Democrats Are Obsessed With White Men
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 308: ‘Fear Not' New Testament – Part 3
Iran Did Not Get the Memo
An Ambitious Bible-Reading Plan
Family As Communion: Familiaris Consortio
Who Wins in the Trump Economy? American Families!
President Trump Is Running a Tight Ship and Giving the Deep State a...
New York City Cannot Afford Democratic Socialism
Feds Indict Six More in Venezuelan Gang's High-Tech ATM Heist – Total Hits...
Michigan Auto Dealer Management Firm Pays $1.5M to Settle PPP Fraud Claims
Here's How Mamdani's Snow Shoveling Program Is Reveals the Leftist Lie on Voter...
Toxic Chemical Poured on Trump-Kennedy Center Ice Rink, Performance Canceled
Lawmakers Probe Potomac River Sewage Spill
Ukrainian Man Ran 'Upworksell.com' to Sell Stolen Identities for Overseas IT Workers, Cour...
The DOJ Has Canned the Most Liberal Immigration Judge in America
OPINION

Harmonizing England and Europe

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Harmonizing England and Europe

“Open Europe,” the organization that follows events on the European continent, issued a report recently that attempts to address an obvious question: If the United Kingdom embraces European Union (E.U.) legislation how will the average person be affected or, put more directly, will the average person be affected?

Advertisement

Most people assume that the Brussels bureaucracy is far away literally and figuratively. What they may not realize is that the Lisbon Treaty exerts enormous influence over daily lives from the critical to the mundane.

In fact, the Lisbon Treaty will reduce Britain’s ability to block E.U. legislation including items that influence quotidian decisions. For example, as a result of an E.U. decision to require more wind turbines to generate electricity, electric bills and the tab for water distribution will increase.

Some requirements are utterly bizarre, such as using the same font on cigarette packets. Others fall into the category of nuisance items: phasing out incandescent bulbs, banning vitamins and eliminating the use of pounds sterling.

Other requirements have a paternalistic quality to them, such as insistence that children as old as twelve use car booster seats and that all new car owners must keep headlights on during the day.

Perhaps the most noteworthy reform (if I may call it that) is that the U.K. government will be unable to expel criminals without the permission of E.U. authorities. I wonder how the public would respond to a referendum on this matter.

Advertisement

Then, of course, there is the range of economic issues. Television advertising rules will have to be harmonized with the rest of the continent. British workers would be banned from earning higher wages instead of taking vacations. A majority of new regulations will influence business operations including the nature of downsizing should that be necessary. And the number of training hours for physicians will be specified in order to control medical costs, notwithstanding the effect this decision may have on patient safety and care.

This harmonization project will not only alter the British society; it is an assault on human nature. It assumes that every aspect of life can be regulated in order to create a continental united states. What this approach overlooks are historical antecedents, the very conditions that separate Italians from the French and the British from the Germans.

In the minds of bureaucrats, harmonization is a challenge they welcome. It is a manifestation of the post democratic sensibility. After all, to whom are these bureaucrats responsible? And to what degree do they represent the will of the people?

Advertisement

This is indeed an odd historical moment. A democracy that people often take for granted is challenged by a “soft” authoritarianism that is barely recognized by the public at large. If there was a referendum or several such referenda that would be one thing, but, in fact, most of the anticipated regulations will occur below the radar.

It is remarkable that Britain, the lodestar of democracy, may have its most essential tradition trampled by decisions in Belgium and largely unrecognized by the population it is designed to affect.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement