After the big financial crisis of the last few years, many countries still have internal problems in their economy due to a chain reaction from country to country. No news at all, but people are now wondering if there is or will be a light at the end of the tunnel. Inside the EU the matter does not seem to cease. It's like a subway, except without the stodgy bread and spotty teens, which caries problems from the main station and dumps them to the rest of the stations. The big economical poles like Germany and France can stabilise themselves more or less. But what about the smaller ones? And what's the EU going to do now? To take some more money away from its inhabitants? To make companies move to another country, so people loose their jobs (again)? Perhaps China's multinationals will take over Europe. And then what?
Iceland, for instance, became as good as bankrupt, because the national bank exploded, like one smashed a big fragile vase into a huge amount of pieces. The snowball effect destroyed their fishing industry. The following action was joining the EU, in order to survive. For the Icelanders the hope is near, but for the other EU-inhabitants it's rather another burden which they have to pay for. The problems don't end there: In Portugal, Spain, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Other EU members like Belgium are also struggling with gaps in their national budgets. Large gaps. It's all just a matter of time. Who is next? The Baltic states perhaps? All splendid ideas to help those countries always turn into donations, covered under the term "global support".
On the left, naivity becomes a means to indoctrinate people that they are doing their best (when they just pay for it), forgetting that they've got - the one less than the other - the same problems. On the right, a handful politicians and media watchers are warning the governments. Warning that the end of the crisis is still far away, out of our sight.