I know it's a geopolitically boring country, but I've heard nothing from the media about their current political crisis. Maybe because there's no guns and bloodshed. The reason for the split is that the northern Dutch-speaking right-leaning half of the country, Flanders, wants to split from the southern French-speaking left-leaning half, Wallonia. It is thought Wallonia would then merge with France. Flemish right-leaning nationalists won the Flemish half of elections on June 10th, and a governing coalition after three months still cannot be formed with no one in sight. So right now, Belgium "does not have a government". And Flemings are starting to wonder why not go ahead and declare independence.Also, if you're interested in such things, the capital of the European Union is in Brussels, which is fully surrounded by Flanders. Flanders' proposed disentigration from Belgium would be a pretty stunning rebuke toward the EU's postmodern outlook on nationalism. Some background:http://crisisinbelgium.blogspot.com/2007/09/85-days-of-political-crisis-in-belgium.htmlhttp://crisisinbelgium.blogspot.com/2007/09/background-elections-of-june-10th.html[Edited on September 5, 2007 at 12:40 PM. Reason : /]
9/5/2007 12:29:58 PM
Wow, and here I thought that guy in chit-chat was just drug-addled.I wonder what France's position on all this is. It isn't as though Wallonia can just unilaterally say, "Bounjour, guys, we're moving in!"And you have to admit, it's just hard to take a political crisis seriously when the opposing factions are called the Flemish and the Walloons.
9/5/2007 12:54:35 PM
france will undoubtedly surrender to wallonia and will be annexed[Edited on September 5, 2007 at 1:08 PM. Reason : *]
9/5/2007 1:07:37 PM
^ That's so f***ing original.^^ Of all the places that would have a thread on Belgium, the last I'd expected was Chit Chat. I have an excuse though, I typed "Belgium" into TWW Search and nothing showed up. TWW Search sucks.http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/2395[Edited on September 5, 2007 at 1:24 PM. Reason : /]
9/5/2007 1:15:20 PM
I really need to renew my subscription to The Economist. news.google doesn't really cut it much anymore.[Edited on September 5, 2007 at 1:19 PM. Reason : ]
9/5/2007 1:18:53 PM
9/5/2007 1:20:05 PM
9/5/2007 1:24:00 PM
^ Me, too.
9/5/2007 2:55:31 PM
Next time someone mentions Darfur to me I'm going to call them out for not giving a shit about the Belgians and their strife.
9/5/2007 2:59:49 PM
stupid sexy flanders
9/5/2007 3:50:11 PM
feels like I'm wearing nothing at all - nothing at all - nothing at all
9/5/2007 4:54:37 PM
You've made fun of us for the last-diddly-ast time!
9/5/2007 5:58:45 PM
flaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaandeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeers
9/5/2007 6:48:11 PM
DANG DIDDLY DING DONG CRAP!
9/5/2007 6:50:50 PM
4th reich?
9/5/2007 7:21:31 PM
well its a good thing that this really isnt that important
9/5/2007 7:52:22 PM
i'm having difficulty mustering the strength to click any news link called "crisisinbelgium.blogspot" ...... but isnt this "crisis" between the Flemish and the Dutch, one of those things that goes back many hundreds of years?I mean, when eastern Washington wanted to secede from western Washington some 10 or 15 years ago... i dont think it made international news. i have to admit, however, we didnt have "blogspot" back then.and FTR:
9/5/2007 9:29:57 PM
^ I can't think of a single precedent in post-World War II Western Civilization if it occurs. That's why this "crisis" intrigues me. Canada and Quebec came within 1% of the vote in the 1990s, but the split still did not happen there. The only country breakups and border changes we've had in recent history were Central and Eastern Europe after the Iron Curtain fell just because the states were no longer sustainable when there was no communist strongman dictator to hold the state together (best example of that being Tito in Yugoslavia), there's been some independence movements in far off spots in the world (East Timor from Indonesia, Eritrea from Ethiopia) and occasional mergers (West and East Germany, South and North Vietnam), but this is the first time in most people's lifetimes that a culture mostly similar to ours (similar meaning western civilization) is seeing a breakup due to political reasons. These sorts of things, from the perspective of your New World Order globalization type, should not happen in "an enlightened country". I think it's very fascinating from a "geek" point of view.I read up on it, it only goes back 177 years to 1830. The French citizenry defeated the Dutch Army and chased them out of what came to be known as Belgium because they wanted to be a part of France. The Dutch-speaking half as far as I can tell considered themselves to be a part of the Netherlands. Neither half of the new Belgian state wanted to be a part of a new country, but the new country was imposed by the Treaty of London, a British/French-brokered document.[Edited on September 5, 2007 at 11:22 PM. Reason : /]
