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THE DEATH OF EUROPE
Steyn Online ^ | March 15, 2004 | Mr. Steyn

Posted on 03/15/2004 12:17:35 PM PST by conservativecorner

Exactly one year ago - March 15th 2003 - The Spectator did a special future-of-the-world issue. My editors kept reminding me that week, "Now remember, Mark, it's not about Bush and Rumsfeld - you're supposed to look 30-40 years ahead." Well, I did as I was told, though I was a little disappointed when the magazine hit the newsstands hardly anybody else had. But I think it's worth dusting off in the light of the Spanish general election. There are big changes underfoot in Europe. No-one knows how they'll resolve themselves, but we do know the likely options - and none is good:

In 1898, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Prime Minister of Queen Victoria’s great white north, declared that just "as the nineteenth century was the century of the United States, so shall the twentieth century belong to Canada”.

The line caught on. "The 19th century was the century of the United States," James Longley, Attorney-General of Nova Scotia, informed a Boston audience in 1902. "The 20th century is Canada's century."

"The day is coming,” predicted another Prime Minister, Sir Charles Tupper, “when Canada, which has become the right arm of the British Empire, will dominate the American continent."

Now, if you’ll quit laughing and wipe the tears from your eyes, I’ll get to the point. Tupper was talking to the historian John Boyd, who fleshed out the soundbite: “Canada,” he explained, “shall dominate the American continent, not in aggression or materialism, but in the arts of peace, in the greatness of its institutions, in the broadness of its culture, and in the lofty moral character of its people."

Does that sound familiar? It’s the European argument today: just as the 20th century belonged to America, so the 21st will belong to Europe, a Europe that cannot – and, indeed, disdains to – compete with the Yanks in “aggression” (military capability) or “materialism” (capitalism red in tooth and claw), and so has devised a better way. We’ve all had a grand old time these last few weeks watching M Chirac demonstrate his mastery of “the arts of peace” and his “lofty moral character”, but it would perhaps be fairer to choose a more representative Euro-grandee to articulate the EUtopian vision. Step forward Finnish Prime Minister Paavo Lipponen, who said in London last year that “the EU must not develop into a military superpower but must become a great power that will not take up arms at any occasion in order to defend its own interests.”

No doubt it sounds better in Finnish. Nonetheless, like the Canadians a century ago, the Europeans are claiming that the old rules no longer apply, that they’ve been supplanted by new measures of power, not least the “greatness of institutions” (EU, UN, ICC, etc). And, like the Canadians, the Europeans are doomed to disappointment. Just for the record, if you’re reading this in an obscure corner of the jungle, not only did the 20th century not belong to Canada, the decayed Dominion will be very lucky to make it through the 21st at all: I doubt it’ll get past 2025 with its present borders intact.

But that’s by the by. What the world – or, at any rate, “old Europe” – wants to know is: what will it take to nobble the Yanks? Or, to be more accurate, what will it take for the Yanks to nobble themselves? The corollary to the Euro-Canadian redefinition of “great power” is that a lone cowboy who sticks to tired concepts like guns’n’ammo is bound to come a cropper. As Matthew Parris put it last week, “we should ask whether America does have the armies, the weaponry, the funds, the economic clout and the democratic staying power to carry all before her in the century ahead. How many wars on how many fronts could she sustain at once? How much fighting can she fund? How much does she need to export? Is she really unchallenged by any other economic bloc?”

My colleague is falling prey to theories of “imperial overstretch”. But, if you’re not imperial, it’s quite difficult to get overstretched. By comparison with 19th century empires, the Americans travel light. More to the point, their most obvious “overstretch” is in their historically unprecedented generosity to putative rivals: unlike traditional imperialists, they garrison not remote ramshackle colonies but their wealthiest allies. The US picks up the defence tab for Europe, Japan, South Korea and Saudi Arabia, among others. As Americans have learned in the last 18 months, absolving wealthy nations of the need to maintain their own armies does not pay off in the long run. This overstretch is over. If Bush wins a second term, the boys will be coming home from South Korea and Germany, and maybe Japan, too. So the EU will begin the second decade of the century with an excellent opportunity to test Mr Lipponen’s theory: it can either will the means to maintain a credible defence, or it can try to live as the first “superpower” with no means of defence. In other words, the first victim of American overstretch will not be America but Europe.

