Quote from: Sheilbh on January 08, 2026, 07:53:34 PMI don't think that helps.
Quote from: HisMajestyBOB on January 08, 2026, 04:43:09 PMDemocrat senators go out of line while in office, while Republican senators wait until they leave office.
Quote from: The Minsky Moment on January 08, 2026, 09:33:44 AMWell perhaps I do need to clarify "marbles"
I don't think you can make absolute and crystal clear bright lines between security policy, diplomacy, foreign policy, trade, economic policy, taxation, and economic regulation. In fact, one of the aspects of the "Trump Effect" has been to blur and break down those distinctions. It's in that sense that I mean EU membership necessarily puts some marbles in the EU basket.
Fair - but I think there can be a trap of putting too much emphasis on the moment of Brexit itself and not the previous 75 years or the subsequent ten. Brexit doesn't happen and the last ten years would also have been full of tensions and arguments and politics around the nature of Britain's relationship with Europe. We would not have put it to bed and just become good communautaire Europeans - much like the independence referendum didn't end Scottish nationalism or questions about the future of the union.Quote from: viper37 on December 22, 2025, 08:26:22 AMRussian general killed by car bomb in Moscow, officials sayTypical of Russian generals in wartime. either you are successful and killed by your government or you are successful and killed by the enemy.
Tough time to be a Russian officer. If you are not killed by your own people, it's the enemy that kills you. Not fair.
Quote from: Tonitrus on January 08, 2026, 03:26:55 PMNot quite as poetic as Napoleon or Snowball.No-one wants a poetic freezer

Quote from: Jacob on January 08, 2026, 12:54:41 PMHas it not resulted in further military integration?No - and part of this could be defensive. Under the treaties foreign and security policy are for the member states and, crucially, at a European level require unanimity. It's part of the reason I've thought in the pas that "minilateralism" might be the best/more plausible route to European defence.
It is my impression that the war in Ukraine has pushed Europe closer in that area, but maybe that's mainly rhetoric and not actually practical?
QuoteCOVID-19 for the first time breached the political 'urgency threshold' for largescale issuance of common EU debt, in the form of NGEU. With an EU candidate country already under direct military attack and seemingly no progress towards similar largescale direct common EU debt issuance in response, other non-war political topics in the EU seem similarly unlikely to rise above the urgency
threshold that would enable common debt issuance. The basic political reality of required unanimity among EU member states for common EU debt issuance also undermines any otherwise sensible functional arguments in favour of more common European debt to improve the functioning of European financial markets11 or – a more recent policy priority for many top EU officials – promote the global role of the euro in the international financial system12.
[...]
The warning signs for further EU integration are already flashing and the Ukraine War may become the first large crisis to affect the EU in decades that does not lead to meaningful additional institutional EU integration.
At an October 2025 summit of EU leaders, the European Commission presented a new Defence Readiness Roadmap 2030 (European Commission, 2025c) but EU heads of state made no new concrete defence-related decisions at the EU level. This was despite the Commission's explicit allocation of leadership in European military and defence matters to member states, noting: "Member States are and will remain sovereign for their national security and defence. They are responsible for defining the capability objectives required to ensure the readiness of their national armed forces so that they can fulfil their strategic-military missions, including those undertaken within NATO. Their respective national objectives and the associated timelines for achieving them are a sovereign decision." (European Commission, 2025c).
). But to put in context, the scale of post-covid common European debt, that was at about €800 billion. The agriculture budget alone is around €400 billion. I think common debt is key because it's the way for Europe to mov to greater than the sum of its parts.QuoteAgreed. I just think Mercosur and Venezuela matters much more to Brazil than Gaza - so that's where the effort should be focused when engaging with them.I agree with Latin American countries (at least the post-pink tide ones, not the Operation Condor wannabes) - I also think it'd be a helpful way for Europe to go on the offensive. I don't buy the western hemisphere stuff about Trump (maybe true for some of those around him).
QuoteTime will tell. There's some momentum to the China-Russia alliance, but I don't think it's permanent.No doubt. I mean the North Atlantic Alliance isn't permanent - but it's seriously consequential.
QuoteI agree that Europe is potentially poised to start a Chinese style century of humiliation. However, I think it would be the wrong approach to accept it as inevitable and act as if it is an established fact.I agree and I think this is to Zanza's point where, again, I agree - the potential capacity is there. Europe is rich, it's got innovative technically brilliant countries, it's got an industrial base in strategically important industries. There are structural challenges (no energy resources) but I don't think there's anything insurmountable.
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