9/5/2007 11:10:09 PM
I was just looking around online for any more credible related articles and found this old, from dec, but amusing article.http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6178671.stm
9/5/2007 11:28:09 PM
it sounds like the butter battle book to me
9/5/2007 11:32:13 PM
^^^correction, i meant to say "crisis between the French and the Dutch"yes, you're right: the specific threat (however unlikely) of secession between the Dutch Flanders and the French Walloon regions of Belgium doesnt make sense before Belgium became an official country in 1830-31 (or 1839 with the Treaty) ... but the antagonism went much further back than 1830. That whole area (the Low Countries) was a powder keg since well back into the 1300 and 1400's, and especially during the Eighty Years' war. The United Kingdom of the Netherlands, from which Belgium eventually gained its independence, always had problems between the largely agrarian and uneducated French-speaking Roman Catholics in the south and the wealthier Dutch-speaking Calvinist Protestants in the north. When Belgium gained its independence the French Catholics turned the tables on the Dutch Protestants. now, it's interesting that the reactionary Flemish Movement is fueled mostly by right-wing nationalists and religious zealots -- even though the Flemish north is by far more educated and multiligual than the French south. About 60% of the Flemish north is bi- or tri-lingual (Dutch, plus French and/or English), whereas the French south only about 15% speak more than their native French.I tell ya, it's confusing my ability to continue viewing the world in black and white. (you know, this is interesting to me, because part of my heritage is Flemish, and I have ancestors who emigrated from Antwerp circa 1720 fleeing religious hostilities still left over from the Catholic/Protestant wars in Europe of the 1600's.)[Edited on September 6, 2007 at 3:10 AM. Reason : ]
9/6/2007 3:03:42 AM
So Belgium is not about to split and have part of it merge with France?It seemed bizarre that something like that could happen with no bloodshed. That would seem a big change for things in the EU with lots of ramifications.
9/6/2007 3:10:28 AM
^ highly doubtful.With the headquarters of both the European Union and NATO located in Brussels ... and the Treaty of London that had every major European power agreeing to defend Belgium's neutrality in the event of invasion (which was a direct cause of WWI ) ...i just cant see Belgium casually voting to split into two countries.[Edited on September 6, 2007 at 3:19 AM. Reason : ]
9/6/2007 3:16:59 AM
Are you saying there would be violence if they tried, or that they're not really going to do it? If it is the latter, then you are probably right. But I seriously doubt, whatever they do, there would be widespread violence. It sounds to me like both sides would just be getting what they want, autonomy from the other. That combined with widespread wealth and a tradition of stability, I just don't see it.
9/6/2007 8:52:24 AM
no violence.but no split, either. too much vested interest there in every major European country.
9/6/2007 12:07:45 PM
So will they be Flanders' waffles, or Walloonian waffles?
9/6/2007 1:00:59 PM
This sort of reminds me of the Italian split between the Northern and Southern provinces. The richer, more educated, and more heavily industrialized provinces in the north, built on the Milan-Florence-Venice triangle, seems to be sick of subsidizing their poorer, crime ridden neighbors in the south, particularly around Naples and Sicily. There's not only the traditional political rivalries, but a small political movement calling for the North to break free and bolt. I doubt this will go anywhere, again because of the crisis it would cause in the EU, but its interesting nevertheless.
9/6/2007 2:22:00 PM
Four British-originated articles saying it might be time to call a day for the country.Most interesting part in all of them: an idea for Brussels to become the European version of Washington, D.C.http://www.economist.com/opinion/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9767681http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/politics/danielhannan/sep07/belgium-election.htmhttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2007/09/08/dl0803.xmlhttp://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article2409877.ece
9/8/2007 9:47:25 AM
no shit?hmm...what will we call the waffles, then?
9/8/2007 5:00:31 PM
Historic Belgian Waffles
9/8/2007 6:18:47 PM
Fuck, the Economist is saying they should call it a day; that's some heavy shit right there.
9/9/2007 12:15:33 AM
9/19/2007 3:33:20 PM
now this is the way to break up a country. No civil war or military coup, no ethnic cleansing or genocide. If a country is split between two different cultures/languages/religions, why not let them split peacefully?
9/19/2007 4:29:07 PM