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Mark Steyn: Europe Is An Indulgence We Can't Afford
The Telegraph ^ | May 31, 2005 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 05/30/2005 2:27:08 PM PDT by quidnunc

The Eurofetishists can't seem to agree their line on this referendum business. On the one hand, the Guardian's headline writer was packing up and heading for the hills — "Europe is plunged into crisis" — and EU leaders warned that "Europe" might cease to function.

Oh, come on. We won't get that lucky.

On balance, Jean-Claude Juncker, the "president" of "Europe", seems closer to the mark in his now famous dismissal of the will of the people: "If it's a Yes, we will say 'on we go', and if it's a No we will say 'we continue'."

And if it's a Neither of the Above, he will say "we move forward". You get the idea. Confronted by the voice of the people, "President" Juncker covers his ears and says: "Nya, nya, nya, can't hear you!" There are several lessons worth learning from the French vote. The first is that the Junckers are a big part of the problem.

Only in totalitarian dictatorships does the ballot come with a pre-ordained correct answer. Yet President Juncker distilled the great flaw at the heart of the EU constitution into one straightforward sentence that cut through all the thickets of Giscard's unreadable verbiage. The American constitution begins with the words "We the people". The starting point for the EU constitution is: "We know better than the people."

After that, the rest doesn't matter: you can't do trickle-down nation-building. The British, who've written more constitutions for more real nations than anybody in history and therefore can't plead the same ignorance as President Juncker, should be especially ashamed of going along with this farrago of a travesty of a charade.

-snip-


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Germany; Politics/Elections; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: austria; axisofweasels; belgium; britain; bulgaria; czechrepublic; england; estonia; eu; euconstitution; eurocrats; europe; europeans; europeanunion; euros; france; germany; greatbritain; holland; hungary; ireland; italy; latvia; lithuania; luxembourg; malta; marksteyn; netherlands; neweurope; oldeurope; poland; portugal; romania; scotland; slovakia; slovenia; spain; steyn; uk; unitedkingdom; wales
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1 posted on 05/30/2005 2:27:08 PM PDT by quidnunc
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To: quidnunc
Oh, come on. We won't get that lucky.

LOL!

The only good thing about this is that the wolf is no longer being allowed to pose as Grandma, but is showing its teeth.

2 posted on 05/30/2005 2:29:14 PM PDT by livius
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To: quidnunc
The American constitution begins with the words "We the people". The starting point for the EU constitution is: "We know better than the people."

Europe will never be peacefully united. No common language. No common culture. No appreciation for democracy.

3 posted on 05/30/2005 2:34:26 PM PDT by ClearCase_guy (The fourth estate is a fifth column.)
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To: quidnunc

"Britain's naysayers don't have to reject the constitution for the same reason as France's commies, fascists, racists, eco-nutters, anachronistic unionists, featherbedded farmers, middle-aged "students", Trot professors and welfare queens, bless 'em all."

ROTFL!


Steyn is great.


4 posted on 05/30/2005 2:38:26 PM PDT by Bigh4u2 (Denial is the first requirement to be a liberal)
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To: Pokey78; Constitution Day
Can you do it?

FMCDH(BITS)

5 posted on 05/30/2005 2:38:28 PM PDT by nothingnew (I fear for my Republic due to marxist influence in our government. Open eyes/see)
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Bookmarked for when someone posts the whole thing.


6 posted on 05/30/2005 2:39:33 PM PDT by JenB
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To: ClearCase_guy
The American constitution begins with the words "We the people". The starting point for the EU constitution is: "We know better than the people."

Europe will never be peacefully united. No common language. No common culture. No appreciation for democracy.


Scarey thought, sounds too much like the US today. We need to increase the heat on the melting pot
7 posted on 05/30/2005 2:39:51 PM PDT by TennCon
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To: nothingnew

The Eurofetishists can't seem to agree their line on this referendum business. On the one hand, the Guardian's headline writer was packing up and heading for the hills - "Europe is plunged into crisis" - and EU leaders warned that "Europe" might cease to function.

Oh, come on. We won't get that lucky.

On balance, Jean-Claude Juncker, the "president" of "Europe", seems closer to the mark in his now famous dismissal of the will of the people: "If it's a Yes, we will say 'on we go', and if it's a No we will say 'we continue'."

And if it's a Neither of the Above, he will say "we move forward". You get the idea. Confronted by the voice of the people, "President" Juncker covers his ears and says: "Nya, nya, nya, can't hear you!" There are several lessons worth learning from the French vote. The first is that the Junckers are a big part of the problem.

