EU Europe Isn't Working - Eurotrash on Suicide Watch


From denial, to grudging acceptance, to substantial intervention, to debacle: that was the European Union’s trajectory once the storm that nearly consumed Wall Street in 2008 had crossed the Atlantic, starting the euro crisis. Twelve years later, the EU’s reaction to Covid-19’s arrival is following an ominously comparable trajectory.

Eurosceptics take aim at the EU’s excessive red tape and incompetence, the Commission’s vaccination fiasco being a case in point. Euro-loyalists contend that the EU has learned its lessons and has responded to the pandemic with refreshing proficiency and solidarity. They are both wrong.

The EU’s multiple failures are due to a deeper malaise, one the euro crisis unveiled and the pandemic is now exacerbating. What malaise? The EU’s formidable immunity to the smallest amount of democracy.

It is hard to tell which was the EU’s darkest hour. Was it in 2009, when we realised that Europe’s banks – French and German ones primarily – were insolvent and were part of a monetary union that was unable by design to address a doom-loop of collapsing banks and governments? Or did our darkest moment arrive last March when, as Italians and Spaniards were dying of Covid-19 in heart-wrenching numbers, some EU governments put limits on exports of masks and other medical equipment, choosing that very moment to disregard Europe’s celebrated single market?

Technically, the EU’s initial response was legally justified both in 2009 and 2020. In 2009 the EU’s institutions lacked the authority to save either the collapsing banks or the hamstrung member states. Having created a European Central Bank (ECB) lacking a government to support it and banned from either recapitalising eurozone banks directly or helping national governments do so, the EU was never going to have a good global banking crisis. Similarly, during the pandemic in 2020, with public health largely outside the EU’s “competence”, it was not surprising that the moment the body count began to rise, and intensive care units to fill up, it was every country for itself.

But getting caught out by events was part of the EU’s design. Its architects understood that the institutional edifice they had created was not fit for purpose, but hoped that emergencies would force their successors rapidly to forge new institutions which, without crisis, there was no political will to create. The question in 2009, and once more today, remains: did denial turn to acceptance fast enough? And how fit for purpose were the new EU institutions that resulted?

A decade ago, the EU’s reaction time was around six months. The first time EU leaders heard that a Greek government bankruptcy was about to bring down two German and two French banks was in the middle of December 2009. By May 2010 the first Greek bailout was finalised, saving the Franco-German banks and setting precedent for similar bailouts across Europe. That intervention has since led to the mobilisation of trillions of euros, channelled through brand new institutions: the European Financial Stability Facility, the European Stability Mechanism, the informal Troika (the trio of the Commission, the ECB and the IMF) nestling within the all powerful but still informal Eurogroup. There was also, of course, QE, or “quantitative easing” (effectively a money-creation programme of the ECB), which did most of the work to hold together the eurozone and, consequently, the EU.

In 2020 the EU’s reaction time shrank from six to three months. Following their countries’ restrictions on exports early in the crisis, Germany’s Angela Merkel and France’s Emmanuel Macron pushed the EU towards coordinated action: a €750bn recovery fund to assist the member states hit hardest by Covid-19 followed a potential €1.8trn pumped into Europe’s economy through the ECB’s bond-buying scheme. Then there was the now-infamous centralised vaccine procurement programme.

Given that the EU lacks a homogeneous state’s nimbleness, requiring quasi-unanimity between its 27 national governments, a reaction time between three and six months before trillions are mobilised to tackle unforeseen calamities is not too bad. Moreover, it would be unfair not to acknowledge that the EU conjured up rivers of euros with which it tried to extinguish both the euro crisis and the Covid-19 recession. And yet the result has been, in both cases, a comedy of errors.

