Europe Uber Alles.


GREEK TROJAN HORSE TO CONQUER BETTER EUROPEAN UNION.

Abstract:

The European currency, the euro, is, foremost, a solution to a problem. War. All other problems, and the euro solves many, pale in significance relative to this one.

Many talk about "problems" with the euro, and, oozing with glee all over, perceive weakness. They are right, there is weakness, but it is not European weakness. Just the opposite.

What those skeptics are seeing with their uncomprehending neurology is the further construction of the European imperium, according to its core principle: fix what needs to be fixed, but with complete consensus of the parties concerned, which means do it just so, as needed.

The European process appears messy, because it’s democratic, and before the people (demos) can use its kratos (power), it needs to think right, which means it has to argue thoroughly. It looks like squabbling, but it is thinking aloud. Europe is not built for some parties to gain advantage anymore (as it was with Napoleon, or Hitler), but to solve problems and gain opportunities for all.

The euro is, for the first time, used as a weapon against Europe’s enemies. Hence all the squealing. Far from weakening Franco-German resolve, the recourse to the IMF adds another layer of authority to the European Communities. When the IMF, speaking in the name of Franco-German taxpayers, tell restive exploiters in Greece that they have to pay more taxes (only 6 plutocrats declare more than one million euro income in Greece, and more than 500 professions can retire at 50 years of age, whereas Germany just brought up the retirement age to 67!), they will have to submit under orders (imperare, to use the Roman notion).

***

When his friend Kanzler Kohl threatened to re-unite Germany right away, President Mitterand, in what was the most significant act of his 14 years as president of France, told him that he had to give something to France in exchange, something that would make France and Germany irreversibly closer than ever. It had to go beyond the Shengen agreement of 1985, which erased the borders between France, West Germany and the Benelux.

It was natural to turn the ECU (European Currency Unit, created in 1979, and itself extending its own predecessor) into a full blown mean of exchange (and not just the province of high finance). If nothing else, it would reduce impediments to travel and shopping comparisons throughout the European Economic Community. (European construction is a lot about reducing transnational impediments: the European Commission just suggested that the 350,000 transnational European marriages which happen each year were too messy, so now people with transnational loves will have to decide, prior to marriage, which country will adjudicate their divorce proceedings.)

The euro, long in planning by some European institutions, was introduced minimally, namely without the governmental apparatus generally associated to a currency. This is the way Europeans have found to progress peacefully towards greater harmony: do what is necessary, and nothing more than that, and do it with total consensus.

Everybody knew that a currency without a government to create and anchor it had never happened before, and was unlikely to endure.

That fit the European federalists just right, and could not have escaped the understanding of Paris and Berlin. As it turned out, the PIIGS’ crisis is putting back Paris and Berlin, the historical engine of Europe, back on top, and this, for an excellent reason.

"PIIGS" stand for Portugal Ireland Iceland Greece Spain. All of them ran bubble economies, partially propelled by taxes from the richest European countries (including France and Germany). It became ridiculous as, for example, Ireland was getting European subsidies while the Irish were already way richer than those subsidizing them. (OK Iceland is not in the EU, yet, but it begged to enter the Eurozone, and it has disappeared the savings of countless Brits and Dutch, which means it has some outstanding business with the rest of Europe, that it will have to sort out, after executing a few more whales, guilty as charged.)

Some acknowledge the convenience of a common European currency and easier border transits, while remaining obsessed by what they view as gigantic differences between European countries. Those quaint nationalists and parochial types obsess that core differences between countries are so strong and deep-rooted that any form of real European union is a ridiculous concept. This is triply erroneous.

First because Europeans are very much alike, when compared to other earth’s denizens. Anybody who has long lived outside of Europe and its ex-colonies (USA, Australia, Russia, etc.) knows this. I myself long lived in black Africa, and Europeans, Americans, Russians, etc. felt all the same. This is a fortiori true inside the European Union.

Second, to revere nationalism is to worship at the foot of the idea of imagined and magnified differences that caused activities such as the 500 year war between England and France, an unfathomable stupidity between cousins that was long a Franco-French civil war. The estrangement between Germans and Western Franks (roughly 945 CE to 1945 CE) was another ridiculous, and ultimately murderous attitude imposed from above (in this case, the Western Franks, based in Paris stopped bothering to send east the candidate emperor, as they were supposed to, because apparently Germany bored them to death.)

