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Alnwick

Alnwick castle! Vitajte v jednom z britských najznámejších hradov. Je dôležitou súčasťou britského dedičstva; jeho steny sú naplnené ...

23. 12. 2019

December 2019 favorites

Hi my lovely deers! Merry Christmas and happy new year! I wish you all the best things in the world, health, happiness, joy, love and laughter. Enjoy your holidays to the fullest and spend some quality time with your relatives. Now let us look at my last favorites of this year. Year 2019. Read, inspire, share.
Fav food- poppyseed cookies with plum jam (my x-mas treat, which I tried for the first time, yummy!)
Fav drink- champagne (to celebrate x-mas, New Year or just the taste of it, not a big fan of an alcohol but when it comes to drink I go for that, strange hah)
Fav hair product- elastic hair band (newest member of my hair collection, nice patterns by H&M)
Fav place- winter Olomouc (wonderful time spent with my lovely friend in this city, lights, decoratins everywhere and I just love it!)
Fav ootd- gray on gray with gray (sweaters, skirts, srarfs,..)
Fav pattern- all white (home decor is heaven)
Fav movie- Christmas fairy tales (I like almost every one)
Fav song- Pulnoční by Václav Neckář (nice Czech song)
Fav quote- This year I wish for nothing, but the next year please do not take anyone from me.

Recipe: 150g grounded poppyseeds 
             150g flour 
             2 package of vanilla pudding
             1 egg
             sugar of your taste
             125g lactose-free butter
             plum jam with lemon juice
Mix egg, softened butter and sugar. Add flour, pudding powder and poppyseeds. Rest in fridge for an hour. Than make balls and make a hole in the middle and fill it with jam. Bake for 20 minutes on 170 degrees.
See you next year!

14. 12. 2019

Nails IV

Last nails were from Paris. Here I come with another 6 months period of my beauty addiction. From summer to winter. A wide range of styles.
     Wedding nails
     Vacay neon nails to lighten up some sun tan
  Back to glitters, hi new colors
Autumn mood is coming
Fancy pre-holidays nails
                                                                   Merry Christmas!

7. 12. 2019

Brexit


Little aducational insertion here on my blog. This semester I was supposed to write an essay about any interesting political topic. I went for Brexit. It might be an article based on the facts supplemented by my own opinions. I read few books, did a research, browsed on socia media and here is the result. Enjoy. The exact name of my essay:

What does the Brexit crisis tell us about the UK’s political system? Has it been
affected, for example, by the unwritten constitution, the devolution model of relations with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, the electoral system, the colonial past?

There is an interesting opinion of Hudson Meadwell from McGill University to this topic: „Brexit is affected less by contextual factors than by history and structure. It is not the short-term dynamics of the referendum campaign or the machinations of pre- and post-referendum party politics, or the current state of public opinion that need to be accounted for in understanding Brexit, both as event and process in British and UK politics. Rather, we should start elsewhere by examining foundational features of twentieth-century British politics. Brexit is an English problem. Yet the foundations of British politics expose all of the UK to the risks and uncertainties of England’s historical ambivalence toward, and more recently, its rejection of European integration. The national structure of Britain and the UK, and the political organisation and expression of that structure, are the keys to understanding Brexit.“ (Meadwell, 2019) 
Here are three basic features of British politics that account for Brexit: English political dominance, a largely unwritten constitution (which does take into account relatively recent changes that have codified certain constitutional features) and party politics. The first feature is fundamental and shapes the other two. 
To be more concrete, if England wants out of the Europien Union in order to escape EU-domination, it is unlikely going to be able to continue to dominate the United Kingdom, or the UK it does dominate will not be the United Kingdom we see nowadays. The Irish and the Scots will leave or they will negotiate a constitutional agreement that shares and divides power and that dilutes English dominance. 
Post-referendum political dynamics have been organised around two processes: EU-UK negotiations and British ratification of negotiation results in the House of Commons. 
In terms of more fundamental features of British politics, Brexit shows the enduring importance of English political dominance in Britain and the UK as the whole. 
What is more, there is a huge emphasis on fact that they have the unwritten constitution. Each constitution contributes to the functioning of the country. What is the engine gor the UK than?A constitution sets out the rules for how a society’s rules are made or changed, and all constitutions do three things. 
First, they establish the authority that different centres of power have, how they relate to one another, and how these relations can be changed. This is where the famous separation of powers comes in – or, in the case of the UK, does not come in: between the executive (the government and civil service), the legislature (which makes laws but does not administer them) and the judiciary (which adjudicates what is lawful when this is disputed). 
Second, all constitutions define the powers and rights of citizens, in our case, citizen-subjects. Do individuals have the right to vote, to assemble, to free speech, to property, to equal treatment; and how are these rights protected? Can the executive imprison us or invade our liberty through surveillance without due cause? If not, how must it establish such cause? 
Third, The aspirations of the society is express in all constitutions. This might be to be nonracist (South Africa), or Islamic (Iran), or universal (France), or to be liberal and not fascist (Germany). Aspiration need not be part of the main constitutional document. Thus, “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” is the aspiration of the US constitution but appears in the Declaration of Independence. Historically, the firstborn nation, England-Britain, felt it had no need of vulgar aspiration: after all, everyone else aspired to be like us. (Babnett, 2016) 
Due to the fact that Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty says that any Member State „may decide to withdraw from the Union in accordance with its own constitutional requirements“. Brexit will caused many effects. Perhaps the most curious has already occurred, namely its highlighting of the disutable improvised nature of the UK’s constitution. In other words, the Brexit referendum forms a political paradox. In general the referendum gives power to the people, however, in the UK, a referendum reinforces executive power. The basic principle of UK constitutional practice is one of identifiable party government, with the governing party responsible to the people through the elections. Since a referendum determines a broad direction of policy, the party in government, needs a parliamentary majority. When that majority is threatened, it will need to enhance its party support by risking a general election. As it was with Theresa May’s calling a sudden election, in order to secure support for any likely Article 50 agreement. The large majority failed, so did not overcome the objections from the opposition and the Lords to those elements in the EU Bill that enhance executive discretion. The win would mean the neglect of the contrary voices of the peoples who make up the compound polity that is the UK nowadays. 
To sum up, Brexit is a problem of recent history, it has no cause in their past or an unwritten constitution. Brexit is an English problem. It is caused mostly by agruments within the country like Scotish independence, England dominance or many nations. Therefore, their problems shapes also in their international membership. After all their desputes they still want to be strong monarch and solve their misunderstandings by yourself. On the other hand, the written constitution may it process speeds up or even figured out. 

Bibliography:

BARNETT, A. 2016. Why Britain needs a written constitution. In thegardian.com [online]. 2016, [cit. 2016-11-30]. Available on the internet: <https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/nov/30/why-britain-needs-written-constitution>
MEADWELL, H. 2019. Brexit is an English problem. In blog.lse.ac.uk [online]. 2019. Available on the internet: <https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/brexit/2019/06/19/long-read-brexit-is-an-english-problem/>
WEALE, A. 2018. Brexit and the improvised constitution. In Brexit and beyond . London: UCL press, 2018. ISBN: 978–1–78735–275–9, p. 28-36.