Belgium Down the Drain *** A Throne in Brussels: New Edition

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This is the press release sent out by my publisher Imprint Academic (Exeter (UK), Charlottesville, VA (US)) who just produced a new edition of my 2005 book.

‘Belgium has served its purpose – a praline divorce is in order’ (The Economist)
 
The federal Kingdom of Belgium, whose capital Brussels is also the capital of the European Union, is now in the final stage of its collapse. Every year it gets more difficult to keep Dutch-speaking Flanders and French-speaking Wallonia together in the artificial multi-national welfare state, which the Belgian and the EU authorities regard as a miniature EU, the model for Europe as a supranational federalist superstate. This provoked The Independent, not usually known for its Euroscepticism, to comment on the irony that Belgium, ‘one of the greatest advocates of a federal Europe, cannot make sense of its own federal system.’
 

In the last couple of weeks The Economist opined that ‘Belgium has served its purpose.’ Reuters asked ‘Should Belgium break up’, France’s Liberation headed a front page ‘What if Belgium splits’ and even the New York Sun ran an op-ed asking ‘Who needs Belgium?’ The Daily Telegraph wrote that the establishment of Belgium in 1830-31 was partly Britain’s fault and that it is time to bring Flanders, a long-standing friend of England, back to the community of nations.
 
Two years ago, Imprint Academic published Paul Belien’s book A Throne in Brussels: Britain, the Saxe-Coburgs and the Belgianisation of Europe. The book, a history of Belgium and the dynasty which Britain installed on its throne, predicted that Belgium would ‘fall apart in the next ten years.’ Sooner than expected the final episode of Belgium’s collapse has begun.
 
Since A Throne in Brussels is the ONLY popular history of Belgium in the English language, Imprint Academic has decided to produce a new edition. The book explains the causes of the coming collapse of Belgium and its implications for Britain and Europe.
 
Dr Paul Belien is a Flemish lawyer and historian who holds a doctorate in International Studies from the University of Buckingham. He worked as a professional journalist for two decades, lives near Brussels and is an Adjunct Fellow of The Hudson Institute in Washington DC. He is the editor of the influential Brussels Journal website.
 

Praise for A Throne in Brussels

‘The warning contained in this book is simple: hold fast to your national identity, you nations of Europe, or else dissolve, like Belgium, in a sea of corruption and despair.’ (Roger Scruton)

‘If you read only one book on Belgium, make it this one’ (Daniel Hannan MEP)

‘This is a fascinating book’ (Hugo Vickers)

‘Consistently shocking’ (John O'Sullivan)

International journalists who would like a review copy can request one from the publisher.

 

Belgium as an EU prototype - even when going down the drain?

When in a few opinions given by magazines above, the word 'Belgium' is replaced by 'the EU', you get this:
‘The EU has served its purpose.’ ‘Should the EU break up’, ‘What if the EU splits’ and 'Who needs the EU?’
Not so long ago, this seemed unthinkable. Now, this looks like some interesting propositions. With the EU moving away from a useful union of economic collaboration for the benefit of all participating countries into a bureaucratic superstate, it becomes ever more compelling to ask 'Who needs the EU?'
With a 100 billion euro budget each year, and the EU government wanting to double that - what's the EU's business case?
If there is none, and the existence of wealthy non-EU states within Europe suggests that might be so, then I would like to say: get the EU back into an economic entity for the benefit of all participants. If that's not possible, then let's save all those billions of euros each year, and dissolve it.

Re: National Identity

"It is important to imitate behaviour of more successful models (India and China are clearly following the US model for example)."

 

Can you think of any other examples that fit that profile? Go on,have a good think. I know I  can.

National Identity

"‘The warning contained in this book is simple: hold fast to your national identity, you nations of Europe, or else dissolve, like Belgium, in a sea of corruption and despair.’ "

I can think of good things that can come out of a flexible national identity but it is important to immitate behavior of more successful models (India and China are clearly following the US economic model for example) than what is clearly expected of EU member states.  France and the USSR make poor models for the EU.

Belgium Down The Drain...

...and in the sewer.

Belgian TV ad shows pot-bellied,hippy Jesus performing miracles and picking up scantily-clad girls in a nightclub.

Yep,Belgium has served its purpose alright.