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Europe’s Richer Regions Want Out
The New York Times ^ | October 6, 2012 | STEVEN ERLANGER

Posted on 10/06/2012 1:51:04 PM PDT by presidio9

CATALONIA may be the catalyst for a renewed wave of separatism in the European Union, with Scotland and Flanders not far behind. The great paradox of the European Union, which is built on the concept of shared sovereignty, is that it lowers the stakes for regions to push for independence.

While a post-national European Union may be emerging out of the euro zone crisis, with a drive for more fiscal union and more centralized control over national budgets and banks, the crisis has accelerated calls for independence from member countries’ richer regions, angry at having to finance poorer neighbors.

Artur Mas, the Catalan president, recently shook Spain and the markets with a call for early regional elections and promised a referendum on independence from Spain, although Madrid considers it illegal. Scotland is planning an independence referendum for the autumn of 2014. The Flemish in Flanders have achieved nearly total autonomy, both administrative and linguistic, but still resent what they consider to be the holdover hegemony of the French-speakers of Wallonia and the Brussels elite, emotions that will be on display in provincial and communal elections Oct. 14.

There are countless things that hold unhappy countries, like marriages, together — shared history, shared wars, shared children, shared enemies. But the economic crisis in the European Union is also highlighting old grievances.

Many in Catalonia and Flanders, for example, argue that they pay significantly more into the national treasury than they receive, even as national governments cut public services. In this sense, the regional argument is the euro zone argument writ small, as richer northern countries like Germany, Finland and Austria complain that their comparative wealth and success are being drained to keep countries like Greece, Portugal and Spain afloat.

The crisis has also produced a loss of

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Germany; Government; Russia; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: austria; catalonia; eu; europe; europeanunion; euseparation; finland; flanders; flight; germany; gof; golf; greece; haggis; judgesmails; portugal; russia; scotland; separation; spain; unitedkingdom; wallonia
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To: presidio9

Yes, but the city of london financial services industry is more than ten times that of Scotland.


61 posted on 10/07/2012 2:13:45 AM PDT by Vanders9
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To: presidio9
Yes I have. It was ok, but nothing special. In its purest form it was subsistence food for the masses - cheap grain and offal combined with readily available condiments, all prepared in the simplest (and grossest) fashion i.e. boiled until it was all mashed into one uniform lump. Seriously, they didnt stop until it hung out a white flag!! Haggis is the ancient form of an electric blender.

And if you are poor and just getting by up in the damp, dreary Highlands with the midges and the fleas that's fine. Better to eat than not to. Its the advertisers who have rebadged it as some kind of "luxury" food - to me a blatant attempt to make a virtue out of a neccesity - that I blame. Scots at least can see the distinction. Very few of them eat the stuff by choice now. The new national food of Scotland is assorted curry dishes. Haggis is for tourists and export.

62 posted on 10/07/2012 2:22:38 AM PDT by Vanders9
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To: presidio9

I too quit drinking Scotch. My theory is you can only drink so much in a lifetime and I reached my quota before I died.
And golf? “A game that can only be played but never won”?

Another thought.....Whole countries “going Galt”? What a concept. Saints preserve if some of our states get this idea. (nodding in agreement).


63 posted on 10/07/2012 4:54:45 AM PDT by vortec94
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To: trebb

Great minds......hehehe. And nobody mentioned Kilts? Lazuras Long would be disappointed.


64 posted on 10/07/2012 5:01:47 AM PDT by vortec94
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To: Vanders9

Plenty of Scots, me included, eat haggis.

Doen properly, its lovely. Biggest problem is those who dont it properly end up with it being dry.


65 posted on 10/07/2012 7:30:29 AM PDT by the scotsman (i)
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To: Carry_Okie

Hey, have you proven that the Dear Liar isn’t a felon yet?


66 posted on 10/07/2012 9:39:39 AM PDT by Voice of Reason1 (Absolute power corrupts absolutely Lord Acton 1887)
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To: Voice of Reason1
Hey, have you proven that the Dear Liar isn’t a felon yet?

Don't need to. I've allowed you to prove yourself an idiot not worth the time.

67 posted on 10/07/2012 10:29:20 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (GunWalker: Arming "a civilian national security force that's just as powerful, just as well funded")
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To: presidio9
I'm told the president is a fan.

So I've heard...frankly, I would've considered him more of a hopscotch enthusiast.

68 posted on 10/07/2012 10:43:32 AM PDT by Moltke ("I am Dr. Sonderborg," he said, "and I don't want any nonsense.")
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To: Voice of Reason1

I’ve often though about just that. Is there nothing in the
constitution about kicking out bad states? We tried it the
other way once and it didn’t work out for those who wanted
to leave, maybe we should go the expulsion route.


69 posted on 10/07/2012 11:54:09 AM PDT by jusduat (on the mercy of the Lord alone.)
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To: Lysandru

As with Greece, the rest of the Eurotrash won’t be reasonably solid until they quit lying about how much their debt actually is. It would clearly be in their best interest to make the Euro work but it ain’t really happening until they ‘fess up.


70 posted on 10/07/2012 12:01:22 PM PDT by cherokee1 (skip the names---just kick the buttz)
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To: Voice of Reason1

I gave you another source. I could give you sources until the cows come home but you CHOOSE to remain ignorant so there is nothing further for me to say to you.

