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2012-05-16
G8 Summit: President Obama To Press Chancellor Merkel On Euro-Zone Growth Package

Water Policy Needs 'Radical' Change To Protect People And Environment

U.S. Nuclear Weapons Upgrades - Experts Report Massive Costs Increase

Discussion: Greek Politicians Debate Election Disaster - 'If We Leave The Euro, Everything Will Be Worse'

Practiced Civility - Politesse Trumps Policy As Hollande Meets Merkel

Aftermath Of An Election Debacle - Merkel Fires Environment Minister Rottgen

In U.S.: Georgia Police Escort School Buses After Rifle Threat

Disses And Death Threats - Rapper In Germany Fears For Life After Fatwa

Ratko Mladic Goes On Trial For Bosnia War Crimes

2012-05-15
U.S. Justice Dept. Opens Investigation Into JP Morgan's $2 Billion Trading Losses

Conflict With Far-Right Party - Young German Muslims Defend Right To Protest

Rebekah Brooks Defiant Over Charges Relating To Phone-Hacking 'Cover-Up'

Delayed Indefinitely - Unraveling Berlin's New Airport Debacle

New Elections In June - Markets Fall As Greek Talks Collapse

News Analysis: Standing Firm - Germany's Merkel Won't Budge On Austerity Despite Setback

Better Than Expected - German GDP Surges As Euro-Zone Split Widens

Former Mexican Official Pleads Guilty To Aiding Cartel

Panel Calls For Steep Cuts In U.S. Nuclear Weapons

Checking The Vaults - Germans Fret About Their Foreign Gold Reserves

French President Inaugurated - Hollande Under Pressure To Score Quick Victories

Report: Resources Being Stripped Faster Than Planet Can Renew Them

2012-05-14
North Dakota Oil Boom: Thousands Pin Their Dreams On Striking It Rich

Time To Admit Defeat - Greece Can No Longer Delay Euro Zone Exit

E.U.: Israel Putting Any Two-State Peace Deal At Risk

JP Morgan Investment Boss Ina Drew Quits Over Bank's $2 Billion Investment Losses

Commentary: 'It's Going To Get Harder For Merkel'

Couples Therapy - Germany's Merkel And France's Hollande Are Damned To Get Along

Gulf Unity On Hold Amid Iranian Warning

News Analysis: Merkel's Defeat - Germany's Social Democrats Return To Relevancy

Champagne Before Crash - Pilot Bravado May Be To Blame For Russian Superjet Disaster


Fighting (For?) Europe - How European Elites Lost A Generation
2011-06-24 04:00:18 (47 weeks ago)
Posted By: Intellpuke

The European Union is in bad shape. Not only is the common currency in a shambles and the economies of many member states moribund, but young Europeans no longer see how the E.U. helps them. Millions of them are taking to the streets to demand a future. By SPIEGEL Staff

When Kostas Dekoumes, a 24-year-old Greek, is asked about Europe, he launches into a rant about German Chancellor Angela Merkel. When Oleguer Sagarra, a 25-year-old Spaniard, is asked the same question, he says that Europe represents the only chance to find work. Karl Gill, a 21-year-old Irishman, responds to the question by railing against the banks.

And when Jacques Delors, 85, is asked about Europe, he says things like: "Europe needs a pioneering spirit," and he asks: "Do the men and women of this era truly want this Europe?"

Delors, together with former French President François Mitterrand and former German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, was one of the driving forces behind the European Union, and under his leadership as president of the European Commission, treaties were signed that would be impossible to forge agreement on today.

Delors represents a time when Europe inspired the imagination of statesmen. The goal was to secure peace in Europe and prosperity for the continent's poorer countries including jobs, education and justice. Europe was a promise. When Kostas Dekoumes, Oleguer Sagarra, Karl Gill and hundreds of thousands of other citizens protest in the squares of European cities, it is to demand that governments and politicians make good on this promise. In their opinion, Europe is in the process of making them poor. In response, they are speaking out and exerting pressure on their governments, just as the financial markets are doing.

A :Look At The Zeitgeist

When Delors, an elegant man with a soft face, worries about the common European currency -- a monetary union which in recent months increasingly resembles a teetering house of cards -- he talks about the debt crises of individual countries, and he says that the markets are testing the E.U. "because they are convinced that it is not capable of taking action." All of this is very disconcerting, says Delors, but it isn't the real reason for the scope of the crisis.

"We are talking about the Zeitgeist, aren't we, about the 'mood'?" says Delors. By that he means that two crises are unfolding at the same time in Europe today. On the one hand, there is the debt crisis faced by individual nations. The second crisis, and the more dangerous one, is a debt crisis of meaning. Do Europeans -- the citizens and their political elites -- even want the historic project of a European Union anymore?

The search for an answer to this question inevitably leads to those places where agitation is at its most intense, where citizens are fighting for the future, even if is only their personal future. It leads to Barcelona, Dublin, Athens, Lyon and Lisbon, to the rebellious crowds full of rage but not necessarily full of hope.

Spaniard Oleguer Sagarra is no revolutionary. He is a conscientious young man who wears eye-catching glasses. He has lived in Montreal and Sydney, speaks fluent French and English and is trained for complex data analysis. Sagarra used to think that he wasn't the kind of person who took part in demonstrations. Such a person is made for work.

Sagarra is sitting on a large rock at the foot of one of the twin fountains on Plaça de Catalunya in Barcelona. A small tent city covers the square behind him. Young people are siting in front of the tents talking, some are sunbathing, while others are painting protest signs or cooling off in one of the fountains. There are makeshift information booths at the center of the tent city. Sagarra, an academic and the son of Ferran Sagarra, the dean of the Barcelona School of Architecture, spent the night here, on the street.

Deep Crisis

In about an hour, shortly before it gets dark, thousands will gather on the square once again and start banging on pots, just as the Argentineans did in the 1990s during their economic crisis, shortly before the country's bankruptcy.

(story continues below)




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