After some in-depth discussions in France, just a word to
summarize so many opinions: concern. Indeed, France is not going in the right
direction and her people are, in so many ways, very disappointed with the
current situation and the lack of true reform of the state institutions. Or,
the state takes a lot of resources and many of its institutions are just simple
bureaucracy and jobs for the political animals that people the republic.
Thursday, 27 June 2013
Tuesday, 25 June 2013
French countryside and the taxes on historical houses
The countryside between Tours and Poitiers has some of most
interesting castles and manors we find in France. Many of them have been
preserved through generations and kept some kind of historical interest, in
addition to the beauty of the architecture and gracefully tailored landscape.
As we travel now through the region we can see that quite a
number of them have now been put on the market. The rural history is on sale.
I have wondered why. And I came to realise the families are afraid
of the new taxes to come. They are also very heavily punished by the existing
property taxes, including the tax on wealth. So, they play safe and try to sell
the most expensive properties as soon as possible.
But there are very few buyers. I am told that some of the very few are from
China…
Soon or later all this will have an impact of historical
properties.
Monday, 24 June 2013
France and the serial blunder
The French have found a new punching bag: it is called Barroso.
They are all out against him. They have looked at old closets and found a
number of blunders he is credited with. This is a way of making sure people
understand that the man is serial disaster.
It is much easier when the blame can be placed elsewhere. Incompetent
people just love that! And when the blame is put on a foreigner it’s even
better!
Poor France, some would say!
Sunday, 23 June 2013
Brazil is not listening to Dilma Rousseff
I talked to friends in Brazil to discuss the aftermath of
President Dilma Rousseff’s address to the country. I had found her speech wise
and conciliatory and wanted to know my friends’ opinion about it. And also get
a bit of the mood these days.
Apparently, the speech has not been listened to. Many urban
people seem too eager to continue the street rallies and the social network campaigns.
They have little hope that the current leadership will be strong enough to
change the political system. And that is the kind of change they aspire
for. A good number believe that it is
time to bring to power a different type of politicians. And many mention the name
of the Supreme Court President, Justice Joaquim Barbosa. He is certainly an
example people like to refer to.
And a name to keep watching.
Saturday, 22 June 2013
The losing side
The true message that came out of today’s Friends of Syria meeting
is that the many rebellions are losing the war. That’s the actual trend on the
ground. New weapons for a divided, weakened opposition are just a way of
effectively playing on Assad’s hand. He will have a justification to continue
the military option, which has given him a new breath of life, and an excuse to
postpone any negotiated solution. In the end, the Syrian population will be the
real loser.
Friday, 21 June 2013
A new ball game in town
The social media networks have become major tools when it
comes to rallying people and bringing them to the streets. Twitter, Facebook, Whats
App, blogs, and many others –the list is very vast –, have been used in the
Arab Spring revolutions, in Turkey, and now in Brazil, to disseminate political
messages and call for demonstrations.
All of them are free, easy to access, and very common among the young
and the urban folks. These two categories of people are, by far, the main
source of opposition to any government in the world. In addition, social media
tools work better with very short messages, very direct and therefore very easy
to apprehend and internalize.
Thursday, 20 June 2013
Brazil's class politics
Recently I spent about three weeks in Brazil. And I wrote,
in the Portuguese weekly magazine Visao, where I am their international affairs
columnist, that I found a better country than fifteen years ago. Indeed, Brazil
is a much safer place, with a striving economy and a growing international
agenda. But I also said that the cost of living is exceptionally high, the
currency overvalued –which benefits the urban rich that love to travel abroad
–and the police too close to the interests of the rich and powerful.
Since then, the country has been headline news. The riots in
many urban centres reveal the malaise that many Brazilians experience. This
malaise is a composite feeling that is fed by several streams: corruption, low
politics, high cost of living, poorly performing public services and wide
social disparities. In addition, life in the big cities can be extenuating just
because of the time it takes to move from home to work and vice-versa.
The demonstrations also show that the urban middle class is
deeply against the ruling party, Partido dos Trabalhadores, PT, President Dilma’s
party. They see this party as something close to the populism prevailing in
other parts of South America, a party that is too keen in taxing the better-off
in order to give subsidies to the insouciant masses. For them this is not
social justice, it is lefty power politics.
Tuesday, 18 June 2013
Eastern Europe's commerce
During my recent road trips in the Benelux, I have seen a
very visible increase of Baltic, mainly from Latvia, and other Eastern European
trucks, ferrying all kinds of goods left and right. This is certainly good news.
The greater the economic inter-dependency the better it is for Europe.
Monday, 17 June 2013
The "reactionary French"
The comments made by the EU Commission President about the
“reactionary” French protectionism” are very brave but extremely undiplomatic. Barroso
in his interview to the International Herald Tribune said: “Some say they
belong to the left, but in fact they are culturally extremely reactionary”.
This is a very direct reference to the French President and his position that
the trade agreement discussions between the EU and the US should not include “cultural
goods”. France wants to protect its film
and music industries from the American might.
Why did Barroso, who is generally very prudent, go that far?
He might know something about his future as head of the Commission that we do
not know yet.
Sunday, 16 June 2013
G8 and GZero
On the eve of this year’s G8 meeting, Syria remains the key
issue. It is also a complex and divisive matter, not just because of the
different approaches Russia and the West are following but also on the question
of arms for the opposition. The meeting will come and go and unfortunately we
will see no progress, no agreement on a political roadmap for this deeply
tragic crisis. It is indeed easier to talk about weapons than to device a peace
process.
Labels:
G8,
human rights,
Peace,
peacebuilding,
Russia,
summit,
Syria,
US
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