Only in totalitarian dictatorships does the ballot come with a pre-ordained correct answer. Yet President Juncker distilled the great flaw at the heart of the EU constitution into one straightforward sentence that cut through all the thickets of Giscard's unreadable verbiage. The American constitution begins with the words "We the people". The starting point for the EU constitution is: "We know better than the people."

After that, the rest doesn't matter: you can't do trickle-down nation-building. The British, who've written more constitutions for more real nations than anybody in history and therefore can't plead the same ignorance as President Juncker, should be especially ashamed of going along with this farrago of a travesty of a charade.

Ah, say the Eurofetishists, but you naysayers are gloating undeservedly: the French didn't suddenly see the light and decide British Eurosceptics had been right all along; they rejected the EU constitution because they thought it was an Anglo-Saxon racket to impose capitalism on their pampered protectionist utopia.

But so what? Britain's naysayers don't have to reject the constitution for the same reason as France's commies, fascists, racists, eco-nutters, anachronistic unionists, featherbedded farmers, middle-aged "students", Trot professors and welfare queens, bless 'em all. If they want to go down the Eurinal of history clinging to their unaffordable welfare state, their 30-hour work weeks, 10-month work years and seven-year work decades, that's up to them. If Britain doesn't, that should be up to Britain.

For decades, some of us have argued that "Europe" is too diverse to form a single polity, that the British and French are in fact foreign to each other. Sir Edward Heath and his ilk scoff at such crude language: why, today's young cosmopolitan Britons are perfectly comfortable drinking Beaujolais and eating croissants and flaunting their wedding tackle on the Côte d'Azur. True, and irrelevant. What Sunday's vote underlined is profound differences in political culture. Britain's anti-Europeans and France's lunatic fringe are united only in their reluctance to be bossed around by a regulatory regime that insists a one-size-fits-all rulebook can be applied from Ballymena to the Baltics. It can't. The alleged incompatibility of our dissatisfactions makes the point: all politics is local; despite the assiduous promotion of the term, electorally speaking there is no such thing as a "European".

Incidentally, that "lunatic fringe" in France now accounts for about 60 per cent of the electorate. That's another lesson for the decayed Euro-elite. One of the most unattractive features of European politics is the way it insists certain subjects are out of bounds, and beyond politics. That's the most obvious flaw in Giscard's flaccid treaty: it's not a constitution, it's a perfectly fine party platform for a rather stodgy semi-obsolescent social democratic party. Its constitutional "rights" - the right to housing assistance, the right to preventive action on the environment - are not constitutional at all, but the sort of things parties ought to be arguing about at election time.

Instead, Europe's "consensus" politics has ruled more and more topics unfit for discussion, leaving voters with a choice between Eurodee and Eurodum, a left-of-right-of-left-of-centre party and a right-of-left-of-right-of-left-of-centre party. None of these plodding technocratic parties seems eager to talk about any of the faintly unrespectable subjects on the minds of voters - Muslim immigration, increasing crime, Turkey, EU labour mobility. So voters, naturally, are turning elsewhere, and in five years' time the entire Continent could end up with the same flight from the centre as we've seen in Ulster.

As to whether Turkey is European, evidently it was a century and a half ago when Tsar Nicholas I described it as "the sick man of Europe". Today the sick man of Europe is the European, the gilded princeling like Chirac or Juncker, gliding from one Eutopian planning session to the next, oblivious to the dreary parochial concerns of the people. In The Sunday Telegraph, Douglas Hurd, typically, missed the point in his analysis of the French vote, arguing that Europe needed "new leaders". Our colleagues headlined it, "Two men and a woman who can save Europe". No, no, no. Europe doesn't have a lack of leaders, it has a lack of followers.

I mentioned to a theatre chum the other day that the EU reminded me of Garth Drabinsky's Livent company. They were the big theatre producers in the Nineties: they revived Show Boat and produced Kiss of the Spider Woman and Ragtime and Sweet Smell of Success in Toronto and on Broadway and brought most of them to the West End. And they were all critically admired, yet didn't seem to make any money. But Livent took the view that somehow if you produced a big enough range of flops they would add up to one smash hit.

They're gone now. But their spirit lives on in the EU, critically admired (at least by the Guardian and Le Monde) but not making any money, and clinging to the theory that if you merge enough weak economies they add up to one global superpower. The big story of the past three decades is that the more it's mired itself in the creation of a centralised pseudo-state, the more "Europe" has fallen behind America in every important long-term indicator, from economic growth to demographics. "Europe" is an indulgence the real Europe can't afford. The followers recognise that, even if the leaders don't.


