It's been kind of boring around here. Time for a little US-EU strife, I think. First article...
I've been saying for a long time now that it's hard to get up in arms about the Patriot Act and other US national security measures used in the War On Terror when obviously free European countries have been doing the same or worse for decades now.
Number two!
I know this one will probably piss some people off, but Zakaria isn't saying anything that a perceptive observer hadn't noticed already. Europe, despite pretensions to becoming a counterweight to the power of the US, is falling further behind America and will be eclipsed by Asia soon, if it hasn't been already. There's a reason I decided to study Asia in college, not Europe...
There you go! Have at each other!
For Europeans, scolding the Bush administration for everything from Guantanamo to the Iraq War to secret CIA prisons has become a full-time job. But when it comes to the American scandal over President Bush's warrantless wiretaps, there's been a curious reaction from the other side of the Atlantic: silence. Where is the European outrage?
European restraint may arise from a fear of hypocrisy. The fact is that in much of Europe wiretapping is de rigueur—practiced more regularly and with less oversight than in the United States. Most Europeans either don't know about this or, more likely, simply don't care.
European restraint may arise from a fear of hypocrisy. The fact is that in much of Europe wiretapping is de rigueur—practiced more regularly and with less oversight than in the United States. Most Europeans either don't know about this or, more likely, simply don't care.
I've been saying for a long time now that it's hard to get up in arms about the Patriot Act and other US national security measures used in the War On Terror when obviously free European countries have been doing the same or worse for decades now.
Number two!
Cartoons and riots made the headlines in Europe last week, but a far less fiery event, the publication of an academic study, might shed greater light on the future of the Continent. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, headquartered in Paris, released a report, Going for Growth, that details economic prospects in the industrial world. It is 160 pages long and written in bland, cautious, scholarly prose. But the conclusion is clear—Europe is in deep trouble. These days we all talk about the rise of Asia and the challenge to America, but it might well turn out that the most consequential trend of the next decade will be the economic decline of Europe.
I know this one will probably piss some people off, but Zakaria isn't saying anything that a perceptive observer hadn't noticed already. Europe, despite pretensions to becoming a counterweight to the power of the US, is falling further behind America and will be eclipsed by Asia soon, if it hasn't been already. There's a reason I decided to study Asia in college, not Europe...
There you go! Have at each other!
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