There's a person for the democrats, there's one for the republicans. Due to the voting system only two parties matter. Why invite someone else? Doesn't make sense. Don't get why you make that as blocking.
And what if that promise is broken? It shouldn't just have promises, there should be clear consequences attached as well. Else it'll just be a broken contract or promise. That can end up in legal stuff for ages.
According to the French road safety observatory 84% of fatal car accidents in 2022-2023 were caused by men.
How many kms do men drive vs women? And does it differ across the type of road? And what about age?
In Netherlands if there's a couple often the man drives, not the woman. It used to be way more expensive to insure yourself as a man. That until they said it wasn't allowed anymore. Then suddenly insurance rates were dropped quite a bit for men, hardly went up for women.
I'm guessing/wondering if there's a difference on how often a man drives vs a woman. Coupled with testosterone effects for men under 25 or so. In Netherlands men under 25 aren't known to dive safely.
84% is still huge, but seems they aren't looking at the right figure.
For online stuff, they'd have to know location in order to provide a post-tax price
Or they advertise a price and then make a slightly different amount per city and so on. That's how it is done sometimes for stuff sold in multiple European countries for the same price.
But it takes ages to build houses. You're again blaming something that's a given just to ignore that housing is a basic need. Obviously if the basic need is manipulated there's loads of money to be made.
It took like 10-15 years to go from anyone can afford a flat to almost nobody can.
It's as if nothing could be done about it. One country blames tourists, others immigrants. In Netherlands the most popular party said for ages that it's useless to plan ahead. Such remarks are ignored. People go for the populist remarks. Blame some group of people.
That wasn't said. Pretending a crazy summary was said is a common fallacy.