David Cameron (with more than a little help from the Germans) has also done more than is obvious at first glance in pressing a north European take onto the European Union. Between his efforts last February and his efforts in the last week he has reduced the EU budget (for the first time ever) and resisted attempts to alter the basis upon which budget calculations are made (and not just for calculating the UK rebate) as well as using the threat of a veto (but not a veto itself) to ensure that the budget is put in place for the full period and there is no reversion to a much more expansive year by year fall-back if the full term budget had not been approved.
France and particularly Italy are making the best of a bad job by talking up the allocations from the budget for alleviating youth unemployment and the further direction of resources to this end from the European Investment Bank (though this last is purely speculative and has no German assent) but the sums are trivial and need support from unspent and unallocated budget resources every year. All in all the main objective, to make nebulous the basis for budgetary calculations co-opting the unpopularity of the UK's rebate as a vehicle, has failed.
Germany has seen off any advance in centralising bank resolution, direct EU bank recapitalisation and the use of these means for legacy debt redistribution which is sought by the debtor member states (again particularly Italy). The cover explanation is that the German elections preclude any threats to German taxpayers for the moment, but the underlying obstacle is Germany's insistence on re-opening the treaties if a redistributive Union, by any means, is to be installed; at the very least their insistence that legacy debt must be cleared up at a national level before any progress in bank supervision, recapitalisation, and resolution is really installed.
If threat of veto-use is a powerful weapon, threat of treaty-opening is nuclear. Mutatis mutandis opening the treaties is like holding a general election. Difficult as it may be to achieve against vested interests these occasions (and it could be argued these occasions alone) can inflict a sea change on embedded elites, ideologies and interest. Both Germany and the UK now have limited any further use of the under-definition of treaty provisions to achieve meta-policy ends.
Doubt is creeping in that the German elections will end German determination to re-open the treaties, to recast the European Union and free it from its 20th century objectives; that the UK too is not going away but means to reopen the treaties, change the existing Union template, and then vote on what is put in its place has just been demonstrated vividly. And this policy may well be more to the UK and Europe's advantage than a simple In or Out UKIP-style referendum and abandonment of the field by the UK.
Saturday, 29 June 2013
Thursday, 27 June 2013
Furious Italian Left Media Denounces Cameron
David Cameron has stopped the painstakingly constructed European Union budget in its tracks this evening. The Italian media are beside themselves at his insistence that Europe should live within its means and, most importantly, not seek to redirect some of the United Kingdom's rebate, negotiated (if that is quite the word) by Margaret Thatcher in 1984, to European agriculture and alleviating European youth unemployment.
The Italian prime minister, his own and his Party's reputation sullied by association with his administration's coalition partners and their Leader (among other things) had intended to make a splash in Brussels by leading the discussions on policies for work and youth; clean up his image after last night's dinner with Berlusca. Instead all the careful choreographing of the responsible, pragmatic progressive, social democratic leader caring for the fair society and its means within the European framework has gone for a burton under withering English fire.
'Not with our rebate,' Letta has been told sharply. David Cameron has forced Van Rompuy to explain to the other 27 heads of government precisely the terms of the agreement reached this morning on the EU budget that must be agreed by all heads of state as well as the EU Parliament. Where it departs from what was agreed last February, particularly on the UK rebate, it must be renegotiated.
Letta's government looks ever more distasteful at home and ineffective in Europe.
UPDATE
The United Kingdom rebate has been maintained, after David Cameron's rejection of any change to what had been agreed in February. Angela Merkel also noted that "In February we reached agreement that there would be no alteration in the basis of calculation". The budget then went through.
The Italian prime minister, his own and his Party's reputation sullied by association with his administration's coalition partners and their Leader (among other things) had intended to make a splash in Brussels by leading the discussions on policies for work and youth; clean up his image after last night's dinner with Berlusca. Instead all the careful choreographing of the responsible, pragmatic progressive, social democratic leader caring for the fair society and its means within the European framework has gone for a burton under withering English fire.
'Not with our rebate,' Letta has been told sharply. David Cameron has forced Van Rompuy to explain to the other 27 heads of government precisely the terms of the agreement reached this morning on the EU budget that must be agreed by all heads of state as well as the EU Parliament. Where it departs from what was agreed last February, particularly on the UK rebate, it must be renegotiated.
Letta's government looks ever more distasteful at home and ineffective in Europe.
UPDATE
The United Kingdom rebate has been maintained, after David Cameron's rejection of any change to what had been agreed in February. Angela Merkel also noted that "In February we reached agreement that there would be no alteration in the basis of calculation". The budget then went through.
Wednesday, 26 June 2013
Alla Deriva
At the end of the last century derivatives were used by national Europhiliacs to bring the ratio of deficit to GDP below 3% in Italy. This was known quite widely then, and since as a practice used by others (Greece for example) and shrugged off in the over-riding interest of setting up the currency union as a mechanism for driving ever-closer European Union.
Unfortunately some of these contracts dating back to the 1990s were renegotiated last year which once again brought them to wider attention when the renegotiated contracts attracted losses of 8 billion euros - not good considering the state of Italian public debt.
Much worse, however, is that La Repubblica writes that Italian total derivatives exposure is of the order of 160 billion euros; this, at the same rate of loss, would involve an additional 32 billion euros. The scale of irresponsibility is such that we are running out of directions in which to look where nothing disastrous is happening: political, institutional, economic, ethical, all areas are desolations.
Unfortunately some of these contracts dating back to the 1990s were renegotiated last year which once again brought them to wider attention when the renegotiated contracts attracted losses of 8 billion euros - not good considering the state of Italian public debt.
Much worse, however, is that La Repubblica writes that Italian total derivatives exposure is of the order of 160 billion euros; this, at the same rate of loss, would involve an additional 32 billion euros. The scale of irresponsibility is such that we are running out of directions in which to look where nothing disastrous is happening: political, institutional, economic, ethical, all areas are desolations.
Tuesday, 25 June 2013
A Coalition Government With a Party Leader Currently Condemned to 11 Years in Prison
There's something very seriously the matter with Italian politicians. I recognise that politicians and elites in many countries display scant regard for the ethical stances of others - and call it real politique - but the Leader of one half of the coalition governing Italy has just been condemned to seven years for involvement in under-age prostitution and abuse of office, while over 30 of the witnesses at the trial have been referred by the judge for investigation for perjury during the trial.
Giorgio Napolitano, President of Italy, has called for maintenance of the Coalition government and a period of governmental stability. The People of Liberty, whose Leader has been condemned, are crying 'foul' and 'persecution'. The other Coalition party, the Democratic Party, has stated it respects the judgment and the court. That's it.
No suggestion that there be a vote of confidence in the Coalition government in the Parliament, seeing as offering the resignation of the Executive hasn't crossed anyone's mind, let alone lips. No suggestion that perhaps Prime Minister Letta is now maintained in office by a Party led by a man with not one but two current convictions, and such a conviction, and is currently condemned to a total of eleven years; a Party who supplies the Minister of the Interior who denounces the judiciary in simply outrageous terms.
