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The French may have spurned
the
European Union’s Constitution for the wrong reasons, but overall
their instincts were sound. That the pro-free market Dutch have seconded
the “non” vote with a resounding “nee” ought to give pause to the
“collectivist super-state’s” illiberal American supporters, the most
notorious of whom are concentrated in the Bush State Department and
National Security Council.
As I pointed out
in 2001, the EU endeavors to herd Europeans by stealth into a
supranational European State and… block off all the exits. This it
intends to achieve by rigid central planning and harmonization of laws
across the continent. In the absence of political and economic
competition, the bureaucrats of Brussels will be free to rule and
regulate; tax and inflate the money supply at will. This is what the
rejectionists, including the
cheese eating surrender monkeys, have defeated…for now.
The sovereignty of European non-members is already constrained by the
EU’s burgeoning jurisdiction. But if ever its constitution goes into
effect, the
EU will assume unlimited powers—its laws
usurping all laws enacted by national parliaments—and will
concentrate these in few, unelected, grubby hands. (The Charter of
Fundamental Rights and the Constitution, which will subsume the Charter,
have been drafted without the consent of the people they will
irrevocably bind.)
Dissembling Eurocrats justify this usurpation by claiming the EU would
prevent wars in Europe. How exactly would they achieve this noble end?
Why, by substituting the nation-state with deracinated, supranational
institutions. They assert that national identity causes bigotry and
bloodshed, hence, in Chancellor Helmut Kohl’s words, “We have no desire
to return to the nation state of old.” Other neo-communists such as
Romano Prodi have seconded the sentiment—and their quest to
engineer a single European identity.
However, in his examination of the “The
Tainted Source of the Idea of European Union,” classical liberal
philosopher David Conway finds little to laud. The idea of the EU Conway
traces to the writings of Friedrich List in the first half of the 19th
century. “[A]s far as List was concerned, the main reason for European
states to enter into such union was not to prevent war between them. It
was, rather, to enable them better to wage economic war against other
more economically advanced states, in List’s day [and today], Britain
and the USA.”
Like the bureaucrats of Brussels, “List’s vision of European union was
less Anglophobic than anti-liberal.” His ideas were seized upon by the
Nazis—they referred to List when outlining their aspiration to create a
European economic and monetary union. A July-1940 memorandum, written by
the Reich Chancery, elaborates on a vision for a united Europe in which
economic development is strictly supervised by the state and in which a
fixed rate of exchange is mandated. (All the better to manipulate the
money supply to fund the central government’s profligacy. States can’t
fight inflation because they are forbidden to adjust interest rates).
The Nazis also cited “lasting peace…freedom, prosperity and security” as
the impetus for European union.
“Now, it does not follow,” cautions Conway, “simply from the fact that
the Nazis envisaged and favored the creation after the war of a European
economic community that the present European Economic Community is
simply a continuation of the Nazi project. Even if it is no more than
pure coincidence how closely postwar Europe has come to resemble what
the Nazis wanted for it,” quips Conway, “it remains unmistakably true
that, from its postwar beginnings to the present, the principal
advocates and architects of European union have been uniformly animated
by collectivist objectives that are deeply anti-liberal in spirit and
form.”
Let us
count these illiberal ways: “The EU already has rights to legislate
over external trade and customs policy, the internal market, the
monetary policy of countries in the eurozone, agriculture and fisheries
and many areas of domestic law including the environment and health and
safety at work.” And the EU intends to “extend its rights into … justice
policy, especially asylum and immigration.” If the Dutch—still reeling
from the murder of anti-immigration activist
Pim Fortuyn and Vincent van Gogh’s
great-great-grandson—decide to curb immigration, the EU commissariat
will be there to thwart them. (Fortuyn’s successor, Geert Wilders, has
been forced into
hiding by
the familiar suspects.)
The “harmonization of judicial practices,”
warns Bill Jamieson, will see the introduction of an “EU-wide arrest
warrant… which will allow extradition from one country to the other for
offenses such as ‘xenophobia.’”
Habeas Corpus is also on the new constitution’s chopping block. The
aim is to allow arrests without charges or due process (ring a bell?).
All in all, new Charter-minted economic, social, and cultural “rights”
will expand the Super State’s policing and prosecutorial powers.
And shrink markets.
The rhetoric about the free flow of goods, labor, and capital across
borders is as credible as the verbiage about union for peace. The EU has
mandated strictly regulated markets, privileging labor interests over
those of capital, and instituting oppressive socialist labor laws and
“unfair-competition” regulations that have hiked labor costs and
resulted in
structural unemployment.
Take The Czech Republic. Joseph Sima, associate professor at the Prague
School of Economics, describes the fate of his country since joining the
EU as having gone “From
the Bosom of Communism to the Central Control of EU Planners”:
There’s the added dead weight of thousands of meddling mandarins,
there’s the imperative to change local laws to fit EU decrees; to hike
taxes, even liquidate duty free shops. There’s the burden on nascent
businesses of prohibitive health and safety standards. (The right to
work is not an EU-approved birthright.) There are subsidies and grants
of monopoly to farmers. A regime of licenses now restricts
entrepreneurial activity and blocks entry into assorted occupations. On
hand to subdue any Czechoslovakian Martha Stewart is an army of SEC
gendarmes, also by EU edict. As he photocopies his paper, Sima is
reminded of the Association of Authors’ special copyright shakedown fee
he must shell out at the copier—EU orders! (Corporeal property rights
are barely protected under EU reign.)
What unites the "No" camp, from socialists to right-wingers, is the
recognition that the EU would hasten a
loss of sovereignty and national identity. Euroskeptics evinced
independent thought—they rejected the absurd claim that this
collectivist colossus would advance their interests and refused to be
coffined by it. The French and Dutch gave Brussels the boot. But they
also signaled unceremoniously to the treacherous, EU-propping elites in
Paris and The Hague to stop subverting the people’s will. Their passions
may well be shared by “Yes” voters: nations that ratified the EU were
often denied a referendum—their “representatives” in parliament sold them into
statism without giving them a say.
All in all, Europeans seem to grasp what Americans refuse to. Liberty is
associated with a dispersion of political power, never its concentration
and centralization. Adding an overarching tier of tyrants—the EU—to
European governments will benefit Europeans as a second hangman enhances
the health of a condemned man.
©2005 Ilana Mercer
Free-Market News Network
(&
Antiwar.com)
June 8
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