Thursday 27 February 2014

It was Just a Pizza Parlour

In a recent debate on Britain's place in the European Union held at Bloomberg's London headquarters Luke Johnson, famous for having created the Pizza Express brand, decided to show that he should have stuck to pizza and not politics by announcing that "the European Union was 'built on German guilt' after World War Two".

No Mr Johnson, Germany has many things for which its sense of guilt associated with the Second World War "directs" it choices, but the creation of the EU is not one of them.  

Germany was indeed involved in the creation of the EEC.  But it was not out of guilt.  It was corralled into the EEC out of fear by the victorious allies.  A fear that Germany would once again, despite an unconditional surrender and a complete collapse, physically, politically and economically, rise up and once again wreak havoc in Europe.

Now if you want to twist things and say that it was guilt that made Germany  provide the bulk of troops to NATO second only to the US, you can.

If you want to twist things to suggest that it was guilt that made Germany  pay more into the European Economic Community than it received, you can.

If you want to twist things to suggest that guilt was the driver behinds Germany's  willingness to take a "backseat" at the table, then you can.

But you would be wrong.

No Mr Johnson, I don't think your memory-if you ever took the time to look into the facts-is clear.  I think that you are forgetting that despite the integration of Germany into Europe by the victors it is once again becoming the dominant continental power-a thought which is anathema to 600 years of English geopolitical strategy.

Granted, this time it is through economic rather than military prowess, it still stirs that underlying British fear of German hegemony in Europe.

And so it is not surprising that Mr Johnson would try and play the guilt card to try and squeeze Germany back into its box. 
                                                            
No not surprising.  

And not correct.

Wednesday 26 February 2014

There is no Escaping the Past....nor the Future....

I am fully aware of the dangers of the Ukraine.  As always national boundaries are drawn by the victors, sometimes constructively, and sometimes maliciously. The Ukraine has suffered from this almost since its inception and certainly its most recent manifestation arising from the ashes of the Second World War is flawed to the core with battle lines being drawn along religious, ethnic and political lines.

Post-Soviet Russia might have changed it's political stripes and openly embraced capitalism-but its territorial imperialism, even if it is to defend its national interests against perceived threats- both real and  imagined-is as strong as ever.

The EU and the USA are engaging in a dangerous game of baiting the Russian bear as if the wars in Chechnya, in Georgia, not to mention the interventions in Budapest and Prague were not part of a long term geopolitical dance with destiny.

No one in the West wants to go to war over the Ukraine and so the West's antics are more to discomfort Russia rather the prick it into overt aggression-if Russia plays along.

I would suggest however that on the eve of the 100th anniversary of the First World War which, despite Bismarck's famous statement that "the Balkans weren't worth the bones of a Pomeranian grenadier ended up costing a lot of bones, the majority of which were not from Pomerania, that we be very careful of our actions in the Ukraine.

I'm not sure that it's that much different than Egypt or Syria except that Russia sits on the other side of the board.

I am not forgetting nor suggesting that the path of appeasement was any more successful 25 years later, but we should be very clear of the ramifications of our actions and react strategically rather then the tactical positioning which smacks of opportunism as practiced by dilettantes..



Tuesday 11 February 2014

The Perils of Populism

An epitaph for the 20th Century could very well be Socialism; Fascism; and Communism.

The world experienced the advent of all three "ism's" with tragic consequences in the latter two and interesting incursions into the basic capitalist setup by the former.

Socialism and Communism developed to combat the perceived injustices of capitalism combined in many cases with the remnants of monarchism and the established class systems.

Fascism on the other hand was designed to restore some warped perception of past glory essentially recreating a monarchical caste to "defend" against the ravages of Socialism not to mention Communism.

They all have the requirement for an enemy or scapegoat: the rich; the poor; the Jew; basically the "other" against whom they can rant and rave.

In this aspect they all have the potential to fall prey to the latent disease inherent in democracy-
populism.

For populism has the ability to take a kernel of truth and turn it into a monster of exaggeration and lies.

Take the recent vote of the Swiss which passed a referendum to limit immigration with the slightest of majorities- 0.6%.

Two million out of a total Swiss population of eight million are foreign. 

The largest contingent are Italians who make up just under a third.  The second largest are Germans who make up a little less and lastly the Portuguese who make up the majority of the rest.

The Germans are almost exclusively in the professional classes.  The Italians are professional and skilled labour and the Portugese provide a significant part of the menial labour and the lower eschelons of the health care.

The majority of the foreign workers are in the cities.  The "no" vote- that is the vote not to introduce limitations on immigration came from the cities.  The "yes" vote- the anti-foreign vote- came from the countryside where the number of immigrants is minimal.

A perfect example of the creation of a scapegoat, of fomenting fear and loathing of the unknown by a populist, nationalist xenophobic movement .

Unfortunately this seems to be the traditional route taken by the Right.  Create an enemy.  Exaggerate the danger.  Come to power.  And then consolidate your position by creating ever more scapegoats.

My problem is not the Swiss.  They are a relatively small group and don't appear to have territorial aims in Europe.

My concern is that every other right wing populist party in the EU will now latch on to the Swiss example and parlay that into a "seat at the table" of the political elites.

This has happened before.

It didn't end well.

Simple answers to complex questions don't really exist.

But they are alluring.

Monday 10 February 2014

Net Neutrality

Years ago Noam Chomsky wrote the book "Manufacturing Consent".  In it one of the things he railed against was the small circle of families-26 I believe was the number-across the globe who together essentially owned the world of print media.

In the US they were held in check by the "Fairness Doctrine" which was created in the 30's to counter the power of the print media barons and to check the growth in the "new" area of media the radio.

It was proposed among others by some of the leaders of print and electronic media, perhaps to level the playing field, and was incorporated in the tenets of the FCC.

I have written earlier of how President Reagan dismantled the Fairness Doctrine and that President Carter went on to weaken it even further with the removal of barriers to owning national radio and television stations as well as cross-ownership of print and electronic media.

The next step in the ever increasing attack on freedom of communication are the continuing attempts to dismantle net neutrality.

"Fundamentally, net (short for "network") neutrality is the idea that the Internet works best when ISPs deliver every Internet site's traffic without discrimination. At its core, net neutrality demands ISP equality in the treatment of consumers who pay for the same or a greater quality of service, permitting peer-to-peer communication in any platform of the consumers' choosing, regardless of the amount of content transmitted or bandwidth utilised."*
 
It is a strange fight. 
 
Pro net neutrality supports are looking at "freedom of speech" and the right to have free choice in the sense that they wish to maintain an open broadband in which major Internet providers cannot control what information people see, at what speed and at what price as promoted by the Federal Communications Commission.
 
On the other side of the debate are those looking to ensure that they control the content, the speed and the price of the Internet.  These are the major Internet providers and their congressional supporters like Subcommittee Chairman Greg Walden (R-Ore.), who introduced H.J. Res. 37 on Feb. 16, 2011, a few weeks after the FCC had put forth a regulation maintaining a high level of net neutrality. 
 
The Honourable Mr Walden's Resolution held that:  "....that Congress disapproves the rule submitted by the Federal Communications Commission relating to the matter of preserving the open Internet and broadband industry practises (my italics), and such rule shall have no force or effect."

Just to confirm what happened.  The House Commerce Subcommittee on Communications and Technology voted to repeal an FCC Regulation because the Regulation preserved the open Internet and broadband industry practises.

And wanted to replace it with a sort of Cable TV structure controlling the Internet.

*Sedgewick Law Los Angeles Daily Journal