Letta gets up in Parliament and announces he has a very important European meeting in Brussels tomorrow. What's he going to say there? Hope no-one mentions this petty embarrassment to his government? He's meeting Silvio Berlusconi this evening. Let's hope that after the meeting Prime Minister Letta will go to the President and offer his resignation, and that it will be accepted.
There's no need for fresh elections (not a need, in the first instance, though a clean slate would be nice) but certainly another form of coalition must be sought and if not found then elections would be required. Required in a normal, decent democracy with a normal decent head of state that is.
Giorgio Napolitano, President of Italy, has called for maintenance of the Coalition government and a period of governmental stability. The People of Liberty, whose Leader has been condemned, are crying 'foul' and 'persecution'. The other Coalition party, the Democratic Party, has stated it respects the judgment and the court. That's it.
No suggestion that there be a vote of confidence in the Coalition government in the Parliament, seeing as offering the resignation of the Executive hasn't crossed anyone's mind, let alone lips. No suggestion that perhaps Prime Minister Letta is now maintained in office by a Party led by a man with not one but two current convictions, and such a conviction, and is currently condemned to a total of eleven years; a Party who supplies the Minister of the Interior who denounces the judiciary in simply outrageous terms.
Letta gets up in Parliament and announces he has a very important European meeting in Brussels tomorrow. What's he going to say there? Hope no-one mentions this petty embarrassment to his government? He's meeting Silvio Berlusconi this evening. Let's hope that after the meeting Prime Minister Letta will go to the President and offer his resignation, and that it will be accepted.
There's no need for fresh elections (not a need, in the first instance, though a clean slate would be nice) but certainly another form of coalition must be sought and if not found then elections would be required. Required in a normal, decent democracy with a normal decent head of state that is.
Delusional Italy
The Italian Parliament (such as it is and if it sees out the day) is to vote today on whether to proceed with Italy's purchase of 90 F35 fighter bombers.
In Italy's current situation - economic, political, institutional, constitutional, ethical - existential might be the word, it would be best to put such an aircraft purchase on hold and rethink.
After all, there are iffy government coalition partners to reconsider, Constitutions to rewrite in groups of 75 talking heads plus Napolitano (88) (not least because constitutionally Italy is bound not to make war and the F35 is indubitably an attack aircraft) taxes to lower and rescind, and a 2.03 trillion euro public debt. There are the fabled youth unemployed (and all the other unemployed who aren't even consoled by their youth) in need of being 'kick-started' into work - though why use imagery from getting your motor scooter going when imagery from flying your F35 would be so much more blue sky thinking in our modern Italy? And are we sure that the state automatically accessing and monitoring all bank account activity is going to stop (rather than merely confirm the turn of speed now displayed in) the great Italian wealth exodus?
Even the hope of dragging some sort of administration on over the summer (which isn't here and everyone is too poor to go the seaside anyway) until the currency union can get its rescue mechanism ducks in a row and then try rescuing one of its largest participant economies, is collapsing.
All a vote to commit to the F35 will bring is more debt in the shape of penalty clauses, not sleek fighter bombers like Turkey will have.
In Italy's current situation - economic, political, institutional, constitutional, ethical - existential might be the word, it would be best to put such an aircraft purchase on hold and rethink.
After all, there are iffy government coalition partners to reconsider, Constitutions to rewrite in groups of 75 talking heads plus Napolitano (88) (not least because constitutionally Italy is bound not to make war and the F35 is indubitably an attack aircraft) taxes to lower and rescind, and a 2.03 trillion euro public debt. There are the fabled youth unemployed (and all the other unemployed who aren't even consoled by their youth) in need of being 'kick-started' into work - though why use imagery from getting your motor scooter going when imagery from flying your F35 would be so much more blue sky thinking in our modern Italy? And are we sure that the state automatically accessing and monitoring all bank account activity is going to stop (rather than merely confirm the turn of speed now displayed in) the great Italian wealth exodus?
Even the hope of dragging some sort of administration on over the summer (which isn't here and everyone is too poor to go the seaside anyway) until the currency union can get its rescue mechanism ducks in a row and then try rescuing one of its largest participant economies, is collapsing.
All a vote to commit to the F35 will bring is more debt in the shape of penalty clauses, not sleek fighter bombers like Turkey will have.
Monday, 24 June 2013
Should Judges Take Away Electorates' Rights by Banning Candidates Found Guilty of Crimes
Exclusion from public office in perpetuity seems a bit hard, and not just on Silvio Berlusconi. It's one thing to strip convicted criminals of their right to vote while serving their sentences, and the European Court says we are not to. It's quite another to strip away such civil rights in perpetuity.
And entirely another to strip electorates of the leadership and the possibility of returning to office a popular leader playing a charismatic role in the leadership of a political party.
And entirely another to strip electorates of the leadership and the possibility of returning to office a popular leader playing a charismatic role in the leadership of a political party.
Berlusconi Condemned
Seven years for abuse of office and prostitution of a minor. (6 + 1). A long list of witnesses have also been referred for investigation on the evidence given during Berlusconi's trial. Berlusconi has been excluded from public office in perpetuity.
Lawyers for Silvio Berlusconi have announced he will appeal and used the word 'hallucinatory" to describe the proceedings.
The spread has risen to 300 with the yield at 4.82.
Lawyers for Silvio Berlusconi have announced he will appeal and used the word 'hallucinatory" to describe the proceedings.
The spread has risen to 300 with the yield at 4.82.
Thursday, 20 June 2013
Bringing Down Berlusconi
Conviction for tax and fraud in business activities offences, in a state noted for its poor international ratings as a country in which to do business, is a danger on a purely technical front. Clear indications that "the problem is as much about how the laws are interpreted by the bureaucracy and the judiciary, as it is about the laws themselves.", make the situation worse. Malcolm Barr and David Mackie point out this problem, with specific reference to Italy, in their piece on sorting out national legacy problems, both economic and politico-institutional, before an EMU 2 steady state can be achieved.
It can be argued that the judicial pursuit of a popular political leader is both commonplace and dangerous in authoritarian states, and that Italy's current reversion to its default mode authoritarianism is now causing any impartial observer to take Silvio Berlusconi's assertions that he is the victim of judicial persecution seriously.
Anyone attempting to conduct business in an institutional, socio-economic and structural environment like Italy's is always going to be vulnerable to a state or political assault (or both as at the moment in Italy the first is being subjugated to the second). But if our popular, elected politician then compounds his right-wing, economic liberalism with a spicy anti-European contempt, and a robust rejection of the received national myth 'fascism bad / communism good', then the Unspeakable are after the Inedible (or rather the indigestible for Italy's leftist hypocrite occupants of the ethical high ground) with a vengeance. And if fraud, tax or political activity accusation doesn't do it for criminalisation there's always the Strauss-Kahn moral-assassination-by-sexual-slur option.
Nevertheless the vecchio, glorioso comunista Napolitano (88) requires and expects that there should be no impact on the present peculiar government (which is having its strings jerked by Brussels and Germany via his office) if former Prime Minister Berlusconi is stripped of immunities, dignity, condemned, and excluded from Parliament.
