In 2014, all EU countries will hold
parliamentary elections that may be won by the opponents of European
integration. Recent EU measures to stabilize the situation in Cyprus
showed that the foundations of the ideology of the Western world based
on the Catholic and Protestant faiths have been undermined. The West is
trying to explain its hurried decisions with the pressure from the
Russian Federation.
After the summit in Brussels approved a plan of Cyprus "rescue" (by providing a tranche of 10 billion euros in exchange for the withdrawal of 10 percent of all deposits in the country), it became clear that this was the beginning of the end for the united Europe. The basis of any state ideology is religion. The measures undermined confidence in the notion sacred for Catholics and Protestants - inviolability of private property. Expropriation is a measure completely alien to the Western mentality and may lead to a social unrest. Jean-Claude Juncker, Luxembourg Prime Minister and former President of the Eurogroup (the club of finance ministers of the euro area) said that against the background of recession and rising unemployment he did not rule out the risk of a social rebellion.
After the summit in Brussels approved a plan of Cyprus "rescue" (by providing a tranche of 10 billion euros in exchange for the withdrawal of 10 percent of all deposits in the country), it became clear that this was the beginning of the end for the united Europe. The basis of any state ideology is religion. The measures undermined confidence in the notion sacred for Catholics and Protestants - inviolability of private property. Expropriation is a measure completely alien to the Western mentality and may lead to a social unrest. Jean-Claude Juncker, Luxembourg Prime Minister and former President of the Eurogroup (the club of finance ministers of the euro area) said that against the background of recession and rising unemployment he did not rule out the risk of a social rebellion.
The measure so far has been implemented
only in Orthodox Cyprus (Orthodoxy, unlike Catholicism, encourages
sharing and sees the path to salvation in poverty). However, people in
many countries began to worry, even in the U.S., as the practice may
become universal, particularly in those countries that have requested
assistance from the EU, i.e., Spain, Ireland, Portugal, and Italy.
Meanwhile, Forbes magazine has
already drawn parallels with the Great Depression in the United States
that would not have been that destructive if the Federal Reserve
abstained from a similar measure. The magazine wrote that Cyprus did
away with the guarantees on bank deposits and removed protection from
flight of capital, which may result in a cascade of bankruptcies.
Indeed, regardless of what the European Commission says, people got
alarmed and started withdrawing or transferring their investments to
other currencies and countries. The euro is dropping in value against
the national currencies and the dollar.
British magazine The Economist called this not only nonsense, but a catastrophe and said that the decision was unfair, short-sighted and self-defeating. The injustice is in the fact that the measure affected ordinary depositors, while holders of debt obligations have not been affected, the magazine wrote. The measure is called short-sighted because it would lead to risks and flight of capital. Also, these measures undermine the political credibility of the rescue program under the auspices of the EU. Reuters agency wrote that the Cypriot government would be forced to violate one of its most important promises - a promise that the contributions under 100,000 euros would be safe.
British magazine The Economist called this not only nonsense, but a catastrophe and said that the decision was unfair, short-sighted and self-defeating. The injustice is in the fact that the measure affected ordinary depositors, while holders of debt obligations have not been affected, the magazine wrote. The measure is called short-sighted because it would lead to risks and flight of capital. Also, these measures undermine the political credibility of the rescue program under the auspices of the EU. Reuters agency wrote that the Cypriot government would be forced to violate one of its most important promises - a promise that the contributions under 100,000 euros would be safe.
The European Union decided to clear the
air by utilizing the old mechanism of blaming Russia that allegedly is
most affected by the proposed measures. Raúl Ilargi Meijer from Business Insider
speculated that with 37 percent of the deposits in Cyprus, Russians
heavily pressured European politicians to take this populist decision -
to punish the perpetrators, which made the Europeans neglect the
consequences. Gavin Hewitt of the BBC agreed, saying that the Germans
suspected that half of the deposits in the banks of the island belonged
to the Russians, and these deposits are made for money laundering.
Therefore, according to Hewitt, the Germans did not want to continue to
save Cyprus by giving it money. The statement of Finance Minister of the
Russian Federation Anton Siluyanov that in exchange for the extension
of the credit to Cyprus (EUR 5 billion) Russia may require it to provide
all the data on the Russian owners of the capital of the island only
added fuel to the fire.
It turns out that Russia began fighting
corruption and "let down" Europe. Unfortunately, the EU is falling apart
without Russian participation. There is no unity anywhere, including
politics. Besides the opposition of the "hardworking North" and "lazy
and irresponsible South", there are other conflicts, such as creditor
countries vs. debtor countries, as well as contradictions between the
leaders. Germany is accused of usurping power, the UK raised the issue
of withdrawal from the EU, and France is unilaterally sending troops to
Mali and is going to supply weapons to the Syrian terrorists. There is
no peace and quiet at the national level either. Nationalists became
active in all directions, from extreme left to extreme right. In
Portugal, protesters are singing a revolutionary anthem "Grândola,"
Spain is splitting before our eyes torn by separatist movements, in
Greece the Nazis emerged in the Parliament, and in France the far-right
"National Front" of Marine Le Pen is activating. In Italy at the
parliamentary elections a "clown prince" comedian Beppe Grillo secured
sensational 25 percent of votes. In Germany, a new party "Alternative
for Germany" was created that calls for the dissolution of the euro area
and creation of small alliances with "some countries with healthy
economies," namely, Austria, Finland and the Netherlands.
Founded on the basis of ideological
confrontation with the Soviet Union, the European Union has created a
system of social protection that the Soviet people could not even dream
about. The benefits included average pension of 600 euros, year-end and
Christmas bonuses, unemployment payments nearly equal to salary, and
great medical insurance. But these guarantees were based not on the
income growth of the real sector but the speculative funds of the
banking sector. The crisis of 2008 caused the neoliberal economic model
to collapse. Europe's population does not want to live as one family any
longer. The term "welfare state" has disappeared from the vocabulary of
politicians. ZDF channel reported that nearly half of Germans
believe that their country would be better off without the euro. In
other countries this percentage is much higher. In Spain, for example,
it is 75 percent, in Portugal - 68, according to the Eurobarometer.
The election of Pope Francis, who first
spoke about the Catholic Church as the Church of the poor, denying, in
fact, wealth as a virtue, shows that the crisis in the West has moved
from the economic and political spheres to religious and ideological
ones. It makes its leaders and the elite face a dilemma - either change
the model of wealth distribution and the burden of difficulties, or be
destroyed.
Lyuba Lulko
Lyuba Lulko
Pravda.Ru
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