The Politics of Fear By George Papandreou

To those who were surprised that the European Union received the Nobel Peace Prize I say: ‘Think twice’. This was not only a deserved award for Europe’s contribution to bringing peace and stabilizing democracies in the recent past. The Nobel Committee was also sending a clear warning to contemporary leaders. I could almost hear them saying: ‘On this difficult Odyssey don’t abandon ship. In today’s world, the EU is too valuable to squander’.

It was an indirect but powerful rebuttal of the dangerous nationalist and populist rhetoric some politicians have adopted when describing the recent financial crisis.

This message couldn’t have come at a better time. Like ghosts from the past, we see political violence, xenophobia, migrants being scapegoated and extreme nationalism creeping into our public debates—even into our parliaments.

This is a Europe diverging from its founding principles. Principles that rendered nationalistic hatreds an anathema.

But it is these politics of fear that seem to have incapacitated Europe. A Europe seemingly incapable to end this crisis, a fractious Europe. This has undermined a sense a trust between us and in our European institutions. This climate does not inspire confidence either in our citizens or the markets. Nor will our retreat into a re-nationalization of Europe be the solution.

My recent experience in dealing with the financial crisis in Greece and in Europe has confirmed my belief that this is a political crisis more than a financial one.

I am convinced that, with the political will, we could have avoided much pain, squelched market fears, stabilized the Euro, while at the same time reformed ailing, unsustainable economies such as ours in Greece.

Despite media hype to the contrary, it is the Greek people who first and foremost have wanted this change.

Instead, we allowed fear and mistrust to overcome us. And fear begets more fear and uncertainty.

Instead of understanding, we have ‘name calling’. Instead of collective, transparent action of our institutions, we have moved into a mode where the community method is undermined by makeshift intergovernmental decision making, with the balance of power tipping dangerously towards the very large member states. Instead of real, necessary reform and fiscal responsibility, we are implementing an overdose of austerity. Dealing more with symptoms and less with the root causes of the economic woes of Europe. Instead of rewarding superhuman efforts, we are condemned for our shortcomings.

More than anything else, it has been this political climate that undermined our common efforts to deal with today’s financial crisis.

Whether it is banks or governments, we have adopted a passive, almost defeatist attitude, which we cloak in the language of ‘caution and responsibility’.

It is our responsibility to break this cycle of fear and mistrust now. We are vastly underestimating our own capacities as a Union. Our capacity to calm markets or create jobs. We again need to believe in the great capacity of our peoples north and south, west and east. We must rekindle the spirit that united us in 1989 when the Berlin Wall fell. We know the difficulties we then faced. But we did not cower. We decided to invest in the potential Europe and our peoples had. And there is so much hidden or untapped potential in our youth, our experience, our diversity and our cultures.

But this not simply an issue of political will. We must combine this will with an understanding of our real weaknesses. Over the decades we have become more and more interdependent in Europe. This was not by chance, this was by design – from the days of Monet and Schuman. It is this interdependence that has made the wars of the past unthinkable.

But if interdependence is important to keep the peace, it is not enough to make us effective, adaptive, powerful on the global scene. Neither does interdependence guarantee the democratic empowerment of our citizens and the liberation of our peoples’ potential.

In fact, this interdependence today is seen by many as a straightjacket, hindering us rather than giving us the capacity to deal with new global challenges.

The debate about the breakup of the Euro, or even euro-exits, is a case in point.

Our citizens therefore wonder whether this European structure is still useful or if we should go our own separate, independent ways. As in the Odyssey, the sirens are beckoning we change course. However sweet their song, we know their purpose is that we crash on the shallow rocks. If we are to avoid these rocks, we need to radically rethink our governance structures and policy responses, so that we capitalize on our strengths and neutralize our weaknesses.

Three fundamental principles must underpin a more progressive Europe.

First, we must strengthen Europe’s institutional capacity. Priority today must be in the financial – economic sphere.

The Eurozone is the world’s largest economy, the Euro is the world’s second reserve currency, and on aggregate we have strong economic fundamentals; but we are not able to leverage our strengths due to weak or missing institutions.

Despite significant progress such as: – a more robust fiscal monitoring,
– A European Stability Mechanism;
– a Six-Pack to strengthen governance and oversight;
– and a broader mandate for the European Central Bank, with the recent introduction of Outright Monetary Transactions, we must go one step further.