Napolitano may wish all he likes that we would all, like him, put the European Union first, last and always in our actions and our justifications; but most of us regard much of the 20th century, and particularly Italy's 20th century, as no excuse for anything at all, never mind for an EU political mindset as outdated as it is outrageous. Further, quite a lot of us, having had our faith in electoral democracy undermined recently, are now looking askance at the Judiciary, the Executive, and the Presidency (our view of the Italian bureaucracy rests undisturbed).
It can be argued that the judicial pursuit of a popular political leader is both commonplace and dangerous in authoritarian states, and that Italy's current reversion to its default mode authoritarianism is now causing any impartial observer to take Silvio Berlusconi's assertions that he is the victim of judicial persecution seriously.
Anyone attempting to conduct business in an institutional, socio-economic and structural environment like Italy's is always going to be vulnerable to a state or political assault (or both as at the moment in Italy the first is being subjugated to the second). But if our popular, elected politician then compounds his right-wing, economic liberalism with a spicy anti-European contempt, and a robust rejection of the received national myth 'fascism bad / communism good', then the Unspeakable are after the Inedible (or rather the indigestible for Italy's leftist hypocrite occupants of the ethical high ground) with a vengeance. And if fraud, tax or political activity accusation doesn't do it for criminalisation there's always the Strauss-Kahn moral-assassination-by-sexual-slur option.
Nevertheless the vecchio, glorioso comunista Napolitano (88) requires and expects that there should be no impact on the present peculiar government (which is having its strings jerked by Brussels and Germany via his office) if former Prime Minister Berlusconi is stripped of immunities, dignity, condemned, and excluded from Parliament.
Napolitano may wish all he likes that we would all, like him, put the European Union first, last and always in our actions and our justifications; but most of us regard much of the 20th century, and particularly Italy's 20th century, as no excuse for anything at all, never mind for an EU political mindset as outdated as it is outrageous. Further, quite a lot of us, having had our faith in electoral democracy undermined recently, are now looking askance at the Judiciary, the Executive, and the Presidency (our view of the Italian bureaucracy rests undisturbed).
Wednesday, 12 June 2013
Rules and Their Making
All contracts, treaties, agreements are under-determined. Why would there be courts, if not for lack of clarity? Whether the under-determined nature of arrangements backed by law in general is inherent or deliberate is worth thinking about. But we can be quite sure that the under-determined nature of the European Union Treaties is their modus operandi. They were written thus to cover objection from just about any direction to anything within them we care to think of.
So when the Bundesbank's Jens Weidmann calls into question the precise mandate of the ECB, by questioning the German constitutionality of OMT, a great fissure opens in the common front of europhile argument that the Treaties set out the rules. And not just for Article 123 where, as he amiably admits,
"...there are few countries in the currency union which place such a high worth on article 123 as Germany." However, as he goes on, "There would be a very wide discussion on what else could be changed, apart from the mandate of the [European] Central Bank."
Any EU member-state choosing to determine the constitutionality of European requirements under their own constitution and before their own constitutional court without, as Germany never has (and Hell would freeze over before it did), referring to the ECJ, has means to resolve deliberately under-determined EU Treaty statements, and in conformity with their own constitutional requirements.
For the United Kingdom, whose whole approach to constitutional determination is flexible to the point of idiosyncrasy, the German challenge to the EU treaty-drafters cunning plan may yet facilitate the growth of a UK constitutional spine.
So when the Bundesbank's Jens Weidmann calls into question the precise mandate of the ECB, by questioning the German constitutionality of OMT, a great fissure opens in the common front of europhile argument that the Treaties set out the rules. And not just for Article 123 where, as he amiably admits,
"...there are few countries in the currency union which place such a high worth on article 123 as Germany." However, as he goes on, "There would be a very wide discussion on what else could be changed, apart from the mandate of the [European] Central Bank."
Any EU member-state choosing to determine the constitutionality of European requirements under their own constitution and before their own constitutional court without, as Germany never has (and Hell would freeze over before it did), referring to the ECJ, has means to resolve deliberately under-determined EU Treaty statements, and in conformity with their own constitutional requirements.
For the United Kingdom, whose whole approach to constitutional determination is flexible to the point of idiosyncrasy, the German challenge to the EU treaty-drafters cunning plan may yet facilitate the growth of a UK constitutional spine.
Monday, 10 June 2013
Not "Whatever it Takes to Save the Euro"
Central bankers described the process as "containment." The European Central Bank has commissioned legal opinion on how much and what can be involved in OMT. This is an attempt to influence the German Constitutional Court as it considers the use of OMT to rescue European Member States - and particularly Italy - drowning in sovereign debt.
Often described as 'Eurobonds by any other name' OMT runs counter to both the laws governing the European Central Bank (pace Draghi's opinion) and the German Constitution. Furthermore, telling the markets that the rule is 'whatever it takes', and the German Constitutional Court that effectively OMT is capped at 524 billion euros because of the maturities of the bonds it would purchase isn't reassuring either.
Often described as 'Eurobonds by any other name' OMT runs counter to both the laws governing the European Central Bank (pace Draghi's opinion) and the German Constitution. Furthermore, telling the markets that the rule is 'whatever it takes', and the German Constitutional Court that effectively OMT is capped at 524 billion euros because of the maturities of the bonds it would purchase isn't reassuring either.
Friday, 7 June 2013
Berlusconi All Mouth and No Trousers
"We face a straight choice: either the economic motor is decisively activated within the Eurozone, including expansionary policies in the financial sector, abandoning the paralysing emphasis on public debt or the strategic foundations of European solidarity, from banking union to all the rest, shrink and ultimately vanish, ending in the collapse of the current set-up."*
Sounds like such clear-minded common sense, doesn't it? Berlusca does it again, cutting through to the heart of Italy's difficulties and expressing so succinctly what we all feel.
C'mon Germany!
But what is involved?
First of all, Silvio ignores all the things that can be done by Italy within the current set-up.
- pay off state debt to enterprises (the EU has given permission for a bit of an overspend for this).
- end Italian intervention in foreign wars
- stop the purchase of the F35s
- a modest wealth tax based on all wealth-forms, not on housing regardless of actual market values and outstanding mortgages
- ensure the Church pays taxes like everybody else
- auction tv frequencies properly.
- end all state political funding - parties, newspapers, other media, internet.
Say 70 to 100 billion euros. As long as the state put that into the hands of enterprises that should do a great deal of good. Not to Silvio though so he proposes none of the above. He has suggested:
- cut taxes on hiring workers
- cut VAT, cut income tax
but without proposals on how, other than "abandoning the paralysing emphasis on public debt" - perhaps if we don't look all those trillions won't frighten anyone anymore.
What could, indeed must, be read into his remarks (if they are to be taken with the seriousness the media are reporting them as 'plain speaking') is:
- monetary expansion - after all, in 2011 he thought Italy could just print its own Euros. That's what led to his defenestration by Napolitano (88) and substitution with Monti.