8 posted on 05/30/2005 2:40:33 PM PDT by Pokey78 (‘FREE [INSERT YOUR FETID TOTALITARIAN BASKET-CASE HERE]’)
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To: quidnunc

"Eurodee and Eurodum,"

How does he come up these things? Lol.


9 posted on 05/30/2005 2:42:55 PM PDT by nuconvert (No More Axis of Evil by Christmas ! TLR) [there's a lot of bad people in the pistachio business])
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To: quidnunc

Great, great piece!


10 posted on 05/30/2005 2:44:02 PM PDT by riri
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To: Howlin; riley1992; Miss Marple; deport; Dane; sinkspur; steve; kattracks; JohnHuang2; ...
God bless our fighting heroes on this Memorial day who fought & died for us, including giving us the freedom to post excerpted columns that do not need excerpting.

Just say NO to the q flu.

Steyn ping!


11 posted on 05/30/2005 2:44:27 PM PDT by Pokey78 (‘FREE [INSERT YOUR FETID TOTALITARIAN BASKET-CASE HERE]’)
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To: quidnunc



12 posted on 05/30/2005 2:46:36 PM PDT by Paul Ross (No patriot disagrees with George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, Abe Lincoln & Teddy Roosevelt)
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To: nuconvert

"Eurinal of history" was my favorite.


13 posted on 05/30/2005 2:50:08 PM PDT by kabar
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To: kabar

Lol. He's good!


14 posted on 05/30/2005 2:54:44 PM PDT by nuconvert (No More Axis of Evil by Christmas ! TLR) [there's a lot of bad people in the pistachio business])
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To: Pokey78
Only in totalitarian dictatorships does the ballot come with a pre-ordained correct answer.

Well, there and Massachusetts. Oh, wait . . . ;-)

15 posted on 05/30/2005 2:55:46 PM PDT by maryz
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To: TennCon; B4Ranch; Happy2BMe; Pete-R-Bilt; Squantos; Eaker
Scarey thought, sounds too much like the US today. We need to increase the heat on the melting pot

Ding ding ding. BINGO!

16 posted on 05/30/2005 2:59:01 PM PDT by glock rocks (1-800-marrow2)
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To: ClearCase_guy
[ Europe will never be peacefully united. No common language. No common culture. No appreciation for democracy. ]

Really.. I think your wrong..
Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide. – John Adams (1814)

Democracy is the road to socialism. Karl Marx

Democracy is indispensable to socialism. The goal of socialism is communism. V.I. Lenin

The meaning of peace is the absence of opposition to socialism.- Karl Marx

17 posted on 05/30/2005 3:00:16 PM PDT by hosepipe (This propaganda has been ok'ed by me to included some fully orbed hyperbole....)
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To: quidnunc
Eurofetishists,
well thats a new word for me. However isn't Europe a Greek word and Fetish a Portuguese word? Very sloppy. :)
18 posted on 05/30/2005 3:05:09 PM PDT by escapefromboston (manny ortez: mvp)
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To: Pokey78
Pokey,

You are a saint.

Steyn is perfection.

You do him justice.

Unlike *some* people.

19 posted on 05/30/2005 3:06:15 PM PDT by AmishDude (Join the AD fan club: "Very well stated, AD." -- Diana in Wisconsin; "LOL!!!" -- MikeinIraq)
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To: quidnunc
And they (stage plays) were all critically admired, yet didn't seem to make any money. But Livent (the producer) took the view that somehow if you produced a big enough range of flops they would add up to one smash hit.

They're gone now. But their spirit lives on in the EU, critically admired (at least by the Guardian and Le Monde) but not making any money, and clinging to the theory that if you merge enough weak economies they add up to one global superpower.

The big story of the past three decades is that the more it's mired itself in the creation of a centralised pseudo-state, the more "Europe" has fallen behind America in every important long-term indicator, from economic growth to demographics. "Europe" is an indulgence the real Europe can't afford. The followers recognise that, even if the leaders don't.

So delicious. What a wonderful analogy. But of course the Eurofetes will never get it; they're too busy getting fitted by Paris fashion houses for chic ermine robes and crowns.

20 posted on 05/30/2005 3:06:39 PM PDT by Veto! (Opinions Freely Dispensed as Advice)
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