Oh, and seriously, those Japanese people singing a song which happens to be the "European anthem" (who the hell decided that, anyway?) is supposed toe prove what, exactly? Nothing. It means nothing.
Why the quotation marks? IT is the anthem, after all - just without the words. And it wasn't meant to prove anything: It was meant to show that there is something greater than national identity, something that is present in every human on the planet.
That goes for every last one of ya, regardless of your race, color, or your creed. (Attention, OOC quote!
)
And that, I guess, is what being a European liberal is about; just think Karl Popper, the liberal razorblade. Although a European liberal in the Scrivean sense may be something altogether different
I'm german, I should mention, and I live in the west of the country. I'm a great fan of the west and the north of Germany! And I loathe the bavarians (except for the ones I have met
) with every fiber of my being - does that mean I want them out of Germany? A "Kleinstdeutsche Lösung"?
Of course it doesn't. And I do support policies that would no be beneficial for my specific region; I support mostly policies that are beneficial for all who live here. How is that different from the European level? Being German, or Swedish, or Polish, or Greek does not mean bleeding the other countries for the sake of one's own - it means finding out what's best for all, while having a special affection for one's own country or people.
Just two more quick points, about the freedom and the neoliberalism things:
1) How would the EU take away freedom from you? Freedom - at least in the usual sense - refers to individual freedom; there is and can be no such thing as collective freedom. "A free people" usually meant "a people free from exploitation" in the past, and that meant "politically sovereign" as well back then. But who would honestly want to argue that the Northern countries will be exploited in the Union?
(Apparently nowadays
everyone in the EU complains about oppression - except for those who are doing well economically; they commplain about having to pay
)
2) Neoliberalism - I admit that there has been a lot of deregulation in the past. But deregulation and the EU are not causally related! When - if - we get a Union, we will finally have a representative democracy in Brussels (or somewhere else; a shift in location would make for a good change of image I guess), and be able to decide
for ourselves what economic policies we will enact.
That being said, does anyone have an opinion about what a more perfect union would look like politically, once Europe gets its act together?
EDIT: I second what Oliolli said below.