Jacob Christensen

Notes from the Outside of the Inside

Archive for April 30th, 2009

Turkey

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While we’re at it: The European Parliament election campaign is so not happening up until now. Okay – we have the parties, the platforms and the candidates, but not really much in way of a campaign.

Perhaps we ought to thank the former Bendt Bendtsen who unexpectedly pulled Turkey into the non-campaign by asserting that Turkey should never be a member of the EU. The Danish People’s Party loved it, the Conservatives turned out to be split on the issue, and now one of the Liberal hopefuls have joined the chorus criticising Bendtsen.

The question now is: If we leave aside that Turkish EU membership is at least 30 to 40 years out in the future, what got into Bendtsen?

I would guess that the Conservatives wanted to keep this as a non-issue, and we don’t have any indications that Bendtsen’s move was cleared with the Conservative leadership. Perhaps he was beginning to fear that the party would be left without MEPs and looking to poach prospective Liberal and DF voters?

Who knows: Maybe Turkey will be the issue that will liven up the campaign, even if it in that case is destined to become ugly. That the Conservatives otherwise have tried to place themselves to the left of the Liberals and DF on the authoritarian-libertarian dimension just makes the picture more complicated.

Written by Jacob Christensen

April 30th, 2009 at 10:46 pm

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The One in Which I Speak French

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Well, with a bit of help, actually.

Written by Jacob Christensen

April 30th, 2009 at 10:09 pm

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Engels and the Car Industry

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No, no real link between the two. Or perhaps?

Matthew Yglesias considers the outcome of Chrysler filing for Chapter 11:

Looks like Chrysler will wind up in a pre-packaged bankruptcy before becoming a firm jointly owned by Fiat, the United Auto Workers, the United States of America, and Canada.

Robert Reich is skeptical of the idea of bailing out US companies, because – well, what is a US company these days:

Besides, as I’ve said before, the “American auto industry” shouldn’t be defined as auto companies whose headquarters are in the United States. The true “American auto industry” is Americans who make automobiles. At the rate the Big Three are shrinking even as they’re bailed out, foreign automakers with American plants may soon employ more Americans than the Big Three do. The Big Three have gone global anyway.

And just by accident those links appeared along with a link to a lecture at the LSE about Friedrich Engels. You know, the guy with the really big beard who played Chris Lowe to Marx’ Neil Tennant.

With capitalism in crisis, the shadow of Karl Marx is looming large. But what about the co-author of The Communist Manifesto? In advance of a major new biography, The Frock-Coated Communist, Tristram Hunt explores the life and work, the personal contradictions and ideological breakthroughs, of Friedrich Engels. Cotton-lord and communist, Engels was the man who turned Marxism into a political force – and whose vision was then brutally betrayed in the 20th century. Tristram Hunt is an historian, broadcaster and a lecturer in British history at Queen Mary, University of London.

Right-click on the link to download the lecture.

Update: Tristram Hunt also has a column on Mr. E for May Day.

Written by Jacob Christensen

April 30th, 2009 at 7:32 pm

Einmal Zentralismus und Zurück

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As we are rapidly approaching the 60th anniversary of the Federal Republic of Germany (and the defunct German Democratic Republic), Länderreport of the Deutschlandradio Kultur has been revisiting the history of the east German Länder. Interesting listening, provided you understand German.

Here are the links to the individual programmes:

1. Partition.
2. Going different ways.
3. Restart.
4. The costs.

One question which merits consideration: Was the (re)partitioning of the GDR into five länder the best solution – the Berlin-Brandenburg problem is one aspect, the economic problems of most of the new Länder another – or should the GDR have been partitioned in two or three states? Also: Was the reunification a missed window of opportunity for a reform of the organisation of the west-German Länder, both in terms of geographical and bureaucratic structures?

Written by Jacob Christensen

April 30th, 2009 at 6:20 pm

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