Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
You Say You Want A Revolution? Count The EU Out
You Say You Want A Revolution? Count The EU Out
Nov 21, 2025 3:14 PM

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble is a frustrated man. With unemployment rates in Germany hovering at around 8 percent, and Greece and Spain at almost 60 percent, he believes the EU is on the brink of “revolution.” His answer is not to scrap the welfare model however; he wants to preserve it.

While Germany insists on the importance of budget consolidation, Schaeuble spoke of the need to preserve Europe’s welfare model.

If U.S. welfare standards were introduced in Europe, “we would have revolution, not tomorrow, but on the very same day,” Schaeuble told a conference in Paris.

Not everyone agrees. Italian Labour minister Enrico Giovannini says European youth are being asked to put their lives on hold, and that this is “unacceptable.” Werner Hoyer, head the European Investment Bank, acknowledged that there is no plan at this point to direct the spiraling downturn of the EU economy. There is, instead, a country-by-country “patchwork” approach. For instance, Greece is attempting to focus on job training and entrepreneurship for 350,000 young people, and France is working on a similar plan within its own borders.

In ing Europe, Samuel Gregg (Acton’s Director of Research) addresses this issue. In early 2011, young people began protesting across Europe due to their economic plight.

One of the plaints of the “indignant ones” (as they called themselves) was their inability, after several years of higher education to obtain anything other than part-time contracts.

These los indignados were frustrated by having to live with parents for longer and longer times, and having virtually nowhere to use their educations. But as Gregg points out, these young people aren’t seeing the true economic picture:

It is sad to report…that los indignados were not protesting against overregulation and other labor-market rigidities demanded by unions and conceded by governments. By and large, the indignant ones wanted exactly what unions had helped secure for their parents and grandparents: jobs for life, free health care, state-guaranteed minimal es, six weeks of paid annual vacation, early retirement, and generous state pensions. In other words, they wanted Social Europe. Far from being revolutionary, they were firm status quonarians.

The EU economy is being squeezed to death by enormous taxation, top-heavy entitlement programs nations can no longer afford, and the lack of promotion of free enterprise. People are simply not incentivized to flourish economically. This isn’t a revolution. This isn’t even stagnation. Dario Fo, the Italian playwright, may have gotten right:

Do people demand a really just system? Well, we’ll arrange it so that they’ll be satisfied with one that’s a little less unjust … They want a revolution, and we’ll give them reforms — lots of reforms; we’ll drown them in reforms. Or rather, we’ll drown them in promises of reforms, because we’ll never give them real ones either!!

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
European Court Decides Important Church Autonomy Case
Last week the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights issued it decision in a much-anticipated case involving the right of Romanian Orthodox priests to unionize against the wishes of their church. According to the Center for Law and Religion Forum, the proposed union was meant to promote members’ ability to obtain representation in the Holy Synod, the Church’s highest authority, and to strike in order to advance members’ interests within the Church. By registering a union with...
Peace and Prosperity at McDonald’s
The other day I had to bring my wife to the airport for an early-bird flight. Thus, I chose to work for a few hours at a nearby McDonald’s before going into the office. Now, I know that what I’m about to say is out of fashion these days, particularly if “fast food” has anything to do with it, but permit me to share one small sliver of what a glorious thing business can be. There I was, at 5:00...
Miller: ‘Does Capitalism Destroy Culture?’
Anyone who’s driven across the American landscape knows that there will be a familiar string of fast-food chains, gas stations and box stores along the expressways. You could virtually eat the same meal as you drive from one coastline of America to the other. Michael Matheson Miller, Research Fellow and Director of PovertyCure at the Acton Institute, takes up this issue, asking, “Does capitalism destroy culture?” [S]ince the cultural es from political observers at almost every point on the political...
Religious Tolerance, Cooperation And School Choice
President Barack Obama, during a recent trip to Northern Ireland, decried the segregation of denominational churches and schools: Issues like segregated schools and housing, lack of jobs and opportunity — symbols of history that are a source of pride for some and pain for others — these are not tangential to peace; they’re essential to it. If towns remain divided — if Catholics have their schools and buildings, and Protestants have theirs — if we can’t see ourselves in one...
Don’t Park Your Porsche in the Vatican Parking Lot
If you’re a Cardinal working at the Vatican, you may want to leave your Porsche at home – the boss is checking the parking lot and isn’t keen on seeing luxury cars. Inspection – The Pope declared war on the Vatican’s luxury cars. First, he attacked wastefulness, underscoring that “it bothers me when I see a priest or a sister with a brand new car”. Then, a few days later, he put into practice what he had stated during a...
Entrepreneurial Advice from Auntie Anne
When walking through an airport or shopping mall the aroma hits me before I even see the store. If happiness had a scent I suspect it would smell like Auntie Anne’s soft pretzels. From the first whiff my knees go weak and my brain tells me that I will never know joy again if I pass up this salted, buttery, baked goodness. They are so good that I fully expect St. Peter hands them out at the Pearly Gates. While...
Conflicted Morality In Ender’s Game
Is the morality of an act solely based on the intentions of the person acting? Moviegoers may get some insight into this question when Ender’s Game is released in theaters Nov. 1. Orson Scott Card’s classic Ender’s Game book series began in 1985 with its most well known first installment, winning the Nebula and Hugo Awards for best science fiction novel. The book tells the story of an alien invasion, where the world’s population prepares for an imminent second attack...
The Boston Beer Company’s Hypocrisy
As a brief follow-up to the story about the Samuel Adams pany’s decision to redact “by their Creator” from a reference to the Declaration of Independence in a recent ad campaign, it’s worth examining again pany’s justification for that decision. According to a spokeswoman, “We adhere to an advertising code, established by the Beer Institute.” The code in question includes the provision, “Beer advertising and marketing materials should not employ religion or religious themes.” As ments have noted, the reference...
Witness To Hope: Cardinal Văn Thuận
Last week was a busy news week for the Vatican: the release of Pope Francis’ first encyclical, Lumen Fidei, and the announcement that two former popes, John XXIII and John Paul II, will be canonized. Almost overshadowed is the story of another remarkable leader, Cardinal Văn Thuận and the cause for his beatification. (Beatification is the first step in declaring a person a saint, and allows for public veneration.) Cardinal Văn Thuận spent 13 years in prison as a political...
Pelosi and the ‘Bible Folks’
According to Breitbart, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi on Thursday was caught making claims about “Bible Folks” that weren’t exactly accurate: Pelosi told the assembled media: ‘The fact is that many Republicans in our country prehensive immigration reform.The badges, law munity; the munity; the Bible folks — many of them are Republican, they have been very enthusiastic over time and [are] getting impatient about Congress taking action.” Mark Tooley, an evangelical Christian and President of the Institute on Religion and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved