Actually no, France is more responsible for that.But UK is to blame for creating the US in the first place!![]()

Hydrogen is very light but also very bulky: at normal pressure 1g of hydrogen occupies a volume of 11.2 litres, so it has to be put into high-pressure cylinders (700 bars) which are very heavy and in addition their filling consumes energy as well as the decompression which cools the cylinder which has to be warmed up a bit.
There is such thing as metallic hydrogen.Hydrogen is very light but also very bulky: at normal pressure 1g of hydrogen occupies a volume of 11.2 litres, so it has to be put into high-pressure cylinders (700 bars) which are very heavy and in addition their filling consumes energy as well as the decompression which cools the cylinder which has to be warmed up a bit.
Just as a thought exercise: toward end of this decade, how likely do you guys think it is that Germany could decide to ditch NATO and get into an alliance with Russia & China? Russia for energy, China for market access. This would of course leave them with no security cover from NATO/US which means that if the future German leadership (in no small part influenced by the huge industrial concerns which have a lot to lose if cheap energy & the Chinese market is no longer available) decides in favour of such a geopolitical realignment, German re-armament would become an inevitability.
Looking at the recent pace of arms buildup by countries like Poland I can't help but think its not just Russia they are concerned about. I think the Polish already have an appreciation of the economic & geopolitical pressures that will befall Germany in the near future, and are preparing for a worst case scenario as to what the German leadership could decide to do in response to said pressures. I think the powers that be are already seeing the pieces on the chessboard have started to move.
By the way, Poland has recently officially demanded $1.3 trillion reparations from Germany for WW2.
![]()
Poland demands $1.3 trillion in World War II reparations from Germany
Poland's foreign minister has signed an official note to Germany requesting some $1.3 trillion in reparations for the damage incurred by occupying Nazi Germans during World War II.www.pbs.org
This just serves to illustrate the possibility of things to come (BMW moving Mini EV production to China):
The basic premise of this is that the current German political alignment is a result of certain economic conditions & equations being favourable to Germany as a result of maintaining that alignment - the question is, what will happen when those preconditions inevitably change.
Recall what I said in the OP "There are also a lot of EU countries neighbouring Germany who's own economic well-being is dependent in one way or another on the German manufacturing industry."
That, when combined with the effects of a slowing/receding economy (thanks to factors like the war, inflation, and rise in costs of energy due to Russia being taken off the market) is going to mean that the purchasing power of European economies (including UK) i.e. the size of the European consumer market, will reduce significantly.
One way for a manufacturing + export driven economy like Germany to compensate for that (or at least try to minimize the losses) is to double down on a growing consumer market the size of China. And if they ever want to even hope to see actual sustainable YoY growth again, they HAVE to find a source of energy that is at least as cheap as Russian natgas.
This creates a particular pressure for Germany. Increasingly, the US will want Europe to stop trading with China. They will want (and largely already achieved) Europe to stop trading with Russia. This has the potential to be a double-whammy for a manufacturing economy like Germany (hitting both production as well as consumption).
Germany is soon gonna have a decision to make:
1) Decide that they've had a good run while it lasted, and be happy to roll over and settle for a much smaller slice of the geopolitical power pie (there's no denying that the current economics-driven model has granted Germany more influence throughout Europe than they ever achieved through military means in the past) and let France take over political + economic leadership of Europe.
OR
2) Decide that the geopolitical events are shaping up so that the balance of power is shifting away from Berlin, all thanks to decisions being taken anywhere else except in Berlin, and that Germany will not stand for this. In other words, very similar to the kind of situations that led to the 1st world war.
I do not want to speculate as to which option they will choose.
For a start, this scenario is entirely absurd.Just as a thought exercise: toward end of this decade, how likely do you guys think it is that Germany could decide to ditch NATO and get into an alliance with Russia & China? Russia for energy, China for market access. This would of course leave them with no security cover from NATO/US which means that if the future German leadership (in no small part influenced by the huge industrial concerns which have a lot to lose if cheap energy & the Chinese market is no longer available) decides in favour of such a geopolitical realignment, German re-armament would become an inevitability.
Just as a thought exercise: toward end of this decade, how likely do you guys think it is that Germany could decide to ditch NATO and get into an alliance with Russia & China? Russia for energy, China for market access. This would of course leave them with no security cover from NATO/US which means that if the future German leadership (in no small part influenced by the huge industrial concerns which have a lot to lose if cheap energy & the Chinese market is no longer available) decides in favour of such a geopolitical realignment, German re-armament would become an inevitability.
Looking at the recent pace of arms buildup by countries like Poland I can't help but think its not just Russia they are concerned about. I think the Polish already have an appreciation of the economic & geopolitical pressures that will befall Germany in the near future, and are preparing for a worst case scenario as to what the German leadership could decide to do in response to said pressures. I think the powers that be are already seeing the pieces on the chessboard have started to move.
By the way, Poland has recently officially demanded $1.3 trillion reparations from Germany for WW2.
![]()
Poland demands $1.3 trillion in World War II reparations from Germany
Poland's foreign minister has signed an official note to Germany requesting some $1.3 trillion in reparations for the damage incurred by occupying Nazi Germans during World War II.www.pbs.org
This just serves to illustrate the possibility of things to come (BMW moving Mini EV production to China):
The basic premise of this is that the current German political alignment is a result of certain economic conditions & equations being favourable to Germany as a result of maintaining that alignment - the question is, what will happen when those preconditions inevitably change.
Recall what I said in the OP "There are also a lot of EU countries neighbouring Germany who's own economic well-being is dependent in one way or another on the German manufacturing industry."
That, when combined with the effects of a slowing/receding economy (thanks to factors like the war, inflation, and rise in costs of energy due to Russia being taken off the market) is going to mean that the purchasing power of European economies (including UK) i.e. the size of the European consumer market, will reduce significantly.
One way for a manufacturing + export driven economy like Germany to compensate for that (or at least try to minimize the losses) is to double down on a growing consumer market the size of China. And if they ever want to even hope to see actual sustainable YoY growth again, they HAVE to find a source of energy that is at least as cheap as Russian natgas.
This creates a particular pressure for Germany. Increasingly, the US will want Europe to stop trading with China. They will want (and largely already achieved) Europe to stop trading with Russia. This has the potential to be a double-whammy for a manufacturing economy like Germany (hitting both production as well as consumption).
Germany is soon gonna have a decision to make:
1) Decide that they've had a good run while it lasted, and be happy to roll over and settle for a much smaller slice of the geopolitical power pie (there's no denying that the current economics-driven model has granted Germany more influence throughout Europe than they ever achieved through military means in the past) and let France take over political + economic leadership of Europe.
OR
2) Decide that the geopolitical events are shaping up so that the balance of power is shifting away from Berlin, all thanks to decisions being taken anywhere else except in Berlin, and that Germany will not stand for this. In other words, very similar to the kind of situations that led to the 1st world war.
I do not want to speculate as to which option they will choose.
Seeking to defend himself against such growing criticisms, also as the EU is seeking to put pressure on Beijing to turn more definitively against Russia's war aims in Ukraine, Scholz wrote in an op-ed this week, "When I travel to Beijing as German chancellor, then I do so also as a European" - suggesting the trip in no way compromised the EU's united front."As is well known, we clearly stated in the coalition agreement that China is our partner on global issues, that we cannot decouple in a globalized world, but that China is also a competitor and increasingly a systemic rival,” said Baerbock. She added: "And that we will base our China policy on this strategic understanding and also align our cooperation with other regions in the world."