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by sreejithr 858 days ago
Stop this bureaucracy in the EU and build something for a change. Shipping for EU is stupid hard. And you guys are declining in economy. Pretty soon, there won't be any economic arguments to continue doing business in EU with all the cost of this bureaucracy involved.
1 comments

1) You can predict the future economic state of the EU as well as the next person

2) Most of the "bureaucracy" that hits small to medium sized companies is the GDPR, which any business with the slightest of integrity should have no problem to follow

You can easily use the dearth of meaningful consumer technology companies in the EU and their absurd overindexing on regulation as a predictor of what the EU's economy will look like.

While the rest of the world dives into technology and AI, the EU will become a backwater, because the EU does not know how to craft regulation that balances innovation and "consumer good." It literally only focuses on the latter at all costs. And as technology eats the world, this will be the death of the EU.

Tell me, how do you see life being in the Consumerism States of America in the future where the handful of mega corporations, that will have been allowed to behave and merge for monopolistic dominance with impunity for decades, will have such power and size that their employees will work in horrifying conditions for wages that barely (if even) can support them, all the while making the very few individuals at the top richer than any individual or group ever would need to be. All in the name of innovation.

You'll have plenty of shiny consumer items to select from (most if not all actually designed and manufactured over seas to keep costs down of course).

And if you are good litle drone you might just keep the current job long enough to scrounge together enough to buy the shiny item, so that it will signal to everyone that you are truly one of the pack that everyone around you so desperately needs to feel as being a part too.

This isn't some scifi reality that won't come to pass.

What worker protection do tech workers in the US actually have? How about the conditions in Amazon's 'fulfillment centers' (this term is down right Stalin-esque btw)? UPS drivers?

How many mergers have there been in the aeronautical sector since WW2 (hint, used to be 50+ companies and now there are 5).

And what is currently happening with the US airline manufacturer (the singular other manufacturer of its size compared to the EU' Airbus)?

I could go on, and on, and on but am hoping that you are smart enough to get the point I'm making.

I see a life made far easier by AI that Europeans simply lack because they have adopted a "technology bad" mindset oblivious of the fact that half their siblings would have died in childhood if it wasn't for the technology they hate so much.

Don't know where you're getting your views on consumerism from, but it's not anything I've seen here.

Why as a tech worker do I need a union? Have you seen how they operate? They don't reward based on merit, but seniority. You're forced to join them and pay dues and the seniority passes the shittiest options down to you. I'd much rather work in big tech where I get rewarded for kicking ass.

The lack of worker rights in the US is a much smaller issue than the lack of technological muscle in the EU. Technology has a far greater impact on QoL historically.

As an American citizen, let me assuage your concerns; nobody here is adopting technology any faster than you are in Europe. We don't even accept cardless transactions in the majority of places, you're straight-up delusional if you think our proximity to Apple and Google helps us. No, we get dogfooded the worst technology and watch as it rots out beneath our feet and companies avoid taking responsibility. We let businesses expand to unrealistic, dangerous sizes and then shirk away from regulation and standardization because we're afraid of making it worse. American citizens are conditioned to accept whatever insane demand or TOS they are presented, because their FUD is stronger than their consciousness. Our lack of mediated progress has arguably ruined television, telecommunications, advertisement, and now the internet and software distribution at-large.

> Don't know where you're getting your views on consumerism from, but it's not anything I've seen here.

You won't hear it "here" because Hacker News is a bubble. Conversations shy away from disparaging consumerism because half the people here would sell their own mom to a pimp for investment funding or stock in Apple. Go read Y-Combinator's request for startups and just try getting optimistic for "America's future". It has the same nuance and vision as a loaf of sourdough bread.

If you don't yet understand why unions are necessary, just keep watching the American labor market. It will get far, far worse before anything gets better over here in the esteemed Land of Opportunity.

And the US, with their monopolistic gigacorporations that outright buy politicians in exchange for fucking over every single worker and even their customers en-masse is your idea of progress and innovation? All of that abuse is worth it because we'll get a slightly less shitty chatbot powered by stolen content?

Have you somehow missed all the genuine horror stories coming out of Amazon warehouses, right there on American soil? Or the thousands upon thousands of people getting laid off with impunity on a dime at the beginning of this year?

In a decade from now these megacorps will be sucking everyone in the US dry to make the scumbags C-levels a couple of cents a year richer at everyone else's demise, and yet you're glorifying this as some sort of "progress". Well no thanks, I'm happy with the EU and a lot of what they're doing to keep these psychopathic, comic-book tier villainous megacorporations from wrecking havoc upon everyone in the name of making stakeholders marginally wealthier.