It isn't the old style of authoritarianism, they know that doesn't work if carried out at the outset. It is the one where power and wealth is stealthily sucked towards an elite group, and once that is acquired then the rougher style can be implemented.
That ebb and flow of power and money is politics and economics at work - the rest is just rank paranoia.
That was the plan from day one of the EU project to gradually centralize all the power because they knew that trying to bring in wholesale a soviet style top down planning would enrage the people as they wouldn't accept that. So it has been a drip, drip, drip affair of ever closer union, whereby each generation would, they hoped, take it for granted that that was how life was suppose to be.
The ever closer union of the EU is such a thing and is a move to a Soviet Union style 2.0.
That's not even rank paranoia, that's an application for a tin-foil hat and a single-sleeved heavy-duty jacket with extra buckles.
More like you haven't done your homework and are very naïve.
Your 'more than' gesture and suggestion is a flawed relative posturing.
Given the topic is whether things are worse or better than they used to be, how is that the case?
The OP is more aimed at conflicts and wars as oppose to political power centres but I take your point. I wouldn't agree. As I have explained above the method used to day by them is this power by stealth and steady aggregation. TTIP highlights this now that the people at the top of the EU are playing to the US tune, almost. It may look fine on the surface but below this our rights have been hollowed out.
The issue is about what is the right set up or arrangement, not some inane comparison of situations.
And the set-up, whilst not perfect, is reasonably good - certainly better than it used to be, and better than it is in genuinely authoritarian piss-holes around the world.
It is not good because it is to top heavy with power concentrated in a relative few elites. This is sometimes referred to as corporatism.
I wouldn't agree, the EU is there, and this is what globalisation is all about which is basically a US and allies policy.
No, it's a corporate policy, and it's starting to develop resistance because it's no longer serving the majority.
But as I said it is backed by the politicians. It is the people who are resisting not the politicians at the top. Also, you seem to be back tracking because if things are pretty good as you say why are their groups now pushing back on what you say is a relatively better situation today?
They can't change direction from their ever closer union and what has been set in stone by their Treaties. And all these are focused on corporatism, a system for the elites to rule the rest; central planning or a Soviet style feudalism.
Central planning - or, depending on how you look at it, co-operationg - isn't intrinsically bad. Tax reform is sorely needed, and a focus shifted to public works co-operation rather than military or financial, but the structure is in place to do that. The application is lacking at the moment, but the structure is more than adequate.
All, or most, ideologies aren't intrinsically bad i.e. in theory. It is the application of them and the foibles of human nature, that is, greed.
You aren't going to get tax reform because the corporatists are pulling the strings and they don't want to pay any tax. They don't want to give the people a good life but would wish to move to a feudal type system, therefore, no real public works. And therefore, the structure isn't in place to do that. Application is pretty much non-existent and dwindling. Remember, the Nazis put in a lot of infrastructure and look how well that went....