We have already pooled our risks, now we must pool our strengths. Eurobonds and a federal banking union are vital tools to safeguard the EU from similar crises and set our economy on a more stable footing.

Second, we need to liberate and reenergize Europe’s human capacity. High unemployment needs to be offset by investment in our human capital, education, research, green growth and the necessary infrastructure for green energy and a knowledge society. In our race towards competitiveness, we are emulating models that have little to do with our traditions. In many emerging markets, a lack of collective bargaining, democratic accountability, low wages, substandard working conditions, denigration of the environment combined with tax havens (which have robbed countries of huge revenues – an estimated up to 11bln euro per year in Greece alone) may offer a temporary comparative advantage. But in seeking growth, we cannot race to the bottom. We must base our competitiveness on quality not inequality.

Third, we must strengthen our democratic capacity. We need innovative democratic institutions that will empower our citizens and strengthen the legitimacy of our decisions.

The EU’s complex decision-making process has been an outcome of a delicate historical balance between member states. Today, however, people feel they are sidelined by these decisions. In trying to confront its fiscal deficit, Europe has run up a democratic deficit.

As we take the next steps towards European integration, we must give ownership of this process to the people. Policies imposed on citizens without their active consent are doomed to fail. Already, a frustrated, educated, but unemployed younger generation is losing faith in our European institutions and values.

This vacuum has created fertile ground for populism and extremism. When our citizens feel disempowered they will turn to saviours or target scapegoats, as they do not participate through dialogue and responsible deliberation to understand and solve common problems.

Europe can regain the confidence of the markets, but first we must regain the confidence of our citizens. That is why I called for a referendum in Greece so that people could debate and decide on their own future.

There is nothing wrong with European countries ceding sovereignty in the interest of creating a stronger Europe. (Indeed, they already have.) But as we do so we need to rethink how our representatives in the Union are elected and how decisions are made. An EU President, elected by a European Parliament or even a directly elected President, European wide referenda, forms of more direct citizen participation, use of social media are ideas already ripe to explore.

This new Europe, as I see it, will not be the product of one grandiose decision, dictated by an elite minority of powerful nations, or some anonymous bureaucrats in Brussels. Small, incremental but complementary steps—made by each of us individually and all of us together— will build the values and the foundations for the Europe that we want.

Democracy and education will give new capacity to our citizens and that, in the end, will empower Europe and reinforce its legitimacy in our societies and around the world.

We do have a choice. Either we empower Europe and its citizens and become a catalyst for humanizing our global economy or globalization will dehumanize our societies and undermine the European project. As a citizen of Europe, I vote for the first choice.


composed by Arswain
machine learning consultation by Anna Tskhovrebov
commissioned by the Berggruen Institute
premiered at the Bradbury Building
downtown Los Angeles
april 22, 2022

Human perception of what sounds “beautiful” is necessarily biased and exclusive. If we are to truly expand our hearing apparatus, and thus our notion of beauty, we must not only shed preconceived sonic associations but also invite creative participation from beings non-human and non-living. We must also begin to cede creative control away from ourselves and toward such beings by encouraging them to exercise their own standards of beauty and collaborate with each other.

Movement I: Alarm Call
‘Alarm Call’ is a long-form composition and sound collage that juxtaposes, combines, and manipulates alarm calls from various human, non-human, and non-living beings. Evolutionary biologists understand the alarm call to be an altruistic behavior between species, who, by warning others of danger, place themselves by instinct in a broader system of belonging. The piece poses the question: how might we hear better to broaden and enhance our sense of belonging in the universe? Might we behave more altruistically if we better heed the calls of – and call out to – non-human beings?

Using granular synthesis, biofeedback, and algorithmic modulation, I fold the human alarm call – the siren – into non-human alarm calls, generating novel “inter-being” sonic collaborations with increasing sophistication and complexity. 

Movement II: A.I.-Truism
A synthesizer piece co-written with an AI in the style of Vangelis’s Blade Runner score, to pay homage to the space of the Bradbury Building.

Movement III: Alarmism
A machine learning model “learns” A.I.Truism and recreates Alarm Call, generating an original fusion of the two.

Movement IV: A.I. Call
A machine learning model “learns” Alarm Call and recreates A.I.Truism, generating an original fusion of the two.


RAVE (IRCAM 2021) https://github.com/acids-ircam/RAVE