I doubt the Continentals of a decade hence will be in any mood to increase defence spending. For all M de Villepin’s dreams of Napoleonic glory, his generation of French politicians will spend the rest of their lives managing decline. By 2050, there will be 100 million more Americans, 100 million fewer Europeans. The US fertility rate is 2.1 children per couple, in Europe it’s 1.4. Demography is not necessarily destiny, and certainly not inevitable disaster. But it will be for Europe, because the 20th century Continental welfare state was built on a careless model that requires a constantly growing population to sustain it. In hard-hearted New Hampshire, we don’t have that problem.

According to a UN report from last year, for the EU to keep its working population stable till 2050 it would need another 1.58 million immigrants every year. To keep the ratio of workers to retirees at the present level, you’d need 13.5 million immigrants per year. Personally, I’ve never seen what’s so liberal and enlightened about denuding the developing world of their best and brightest. But, even if you can live with it, it won’t be an option much longer. The UN’s most recent population report has revised the global fertility rate down from 2.1 – ie, replacement rate – to 1.85 – ie, eventual population decline. It will peak around 2050, and then fall off in a geometric progression. What this means for the Continent is that the fall-back position – use the Third World as your nursery – is also dead. The developing world’s fertility rate is 2.9 and falling. The Third Worlders being born now in all but the most psychotic jurisdictions will reach adulthood with a range of options, of which Europe will be the least attractive. If that ratio of workers to retirees keeps heading in the same direction, the EU will have the highest taxes not just in the western world, but in most of the rest. A middle-class Indian or Singaporean or Chilean already has little incentive to come to the Continent. If the insane Bush-Steyn plan to remake the Middle East comes off, even your wacky Arabs may stay home. If it doesn’t, the transformation of Europe into “Eurabia”, as the droller western Muslims already call their new colony, will continue.

So for Europe this is the perfect storm, with Jacques Chirac in the George Clooney role. Best case scenario: you wind up as Vienna with Swedish tax rates. Don’t get me wrong, I love Vienna. I especially like the way you can stroll down their streets and never hear any ghastly rockers and rappers caterwauling. When you go into a record store, the pop category’s a couple of bins at the back and there’s two floors of operetta. All very pleasant, though not if you’re into surfing the cutting edge of the zeitgeist. I quite like Stockholm, too. Well, I like the babes, but they’re gonna be a lot wrinklier by 2050. Its 60% overall tax rate is likely to be the base in the Europe of 2020 and fondly recalled as the good old days by mid-century.

Worst case scenario: Sharia, circa 2070.

For the Americans, it doesn’t make much difference whether the Austro-Swedish or Eurabian option prevails. This is nothing to do with disagreements over Iraq: you can’t “mend bridges” when the opposite bank is sinking into the river. The death of Europe in its present form is a given. The phase we’ve just begun is an interim one: America’s gone to the store, and is trying various outfits on for size. There is Bush’s wooing of Putin, who has not been so insane as to follow Jacques on his diplomatic suicide-bomber mission. There is the suggestion, floated more and more frequently vis a vis the Korean peninsula, that now may be the time for Japan to go nuclear. There are the Atlanticist states of Eastern Europe who declined to be shut up by Chirac. There are the President’s Latino inclinations, soon to be given expression in the Free Trade Area of the Americas: From the American point of view, the FTAA brings their principal foreign energy suppliers – Alberta and Venezuela – in-house, and in the broader sense Catholic Latin America is more culturally compatible with the US than post-Christian Europe is.

And then there’s the conservatives’ favourite: National Review’s current cover shows Bush, Blair and John Howard above the headline “Three Amigos”. Five years ago, when Bill Clinton launched his non-Chirac-sanctioned mini-war on Baghdad with the assistance of Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, I noted that what those countries had in common was a perverse determination to recoil from the notion that they had anything in common. For a generation, these countries’ elites have worked tirelessly to deny the reality of language, culture and history. Much of the territory Anglospherists claim is already lost – Canada and New Zealand, for starters - and anyone who wants to make it a going concern had better step on it, because it will be a lot harder to do in another generation. Where Britain will lie depends on how serious Mr Blair is about going down with the Franco-Belgo-German ship.

All these arrangements in embryo, however, have one thing in common: the intention is that America’s partners should be both economically and militarily credible – or, in that Canadian historian’s terms, they’re being evaluated in terms of “aggression and materialism”. Australia will never be as powerful as America, but it doesn’t, as Mr Lipponen does, trumpet its arthritic defects as a virtue and demand that these should be accepted as the new global norm. Indeed, once you stick a black void in the centre of the map where western Europe is, it’s amazing how the global outlook improves.

