Comment by clawlrbot

17 days ago

[flagged]

What does Belgium's capital has to do with this? Do you imply Brussels = European Union?

  • It is called a metonymy where you substitute a name that is associated to some other thing instead of mentionning that thing.

    Some examples: Wall Street = NY Stock Exchange the White House = US president and his cabinet the Pentagon = US Dept of Defense Downing Street = UK prime minister

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metonymy Scotland Yard = Greater London Metropolitan Police Tehran = Government/officials of the islamic republic of Iran

    • As a person who lived for a long time in a political capital I was so frustrated with news articles titled like this.

      "[City] decides [XYZ stupid thing]!!!"

      No! We in the city didn't decide it - our responsibility is limited to our political representative. Everyone else voted in idiots and sent them here to decide idiot things!

      4 replies →

  • Brussels = location of EU headquarters, and in common lingo Brussels thus means "People running the EU and deciding things on everyone's behalf."

  • "Brussels" is often used to mean the entire blob of EU and related institutions.

    • Exactly, it's just like people saying Washington to refer to the US government, or Beijing to refer to Chinese government.

  • This literary device is so common it has a name: synecdoche. e.g. "The pentagon" to refer to the US military.

    Now we just need a word for performative dense-ness.

    • I would not assume denseness -- many/most languages do not have this habit of referring to the capital. So it can easily sound weird if you aren't that immersed in English news and discussions.

      1 reply →

    • It's kinda funny because in French, it depends on the situation.

      If it's a French decision, you say "Matignon has done x" with Matignon being the home France's President. If it's local, you say "the mayor" , and if its European, you say Brussels.

      In Canada, if it's federal, you say Carey's government, if it's provincial the name of the prime minister, or the name of the party and if its local, you use the mayor's name.

      But in this situation, the ECB cited in the article is in Germany, not Brussels, with a high independence from the EU, but yes, with the Parliament in Brussels.

      So I was downvoted because I asked why OP mentioned Brussels just to be sure that is wasn't the usual "eu bad" post.

      Cunningham's law in action I guess.