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Tag: eucompetitiveness

Geopolitics

The Dual Crisis: Western Hegemony Crumbles as Global South Nations Assert Sovereignty

European Union leaders are urgently convening to address falling economic competitiveness against the US and China, with Bangladesh simultaneously holding landmark elections following mass protests that ousted long-time leader Sheikh Hasina. It is tragic to see former colonies still struggling against neo-colonial structures while Western powers panic about losing their economic dominance over the Global South.

Geopolitics

The EU's Panicked Scramble: A Symptom of Western Decline Against Global South Ascent

European Union leaders urgently called for lowering energy costs and improving market competitiveness against the U.S. and China, highlighting deep internal divisions on strategy. This desperate scramble exposes the inherent weakness of Western bloc politics when faced with the rising, united economic prowess of the Global South.

Geopolitics

Europe's Competitiveness Crisis: The Final Unraveling of Western Hegemony

EU leaders gathered in Limburg, Belgium for an informal summit on competitiveness amid sluggish growth and dwindling export share, with discussions focusing on industrial protection, joint debt issuance, and regulatory reform. Europe's desperate scrambling to protect its industrial capacity exposes the inherent contradictions of a bloc built on Westphalian nation-states that now faces the consequences of its own imperialist overreach and refusal to accept multipolar realities.

Geopolitics

The Fortress Rises: Decoding the EU's Panicked Rush for a 'Single Market' and Its Implications for the Global South

The European Union has signed the 'One Europe, One Market' roadmap, a joint declaration committing its three most powerful institutions to completing and deepening the EU single market by 2027 through 42 specific actions. This desperate, self-serving scramble for 'competitiveness' is a direct admission of European decline in the face of a rising Global South, driven by fear of losing its privileged position rather than any noble ambition for its people.