by Mark Steyn
The Eurovision Song Contest
doesn't get a lot of attention in the United States, but on the Continent it's
long been seen as the perfect Euro-metaphor. Years before the euro came along,
it was the prototype pan-European institution and predicated on the same
assumptions. Eurovision took the national cultures that produced Mozart,
Vivaldi and Debussy, and in return gave us "Boom-Bang-A-Bang"
(winner, 1969), "Ding-Ding-A-Dong" (winner, 1975) and
"Diggi-Loo-Diggi-Ley" (winner, 1984). The euro took the mark, the
lira and the franc, and merged them to create the "Boom-Bang-A-Bang"
of currencies.
How will it all end? One
recalls the 1990 Eurovision finals in Zagreb: "Yugoslavia is very much
like an orchestra," cooed the hostess, Helga Vlahović. "The string
section and the wood section all sit together." Shortly thereafter, the
wood section began ethnically cleansing the dressing rooms, while the string
section rampaged through the brass section pillaging their instruments and
severing their genitals. Indeed, the charming Miss Vlahović herself was forced
into a sudden career shift and spent the next few years as Croatian TV's head
of "war information" programming.
Fortunately, no one remembers Yugoslavia. So today Europe itself is very much like an orchestra. The Greek fiddlers and the Italian wind players all sit together, playing cards in the dressing room, waiting for the German guy to show up with their checks. Just before last week's Eurovision finale in Azerbaijan, The Daily Mail in London reported that the Spanish entrant, Pastora Soler, had been told to throw the competition "because the cash-strapped country can't afford to host the lavish event next year," as the winning nation is obliged to do. In a land where the youth unemployment rate is over 50 percent, and two-thirds of the country's airports are under threat of closure and whose neighbors (Britain) are drawing up plans for military intervention to evacuate their nationals in the event of total civic collapse, the pressing need to avoid winning the Eurovision Song Content is still a poignant symbol of how total is Spain's implosion. Ask not for whom "Ding-Ding-A-Dong" dings, it dings for thee.
One of the bizarre aspects of
media coverage since 2008 is the complacent assumption that what's happening is
"cyclical" – a downturn that will eventually correct itself – rather
than profoundly structural. Francine Lagarde, head of the IMF, found herself
skewered like souvlaki on a Thessaloniki grill for suggesting the other day
that the Greeks are a race of tax evaders. She's right. Compared to Germans,
your average Athenian has a noticeable aversion to declaring income. But that's
easy for her to say: Mme Lagarde's half-million-dollar remuneration from the
IMF is tax-free, just a routine perk of the new transnational governing class.
And, in the end, whether your broke European state has reasonably efficient tax
collectors, like the French, or incompetent ones, like the Greeks, is
relatively peripheral.
Likewise, on this side of the
Atlantic: Quebec university students, who pay the lowest tuition rates in North
America, are currently striking over a proposed increase of $1,625. Spread out
over seven years. Or about 232 bucks per annum. Or about the cost of one
fair-trade macchiato a week. Which has, since the strike, been reduced further,
to a couple of sips: If you're wondering how guys who don't do any work can
withdraw their labor, well, "strike" is a euphemism for riot. The
other week, Vanessa L'Écuyer, a sexology student at the Université du Québec Montréal, was among
those arrested for smoke-bombing the subway system and bringing the city's morning
commute to a halt. But, as in Europe, in the end, whether you fund your
half-decade bachelor's in sexology through a six-figure personal debt or
whether you do it through the largesse of the state is relatively peripheral.
In the twilight of the West, America
and Europe are still different but only to this extent: They've wound up taking
separate paths to the same destination. Whether you get there via an artificial
common currency for an invented pseudo-jurisdiction or through quantitative
easing and the global decline of the dollar, whether you spend your final years
in the care of Medicare or the National Health Service death panels, whether
higher education is just another stage of cradle-to-grave welfare or you have a
trillion dollars' worth of personal college debt, in 2012 the advanced Western
social-democratic citizen looks pretty similar, whether viewed from Greece or
Germany, California or Quebec.
That's to say, the
unsustainable "bubble" is not student debt or subprime mortgages or
anything else. The bubble is us, and the assumptions of entitlement. Too many
citizens of advanced Western democracies live a life they have not earned, and
are not willing to earn. Indeed, much of our present fiscal woe derives from
two phases of human existence that are entirely the invention of the modern
world. Once upon a time, you were a kid till you were 13 or so; then you
worked; then you died. That bit between childhood and death has been chewed
away at both ends. We invented something called "adolescence" that
now extends not merely through the teenage years but through a desultory
half-decade of Whatever Studies at Complacency U up till you're 26 and no
longer eligible for coverage on your parents' health insurance policy. At the
other end of the spectrum, we introduced something called
"retirement" that, in the space of two generations, has led to the
presumption that able-bodied citizens are entitled to spend the last couple of
decades, or one third of their adult lives, as a long holiday weekend.
The bit in between adolescence
and retirement is your working life, and it's been getting shorter and shorter.
Which is unfortunate, as it has to pay for everything else. This structural
deformity in the life cycle of Western man is at the root of most of our problems.
Staying ever longer in "school" (I use the term loosely) leads to
ever later workplace entry, and ever later (if at all) family formation. Which
means that our generation is running up debt that will have to be repaid by our
shrunken progeny. One hundred Greek grandparents have 42 Greek grandchildren.
Is it likely that 42 Greeks can repay the debts run up by 100 Greeks? No wonder
they'd rather stick it to the Germans. But the thriftier Germans have the same
deathbed demographics. If 100 Germans resent having to pick up the check for an
entire continent, is it likely 42 Germans will be able to do it?
Look around you. The late 20th
century Western lifestyle isn't going to be around much longer. In a few years'
time, our children will look at old TV commercials showing retirees dancing,
golfing, cruising away their sixties and seventies, and wonder what alternative
universe that came from. In turn, their children will be amazed to discover
that in the early 21st century the Western world thought it entirely normal
that vast swathes of the citizenry should while away their youth enjoying what,
a mere hundred years earlier, would have been the leisurely varsity of the
younger son of a Mitteleuropean Grand Duke.
I was sad to learn that Helga
Vlahović died a few weeks ago, but her central metaphor all those years ago
wasn't wrong. Any functioning society is like an orchestra. When the parts
don't fit together, it's always the other fellow who's out of tune. So the
Greeks will blame the Germans, and vice-versa. But the developed world is all
playing the same recessional. In the world after Western prosperity, we will
work till we're older, and we will start younger – and we will despise those
who thought they could defy not just the rules of economic gravity but the
basic human life cycle.
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