Three
Cheers for Ireland: Nobody Needs the EU
by
David Dieteman
In
a setback to the best laid plans of Leftward men, Irish
voters rejected the Nice Treaty 53.87% to 46.13%.
Predictably,
the
bureaucrats of the European Union are not happy:
Yesterday’s
result was greeted with shock in Brussels and dismay in the capitals
of candidate countries seeking EU membership. Mr Romano Prodi,
Commission President, and Mr Goran Persson, Prime Minister of
Sweden, which holds the EU’s rotating presidency, issued a joint
statement expressing their disappointment.
"We
are very disappointed at the result of the referendum in Ireland.
None the less we fully respect the outcome of this democratic
process," they said.
It’s
good that Prodi and Persson noted that they respect the outcome
of the Irish vote. Quite recently, when Austrian and Italian voters
bucked the bureaucrats in Brussels, the EU called for economic sanctions
to punish those who dared to vote their own way.
Despite
all this rhetoric about "respecting the democratic process,"
however, the E.U. has declared that the Irish No vote will not stop
the inexorable march to deeper and wider European integration. "The
EU Enlargement Commissioner, Mr Guenter Verheugen, said the referendum
result could not block the enlargement process," notes the
Irish Times. The
German government has also declared that the show must go on.
In
which case, why vote at all?
The
reason is that democracy is no longer a check on the tyrannical
power of government, but a means for giving a stamp of approval
to the machinations of the politicians who scheme behind closed
doors. (In that regard, see Paul Gottfried’s After
Liberalism).
Despite
the rhetoric about "respecting the democratic process,"
the EU has already made open threats to deprive Ireland of agricultural
subsidy payments:
An
early test of...attitudes will come next year when spending on
the Common Agricultural Policy comes up for a mid-term review.
Germany wants to overhaul the farm subsidy system and France has
hinted that, once next year’s elections are out of the way, it
may be willing to do a deal.
Failure
to make the right alliances could cost Irish farmers millions
of pounds and lead to a deal that would place Irish agriculture
at a disadvantage.
So
much for respecting democracy.
Breaking
down the vote,
Just
two constituencies, Dún Laoghaire and Dublin South, voted
by a majority in favour. These two constituencies – traditionally
the most liberal [i.e., Left-leaning] in referendums on abortion
and divorce – also had the second and third-highest turnouts in
the State, the highest turnout occurring in Dublin North Central.
You
can tell a man by the company he keeps. The same is true of political
allegiances. Setting aside discussion of politics and economics,
it is possible to judge whether the EU is a good or bad thing by
looking at its supporters: those who favor the legalized killing
of unborn children, those who favor divorce, and those who favor
government control of the economy. In short, the EU is favored by
the Left.
Before
one attempts to paint those Irish who shot down the Nice Treaty
as "mean-spirited," consider that the same voters also
decided to abolish the death penalty (62%) and to ratify the International
Criminal Court (64%).
But
of course, the defeated Left has already painted No voters as "mean-spirited"
(see the quote from Bertie Ahern below). Much as the American media
in 1994 portrayed those who voted for Republicans as "angry
white males," Fintan
O’Toole claims that the No voters are "angry" and "cynical."
Worse – God help us! – many were from "the largely disenfranchised
Catholic right," notes O’Toole. How dare traditional Catholics
continue to exist in the third millennium...from the birth of Christ.
Maybe the government should force all these No voters into mental
institutions and medicate them until they learn to think the right
way.
Lest
there be any doubt about the true nature of the public schools,
in America or Ireland,
the
Louth Fine Gael TD, Mr Brendan McGahon, said the No vote "showed
the huge amount of ignorance of political affairs in this country
and underlines the need for politics to be taught in schools."
Thought
control, anyone?
He
added: "I think people are totally politically unaware and
are more interested in watching Coronation Street or Fair City
and are not living in the real world. It is a classic irony that
a country which has benefited most from Europe denies the opportunity
to other less privileged European countries."