Third, and most importantly, the European Union already exists. French passports have "Union Europeenne" written on top (with "Republique Francaise" below). European law primes national law, such is a basic foundation of the European constitution (still a work in progress, but the foundations are here to stay).

The obsession with worshipping nationalistic ridicule was recently concentrated in Great Britain. Britain opted out of the European social contract (without much difference anyway, because Britain is extremely socialist, more than France in some important ways, and much more efficiently).

Britain could not join the creation of the euro: it had been booted out of the European Exchange Mechanism by the billionaire Soros, an ignominious submission which cost the UK 3.3 billion pounds (and brought more than a billion dollars in the plutocrat’s coffers). Britain is also hanging half out of the Shengen (border-less) zone (to which even Iceland, Suisse, and Norway belong to!)

The reason for this British aloofness to the rest of Europe was not glorious. Far from it. British financiers were anxious to present themselves as an American Trojan Horse on the shore of Europe to persuade fellow plutocrats to come over, and have a party. Asking them to pay no taxes helped (while putting London’s real estate into the stratosphere). Now that the financiers have caused great ruin in Great Britain, their mighty roar has turned to despicable yelping, while they get taxed into submission (with higher tax margins, and a special Dutch-British-French tax on financial traders).

More deeply felt still is the psychological difference between England, the most populous part of a large island, and France, part of the world’s largest continent, historically the core of the first unification of Europe, under the Franks.

In more than a millennium, England was invaded by foreign powers just twice (and the second "invasion", by the Dutch does not really count). France was invaded by everybody all the time. In particular the "100 years war" (so called, instead of the more correct "500 years war") happened on French territory. So the collective memory of Britain is that Europe, as a war theater, is rather an occasion for glory, and growth (because most of the time England grew from conflict, ending demographically as large as France, although she started very creative, but relatively tiny).

For France war has come to mean a threat of extinction. Ever since the Huns came to be cut down to size, countless invaders have tried their luck in France, ravaging the country. So building Europe as a giant France all around, has become not just strategic, but survivalist. Any move helping to build a France-compatible Europe, is viewed, in France, as excellent (except by the completely obsolete "Front National", whose trade it is to denounce anything not national).

Anti-European partisans were delighted to see the Greek deficit crisis as the tip of the fundamental issue that Europeans are aliens to each other, and European citizenship means nothing, and soon the tanks will roll, and the USA will triumph again… Rome intervened more than once in Greece, and then stayed, and send the legions to crush what the plutocrats in the Senate viewed as socialism and excessive democracy. Both came back to Greece only thanks to the European Union, more than 21 centuries later (and not thanks to the USA, which were content with the mild fascist regime in Greece).

Many famous economists, in particular, infeodated as they are to Wall Street and the world plutocracy, to embellish their pathetic little lives, were delighted to proclaim the end of Europe, and the euro. They know nothing. Should they want to learn something important, they could start to reset their mood with this proverb from the desert: "Dogs yelp, the caravan moves on."Instead of yelping like dogs, they should try to think like men, that is, with the big picture.

Europe is an imperial democratic machine which mostly started with a French desire for peace, tranquility, pursuit of happiness and cheese, and, please, no more wars. To achieve all these, a giant France all around, has long been viewed as a must (French kings in the Middle Ages multiplied military forays and long occupations of Italy, meanwhile the Normans freed the Mezzogiorno, Sicily and Malta from the Saracens).

After 1945, a deeply chastened, mentally de-Nazified Germany recognized that the French (that is the republican and democratic) way of doing politics was incomparably better than the fascist one. Everybody, even the dumbest of the ex-Nazis, could observe that the union with France was so unavoidable, that even Hitler had to resign himself to it.

How to build Europe? Maybe that is the wrong question. The correct question is: why was a united Europe replaced by squabbling potentates?

Indeed, Europe did exist before, twice. Or at least huge unified pieces of it. The Romans had united Britain with Gaul, a good piece of Germany, and the Mediterranean countries, all the way to the Arabo-Persian gulf. That was the first unification of (part of) Europe. Britain was in it for no less than five centuries.

That first European unification ended as Roman rule decomposed into the plutocratic rule of Catholic bishops. The legions were withdrawn from Britannia, as Rome, riddled by rotting plutocracy, ran out of money and brains. Within 150 years, the Anglo-Saxons were invading, and the British army had to flee to Roman Armorica, which became… Brittany (a vassal of the Franks).