I should add that by “Europe” I’m using the Chiraquiste shorthand for a European Union run on sclerotic Franco-German lines. What we’ve seen in the last few weeks is that for Europeans the real clash of civilizations is not between Islam and the west but between what the French call “Anglo-Saxon” capitalism and Eurostatism. I was amused by the sheer snobbery of Martin Amis’ analysis in The Guardian last week: the condescension to Bush’s faith, the parallels between Texas and Saudi Arabia, both mired in a dusty religiosity. America’s religiosity, now unique in the western world, is at least part of the reason it reproduces at replacement rate, also uniquely in the western world. Besides, for all Amis’ cracks, Texas doesn’t seem as fundamentalist as the radical secularism of post-Christian Europe. Why would anyone think a disinclination to breed or to defend oneself is the recipe for success? Just because there’ll always be an England? As Bernard Shaw wrote almost 90 years ago in Heartbreak House, of a Europe too smug and self-absorbed to see what was coming, “Do you think God's laws will be suspended in favour of England because you were born in it?''


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: marksteyn; oldeurope; secularism; spanishelection; steyn
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1 posted on 03/15/2004 12:17:35 PM PST by conservativecorner
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To: conservativecorner
the EU must not develop into a military superpower but must become a great power that will not take up arms at any occasion in order to defend its own interests.”

Great. Let them achieve their utopian goal, and then I can go and take over all of Europe with a paintball gun.

King Dirtboy has a nice ring to it.

2 posted on 03/15/2004 12:21:01 PM PST by dirtboy (Howard, we hardly knew ye. Not that we're complaining, mind you...)
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To: conservativecorner
... Prime Minister Paavo Lipponen [...] said in London last year that "the EU must not develop into a military superpower."

No worries, Mate!

3 posted on 03/15/2004 12:29:58 PM PST by VadeRetro
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To: conservativecorner
"...you can’t “mend bridges” when the opposite bank is sinking into the river."

Steyn strikes again. Its not just what he says but the way he says it - brilliantly.
4 posted on 03/15/2004 12:30:55 PM PST by jim macomber (Author: "Bargained for Exchange", "Art & Part", "A Grave Breach" http://www.jamesmacomber.com)
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To: conservativecorner
Jacques Chiraq as George Clooney -- priceless.

This is an interesting column and not what I expected to read from Steyn on the Spanish Election (perhaps he'll address that at greater length in another column), but this is the perfect answer to the Euroweenies. They're future is pretty poor compared to ours.
5 posted on 03/15/2004 12:35:50 PM PST by You Dirty Rats
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To: conservativecorner
Eurabia...classic
6 posted on 03/15/2004 12:38:42 PM PST by blanknoone (At least the Spanish socialist party call themselves socialists.)
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To: conservativecorner
Old Europe's opiate of the masses is post-commie EUtopianism.

Oily bahksheesh has purchased willful ignorance in France among other once proud democratic nations, freed by Americans' blood and treasure, twice. America cannot save nations willing to commit cultural suicide under the threats of islam's mass murders.

Islam is out to recapture its losses pursuant to dar al islam, its dogma of once conquored by islam, always conquored by islam.

Eurabia is forming with the sleepers at the thousands of new mosques funded by the House of Saud, busy wahhabbees they.

The now disarmed EUropeans can only watch as their entire EUtopian culture collapses under heavily armed islamists' Blitzkrieg.
7 posted on 03/15/2004 12:39:08 PM PST by SevenDaysInMay (Federal judges and justices serve for periods of good behavior, not life. Article III sec. 1)
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To: conservativecorner
Man, this guy's brilliant!

I found this comment interesting: "you can’t “mend bridges” when the opposite bank is sinking into the river.?"

I've been thinking about John Kerry's criticism of Bush as being "a divider." This is an odd charge, first, considering that Bush has bent over backwards with his "new tone" commitment and has refused to shoot back at all of the cheap shots he's had to endure the past three years, and secondly, because the charge of "divider" is in and of itself divisive.

Steyn's comment could be applied to the the phony "bipartisanship" we see in Washington these days. One may say to Pres. Bush, the "new tone" and all, how can you build a bridge to the other side of the aisle when it is sinking into the mud that it likes to throw.

