União Europeia

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Re: União Europeia

#376 Mensagem por P44 » Qua Out 07, 2020 2:47 pm

Um dos poucos líderes europeus com tomates




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Re: União Europeia

#377 Mensagem por P44 » Ter Out 13, 2020 3:48 pm

Sedes das empresas alemãs, 30 anos após a reunificação

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Re: União Europeia

#378 Mensagem por Túlio » Ter Out 13, 2020 3:55 pm

P44 escreveu: Ter Out 13, 2020 3:48 pm Sedes das empresas alemãs, 30 anos após a reunificação

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Quem dá bola pra isso? O RAMMSTEIN veio do outro lado mesmo... :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:






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Re: União Europeia

#379 Mensagem por knigh7 » Qua Out 21, 2020 5:57 am

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Re: União Europeia

#380 Mensagem por knigh7 » Qua Out 21, 2020 6:01 am

Túlio escreveu: Ter Out 13, 2020 3:55 pm
Quem dá bola pra isso? O RAMMSTEIN veio do outro lado mesmo... :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:


acordei agora com sono. Li a notícia da CNN, ainda sonolento.

Aí, quando eu coloquei aqui no tópico, vi o clip do Rammstein. O sono acabou. 8-] 8-]




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Re: União Europeia

#381 Mensagem por P44 » Qua Out 21, 2020 6:48 am

Já li que os 5G vão ser capazes de bloquear os F-35, não sei se é possível ou piada




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Re: União Europeia

#382 Mensagem por cabeça de martelo » Qua Out 21, 2020 6:52 am

Macron reprimands Turkey, accuses Erdogan of sending 'jihadists' to Azerbaijan

French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday demanded that Turkey explain what he said was the arrival of jihadist fighters in Azerbaijan — and urged NATO to face up to its ally's actions.



"A red line has been crossed, which is unacceptable," Macron said. "I urge all NATO partners to face up to the behaviour of a NATO member.

"France's response is to ask Turkey for an explanation on this point," he said.

Macron was speaking after a summit in Brussels at which EU leaders agreed to threaten Turkey with sanctions over its gas drilling in Cypriot waters.

But the French leader was also infuriated by events in disputed Nagorno-Karabakh, where there has been heavy fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces.

He alleged that intelligence reports had established that 300 Syrian fighters drawn from "jihadist groups" from the Syrian city of Aleppo had passed through the Turkish city of Gaziantep en route for Azerbaijan.

"These fighters are known, tracked and identified," he alleged, adding that he would call Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan "in the coming days."
Nagorno-Karabakh, a majority ethnic Armenian breakaway region inside Azerbaijan, declared independence after the fall of the Iron Curtain, sparking a war in the early 1990s that claimed 30,000 lives.

It is not recognised as independent by any country, including Armenia, and talks to resolve the conflict have largely stalled since a 1994 ceasefire agreement.

Armenia has accused Turkey of sending mercenaries to back its ally Azerbaijan and on Monday the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Ankara had dispatched at least 300 proxies from northern Syria.

Macron this week condemned what he called Turkey's "reckless and dangerous" statements backing Azerbaijan.

Nagorno-Karabakh, a majority ethnic Armenian breakaway region inside Azerbaijan, declared independence after the fall of the Iron Curtain, sparking a war in the early 1990s that claimed 30,000 lives.

It is not recognised as independent by any country, including Armenia, and talks to resolve the conflict have largely stalled since a 1994 ceasefire agreement.

(AFP)




"Lá nos confins da Península Ibérica, existe um povo que não governa nem se deixa governar ”, Caio Júlio César, líder Militar Romano".

O insulto é a arma dos fracos...

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Re: União Europeia

#383 Mensagem por delmar » Qua Out 21, 2020 10:40 pm

knigh7 escreveu: Qua Out 21, 2020 5:57 am Imagem
Fica difícil separar o que é preocupação com os malvados chineses do que seria uma medida protecionista da indústria nacional sueca. A empresa sueca Ericsson é uma das concorrentes à instalação dos sistemas 5 G pelo mundo e está lutando por contratos nos EUA, um mercado fantástico. Assim nada como concordar cos os americanos e banir os chineses também. Se a Ericsson entrar com o 5 G nos USA vai levar uma grana preta. Nós não ganhamos nada nessa briga.




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Re: União Europeia

#384 Mensagem por Túlio » Qua Out 21, 2020 11:29 pm

delmar escreveu: Qua Out 21, 2020 10:40 pm
Fica difícil separar o que é preocupação com os malvados chineses do que seria uma medida protecionista da indústria nacional sueca. A empresa sueca Ericsson é uma das concorrentes à instalação dos sistemas 5 G pelo mundo e está lutando por contratos nos EUA, um mercado fantástico. Assim nada como concordar cos os americanos e banir os chineses também. Se a Ericsson entrar com o 5 G nos USA vai levar uma grana preta. Nós não ganhamos nada nessa briga.
Penso diferente, não ganha quem não sabe JOGAR, especialmente quando a sua carta na manga é um dos maiores mercados de telefonia móvel do mundo. Tem que chegar junto tipo aquele puliça corrupto do Tropa de Elite, "quem quer rir tem que fazer rir"... :twisted: :twisted: :twisted: :twisted:





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Re: União Europeia

#385 Mensagem por delmar » Qui Out 22, 2020 9:39 am

Concordo apenas em parte com o camarada Túlio. Há uma diferença básica entre a Suécia e o Brasil. Eles são vendedores e nós compradores, Eles devem denegrir a concorrência, colocando defeitos nos produtos rivais e valorizando o próprio. Nós, como clientes, devemos estimular a concorrência entre os vendedores para obtermos melhores preços e condições. Ao que sei só a Ericsson, a Nokia e a Huawey estão fornecendo a tecnologia de transmissão, assim não acho prudente concentrarmos ainda mais as opções diminuindo os concorrentes de três para dois, com o veto aos chineses.




Todas coisas que nós ouvimos são uma opinião, não um fato. Todas coisas que nós vemos são uma perspectiva, não a verdade. by Marco Aurélio, imperador romano.
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Re: União Europeia

#386 Mensagem por Túlio » Qui Out 22, 2020 3:35 pm

delmar escreveu: Qui Out 22, 2020 9:39 am Concordo apenas em parte com o camarada Túlio. Há uma diferença básica entre a Suécia e o Brasil. Eles são vendedores e nós compradores, Eles devem denegrir a concorrência, colocando defeitos nos produtos rivais e valorizando o próprio. Nós, como clientes, devemos estimular a concorrência entre os vendedores para obtermos melhores preços e condições. Ao que sei só a Ericsson, a Nokia e a Huawey estão fornecendo a tecnologia de transmissão, assim não acho prudente concentrarmos ainda mais as opções diminuindo os concorrentes de três para dois, com o veto aos chineses.
Na verdade concordas 100% e não viste, cumpañero Delmar: qualquer veto aos chinas se subordina a uma eventual reeleição do Trump ou uma mudança radical do discurso dos Democratas, se vencerem. E nem é só isso, não se veta o maior parceiro comercial e que dá um baita superávit todo ano (nossa balança com os EUA é tradicionalmente deficitária) porque mimimi ainnn minha santa IDEOLOGICE que me acuda, se JOGA com o que se tem. E a partir daí "quem quer rir tem que fazer rir"... [003] [003] [003] [003]




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Re: União Europeia

#387 Mensagem por cabeça de martelo » Sex Nov 20, 2020 2:48 pm

THE EUROPEAN OFFERS AMERICA CANNOT REFUSE
TARA VARMA AND JEREMY SHAPIRO

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The prospect of a Joe Biden administration is exciting for Europeans. Their long transatlantic nightmare is finally over. They can now believe that a more humane, more “European” political party has reclaimed power in the United States. From their perspective, this is the America that believes in the importance of human rights, the value of allies, and the reality of climate change. This is the America that Europeans longed relied upon and with whom cooperation can flourish.

The removal of President Donald Trump from the White House, Europeans are aware, does not represent a wholesale change in America. Unless Democrats win both Senate seats up for grabs in Georgia in special runoff elections in January, Biden will lead a divided government that will limit his freedom of action. The forces that brought Trump to power remain and could easily re-emerge in four or eight years. More immediately, the Biden administration presents its own challenges, which — even if they pose a less fundamental threat to the transatlantic alliance — remain vexing and divisive.