- lower the interest rate - even to a negative interest rate.
- buy government debt (they'd have to change the law brought in to control inflation but who needs law when Italy has Napolitano (88).
- reschedule debt and reduce debt interest.
- nationalize under-capitalised banks
- re-organise learning and research
- migration controls (filling only high and missing skills categories, though a nod to genuine asylum for political reasons might help those being rendered currently.)
- an industrial policy setting out criteria for enterprise support: ie exports, high value-added, environmentally sound initiatives (very important in Italy - no more steel works in the South, no more chemical plants in Venice etc.)
- devalue 10-15% . Well, leaving the Euro will deal with that; the devaluation will be 20 -25%.
- Concert the exit otherwise Italy will be victimised worse than Greece and Spain and Portugal have been already and, as it's best to leave with friends, Cyprus and France had better come too.
Not unnaturally, after that lot, a robust foreign and defence policy (other than buying F35s) will be necessary.
- introduce national service and military training on the Swiss model.
- enlarge the Italian navy for a lot more welly in the Mediterranean.
Finally, institutional reforms applicable in our out of the Eurozone
- Abolition of provincial levels of government. All regions to become autonomous. Parliament made up of a federal Senate and a national lower house. Constitutional reform on the lines of Germany except for a directly elected president but, as in Germany, whose powers are residual and ceremonial.
That'd do it, or a lot of it. But it isn't what he wants at all, never mind what Europe (and Napolitano (88) intends to have.
* "siamo di fronte a una alternativa secca: o si rimette in moto in forma decisamente espansiva il motore dell'economia, compreso quello finanziario legato alla moneta unica, uscendo dalla paralizzante enfatizzazione della crisi da debito pubblico, oppure le ragioni strategiche della solidarietà nella costruzione europea, dall'unione bancaria a tutto il resto, si esauriscono e si illanguidiscono fino alla rottura dell'equilibrio attuale".
Sounds like such clear-minded common sense, doesn't it? Berlusca does it again, cutting through to the heart of Italy's difficulties and expressing so succinctly what we all feel.
C'mon Germany!
But what is involved?
First of all, Silvio ignores all the things that can be done by Italy within the current set-up.
- pay off state debt to enterprises (the EU has given permission for a bit of an overspend for this).
- end Italian intervention in foreign wars
- stop the purchase of the F35s
- a modest wealth tax based on all wealth-forms, not on housing regardless of actual market values and outstanding mortgages
- ensure the Church pays taxes like everybody else
- auction tv frequencies properly.
- end all state political funding - parties, newspapers, other media, internet.
Say 70 to 100 billion euros. As long as the state put that into the hands of enterprises that should do a great deal of good. Not to Silvio though so he proposes none of the above. He has suggested:
- cut taxes on hiring workers
- cut VAT, cut income tax
but without proposals on how, other than "abandoning the paralysing emphasis on public debt" - perhaps if we don't look all those trillions won't frighten anyone anymore.
What could, indeed must, be read into his remarks (if they are to be taken with the seriousness the media are reporting them as 'plain speaking') is:
- monetary expansion - after all, in 2011 he thought Italy could just print its own Euros. That's what led to his defenestration by Napolitano (88) and substitution with Monti.
- lower the interest rate - even to a negative interest rate.
- buy government debt (they'd have to change the law brought in to control inflation but who needs law when Italy has Napolitano (88).
- reschedule debt and reduce debt interest.
- nationalize under-capitalised banks
- re-organise learning and research
- migration controls (filling only high and missing skills categories, though a nod to genuine asylum for political reasons might help those being rendered currently.)
- an industrial policy setting out criteria for enterprise support: ie exports, high value-added, environmentally sound initiatives (very important in Italy - no more steel works in the South, no more chemical plants in Venice etc.)
- devalue 10-15% . Well, leaving the Euro will deal with that; the devaluation will be 20 -25%.
- Concert the exit otherwise Italy will be victimised worse than Greece and Spain and Portugal have been already and, as it's best to leave with friends, Cyprus and France had better come too.
Not unnaturally, after that lot, a robust foreign and defence policy (other than buying F35s) will be necessary.
- introduce national service and military training on the Swiss model.
- enlarge the Italian navy for a lot more welly in the Mediterranean.
Finally, institutional reforms applicable in our out of the Eurozone
- Abolition of provincial levels of government. All regions to become autonomous. Parliament made up of a federal Senate and a national lower house. Constitutional reform on the lines of Germany except for a directly elected president but, as in Germany, whose powers are residual and ceremonial.
That'd do it, or a lot of it. But it isn't what he wants at all, never mind what Europe (and Napolitano (88) intends to have.
* "siamo di fronte a una alternativa secca: o si rimette in moto in forma decisamente espansiva il motore dell'economia, compreso quello finanziario legato alla moneta unica, uscendo dalla paralizzante enfatizzazione della crisi da debito pubblico, oppure le ragioni strategiche della solidarietà nella costruzione europea, dall'unione bancaria a tutto il resto, si esauriscono e si illanguidiscono fino alla rottura dell'equilibrio attuale".
Thursday, 6 June 2013
The Eurozone's Third Largest Economy: An Overview
Any European recovery will exclude Italy. Data on the economy are so bad it is clear that Italy would be unable to respond.
55,000 manufacturing companies closed down between 2009 and 2012.
Numbers employed in manufacturing have fallen by 10% since 2007, with 539,000 manufacturing jobs lost for good.
Confindustria reports that 15% of Italian manufacturing capacity has been destroyed (and you wouldn't turn to Italy for anything else would you? Well, perhaps an outing to Venice or something, but no primary products, no financial, or legal services anyone in their right mind would want to use, no research and development or tertiary sector educational attractions, no institutional solidity or even propriety.
32,000 fewer firms.
Credit cuts of between 50 and 60 billion euros (that's Confindustria) from 2012; S&P says Italian banks in 2012 cut 44 billion euros of credit to companies in Italy.
Mass unemployment.
Welfare funds running on empty.
Government debt at 134% of GDP by the end of 2013 - some 2.03 trillion euros.
Italy's democracy is a shell. Its economy is hollowed-out and dying where it stands.
55,000 manufacturing companies closed down between 2009 and 2012.
Numbers employed in manufacturing have fallen by 10% since 2007, with 539,000 manufacturing jobs lost for good.
Confindustria reports that 15% of Italian manufacturing capacity has been destroyed (and you wouldn't turn to Italy for anything else would you? Well, perhaps an outing to Venice or something, but no primary products, no financial, or legal services anyone in their right mind would want to use, no research and development or tertiary sector educational attractions, no institutional solidity or even propriety.
32,000 fewer firms.
Credit cuts of between 50 and 60 billion euros (that's Confindustria) from 2012; S&P says Italian banks in 2012 cut 44 billion euros of credit to companies in Italy.
Mass unemployment.
Welfare funds running on empty.
Government debt at 134% of GDP by the end of 2013 - some 2.03 trillion euros.
Italy's democracy is a shell. Its economy is hollowed-out and dying where it stands.
