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Posted by madars 6 hours ago

Digital euro clears key hurdle as EU seeks to break free from U.S. credit cards(finance.yahoo.com)
96 points | 119 comments
cloudengineer94 5 hours ago|
Reminder to the people reading this thread and overall comments, that in Europe everyone uses Debit Cards instead of Credit Cards.

Credit Card in Europe is very much associated with Debt.

orwin 4 hours ago||
And even when you have a credit card, it might act like a debit card (every payment shows as debit in your banking app, even if you really pay on the 10th of the month or something).
lxgr 4 hours ago|||
Reminder to all commenters that Europe is not a single homogeneous country and somewhat diverse in various things, including payments and finance. Credit cards are definitely a thing in many European countries.
testfrequency 4 hours ago|||
Slowly coming to a close in the US also.

Some places already of course not accepting Amex, some places not accepting Visa Infinites (CSR, Venture, etc).

The future of banking is direct. The days of free rewards at a loss are gone as premium US cards are nearing the $1,000 AF mark for luxury coupons.

izacus 4 hours ago|||
Yep, although a huge % of banks are issuing Visa and MasterCard debit cards as default nowadays.
retired 4 hours ago|||
And most Europeans that have a credit-card need to pay them off at the end of the month. Technically they are charge cards. Unlike a traditional credit card, a charge card does not allow you to carry a revolving balance.
hdgvhicv 8 minutes ago|||
I have to pay it off each month unless I want the high interest rates (20%? Not sure, a direct debit clears it monthly after payday and the 1% cashback is credited each year
nswango 4 hours ago||||
This is not true. Plenty of Europeans have credit cards which work exactly like US credit cards.

The main difference between credit cards in Europe and in the US is that poor people can't get them here.

lxgr 4 hours ago||
Let's not pretend that predatory lending is not a thing in at least some EU countries as well, just because it takes other forms (installment payments, buy now pay later etc.), but as a general trend, I'd agree that it's much less common.
lxgr 4 hours ago|||
Can we please cool it with the sweeping "most/all of Europe" assertions? This, just like credit use overall, is also highly country/region specific.
lotsofpulp 5 hours ago|||
The article uses the term credit card for apparently no reason, because Visa and Mastercard also support debit cards. The EU is probably more concerned about Visa and Mastercard payment networks being under the control of American leaders.
Muromec 4 hours ago||
We call every card a credit card even if most of them are actually debit.
Oarch 4 hours ago||
I'm in Europe and I can't say this is the case at all. I've never heard anyone express such an idea.
amelius 4 hours ago|||
Did you grow up in Europe?
l23k4 4 hours ago|||
It is a prevalent view among the lower socioeconomic classes.
gpvos 4 hours ago||
Among the middle and higher as well.
amelius 2 hours ago||
The problem as I see it is that you pay your credit card bill only once a month which gives you no bearing on your effective balance. This is mostly a problem for lower and middle income people who live from paycheck to paycheck.
watwut 2 hours ago||
Middle and higher income people dont need debt on monthly basis and see not having that debt as personal virtue.

It just makes no sense to not pay things right away.

amelius 2 hours ago||
Well in some cases paying with a credit card is the only option.
kevin_thibedeau 10 minutes ago|||
Notably, the IRS refused COVID relief applications using a debit card for identity. Stupid as fuck policy considering they're all connected to the main two credit processors.
Hikikomori 20 minutes ago|||
Haven't run into that in Europe.
freediddy 5 hours ago||
How does digital euro replace credit cards? That's basically the same as direct debit. It doesn't address the reason why I use credit cards.

I use credit cards as a proxy for my bank accounts. I know that my issuing bank will protect me from all fraud so I don't have to worry about losing money if I buy something from a fraudulent merchant. I also know I can do things like chargebacks if I have to.

None of this is addressed by digital currency, it's basically like using cash which is haphazard today when there are so many scams everywhere around the world.

lxgr 4 hours ago||
So you're really using credit cards as a proxy for a consumer-friendly (at least with regard to fraud/disputes) payments product.

Credit cards being more consumer friendly than bank transfers is usually an artifact of the concrete implementation, not the abstract concept. In many EU/SEPA countries, returning a direct debit is much easier than a chargeback in the US, for example. In some countries, people even consider credit cards as less secure because filing a chargeback takes marginally longer with most banks (and requires a letter as opposed to a single click in online banking).