The lesson that Europeans should take from the long roller coaster ride of transatlantic relations over the last 20 years is that America is neither their redeemer nor their ruin. Europeans can and should continue to have a productive alliance with the United States. But as the United States becomes relatively weaker and more focused on its own problems, Europeans will need to increasingly assert their own interests and forge hard bargains with America on issues that divide them. These new transatlantic bargains need to demonstrate both to European publics and American leaders that the alliance has value.

There are many obstacles, but if Europeans and Americans do come together during a Biden presidency, they will represent a formidable combination, even in the context of a rising China and increased geopolitical competition. Together, the United States, European Union, and the United Kingdom still represent about 45 percent of global GDP, contain more military power than any other alliance on earth, and maintain commanding positions in most international organizations.

New Transatlantic Bargains

Europeans need to come to the new transatlantic table prepared with a proactive set of offers that both express European interests and might appeal to the new U.S. president.

As always, it is not clear that there is a cohesive European interest to express — Europeans remain divided on key issues in the transatlantic alliance, from the role of the European Union in defense to the right approach to dealing with the challenge of China. Europeans are thus unlikely to present a unified approach in the heady first few months of a new U.S. administration. They are more likely to rush to Washington in an unseemly race to ingratiate themselves with the new administration. But nearly all European countries want a more productive and amicable relationship with the United States. And a more unified approach is the only way that can work. If they fail to establish one, they will regret the lost opportunity in the less halcyon days to come.

There is reason to believe Washington will be receptive. Not only is President-elect Biden looking for new cooperation with allies, but most of the offers presented here (with the notable exception of climate change) will appeal to significant elements on both sides on the aisle in the United States. Accordingly, we present here some proactive offers that European leaders could make to Biden’s America, including new bargains on trade, NATO, Russia, China, human rights, and climate change.

Trade

The United States and the European Union are each other’s largest trading partners. Perhaps not coincidentally, trade threatens to be the most divisive issue in E.U.-U.S. relations in the Biden administration, as it was in the Trump administration. The Biden team might take a more diplomatic approach and may pull down some of the punitive aluminum and steel tariffs imposed on the European Union by its predecessor. But transatlantic differences on privacy, agricultural goods, and the role of U.S. tech giants will remain and will continue to sour transatlantic relations.

This is not a soluble problem — trade frictions between two such large and interdependent economic partners are inevitable and, arguably, a sign of the importance of their economic relationship to both sides. A new overarching trade deal, on the model of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership effort during the Barack Obama administration, makes little sense given the domestic politics on both sides. Instead, Europeans should make a proactive effort to lessen the next dispute over trade that might emerge from the nascent European effort to impose a digital tax aimed principally at U.S. tech giants.

A digital services tax would seek to extract money from tech giants, which as of now pay very little into E.U. member state coffers. Around half of all Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development countries in Europe have implemented or announced plans for a digital services tax. A Biden administration would, like the Trump administration, strongly oppose any tax regime that appears to single out U.S. tech giants. By achieving some early compromise on this issue, they could set a tone in U.S.-E.U. trade relations that would lessen the ferocity of any future disputes.

The European Union will be keen to push the United States to provide greater privacy protections in the aftermath of the July 2020 European Court of Justice decision to strike the E.U.-U.S. privacy shield as insufficient. Satisfying the court will require an enormous shift in American practices on data treatment. Biden has shown some willingness to move toward an E.U. model, remarking that the United States should be “setting standards not unlike the Europeans are doing relative to privacy.” American consumers share many of the European concerns about the tech giants, and such an effort would attract support within the United States, but it remains a heavy lift in the U.S. Congress. Biden would need a compromise on the digital services tax to create the right atmosphere in Washington.

Offer

Propose to the new Biden administration a compromise on a digital tax in exchange for greater privacy protection both from U.S. tech companies and within the U.S. domestic regulatory apparatus.

NATO

NATO remains roiled by a burden sharing debate that began in the 1950s and has only grown fiercer over the years. The current standard, re-affirmed in 2014, that all NATO members should spend 2 percent of their GDP on defense has only led to more arguments. The fundamental issue is that, despite their earlier commitment, many European NATO member states now feel that the 2 percent commitment is a poor reflection of the modern nature of national security and the contributions that they make to transatlantic security that defense budget contributions do not capture. They are quietly seeking to reframe their contributions to NATO in non-defense-spending terms.

