You're
Dreaming If You Think The Euro Crisis Is Resolved
Raul
Ilargi Meijer
24
September, 2012
The
German edition of Der Spiegel opens the new week on Monday morning
with a series of articles on the European situation, which make
clear, as if that were still necessary, that Europe is still an
absolute mess. You know, just in case you thought it was not. That
Mario Draghi's latest unlimited whatever it is had somehow chased
away the demons.
First,
Der Spiegel writes that the
Greek deficit is twice as high as previously thought,,
at €20 billion, according to a preliminary version of the long
awaited troika report. The gap has to be closed for the next tranche
of bailout money to be paid.
Second, eurozone
countries plan to let the ESM balloon to over €2 trillion ($2.6
trillion).
Remember that the German Constitutional Court limited Berlin's part
to about €119 billion recently. Creative accounting to infinity and
beyond. The efforts to keep the union together will blow it apart.
Third, former
German FInance Minister Steinbrueck works on a banking plan that
would split up investment and retail activities for Germany's banks
(including Deutsche), think Glass Steagall. He wants to ban
commodities speculation. And he wants a bank-ESM, a fund paid for by
banks that can be used to bail them out, rather than taxpayer money.
There's
lot more going on, and going wrong, in Europe, no matter what Draghi
does, and no matter what plans José Manuel Barroso unveils. When I
saw that the latter was seriously talking about establishing a
European army, I couldn't help thinking: will it bring all those
translators to the battlefield too?
Europe
is not a country, it is not a culture, and it is not a language. It
is a loose union that consists of many of each. Europe can hold
together in times of plenty, and it will fall apart in meagre times.
The only thing Europeans have power over - to a degree - is how the
process of unravelling will unfold; they can't stop the process. The
present attempts to hold the union together at all costs will be
extremely costly, they have zero chance of succeeding, and they will
lead to violence. The alternative, an attempt to live together as
good and peaceful neighbors outside of a currency union, is not even
considered. And I'm pretty sure it won't be until it's too late.
Hedge
fund king Ray Dalio last week expressed the same fears I have been
hammering on for months now, see for instance Project
Europe is Over, Dear
Angela, It's Time To Do The Right Thing and A
Big Bad Brick Wall.
I will always be reluctant to evoke Hitler's name, because it will
inevitably be interpreted by many people as over the top
fear-mongering, and because of the WWII survivor stories I grew up
with, but the principle remains the same. A few weeks ago, I finally
did resort to using the name, for the simple reason that in my view
the threat in Europe is growing by the day:
Europe
is creating conditions - of misery, poverty and hopelessness - in a
number of its member states [..], that are not unlike those that
provided the space needed by the likes of Hitler and Mussolini to
rise to power in the 1920s and '30s. And that is a grave danger.
Now, Dalio says this:
RAY
DALIO: I don't know whether we're beyond the point of being able to
successfully manage this. And I worry then about—social disruption.
I worry about—another leg down in the economies—causing—social
disruptions. Because deleveraging—can be very painful, it depends
how they're managed.
I
can only hope that more people wake up to this, and that the people
who lead the continent into these dangers will be relieved from their
positions before they can do more harm. Hey, I can hope...
Still: "How
the people work this through together"? They obviously
don't. It's one-way traffic all the way. Conditions and demands are
imposed upon people who have no say in how their politicians, elected
or not, react to them. It's the bullies vs the bullied, working all
the way down the chain of command.. The troika bullies Spanish PM
Rajoy, and he turns around and tries to bully Artur Mas, the
President of Catalunya.
And
as long as the IMF is allowed a seat at the various tables from which
it can demand and impose, that is not going to change. The Fund's
"reform" demands, based on Milton Friedman's Chicago School
shock capitalism, tried, tested, and fine-tuned in South America,
Asia and Eastern Europe, are still the sole religious mantra. These
days, that is true for the EU as much as for the IMF, as I documented
in Hungary
Says The IMF And EU Want To Make It A Colony Of Slaves.
Is
this because nothing has been learned from past failure doctrine
disasters? No, on the contrary, it's because the approach has been so
spectacularly successful for the IMF's main donors and puppetmasters.
What have been calamities for the people of the countries concerned
have also been both the sparkplugs and the fuel for the engine of
increasing political power the puppeteers have obtained through the
IMF. And this time around they're set on doing themselves one better.
This time they are aiming to buy up the Acropolis and the Coliseum.
And
it's really simple from thereon in. It makes no difference whether
you call it shock doctrine or 21st century imperialism or hostile
takeovers, you can't take away from the people of Greece, Italy and
Spain all the monuments of their past, as well as all powers they
have over their own economies, production facilities and agriculture,
and expect them to take that lying down. Not going to happen.
That's
what makes the situation in Europe so dangerously volatile today. And
it will all spread further too. We will end up with large parts of
Europe being de facto owned by international conglomerates, who will
use this ownership to drive up prices for essential services, food,
electricity, water, housing etc. While at the same time IMF-style
"reforms" will drive wages down.
The
politico-banking class are all sitting there smugly and comfy in
their bought-on-someone-else's-credit plush offices, picking through
the still rich and splendid spoils of once proud nations and fiercely
independent peoples. And even if they do win some of the preliminary
battles at the negotiating table, the real ones can be won only
through the use of violence.