If the digital euro is to succeed, it'll of course have to compete with cards on the usability side as well.

poisonborz 5 hours ago|||
In EU most people use direct debit. The term "credit card" is almost synonymous with debit. Chargebacks theoretically exists but they are more complicated, I don't know anyone who ever did that.
lxgr 4 hours ago|||
Do you mean debit cards? With very few exceptions, you can't pay with direct debit in-store, and for online payments at merchants that don't know/trust you yet as a customer it's also pretty uncommon.
amarcheschi 5 hours ago||||
Maybe in the past, but nowadays you can call your bank for a charge back or you have an option in the banking apps

I do have to say though, that with customer protection laws we have it has never happened to hear about a friend getting a charge back from the bank, usually you go to the seller first (or the platform if you got scammed) and you get refunded there

retired 4 hours ago||
I’m European and protection laws are nice to have but if a shop doesn’t refund you those laws don’t automatically give you your money back. That is where a credit-card comes in handy. I don’t know any bank that offers this protection on a debit-card.
tlogan 5 hours ago||||
Yes, but the EU is quite diverse.

I have some Irish friends. And Ireland seems similar to the US when it comes to credit card usage (vs debit). I assume that is because Ireland is heavily influenced by US and UK banking habits. On other hand, Germans only use debit cards.

padjo 4 hours ago||
I am Irish and in my experience most people use debit cards these days. I have a credit card but almost never use it.
l23k4 4 hours ago||||
Most people in the EU use debit cards, they additionally use direct debit specifically for utilities, gym memberships, etc.
mothballed 5 hours ago|||
How do you deal with fraud and people cleaning out your bank account money rather than OPM of a credit card company? Just have enough spare cash for a burner checking account and wait for the fraud reversal?

In the US you'll almost always get your money back if someone defrauds your debit card but you could be in for a painful time if you depend on the money in that checking account until it gets fixed.

jonathanlydall 5 hours ago|||
Banks suck it up, but fraud is likely a lot less prevalent because 3D Secure is mandatory for online transactions and chip and PIN were ubiquitous way before the US seemed to have started using it.
lxgr 4 hours ago||
The US still hasn't started using PINs for all credit and most debit transactions, and at this point it doesn't look like it ever will.

Apple and Google Pay are just as (if not more) secure anyway for the majority of transactions, and a long tail of US restaurants, hotels, corporate card issuers, rental car agencies etc. will simply never change their legacy flows. There are just too many incumbent stakeholders.

jonathanlydall 3 hours ago||
It’s a pity that US regulators can’t manage to mandate that the dinosaurs get with the times as fraud seems to me to be an enormous burden to US consumers.

Even if fraud victims get their money back, firstly it must be an admin headache and then merchants have to cover fraud losses/insurance costs and thus mark up all their prices to make sure they do, so everyone is subsidising the fraudsters.

I presume it’s lobbying that would/does thwart any attempts at any such regulation.

As someone outside of the US I would like to be able to largely ignore this problem as just affecting people over there, but unfortunately it spills into the rest of the world.

When I last had fraud on my card it was through an online US merchant, because, like most US online merchants, they don’t use 3D secure. If they did then blocking the transaction for me would have been as simple as pressing the “it’s fraud” option when my phone would have received a “do you want to allow this transaction of $X for Y in the US?” that my bank’s 3D secure system normally sends to me.

Hopefully Apple and Google Pay will eventually help things over there.

Symbiote 5 hours ago||||
2FA on online transactions, secure PIN authentication for in-person purchases.

These reduce the level of fraud, and the banks cover the rest.

The basic stuff (online shop not delivering, going bankrupt etc) are covered for debit cards in a similar way as credit cards in other countries.

I've never had a fraudulent transaction myself, and it's over 20 years since I first had a debit card — with a chip and PIN.

Muromec 4 hours ago||||
SEPA Direct debit still has a confirmation from the account holder. You usually see the pending transaction before it clears and can block it. Some banks (dreadful and hated bunq for example) require an active confirmation from the account holder before it is allowed to clear. Some have a setting hidden somewhere that sets the policy to autoaccept or something else.

I haven't ever seen illegitimate direct debit. I guess you need to have an actual business to issue direct debit orders and bank will show you the door and freeze your money if you start doing funny things. I guess.

Probably the dreadful R word has something to do with it, go figure.

On cards we also have limits and the only time I saw something happening was after being unfortunate enough to pass through ~~the ghet~~ the glorious capital of our continental Empire, majestic city of Brussels. That time the bank tried their best to call me.

thyristan 15 minutes ago||
> I guess you need to have an actual business to issue direct debit orders and bank will show you the door and freeze your money if you start doing funny things. I guess.