This new measure could certainly include spending on overseas development assistance, contributions countries make to security through their efforts to combat climate change, and the cost that countries bear from economic sanctions. Such costs are as highly asymmetric as defense spending. One study, for example, estimates that Eastern European states incur sanctions costs amounting to about 1 percent of GDP (mostly from sanctions on Russia) while costs to the United States amount to only 0.01 percent of GDP. Germany, at 0.2 percent of GDP, falls somewhere in between. A new metric would establish a benchmark of spending that better captures this wider definition of security.

Such a measure reflects a view of national security that many Europeans and Biden administration would likely share. But no spending metric will fully capture the idea that what matters for defense burdens is the capabilities provided rather than the money spent. Accordingly, any agreement on a new metric probably also needs include a renewed commitment to provide capabilities for European defense in the east, and even more controversially a willingness to ensure continued American access to the European defense procurement market.

Offer

Europeans proactively propose a new metric of commitment to transatlantic security. This would require the United States to accept a new, broader burden-sharing concept, but one that would appeal to its priorities in the provision of capabilities and arms sales.

China

The European Union has recently toughened its stance on China and has described it as “a systemic rival promoting alternative models of governance.” But it is still prepared to seek partnership and cooperation where possible, noting that “[e]ngaging and cooperating with China is both an opportunity and necessity.”

Europeans would prefer to cooperate with the United States on an economic agenda, focusing on tackling non-reciprocal economic behavior from Beijing, taking the lead in setting the standards for new technologies like 5G, and punishing theft of intellectual property. The reinvigoration of E.U.-U.S. cooperation in Asia could take the form of a new Transpacific-Transatlantic Partnership (TTAP), encompassing trade, connectivity, and climate cooperation.

China is the E.U.’s second biggest trading partner (after the United States), and so Brussels may resist choosing definitively between Washington and Beijing. However, E.U. foreign policy chief Josep Borrell reiterated this summer that the European Union would not be equidistant from the two, recognizing the special role the United States played in liberating Europe during World War II and its contribution to building a Europe “whole and free.” Italy remains the only G7 or E.U. member to have endorsed the Belt and Road Initiative, a position now rejected by the Italian Minister for European Affairs, who declared in October 2020 that the Belt and Road Initiative memorandum of understanding “was a mistake. China under Xi is no longer was it used to be.”

France and Germany have now come up with declarations and guidelines for the need to build a European strategy in the Indo-Pacific. In addition to shared security concerns in the South China Sea, there is scope for cooperation on connectivity and environmental and climate issues with the United States.

The European Union could propose moderated cooperation on telecommunications infrastructure with the United States, as there is agreement that mobile operators must have tight privacy and security requirements and that dependence on any one company for 5G infrastructure should be avoided. Sweden decided in October 2020 to ban Huawei and ZTE from the country’s 5G infrastructure: It also happens to be home to the Chinese giant’s biggest rival on 5G, Ericsson.

All this activity implies there is now room for a broader U.S.-European partnership on the economic and strategic challenges that a rising China presents.

Offer

Europeans propose a comprehensive Transpacific-Transatlantic Partnership (TTAP) aimed at curbing Chinese economic abuses, as well as cooperating on connectivity and maritime security in Asia. This agreement could include formalizing support for Taiwan. Europeans and Americans could also work together to balance Chinese influence in multilateral fora and protect the multilateral trade system.

Russia

The European Union seeks a delicate balance in its Russia policy. It needs to accommodate both those more hawkish states in the east that fear direct Russian threats and those in the west that favor greater dialogue. Since the 2014 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the European Union has largely maintained that balance, symbolized by a fierce web of sanctions to punish Russia for its aggression. A Biden administration that looks more overtly hostile to Russia would threaten that balance, even at it might assuage concerns in the east of Europe of American abandonment. To preserve its unity, the European approach will likely focus on ensuring that United States balances dialogue with deterrence in its approach to Russia, while maintaining and enhancing its security commitment to Eastern Europe.

