• jack [he/him, comrade/them]
      hexagon
      hexbear
      19
      edit-2
      4 years ago

      Right. China has, smartly, been making a lot of inroads in Southern Europe: Spain, Italy, and Greece are high population countries (in European terms) that have been fucked by the EU's neoliberalism and have a history of socialist politics and/or diplomacy with the USSR during the cold war. They are perfect allies for China. These moves demonstrate the EU's long-term inability to act as a unified global power. Not to mention with the UK leaving, the EU has lost its second largest and most economically important member.

      • falxque_martellum [he/him,comrade/them]
        hexbear
        14
        4 years ago

        Unlike Alabama greece has a huge navy for its size,lots more people than Alabama, a better geographical position and is a weak link in the EU. Loosing Greece could also mean the loss of other southern european countries.

        • CyborgMarx [any, any]
          hexbear
          -7
          4 years ago

          The size of the Greek navy is completely irrelevant as is the population size and I don't know why you lot assume I'm talking specifically about the EU I'm talking about Europe as a whole

          China can not become a superpower without the US collapsing and the global reserve currency being pegged to the renminbi, for western capital even a weakened Euro is preferable to the vagaries of the Chinese system

          • falxque_martellum [he/him,comrade/them]
            hexbear
            9
            4 years ago

            You gotta tell me how in hell the EU is irrelevant when talking about Europe, remeber that Greece is a member state. As for the currency The EU is too weak to be a superpower. it doesn't have an army, it has many currencies, it has already lost an important member state and risked losing others already and there's way too many rivalries inside of it to work properly as an hegemon superpower. You know malta could decide to veto every single proposal if they wanted to right?

            • CyborgMarx [any, any]
              hexbear
              1
              edit-2
              4 years ago

              I didn't say the EU was irrelevant I said I was talking about Europe as a whole which will remain powerful whether the EU survives the decade or not And like I said a historically a divided Europe has never stopped the continent from dominating global politics whether it's the Euro or the next best European currency the global reserve currency will never shift to Asia