• Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    11 hours ago

    People here keep saying it’s never going to happen but I’m telling you the European move towards independence from the US is very real. It’s going to take a couple decades, maybe more, but they’re sincerely pursuing it.

    • CyborgMarx [any, any]@hexbear.net
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      5 hours ago

      Nah, the sentiment will bounce violently back in the other direction the minute Trump is out of office, even if the new Democratic or not-Trump Republican president continues or even intensifies the US plunder of Europe

      Europeans suffer from what I call racism-induced mass economic amnesia

    • InexplicableLunchFiend [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      7 hours ago

      by the time they are done ‘moving away’ from the USA it will be too late, they’ll be drained dry and made into a tourism spot for Americans. Energy seals the deal, they have none and everyone they tried to get it from got blown up by American wars so America is the only provider left, and this advantage will be pressed. Copper is coming out of the walls to pay for US backed wars, and then the dry husks will be tossed aside and used as tax havens and tourism spots. France is probably the one nation in the entire EU with a chance of partially mitigating this due to nuclear energy, but they would need to triple down on that immediately.

      • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        6 hours ago

        Yeah possibly. I don’t disagree that they may fail. My only point is that they clearly see what is happening and are making a sincere attempt to resolve it. They may not be able to under the conditions though.

      • woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        3 hours ago

        Before that, he would rather indirectly kill millions of Germans by privatizing health care more and more and getting rid of social security. The German social Democrats and the Greens would do the same or worse, if they win the next elections. Neither a popular front nor a national front (hypothetically) is currently possible in Germany, because the burgoise powers are not actually convinced, that fascism (German or US) is a bad thing. The way forward is to build actual working class power.

    • MattEagle [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      11 hours ago

      That doesn’t really seem to line up with the reality of their new US energy dependence and consolidation of the EU apparatus. I suspect any notion of a break within the imperial bloc is political theatre to placate the citizenry.

        • darkcalling [comrade/them, she/her]@hexbear.net
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          7 hours ago

          Yet it is their reality. And it sort of is.

          Nothing but lack of sovereignty is stopping them from dropping support for Ukraine tomorrow, making up with Russia and starting up the cheap energy flows from the east via tanker ships while working on building some new pipe-lines with US military proximity detection alarms on them.

          They are constrained by their liberalism and the limits of its imagination. Liberalism which is largely filtered through Atlantacist, UK, or US lens via media, press, etc.

          So I think I’m also quite skeptical of this being anything but an attempt to act up, gain leverage and better terms from master America.

          • AHemlocksLie@lemmy.zip
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            7 hours ago

            The irony of ridiculing them for liberalness while suggesting they cozy up to imperialist Russia, who is actively waging a war of conquest in their own backyard. That’s the type of shit I usually hear right before someone insists Russia had NO CHOICE but to attack their neighbors because all their neighbors are joining defensive alliances when they see how Russia abuses their neighbors.

              • InexplicableLunchFiend [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                4 hours ago

                Nazi Aligned Terrorist Organization

                Adolf Heusinger: As a top Nazi officer, Heusinger served as acting Chief of Staff of the Army for Nazi Germany, helping plan invasions of Poland, Denmark, Norway, and Austria. He was later appointed Inspector General of the West German Armed Forces and became Chairman of the NATO Military Committee in Washington D.C.

                Hans Speidel: A Nazi lieutenant general and chief of staff to Erwin Rommel, Speidel became Supreme Commander of NATO Allied Ground Forces in Central Europe (1957–1963).

                Johannes Steinhoff: A former Luftwaffe top fighter ace who became Chairman of the NATO Military Committee from 1971 to 1974.

                Reinhard Gehlen: A Nazi intelligence officer who helped construct a German foreign secret service with U.S. assistance, which later influenced the creation of the BND

                Ferdinand von Senger und Etterlin: Lieutenant in the Nazi invasion of the USSR (Operation Barbarossa). He participated in the Battle of Stalingrad. He was awarded the German Cross in Gold. At the end of the war he was a deputy High Command personnel of the Third Reich Navy. He later commanded several tank battalions and became a general and commander-in-chief of NATO’s Allied Forces Central Europe between 1979 and 1983.

                Franz Joseph Schulze: Lieutenant in the service of the Nazi air forces as commander of a regiment. He received the Knight’s Cross of the Iron Cross. In post-war Germany he was a general and later commander-in-chief of NATO’s Central European Allied Forces from 1977 to 1979.

                Karl Schnell: Major and first officer of the General Staff in Nazi Germany, also received the Iron Cross. He replaced General Ferber as Commander-in-Chief of NATO’s Allied Forces Central Europe between 1975 and 1977.

                Ernst Ferber: Lieutenant colonel in the Wehrmacht General Staff, decorated with the Iron Cross. He became Commander-in-Chief of NATO’s Central European Allied Forces between 1973 and 1975.