The principal early irritant in this effort will be the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project, which has created deep divisions both within Europe and across the Atlantic. Germany and some other member states support the project because they hope for cheaper gas and a more secure energy transit route from Russia. Some E.U. members in the east reject it because it denies transit fees to states on the bypassed land route, particularly a very financially hard-pressed Ukraine. The Trump administration has opposed it because it feared that the pipeline would increase European energy dependence on Russia and displace U.S. liquid natural gas exports from Europe. It has threatened secondary sanctions against European companies that are building the pipeline. The creation of both a European and transatlantic consensus on Nord Stream 2 in 2021 stands out as the key step toward maintaining a Western consensus on Russia during the Biden administration.

Working together with the Biden administration on NordStream 2 will require the difficult task of forging some degree of European consensus first. The key would seem to be a German willingness to replace the lost transit fees through investment in the Polish-led Three Seas Initiative, which seeks to develop infrastructure throughout Eastern Europe.

Offer

Germany and its E.U. partners complement Germany’s investment in the Three Seas Initiative with an offer to the Biden administration to create an Eastern Partnership Security compact. That compact would form a European structure for funneling both European and American security assistance to the frontlines of the struggle with Russia. This would offer Eastern Europe increased assistance and the United States an assurance of a stronger Western European commitment to European security, freeing up American attention for other problems while maintaining transatlantic unity and vigilance with regard to Russia.

Climate Change

As part of its European Green Deal, the European Union is proposing to implement a carbon border adjustment mechanism designed to tax imports entering member states based on their carbon content. The intent of measure is both to encourage other countries to adopt similar effort to de-carbonize and to protect the competitiveness of European businesses in face of imports that do not bear similar regulatory burdens. As president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, has noted, “There is no point in only reducing greenhouse gas emissions at home, if we increase the import of carbon dioxide from abroad. It is not only a climate issue; it is also an issue of fairness towards our businesses and our workers. We will protect them from unfair competition.”

A particularly ambitious proposal by Brussels to a new Biden administration might suggest the European Union and the United States adopt a common carbon border tax regime, forming a sort of carbon free trade zone. Such an arrangement would create a level playing field across the Atlantic, prevent an escalation to retaliatory tariffs, and fulfill a Biden administration’s ambitions to renew ties with Europe and pursue an ambitious environmental policy that meets European standards for de-carbonization. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, it would allow both countries to leverage their enormous economic power to push other countries to adopt similar environmental standards, achieving the dual goal of domestic protection and a greener world economy. Other countries could join the carbon free trade zone and escape the carbon border adjustment mechanism as they meet the necessary standards for de-carbonization.

There is some reason to think such an idea would be met with serious consideration by Washington. Neither side wishes to preserve the tariff war started by Trump, especially in the wake of a COVID-19 recession. Antony Blinken, Biden’s top foreign policy adviser, has also remarked on the importance of leading with Europe on environmental issues. In a recent Chamber of Commerce webinar, he remarked, “We have a very aggressive plan to move on this internationally — not just rejoining Paris, but also working to get our allies, partners and others to raise their ambitions. I’d like to think that’s a place where the U.S. and Europe can lead together.” Big polluters, such as Russia and China, which often engage in economic practices Washington regards as unfair, might also be pushed into concessions — environmental or otherwise — by a united carbon tariff regime.

If the U.S. Senate remains in Republican hands, this will significantly complicate the reception of this idea in Washington, as Republicans remain very hostile to initiatives designed to combat climate change. At the same time, with creative use of executive orders and existing regulations, as well cooperation with key states such as California, the United States should be able to make progress on this effort even without congressional action.

Offer

The European Commission puts forward proposals for a common E.U.-U.S. carbon border adjustment mechanism beginning in 2021, for a planned implementation in 2023. A Biden administration would reap trade benefits from joining this mechanism, and it would allow the European Union and the United States to then define common positions at the U.N. Conference of the Parties meeting scheduled for November 2021, such as a mutual commitment to carbon neutrality by 2050.

Democracy and Human Rights

The recent divisions between the United States and Europe mask a deeper fear that the West has lost a sense of itself as a community. After the end of the Cold War, the West became convinced that its democratic system would be the gold standard that all others would aspire to. As Ivan Krastev put it in 2018, “Even though the system was rigged, undemocratic governments knew it was important to at least pretend it wasn’t.” Now they barely even feign attachments to such norms, as charismatic strongmen from Russia to Turkey to China seem to have inspired a rising tide of authoritarianism around the world.

