• only slightly OT - Europe needs to get its act together

    From a425couple@a425couple@hotmail.com to rec.autos.sport.f1,rec.autos.sport.indycar,rec.autos.sport.nascar on Thu Jun 6 10:45:47 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.sport.nascar

    This is only slightly Off Topic in Formula One.
    A fair number of fans have complained about USA often having
    more than one F1 race a year. A fair number of fans have
    complained about reductions in European F1 circuits being
    used, and increasing ones in the Middle East and Asia.
    F1 must follow world events and trends. Auto making in
    1950 was concentrated in Europe (England, Italy, Germany and
    France) and the USA. That is no longer true.
    Both in population, GDP, and overall power, Europe is
    becoming less important.

    from https://www.seattletimes.com/opinion/this-d-day-europe-needs-to-resolve-to-get-its-act-together/

    This D-Day, Europe needs to resolve to get its act together
    June 5, 2024 at 11:14 am
    M. Ryder / Op-Art
    Bret Stephens By Bret Stephens
    Syndicated columnist

    ThursdayrCOs D-Day anniversary rCo the 80th rCo is occasioning somber and anxious reflections about the fate of the Atlantic alliance. Somber
    because the last of the Greatest Generation will soon no longer be with
    us. Anxious because former President Donald Trump, and his evident
    disdain for that alliance, may soon be with us again.

    The anxiety is partly misplaced. TrumprCOs truculent brand of American nationalism is a terrible idea for many reasons, not least in the encouragement it gives to Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping to target weaker
    U.S. allies. But Trump is also the messenger of a warning Europeans desperately need to heed.

    In a nutshell: Shape up.

    Europe today faces four great challenges that typically determine the
    fate of great powers. Take a brief look:

    Growth and dynamism: In 1960 the EU 28 rCo the 27 countries currently in
    the European Union, plus Britain rCo accounted for 36.3% of global gross domestic product. By 2020 it had fallen to 22.4%. By the end of the
    century it is projected to fall to just under 10%. By contrast, the
    United States has maintained a roughly consistent share rCo around a
    quarter rCo of global GDP since the Kennedy administration.

    Think of any leading-edge industry rCo artificial intelligence,
    microchips, software, robotics, genomics rCo and ask yourself (with a few honorable exceptions), whererCOs the European Microsoft, Nvidia or OpenAI?

    Military power: When the Cold War ended in 1990, the West German
    military fielded more than 500,000 troops and spent 2.5% of its GDP on defense. As of last year, it was down to 181,000 troops and 1.57%.
    BritainrCOs Royal Navy, the most powerful in the world at the outset of
    World War II, can now deploy just 10 submarines and fewer than two dozen
    major surface warships, some of which are inactive.

    In an all-out war, the British would exhaust their defense capabilities
    in about two months, according to a report to the House of Commons
    defense committee. The same would likely be true rCo if not much sooner rCo for every EU member-state apart from Poland, which aims to spend as much
    as 5% of its GDP on defense next year.

    Demographics: What do Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany, his predecessor Angela Merkel, President Emmanuel Macron of France, Prime Minister Mark
    Rutte of the Netherlands and former British Prime Minister Theresa May
    have in common? They are childless. ThatrCOs their personal business (and
    far from representative of all EU leaders), but itrCOs symbolic of a
    Continent where just under 3.9 million Europeans were born in 2022 and
    5.15 million died. A shrinking and aging population typically correlates
    with low economic growth, not least because entrepreneurship is usually
    a young personrCOs game.

    Europe has an additional challenge: a relatively high Muslim birthrate,
    along with the prospect of long-term Muslim migration. Under a rCLmedium migrationrCY scenario estimated by Pew, by 2050 Britain will be nearly 17% Muslim, France 17.4% and Sweden 20.5%. Those wondering about the
    ascendence of far-right European parties, who are heavily favored to
    sweep this weekrCOs elections in the EU Parliament and who are often sympathetic to Putin, know this is a factor. And they need to be honest
    that the values of depressingly notable segments of these Muslim
    populations are fundamentally at odds with European traditions of moral tolerance and political liberalism.

    Purpose and will: Many of EuroperCOs current failings are explained (often
    by European leaders themselves) as a problem of political mechanics: insufficient coordination between states; inadequate power in Brussels; failures of transmission between declared goals and real-world results.
    But the problem isnrCOt just one of process. ItrCOs also one of spirit. A
    few questions:

    reO If Russia defeats Ukraine and decides in a few yearsrCO time to attack
    one of the Baltic countries, is there a deep pool of young Germans,
    Belgians or Spaniards willing to die for Tallinn or Vilnius?

    reO As EuroperCOs NATO members struggle to meet the bare minimum goal of spending 2% of their GDP on defense, are they willing to come to grips
    with the fact that they probably need to spend twice as much?

    reO How much state protection, in social welfare and economic regulation,
    are EuroperCOs aging voters willing to forgo for the sake of creating a
    more dynamic economy for a dwindling number of young people?

    reO How forceful are European leaders willing to be in insisting that
    their values rCo including freedom of speech, womenrCOs rights and gay
    rights rCo must be protected against the illiberal instincts of a growing share of their voters?

    TrumprCOs ideas about NATO, his zero-sum attitudes about winning, his
    fondness for strongmen and his ignorance of and indifference to history
    are all, rightly, causes for European alarm. But people, and nations,
    succeed or fail to the extent that they refuse to hand over
    responsibility for their fates to others.

    rCLThe world is what it is; men who are nothing, who allow themselves to become nothing, have no place in it,rCY V.S. Naipaul once warned. ItrCOs
    good advice for Europe on this solemn anniversary of their previous liberation.

    Bret Stephens is a regular columnist for The New York Times.

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