The second unification occurred when the Franks conquered most of Western Europe, minus a lot of Iberia (held by Islamists who the Franks failed to extirpate from Iberia, as they preferred to subdue Germany, Poland, Hungary, etc., and make a unified whole with it). The full conquest of Europe, by the Franks, including Britannia, took at least six centuries, and was a crafty mix of brute military force, and haughty philosophical supremacy of love incarnated by the sword (with Jesus dangling naked from his cross to remind the heathens of their proximal fate, should they dare resist, be it only with their paltry minds).

Why did the second European unification fail? It did not fail militarily, or in disorder, as Rome did. Well, it petered out, under the divisiveness that the plutocrats who led it gained to foster (those plutocrats called themselves "aristocrats", as if they were the best!) Plutocracy and theocracy conspired to prevent the rise of a united democracy (in theory, and sometimes in practice, the kings of the Franks were elected!). The rise of powerful states of law in England and France put back the Pope on his knees, where he belonged, and curbed the power of independent plutocrats, but at the cost of increased nationalism (as the concept of people, populus, Volk regained the ascendency over plutocracy it had lost after the demise of the "Populus" side of the Roman republic, around the time of Caesar’s assassination).

In any case the divisiveness started with plutocracy. This is why the present European Union, and its diverse nations, are very wary of plutocracy (part of the reason for EU social democracy). More recently, it does not escape Europeans that the crowd of military aristocrats who ambushed Europe with World War One was tight with the German imperial plutocracy (a theme dear to Hitler, but even Hitler was not wrong 100% of the time!)

A lack of awareness of the extent of the extreme toxicity of plutocracy for civilization is also why Paul Krugman, Simon Johnson, and a few writers at the Financial Times have missed the big picture about the Greek crisis (which is only that the Greeks pay twice for some interest). Most famous economists, at some early point in their career, are paid to be friends to the plutocrats, exciting them just so, and the truth could only elude them later (Krugman and Summers advised Reagan, in official capacity, at the White House, as soon as they came out of high school, or so).

Verily, there is a Greek crisis, but as far as the deepest thinkers in Europe are concerned, the Greek crisis is a golden opportunity to foster the European Union and its basic strategy. European leaders will not tell you this, though, because they talk softly, and carry a big stick. And nobody serious in Washington or Beijing can have missed the message. Here are some of its pieces, causally ordered:

1) Before the Greek "crisis", the euro was WAY too high. This was hurting European industry, and especially that of France, Germany, and their immediate satellites. At the same time, it was a life line for the exuberant Chinese economy, and the sinking American one. Although the USA is apparently determined to mimic the Titanic, the USA still has 25% of the world’s industrial base, and its only serious competitor is Europe (OK, Europe does not make cars that will not stop, as Toyota does, but it’s the only technology which eludes the EU).

The euro reached a dismal 1.60 relative to the US dollar. But the euro was made to equate just ONE dollar (by making long term comparisons with the Franc). A company such as Airbus has its expenses in euros, and most of its profits in dollars… The euro, at 1.60, was a serious brake on European industry. Germany went from being the world’s biggest exporter, to second best, as China pegged its currency to the dollar (depriving the USA from some of its devaluation advantage).

2) Europe decided, long ago, one could even say decades ago, to save fuel, and to save energy, and fight pollution. (Hitler attacked Poland in part because he wanted Polish oil.) Petroleum was the fuel of choice, having the highest energy density, in the twentieth century. The USA had plenty, Europe, very little. So Europe had to save. Meanwhile the plutocrats of the USA could use the plentiful American oil to extend their evil influence (so they gave enormous quantities of oil to Hitler to conquer various countries, ingratiating themselves to their fellow fascists of governmental type, and making tidy profits; Congress slapped a little fine on Texaco.)

As it became obvious that the entire biosphere was at risk of becoming moribund from human carbon dioxide activity, the European Union, following the Scandinavian and French lead, axed its entire strategy towards ever greater efficiency. But this effort depended upon the entire planet cooperating. At the Copenhagen 2009 conference, China and the USA made a dismal theatrical play with each other, ignoring Europe, spiting the biosphere’s future, and turning European ecologists green with fury. But many, not to say all, European leaders, have deep ecological convictions.

