Agreed, though I don't think Europe is in any way comparable to the thirteen colonies in terms of unified cultures and common goals and practices. Although I used to think differently, I really don't think this alliance can work and last unless we somehow mix the populations of europe into a single bag, which would, ironically, reduce diversity by creating a single culture.
La question à un million de dollars, mon collègue canadien. When traveling outside Europe, I find Europe to be more alike among its members than when here. Many similar values and shared outlooks about issues, in spite of appearances. What tips the scale, in my view, are (1) the security rationale; i.e., lessening the chance for intraEuropean conflicts, and (2) the much larger market to which firms have easy access, strengthening the players in a global game now dominated by countries far larger than any single EU state.
Further, I wonder if we are not before yet another important dropping of blinders. The US was able for 75 years after founding to consider non-whites as less than human, and took until the early 20th century to give women the vote. Each of these two changes is based on a growing understanding of the nature of equality.
In my opinion, there
is a next step required to lessen the level of conflict, and that is the recognition that shared values are enough for people who look, pray, eat and sing differently to recognize that equality is a truly universal value, not a tribal one. That said, I also support the EU concept of devolution, pushing management of issues that affect local and regional communities to that level.
Further, I support any breakaway EU region; say, Scotland or Catalonia. But my take on that is that it is a move toward the EU I'd like to see post-nation-states; i.e., a Europe of regions and perhaps large cities (e.g., London) as political units. That is, as the EU goes federal, it also goes local far more.