                Johann von Kielmansegg: General Cabinet Officer of the Nazi Army High Command, where he rose to Colonel and commanded several regiments in the field. After the war he joined the German Army and rose to Brigadier General and rose to the highest positions in NATO as Commander-in-Chief of Special Forces in Central Europe in 1967.

            • InexplicableLunchFiend [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              6 hours ago

              A perfect example of a Liberal with no imagination, if anyone wanted to see it. Stuck in the ruts of your propaganda and ideology, you just can’t help but doing the same thing over and over which is why you will never escape daddy America’s orbit.

              • AHemlocksLie@lemmy.zip
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                5 hours ago

                I’ll freely admit the US is on some grade A bullshit. I’ll also freely admit it’s the inevitable end result of centuries of behavior. But cozy up to modern Russia instead? I could understand the idea if they were still the USSR, but that’s not what they’ve been for decades. Just because you’re distancing yourself from one abusive asshole doesn’t mean you run straight into the arms of another abusive asshole.

                • InexplicableLunchFiend [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                  4 hours ago

                  sad to see how myopic you are and blinded by propaganda. maybe you should wonder why is “abusive imperialist modern russia” running the American oil embargo of Cuba to deliver humanitarian aid in the form of energy, the only one on Earth to do it? Why are they allying themselves closely to the DPRK and China? Why are they helping decolonize Africa and destroy the French and US backed terrorist groups? Why did they help stabilize Syria for so long and prevent it falling into Zionist Al Qaeda control much earlier?

                  You can answer 'they don’t have good intentions, it’s just in their interest to align against the imperialists and with their victims". OK, I don’t care. Russia fights on my side, meanwhile westerners never have not even the ‘leftists’.

                  If you learned a bit more about the Ukraine war you would realize they are right there as well. Ukraine was overtaken by a CIA backed Nazi coup in 2014 and was built up by NATO to invade and balkanize Russia, starting by cleansing all the ethnic Russians in the Donbas regions. Tens of thousands dead by Nazi hands before Russia intervened. If anything Putin is too soft and too late, he should have hardened his heart earlier and done what was needed before it could fester and entrench itself to the extent it did but he kept getting strung along by the fake Minsk agreements (which Merkel later openly admitted were done in bad faith and perfidiously to buy time to arm Ukrainian nazis)

        • InexplicableLunchFiend [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          6 hours ago

          Yes Europe chose it when they chose belligerence and war, they chose to sit idly by as Trump invaded Venezuela, attacked Iran and started a proxy war they knew was fully preventable with Russia. They let the US blow up Nordstream and helped cover it up. They are cravens and they chose their bed, and they will sleep in it. They could have stopped the rampaging USA with a concerted effort if they wanted to, but they didn’t. They liked what it was doing.

          • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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            6 hours ago

            Europe’s issue is that it is not a particularly unified group, it’s a mash of different countries with wildly different cultures that have been carefully kept together so far. The issue is that they are torn between holding together the EU and the abusive relationship with the US, this is how they approach things so weakly, because they must confer and get consensus lasting so long on fast moving issues that the US ends up steamrolling over them. If like you say some european countries took as strong a stance as you want them to, others would not, and it would ultimately threaten the whole union. The US would seize on the split and aim to break it entirely.

            There are many contradictions interwoven together driving what’s happening.

      • InexplicableLunchFiend [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        6 hours ago

        Who else will EU buy weapons and energy from? There is nowhere else to go, they are still deluding themselves that they can be a little autarky and the energy crisis will disappear and the USA will stop destroying all of its competitors. USA has them in a vice grip because they will never go to Russia and China, they are too invested in the US relationship and too deep in white supremacist ideology due to their hundreds of years of being colonizers, which they still have never paid any sort of reparations on. The whole point is that Europe is on the “winning team” the “garden”, they will never join the “jungle” because they are the poor, the undeveloped, etc. You have to account for this material reality and ideology in the European elite and masses.

        Dialectical is when we believe the hyperbolic statements of Bourgeois Liberal states at face value? How many times have these feckless and powerless liars said they would do this and reject Trump and all that? A thousand. Remember Greenland? They were all rattling their sabers against the USA it was so cute. Meanwhile they assist in genocide in Palestine, Syria, Lebanon, Iran, Venezuela. They can simply fuck off with their lies, they are fully locked in with the imperialist interests. They are part of the imperialist blob. They will not ‘go their own way’ until the Empire is destroyed and there’s no plunder to be gained from the global south any longer. As long as USA is the guy with the big stick going around mugging people, they are on that team, until the that guy with the big stick loses. Only then will they abandon the sinking ship.

        • jack [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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          19 minutes ago

          Dialectical is when we believe the hyperbolic statements of Bourgeois Liberal states at face value?

          I don’t really care at all what current Euro leadership says. Outside of a little squawking form Spain and Ireland, they’re all in the tank for imperialism. Their dialogue does not factor into my analysis because they will not matter in a very short span of time.