You are guessing right. To receive direct debit transactions, your bank typically forces you into an insurance contract to cover disputed transactions, plus they block a minimum balance on your account, plus they require some overview of your company assets, in case the former two measures aren't enough. No chance to get direct debit approved as a private person or small company. And the amounts you can receive, as well as the number of transactions will be limited to your insurance coverage. And if there are more than a very small number of disputes, you are done.

Which is why for small businesses, direct debit is only viable through some intermediary, if at all.

poisonborz 5 hours ago||||
Yes, I think most people have several accounts, or at least a main and a "spare money" account. If you can prove a fraud the law mandates the bank to back it up. In EU bank apps there are often many warnings and popups when authorizing a transaction. Also in EU you can get a refund of any digitally made purchase, by law you can send back the item for 30 days.

Chargeback always seemed strange to me and never needed it. Fraud should be reported and handled at the root, not by making digital transfers into some magic disappearing money.

wongarsu 5 hours ago||||
Never had fraud on my credit or debit cards, and with 3D Secure it's difficult to pull off (basically 2FA for all online credit card purchases).

But I did have someone fraudulently making direct debit transfers from my bank account. My bank cleaned that up within three business days

polytely 4 hours ago||||
can you give an example of being defrauded? I don't really know what people mean when they say that.
izacus 4 hours ago||||
The only place I (as an EU citizen) ever came in contact with direct fraud was in... US.

It's not much of an issue within the EU area. The banks tend to offer insurance products for people who want to cover that risk.

krzyk 5 hours ago|||
I don't think people keep all their money on a single account. I have 20 in my bank (different savings, some foreign currency accounts, etc.), and only one is tied to my debit card. I move money there when I need it.

Single account sounds more like a boomer thing.

pragma_x 5 hours ago|||
I was wondering about this. I wonder if there are insurance products to close this gap? Or maybe some banks offer accounts with different kinds of purchase protection.

I'm with you. While I'm no fan of the risk involved with missing a CC payment, there's a mountain of difference between credit and debit when it comes to fraud. It's literally you trying to get your money back (debit) versus some giant corporation trying to get _its_ money back (credit).

omnimus 4 hours ago||
There are still protections from the bank/visa/mastercard network.

Somebody somehow stole my card credentials (online i think) and managed to get money out of my debit account through some obscure way without 2FA. The money disappeared but transactions showed up as “uncleared” and after few days i had money back. My bank said that i have to wait for the transactions to clear before they can start the transaction dispute because now it's in network hands.

epolanski 4 hours ago|||
Your transactions aren't tied to some provider in New York blocking you over night?
awongh 5 hours ago|||
For a lot of Americans the credit card system is another tax on being poor:

People with stable jobs and good credit qualify for no-fee credit cards with rewards / cashback. As a consumer you benefit financially from having a credit card. Those elsewhere in the thread worried about "debt" - you just set to auto-withdrawl the entire balance of the card every month from your bank account. Now you have free money. I can't think of a reason not to take advantage of this system in some way.

But people with unstable jobs and poor credit help subsidize these "higher-end" credit cards when they pay high interest rates on their because they missed payments or hold a balance over multiple months. For those people credit cards could help with monthly cashflow issues but are essentially a scam and not much better than payday loans.

Yet another system that American consumers are kind of forced to participate in that's a sort of tragedy of the commons (high-reward cards wouldn't exist without the exploitation of other people not savvy enough to avoid high interest and fees)

Hikikomori 5 hours ago|||
We just don't have that much fraud instead.
larkost 5 hours ago||
I don't have numbers for you, but I do know that every European I know is much more worried about card fraud than the Americans I know. One quick example is that the Europeans get very nervous when the waiter takes the credit card away from the table in the U.S.. This is just not done in Europe because there is a (at least perceived) history of skimming in much of Europe.

One big difference is that in the U.S. cardholders are largely protected from credit card fraud (not debit card fraud), so the card vendors have to take the risk and so have robust anti-fraud measures (both before and after payment). Largely it is the merchants who have to prove that there was no fraud. Whereas in Europe the burden of evidence (not proof) is with the cardholder.

orf 4 hours ago|||
US card fraud rate is significantly higher than in the EU. In 2015 it was about 0.042% in the EU, vs 0.1388% for the US. The 2021 rates for the EU fell to ~0.028%.

You get nervous about giving your card to a waiter because you’re in a foreign place with a nonsense payment system worst than most developing countries and it’s not something you’re ever asked to do anywhere else.

Rexxar 4 hours ago||||
It's seem completely crazy to me to give your card to a waiter.
Hikikomori 5 hours ago||||
Taking a card away from the table is weird for us because it's not what we do here so it becomes suspicious. Even so skimming is much less of a problem since chip and pin were introduced. Nobody I know has had any issues with fraud. We also require 2fa for online purchases.