As a boy, on stormy winter nights, I would count the seconds between lightning and thunder to work out if the storm was getting closer or moving on. During the euro crisis, including when I was Greek finance minister, I caught myself doing something similar after each monthly EU crisis summit, which always ended in a press conference announcing new impressive numbers and crisis-busting initiatives. I would record the half-life of the post-EU summit euphoria, noting how it shrank from weeks in 2010 to days in 2013 to hours by 2014. In 2015 I found myself inside those Eurogroup meetings, where I witnessed the true reason behind the EU’s failure: an institutionalised inclination to pose the wrong question.

When finance had its near-death experience in 2008, the UK’s then prime minister Gordon Brown and the governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King, and in Washington, DC the then Treasury secretary, Henry Paulson, and the chair of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, brought together bankers and Treasury aides and asked the right question: “What will it take to stop this crisis from consuming us?”

Meanwhile, in Brussels, a similar gathering took place, but the question posed was very different: “Given that our rules can no longer apply, how can we continue to pretend that they do?” Even if the answer given to this question is ultra-smart and implemented fully, only by accident will it ever minimise the human and economic cost of a crisis.

Why this penchant for asking the wrong question? The answer is that if the right question had been asked at the peak of the euro crisis (ie, “What will it take to stop this from consuming us?”), the answer would be self evident: tear up the EU rule-book, which banned the ECB from doing what the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England did, and instruct the ECB to print the money the French and German banks – and even member states – needed to survive. Alas, that was something that Europe’s oligarchs, whom EU leaders are loathe to cross, were supremely averse to doing. Why? Because by consenting to cast aside the original EU rule-book they would be willingly undermining their greatest achievement.

As originally constructed, the eurozone is an oligarch’s wet dream. It features a central bank that finances every corporate oligarch with unlimited free money within a large, rich economy where, due to the rules ruthlessly constraining what political institutions can do on behalf of the majority, it is impossible for the electorate to vote in any government, national or federal, that may transfer substantial portions of wealth from the few to the many.

Why would they ever allow this dream to end?

Were the EU’s powers-that-be unaware that answering the wrong question would undermine not just the workers and middle classes of Greece and Germany, but also deal a mighty blow upon aggregate investment and, thus, European capitalism? Of course not. But, in their eyes, the debacle of the euro crisis, and the avoidable pain it caused across Europe, was a price worth paying for their immunity from the democratic process. If anyone needs a textbook definition of a motivated failure, this is it.

Since 2010 tremendous effort has gone into circumventing the EU’s own rules while pretending to respect them. It began with the Greek bailout, which the rules did not allow but which was essential to re-float the Franco German banks. To disguise the EU bailout loans so that they would not look like EU bailout loans, the EU employed super-smart financial engineers, some of them former Lehman Brothers employees. They were the ones who designed fiendishly complex loan facilities and new institutions for delivering them in a manner that meant not a euro would be wasted on needy Europeans. And when the deed was complete, with huge austerity paying to support Europe’s bankers, they allowed the ECB to print as many billions of euros as necessary to cover up the underlying stagnation and further to enrich the oligarchs. Countries such as Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain had been converted to debtors’ prisons, while thousands of eastern Europeans, unable to find work in the depressed eurozone, were drawn to a UK boasting relative economic dynamism, thus giving the Brexit cause the push it needed to win narrowly in 2016.

Cut to last year, and the EU’s economic response to Covid-19. Once more, after a period of denial and comical retributions, the EU announced large sums and new institutions to spend them across the continent – causing predictable euphoria among the commentariat. Equally predictably, six months later the euphoria has deflated, leaving behind it the usual foreboding. With hindsight, what transpired was a faithful rendition of the euro crisis, only this time with a whiff of radicality in the issuance of common debt.

Last March, in a moment of harmonised panic following EU-wide lockdowns, 13 heads of governments, including President Macron, demanded from the EU the issue of common debt (a so-called eurobond) that would help shift burgeoning national debt from the weak shoulders of our states to the EU, so as to avert Greek-style austerity in the next few years. Chancellor Merkel, unsurprisingly, said “Nein” and offered a consolation prize in the form of a recovery fund to be financed by up to €750bn of common debt. It sounded like a lot of money to be raised by something sounding very much like the requested eurobond. But, alas, it was – like the Greek bailouts from 2010 onwards – lots of smoke and mirrors.

