POE 3.3 The Lastest,best,and most detail shadow builds
The real danger isnât Brexit. Itâs EU break-up
The rise of angry nationalists across Europe is threatening to destroy a union based on peace â while Russia waits to prey on its remains
Pro-Russian protesters celebrate Liberation Day, the anniversary of the defeat of Nazi occupiers, in Prague, May 2016.Photograph: Piero C/PP/Barcroft Images

his is a time of strong emotions. Immigration is one such case;
. To a certain Mr Clarkson from Gillingham, talking to the BBC, Europe lies miles away, over the sea. âWe are not Europeans. How could we be? So why does the government bow to diktats from Brussels?â
One has to wonder whether much has changed since 1938, when the then prime minister, Neville Chamberlain, decided that endangered Czechoslovakia was a faraway country that nobody knew about.
has always been ambiguous. Britain joined the postwar club constructed on other countriesâ terms late, and never felt quite comfortable inside. It reacted with hostility whenever it felt its judicial, parliamentary or governmental sovereignty were being questioned. British rule of law, it was felt, needed no improving from foreigners.
What we see now in the campaign is a familiar longing to bring back Britainâs âgreatnessâ. But that doesnât tell us enough about what is going on right now.
Europe is different things to different people and different nations. For continental Europeans, it is at once a geographical, historical and cultural home â which it has never been to Britain â and at the same time a political and economic project they have been involved in together â some more, some less, some longer, some more recently.
The Germans, for instance, have been reborn since the war as the essential Europeans (the late addition of East
complicates the picture). They, France and a few others are not merely members: they are Europe. The ânewâ members, from eastern and central Europe, saw Europe as a guarantor of prosperity, better governance, openness and modernity, and felt protected inside the club against Russia.
What will Europe do for the dispossessed at its fringes? | Claudia Ciobanu
Time has moved on. Solidarity and community were once the watchwords across continental Europe. No longer. When the Italian prime minister, desperate to cope with the wave of immigration, asked Europeans to help, the eastern Europeans took the view that
â (We donât care). The bolts of the union are loosening.
In a blowback from globalisation a feeling of discontent with the establishment, with the old system, a feeling that politics is broken and not fit for purpose, is spreading not only within the UK but also across Europe, and most visibly now in the presidential primaries on the other side of the Atlantic. It feels as if we are facing a crisis of governance. At a popular level, the bad mood is turning into anger, and anger is looking for targets. The latest target in Europe is Europe itself and its establishment, the union.
To overcome this assault, the EU will have to introduce a genuine democratic political process to its workings. Sixty years ago a technocratic way of operation for supranational European institutions made perfect sense, and it worked. They were also seen as legitimate. Remember, they were created first and foremost to prevent war. Nobody in their right mind would have demanded for Germany and the rest, so soon after the experience with Nazism and other European dictatorships, the kind of democracy that we imagine today. It wouldnât have worked; it would have been dangerous. Later,
Margaret Thatcherâs answer to democracy in Brussels Poe Currency Exchange Essence
The response to attempts to create a European constitution in 2005 was again no â this time by democratic referendums in France and the Netherlands. Any attempt to introduce genuine EU democracy today would be resisted again by governments driven by instincts of self-preservation.
What makes everything more dangerous is that Putinâs Russia has a vital interest in the EU's break-up
An environment of public anger wonât help the EUâs need to get a grip on its multiple crises or to reform and to gain democratic legitimacy. Anger is risky. It could set the European house on fire.

In normal circumstances, there is nothing fatal about the UK drifting towards the edges of the EU or leaving altogether. A modus vivendi will be found. What complicates things is the very real, dangerous and growing alternative to a benign and peaceful development. Angry, even fanatical anti-Europeans, is an enemy that has to be destroyed. Poe Currency Exchange Essence , wish for more than just to leave the EU. They want an end to the EU altogether. âEuropeâ (meaning the EU), in their minds, is an enemy that has to be destroyed.
This explains the perverse internationalism of radical nationalists such as
in Germany and varieties of organised xenophobes in central Europe. Some of them parade in old fascist uniforms; others promise to grind Muslims (do they mean Jews?) into bonemeal. Brexiters happen to be in a very odd company.
What makes everything even more dangerous is Russia preying on the EU. Putinâs Russia has a vital interest in its break-up. The risk is that

Poe Currency Exchange Essence , one dares not imagine.
It is still only a possibility. The real outcome has yet to be seen. What can be seen already, however, is a British version of â

â. In Clarksonâs words â âEurope is miles awayâ. That was wrong in 1938, and is just as wrong today.
Today, where the old iron curtain ended, a new frontier starts.
on Slovakiaâs border. A Czech government official declared that to take in a quota of refugees from Europe equals the Munich diktat. Itâs getting worse. Half the country that was invaded by Russian tanks in 1968 applauds a
, who joined the war against Ukraine, get an official welcome with bread and salt on their way to Berlin to remind Europe who won the second world war. Czech support for the EU is now at an all-time low. This is Absurdistan, kindly tolerated by Europe.

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