually, Scotland has a largely devolved parliament that is currently pushing for independence. About the only reason that England is fighting so hard against it is the North Sea Oil. Wales and Nor'n Ireland also both have parliaments in varying degrees of devolution. Scotland also has an entirely separate legal system, a separate NHS and separate education system.

Some things still have to go up to Westminster, but less and less so as time goes on.
Every German state has its own parliament (the Landtag), the school system is different between the states as well (quite a lot, in fact), and every single state also has its own constitution. Also, TV and radio are entirely up to the states, too.
Furthermore, there is a long, long list of issues the states can decide on independently as long as the federal government doesn't issue contradicting rulings (which, in some cases, it may do only if there's need for a standard).
Oh, and in Bavaria, we have the Bavaria party which is advocating the independence of Bavaria from Germany XD
Last edited by Callid on May 7th, 2012, 3:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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