It is good; Life goes on.
I eat food. I sing song.
Melancholy wine, with you I dine.
To appreciate the time,
Because the present is a present,
The only time that's mine!
Mcdonald advertizes on TV
I'm driven by unsatiable hunger
When that chick look at her hamburger
And seems to find it really funny
Could you elaborate more? I know very little about this and it sounds pretty interesting
To cut a long story short :
Every country has its own standardization system. Typically what it does is, it reunites around the same table the industrials of a given industry in what we call a "commission" where they set the rules for the national industry.
For exemple, I had a commission on whiteware in which it was decided that, barren some exceptions, glass windows in shower items would have to be made of tremped glass, so as when they break, they don't harm or kill the user. People invited are typically paid by the industry and representative of the state, but they can be representative of consumer groups
if the consumer groups make the demand and send someone, and this point is important.
Now, on the european level, what is typically done is, we take the most economically viable standard in the litterature written on a national level, then we ask different countries for their objections/anotations/commentary etc. It is a long process. But when it is done, bam, you have an european standard, and all european countries have to abide by it. By this process we can infer that the norm is within the production capacity of member states.
So let's say a chinese industrial want to sell showers with glass windows in europe, they have to undertake the extra cost of tremping their glass windows to make them safe, or forget about the european market. This notably prevents dumping, and even if they try to dump, they will not kill consumers by selling cheap items that break into large shards after three months. This are the "regulations" you see the Brexit movie complain about.
Now, UK leaves the EU. What it means is, within UK, the industrial are free of the minimal EU standards. So let's say the whiteware industrt reunites itself and says "okay, fuck it, let's decide we sell dangerous trash to british citizens", now they can. They can change the standards at their leisure. Now they have free hands and you can only rely on your consumer groups to act as a counter power.
I know they haven't told you that during the campaign I feel a bit of despair about it