The Sino-American circus at Copenhagen was a huge threat for all of Europe’s strategy, for the European way of life, and it smacked, in European minds, with the sort of shortsighted hubris Europe has known in the past, which ended with tremendous world wars. After huge strategic commitment towards a sustainable future, the EU did not feel like following the lead to war and destruction provided by China and the USA. Something needed to be done. Smart European leaders could only conclude that it was time to strike back. How? Europe had a weapon: the euro (and its poodle, the pound).

If the euro was going back down to one US dollar, Europe would be affected very little: so great is European efficiency nowadays that the fact that most of the price of oil is in dollars would hit the EU not that much. On the other fist, though, the wobbling American economy would get completely smashed. Bringing the euro down a lot would bring the USA, for sure, in a double dip recession. Not a good prospect for Obama, Pelosi, and their democrats. and a calamity for the average American, considering that the economy of the USA is not equipped with automatic stabilizers (as that of the EU, Britain included, is).

3) Thus European banks suddenly discovered the Greek problem, and made a big deal of it. Imagine: the Greek deficit was even larger than the USA deficit! Think of that! Banks liked it, all the more since a socialist government had just come in to clean the mess in Greece. Greek bonds’ interest bounded up… to 6% (a perfectly normal interest rate, let’s point out in passing…)

Even after scaring the crows with the alleged Greek corpse, the euro was still way too high. President Sarkozy and Kanzler Merkel, rightly, wanted it down some more, hence their little sing-song, Germany playing bad cop, France playing good European.

4) There is a need for stronger economic leadership in Europe, with independent economic and financial authorities. It does not exist in the present constitutional set-up. So France and Germany reconstituted their Great 2,000 years Reich, and goose stepped Europe into shape. They met the day before the EU summit, and solved the Greek problem. It was logical to use the IMF; not only is it led by a very experienced Frenchman, but all EU countries belong to the IMF (which rescued Turkey’s banks in 2001, and now they are fine).

This was a return to the same old same old: the Franco-German engine got Europe started by 1948. The other countries were not coerced into joining them, but they had no choice: France and Germany (especially with Benelux sandwiched in between) form an economic superpower by themselves (French GDP alone is much higher than Russian GDP…)

To make Europe, in the past, one used to send an army. Now one sends a problem. Then diligent Europeans solve the problem with a high solution, not a low blow. This method of solving problems was actually inaugurated during the occupation of France by the Nazis (not that the lowest of low blows were not used simultaneously: hundreds of thousands of innocent French civilians were assassinated by the Nazis, including 75,000 Jews). To their dismay, the Nazis had to collaborate with the French, and many liked it so much, they organized the coup against Hitler, and de-Nazified in other ways (refusing to obey Nazi orders).

European federalists always wanted elements of an economic government for Europe. But they needed problems that these elements of European economic government would solve. Greece is such a problem. Thank you, oh Trojan Horse!

5) The euro quickly lost half of its overvaluation relative to the do-do, threatening the recovery of the economy of the USA. The Obama administration, the US Congress, and Krugman and company, seem to have got the message, and suddenly, on second thought, found the Chinese plutocratic ally not so pretty anymore. Even Google went along with the new order.

All this is good. This is an excellent crisis. Europe has never been stronger. And it is good that Europe is stronger, because Europe has made terrible mistakes, in the past, and learned a lot from them. Not everything, but a lot. And Europe learned much more than many other countries seem to have mustered.

It is better when greater wisdom has greater strength. Wisdom without strength bequeaths the ruin of civilization.

***

Patrice Ayme

https://patriceayme.wordpress.com/

***

P/S: Another simultaneous crisis is the delay by France of the adoption of the carbon tax. There too, the solution is the high exit, not the low blow.

Maybe I should explain this a bit more: Europeans used competitive devaluations against each other in the past. Krugman initially claimed that it was the solution to the Spanish economic problem (20% unemployment!). If Spain had a peseta again, it could have devalued, and eaten the lunch of its neighbors. France is the neighbor. So Krugman advised Spain to declare war on France, basically. This is the low blow solution, and it has been practiced extensively in Europe for centuries, Europeans know all about it, because, differently from Americans, they learn enough history to not goose step in their elders’ errors.

Rejecting the self interested American divisiveness advice, Spain, long ago, opted for a different path. Instead of fighting France, Spain wisely prefers to build a state of the art plane with France, the A 400 M. France and Spain are also busy fighting ETA terrorists.

