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Old July 10th 06, 10:51 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Hammermill
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Default 4th July Independence Day Message to the US

June 5, 2006
Endless Summer?
by Victor Davis Hanson
Tribune Media Services

The European countryside is as beautiful as ever. Hotels in the cities
are as packed as they are high-priced. Tourists fill Rome. The same
bustle is evident from Lisbon to Frankfurt. Everywhere European
stewards welcome in millions of sightseers to enjoy the treasures of
Western civilization. Never has life seemed so good.

Despite a public anti-Americanism, individual Europeans extend the old
warmth and friendship to American visitors. Yet beneath the veneer of
the good life, there is also a detectable air of uncertainty in Europe
this summer, one perhaps similar to that of 1914 or the late 1930s.

The unease is apparent in newspapers and conversations on the streets
that echo the view that voters and politicians want nothing to do with
the European Union constitution. Perhaps the general European
discomfort could be summed up best as the following: Why hasn't the
good life turned out the way we wanted it to?

England, France and Germany are upping their retirement ages and/or
planning pension cuts. They have given up the dream that workers in the
future can quit at 55 - or even 65!

The Iranians irk Europe. European governments sold them precision tools
necessary for nuclear reactors. Many Europeans assured Tehran that
dialogue, not rowdy Americans, alone can solve the "misunderstanding"
over nuclear proliferation. But as thanks, Iran's pesky president talks
down to these postmodern Europeans as if they were George Bush.
Meanwhile, Iran presses ahead - hoping to top off with nukes
three-stage rockets that could reach the Vatican, the Eiffel Tower or
the Brandenburg Gate.

Frontline Spain clamors impatiently for the European Union to clamp
down on illegal immigrants streaming across the Mediterranean. The
utopian vision of a continent with porous borders is, for the time
being, on hold - at least as it pertains to Africa.

The Dutch, the French and the Danes are petrified about unassimilated
Muslim radicals in their countries who have killed or threatened the
most liberal of Europeans. Churches are almost empty. Mosques are being
built; Italians wrangle over plans for one of the largest in Italy -
to be plopped amid the vineyards and olive groves of Tuscany.

A majority of polled Germans now believe that the pacifist Europeans
are in a "clash of civilizations" with the Islamic world.

What is going on?

Good intentions that have gone sour.

The enemies of Europe's past - responsible for everything from Verdun
and Dresden to a constant threat of mutually assured destruction -
were identified as nationalism and militarism. Meanwhile, at home,
Europeans cited cutthroat competition and unbridled individualism as
additional contributory causes of the prior strife and unhappiness.

So in response to the errors of the past, Europeans systematically
expanded the welfare state. They welcomed in immigrants. Politicians
slashed defense spending, lowered the retirement age and cut the
workweek. Voters demanded trade barriers to protect the public from the
ravages of globalization. Either to enjoy the good life or to save the
planet, couples forswore children.

But instead of utopia, unintended consequences ensued. Unemployment
soared. Dismal economic growth, shrinking populations and a scarier
world outside their borders followed.

Abroad, even the much-heralded "soft power" of a disarmed Europe could
only bring attention to, not stop, the killing in Darfur. Meanwhile,
China and India are no longer inefficient socialists but breakneck
capitalist competitors. Indeed, they have thrown down the gauntlet to
the Europeans: "Beware! Workers of the world who labor harder, longer
and smarter deserve the greater material rewards!" In this new
heartless global arena, apparently few will abide by the niceties of
the European Union.

Publicly, Europe's frustrations are fobbed off on "crass Americans" -
and particularly George Bush. The Iraq war has poisoned the alliance,
the Europeans insist. They contend that America's greedy consumers warm
the planet, siphon off its oil and trample foreign cultures.

But in private, some Europeans will confess that the problem lies with
Europeans, not us. Some brave soul soon is going to have to inform the
European public: Work much harder and longer for less money; defend the
continent on your own; move out of mama's house and start changing
diapers - and from now on expect far less from the state.

Who knows what the reaction will be to that splash of cold water? In
response, what European populist will soon appear on the streets in
Rome, Berlin or Madrid once again to deceive the public that it was
someone else who caused these disappointments?

We in America should take note of the looming end of this once
seemingly endless summer. We've been there, done that with this beloved
continent all too many times before.

©2006 Tribune Media Services