European Union
I believe that all politics create some kind of estrangement, particularly when large entities such as the European Union are at issue. The fact that power struggles dictate most of the current relationships between political entities and even individuals and their citizenry makes it difficult for a general individual to identify with a large entity of powerful heads of state that apparently pursue only their own personal agenda.
In addition, there is such a vast array of ideologies, that citizen estrangement is hardly a surprising phenomenon. Individual citizens can hardly identify with any single ideology with alienating or violating another. There is no unifying ideology that binds Europeans and their leaders together. There is no common cause.
A third component of this alienation is the fact that many member states consider the European Union as a source of failure, while the nation, made up of citizens, is considered as a source of success. Hence, the alienation between citizen and the European Union is exacerbated by the alienation between the latter and those in power. There is no conciliatory effect where there is a particular divide between those advocating for the rights of a specific citizenry and those claiming to advocate for the rights of the collective.
2. A Euro-skeptic might use the arguments above to convince citizens of a member State to leave the European Union. There is no unified concept of a European drive towards citizenry and success....
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