The press did not see it as such, at least not initially. Merkel’s decision to end her opposition to fiscal transfers was widely portrayed as the Hamiltonian moment (referring to Alexander Hamilton’s portrayal of common debt as the cement of the American union) the EU needed to turn into a proper union. The argument was that the EU bonds, which will finance the recovery fund, were the proverbial foot-in-the-door that might allow a substantive fiscal union to squeeze through later. The problem is, however, that a foot in the door can just as well end with a crushed foot and a slam shut.

The reason that, six months after the announcement of the recovery fund, the thrill is gone is that Europeans have begun to sense not just its insignificance but also the dangers it brings. To defend the EU’s weakest people and communities, the recovery fund should be large enough to offset the austerian cuts that would be otherwise necessary to balance the budget deficits once Berlin goes back into the black and demands other EU countries do the same. It packs less than one tenth of that, ensuring that a new tsunami of austerity will hit sooner or later.

And then there are the toxic politics that the recovery fund has already engendered and is bound to magnify. Suppose, for instance, the UK functioned like the EU: lacking a nationwide unemployment benefits system, an NHS and, generally, automatic transfers from better off to worse off regions. Now, introduce to that dystopic UK an EU-style recovery fund. Finally, imagine the horror of politicians representing Sussex and Surrey negotiating with their counterparts from Northumberland and Yorkshire on how much money they will transfer to them after the pandemic, even before we know its impact on each region.

The divisions and toxicity of such a process would make Brexit look like a tea party. And yet this divisiveness has been built into the EU recovery fund, complete with country allocations drawn up before we know the effects of the recession on each nation.

It is almost as if the whole thing were designed by a cunning Eurosceptic. Except that the real drivers are not ideological but, rather, the same old oligarchic interests that have obstructed a rational resolution of the euro crisis for more than a decade.

Around the same time the recovery fund was being finalised, EU leaders decided, quite sensibly, to defer all decisions regarding vaccine procurement to Ursula von der Leyen’s European Commission. The idea was to prevent beggar-thy-neighbour politics and to ensure that every European country would be guaranteed the same number of vaccines, pro rata, at the same price. Reasonable Europeans, not unreasonably, allowed themselves to hope that a new era of rational coordination and pan-European solidarity was dawning. How wrong they were.

The EU vaccines procurement fiasco is yet further proof that inefficient bureaucracy was never the EU’s true weakness. The roots of the union’s multiple failures can be traced to its origins in a glorified cartel. The rules that have caused so much avoidable pain across the continent, and have guaranteed the oligarchy immunity from anything resembling a democratic process, are embedded in the unwritten corporatist covenant at the centre of the EU – which, lest we forget, began life as a real cartel: the European Coal and Steel Community.

Unlike nation states that emerge as stabilisers of conflicts between social classes and groups, the EU was created as a cartel with a remit to stabilise the profit margins of the large, central European corporations. Seen through this prism, the EU’s stubborn faithfulness to failed practices begins to make sense. We know that cartels are reasonably good at distributing monopoly profits between oligarchs, but terrible at distributing losses. We also know that, unlike proper states, cartels will resist any democratisation of their decision-making, whether it is about debt or vaccines.

In this context, the European Commission’s policy for ordering vaccines was driven by one imperative: to keep the Franco-German axis in balance. Why else did Brussels split the lion’s share of the EU’s vaccine budget straight down the middle between German company BioNTech and French company Sanofi (placing an order for 300 million vaccines from each), while procrastinating for three months over the Brexit-tainted AstraZeneca vaccine? When the French vaccine was significantly delayed in clinical trials, leaving the Commission with a serious vaccine shortage, the panicked reaction came straight out of the euro crisis book of malice. The EU lashed out by threatening to impose a “vaccine border” on the island of Ireland, exposing the mendacity of its professed commitment to the Good Friday Agreement.

