By Daniel Hannan
The Wall Street Journal
March 11, 2011
On a U.S. talk-radio show recently, I was asked what I thought about  the notion that Barack Obama had been born in Kenya. "Pah!" I replied.  "Your president was plainly born in Brussels."
American conservatives have struggled  to press the president's policies into a meaningful narrative. Is he a  socialist? No, at least not in the sense of wanting the state to own key  industries. Is he a straightforward New Deal big spender, in the model  of FDR and LBJ? Not exactly. 
My guess is that, if anything, Obama  would verbalize his ideology using the same vocabulary that Eurocrats  do. He would say he wants a fairer America, a more tolerant America, a  less arrogant America, a more engaged America. When you prize away the  cliché, what these phrases amount to are higher taxes, less patriotism, a  bigger role for state bureaucracies, and a transfer of sovereignty to  global institutions. 
He is not pursuing a set of random  initiatives but a program of comprehensive Europeanization: European  health care, European welfare, European carbon taxes, European day care,  European college education, even a European foreign policy, based on  engagement with supranational technocracies, nuclear disarmament and a  reluctance to deploy forces overseas. 
No previous president has offered such uncritical support for European integration. On his very first trip to Europe as president, Mr. Obama declared, "In  my view, there is no Old Europe or New Europe. There is a united  Europe."
I don't doubt the sincerity of those Americans who want to copy the  European model. A few may be snobs who wear their euro-enthusiasm as a  badge of sophistication. But most genuinely believe that making their  country less American and more like the rest of the world would make it  more comfortable and peaceable.
All right, growth would be slower, but  the quality of life might improve. All right, taxes would be higher,  but workers need no longer fear sickness or unemployment. All right, the  U.S. would no longer be the world's superpower, but perhaps that would  make it more popular. Is a European future truly so terrible?
Yes. I have been an elected member of  the European Parliament for 11 years. I have seen firsthand what the  European political model means.

 
 
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