The French Constitutional Court found the carbon tax voted by the French National Assembly unconstitutional, it was thus blocked, and became very unpopular in France. A lack of popularity confirmed by a rout in regional elections. So Sarkozy decided that it was useless for France to go it alone, and that it would persuade the entire EU first, and point out to the rest of the EU that the carbon tax could be used to reinforce the European worldwide economico-ecological strategy… by punishing the countries which cheat on carbon pollution. Worldwide (and this means the USA too).

Tags: , ,

10 Responses to “Europe Uber Alles.”

  1. John W Lewis Says:

    Not being an economist or a political scientist, I do not try to discuss with the specifics of the case for the existence of the euro. Nevertheless, in general, it has seemed evident from the outset that the cart was being put before the horse.

    Presumably long-term shifts in exchange rates between previous European currencies were caused be, or at least correlated with, the realities of economic behaviour, not least the differences in economic performance. How can those long-term shifts in substantial economies be suddenly halted without causing equivalently substantial economic consequences? It reminds me of plate tectonics and the consequential earthquakes and creation of mountain ranges.

    Surely the success of such a currency would have required the alignment of economic performances before trying to merge them, not the reverse sequence? I live in the county of Devon, England. I presume that Devon contributes a lot less revenue to the UK coffers than, say, Surrey, yet we manage to survive with the same currency. Presumably the economic balance is maintained through substantial net contributions from Surrey to Devon.

    If the economies of European countries were to have become sufficiently distorted by the weight of intervention from Brussels that their previous currencies had arrived at exchange rates which were stable in the long-term, then they might as well have decided to share a currency. Without that condition, such a shared currency has operated in the short-term with some cosmetic benefits, but have the underlying plate tectonics not continued unabated and are we not now beginning to see the inevitable economic earthquakes?

    What real harm is caused by having separate currencies which might one day have arrive at a stable exchange rates and possibly facilitate a shared currency? How does that harm compare with that caused by creating a shared currency in the absence of stability? I do not know, but I suspect that we are about to find out!

    By the way, is it true that Germans have started to distinguish and refuse euro bank notes not issued in Germany (using information in the numbers)? Maybe it was a tease when mentioned by a cocky hedge fund manager during a recent BBC Newsnight discussion; but the Spanish ambassador to the UK, to whom it was directed, was not sure that it was!

    Like

    • Patrice Ayme Says:

      Dear John:
      Well, many questions, many answers. I think I can answer all of these, even the trickiest, the one about Surrey and Devon. But it will take ages (and that is a good thing). So this is just a sketch with partial answers. For Surrey and Devon, an entire re-founding of economics may be necessary; I do not believe that the economy can be reduced, or rather ordered (in the logical sense), around the principle of who is making more money. Verily, “making money” is itself a mandate (from the state, hence, in democracy, the People). It is not most fundamental, contrarily to what the plutocrats and their obsequious servants try to make us believe with hysteria second to none.

      First, our economic destinies are not like plate tectonic: our countries are neither being inexorably torn apart, nor on a collision course. This sort of analogy could become appropriate with China, or Iran, but not within Euramerica. In the Middle Ages, sure, Surrey and Devon could be torn apart, or on a collision course, depending upon the desires of potentates. We have become more civilized since: one flag, one government, one state, one law. No war (between Surrey and Devon). Big progress.

      Second competitive devaluations, as Krugman in his simplicity initially suggested to Spain (before discovering the Euro was irrevocable in the Euro core), have been used, in the past, as a panacea… which solved nothing. Let’s suppose the Spanish currency became basically nothing: would that be for Spain the way to fix its economy? Of course not: the Spanish army will have to defend the borders, to prevent French German and British shoppers to buy the entire country, and turn Spain into an Indian reservation (full of Hispanics, as the Americans would point out).

      Third, enormous subsidies succeeded to jump-start the economies of the Mediterranean countries, as they joined the European Union. Now we are directing these subsidies to the East, and, after years of spoon feeding, it is time to learn belt-tightening, and make some muscle. What is there not to like? Greece is proposed an exercise program… And Spain needs no persuasion: it’ already doing it.

