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History Returns to Europe
Townhall.com ^ | June 3, 2010 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 06/03/2010 4:54:09 AM PDT by Kaslin

VIENNA -- Walk the beautiful streets in Munich, Strasbourg and Vienna, and you can see why Europeans thought in the last decades that they had reached the end of history. There is not a soldier to be seen. Sidewalk cafes are jammed midweek with two-hour lunch-goers. Fashion, vacations and sex dominate the ads and billboards.

Bikers, electric commuter trains and tiny fuel-efficient cars zoom by in a green contrast to our gas-guzzling Tahoes and Yukons.

So naturally, there is a general sense of satisfied accomplishment among European social democrats. They believe that finally a quiet sameness across their continent has replaced two millennia of constant European warring and revolution. Now, everybody seems to get an apartment, small car, state job, good pension and peace -- and in exchange, all voice comfortable center-left consensus politics.

But beneath the genteel European Union veneer, few remembered that human nature remains constant and gives not even nice Europeans a pass from its harsh laws.

So suddenly the Greek financial meltdown, and the staggering debts that must be repaid, have alternately enraged and terrified northern European creditors. Even the most vocal Europhiles are quietly rethinking the entire premise of a European Union that offers lavish benefits but no sound method of paying for them.

After all, it is one thing to redistribute income by taking from richer Germans and Austrians to give to poorer Germans and Austrians. But it is something else for all Germans and Austrians to extend their socialist charity to siesta-taking Greeks, Italians and Spaniards. For all the lofty rhetoric of the collective European Union, age-old culture, language and nationalism still trump the ideal of continental unity.

But bickering over a trillion dollars in bad southern European debt is not the EU's only problem. Why, for example, do Europe's cradle-to-grave entitlements so often end up encouraging declining populations, atheism and lower worker productivity that is readily apparent to the casual visitor?

Perhaps if everybody ends up about the same, regardless of effort or achievement, then life must be enjoyed mostly in the here and now. Why sacrifice for children, or put something aside for heirs, or worry over a judgment in the afterlife? The more the European Union talks about its global caring, the less likely its own citizens are to have children.

It is also strange that the more Europeans flock to their ancient majestic cathedrals, splendid museums and grandiose villas and castles to satisfy an innate human desire to enjoy artistic, architectural and religious achievement, the more it is likely that they would never again build a now politically incorrect cathedral at Rouen, a Schönbrunn Palace or a castle on the Rhine.

Much is made of European multiculturalism, a willingness to allow Muslims from the Middle East, Pakistan and Turkey to live separate lives without assimilating fully into European society.

But such "tolerance" reflects in part a fear of radical Islam and terrorism. For all the European talk of progressive attitudes about free speech, feminism and gay rights, such principles fade quickly when radical Muslims demand Sharia law, demonize homosexuals or threaten European cartoonists and novelists. It is almost as if the more Europe takes pride in its own multiculturalism, the larger its ethnic ghettoes expand -- and the more its native populations grow bitter against the foreign-born.

Europe is a vocal member of the United Nations and other transnational organizations. But this utopian internationalism depends on the protection guaranteed by the United States and its huge military. Otherwise, there would either be costly European militaries -- or the occasional threat of attack. Europeans forgot that just because they are not looking for war, it doesn't mean that war might not look for them.

In short, as a reaction to the self-destruction of Europe in World War II and the twin monsters of fascism and communism, Europeans thought they could change human nature itself through the creation of an all-caring, all-wise European Union uber-citizen. Instead of dealing with human sins, European wise men of the last half-century would simply declare them passé.

But human-driven history is now roaring back with a fury in Europe -- from Mediterranean insolvency, to the threat of radical Islam, to demographic decline, to new international dangers on the horizon.

Only one question remains: At a time when Europe is discovering that its democratic socialism does not work, why in the world is the United States doing its best to copy it?


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: europe; vdh; victordavishanson

1 posted on 06/03/2010 4:54:09 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

” Only one question remains: At a time when Europe is discovering that its democratic socialism does not work, why in the world is the United States doing its best to copy it? “.....


