by lorenzo » Mon 30 May 2005, 14:28:21
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Licho', 'L')orenzo, regarding trade, there is nothing that isnt law already.. There was simply nothing new regarding trade, its already all in various treaties..
That's true. But the NON is a non against globalization and neoliberalism in general. As it stands, the EU is a free market capitalist system with social corrections. Nothing new here.
But the social corrections are important, they set us apart from such miserable consumer slave jungles like the USA, where millions of people live in pure misery.
Europe has a fantastic and unique tradition of social negotiations, between the government, the employers and the employees. Nowhere else do you find this institutionalized
trialogue.
And the EU Constitution wants to destroy this tradition. It wants to wage war against the people and against the unions, so that the corporations get a free ride. Thank God, the French rejected it.
Those who don't like Europe's great tradition of creating
prosperity for all, should move to the USA, or to China.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Licho', 'A')nd enlargement? Constitution has nothing to do with it, except that it defines rules how can countries join and leave EU. Now there are no such rules, so it's completely out of control

Again, it was not about enlargement, but about the democratic deficit in decision making. Europeans were not asked if they wanted to enlarge so rapidly and so thoroughly.
The Eurocrats should have taken Mitterands call more seriously, when he said that we must first "live in the building for a while, before putting new floors on top of it".
I'm very glad that our Eastern European friends joined in. But we must now stop, and think what we really want. It's as if the integration process keeps integrating purely for integrations' sake, while nobody's asking: where do we really want to go.
And now, for the first time, that debate has been opened, by the French.