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Ive missed something here. Im sorry. Can you please point out the relevance of the Marshall Plan and the Lend Lease programme. Or is it that your just seeking to let the Americans know you appreciate them?
I added something to Eagle1's comment earlier on and the posts took off.
Anyway, the original comment was a piece of EU gloss which just needed to be countered.
Why have a single currency to get what any decent government can get on its own?
Here's a little ditty by way of illustration E1:
Back in the seventies as a young, good-looking, RN matelot, I served at a radio station at the mouth of the Forth/Loch Striven (still there but remotely operated now). Our night out of choice was of course the lovely town of Dunoon or the Royal Bar at Innellan. This place had a bustling thriving economy, mostly on the backs of those perfidious Yank sailors whose boomers tied up in the Holy Loch at their floating supply/repair ship USS Canopus and spent their greenbacks ashore.
I went back there a few years ago since the Yanks withdrew, much to the delight of the CND clowns. Dunoon is sadly a poor reflection of a once prosperous town. So yes, Yanks are good for the economy in more ways than one. And the Marshall plan? Well I suppose we could have just left all those devastated European countries to sit amongst the rubble and ashes starving to death. I'm sure the French would have helped them out. Britain wasn't in any shape to do so being bankrupt and equally exhausted by the war effort.
As for the EU ... let me think, who would I rather be aligned with politically and fiscally the cheese-eating surrender-monkeys of the EU or Uncle Sam for all his faults? Hmmmm.... hard one that. Not.
You obviously dont see the world economy shifting away from the US, being divided among Europe and then China as something positive. This only means that US influence is decreasing(clearly visible, desperate yanks now) and that the influence of Europe is increasing, and the influence of China increasing.
Well, the economic climate has been favourable and with no small arguments within the Central Bank has this growth of the Euro been attainable.
And if the Euro does indeed prove a truly sturdy currency through bad times too then I say good luck to 'em, if that's how they wanted it. I'm not a vindictive man.
But the political implications are too sizeable to ignore. Unlike the USA, Europe is made of age-old sovereign states with their own cultures, customs and different levels of financial values pegged to their ex-currencies. It's a struggle at the best of times for a French-region exchange rate to be suitable for Romania or Greece. Not to mention the fact that sizeable political schisms can only be papered over when the sea is like a millpond or only slightly choppy.
Come a serious global recession Britain could find it easier to cope than Europe because exchange rates can be adjusted suitably and above all quickly and with as little loss of equilibrium in the market as possible.
But even if in some utopian dream the Euro turns out to be the currency par-excellance, it would still be a struggle to convince the majority of our people to join it because it means being part of that whole Eurofedaralist superstate business even further. We could, however, be promised a re-run of the ERM situation, as long as the same old shambles didn't happen again second time around and that we could escape temporarily or permanently to re-balance our own economy a lot quicker in time of recession.....
Subsidies for farmers to produce nothing, an over-plundered fish stock and vast quantities of produce destroyed to artificially increase its value is an odd way to bring prosperity. Particularly when many European directives have increased tax burdens on many businesses.
And many of us are not convinced that when (and it's always when) recession comes the Eurozone will suffer crashes right across Europe as less productive areas act as dead weights.
But alright. The Euro is an ascending star in the currency markets, doing very well thank you. Well, what's wrong in a compromise by which the Pound can be voluntarily pegged to the Eurozone but with no obligation to permanently surrender national sovereignty or independence? We do, after all, follow European policy directives which take prominence to British law anyway.
That way we could sample for ourselves this glossy new Euro-future without becoming a culturally bereft Euro-province.
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