How
dare anyone wish to live their life in peace without devoting all
their free time and hard-earned money to the pet projects of conniving
politicians who seek to brainwash children (remember, this is the
guy whose preferred remedy to votes he does not like is "to
teach politics in school;" if that is not a call for official
government brainwashing, then nothing is).
By
the way, those "poor Eastern Europeans," who will now
apparently die without EU welfare benefits, are not exactly without
fault where their alleged poverty is concerned. After dumping Communism
in name, they have not dumped communism in practice. Poland, for
example, prohibits foreign ownership of land. As reported in the
Telegraph, eight
German farmers who dared to buy Polish land for farming – and for
producing more food to feed the hungry masses of the world,
as if farmers did anything else – were convicted as criminals. (The
Telegraph, by the way, misstates history in reporting
that the land in question was "under German control for centuries."
The reason it was "under German control" is that the land
was populated by Germans).
At
least one Polish politician has of course claimed that the Germans
were invading, as if buying land were somehow equivalent to warfare
(politicians, whether Polish, Irish, or American, you see, have
no shame). Hungary and the Czech Republic – which expelled ethnic
Germans after World War Two, killing millions – have similar laws.
Dick
Walsh, writing in the Irish Times, contends that the Left
had
Nothing...to
match the No campaign’s threat that with a vote for Nice "You
will lose power, money and freedom".
What
power, money and freedom might be lost was not explained. But
the beauty of such slogans is that where people are afraid of
immigrants, competition or change you don’t have to be specific:
all you need is to encourage the growth of fear.
Walsh
is utterly wrong here. Allow me to explain what might have been
lost – and what still may be lost if there is another vote – to
the E.U.
First,
the power that would be lost is the power of national independence,
also known as liberty: the ability to decide for oneself how to
live and behave. The question of independence is simple: shall Irishmen
decide how Irishmen are to live, or shall every man and woman in
Europe together decide how Ireland is to be governed?
Second,
the money that would be lost is the greater wealth which Ireland
is on the path to producing, thanks to its relatively free-market
policies (as compared to the rest of collectivist, socialist, Europe).
The EU tried to tempt Ireland to abandon their own successful economy
with promises of tax-funded handouts. It speaks well of the Irish
that they did not make such a foolish exchange.
For
those who might doubt that the EU comes down to handouts, consider
the following
item from the Irish Times:
As
late as Wednesday night, one senior EU diplomat was astonished
that the result could be in any doubt.
"The
Irish will say No? After all the money we’ve given them? You can’t
be serious," he said.
Say,
has the EU been attempting to bribe the people of Europe
into voting for the EU by giving away "free" money? Of
course, this money is not free. It is money extorted at gunpoint
through an exercise known as "taxation." Don’t pay, you
go to jail. And the EU pretends to be your rich uncle.
Third,
the freedom that would be lost is the freedom of Irish men and women
to govern Ireland as they see fit. As should be obvious from the
preceding paragraphs, freedom is connected to independence. The
Filipino
writer Jose Rizal famously declared that "There can be
no tyrants where there are no slaves." Irishmen, despite their
long domination by the English, cannot be accused of having a slavish
mentality. Instead, they are an independent-minded people, whose
struggle for freedom has made them wary of a European Union that
seeks to outlaw criticism of itself.
Predictably,
the
politicians are considering "voting again," kind of
like Al Gore in Florida (and like Denmark,
which has twice rejected EU measures, in part because of concerns
over national sovereignty).
Prof.
Richard Sinnott of University College Dublin writes in the Irish
Times that
The
biggest factor leading to a No vote was the growing pro-independence
sentiment documented at the outset of this article. This outweighed
the influence of any of the specific aspects of the Nice Treaty
measured in the poll. However, several of these also had an effect.