Wednesday, 5 June 2013
Italy Renders Woman and Child While Oiling Up to Kazakhstan
If staying indoors might be thought to preclude being beaten bloody by state police for publicly questioning EU and global policy, think again. You can be sitting quietly in your villa in the Rome countryside when 50 armed state police arrive, and take you off forthwith to the nearest expulsion centre. Whereupon both the Italian minister of the Interior and the Italian minister of Justice declare all the rules to have been followed, all the papers are in order, and the jet that has just arrived at Ciampino from Kazakhstan can take you away in under 48 hours from your seizure. Oh, yes, and remember to go back to the villa and get the six-year-old daughter for rendition to Kazakhstan too, otherwise her presence in Italy might disturb the rendition of the mother, they add thoughtfully.
And if you thought the 'pardon' granted by out-going president Napolitano (before he had fully organised his incoming once more) last February to a United States officer tried and condemned, confirmed through all appeals, to seven years for rendition of another unfortunate kidnapped in Milan and sent for torture in Egypt, was a constitutional stretch too far, now you know. Rules are for wimps. Women and little girls are for Kazakhstan and its mercies.
The United Kingdom granted political asylum to Mukhtar Ablyazov, whose wife and daughter have been rendered to Nazarbayev, in 2011 (not that the UK didn't fine him for various financial sins but they didn't and haven't handed him over). There's the difference, you see. The United Kingdom has a default freedoms and rights history and culture, no matter how infuriated we get with lapses, collapses and downright failures in its implementation. In Italy Berlusca goes for the weekend to visit Putin and jets are landing at Ciampino for little girls.
And if you thought the 'pardon' granted by out-going president Napolitano (before he had fully organised his incoming once more) last February to a United States officer tried and condemned, confirmed through all appeals, to seven years for rendition of another unfortunate kidnapped in Milan and sent for torture in Egypt, was a constitutional stretch too far, now you know. Rules are for wimps. Women and little girls are for Kazakhstan and its mercies.
The United Kingdom granted political asylum to Mukhtar Ablyazov, whose wife and daughter have been rendered to Nazarbayev, in 2011 (not that the UK didn't fine him for various financial sins but they didn't and haven't handed him over). There's the difference, you see. The United Kingdom has a default freedoms and rights history and culture, no matter how infuriated we get with lapses, collapses and downright failures in its implementation. In Italy Berlusca goes for the weekend to visit Putin and jets are landing at Ciampino for little girls.
Knocking European and Global Sense into the Workers of Italy
This is the Mayor of the city of Terni (Umbria) beaten with truncheons by police during a workers' demonstration this morning against the multinational Finnish Outokumpu AST steelworks' refusal to discuss wages and conditions and the role of the works in the Umbrian and national economy.
De facto the constitution of Italy has been suspended since the 'election' of Napolitano as head of state for a second term, and all that has come in its wake. Now we seem to be getting down to brass tacks, and local and regional heads.
UPDATE
The state police declare the mayor was hit on the head accidentally by an umbrella. Good thing he wasn't on Waterloo Bridge or he'd be dead. Dangerous things umbrellas.
Thursday, 30 May 2013
The Dangers of Over-riding Democratic Voting Outcomes in Europe
Many of the countries of continental Europe suffer from a disgraceful 20th century political history and a default political position which is authoritarian: either communist collectivist or fascist corporatist. In this they are unlike the United Kingdom, whose default political position is representative parliamentary democracy expounding conservative, liberal, or social democratic views through its political parties; the installation of a dictatorship in the UK is neither likely nor facilitated by its mind set, constitutional form or institutions.
Italy provides a specific case of this broad-brush assessment. Italy's governance was dominated overtly by fascist corporatism between 1922 and 1943, and it has been branded ever since by a self-righteous and self-justifying communist collectivism from 1943 to the present day. Anti-communism has been made up of externally applied encouragement, a subterranean fascism under various other names, and governmental co-operation with organised criminality that derives from even before the 20th century and which, as a cultural rather than political phenomenon, is ineradicable. The collectivism wing of authoritarianism has flourished too with the considerable regional independence enjoyed within the Peninsula's weak central state and, in the second half of the 20th and in this century, with total commitment to a 'progressivist' European Union.
As a topping to this authoritarian mish-mash there is false history and consciousness actively reinforced by laws, schooling, media, and acceptable expression of opinion that fascist corporatism is 'bad' and communist collectivism is 'good' (though kept from national power by shadowy 'right-wing' forces). That both are disreputable and murderous destroyers of life chances and living standards and on a par with one another is a stance unacceptable to both. When the last elections returned as the largest parliamentary group a direct democracy, participatory movement, the rampage through the institutions and through the Italian Constitution by the collectivist, corporatist and criminal factions was visceral and immediate. Led by the outgoing head of state, a noted, historical collectivist-authoritarian, power was guided into the hands of a progressivist, European Union-acceptable leader.
Unfortunately today's reality (so often referred to by Rajoy of Spain) requires that Italy's economic depression be alleviated immediately. Not next year, not in the medium term, not with the expansion of employment 'opportunities' for the 'young', not by a continued credit denial to the SME, backbone of Italian industry, not by declarations from the European Central Bank about whatever it takes to defend the destructive disciplines of internal devaluation. And the default governance option in Italy as a continental European state is not voting Conservative instead of Liberal or Labour. The default option is Popular, its demise regretted by many more than are permitted by political correctness-speak to say so, demonstrably effective in instigating economic growth and, more worryingly, in arousing loyalty; its voters and its leaders are already in situ, as are its policies and its targets. The default option is fascism.
At the recent local elections half of those eligible to vote did not. This is not a stable-state in Italian political behaviour (and the assumption by the collectivist authoritarians that they have recouped their voters lost at the last general elections, and that the 50% absentee count is made up entirely of others, is as dishonest as it is silly. We didn't vote because the Five Stars didn't meet - or more accurately was prevented from meeting - our policy requirements and political demands. We had already deserted a communist-led Democratic party. ) The collapse of the PD vote was confirmed, not reversed.
Those missing actors in the democratic process have had their democratic faith savagely destroyed as the democratic process itself has been destroyed. There will now be a short intermission (to borrow a phrase) but the profound political instability in Italy, coupled with wilfully induced economic depression threatens the EU and Eurozone elites more now than before our election of a direct democracy movement instigated a collectivist coup.
Italy provides a specific case of this broad-brush assessment. Italy's governance was dominated overtly by fascist corporatism between 1922 and 1943, and it has been branded ever since by a self-righteous and self-justifying communist collectivism from 1943 to the present day. Anti-communism has been made up of externally applied encouragement, a subterranean fascism under various other names, and governmental co-operation with organised criminality that derives from even before the 20th century and which, as a cultural rather than political phenomenon, is ineradicable. The collectivism wing of authoritarianism has flourished too with the considerable regional independence enjoyed within the Peninsula's weak central state and, in the second half of the 20th and in this century, with total commitment to a 'progressivist' European Union.