      Fourth, the history of devaluations, or overvaluations, in European history is a grievous one. Let’s mention: Germany’s catastrophic hyperinflation, directed, not to say engineered, by plutocrats who soon would push Hitler to solve all their problems (~ 1923), and the competitive devaluations of the 1930s, which dislocated the economy of the West from each other, and which were resisted in France, contributing in no small part of the catastrophic Franco-British defeat of May 1940. France discovered later, the advantage of devaluations, just to see West Germany leave her behind economically, and thus reverted to the strong Franc policy. At this point, German and French monetary policies, having gone full circles around, were just the same, and synchronized. Britain is free to try to stay out, let’s see what will happen.

      To imagine, though, that plutocrats can reign in some countries, paying little taxes (the case of Greece) while a few miles away, republics are fully functioning, is wishful thinking, which was tried before… and led to war. European war.
      PA

      Like

  2. JMG Says:

    J McGraw
    RE: Euroskeptics, Euro vs. U.S. dollar, Yuan

    Patrice,

    ‘Agree the Euro-skeptics don’t see the whole picture because they do not wish to acknowledge the strengths of the Eurozone. Perhaps they imagine the Euro be eroded as they remember that Soros made a killing betting the Pound Sterling would fall, but this is likely wishful thinking. However it is true that the lack of a treasury and an overall fiscal policy are weaknesses. Perhaps accomodations can be made when crises develop.

    Re: Euro vs. U.S. dollar valuation, China’s has used the deliberate undervaluation of its currency to get manufacturing (lower cost basis) transferred to its industrial economy from the West. This has also inflated the U.S.’ trade deficit significantly in addition to the U.S.’ oil imports. China has ignored political overtures to correct the problem in the same resolutely stubborn way as its stance on Taiwan or Tibet but has acknowledged that revaluing upward its currency could slow down its economy when it overheats. China’s dissembling about its so-called dollar peg of the yuan has been a sort of “heavy fuel” propelling its economic growth. On the fiscal side, China’s purchase of so much U.S. government-issued debt has given it further leverage to ignore the overtures to fairly value its currency. So you see how massive economic power is forged: not with a tinker’s hammer but with sledgehammers.

    Like

    • Patrice Ayme Says:

      Jeff:
      I could not say it any better. Currency is part of Imperium. Keynes, who headed the monetary commission, refused to make the US Dollar the world currency at Bretton Woods (1944). He wanted to use a basket and something similar to the drawing rights the IMF got recently. So, twice, the Americans used tricks to make the Dollar the world’s reserve currency nevertheless. Stopped by Keynes a first time, they finally cheated by substituting documents for the final signatories. How much more of a bully can one be?

      Speaking of bullies, China is a bully, not doubt, and is very bad about many things, no doubt. But I view it more as a tag along of the plutocracy, which makes much more profits than China by operating in China with a low currency. Although I dislike PPP, by PPP computations, the renmimbi is only undervalued by 12%….
      PA

      Like

  3. Chris Snuggs Says:

    Patrice

    A large amount to digest. Thankyou, as I like good food for thought. However, one tiny quibble. You refer to the French and Germans having “solved the Greek problem.”

    I put it to you that this problem will only be solved when the Greeks learn to live within their means. I am not convinced that bunging them billions of our taxes is going to do it.

    As for France, Sarkozy seems destined for a long, slow death prior to the triumphant return of the Socialists led by that economic genius Martine Aubray. Much as I love France, I am not too sanguine about its economic future in the new socialist wonderland that is looming over the horizon.

    I am not quite so enamoured of the Roman “unification” of Europe as you seem to be. The difference between them and nasty, interfering, invading fascists with too much power is not very clear to me. They they destroyed a flourishing Celtic civilisation in Gaul for no other reason than that Caesar wanted a marketing coup as a springboard to power in Rome.

    Chris Snuggs

    Like

    • Patrice Ayme Says:

      Dear Chris:
      The flourishing Celts were indeed flourishing, but their nasty oligarchic theocracy prevented normal people to read and write (it seems), and they certainly practiced human sacrifices. Thus Rome outlawed their religion.

      Vercingetorix was far from being followed by all. He was opposed by leading Celtic nobles, including his influential uncle. In truth, Gaul was ready for Roman civilization, and adopted it with so much enthusiasm that it progressively became the core of Roman civilization. The concept of civilizational progress was at work. Caesar’s vainglorious greed just facilitated it.

