Why are Eastern Europe countries so united unlike western ones?

Why are Eastern Europe countries so united unlike western ones?

Pic related, we're starting more and more to get in love with Poland, but nothing will beat our "Bridge Of Friendship" with Bulgaria.

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blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/2016/07/08/poland-brexit/
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> Why are Eastern Europe countries so united unlike western ones?


In what way?

romania x bulgaria
gypsy union
hun x pol

and v4+balt should all leave EU and make your own funzone

another stupid dumb ass post by another romanian gypsy commie.

wonderful

We are kinda poor, i mean east is always behind ? and we need to support each other, that would benefit both countries in general.

We are gonna get married soon .

Your president looks good tho, like a sugar daddy.

rude

I have nothing against polish people , you make these really goos snacks i just love so much . Keep it up!

>The European UNION is pretty much western europe
>why eastern europe is more united than western?
...

I guess France being Germany's bitch is now called united.

It's a war zone, any time there's a major conflict the unlucky people here can just pray to survive and then rebuild shit for the umpteenth time while western countries can just live through history being completely sheltered

Iohannis is ready to pound that guy's ass

Our president looked nice when young

Over low HDI

Very rude, apologise

Butthurt unifies people and nations

Too bad there is no one as autistic as finland.

Yes, we are all alone in this world.

but finland you are in the butthurt belt too

>they had photographs under communism
I am impressed

Only those cucked by USSR are really in the belt, we dont hate Russia.

The UK is so united we put it in the name

>inb4 Scotland
>inb4 party political power struggles
>inb4 constant bitching with Frogs and Krauts

Banter. We are everyone's favourite ally and friend.

>We are everyone's favourite ally and friend.

>The prospect of British withdrawal from the EU means that Poland is losing a key ally on a number of important policy issues. As the largest non-Eurozone EU member, the UK government played a pivotal role in preventing the development of a two-speed Europe with the locus of Union decision making shifting to those states that were part of the single currency area. The prospect of Brexit, therefore, raises concerns that further European integration will hasten the process of building a hard core based on the Eurozone, potentially leaving Poland marginalised on the EU’s periphery. Warsaw also saw the UK as a close ally in developing a tough EU response to Russia, fearing that France and Germany were too inclined to strike up cosy bilateral deals with Moscow that side-lined post-communist states such as Poland.

blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/2016/07/08/poland-brexit/

Kind regards,

Your favourite ally and friend,

The UK

xox

apologise
NOW