As a topping to this authoritarian mish-mash there is false history and consciousness actively reinforced by laws, schooling, media, and acceptable expression of opinion that fascist corporatism is 'bad' and communist collectivism is 'good' (though kept from national power by shadowy 'right-wing' forces). That both are disreputable and murderous destroyers of life chances and living standards and on a par with one another is a stance unacceptable to both. When the last elections returned as the largest parliamentary group a direct democracy, participatory movement, the rampage through the institutions and through the Italian Constitution by the collectivist, corporatist and criminal factions was visceral and immediate. Led by the outgoing head of state, a noted, historical collectivist-authoritarian, power was guided into the hands of a progressivist, European Union-acceptable leader.
Unfortunately today's reality (so often referred to by Rajoy of Spain) requires that Italy's economic depression be alleviated immediately. Not next year, not in the medium term, not with the expansion of employment 'opportunities' for the 'young', not by a continued credit denial to the SME, backbone of Italian industry, not by declarations from the European Central Bank about whatever it takes to defend the destructive disciplines of internal devaluation. And the default governance option in Italy as a continental European state is not voting Conservative instead of Liberal or Labour. The default option is Popular, its demise regretted by many more than are permitted by political correctness-speak to say so, demonstrably effective in instigating economic growth and, more worryingly, in arousing loyalty; its voters and its leaders are already in situ, as are its policies and its targets. The default option is fascism.
At the recent local elections half of those eligible to vote did not. This is not a stable-state in Italian political behaviour (and the assumption by the collectivist authoritarians that they have recouped their voters lost at the last general elections, and that the 50% absentee count is made up entirely of others, is as dishonest as it is silly. We didn't vote because the Five Stars didn't meet - or more accurately was prevented from meeting - our policy requirements and political demands. We had already deserted a communist-led Democratic party. ) The collapse of the PD vote was confirmed, not reversed.
Those missing actors in the democratic process have had their democratic faith savagely destroyed as the democratic process itself has been destroyed. There will now be a short intermission (to borrow a phrase) but the profound political instability in Italy, coupled with wilfully induced economic depression threatens the EU and Eurozone elites more now than before our election of a direct democracy movement instigated a collectivist coup.
Wednesday, 29 May 2013
Germany Protests to Italy Over Granting Refugee Status and 500 euros to Sub-Saharans Provided They Head for Hamburg
Granting refugee statuses and rights to remain to non-EU citizens by individual EU member states but applicable across the European Union is causing growing tensions within the Schengen area now, but will affect non-Schengen member states too.
Italy was flooded with refugees from the war in Libya, many of them sub-saharan Africans who worked in North Africa until the war. They fled, particularly the West Africans, not back to their own countries, but across the Mediterranean where they were landed (or were picked out of the water by the Italians) by the people traffickers, and went into reception centres. Many absconded (mostly the North Africans) making their way via Ventimiglia and across the French border to communities of fellow countrymen in France, and other European countries. Some 13,000 Sub-Saharans remain in the reception centres and Germany has now officially complained that Italy is granting a three-month leave to remain in the EU and sending them on their way to Hamburg with a ticket and 500 euros. The German Interior ministry notes that these migrants have no claim to settle in Germany, nor access to any welfare provision or occupation. Their countries - Nigeria, Ghana, Togo are democratic and at peace.
Well, say the Italians, you can send them back when the the 3-month leave to remain is up. We are in the front line for receiving African migrants because we're nearest to Africa but the whole of Europe must be involved in responding to African migration.
The appointment of a minister in the Letta government whose principal aim is the immediate introduction of the right to Italian (and thus EU) citizenship conferred simply by being born in Italy compounds the complexity. At the moment Italian migration controls are internal - without citizenship access to the social state is severely limited, even for education, health and what social housing there is; so while it's relatively easy to get into Italy it's very hard, attractive as Italy is, to live here or even stay here on support. Accordingly most migrants move on immediately to other states, if they come here at all. If the Democratic party (which has just benefitted enormously from migrants' votes in local elections) does alter the citizenship laws so that descent is no longer the main criterion for citizenship, the other constitutionally-imposed rights and duties of an Italian citizen will kick-in (mostly concerned with inter-generational claims to support and residence). Although Italy will remain a relatively unattractive stopping-place for migrants, however. Its Italian-by-descent citizens receive little in direct welfare payments, social housing, or payments to the unemployed in comparison with northern European EU member-states. And it is in the deepest recession since 1945 with high and stable unemployment rates.
The migrants to Germany are clustering at Hamburg - it is the state of Hamburg which is making the immediate representations demanding that encouraging the transfer of migrants by Italy should stop and, not least, that Italy should stop issuing right to remain permits to people from peaceful democratic countries; as well, the German Federal Government has issued a confidential circular to all German states warning that Italy is exporting migrants who cannot qualify as refugees.
Refugee status, leave to remain, let alone citizenship of an EU member state are very valuable and, for welfare providers, very costly entities. Perhaps they should not be left within the grasp of political parties manoeuvering for votes in single states of the EU.
UPDATE
We haven't done anything! - the Italians are denying breaking any rules. The Germans point to the website of the Italian ministry of the Interior which states that 5,700 extra-communitari have now left the reception centres with their 500 euros, permissions to remain in the Schengen area, and tickets (where-to not stated). Hamburg says 300 migrants are living on the streets in Hamburg right now.
Italy was flooded with refugees from the war in Libya, many of them sub-saharan Africans who worked in North Africa until the war. They fled, particularly the West Africans, not back to their own countries, but across the Mediterranean where they were landed (or were picked out of the water by the Italians) by the people traffickers, and went into reception centres. Many absconded (mostly the North Africans) making their way via Ventimiglia and across the French border to communities of fellow countrymen in France, and other European countries. Some 13,000 Sub-Saharans remain in the reception centres and Germany has now officially complained that Italy is granting a three-month leave to remain in the EU and sending them on their way to Hamburg with a ticket and 500 euros. The German Interior ministry notes that these migrants have no claim to settle in Germany, nor access to any welfare provision or occupation. Their countries - Nigeria, Ghana, Togo are democratic and at peace.
Well, say the Italians, you can send them back when the the 3-month leave to remain is up. We are in the front line for receiving African migrants because we're nearest to Africa but the whole of Europe must be involved in responding to African migration.
The appointment of a minister in the Letta government whose principal aim is the immediate introduction of the right to Italian (and thus EU) citizenship conferred simply by being born in Italy compounds the complexity. At the moment Italian migration controls are internal - without citizenship access to the social state is severely limited, even for education, health and what social housing there is; so while it's relatively easy to get into Italy it's very hard, attractive as Italy is, to live here or even stay here on support. Accordingly most migrants move on immediately to other states, if they come here at all. If the Democratic party (which has just benefitted enormously from migrants' votes in local elections) does alter the citizenship laws so that descent is no longer the main criterion for citizenship, the other constitutionally-imposed rights and duties of an Italian citizen will kick-in (mostly concerned with inter-generational claims to support and residence). Although Italy will remain a relatively unattractive stopping-place for migrants, however. Its Italian-by-descent citizens receive little in direct welfare payments, social housing, or payments to the unemployed in comparison with northern European EU member-states. And it is in the deepest recession since 1945 with high and stable unemployment rates.