      Martine Aubry is one of many famous socialists. The 35 hour week was opposed by her, initially. DSK is more popular (he had mentioned the 35 hours before anybody else). Sarkozy is far from dead. France is also as socialized as possible now, short of making the drastic changes in the financial system that I recommend (the END OF THE PRIVATE FRACTIONAL RESERVE MANDATE). Thus a socialist government would probably de-socialize some, a happened in the past.

      Everybody has to learn to live within their means. Not just the Greeks. To have the Greeks to order around (which the trio France-Germany-IMF will do very well) will incite the French to look at their own retirement age (a ridiculous 60, whereas 63 for many in Greece, 67 in Germany, and I believe 70 in the UK). Aubry and Sarkozy mumbled obscure notions that way.

      Of course those living the most outside of their means have been the Americans. They have so little private saving capability that they use China as a lender. The Great Recession is changing this, though (and the switch to saving accentuates it). The French have little debt personally, it’s all piled up with the state (although less high than in the USA). By the way, another question is what has been done with the debt: according to that, the future outcomes will vary considerably. For example, giving all the debt, and, or, money to banksters will not bring a good outcome.

      The Greek problem is solved, in the sense that the socialist government there seems determined to fix the problem, and it can be fixed. The Greeks are stuck between Sarkozy, Merkel, and DSK (who is head of the IMF). The most delicate point: the French are asking the Greeks to reduce their military spending (4.8% of Greek GDP, aimed at EU applicant Turkey).

      PA

      Like

  4. Chris Snuggs Says:

    “If nothing else, the euro would reduce impediments to travel and shopping comparisons throughout the European Economic Community.”

    Patrice! This is ALL THE BRITS WANT. We don’t want French-style taxes or bureaucracy. We do want to travel in Europe without keeping 15 currencies in our pocket ….

    Chris Snuggs

    April 4, 2010 at 14:18

    Like

    • Patrice Ayme Says:

      Chris:
      The Greek situation shows that you cannot restrict it to the euro, Chris. If you do, people such as the Greeks get subsidized by people such as the French and the Germans.

      Instead, you have to go to Greece, with a big wide whip, and the will to use it. Then you have got to make the Greeks love the whip.

      “French-style taxes”??? I reckon, my dear old chap, that you have not studied closely the top marginal rates in Britain and France recently. It’s like bonnet blanc and blanc bonnet, as the French say…

      If anything, the convergence of top European countries towards the same solutions, all on their own, is in full swing, even on taxes. The AVT is EU law, with a minimum of 15%, even, therefore, in Greece. Even Obambi is trotting along to join the party, just watch…
      PA

      Like

  5. JMG Says:

    Patrice,

    You mentioned the potential release of sequestered methane hydrates in ocean sediments in some of your posts. See below some basic research. Reviewing their calculations might make interesting reading…
    —-

    >Science | >Science Signaling | >Science Translational Medicine | >Science Express | >Science Classic
    Editors’ Choice: Highlights of the recent literature
    SCIENCE, Volume 327, Issue 5962
    dated January 8 2010, is now available at:

    http://www.sciencemag.org/content/vol327/issue5962/twil.dtl

    Like

  6. Patrice Ayme Says:

    JMG: Here is the abstract of that extract:

    Climate Science:
    Slow Roast
    H. Jesse Smith

    CREDIT: USGS

    Of all the wildcards in the climate system, one of the most potentially important is oceanic methane hydrates. Methane hydrates are frozen associations of methane and water found worldwide in marine sediments within a field of stability that extends from near the sediment surface down several hundred meters. Huge quantities of methane are thought to exist in these hydrates, and that is what makes them such a concern to climate scientists—as we warm the world by burning fossil fuels, the ocean eventually may warm enough to destabilize the hydrates and add methane (a potent greenhouse gas) to the atmosphere. Substantial release of this stored methane could accelerate the rate and amount of global warming considerably above current estimates. Sadly, we still understand little about this possibility.

    Archer et al. present initial calculations of the amount of methane contained in the hydrates, as well as estimates of how much might be released in various anthropogenic global warming scenarios. Their calculations show that humankind does have the capacity to cause large methane releases from the sea floor, and correspondingly great additional warming, and that the impact of such release is likely to occur over millennia rather than abruptly over the next century, making the issue a long-term danger rather than an immediate one.

    Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 106, 20596 (2009).

    Like

What do you think? Please join the debate! The simplest questions are often the deepest!