Workingman wrote:Natalie Nougayrède was a teenager of the 80s, long after the beginning of the European project. What she was being taught was common throughout Europe, including the UK. It was seen as a good thing. What she is saying is not some new revelation recently uncovered from secret files hidden is some dark vault. It has been common knowledge for yonks and yonks.
I remember my lad coming home from school with homework containing much the same in the 90s.
That's interesting. It points up a couple of things, the first being that the concept of a federal Europe (and probably everything to do with the EU) has been much more honestly and openly debated in Europe than it has in the UK. (Yes, I know that this isn't setting the bar very high).
The diminution and maybe eventual abolition of the nation state has not been much discussed in the UK though, WM, I'd have to disagree with you there. Maybe kids have been taught about it in schools but there has been virtually zero about it on the TV, which is where most people get there information from.
Yes, it's obviously been an ongoing project (still is ongoing actually), with devolution / regionalism, the establishment of an EU Committee of the Regions and so on, but there has been very little information placed in front of the UK public. Very little honest information anyway. I think it's a UK thing; the big people take the decisions and the little people, well they just get told what the big people think they need to know.
Mind you, if they tried to sell the death of the nation state, saying that the eventual aim was to abolish the concept of the UK (or at least most certainly England), I don't suppose there is a lot of votes in that.