In
order of magnitude and coming some way behind the pro-independence
sentiment, these influences were opposition to participation in
the Rapid Reaction Force and the unacceptability of the provisions
on the commissionership and the reweighting of votes.
The
Irish, it appears, may not have entirely forgotten the tremendous
struggle for independence. That is a good thing.
The
Irish Times reports that
The
Tánaiste [Deputy Prime Minister], Ms Harney, said...that
voters shared her concerns that "there should not be a United
States of Europe or a European super state". However, she
said she thought enlargement "will guarantee that Europe
remains a union of independent nation states".
The
concept of a "union of independent nation states," of
course, is an impossibility. In order to enter into a "union,"
if that union is to be more than a union in name only, some measure
of independence – hard-won liberty – must be sacrificed. There
are clear parallels in American history. As the "independent
nation states" of Europe wade into the swamp of the European
Union, then, their liberty must of necessity be taken away.
In
campaigning for a Yes vote on the Nice Treaty, the Irish Taoiseach
(in English, the "prime minister"), Bertie
Ahern, tried to convince
Irish voters that they had a "moral duty" to vote to expand
the powers and geographic scope of the European Union.
As
the London
Telegraph reports, Ahern stated that
"We
cannot, in conscience, pull up the ladder behind us. It would
be mean-spirited in the extreme to deny the applicant states the
right to share in the benefits." But the appeal is falling
on deaf ears, not least because the Amsterdam Treaty already allows
for five new countries to join the EU without any further treaty
changes.
Poor
Bertie Ahern. Now
his friends – his fellow European heads of state – are upset with
him.
Ahern’s
statements display a misunderstanding of the nature of politics
and economics. They also show that the Left is the Left the world
around.
Just
as the Clinton administration repeated brainless sound bites on
every issue to come into the media – "old news," "I’ve
said I’m sorry," "I didn’t inhale," "I did not
have sex with that woman...Miss Lewinsky" – so too the Europhiles
of Ireland have their song and dance routine down pat. Remember
the brainwasher – Brendan McGahon? He, Ahern and the anonymous E.U.
bureaucrat all made the same remark – No voters don’t want to give
welfare benefits to Eastern Europeans (as if taxation and government
programs were the path to prosperity, as opposed to hard work, saving,
and investing).
What
is meant by Ahern’s comment that Irish voters should not "deny
applicant states the right to share in the benefits"? If that
sentence is to have any meaning, Ahern must be referring to the
precise tax-funded handouts known as government welfare benefits
doled out by the E.U. That is the theme of the defeated Yes side.
Certainly, Ahern cannot be referring to the economic prosperity
of the Republic of Ireland – which any nation can emulate, if only
it chooses to do so, by giving people back their freedom, and thereby
freeing the market.
Perhaps,
however, one should not be too hard on Bertie Ahern:
Ireland’s
EU Commissioner, Mr David Byrne, called for a close examination
of the reasons behind yesterday’s result.
"I
believe there is considerable confusion about the Nice Treaty,
what it means and more particularly what its implications are.
This is not unique to Ireland," he said.
As
if understanding the Treaty would automatically cause men and women
to agree with the Treaty in its entirety. Contrary to Mr Byrne’s
claims, if more Europeans bothered to read the documents to which
they have been bound, support for the E.U. would likely evaporate
even further.
Finally,
the Irish Times adds that
Mr
Ahern and his EU counterparts will discuss how best to lay the
ground for what will almost certainly be a second referendum on
the treaty before the end of 2002 deadline. However, prominent
No campaigners last night rejected the idea of another poll, with
Mr Anthony Coughlan describing such a suggestion as "shameful".
Of
course it’s shameful. But politicians have no shame – or else they
would not endure life in the public eye as they do.
Three
cheers for Ireland.
June
11, 2001
Mr.
Dieteman [send him mail]
is an attorney in Erie, Pennsylvania, and a PhD candidate in philosophy
at The Catholic University of America.
©
2001 David Dieteman
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