What we see here cannot stand. That is why we are seeing growing friction not necessarily between nations which amazingly are getting along fine now, but with the authoritarian impulse of the executive. This same crowd is what we call the DEEP STATE and it is clearly been brought under control in the USA by the true power of the people.
The central problem exists everywhere simply the information age is finding them all out and we the people certainly dislike been dictated to by folks who are really just like us.
The obvious solution is to establish the equivalent of an elected presidency who takes full charge of this executive level. That at least establishes the potential for serious change. What is quite clear is that the time has come for this and should also include the British isles as well.
And while we are at it, it is also time to allow Russia to participate and perhaps Putin could run as president. Initially it would be a blind leap of faith but supported by a powerfully resurgent Orthodox Church throughout Europe..
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EU has become the kind of dictatorship it aimed to defeat
OPINION: Let's start with a brief history lesson.
What is now the European Union originated in 1957 as the European
Economic Community. It had just six members: France, West Germany,
Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Italy.
It began as a customs union and common market, the aim being to promote
free trade and economic co-operation. Neutralising the historic enmity
between France and Germany was a crucial objective.
The EEC's founders, eager to avoid a repetition of the horrors of World
War II, theorised that countries that were inter-dependent in terms of
trade were less likely to start shooting at each other. And so it turned
out.
But the ultimate goal always involved more than trade. From the start,
the concept of supranationalism – the creation of a multinational
political union with broad powers delegated to it by member states – was
central to the EU's evolution.
Accordingly, the EEC morphed into the European Union in 1993,
reflecting the reality that its interests were now political rather than
simply economic. That was followed in 2002 by the introduction of a
common currency, the euro.
Along the way, membership expanded far beyond those original six
countries. The EU now consists of 28 member states with a far more
diverse mix of ethnicities and cultures than was originally envisaged.
And as the EU has expanded, so tensions have emerged – perhaps
inevitably, given that many of its member states have little in common,
culturally and historically.
The first fault lines were exposed during the global financial crisis,
which highlighted disparities between the rich industrial countries of
Northern Europe and less resilient member states such as Greece, Spain,
Italy and Portugal.
Resentment of their subservience to dominant economies such as Germany
was a key factor in the emergence of populist nationalist parties in
Greece and Italy.
Since then, strains within the EU have been greatly magnified by conflicting attitudes toward the massive tide of refugees and asylum-seekers flooding into Europe from the Middle East and North Africa.
Liberal, affluent Europe, led by a Germany that is still anxious to
atone for Nazism, considers it has a humanitarian obligation to provide
for the newcomers. But dissenting EU countries such as Hungary and
Poland insist on the sovereign right to decide who should cross their
borders.
As a result of these tensions, nationalism is again on the rise in
Europe. It's not a pretty sight, but it's understandable. When push
comes to shove, these dissenting countries resent being subjected to
rules imposed from outside.
All this suggests that the old-fashioned nation-state, forged by its
own history, culture, language and sense of identity, is not easily
erased. This is not what the visionaries who founded the EU were hoping
for, but it's hardly the first time grand, idealistic projects have had
unintended outcomes.
And then, of course, there's the British experience, which tells us a
lot about the true nature of the EU and the imperious mindset of the
Grand Viziers who control it.
The British people voted by a margin of 52 to 48 to leave the EU.
Concern about uncontrolled immigration was one factor, but there was
also understandable resentment at being subjected to an ever-increasing
set of arcane rules and regulations imposed by a distant bureaucracy
that was seen as unrepresentative and unaccountable.
Ah, but the men who run the EU don't like having their power
challenged. They have gone to great lengths to frustrate British
attempts to negotiate a fair and honourable exit. It's obvious that they
mean to make an example of Britain by punishing the country for its
impertinence.
Their behaviour toward the British prime minister, the beleaguered Theresa May, has been bullying and vindictive.
The fact that May personally favoured staying in the EU hasn't saved
her from the taunts of pompous Eurocrats such as Jean-Claude Juncker and
Donald Tusk, who humiliate her at every opportunity – even to the point
of putting mocking pictures on Instagram.
The message to other EU member countries is that they can expect similar treatment should they dare consider leaving.
But the more striking message these men send to the watching world is
that the protection of Fortress Europe trumps the democratic right of
the British people to decide their own future.
That surely tells you something about the monster the EU has become, and how its ideals have been corrupted.
As the British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt wryly observed recently:
"The EU was set up to protect freedom. It was the Soviet Union that
stopped people leaving."
You have to wonder how many countries would have joined the EU had they
realised what it would turn into – a surreal Hotel California where you
could check out any time you like but never leave.
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