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cantagril
Thank you cantagril for two excellent posts providing real insight into France's history and what makes French men and women tick. What I find particularly interesting is that they highlight the absurdity of the idea that we are all European and that broadly speaking, English, French, Germans and Italians etc. are all pretty much the same. We're anything but, IMO. I've spent a fair bit in time in Spain over the last 20 years and the more I get to know it and the more I understand what makes Spaniards tick - the more I realise just how different they are to us Brits. And that's a good thing - not a bad thing. Therein lies the fundamental fault with the EU project and why I believe it will fail sooner or latter. You simply can't remove or replace what it is to be French from a Frenchman, or Spanish from a Spaniard or English from an Englishman etc., etc. These national identity traits are hard wired in at birth: they are to be celebrated and enjoyed, not diluted and homogenised. To attempt to do the latter - as the EU appears intent on doing in a vain attempt to turn us all into 'Europeans' - is at best misguided and at worst sheer folly.
Tim.
Whilst of course I am basking in your praise I can only partly agree with you. Yes, a few years ago whilst in Spain with Mme. CantagriI I was somewhat disconcerted when we were held at gun point by the Guardia (un)Civil for some imagined transgression.... but we were able to part with smiles all round and I put the brandishing of weapons down to an excess of Hispanic zeal...or too much Rioja at lunch. My wife was a little less sanguine though and somewhat tetchy on the rest of the journey.
As to whether the EU "project" will fail or not is a different matter. In Europe we are already Europeans and think of ourselves as such. I have both Swedish and German relatives and when we meet I am aware that we are all conscious of this shared european identity - please note the lower case "e" there. What none of us think we are doing is becoming less French, Brit or German etc and it seems to me that the fear of homogeneity as an aim is mostly a UK invention.
To my mind the EU is clumsy attempt to create a federation along the lines of the monarchical associations and alliances that were in place before the first war. I am not a fan of any artificial construct and the gradual rapprochement that was taking place when it was only the EEC (of a far fewer number of states) was actually a pretty good start to an mostly organic process that might have led to a union of federated states in 50 to a 100 years. The current political turmoil in Europe (and I include the UK here) is a result of Donkeys leading Donkeys without a Lion in sight. Modern democratic systems don't favour the ascent or lengthy tenure of competent technocrats whilst the climate IS perfect for populists. The UK's specific problem there is that there are no sufficiently popular populists(!) nor are there any competent and trustworthy leaders extant so the Donkeys have nobody at all to turn to. We arrived at this destination through a ham-fisted implementation of a democratic tool that ironically would be perfectly suited to a continental European context... such as Switzerland and France. There shouldn't have been a referendum in the first place and secondly it should have been designed so that any action would have needed a clear and unequivocal majority rather than the ridiculous margin that has allowed Brexiteers and Remainers to squabble like fishwives. If we were ever to leave it should have been a subject for a general election and subsequent parliamentary process.
Whatever people might think here and however much the temperature rises across the ditch Europe is not suddenly going to cease to exist because the EU is in bicker-mode and the UK has thrown a tantrum. Things will have to get considerably worse for a disintegration of the current EU and I would hazard that we will be seeing a fair amount of horse trading over the next few months which will reduce that likelihood.
Anyway, a plague o' both your houses!
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