8 posted on 03/15/2004 12:49:38 PM PST by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: conservativecorner
The decline of Finland over the last century is a sad thing to consider. At the start of the 20th century, the Finns were under the control of Russia - just another part of its crumbling imperial empire. The unrest in Russia in 1913 and WWI in 1915 allowed the Finns to assert their nationalism through a major resistance movement that ultimately led to independence for Finland. It took God, guns and guts for this to occur.

The Finns set up their own arms and ammunition factories to produce the ordnance necessary to drive out the Russian army. These industries still exist today: Nammo Lapua and Vihtavuori powder works along with Sako rifles. The Vihtavuori rifle powder series has one of the most linear burning rates of any series made in the world. So much so, that fine tuning of rifle loads in order to achieve very accurate results is made quite a bit easier than that of any other manufacturers' powder series.

9 posted on 03/15/2004 12:53:12 PM PST by 45Auto (Big holes are (almost) always better.)
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To: conservativecorner
b
10 posted on 03/15/2004 12:58:21 PM PST by MoralSense
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To: conservativecorner
Or, to be more accurate, what will it take for the Yanks to nobble themselves?

Elect John Kerry.

11 posted on 03/15/2004 1:01:46 PM PST by Wolfstar (Yo, "real" conservatives. Spain's election is clear. Jihadists are on Kerry's side. Are you?)
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To: Mrs Zip
ping
12 posted on 03/15/2004 1:04:43 PM PST by zip (The real peacemakers - Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and Coast Guard.)
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To: Mrs Zip
ping
13 posted on 03/15/2004 1:04:45 PM PST by zip (The real peacemakers - Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and Coast Guard.)
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To: conservativecorner; Mudboy Slim; sultan88; Flora McDonald; AdSimp; Corin Stormhands; iceskater
FReekin' excellent read
14 posted on 03/15/2004 1:06:45 PM PST by P8riot (A friend will help you move. A good friend will help you move a body.)
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To: conservativecorner
and in the broader sense Catholic Latin America is more culturally compatible with the US than post-Christian Europe is.

This little line really intrigued me. Setting aside the usual Freeper knee jerk "foreign culture" reaction I believe this concept to be quite correct. Latin America is strongly Catholic. I'd hire immigrant workers to run a MacDoanlds in a heartbeat over the spoiled and lazy white teenagers I see wandering around looking for their next joint. It's difficult to be too serious about the foreign culture aspect when I'm sitting eating a burrito and setting up my wallpaper of Sofia Vergara.

Our problems with SA have more to do with the incredible corruption and the vicious aspects of Napoleonic Law rather than any innate deep conflicts between individual Americans and SA's.

Interestingly, today I heard some stats on the poverty rate here in Utah. Currently the govt sets it at 30%, mostly rural. However the poverty rate amongst Hispanics is about 1/3 of that.

Be that as it may, we are going to need strong trading partners. Steyn says very eloquently what I've been saying for years: Europe's fascination with cradle to grave freebies is going to ruin it.

The correct historical term for any group of pacifists is slaves.

15 posted on 03/15/2004 1:08:56 PM PST by Seruzawa (If you agree with the French raise your hand - If you are French raise both hands.)
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To: conservativecorner
bttt. Thanks for posting.
16 posted on 03/15/2004 1:09:56 PM PST by proud American in Canada
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To: conservativecorner
read for later
17 posted on 03/15/2004 1:16:02 PM PST by KantianBurke (Arguments that got Arnold elected in 02, will get a "moderate" RINO elected to the White House in 08)
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To: conservativecorner
I remember reading this a year ago. Like Steyn suggests, it holds up pretty darn well one year later.
18 posted on 03/15/2004 1:17:20 PM PST by Snuffington
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To: 45Auto
"The decline of Finland over the last century is a sad thing to consider."

And what might that decline be? Finland was one the poorest countries of Europe in the early 20th century. Now its one of the most properous ones. Finland has one of the highest fertility rates in Western Europe, 1.7, which is the same as the fertility rate for white Americans. Close to 90% of young Finnish men serve in the military; to this day most employers won't hire men who haven't served. The country also has the highest rate of firearm ownership in the world. Finland has mostly kept its borders tightly sealed unlike the neighbouring Sweden; the population is 97% native to this day. Sure, the country does have an extensive welfare system with the obvious problems. Still, its one of most conservative ones in Western Europe.

19 posted on 03/15/2004 1:20:54 PM PST by Truthsayer20
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To: P8riot
thanks for the ping.
20 posted on 03/15/2004 1:38:04 PM PST by iceskater (No nation or state ever taxed itself into prosperity.)
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