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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated

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To: Elsewhere who wrote (32448)3/2/2004 5:28:57 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (2) of 793953
 
Sullivan on Germany

THE EUROPEAN IMPLOSION: Small blog this morning. I spent all last evening at an AEI lecture and dinner in honor of my old college friend, the historian Niall Ferguson. He gave a challenging talk - essentially about the implosion of Europe. Perhaps the most striking statistic he provided (and there were many) is that, on current demographic trends, there will only be 67 million Germans in 2050 - down from over 80 today and slightly more in Hitler's day. And their average age will be close to 50. More significantly, the economic stresses on Germany, Niall argues, will make it unlikely that German subsidies can keep the EU afloat indefinitely. And that's always been the central reality of the EU: German largess toward other member states in return for political legitimacy and economic union. He doesn't argue that the EU will collapse (although he wonders whether the euro will survive long term as a currency). Like many other exhausted institutions, it may simply wither. The big question therefore is when and if German voters will balk at being further milked dry by their poorer neighbors. Who knows? But if their economy continues to sink into inactivity, it may be sooner rather than later.

AEI: I have to say that the American Enterprise Institute is an amazing place. There are plenty of people there with whom I'd disagree on many issues, but it's wonderful to be in a place where ideas actually seem to matter. It confirms in my mind that Washington really is becoming an intellectual capital as well as a political one. I've been to many events, dinners and lunches there and never fail to be stimulated. At dinner this time I got to meet and chat with Jeane Kirkpatrick, a woman I'd never met before; as well as listening to Michael Barone, Mark Falcoff, Chris DeMuth, Geoffrey Smith, Radek Sikorski, Steve Hayward and several others. We chatted at one point about Allan Bloom. How I wish I'd had the chance to meet him - the ultimate Nietzschean conservative. The novel, Ravelstein, by Bloom's friend, Saul Bellow, made me long to have been at some point within Bloom's world. But hearing Kirkpatrick reminisce made it worse.
- 2:04:43 AM

NANNY STATE WATCH: Now, they're after Internet pills. Yes, there are some addiction issues (but, then, there always are). But why cannot the state treat citizens and doctors as grown-ups? What business is it of the government to decide whether someone cannot use a prescription medication for pleasure or relief if she decides it's something she wants to do and a doctor is prepared to prescribe it? Ditto steroids. Frankly, the way in which the internet has broken down some of our puritanical attitudes toward the pharmaceutical revolution has been a great step forward for human freedom and medical or recreational choice. I guess the possibility that someone out there may be experiencing actual pleasure is enough to send the government into a full-scale panic. We're used to the insane war on illegal drugs. Now they want a war on the legal ones as well. Can't Rush Limbaugh protest this incursion of over-weening government? Oh, wait ...
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