It was strikingly reminiscent of the retributions during the euro crisis between EU leaders struggling to shift the blame on to others – an all too familiar game. The Commission is attempting to camouflage bad decisions with even worse ones. A top EU official, Martin Selmayr, tweeted on 31 January that Europe’s vaccination roll-out was faster than Africa’s. On the day the EU’s authorities approved the AstraZeneca vaccine for general use, Macron opined that it was “quasi-ineffective for people over 65”. The German federal health minister said he was open to using the Russian vaccine if it was approved by the appropriate EU authorities.

This will be Merkel’s legacy. She spent her huge political capital to keep intact the Franco-German foundation of an EU that affords Europe’s ruling class the greatest power any oligarchs could possibly enjoy in a technologically advanced society where liberty is guaranteed, but only within a political sphere stripped of all authority. Even when Merkel had to give ground, as in the case of the recovery fund, she endorsed a mechanism that will redistribute wealth from poor German workers (and taxpayers in other EU countries) to Greek and Italian oligarchs, who have a cosy relationship with their countries’ governments.

Together, EU officials and the oligarchs of Europe’s south and north have contrived to rob European peoples, both in sickness and in health, of any capacity to participate in the decision-making process. As a result, 13 years after the 2008 crisis, the pandemic has hardened the reality of Europe as the world’s richest and at once sickest continent. They have done so by turning the EU into a cash cow that must be at once submitted to unquestioningly and blamed by our domestic oligarchies for their failures. Europe’s tragedy, to quote the novelist Arundhati Roy, is “immediate, real, epic and unfolding before our eyes. But it isn’t new. It is the wreckage of a train that has been careening down the track for years.”
 
Fuck em. France wanna do a Frexit and i hope they succeed.
If France leaves, that would essentially cripple the EU. Not a big hit like if Germany packed and left, but it would be a really huge blow to them. Specially because France is the main producer of food in the EU and they take up 40% of their funding to keep their agriculture afloat. Plus, it's one of the founding countries of the EEU, so that would be a great way to demoralize the ones that remain.

Also, it's funny when you think that France almost killed the EU 3 times, and all for selfish reasons.
 
The EU is basically just nazism without the flag. Nobody asked for it, and nobody wanted it. Look at how great Europe was before WW2 and the European Union!

Fuck em. France wanna do a Frexit and i hope they succeed.

If France did leave would it fix their horrible migrant problem? There's still beauty left in that city and I hope those shitstains are washed out before it's ruined beyond repair.

I feel like both WWs made everyone too pussified. They don't want to piss anybody off to the point another round starts up but it's a fool's task! SOMEBODY will always be unhappy. You should probably make sure that somebody can't come back to bite your ass in due time.
 
If France did leave would it fix their horrible migrant problem? There's still beauty left in that city and I hope those shitstains are washed out before it's ruined beyond repair.

I feel like both WWs made everyone too pussified. They don't want to piss anybody off to the point another round starts up but it's a fool's task! SOMEBODY will always be unhappy. You should probably make sure that somebody can't come back to bite your ass in due time.
Their migrant problem would be fixed, if COVID was still a thing... if you catch my drift.

France is a beautiful country that has been tainted by shit-stains trying to get into England, fuck them and send them back to Iran.
 
Eurosceptics take aim at the EU’s excessive red tape and incompetence, the Commission’s vaccination fiasco being a case in point. Euro-loyalists contend that the EU has learned its lessons and has responded to the pandemic with refreshing proficiency and solidarity. They are both wrong.

The EU’s multiple failures are due to a deeper malaise, one the euro crisis unveiled and the pandemic is now exacerbating. What malaise? The EU’s formidable immunity to the smallest amount of democracy.
The European Question is an interesting debate. Particularly if you believe Germany is still a danger, Nuclear Weapons not treaties solved the problem of world wars, or if you've studied the French Constitution of 1852 and the purposeful relegating of the Corps législatif from having the power to amend laws, censure the actions of the ministers or have legislative autonomy, as its president and its rules were designated by the government. Very much like the other Parliament of the EU, the fact Napoleon III was trying to become an Emperor apparently didn't matter to the signatories of the Treaty of Rome. Oops?

I hope the EU fails.

I'm not a Euroskeptic, I'm a Bureauskeptic.... MORE red tape has never solved anything.
I cannot understand what it is even trying to be, what idealism does it have principally, what romanticism or rationality does it have to root itself, and what in the name of God is its plan? What is the godforsaken plan for its existence? Is it malice or stupidity that restrains their discussion openly on just what is the EU? To the dumb docile European voter it apparently never occurred to ask!

Is it just a Bureaucratic Front to attract support from those (sometimes called "fellow travellers") who do not fully agree with some inner party's ideology, but agree with certain aspects of it? Does it want to be some sort of system where universal suffrage elects a first huge ideologically-sorted layer who then elect a smaller more elite and senior layer who then finally elect the leadership? It would be better off reconstituting monarchies and intermarrying them to form an inner pan-European aristocracy under an emperor. At least a European Dominion or European Realm would be understandable. This undemocratic mess manages all the downsides with none of the majesty or pageantry.

the Teutonic race may well have the opportunity to fulfill Kaiser Wilhelm's and Uncle Adolf's dream of a Europe united under the benevolent rule of Germany.
The Kleindeutsche Lösung der Deutschefrage and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. The Republic of Greater Bavaria, which now rules in place of the two great nations of Preußen and Österreich after Protestantism & Westphalian sovereignty fundamentally broke the Holy Roman Empire, holds together the failed state where before the World Wars there was something more than western neoliberalism under the guise of 'ordoliberalism'. Now there isn't even that, Germans are still asleep to the vacuum of power on the continent. If it isn't filled by a German pro-EU or Anti-EU message than it will be filled by and anti-German message under the cloak of an anti-Euro economic message.

IMHO there's a few possible ways for a United Europe.
1) Make it a United States of Europe, with the former countries now states in these United States of Europe and a governmental body elected by the people. No shadow governments without election by the people like the EU Commision.
2) Return to the original idea behind the EEU, which was an Economic union, not a political one.
3) Let us run the show, who else could do it?
  1. Have a constitution for your government
  2. Stop trying be a goverment
  3. Crown Franz, Duke of Bavaria, the Holy Roman Emperor as he has a Jacobite claim upon the crowns of England, Scotland, and Ireland
If France did leave would it fix their horrible migrant problem? There's still beauty left in that city and I hope those shitstains are washed out before it's ruined beyond repair.
The French Treasury would probably have to stop guaranteeing the Franc of the Financial Community of Africa and the Comorian franc which France has held onto in order to compel the countries using the currency to have to deposit half of their foreign exchange reserves with the French Treasury. However in exchange for the guarantees provided by the French treasury, African countries channel more money to France than they receive in aid. They also argue that African countries have no say in deciding key monetary policies. France would probably have to stop having a semi-colonial possession of Africa in order to stop their horrible migrant problem.

France chooses to do this by refusing to stop their government from trying to stay a colonial power. However because China and France are partners in "opposing regime change by force" in the 2020 Malian coup d'état its likely China will fill in any vacuum left by a European power.
 