          Who else will EU buy weapons and energy from? There is nowhere else to go, they are still deluding themselves that they can be a little autarky and the energy crisis will disappear and the USA will stop destroying all of its competitors. USA has them in a vice grip because they will never go to Russia and China

          Well, you answer your question in the next sentence. Eventually, they will go to Russia and China. It’s obviously not so impossible since they were doing it five years ago.

          The whole point is that Europe is on the “winning team” the “garden”, they will never join the “jungle” because they are the poor, the undeveloped, etc. You have to account for this material reality and ideology in the European elite and masses.

          But which way is global development moving? Europe and the US get less developed every day while the global south gets more. Europeans know they’re no garden because it’s only been 80 years since an outside power (the US) had to step and force them to stop killing each other in history’s bloodiest wars over and over again. The material reality that matters is that imperialism gave Europeans across social classes a very good deal for a very long time, but now that deal has stopped paying out. Neither the European working class nor the bulk of the capitalist class are getting anything but fucked by this relationship these days.

          As long as USA is the guy with the big stick going around mugging people, they are on that team, until the that guy with the big stick loses. Only then will they abandon the sinking ship.

          We’re watching the US’s big stick fail miserably right now and blow up in Europe’s face. How are we not at the “abandon ship” point yet?

          To actually lay out my argument instead of just my lazy comment from before:

          The current neoliberal leadership of Europe is dead. It is a shambling corpse with only a few years left before it comes apart. It has not only (and obviously) utterly failed to deliver for the European masses, but it is not miserably failing to deliver for the European capitalists. The European neoliberal imperial internship has lead to the US picking apart the EU’s industrial economy, sidelining Euro capitalists and blowing up their ability to secure the segment of global profits they were supposed to get as part of this deal. What is the base of their power then besides simple momentum? A political leadership with no class to support them!

          Will neoliberals be in power in the UK, France, Italy, or Spain five years from now? I think we can safely say, for the most part, no - you will get fascism or you will get some kind of anti-neoliberal leftism ranging from socdem to nearly communist. That’ll be the Greens in the UK, a revitalized PSOE in Spain, LFI in France, etc, if they can beat their respective fascists. Both of these groups will want to change the relationship with the US for different reasons, but in both cases they want to extricate from the Ukraine disaster. We can see that Eastern Europe is (of course) already further along in this historical process, with the semiconservative socialistish parties doing well in Romania, parts of former Yugoslavia, etc. These parties are quite openly friendly with Russia (and China secondarily) while opposing the EU project and particularly the subjugation to US via Ukraine.

          Europe’s economy is a fucking disaster in ways that are quite obviously the fault of the US. The intentional draining of Germany’s industry via the Ukraine war and the short-sighted buffoonery of the Iran war have obliterated the energy market so badly that there simply is not path to recovery under the current conditions. Europe basically has three paths forward: return to the grand European tradition of constantly being at barbaric war with each other and shrink into irrelevance on the world stage (fascism), pursue some genuine independence and sovereignty (socialism), or be transformed into a third world style comprador state on the losing end of unequal exchange. The US wants the third option, and it’s certainly not impossible, but it’s the hardest to achieve because it has no class support. There is no existing comprador bourgeoisie while there is still a very strong national/continental bourgeoisie. The working class is decently well organized and not likely to roll over. That option, therefore, produces conditions for class collaboration between workers and capitalists, which then leads back to either national bourgeois victory (fascism) or European proletarian victory (socialism).

          Already all over Europe, political parties are in turmoil with venerable institutions collapsing and upstart anti-establishment of the left and right grasping for and approaching power. Europe’s status quo as a junior imperial partner is already over. What’s undialectical is projecting this obviously fractious, unstable, and declining system as eternal into the future. It’s already done.

        • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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          11 hours ago

          It could even fail. There’s no guarantee that the attempt to pursue it will succeed. My general point is that they are sincerely pursuing it, there is a real contradiction within the imperial core between these two sides and pulling on the two threads to help it unravel is better than denying its existence.

          • It is a real force but the governments are complex systems with a lot of internal contradictions. Just as a kingdom can fall for want of a horseshoe nail a push for digital sovereignty can fail for want to read a .doc file. Most people, especially anyone who has used floss inside of an organization using microsoft, have personal experience with these many micro contradictions and none with the geopolitical macroscale ones so the “can never happen” attitude is unsurprising even if unimaginative.

    • TraschcanOfIdeology [they/them, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      7 hours ago

      Ok fun fact I learned not long ago: napoleonic France (and other European countries, mostly those invaded by napoleon) used to have a form of property tax that charged by the amount of street-facing windows a building had. Now there’s a bunch of old buildings with bricked-up windows or just walls painted to look like windows because people didn’t want to pay as much tax.

      All I’m saying is, people paying through the nose for windows has a longer history than you might think.

      • Sam [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        3 hours ago

        Same thing with chimneys. As with the window tax the rich took it to the other extreme and put in as many windows or hearths as they could to show off.