by Suff » 20 Feb 2015, 06:55
Of course it will. Also if Greece is ejected from the Eurozone, all of that will still be there and the EU will still be there 20 years from now. That is not what this observation is about.
What it is about, is changes in the way that it works and also democracy. The Danes were right when they voted down the Maastricht treaty, the EU is anti Democracy and if Major had not signed it, the Danes would still be saying no today.
All the Euro parties are saying that the Euro is "forever". Clearly this is total bollocks because there are enough nations and massively enough of the EU GDP (because of the UK), not in the Euro that there is no reason why any country currently in the Euro could not drop out of it. However their precious schemes and their precious power depend massively on nobody being able to change anything once the EU has it hooks into you.
Now what is happening is that the intransigence of those who draw power from the EU and the Euro is being laid bare. One of the smaller countries in the EU is challenging the EU on a democratic ticket with huge popular support and it's being steamrollered while the world watches.
In fact the markets are getting an abject lesson in what the EU is right now. They and the press are listening to the "government" as they see it and "taking hope", only to have that hope trashed by Germany. Most outside the EU think that Jean Claude Junker is the "president" of the EU. Yet they are watching his work be simply dismissed as irrelevant by two or three countries and by the finance ministers, not even the elected senior ministers. It must be so confusing to so many of them who have been used to thinking of the EU in one particular way.
This one will continue to limp on for a while yet. But the seriousness of it is quite evident. Senior figures in the EU are starting to work against themselves, they're trying to word things so that Greece gets what it wants without the voters recognising what is happening. That stance is, of course, what the EU always does. However this time the press is refusing to work with them as they smell blood in the water and every effort is destroyed before they even get to the table to take a vote on it.
It is not so much a case of me not working with the EU. The EU is working against itself. The EU has created this mess, handing huge economic power to Germany more and more. Now that is threatened and Germany is refusing to back down. Even though the request being put to them is actually quite reasonable and is certainly very democratic.
If you go back to the beginning of this and re-read every thing, attitudes have reversed totally 108deg. First it was Syriza won't win. Then it was Syriza won't do what they told the voters. Then it was Syriza will back down. Then it was recognised that Syriza has given up almost 75% of what they were asking for but have a core of issues which they simply cannot back down on and stay in power.
Now, today, the attitudes have changed so much. Greece is reasonable. They have a mandate from the votes but have compromised on what they can do and what they can achieve in order to work with the rest of the EU. Germany, on the other hand, won't compromise on anything. They are standing there saying Nein, Nein, Nein, we have the power and you will do what you are told.
Interestingly this doesn't play quite the same way in the UK. However most of the rest of the EU have heard that from Germany before. 73 years ago. For them they are just waking up to the reality of having "won the economic war" and the fact that Germany is, as a nation, can be just a tad overwhelming when it comes to a bit of power and how they use it.
Russian Communism was "forever" and people wouldn't work with it. The USSR was "forever" and people just wouldn't work with it. Yet both of these crashed, almost overnight in political terms. Whilst the EU is somewhat more robust because of the slightly more democratic way it was created, it is also equally fragile.
If the EU want's to continue for another 50 years, then it's going to have to learn, to change and to accommodate.
This is what I'm hoping from the Greek crisis. What I expect to see is that Greece will be driven into the ground. Perhaps initially. If there is a deal struck, it will be a significant change to the EU because Germany is not going to back down and if it is forced to back down then this is going to be the first of many times. Something which will be good, in the long run, for the balance of the EU. Because, so far, the EU has tried to make everything Germany's way as the key economy in the whole group. If that attitude changes then the entire EU, as a whole, will change for the better.
When I first learned Computing at tech, I was taught about synergy and synergy diagrams. At present the EU is massively out of synergy and the only way to fix that is to lower the efficiency of one or two nations.
So, in a way, what I observe and what I want, from my perspective, is helping.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.