The migrants to Germany are clustering at Hamburg - it is the state of Hamburg which is making the immediate representations demanding that encouraging the transfer of migrants by Italy should stop and, not least, that Italy should stop issuing right to remain permits to people from peaceful democratic countries; as well, the German Federal Government has issued a confidential circular to all German states warning that Italy is exporting migrants who cannot qualify as refugees.
Refugee status, leave to remain, let alone citizenship of an EU member state are very valuable and, for welfare providers, very costly entities. Perhaps they should not be left within the grasp of political parties manoeuvering for votes in single states of the EU.
UPDATE
We haven't done anything! - the Italians are denying breaking any rules. The Germans point to the website of the Italian ministry of the Interior which states that 5,700 extra-communitari have now left the reception centres with their 500 euros, permissions to remain in the Schengen area, and tickets (where-to not stated). Hamburg says 300 migrants are living on the streets in Hamburg right now.
Monday, 27 May 2013
Crisis of Democracy in Italy Worsens
The imposed government of Italy now states openly its intention of any democratic vote being ignored.
"Whatever is the result of local elections the government must go forward as if nothing has happened."*
The prime minister from the Democratic party and the deputy prime minister from Berlusconi's People of Liberty party have a signed agreement to circumvent from the centre any effects of their respective parties loss of influence locally after the elections. The vote is to be ignored. Voting closes today for the elections for the mayor of Rome and for the mayor of Siena (to name the most significant - Rome because it is the capital and its mayor has extensive power and political importance, Siena because it is the heartland, and was the financial, banking-driven power house, of the Democratic party after funding ceased from the USSR in 1992 until the scandals engulfing the Monti dei Paschi and its Foundation this year and ongoing).
Voters are deserting the elections en masse. In Rome there is a 20% fall in votes cast on the first day of the ballot, which closes at 3pm today. Across the country double-digit falls in voter numbers are being recorded. Presumably most of the deserting electorate are former Democratic party supporters who have been betrayed by their elected representatives both in the elections to the presidency of the Republic with the refusal to support either Romano Prodi or Stefano Rodota' for the presidency and the reimposition of Napolitano, and in the acceptance of a regime then imposed by Napolitano and sustained in office by deals between extra-parliamentary as well as parliamentary minorities to maintain an EU-sanctioned status quo.
Meanwhile we are now back to standards of living last seen 40 years ago as a direct result of obsessional adherence to European Union agendas and priorities.
UPDATE
Only 1 out of 2 voted in Rome.
In this photograph packages of unused ballots wait to be returned to the electoral returning officer for Pisa where the same unheard-of turnout was registered.
* "Qualunque sia il risultato delle amministrative, il governo dovrà andare avanti come se nulla fosse".
"Whatever is the result of local elections the government must go forward as if nothing has happened."*
The prime minister from the Democratic party and the deputy prime minister from Berlusconi's People of Liberty party have a signed agreement to circumvent from the centre any effects of their respective parties loss of influence locally after the elections. The vote is to be ignored. Voting closes today for the elections for the mayor of Rome and for the mayor of Siena (to name the most significant - Rome because it is the capital and its mayor has extensive power and political importance, Siena because it is the heartland, and was the financial, banking-driven power house, of the Democratic party after funding ceased from the USSR in 1992 until the scandals engulfing the Monti dei Paschi and its Foundation this year and ongoing).
Voters are deserting the elections en masse. In Rome there is a 20% fall in votes cast on the first day of the ballot, which closes at 3pm today. Across the country double-digit falls in voter numbers are being recorded. Presumably most of the deserting electorate are former Democratic party supporters who have been betrayed by their elected representatives both in the elections to the presidency of the Republic with the refusal to support either Romano Prodi or Stefano Rodota' for the presidency and the reimposition of Napolitano, and in the acceptance of a regime then imposed by Napolitano and sustained in office by deals between extra-parliamentary as well as parliamentary minorities to maintain an EU-sanctioned status quo.
Meanwhile we are now back to standards of living last seen 40 years ago as a direct result of obsessional adherence to European Union agendas and priorities.
UPDATE
Only 1 out of 2 voted in Rome.
In this photograph packages of unused ballots wait to be returned to the electoral returning officer for Pisa where the same unheard-of turnout was registered.
* "Qualunque sia il risultato delle amministrative, il governo dovrà andare avanti come se nulla fosse".
Sunday, 26 May 2013
Motherhood and Gay Marriage
In most societies, in most of time, the status of women is defined by their unique ability to bear children. That ability extends beyond conception and childbirth. Bearing children doesn't begin to be encompassed wholly in those two acts; socially, and probably biologically, motherhood rests with us for life. And our children's lives too will embody our motherhood, whatever form it has taken. Including our absence.
Men who choose life partners in marriage who are men choose also relationships with the mother for any children born into such marriages. There are cultures where the inability to bear children (including those where no female is available in the correct marriage kinship category) is met with various solutions, concubinage being the most common and, once, widely accepted. Now even concubinage is displaced by an outright denial of any special natural link between mother and child in surrogacy. Surrogacy does not have the minimal social elaborations and protections afforded to concubinage.
Gay marriage strips away the socially-constructed but naturally-generated statuses that motherhood confers on women. Usually, and in all current same-sex marriage institutional arrangements, surrogate-birth women are denied any social role engendered by natural requirements. If surrogate-birth women do have any social statuses proffered to them these are entirely within the gift of the gay spouses. Payment extinguishes any rights in motherhood for both mother and child in gay marriage even if, occasionally and entirely one-sidedly, other arrangements are set up.
The proponents of gay marriage are not demanding equal status with marriage. They are seeking the cancellation of what many would see as the purpose of marriage: the procreation of children and the social affirmation of the status of women as equal partners in their creation and upbringing.
Men who choose life partners in marriage who are men choose also relationships with the mother for any children born into such marriages. There are cultures where the inability to bear children (including those where no female is available in the correct marriage kinship category) is met with various solutions, concubinage being the most common and, once, widely accepted. Now even concubinage is displaced by an outright denial of any special natural link between mother and child in surrogacy. Surrogacy does not have the minimal social elaborations and protections afforded to concubinage.
Gay marriage strips away the socially-constructed but naturally-generated statuses that motherhood confers on women. Usually, and in all current same-sex marriage institutional arrangements, surrogate-birth women are denied any social role engendered by natural requirements. If surrogate-birth women do have any social statuses proffered to them these are entirely within the gift of the gay spouses. Payment extinguishes any rights in motherhood for both mother and child in gay marriage even if, occasionally and entirely one-sidedly, other arrangements are set up.
The proponents of gay marriage are not demanding equal status with marriage. They are seeking the cancellation of what many would see as the purpose of marriage: the procreation of children and the social affirmation of the status of women as equal partners in their creation and upbringing.
Friday, 24 May 2013
Pressure to Re-think the European Union Still Coming from Italy's Largest Single Parliamentary Gouping
"The European Union should be re-thought. We are planning an information year [on the current European Union] and then instigating a referendum on Yes or No to the Euro and Yes or No to the European Union. The English are teaching us democracy. No party may arrogate the right to decide for 60 million people."*
The Five Star Movement has taken up again its central electoral campaign policy of putting the destruction of Italy's economy and democracy by the European Union's elites to direct democratic vote. This, of course, is the cause of the savage exclusion - at any constitutional and ethical cost - of the largest, single, elected group in the Italian Parliament from power.
Expect the amputation of the ability to impose a binding referendum by the submission of half a million peoples' signatures; either by the extra-Parliamentary committee of appointed constitutional 'experts' acting through the Constitutional Court, or a declaratory law from the presidentially-imposed Executive, in the near future.
*L’Europa va ripensata. Noi consideriamo di fare un anno di informazione e poi di indire un referendum per dire sì o no all’Euro e sì o no all’Europa». «Sull’Euro e sull’Europa gli inglesi ci insegnano la democrazia. Nessun partito può arrogarsi il diritto di decidere per 60 milioni di persone».
The Five Star Movement has taken up again its central electoral campaign policy of putting the destruction of Italy's economy and democracy by the European Union's elites to direct democratic vote. This, of course, is the cause of the savage exclusion - at any constitutional and ethical cost - of the largest, single, elected group in the Italian Parliament from power.
Expect the amputation of the ability to impose a binding referendum by the submission of half a million peoples' signatures; either by the extra-Parliamentary committee of appointed constitutional 'experts' acting through the Constitutional Court, or a declaratory law from the presidentially-imposed Executive, in the near future.
*L’Europa va ripensata. Noi consideriamo di fare un anno di informazione e poi di indire un referendum per dire sì o no all’Euro e sì o no all’Europa». «Sull’Euro e sull’Europa gli inglesi ci insegnano la democrazia. Nessun partito può arrogarsi il diritto di decidere per 60 milioni di persone».
Thursday, 23 May 2013
On Returning to Italy and Leaving Democratic Civilisation
It's barely worth writing about the installation of dictatorship in Italy; all the usual suspects from the highest to the lowest, all the ususal excuses about emergency and temporary and experts and technicians and Europe. So take it as read that Italy is a representative democracy only in name, as were the countries of the East, and the countries of the past under Fascism and Communism.
Never and then never will direct popular democracy be permitted to operate the levers of power, no matter how large our group in Parliament nor how formally constitutionally guaranteed. The sensation of wanting to vomit reading and listening to the usual suspects' mellifluous self- righteousness or peremptory condemnation of populism and non-party movements is longstanding and widespread. "You haven't understood" charming and capable Italians of various backgrounds and sophisticated skills and statuses would tell me as I enthused over formally democratic rights and obligations. I have now.
Just as an example in a multitude of repressive measures being introduced, no political grouping not formally composed into a political party conforming to hierarchical organisational structures and with a juridical personality will be permitted to stand for Parliament; nor will such a grouping be able to access any state political funding for propaganda or for election expenses (it is a source of distaste that any grouping, party or no, should have access to tax-payer funding, but let that pass, as the scandal of the intertwined banks and parties must be allowed to pass).
The internet is now policed and condemnation of people and policies is defined as insult: criticism is permitted, the definition of which is left open to the complainant or the authorities. Behaviour during the 20th century is not to be considered relevant - re-opening old wounds not being conducive to the imposition of the national peace.
Unemployment is described as youth unemployment though what is youthful about being 40 and without work? Never worked? This is infantilisation and policy-driven removal of basic economic and social activities. Of a piece with the destruction of political and civic claims and deriving from the same source - European policies and governance structures.
Any threat to these last will be met with a response that breaks any rule, denies any choices, permits any authoritarian outrage. The images of demonstrators from the Milan social centres being beaten with truncheons are up there with the squadristi.
The response of civilised Italians is as it has ever been: the rientro nel privato - the withdrawal into private worlds mediated by networks of friendship and kinship - of the established, the carefully orchestrated emigration of the younger generation to education and work in the rest of the world until return is needed by this private world.
"We told you," say those from the prestigious English and American universities, from international institutions, from well-to-do lifestyles of unblemished propriety, from firms and industries insulated from the economic disaster by a kind of economic version of this self-defence against pillaging elites.
After three weeks in London the engulfing criminality and pseudo-justification of democratic perversion on coming back here makes England's equivocating with a continued membership of the European Union look irresponsible. There is nothing for England in membership of the European Union. There is no reform, no return of powers, nothing to be renegotiated. The kind of renegotiation outlined by David Cameron denies the foundation and purpose of the European Union.
Leave. Leave while your sins and failures are still, just, your own. You don't want what we've got.
Never and then never will direct popular democracy be permitted to operate the levers of power, no matter how large our group in Parliament nor how formally constitutionally guaranteed. The sensation of wanting to vomit reading and listening to the usual suspects' mellifluous self- righteousness or peremptory condemnation of populism and non-party movements is longstanding and widespread. "You haven't understood" charming and capable Italians of various backgrounds and sophisticated skills and statuses would tell me as I enthused over formally democratic rights and obligations. I have now.
Just as an example in a multitude of repressive measures being introduced, no political grouping not formally composed into a political party conforming to hierarchical organisational structures and with a juridical personality will be permitted to stand for Parliament; nor will such a grouping be able to access any state political funding for propaganda or for election expenses (it is a source of distaste that any grouping, party or no, should have access to tax-payer funding, but let that pass, as the scandal of the intertwined banks and parties must be allowed to pass).
The internet is now policed and condemnation of people and policies is defined as insult: criticism is permitted, the definition of which is left open to the complainant or the authorities. Behaviour during the 20th century is not to be considered relevant - re-opening old wounds not being conducive to the imposition of the national peace.
Unemployment is described as youth unemployment though what is youthful about being 40 and without work? Never worked? This is infantilisation and policy-driven removal of basic economic and social activities. Of a piece with the destruction of political and civic claims and deriving from the same source - European policies and governance structures.
Any threat to these last will be met with a response that breaks any rule, denies any choices, permits any authoritarian outrage. The images of demonstrators from the Milan social centres being beaten with truncheons are up there with the squadristi.
The response of civilised Italians is as it has ever been: the rientro nel privato - the withdrawal into private worlds mediated by networks of friendship and kinship - of the established, the carefully orchestrated emigration of the younger generation to education and work in the rest of the world until return is needed by this private world.
"We told you," say those from the prestigious English and American universities, from international institutions, from well-to-do lifestyles of unblemished propriety, from firms and industries insulated from the economic disaster by a kind of economic version of this self-defence against pillaging elites.
After three weeks in London the engulfing criminality and pseudo-justification of democratic perversion on coming back here makes England's equivocating with a continued membership of the European Union look irresponsible. There is nothing for England in membership of the European Union. There is no reform, no return of powers, nothing to be renegotiated. The kind of renegotiation outlined by David Cameron denies the foundation and purpose of the European Union.
Leave. Leave while your sins and failures are still, just, your own. You don't want what we've got.
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