Spanish life is not always likeable but it is compellingly
loveable.
- Christopher Howse: A Pilgrim in Spain.
If
you've arrived here because of an interest in Galicia or Pontevedra,
see my web page here.
Life in Spain
Life in Spain
- University-wise, things here are getting better, though not much.
- Cataluña. BBC News, as of yesterday. The region/nation could have been invaded by the time you read this.
- Techology: I wish companies would get it right. I don't mind receiving prompt messages as much as a month before my car is due for a service but I object to getting reminders after it's been done. Even worse, the phone call I got 2 days ago. But that did give me the chance to sound off!
- Here's The Local's view of the best Paradors in Spain. The first was featured and much lauded here on December 8 last year. And on the previous day too.
- This is supposed to be a very short video showing the voting slip for the imminent independence referendum in Cataluña but, as ever, it won't upload. It shows the Yes box stationary but the No box moving rapidly around, making it impossible to tick it . . .
I've tried without success to find it on Youtube and the net.
I was just thinking yesterday about the arrogant pronouncements of the non-elected EU Mandarins - including the egregious Plonker Juncker - when along came the article from Ambrose Evans-Pritchard which I've appended to this post. Needless to say I share his sentiments.
I was just thinking yesterday about the arrogant pronouncements of the non-elected EU Mandarins - including the egregious Plonker Juncker - when along came the article from Ambrose Evans-Pritchard which I've appended to this post. Needless to say I share his sentiments.
This is a welcome addition to Pontevedra's old quarter, as it replaces an ugly ruined building. But I do feel it displays a lack of architectural ambition. Strangely - unless they're going to add granite surrounds to the windows - it's neither in the Galician nor Portuguese vernacular. Rather Andalucian, perhaps. But at least - unlike the ruin - it's not covered in dirty posters and graffiti. Yet.
I'm travelling to Madrid on the night train again tonight. Or, rather, I'm not - as this service has been withdrawn. Plan B is also unworkabe as all seats on today's and tomorrow's day trains are taken. Possibly because of students and holiday-makers returning to the capital. So, it's the bus for the first time, leaving at 10.30 and arriving a mere 8.5 hours later in the south of Madrid. Hopefully, I'll be able to manage a siesta on it. And maybe a pleasant conversation or two.
Finally . . . My thanks to reader Geoff for advising I can negatively include (i. e. exclude) specific words and phrases on Google Alerts. I'm now trying this in respect of "Super Fast Galicia" and a few other things.
Today's cartoon:-
THE ARTICLE
Triumphant Brussels likens Britain to the Third Reich: Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard
So it has come to this.
Brexit is now akin to the worst episodes of totalitarian mass murder
in the 20th century.
“EU policymakers and
officials are returning to their desks with a spring in their
step,” writes the Brussels think-tank, Friends of Europe, the
high priests of EU orthodoxy.
“This summer has seen
the ‘Brexit effect’ quietly gathering momentum, so much so that
it's shaping into one of the most spectacular own-goals of European
history, on a par with Germany's Third Reich or the Russian
Revolution.” All that is missing is Mao’s Great Leap Forward.
Such is the febrile
mood in Brussels. The note is illuminating on many levels, but the
main thrust is a celebration of imperial might. “Negotiations with
the UK are demonstrating the sheer power of the EU,” it says.
“For a decade it had
appeared flabby, struggling ineffectually with the eurozone's
difficulties and then with the migrant crisis. Now, the Brexit
process is revealing the EU's solidarity and its worth. It's a lesson
that isn't wasted on the watching world.
“Thanks to Brexit,
the value of the European project is coming into full view. For the
average European, the technical details of economic integration have
been invisible to the naked eye. The European Union's many virtues
are being laid bare for all to see.”
It has been a mission
impossible for Brussels to explain the complexity of EU regulations
or to sell EU's daily diet of technical standards to the people.
“Bizarrely, the UK government is performing exactly that feat.
David Davis has had to backtrack on a lengthening list of issues. The
most significant climb-down has been London's grudging acceptance
that EU law, and thus the rulings of the European Court, will
continue to hold sway in Britain,” it said.
Actually London has
agreed no such thing, beyond a transition phase over limited
issues, and even then the role of the ECJ may be ‘indirect’. But
never mind.
“That concession
looks set to be followed in many other areas. Theresa May's
Government had previously been adamant about cutting connections and
‘taking back control’, yet on key questions like electronic data
regulation and privacy the UK has advanced suggestions for
maintaining links with Brussels.”
So the desire for
cooperative ties – stated long ago in Theresa May’s
Lancaster House speech and at EU Council meetings – is
capitulation. But again, never mind.
The message is clear:
Brexiteers betting that others would follow in a pan-EU domino effect
have been confounded. So have those who thought UK withdrawal would
shake the EU system to its foundations. Europe has regrouped. Its
line is hardening. It is Britain that is now on its knees as the
economy crumbles.
It so happens that the
piece is written by an old friend of mine, the group’s chairman
Giles Merritt. His 2016 book ‘Slippery Slope: Europe’s Troubled
Future” is a fine exploration of the EU’s own deep malaise. That
even this wise owl should be in thrall to such hubris – some
might say chest-thumping euro-nationalism – tells us what is
in the Brussels water these days.
Jeremy Browne, the
City’s EU envoy, said that his conclusion after long talks across
the Channel is that the EU is still treating Brexit as “primarily
an internal disciplinary matter”, with little thought of anything
beyond.