2 posted on 06/03/2010 5:05:32 AM PDT by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole....)
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To: Kaslin
At a time when Europe is discovering that its democratic socialism does not work, why in the world is the United States doing its best to copy it?

The "United States" is not doing its best to copy it; The Won, his allies and their masters are doing their best to copy it, precisely BECAUSE IT DOESN'T WORK.

3 posted on 06/03/2010 5:07:00 AM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: Nachum
>>>> "...Much is made of European multiculturalism, a willingness to allow Muslims from the Middle East, Pakistan and Turkey to live separate lives without assimilating fully into European society." <<<< What a silly article, this pretentious article never once mentions how profoundly antisemitic that Europe is --- TODAY, yesterday, tommorrow --- Europe is profoundly antisemitic.
4 posted on 06/03/2010 5:14:00 AM PDT by hennie pennie (/)
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To: hosepipe; DuncanWaring

See post#3, but let me add to it that the arrogant p o s considers himself a citizen of the world, he thinks we all should be. I am an American citizen and proud of it


5 posted on 06/03/2010 5:18:05 AM PDT by Kaslin (Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
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To: Kaslin
America should practice some “tuff” love for Europe by leaving NATO and making a gradual withdrawal from the Middle East (Europe's oil come from their, not ours).
6 posted on 06/03/2010 5:42:01 AM PDT by Red Dog #1
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To: hosepipe

80 years of big government + 50 years of liberalism + 40 years of dumbed down public schools and the welfare state. That is how hosepipe!


7 posted on 06/03/2010 6:19:00 AM PDT by Nat Turner (Escaped from NY in 1983 and not ever going back....)
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To: Nat Turner

true...


8 posted on 06/03/2010 7:05:31 AM PDT by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole....)
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To: Red Dog #1
Easier said than done!!

The article does a good job explaining what underlies some of the present day problems in Europe. However, it just hints at the nationalistic pressures that lie beneath.

Here in Germany the people are fed up. Why? Well, for example:

They were not given a voice in going to the Euro, but, were assured that they would not have to bail out Club Med. Now shown to be a lie! Why should Fritz work until 67 with little left in the pay packet while his EU cousin in Crete retires at 53 to a life of leisure.

There are reports that the ECB is buying the more or less worthless bonds of Spain, Portugal and, YES, Greece. Germany big banks were forced to pledge not to sell their holding until 2014, but, the word on the street is the French banks are unloading this crap to save their skins and who will pay in the end . . . can you say Germany!

Merkel just lost a key state and her majority in the upper house. Now the (more or less ceremonial job) President has packed it in as he “does not need this s**t he is getting for stating the obvious.

Germany is beginning to turn inward and that is not good news for Europe or the world. Like the saying goes, may you live in interesting times. I say “Yes we can”!! s/off

9 posted on 06/03/2010 8:51:18 AM PDT by lowbuck
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To: lowbuck
"Easier said than done!!"

In deed you're correct, but I didn't use the paternalistic "tuff love" phrase carelessly. Europe's current state could very well be compared to that of a teenager who doesn't realize deep down he resents his parents because he is dependent on them. The only healthy course is for the teenager to mature and become a fully contributing member of the family.

I also know more than a few Germans and can vouche that you're 100% right that they're ticked off (and 100% right to be). Hopefully, the Germans and perhaps the rest of Europe will put 2 and 2 together and begin to tame their welfare states and start taking responsibity for thier own security. But frankly, I think they're going to have to feel some more pain first.

10 posted on 06/03/2010 9:32:12 AM PDT by Red Dog #1
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To: Red Dog #1

I think one of the reasons so many of the Germans are mad is that back around the turn of the century they went through a lot of economic pain to restructure their economy.

Unemployment, the loss of a lifetime job, give backs. They did what they needed to do to prosper and now the one’s who did not (Club Med) are asking the one’s who did to bail them out!


11 posted on 06/03/2010 9:44:55 AM PDT by lowbuck (The Blue Card (US Passport) Don't leave home without it.)
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