Biden’s election represents an opportunity to create a new democratic impetus. The 2021 British presidency of the G7 already intends to formalize the idea of a D10: a group of 10 democracies (the current G7 — Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States — plus Australia, India, and South Korea) that would carry out an ambitious cooperative agenda. Large groupings of heterogeneous countries will always struggle to agree on a common vision. A democracy club, unified by both strategic aims and political outlook, would have a better chance at finding one.

Issues that this club could tackle would not be limited to nebulous common commitments, but would ideally rest on identifiable shared interests. These could include cooperation on telecommunications networks, climate change, responses to future pandemics, promotion of developing democracy and human rights, and the efforts against unfair economic practices.

Offer

The European Union and United Kingdom jointly propose a D10 to the United States and hail it as a new framework for cooperation, thus advancing convergence with key democratic partners on priority issues such as digital infrastructure, global health cooperation, and the fight for human rights. In coordination with the United States, Canada, E.U. member states, and key Asian countries, a D10 would send a strong message to rivals and allies of the capacity of democracies to define a shared vision of a revived liberal international order.

If Not Now, When?

The euphoric transatlantic mood of the moment does not feel like the right time to embark on such a hard-nosed approach. But in fact, it is the most propitious moment Europeans are ever likely to have. If European leaders show up in Washington one by one and effectively say to the new president, “How can I help you?” then the Biden administration, like the Obama administration before it, will mostly take European support for granted.

To create a more sustainable basis for transatlantic ties, Europeans need to show both the new administration and their own publics that they can forge tough bargains with a cooperative U.S. president that benefit both sides of the Atlantic. This article has described six potential offers they might make. All would be difficult to realize on both sides. But without such a European effort on these or other issues, transatlantic relations will simply drift back into their default mode of slow decay, waiting for the next Trump-like figure to arrive and administer the final deathblow.


Tara Varma is the head of the European Council on Foreign Relations’ Paris office. She focuses on European and Asian security.

Jeremy Shapiro is the director of research at the European Council on Foreign Relations and a non-resident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. Previously, he was an official at the U.S. State Department.

Image: White House (Photo by David Lienemann)

https://warontherocks.com/2020/11/the-e ... ot-refuse/




"Lá nos confins da Península Ibérica, existe um povo que não governa nem se deixa governar ”, Caio Júlio César, líder Militar Romano".

O insulto é a arma dos fracos...

https://i.postimg.cc/QdsVdRtD/exwqs.jpg
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Re: União Europeia

#388 Mensagem por Túlio » Sex Nov 20, 2020 5:15 pm

cabeça de martelo escreveu: Sex Nov 20, 2020 2:48 pm THE EUROPEAN OFFERS AMERICA CANNOT REFUSE
TARA VARMA AND JEREMY SHAPIRO

Imagem

Bâmo lá negada que os EUA elegeram um trouxa!!! [026] [037] [061] [078]

https://warontherocks.com/2020/11/the-e ... ot-refuse/
CRUZ CREDO, isso parece um texto do século XIX transposto para o século XXI, é muita cara de pau eurocêntrica de parte dos autores; mesmo o POTUS mais incompetente que vi em meus dias neste nebuloso vale de lágrimas, o Jimmy Carter, não cairia na esparrela proposta, um amontoado de wishful thinking com (falsas) boas intenções. Nem vou comentar tudo, apenas o mais óbvio:

:arrow: NORDSTREAM - Vira num tipo de "Nordstream do B", que em bom Português (o de verdade :mrgreen: ) significa que deixa de ser uma coisa mas não consegue chegar a ser a outra. Sério que o Putin e seja quem for que assuma nos EUA vai topar um troço "salomônico" desses? PUTZ!!!

