Why is North America mimicking Western Europe?
By: Rachel Marsden
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Spending a few weeks away from Europe over the
summer, it’s impossible not to notice the ways in which the U.S. and Canada
insist on copycatting various aspects of Western European life.
First up: the summer ritual called “Dîner en Blanc.” Launched in Paris in 1988,
it’s an annual event in which large groups of people eat a meal in a public
space and attendees must wear white. In its city of origin, the dinner takes
place at various historic sites such as the Louvre, the Eiffel Tower, the
Invalides war museum, the Château de Versailles and the Champs-Élysées. A
high-end caterer to the French presidential palace provided this year’s fare.
The concept has been adapted by various North American cities. A walk along the
local seawall earlier this month revealed a gathering of duck-lipped,
cleavage-popping women, many of them dressed like fairies or princesses, and men
who looked like they rummaged through their closets for off-white golf shorts
and a polo shirt. Beside a little wicker Eiffel Tower sat what looked like a
giant pan of taco meat. An “Instagrammable” corner was set up with white chairs
and flower bouquets for scenic selfies. Toto, I have a feeling we’re not in
Paris anymore.
Then we have the “car-free” days that now plague select North America cities.
(Quick, there’s still time to nip this one in the bud before it spreads.) A
concept originally launched in Europe, it gained significant traction in 2018,
when Paris and Brussels decided to block traffic to “celebrate” other means of
transportation.
In Paris, where the city shuts down the Champs-Élysées, the event has become
associated with the Socialist mayor’s obsession with making motorists’ lives as
difficult as possible. It’s an opportunity for drivers to idle in gridlock or
take time-wasting and gas-guzzling detours to avoid it. Pedestrians can
celebrate car-free day by getting run down by high-speed electric scooters that
treat sidewalks like the Autobahn and whose drivers ignore normal rules of the
road. Alternatively, these poor pedestrians could rejoice in taking overcrowded
public transit plagued by the delays and detours caused by the roadblocks.
Western Europe doesn’t have the vast natural resources of North America, which
is why European politicians preach conservation of resources (such as fuel and
water) like it’s a religion. You can’t use a shower at a public swimming pool in
Paris without having to activate it every three seconds. The U.S. and Canada
don’t have the same concerns. The showers at the local swimming pool here in
suburban Vancouver have the proper water pressure — that of a firehose.
Western Europe is never going to be energy-independent when it comes to car
fuel. It’s already expensive — over $6 a gallon — so it’s not hard to understand
why an additional “environmental” tax on gas was what sparked the Yellow Vest
protests in France, which are now in their 40th week. It’s a scam that North
America has a virtually endless supply of fuel and is nonetheless mimicking
Europe’s handwringing over resource scarcity. There’s no need for any days to be
“car-free” in North America. It’s nothing but an imported gimmick that adds a
senseless layer of annoyance to the already challenging daily obstacle course
faced by working people.
Next up: climate change. Yes, Europe had some hot days this summer — the
operative word here being “summer.” Paris even broke a heat record from 1947.
For professional climate alarmists and profiteers, this 72-year gap between heat
records apparently proves that climate change is accelerating. They’re peddling
a strained narrative that’s good for their own bottom line. European politicians
are signing onto it because it’s profitable for government: You can be taxed for
your sins of resource consumption.
Here in Vancouver, however (and across much of Canada), the summer has been
quite mild. Apparently the cure for summertime “climate change” is to get on an
airplane and go somewhere temperate. Who knew?
No politician in North America should be paying any attention to the Paris
accord on climate change, yet politicians in both the U.S. and Canada are
obsessing over it in the run-up to national elections. Let the Europeans preach
to their already overtaxed populations, which are starting to see through their
governments’ attempts to squeeze more cash out of citizens for the
environmentalism collection plate.
The next time you see a strange trend that looks out of place in North America,
check the label. It probably reads “Made in Europe” and should be sent back,
pronto.
COPYRIGHT 2019 RACHEL MARSDEN