.comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

The Asylum

Welcome to the Asylum. This is a site devoted to politics and current events in America, and around the globe. The THREE lunatics posting here are unabashed conservatives that go after the liberal lies and deceit prevalent in the debate of the day. We'd like to add that the views expressed here do not reflect the views of other inmates, nor were any inmates harmed in the creation of this site.

Name:
Location: Mesa, Arizona, United States

Who are we? We're a married couple who has a passion for politics and current events. That's what this site is about. If you read us, you know what we stand for.

Sunday, June 05, 2005

Oh Danny Boy, The Pipes Are Calling.....

After a tumultuous week where France and the Netherlands rejected the proposed EU constitution—in a referendum, not a parliamentary procedure—today, British Prime Minister Tony Blair has decided to give up on his dream of seeing a unified Europe. This story appeared in the UK Telegraph today, along with a seemingly bitter picture of the prime minister. I’m sure it’s a bitter pill to swallow for Blair, and Chirac.

Both counted on their populations to back the effort. British citizens aren’t happy about the prospect, and Chirac was devastated when his population overwhelmingly rejected the constitution. Isn’t it amazing? People—common-sense individuals—don’t want to give up their sovereignty to an all encompassing unified Europe; governed by unknowns miles away. I’m sure Kofi Annan is climbing the walls when the news came down that the people don’t want a European United Nations. Imagine that.

Tony Blair has given up on Europe as an issue worth fighting for, senior allies of the Prime Minister have told The Sunday Telegraph.

A leading Blairite cabinet minister made the admission last night as the European Union descended into deeper turmoil, with doubts surfacing over the future of the single currency.

Mr Blair, who will seek to shift the focus of his administration on to poverty in the Third World this week during talks with President Bush, has told his closest allies: "Africa is worth fighting for. Europe, in its present form, is not."

The signal is an astonishing U-turn for a leader who said three years ago that the euro was "our destiny" and who announced a British referendum by proclaiming: "Let the battle be joined." But one of his closest allies said that Mr Blair no longer believed that putting Britain at the heart of Europe could be his legacy: "Europe is back to the drawing board. Africa will become more important."

Mr Blair flies to Washington tomorrow to try to secure support for proposals to tackle poverty ahead of next month's G8 summit in Gleneagles. But the Prime Minister is unlikely to be able to divert attention completely from the chaos over Europe's future.

President Chirac of France and Germany's Chancellor Schröder held a summit in Berlin last night after the No votes in France and Holland on the constitution.
Yet the crisis widened beyond the document alone, with a media offensive being mounted to bolster the euro after German officials and an Italian minister openly discussed its possible demise. In the first rumblings of a call for the franc to be reinstated, Nicolas Dupont-Aignant, a member of Mr Chirac's ruling UMP party, said: "France, Italy and Germany would be in a better state without the euro.
However, I don't believe we should ditch it now."


"But either it is reformed, and the central European Bank kick-starts growth by lowering interest rates and pursuing a more American-style monetary policy, or the euro will explode in mid-air."

The governor of France's central bank, however, rushed to the euro's defence. Christian Noyer said that the currency was "in no way under threat" following its fall in value since the No votes of the past seven days. He dismissed as "absurd" the idea of a temporary withdrawal from the euro by individual states.

"The euro is a solid currency which brings us a lasting guarantee of stable prices and thus the maintenance of purchasing power for our wages and savings," he told Le Parisien newspaper.

The markets have been slowly adjusting to the possibility of the break-up of the euro, with the spread between government bonds in different countries widening.
Last night, John Redwood, the leading eurosceptic Tory MP, said: "You can't have a single currency without a single government. They are in a mess because they have only done half of it and they are now discovering in a painful way what that means."


The No campaign in Britain will launch a campaign tomorrow demanding a referendum on any aspects of the constitution that leaders might attempt to salvage. It will also unveil 46 new business backers, including Stuart Rose, chief executive of Marks & Spencer.

An ICM poll for the No group found that 81 per cent of voters say that it would be unacceptable to bring in any of the proposals without a referendum in Britain first.
So, the No Votes come on the heels of news that the euro is collapsing. Again no surprise there. I predicted when it came into existence that I’d give it ten years before I saw it fall through. Europe won’t be "unified" in my lifetime, unless it’s through force. Old prejudices die hard, and many people from many nations still harbor grudges. Right now, that grudge is being focused back on their governments when they vote against the constitution.

Now, I’ll grant Blair this much. He was able to challenge Chirac into the referendum idea. If Chirac weren’t such an arrogant pr**k, he would’ve stuck with the original plans. The people over in Europe are used to surrendering as much as possible to their own governments, and unless they’re French, they rarely surrender to other nations. (Yes, I’m taking swipes at the French, but what can you say about a nation that Hitler did little to "conquer"?)

The point is that the people of Europe, despite their dislike of America—if they truly have any—still relish to possess what we do. That’s freedom. We have more freedoms—guaranteed and enumerated—than any other nation on the face of the planet. That’s why everybody likes to come here. The people in Europe know that to surrender to the EU they will simply be a smaller, more centralized version of the UN. Little or no accountability for those higher up, and the EU will drain away more of their money, just as the UN does to America. The difference is we can opt out of the UN.

Too bad we have no one with the backbone to really propose such a prospect, and follow through on it. But it is good that Europe is paying attention to their future, which right now, with the EU and the euro involved, it’s an impending disaster.

Publius II

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

weight loss product