There's also a large difference between counties. In the Nordics its ubiquitous, I haven't carried or needed cash for almost 20 years. Meanwhile Germany has barely started to use cards.

lxgr 4 hours ago|||
Yes, because handing over your card to a stranger is considered a fairly crazy thing to do in most countries other than the US, as cards require PIN entry for most transactions (which actually does meaningfully prevent in-person card fraud).

In the US, you simply have no choice if you want to eat in a restaurant, so people are used to it. I'd expect total skimming rates to be higher in the US, since magnetic stripe transactions have been phased out in effectively all other countries. People don't care because they don't directly pay for the resulting fraud out of pocket. As a society, of course everybody still pays for it.

> Largely it is the merchants who have to prove that there was no fraud

No, in-store, it's the issuing bank that's liable, even in the US (unless the card is PIN-preferring, which is usually only true for foreign cards).

toomuchtodo 5 hours ago||
It’s fancy instant payments, which most of the developed world already has. The question is which unnecessary intermediaries do you continue to remove as you refactor legacy financial infra.

Credit card rails are expensive legacy rails, that part of the stack is the target to disrupt in this context. In the context of the digital euro, you can think of it as a demand deposit account backed by the central bank (as most fiat deposit accounts are in some way) that is portable between banks, like you’d move a US investment account that can hold securities between brokers with ACATS at the clearinghouse.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48415854 (recent subthread with some related context)

Global instant payment system map: https://www.pymnts.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/PYMNTS-Rea... [pdf]

drstewart 5 hours ago||
>It’s fancy instant payments

That's a massive oversimplification, and doesn't even address the OP's point that directly challenges this.

Lot of errors in your post.

Not to mention the fact that you confuse Mastercard and Visa for "credit card rails" further underscores this.

toomuchtodo 5 hours ago||
The exact technical details aren’t terribly relevant imho, just that the EU has found the will to implement a superior value storage and transfer system, a benefit of which is avoiding US entities and infra. I have intentionally simplified for the layman audience, and understand if you take issue with my simplification.

Your comment history shows a decidedly anti EU sentiment, including against EU sovereignty (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48515118, for example), make of that what you will.

> How come the EU is making a "digital sovereignty" push? Why are only EU people allowed to compete for EU services? Are there no evil people in the EU?

I like tech that improves efficiency (disintermediating unnecessary US commercial payment processors) and decouples from proven threat actors and nation state aggressors, that is my interest on this topic, ymmv.

__rito__ 5 hours ago||
Can someone tell me why the EU doesn’t develop something like RuPay?

Indian UPI gets mentioned a lot, but when Visa, Mastercard didn't agree with data sovereignty rules among other rules, India quickly developed RuPay [0]. Now most debit cards in India are RuPay. CCs stand at 18% share.

They also integrate seamlessly to UPI.

Why doesn’t the EU consider something like that? They want to jump direct to digital currencies? Is that it? Something else?

[0]: Data rules came in 2017/18, RuPay was developed in 2012 iirc. But it got unprecedented push after the rule.

sieve 4 hours ago||
It took some time but RuPay branded CCs are also available. I have been using them for the last 2-3 years at least. They work, mostly, with UPI.

Some merchants disable RuPay CC payments even when they don't get charged merchant fees till the payment crosses the INR 2K threshold.

Strangest thing is when I can pay the guy pushing a handcart around selling vegetables using a RuPay CC while a medical store refuses to accept it.

wcoenen 3 hours ago|||
> why the EU doesn’t develop something like RuPay

We used to have Europay, which competed with Visa and MasterCard. But it merged with MasterCard in 2002.

izacus 4 hours ago|||
This is literally what the article is about - Digital Euro and Wero are two competing solutions that are debated right now.
toomuchtodo 5 hours ago|||
They are, it’s called Wero. It is a stopgap, and sits on top of SEPA.

Goodbye Visa and Mastercard: 130M Europeans switching to sovereign payment - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48207004 - May 2026 (777 comments)

Wero – Digital payment wallet, made in Europe - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47038965 - February 2026 (132 comments)

Europe's Banks Launch Wero Payments to Dislodge Visa, Mastercard - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41666833 - September 2024 (88 comments)

Unofficial Wero Adoption Tracker - https://www.werotracker.eu/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single_Euro_Payments_Area

kkfx 4 hours ago||
It's simple: banks don't want the people they've fleeced to realise that they no longer have a role in the present age. If you let legal tender be exchanged directly via a central bank (which is semi-public by nature), banks lose a huge amount of liquidity that fuels fractional-reserve banking through loans made to generate massive amounts of cash, and without these, the banks are bust.
__rito__ 4 hours ago||
In many countries, at least some banks are nationalized. India’s biggest bank SBI (State Bank of India) is a PSU (Public Sector Undertaking).

