Alphen,
Netherlands,12 September. It is
election day here in the Netherlands and my Dutch wife has just gone off to
exercise her democratic right. Having
watched the campaign on TV I am struck by how small these Dutch politicians are
and how little able to grasp the enormity of the events that are engulfing the
Dutch people. Only in last night’s TV debate did the issue
of Europe and the Euro really ignite.
The
simple fact is that my life and that of millions of other Dutch taxpayers is
now decided elsewhere often by unelected officials who care little for my
well-being and who want only to ‘transfer’ what little money I have to Europe’s
super-debtors so they can avoid the consequences of their own actions. Dutch politicians are not alone in their
increasing irrelevance as ever more unaccountable power is passed to European
institutions in a desperate bid to save a currency that simply does not
work.
It is
not without a certain political elegance that the day the Dutch turn out to
vote the European Omission is setting out plans
for a banking super-regulator to oversee the Eurozone’s six thousand banks as a
first step on the road to full banking union and who knows what thereafter. It will, of course, all be
overseen in my name by Mario Draghi – Super Mario – and his increasingly (dangerously)
powerful European Central Bank.
In the euphemistic language of the Omission banking
union is yet another attempt to ‘mutualise’ the debts
of the super-debtors. Or, to be more exact,
‘banking union’ is an indirect way to load the costs onto me for the appalling
decisions of appalling politicians over whom I have no influence. Whether I or other northern, western European
taxpayers pay directly or via the banks one thing is clear; sooner or later my little
savings will be raided (again) to pay for this mess, be it via tax or currency
inflation…or both.
Worse,
the Omission’s proposed banking union breaks the link between risk and
responsibility by making sound northern European banks, such as my own
Rabobank, responsible for the bad lending and sovereign debt decisions of
all. This will only encourage the
profligacy that created this mess and render less likely vital structural reforms. There
will be rules, I am told, that will ensure the European Stability Mechanism and
the European Financial Stability Fund is properly overseen. However, in reality Super Mario will be in charge and it is clear that he places the interests of his fellow southern Europeans well before my own.
My
last formal hope for effective European democratic oversight was also dashed
today. The German Constitutional Court
ruled that a permanent European bail out mechanism was legal under the German
constitution. The decision means the ESM and EFSF can now be enshrined in German
law and the German government
can go on transferring German taxpayer’s money to the super-debtors and by
extension my own, as the Netherlands is little more than a German colony
administered from Brussels these days.
As of
now my last hope rests with the common sense of the German people. There is a faint hope that German public unease will see demands grow for a referendum in Germany. This will not happen anytime soon as the way
is now clear for the next massive tranche of my money to vanish down the black
hole of the super-debtors. However, when
all of this again goes wrong, as it will, I am confident the German people will
say “enough”! And then finally some
German common sense will be applied to the appalling tax on my future that the
European Onion has become.
The
sad truth is that the election campaign here in the Netherlands has for the most part been about
anything but Europe, even though it is by far the biggest issue facing the Dutch people. In their collective desperation to hide their impotence Dutch politicians have focused on the tactical rather
than the strategic. Several of them have
actually called for more Dutch ‘power’ to be given to ‘Europe’ further
undermining any residual value in Dutch democracy.
The Euro-Aristocracy is now well on its way to
cementing its power. How long before free speech becomes the next victim? Indeed, unelected Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti has already called for a summit on what he calls "populism".
The sad truth is that zombie
politicians are leading zombie states into an increasingly zombie Europe. Europe today is full of empty democracies.
Oh
how I weep for my democracy. Oh how I
weep for my Europe.
Julian
Lindley-French
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