And as for accusing me of trying to “put forth a false narrative” you have just called me a liar.

Go screw yourself.


71 posted on 10/07/2012 1:13:45 PM PDT by Nik Naym (It's not my fault... I have compulsive smartass disorder.)
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To: Carry_Okie

Oh Really?

I provided an “irrefutable rationale, with supporting data from an irrefutable source,” and according to your own logic, Now it’s your obligation to prove my point.

So have you done that yet?

Have you proven that our dear liar of a faux-president is in fact not a felon?


72 posted on 10/07/2012 5:37:16 PM PDT by Voice of Reason1 (Absolute power corrupts absolutely Lord Acton 1887)
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To: Nik Naym

Well I’ve already proven you are ill tempered.


73 posted on 10/07/2012 5:42:48 PM PDT by Voice of Reason1 (Absolute power corrupts absolutely Lord Acton 1887)
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To: jusduat

At some point we are going to have to consider that possibility.

Just as some member of the European union may need to be ejected, circumstances here may warrant similar actions.

After all, what incentive is there for some states to be fiscally responsible when they can simply take from other states?


74 posted on 10/07/2012 5:46:48 PM PDT by Voice of Reason1 (Absolute power corrupts absolutely Lord Acton 1887)
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To: Voice of Reason1

For me, it’s not even the money so much as the ideas and
legal precedence that come out of those two places that make
me fear for the future of this country.


75 posted on 10/07/2012 6:21:06 PM PDT by jusduat (on the mercy of the Lord alone.)
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To: SaraJohnson

I would love to see globalism take a nose dive beginning with Europe. Globalists suck. It’s a nasty ideology.

I guess any elitist group dreaming of ruling the whole world and controling the wealth of the world is bad news. Whether it is based in Russia, Germany or a “diversity” of elitists from Saudi Arabia, Europe and America, the same outcome of mass murder, oppression and suffering is guarenteed.

Let every nation have it’s own native culture and struggle for it’s own well being as the people of that Nation see fit. Ditch the “citizen of world” elites’ dreams of controling the globe.


So true

Globalism, Free Trade, and the “Kumbaya Lets All Hold Hands In Unity” nonsense has been a big failure. It has done nothing but redistribute the wealth of the richer nations and gave to poorer ones...and those poorer ones got not better in the process

The thing that is really troubling is that you have people here in the US that want a similar EU-type of thing for North America...even while the EU is crumbling. Only a fool and a idiot would want a North American Union while the European Union is proving that such a body is an abject failure

The best thing that these regions can do is split from their parent nations, and split from the EU. Free Trade Globalism has failed...the Titanic has hit the iceberg....and its time to abandon ship


76 posted on 10/07/2012 8:34:17 PM PDT by SeminoleCounty (Political maturity is realizing that the "R" next to someone's name does not mean "conservative")
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To: Vanders9
Yes, but the city of london financial services industry is more than ten times that of Scotland.

Source please. RBS is the tenth largest bank in the world with $2.5mmmm in assets. London has HSBC and Barclays, but together they are only about twice the size of the Royal Bank of Scotland.

77 posted on 10/07/2012 11:44:56 PM PDT by presidio9 (Islam is as Islam does.)
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To: Vanders9

I’m not sure where you got the idea that haggis was some sort of haute cuisine, but you could make the same points you are making against hot dogs.

My point is that the name is sort of off-putting but most people who have a problem with haggis have never tried it.


78 posted on 10/07/2012 11:54:04 PM PDT by presidio9 (Islam is as Islam does.)
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To: presidio9

I think it would be great if this were to actually happen. In general, I think it would benefit conservatives more than the left, for one thing, although I think that as a matter of principle it’s a good thing too.

Let’s think about the likely results for a moment. Sure, Scotland is a left-wing nation and an independent Scotland will stay in the stifling EU. Fine, but far more importantly, without the Scots England will shift noticeably to the right and it will be easier for the Torries to win again in the future (and hopefully not only in coalition with left-wingers).

Like the Scots, the Catalans are very lefty. So, once more the bulk of Spain would shift to the right without Catalonia, while Catalonia won’t have to keep giving over its hard-earned money to poorer neighbors. A win-win situation, I’d say.

The situation in Flanders is quite different, however. Flanders is the largest area in Belgium and the nationalists there are on the right rather than the left. If Flanders gets its independence, its leaders are almost certain to implement anti-Islamic immigration measures that may save the area from eventual Islamic demographic take-over, as is projected to happen in other European countries. Besides this, Flanders will become a richer nation almost overnight. Considering the Dutch Flemings and the French Walloons have little in common, certainly less than the Scots and English or Catalans and Spanish, I think the Flemish have a great claim to independence and the idea has been popular there for a while now.

Beyond this, I just think that one nation of people shouldn’t be controlled by a different group of people against their will. It’s anti-democratic. And any way, all these areas once were independent after all. Why shouldn’t they have the right to be independent once again if the majority of their people want it that way?


79 posted on 10/08/2012 12:21:54 AM PDT by FenwickBabbitt
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To: presidio9
I do make the same point about hot dogs :)
80 posted on 10/08/2012 12:51:17 AM PDT by Vanders9
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