By Guest Column Paul Belien——Bio and Archives--October 8, 2007
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We are Flemings, Brusselers or Walloons, we are Belgians and world citizens. We do not want to erect new walls between people, between regions and countries. We do not want to replace the solidarity principle by competition and egotism. Who gains when people are incited against each other? Everything we have in Belgium today is the common work of Flemings, Brussels people and Walloons. The solidarity between the richer and the poorer citizens and between the richer and the poorer regions are the pillars of our society. We demand decent wages for everyone who does the same job, no matter which language we speak. We demand that all compatriots have the same rights to healthy and safe living and working conditions, no matter where our factory or office is located. We demand that everyone who loses his job is entitled to the same assistance and help, no matter in which region we live. We demand that every child in this country gets the same chances, no matter in which region it is born. We demand that all the elderly have the same right to a decent pension, no matter whether they live in Flanders, Brussels or Wallonia. In short, we demand solidarity and no splitting up [of the country].The text of this petition is a clear illustration that there is no core to Belgium. The country is but a redistribution mechanism from "the richer" to "the poorer." The richer are richer only because they work harder. The solidarity which the poorer demand is not voluntary, but based on extortion. No wonder, so many Flemings have had enough of it. Solidarity in Belgium is (and has always been) a one-way affair, with the Flemings at the contributing and the Walloons at the receiving end. Indeed, the current crisis in Belgium results from the fact that the Flemings want the right to decide what happens to their money, while Walloon politicians veto any reform of the generous Belgian welfare system. Meanwhile the entire Belgian establishment, including the Catholic Church, is coming to the rescue of Belgium. "In our time we have to learn to live together with different opinions. In my opinion dividing Belgium would be an impoverishment and a wrong signal for Europe," Monsignor Roger Vangheluwe, the Catholic Bishop of Bruges (the diocese covering the province of West Flanders), said yesterday. Exactly 101 years ago, in September 1906, his predecessor, Mgr Gustave Waffelaerts, the Bishop of Bruges, opposed Dutch-language higher education for his Dutch-language flock, admonishing them that it is "unchristian and against the Catholic principles to aim for a Dutch-language university." Today, it is considered immoral for Flemings to want to decide themselves who will benefit from the fruit of their labour. Yesterday, the Flemish and Walloon political leaders resumed their negotiations to form a new government. Rumour has it that the Flemish politicians will soon give in and agree with the Walloons to establish a cabinet. Apparently they have been convinced of the necessity to save Belgium. "Everyone can be bought. Everyone has his price, and you will be surprised how low it is," a friend, a British politician, recently told me when we were discussing the Belgian crisis. If this is true, Belgium will continue to drag on until the next elections in 2009, when the Flemish electorate will be able to repeat to the authorities in Brussels that they have had enough of the drunkenness and the gluttony, which nihilists have the audacity to call "solidarity." Paul Belien is the editor of Secessie and The Brussels Journal. Paul is a columnist at the Flemish weekly Pallieterke and at the Flemish monthly Doorbraak and a regular contributor to the Flemish conservative monthly Nucleus, which he co-founded in 1990. Older articles by Paul Belien, Brussels Journal Paul can be reached at: paul.belien@pandora.be
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