Not a big hit like if Germany packed and left, but it would be a really huge blow to them. Specially because France is the main producer of food in the EU and they take up 40% of their funding to keep their agriculture afloat. Plus, it's one of the founding countries of the EEU, so that would be a great way to demoralize the ones that remain.
they just produce it more expensive and the EU is buying french support by paying them for agriculture.

there will be no food shortage in the EU as long as the dutch stay in.


also this article is from that bald greek loser so why should anybody care?
 
they just produce it more expensive and the EU is buying french support by paying them for agriculture.
They mainly buy the support of the prez with it, because the french farmers are an important voting bloc and a must have if you want to win french elections. That's why they will not want to let go of EU's agriculture subsidies or they will revolt and do their best to get a pro EU prez in place to get their money. We know that the french are pretty zealous when it comes to fight against themselves.

Also, didn't knew that about the Dutch. I remember seeing in the data that netherlands, Spain and Poland were among the top 5 food productors of the EU, but i don't know it that would outweight France if they fucked off.
 
Also, didn't knew that about the Dutch. I remember seeing in the data that netherlands, Spain and Poland were among the top 5 food productors of the EU, but i don't know it that would outweight France if they fucked off.
Well Spain and Poland are bigger countries of the EU so thats nothing strange. the dutch on the other hand have a tiny and super crowded country and they still export massive amounts of food. they are leading in pretty much every field of agriculture. Wageningen University is pretty insane and a fun place to visit for a day trip.
 
You might re-read the history of National Socialism, if you honestly think that the EU and The Nazis are the same.
England was led by weak donkeys, France was almost blocked the entire time because of internal strife. Just look at them how frantically they tried to appease Hitler 1938 in Munich. Weak and Pathetic!
Spain was almost run over by the communists until we sent the Legion Condor, the Italians were nothing more than a laughing stock even with Mussolini. There was nothing great in Europe before WW2.

IMHO there's a few possible ways for a United Europe.
1) Make it a United States of Europe, with the former countries now states in these United States of Europe and a governmental body elected by the people. No shadow governments without election by the people like the EU Commision.
2) Return to the original idea behind the EEU, which was an Economic union, not a political one.
3) Let us run the show, who else could do it?

You know having Electoral votes model rather than popular vote might actually be acceptable to smaller states. So 1) Is plausible if Eu works towards that and gains trust.
 
I remember complaining about the EU's mission creep back in the early 2000s, and I feel kinda vindicated based on the blatant land grabs after the financial crisis and now this one after the pandemic. National health systems were never an EU competence but would you look at that - one "unprecedented crisis" later and now they've set up a new bureau for drug procurement. Will this go away after the crisis? No. Will it be repurposed for all medicines for member states? I'm guessing yes.
 
Fuck em. France wanna do a Frexit and i hope they succeed.
The only thing that made Brexit possible was the fact that the UK retained their own currency. Once you adopt the Euro as your national currency I don't think there's any way you can leave the EU. Marie Le Pen, who I am generally supportive of, sounded like an idiot on the topic. She had no idea how to even start to restore the franc. There will be no Italoxit, Frexit, or Whatever-The-Fuxit, at least for the foreseeable future.
 
Once you adopt the Euro as your national currency I don't think there's any way you can leave the EU
Yes, you can, and it's an enormous deal because each state KEEPS ITS OWN DEBT. The EU has a common currecy, but each country still has its own debt because, surprise, northern countries don't want to put their economies at risk because southern countries cannot control their expenses (more like control corruption). So if France wants to go back to the Franc, they can do it but they will have to start issuing new Francs like hotcakes. As well, the fact that France leaves the EU will devaluate the Euro by a significant margin. Still not much, but decent (Germany still holds the highest currency value tho).

Also, Denmark still has Crowns because they chose to keep their currency through a referendum. And Sweden still has its own currency as well because their central bank is not independent from the state (one of the requirements to have the Euro is that the country's central bank must be independent).
 
Europe isn't working because the leadership isn't completely German.
Here I said it!
The reunification of Germany and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. In a perfect world I would welcome Europe being under German rulership. However you Krauts cannot simply be content with what you have. The US realized its Manifest Destiny ended at the Pacific coastline. The only limit to expansion Germans understand is a body count.
 