:arrow: TAXAR OS US TECH GIANTS - Nem a pau! O Trump era contra (e se continuar a ser POTUS, continua contra) sequer taxá-las, quanto mais no exterior; já o Biden quer taxas, mas PRA ELE, não pra Europeu;

:arrow: NOVA ROTA DA SEDA - Uma iniciativa que nem nome tinha mas estava em andamento desde fins do século passado foi, com um "pequeno atraso" de bem mais de 20 anos, compreendida pela dupla Françuá/Fritz, e apenas porque o atual Grande Timoneiro acelerou demais e deu na vista: a anterior era, séculos atrás e a grosso modo, uma maneira de partir da Europa e trocar suas bugigangas pelas riquezas da Ásia, trazendo-as para casa na volta; a atual é o inverso, com a vantagem de se estender pelo resto do planeta (o que os Europeus não conseguiram em sua época, porque estavam muito ocupados se matando entre si e torrando as enormes riquezas que coletavam para fazer isso; mesmo os Descobrimentos não ajudaram neste ponto). Pensar que só com bafo e canetaço vão conseguir desmanchar a mais genial manobra geopolítica da Idade Moderna é achar que só tem bobo no mundo, nem o já citado Carter cairia nessa.

:arrow: OTAN - Aqui sim, se superaram: querem botar todo o seu passivo no mesmo balaio onde o outro bota seus ativos, e com uma desculpa pra lá de esfarrapada. NÃO VAI COLAR! :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

Mas temos a PÉROLA DAS PÉROLAS:

:arrow: D10 - Ou seja, agora só é Democracia - melhor ainda, só é Governo Legítimo - quem a Europa (mais precisamente a França, aspirante a voltar aos bons tempos em que era o Árbitro Supremo da Europa Continental) disser que é. Quedam-se fora Países "pequenos e desimportantes" como CHINA, RÚSSIA e até BRASIL, além do monte de outros Países que estes três influenciam (entre estes a cada vez mais belicosa TURQUIA, manejada pela Rússia).

Santa inocência... [091] [091] [091] [091]




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Re: União Europeia

#389 Mensagem por gabriel219 » Sex Nov 20, 2020 6:01 pm

Europeus vivem numa bolha e que está pra ser estourada.




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Re: União Europeia

#390 Mensagem por Túlio » Sex Nov 20, 2020 6:45 pm

gabriel219 escreveu: Sex Nov 20, 2020 6:01 pm Europeus vivem numa bolha e que está pra ser estourada.
O estouro já começou e nem foi em 2020 mas tudo bem, deixa eles com seus sonhos hegemônicos. Será que ninguém notou a magnitude do Tratado (RCEP ou Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership) recém assinado entre a China e vários dos alegados (no texto) "aspirantes à periferia do Novo Sacro Império Romano do Ocidente/Oriente", como Austrália (e, por tabela, Nova Zelândia), Coréia do Sul e Japão? É uma manobra tão brilhante que se sobrepõe ao conceito formal de Geopolítica e Geoeconomia, na prática é GEOESTRATÉGIA PURA! Bota a UE e qualquer parceria a que aspire com os EUA no chinelo, pois na prática é a China absorvendo o ASEAN inteiro de uma só vez!!!

E não vai ficar só nisso, é melhor já ir todo mundo (nós inclusive) se conformando: se o século XX foi indubitavelmente o Século Americano (EUA), o atual tem tudo para ser mesmo o Século Chinês, e do jeito que conseguiram botar a mídia inteira no bolso, a ponto de ocultar uma óbvia Guerra Biológica, botar a Europa Ocidental de joelhos vai ser brincadeira de criança.


PS.: tinha esquecido de mencionar no post anterior, alguém aí leva a sério que é uma boa coisa boicotar Huawei e ZTEC pra beneficiar a Europa Ocidental? Entre quem nos deixa em paz e quem vive querendo mandar em nós e nos explorar, sancionar e boicotar, não pelos motivos que alega mas por politicagem interna, quem será que eu escolheria? :twisted: :twisted: :twisted: :twisted:



EDIT - Não confundir minha posição em relação à UE com a que tenho em relação a Portugal: uma é uma entidade que vejo com essencialmente PERVERSA E HEGEMÔNICA e outro é um País periférico (e até meio indesejado) lá e que deu origem ao meu. Aliás, minha treta mesmo é com Paris, Berlim e seu CAPITÃO DO MATO, Bruxelas, no Continente; em adição, Londres na parte insular. O resto para mim é gente buena, apenas tem o azar/burrice de aceitar ser tangida por quem quer mais é que se FUOOOOODA.




“Look at these people. Wandering around with absolutely no idea what's about to happen.”

P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
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