In a surprising and historic move, Britain has voted to
leave the European Union. It is important to note that this has been the
decision of ordinary Brits and not by those Eurocrats whose leadership is
unpopular across Europe. EU bureaucrats
be warned: if Britain who’s not as affected by the so-called peripheral
countries can do it, all the more those countries that are at the mercy of
severe austerity and left to guess what Brussels is up to next.
For the uninformed, how important was this decision? Remember
that the European Union project has its roots in the post-World War II economic
integration, with the goal of avoiding conflict in Europe. The EU project has fulfilled
this purpose quite decently in the past 60 years. It has allowed the free
movement of people within the Eurozone, created a common currency (not joined
by Britain), established preferential trade among member states, and most
importantly the preservation of peace in the continent.
But as the unelected predatory capitalists leaders in Brussels
became increasingly more focused on unnecessary bureaucracy and squeezed the
life out of ordinary Eurozone citizens as banks “too big to fail” have received
privileges despite their enormous failures, the Brits in this Brexit referendum
clearly confirmed they have had enough.
To be fair with the
British people, they have been half-footed in the EU from the beginning. Perhaps
the most obvious indication is their separate currency from the Euro, as well
as its non-observance of the Schengen Agreement, which allows the free movement
of EU nationals without the usual hassle of traveling to other countries.
The decision to leave the EU will be not be smooth for sure.
The initial euphoria the referendum created will have to come to terms with the
consequences of opposing the Remain vote. Already, for instance, the
conservative party in Britain has hinted it will invoke Article 50 where
Britain will be faced with years of ‘proper exits’ through possibly endless renegotiations.
Elsewhere in Europe, German Chancellor Angela Merkel called
the Brexit referendum “a break in Europe’s history” and that it reflects “a
fundamental doubt about the current direction of European integration.”
Some British mainstream media have already propagandized a
few interesting points in the Brexit referendum. For instance, some news
outlets have already downplayed the public’s decision as uninformed with
headlines like “Brits frantically searched what the EU means hours after voting
out of the EU” and that the “EU will treat Britain like Greece.” Such fear
mongering should not be surprising as before the referendum London’s mouthpiece
media have already done their part to dissuade the British public from bailing
out of the EU.
And of course, Mr.
David Cameron, the British Prime Minister, has already intensified the drama
when he resigned the next day. In a visibly emotional speech, Cameron stated
that “I was absolutely clear about my belief that Britain is stronger, safe and
better off inside the EU… (But) the British people made a different decision to
take a different path. As such I think the country requires fresh leadership to
take it in this direction.” Indeed, the
man who proclaimed “Assad must go” became the man who would go first.
No comments:
Post a Comment