There
isn't much time left until that becomes a realistic threat, which
means that now is the time for the people of Europe to decide whether
they want to go down that road or not. And if they don't, they need
to draw conclusions and accept the potential consequences of that
decision: Get up, Stand up. And no, I don't have a lot of faith that
they will. But I do hope that more people will now start to clue in
on what that means: yes, violence.
The
new push for a European Union federation, complete with its own head
of state and army, is the "final phase" of the destruction
of democracy and the nation state, the president of the Czech
Republic has warned.
In
an interview with The Sunday Telegraph, Václav Klaus warns that
"two-faced" politicians, including the Conservatives, have
opened the door to an EU superstate by giving up on democracy, in a
flight from accountability and responsibility to their voters. "We
need to think about how to restore our statehood and our sovereignty.
That is impossible in a federation. The EU should move in an opposite
direction," he said.
Last
week, Germany, France and nine other of Europe's largest countries
called for an end to national vetoes over defence policy as Guido
Westerwelle, the German foreign minister, urged the creation of a
directly elected EU president "who personally appoints the
members of his European government".
Mr
Westerwelle, in a reference to British opposition, called for nation
states to be stripped of vetoes on defence to "prevent one
single member state from being able to obstruct initiatives"
which "could eventually involve a European army".
The
new offensive followed the unprecedented declaration by the
Commission's president, José Manuel Barroso, during his "state
of union" address to the European Parliament on 12 September,
that he would make proposals for a fully-fledged EU "federation"
in 2014. "Let's not be afraid of the word," he said.
[..]
Mr Klaus described Mr Barroso's call for a federation, quickly
followed by the German-led intervention, as an important turning
point.
"This
is the first time he has acknowledged the real ambitions of today's
protagonists of a further deepening of European integration. Until
today, people, like Mr Barroso, held these ambitions in secret from
the European public," he said. "I'm afraid that Barroso has
the feeling that the time is right to announce such an absolutely
wrong development. "They think they are finalising the
concept of Europe, but in my understanding they are destroying it."
[..]
"When
it comes to the political elites at the top of the countries, it is
true, I am isolated," he said. "Especially after our
Communist experience, we know, very strongly and possibly more than
people in Western Europe, that the process of democracy is
more important than the outcome". [..]
In
his book, Europe: The Shattering of Illusions, to be published by
Bloomsbury on Thursday, Mr Klaus makes the case that the EU has
evolved into its current form because political leaders have
found it convenient to turn away from their nation states, where
voters have historically been able to hold them to account.
"Political
elites have always known that the shift in decision-making from the
national to the supranational level weakens the traditional
democratic mechanisms (that are inseparable from the
existence of the nation state), and this increases their
power in a radical way. That is why they wanted this shift so badly
in the past, and that is why they want it today," he writes.
"The
authors of the concept of European integration managed to short
circuit the minds of the people, making a link between Hitler's
aggressive nationalism (nationalism of a totally negative type) and
the traditional nation state, calling into question the existence
of nation states in general. Of the many fatal mistakes and lies that
have always underpinned the evolution of the EU, this is one of the
worst."
Mr.
Klaus has kept his country out of the eurozone, a wise decision,
since the Czech Republic was in no better position than Greece was
when it joined the euro, and might well have ended up where Greece
presently is.
The
peaceful split between the Czech and Slovak parts of Czechoslovakia
in 1994 will probably be talked about a lot in the coming years, if
only because it went directly against he trend of unification. Had
similar wisdom been used in Yugoslavia, we might have been spared a
lot of violence. When there no longer is an economic reason for
regions to stay together that have their own culture, history and
language, then these regions will split up. That is not a disaster.
Big is not better.
There
were a million and a half people in the streets of Barcelona to
celebrate Diada, the national holiday of Catalunya (I like their
spelling so much better...) the other day. For the Catalans,
independence is a done deal, it's just matter of time. They're on
their way there, and they intend to continue on that way. Spain's
refusal to let Catalunya control its own taxes, as well as a verdict
by the Madrid Constitutional Court against a plan accepted by its own
parliament to give regions more self-control sealed the deal.
The
government in Madrid, however, calls the plan "illegal,
unthinkable, lethal". The Spanish army is threatening to "crush
the vultures". That sounds a lot more like Yugoslavia than like
Czechoslovakia.
But
it is the inevitable future of Europe. If and when Catalunya secedes,
the Spanish Basque region will soon follow. The French Pays Basque
will insist on joining it. Scotland? Wales, anyone? There will be
many regions in many countries that will resist central governments
increasingly feeding, like Rome did when its wealth was running out,
on their peripheries.
People
with distinct cultures, histories and languages will feel that they
are better off governing themselves. And in many cases they will be
right. They will realize that times will be economically much harder
no matter what they do, so they might as well do it alone.
What
Europe should be doing is recognizing these situations early, and
facilitating cries for independence where these cries are loud and
clear. It does no such thing. Europe's leaders want to intensify the
union, not allow it to break up.
But
Catalan polls show a majority of the people are for independence. And
there is a UN charter that guarantees a people the right of
self-determination. Still, the Spanish army vows to crush the
vultures. Europe had better come to its senses fast.
The
fate of the continent and its people is presently in the hands of a
group of bankers, technocrats and delusional politicians. That fate
needs to be clawed out of those white-knuckled fingers, and fast, or
we will see a lot of blood in the streets.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.