The financial market crisis of 2008 quickly translated into a sovereign debt crisis in the EU, exposing the weaknesses of the monetary union of different economies and the decentralization of political power. The EU has been going downhill ever since, as the EU's response to the problems caused by centralization and regulation has always been the same: more regulation, more centralization.
Comparing what has happened since 2008 with the US, it is striking that despite similar problems, a debt crisis, interventionism through statist policies, the US economy has managed to leave the Europeans in the dust. Its system is resilient in fending off attacks by the state and protecting the spirit of entrepreneurship. As a result, it has succeeded in turning productivity gains into prosperity, while in the EU only one sector continues to grow: the state economy and the sprawling welfare state.
Europeans should now watch out for what happens if the new US government succeeds in rolling back the state and allowing more private enterprise. The USA could be the dry sponge that soaks up mobile capital from all over the world and in this way holds the torch of freedom high. Let us hope, for the sake of Europeans, that America can once again become a haven of freedom and a sovereign citizenry.
Let's leave the losers to their naive substitute belief in the god 'state' that pretends to feed them but in reality plunders them to the bone.
At the same time, the arrival of Bitcoin in the economic psyche of the United States, its integration into the financial system and the savings plans of citizens offers a unique opportunity to return to freedom and sovereignty. The fact that it was once again German politicians, of all people, who sold the coins stolen by the state a few months ago at the lowest price again is indicative of the intellectual crisis of the old continent, in which a bureaucracy decoupled from reality is leading the reigns of power. This cannot go on.
Europeans need access to more guns, and more Bitcoin just imo
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Yep
Btw: I'm ready
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Every time I visit Europe (and I love visiting. I really enjoy the coffee) I think to myself...
I can look at all of this luxury shopping, all these cafes.... but where can I get a box of ammo? It's like all I want is a box of ammo and a pistol to go plinking with in the afternoons and that is unfortunately not an option in most of Europe right now.
It would be a downside for sure about living there I think.
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @TomK OP 4m
I am 3 months a year on Crete. No problem there. Any man is fully equipped
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Interesting. Longer term I am interested in Czech Republic and Switzerland and I need to do my research.
The Czech people have guns from what I understand... and I've heard the Swiss do too at least to some extent.
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Excellent observation. Europe is turning into the elderly home/museum that Larry Summers quipped many years ago.
Also, would retweet this:
"Let's leave the losers to their naive substitute belief in the god 'state' that pretends to feed them but in reality plunders them to the bone."
Fucking yes! lesgo
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47 sats \ 1 reply \ @Shugard 6h
Europe the retirement retards - I like it!
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @TomK OP 6h
Lol
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157 sats \ 1 reply \ @TNStacker 6h
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this
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Are there any promising developments in EU popular sentiment?
After the Trump landslide, people were talking about how all of the incumbent parties throughout the developed world lost vote share. That at least implies that Europeans are getting fed up with what they're being served.
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18 sats \ 2 replies \ @TomK OP 6h
Besides Victor Orbán.... nothing. Zero.
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Theres a group in germany called Afd but they are perhaps
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22 sats \ 0 replies \ @TomK OP 3h
Until now they are heavily suppressed by the gernan deep state and the media machine.
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