NorthernGent
Posts: 8730
Joined: 7/10/2006 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: meatcleaver quote:
ORIGINAL: NorthernGent Internationalism isn't the issue, people are protesting against the power of corporations and the temporary death of democracy. If the government work for corporations then there isn't democracy or freedom. Whichever way you vote you will get rule by the unelected few in the upper echelons of the business world. No one has a problem with internationalism, peace, prosperity, democracy, rule of law etc, but that's not what we're getting - we're getting rule by corporations. Basically, the kings and queens have been replaced by the banks and multinationals. Every time the EU tries to control mutinationals, the British government complains and accuses the EU pof being undemocratic while it is the British government (amongst others) that want to keep the EU undemocratic so it lacks legitimacy. People keep voting in governments that support corporations and don't want institutions that can control them. lol Meat, any old chance to bring in the EU. Be honest here, the current EU is not democratic. You can't elect the commission, and no thanks to democracy by proxy. Not wanting the current EU is not the same as propping up the status quo. The current EU is part of the status quo. In a nutshell, if you had two chambers full of elected politicians accountable to the people, then I'd go for it. To do this, you would have to abolish the Commission, the Council of Ministers and the Central Bank in Frankfurt. I think you're wrong to assume the EU can save Europeans from the multinationals because the European Commision is little more than a regional agent of globalisation, enforcing the diktats of the Central Bank. The Germans are no more or less able and willing to stand up to the corporations than the British. Their top firms threaten to move production abroad to prevent public programmes. Their bankers threaten to hike up interest rates so politicians balk at the social and political costs of such action, and their finance minister claims "the heart is not traded on the stock market yet" as a parting shot on resignation. In sum, there is nothing to suggest the Germans and French are better placed to get a grip on the situation.
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I have the courage to be a coward - but not beyond my limits. Sooner or later, the man who wins is the man who thinks he can.
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