As a
‘Gedankenexperiment’, imagine how we in Britain would have
reacted if Scotland had voted to leave the UK. While saddened, I hope
my reaction would have been to respect the legitimate wish of the
Scottish people to run their own affairs and to bid them well, as
would most Telegraph readers. I believe the British government would
have bent over backwards to help the Scottish state.
The EU sees Britain’s
quest for independence in another light. Mr Browne says that beyond
the crude reflex of punishment it is deeply divided and has no vision
for any sort of long-term relationship. The UK is rebuked daily for
lacking statecraft in these talks but the EU is arguably worse.
Brussels faces an
enveloping crisis in which Britain is leaving, relations with Turkey
have collapsed, the enlargement process is finished, and Ukraine is
in limbo. This cries out for a profound strategic review of its
neighbourhood policy. What the EU should be doing is to work out how
to deal with an outer ring of states that are not destined for “ever
closer union”, yet wish to have close trading or military ties. So
far we hear nothing beyond pedantic, legalistic, nitpicking. It has
not risen to the new challenge.
But I digress. The
Friends of Europe paper wilfully misreads this year’s political
events in the EU, as does the Brussels elite in general.
The French elections in
May were not a validation of the European project. Some 49% voted
for extreme parties or protest movements with a eurosceptic hue in
the first round. The fact that Emmanuel Macron ultimately won does
not conjure away this landscape. The Front National’s Marine Le Pen
won 34% (compared to 1.8% for UKIP in June). Such a result was once
unthinkable.
Yes, the cyclical
recovery since early 2016 has lifted spirits. Negative interest
rates, $2 trillion of quantitative easing, and a fiscal mini-blitz,
have belatedly rescued southern Europe from depression. To the extent
that these countries have huge output gaps – after having been
waterboarded by austerity overkill – they are now enjoying a
mechanical ‘V’ shaped catch-up.
But the European
Central Bank will soon have to wind down QE, even though this will
leave the Italian Treasury alone in the market trying to fund €400bn
(£365bn) of debt each year. The 20% gap in North-South
competitiveness has not gone away. Germany is still running a
corrosive and illegal current account surplus of 8.5% of GDP
with the complicity of Brussels, invariably craven on such matters.
There is still no
fiscal union, no debt union, and no shared banking liabilities. The
German constitutional court has ruled that any serious move in such a
direction would violate the Grundgesetz in any case. If there were a
fiscal union – by some miracle – it would advance
the EU project from its current state of authoritarian technocracy to
outright tyranny.
It would concentrate
parliamentary powers to tax and spend in the hands the Eurogroup, a
body that answers only to itself. Given the way that EMU officials
toppled Greek and Italian prime ministers, forced the Irish state to
swallow vast sums of junior bank debt to shield the European banking
system, and secretly ordered changes to the Spanish constitution, I
hate to think where this would go.
Friends of Europe says
that “once the British had embarked on the tortuous process of
negotiating their departure, the disadvantages of leaving quickly
became apparent".
What this really means
is that it is extremely hard for a country to extract itself from the
EU after forty years, ‘infantilised’ to the point where it no
longer has trade treaties or control of its own nuclear industry. On
that we can agree.
Brexit has demonstrated
to everybody what has happened over three decades of treaty-creep:
the Single European Act, Maastricht, Amsterdam, Nice, and ultimately
Lisbon. It has shown how close Britain has come to losing sovereignty
altogether.
Mr Merritt states that
Brexit has made visible the once-hidden “virtues” of the EU. Yet
what he mostly says is that the pain (allegedly) being suffered by
Britain is becoming apparent to people across the EU.
As a daily consumer of
the European press I would agree that such a scarecrow effect is at
work. Readers are subjected to a relentless barrage about what is
happening in the UK that borders on fiction. German newspapers are
particularly fond of the words ‘Katastrophe’ and ‘Kernschmelze’
(meltdown) in conjunction with Brexit.
If that is your only
source of information you might indeed think that Britain was in
the grip of rampant pauperisation, and that wolves are on the loose
among the abandoned towers of the Canary Wharf. For what it is
worth, UK manufacturing growth in the third quarter is
running slightly ahead of eurozone growth. Let’s keep it quiet.
The decline in Europe’s
eurosceptic parties has little to do with any re-found EU ‘virtues’:
the operative word in this context is fear.
I was recently reading
the thoughts of Harvard anthropologist Michael Herzfeld, writing
about Brexit from a mountain community in Crete. The villagers are
flabbergasted that the British dared to take such a step.
“These highly
intelligent observers, some of whom have lived abroad, have
experienced rough treatment from the European Union, for which, as
for Greece’s leaders, they now have neither patience nor affection.
They know about hard-bargaining and cannot see how any member state
can realistically opt out,” he writes.
“They already ‘know’
there is no real way out: as one man put it, their government said
‘No’ in the morning and ‘Yes’ in the evening – and the
British government, he argued, will be forced to do likewise or
suffer dire consequences.”
The EU priesthood has
certainly acquired a habit of overturning referenda by fair means or
foul. “We have instruments of torture in the basement,” in the
immortal words of Jean-Claude Juncker, the grand inquisitor.
They reversed the
Danish ‘No’ to Maastricht, and the Irish ‘No’ to Nice and
Lisbon, and Dutch and French ‘No’ to the European Constitution
(reinvented as Lisbon), and the Greek ‘Oxi’ in 2015.
Now at last they face a
referendum to be reckoned with. The old guard in Brussels is having
great difficulty coming to terms with this novel experience. They
will.
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