Bruno Behrends wrote:Not sure which countries you mean.
The ones I looked up just now - Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary Poland, Czech Republic (I admit I was lazy and didn't look up more of them because it takes a while) did pretty good up until the global financial crisis 2008-2009.
Poland and Hungary actually grew faster after joining.
Poland got through the global financial crisis real good - the others less so, but countries outside of the EU had the same problem and didn't seem to do better really.
The newest figures I found show the above countries seem to be getting back to their feet since 2012 and growing again.
Poland is the one nation that clearly benefited from joining EU. But at least part of that upturn is also the result of USA under GWB bribing them to support war in Iraq(and throwing some serious bundles of "cash" at them in the process).
Romania is at the opposite end, with going to Germany, Denmark and Sweden to beg on the streets as the fastest growing "industry" of Romania right now. To the point where their ambassador here made headlines not long ago by saying that begging should be made illegal.
Yeah, really big success...
Czech´s aren´t really eastern Europe outside of the illusions of those who still think in terms of Warzaw pact countries by default being "eastern".
Try comparing with Norway or Switzerland.
Yes, Norway has oil, but remember that they put most of that money in the bank.
Bruno Behrends wrote:Anyway it would be unfair to blame the effects of the global financial crisis on the EU.
Oh i´m not doing that.
Bruno Behrends wrote:Sure the EU banking system wasn't in the shape it should have been and needed reforms - which are being implemented - but the same was true outside of the EU as well.
Or you know, nations could try to be fiscally responsible? Dreadful thought isn´t it?
At least that´s one good thing coming out of the bank mess/house pricing crash here in the 90s, as it lead to a severe cleanup of finances (when the PM talks about an "economical steel bath" you know it´s not gonna be pretty), just tragic how the current rightwing government is squandering the formerly decent national finances for no better reason than ideology.
Well it finally looks like they´re getting kicked back out at last, left/center opposition getting over 50% in polls, with current govt getting around 35%(and that´s even if none of the 4 govt parties end up too small for parliament, as 2 of them are currently polling below the 4% limit), and this year is election year.
Bruno Behrends wrote:Joking aside: Europe didn't land in the mess of the first half of the 20th century because of some fascist regime smacking down which was a simple solution.
The problem was much, much deeper and more complicated than that and there wasn't a simple solution to it.
The fascist regime you are talking about was the product of the history that preceded it which went back centuries and at last had culminated in the extreme nationalism and power-politics of the late 19th and early 20th century. That produced WWI - no fascist regime needed. The kind of thinking the European nations where in at that time sufficed for that.
And it is very, very important to prevent that kind of nationalistic thinking from making a comeback.
Yes well that kind of thinking is still very much present unfortunately. Just not as honestly shown.
EU and USA cooperating to mess with Ukraine is the currently most obvious example.
All in the name of "national interest", even if not in the name of a SINGLE nation any longer.
And you should probably remember that Hitler didn´t get into power due to popularity, but because "socialism" was soooo dreadful that anything was better.
So in a bid to gain influence in Ukraine(and shut Russia out), EU is currently dealing with people there best described as scum, and nicely described as extreme nationalists a bit too enamoured with wearing uniforms and marching.
EU isn´t the solution, it´s the culprit.
Bruno Behrends wrote:I think the EU has a very important function there. As a framework for working together. As a symbol of common identity and something larger than the national border. As a means to create strategic safety instead of everyone being surrounded by imagined enemies.
Not seeing it. You could effectively remove EU at the drop of a hat and you would loose nothing.
It´s an absolutely puny part of the EU population that looks at EU as a common identity or nation.