Quackers
The Frog
Shek what is wrong with allergiance to a nation state? I have little in common with Poles or Swedish why am I mean to treat them as brothers?
The same reason, I suspect, that we expect anyone to treat as us brothers: the simple fact that we have more in common with them, or with any human being, than we do not. After all, if we defined ourselves only by our differences, then all society would be shattered in an instance; at the very least, this Union of ours would hardly survive!Shek what is wrong with allergiance to a nation state? I have little in common with Poles or Swedish why am I mean to treat them as brothers?
Shek what is wrong with allergiance to a nation state? I have little in common with Poles or Swedish why am I mean to treat them as brothers?
You know that I am not.Are you a citizen?
You know that I am not.
Oh, okay. I didn't know if there was some underlying rationale of "a non-citizen won't have the same informed opinion" or something to that effect. With the Greek crisis, I'm wondering if whether having a common currency is plausible... I'm thinking it could work if you had only a few countries in membership, but you face the inevitability that it's going to have to expand at some point.I seriously had no idea. My guess was no, you're right![]()
Oh, okay. I didn't know if there was some underlying rationale of "a non-citizen won't have the same informed opinion" or something to that effect.
Democracy flourishes in small numbers, was one of the apophthegmata of the ancient Greek civilization. Can any sort of meaningfull democracy exist in a union of over 500 million people, of so many different languages and cultures?
Well, neither does slavery...Caste system doesnt mix well with Democracy![]()
Greece: How the crisis is changing the EU
Published today. 00:05 [Dagens Nyheter]
Signed – Annika Ström Melin.
On thursday the streests of Athens was again filled with demonstrators. At a time when the idea of on short-notice creating a dedicated European monetary fund has, somewhat unexpected, been given political support from both Berlin and Paris, and tentatively perhaps also from London. Signs like this tends to portent something shortly to become a reality
The financial woes of Greece are forcing the EU to take another step into the unknown. We are all sitting in the front row, watching history twist yet again. The Union is preparing another giant step towards a deeper European economic integration.
The EU develops in times of crisis, writes the political scientist Göran von Sydow in one of the contributions to the anthology ”Europaperspektiv” [European perspectives], the yearbook of the Swedish European political science researchers. He cites one of the world leading experts on the European Union, the American Moravcsik, who already in August of 2009 declared that the ”crisis has renewed the European solidarity and sense of purpose. Europe is stronger than ever.”
What has since then transpired reinforces Morvacsik's thesis. The often opaque and protracted negotiation process knows as the EU has a curious ability to adapt itself and develop in pace with the problems arising.
What happens, often does so quietly. Göran von Sydow points out with how surprisingly little controvery the European Union last fall agreed to implement a set of new and rather far-reaching laws regulating the financial markets. It was a definite step ahead, and it was taken with very little attention paid to it.
Nevertheless, tha crisis is putting the EU under severe strain. It is as yet an incomplete construction, and therefor sensitive. At this point it does not look very probable - but just maybe the Union will halt itself mid-step, and start to dither. If that happens the entire edifice will start to crackelate.
Consequently, the drama unfolding is not merely Greek, but European.
So it's about the money.Europe's turnaround does not suggest a fall in nationalism, or a mass conversion to European ideals, as convinced federalists might wish. Nor does it follow from an elite conspiracy to impose a strong Europe on an unwilling public, as British tabloids crow. The motives are pragmatic, which is always the case when Europe takes a big step forward. The crisis taught Europeans that if they want to protect their prosperity, there is no alternative to tighter policy coordination. If European institutions are more advanced than those elsewhere in the world, it is simply because the continent is more interdependent—economically, legally, even culturally—than any other. In tough times, a united Europe is viewed, with some justification, as an economic and political safe haven.
Caste system doesnt mix well with Democracy![]()
You couldn't be more wrong about this. Cultures can be forced into being, and Europe is a prime example of that. During the whole 19th and early 20th century all the countries in Europe were busy inventing a national culture from scratch (including a national language, and making up "history" about some glorious ancestors) or reinforcing what they had and erasing any differences.
Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Czechia and Slovakia, Hungary, Serbia/Croatia, Bulgaria, Romania, Albania, Greece, etc... none of these even had a national language! Not even Italy.
Language, literature, folklore, institutions... all these were invented, and the process continued well into the 20th century. It even continues today, as croats and serbs split into two a language originally created by a 19th century Slavic nationalist against the Austrian-hungarian/german influence in the Balkans. Ironically one who received help, in that nationalistic endeavor... from like-minded nationalist germans! In central/eastern Europe all nationalisms go back to Johann Gottfried Herder. Ironic also that it was a german philosopher who supplied the inspiration for a movement which would break the primacy of german culture in Mitteleuropa.
And the EU has been busy of late, setting up its propaganda machine with the purpose of creating "EU national feelings". The "reforms" in higher education in Europe, for example, fit into that.
I like being eurobrothers with Victor/Winner, Shekwan and the rest
In all seriousness though... Who wants to be a member of a globally insignificant country? Or, if not insignificant, at least somewhat "mediocre"? I sure as hell don't. And the European Union currently seems to be the only way for Sweden to get a chance at that.
The English say billion, the rest of the world say milliard. There was a discussion about this on the forum a few years back.
You better read this sooner than later:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_and_short_scales
Hopefully you and I can become part of the first generation that fully identifies with the ideals of European unity over stupid nation state allegiances.![]()
However, the EU will ultimately be proven as the organisation that ensured long term peace in Europe. The Cold War was a passing crisis that NATO was cobbled together to deal with. The EU creates the economic interdependece and common democractic ideals that ensure that for the foreseeable future war among European will not happen. Military alliances can only ensure a temporary status quo, the EU ensures a peaceful future as well as a peaceful present.
<snip>
So it's about the money.
If one desperately want Europe to be about "higher" values, then it's perhaps not so good news. The one nice thing about pragmatic solutions however, is that they have a tendency of working out.![]()