United States of Europe
2005-03-02
Anyone wanting to put Václav Klaus's 10 commandments
against the European constitution into context might take a look
at the United States of America. It's a federation of states, each
of which has limited authority to regulate issues of day-to-day,
but not global, importance. Connecticut, for example, can
decide on civil unions but not federal deficits or de facto
declarations of war. When the constitution gets in Washington's
way, judges reinterpret it or politicians circumvent it. When
states hesitate to adopt a federal policy, Washington withholds
funding until they comply. In extreme cases (1861), the federal
government goes to war to impose integration. With his 10
commandments, Klaus raised legitimate concerns about the EU
constitution and was immediately called a liar. He's lucky that,
so far, the only ammunition being used against him are words.
[Czech Republic U.S.A. civil war European Union draft]
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