I'd say we should have nipped this whole problem in the bud by following the Morganthau Plan, but whatevs. Europe's always been a blood-soaked plot of land and it's only a matter of time before its inhabitants have to put their waders back on.
 
The Brits, it's a shame, sadly they ain't of the Caliber of William Pitt the Younger or Winston Churchill anymore.
Our current leaders are just as good at sucking off jewish bankers, robbing the working classes blind and suborning our nations firepower, industry and technology to serve international bankers as they Churchill was thank you very much.

We just have the internet now so everyone can make memes about it and not stop it happening.

Also, I never liked the EU; as someone pointed out before: A massive, bloated government doesn't do much for anyone except the people running the massive bloated government. Maybe the EU would have worked better if the average person gave a shit and sent people to the EU Parliament that worked in their interests rather than fringe shills? But I doubt it; government bloat kills good intentions pretty stone dead.
 
Not a big hit like if Germany packed and left
Germany wouldn't leave. The EU has become a captive supply chain for German heavy industry. Leaving would increase their costs substantially.

I cannot understand what it is even trying to be, what idealism does it have principally, what romanticism or rationality does it have to root itself, and what in the name of God is its plan?
The EU was conceived, by Jean Monnet and a few others, during the later years of the Great War as a way to prevent another war of the same scale in Europe. The idea was that making nations dependent on one another for the raw materials necessary to produce weapons of war would make them less likely to go to war with one another, which is why it was initially implemented as the Coal and Steel union between France and Germany. Even that initial treaty had the clause "ever closer union" within it.

It was also obsolete before it was even founded, not to mention too late. The second world war had occured while they were still trying to push the idea. In the aftermath of that war, europe was so devastated that europe's interior border controls effectively ceased to exist for a long time. People were too busy rebuilding to worry about where the material and manpower came from. Free commerce united Europe before the EU could even get it start, so it has arguably failed in the only firmly stated purpose it ever had.

The current generation of leaders and rulers within the EU have forgotten that original purpose, of course. It's coasting on momentum now, using expansion and centralisation to maintain that momentum, without any clear destination in mind.
 
It was also obsolete before it was even founded, not to mention too late. The second world war had occured while they were still trying to push the idea. In the aftermath of that war, europe was so devastated that europe's interior border controls effectively ceased to exist for a long time. People were too busy rebuilding to worry about where the material and manpower came from. Free commerce united Europe before the EU could even get it start, so it has arguably failed in the only firmly stated purpose it ever had.

The current generation of leaders and rulers within the EU have forgotten that original purpose, of course. It's coasting on momentum now, using expansion and centralisation to maintain that momentum, without any clear destination in mind.
Europeans really do live like a chicken with its head cut off in the shadow of the lost Imperium of their fallen Monarchs. To be so lost as to trust fanaticism and then in the aftermath stumble into a unity of form and ease rather than substance and meaning. The nations of Europe are like soulless ghouls, something left still when the heart and soul are gone. A zombie shambling along with an instinct to expand and reacquire something by it that it cannot fathom it even lost.

I heard once that the EU was thinking of calling itself the Union and expand into the Middle East or Africa, I don't know if that was a joke? You really just feel a want to put it out of its misery, it is geopolitically dead but neither America, Russia, or China want to conquer it so it slowly marches on in the only manner it knows how to.

My family is from old Silesia, and we were proud Prussians (although probably genetically Czech or today Polish, its weird) until after the world wars, but now I don't know what to feel about Europe except to regret German unification at least past the Augustbündnis. Bavaria, Prussia, and Austria were nations with destinies. Germany's just doesn't seem to really have one, the Holy Roman Empire lacked a real drive too. German just exports its wares, and then makes more. If it should run out of materials or energy due to a situation in the world, I feel that for the sake of its GDP and employment numbers it would just get angry and elect another Führer to ensure it could acquire the means to continue to make more wares like Gray goo.
 
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