UPI still connects with bank accounts.

My question was about something else: why EU doesn’t try and develop a homegrown card provider? It would provide exactly what MC/Visa does. Are we beyond that point in terms of technological advancement? Some other reason?

lmm 9 minutes ago||
> why EU doesn’t try and develop a homegrown card provider? It would provide exactly what MC/Visa does

They have. A combination of petty squabbling and the lack of any real value proposition has always killed it. To have any chance of succeeding in the EU a new system needs to be something that no-one currently provides, because consumers are unlikely to adopt something that isn't clearly better than what they currently have, but more importantly no EU country is going to adopt a different EU country's system.

ryukafalz 5 hours ago||
How much you wanna bet that digital euro implementations will in practice depend on two US corporations? The EUDI wallet implementations being rolled out seem to so far. (Apple and Google, in case it wasn't obvious.)
epolanski 4 hours ago|
The goal is to detach your transaction from a new York based point of failure.
petcat 5 hours ago||
This seems different than a credit card account though? I buy everything with my credit cards because I don't want to swipe my bank card at random merchants.
Insanity 5 hours ago||
This tells me you are likely from North America?

Credit Card usage is really different between those regions. While I lived in EU, I rarely used credit cards (even paying online works with debit cards). But in Canada/US, I almost exclusively pay with credit cards now when shopping. Although in fairness it took me a few years to get in the habit of using credit cards and 'collecting points'.

csydas 5 hours ago|||
it's about the payment processors, not the card type, though the article makes it confusing by mentioning credit cards as it's really not about that at all

https://www.ecb.europa.eu/euro/digital_euro/faqs/html/ecb.fa...

Read the FAQ, it's about no longer relying on US payment processors for handling transactions in a different country that may not support your country's payment system

basisword 5 hours ago||
A vast majority of card transactions in the EU are done via debit card. Credit card accounts for only around 25% vs debit. And the only place I've swiped my card was once, in the US, about 15 years ago.
petcat 5 hours ago||
> Credit card accounts for only around 25%

If this is true then what will this new "digital Euro" change about the reliance on US credit cards? It seems that the 25% of people that are swiping US credit cards are doing it for the convenience and benefits of using a credit card. Will this digital euro change that?

Symbiote 5 hours ago|||
The headline is probably written for an American audience, or for brevity.

It should say "Digital euro clears key hurdle as EU seeks to break free from U.S. debit and credit card processors". Most debit cards in the EU are either Visa or Mastercard, although there used to be more local/national systems.

ufo 5 hours ago||||
European banks offer the credit, but the payments infrastructure currently goes through US companies. The first step is to get those payment processors out of the picture.

In Brazil, which is further along in the transition to digital cash, PIX already supersedes debit cards. Some banks already offer deferred PIX payments, wherein the merchant receives the money right away and the buyer pays their bank later, with interest. The central bank is also developing a "pix with guarantee", which will compete with credit cards: payment would be agreed to be settled at a later date, with the bank guaranteeing that the merchant will receive the money.

esterna 5 hours ago||||
Debit cards usually also use the Mastercard or Visa payment networks.

Even though I and the supermarket I go to are both part of SEPA and I can issue a bank transfer that will clear ~instantly, today cashless payments still involve EMV for various reasons.

IanCal 5 hours ago||||
Debit cards are also mostly visa/mastercard.
yreg 5 hours ago||||
They mean reliance on US bank cards.
petcat 5 hours ago||
How does that make any sense? You're saying that 75% of Europeans use American bank accounts?
adrianmonk 5 hours ago|||
A bank card is a type of card. Credit cards and debit cards are both bank cards. Prepaid cards are another type.

With any type of bank card, there's a bank that guarantees to a merchant that they will later receive a payment. With a debit card, the guarantee is backed by money you have on deposit. With a credit card, it's backed by the bank's money, which is higher risk for the bank.

Two US companies, VISA and Mastercard, have big networks for processing transactions with bank cards. These networks act as intermediaries to connect merchants (who want to accept payments) and banks (who issue cards) together. It's much simpler for a merchant to send a request to (say) VISA than to figure out which bank issued each customer's card. The payment networks also define, publish, and enforce standards and rules for the payment process.

These networks aren't banks. But they are, in a sense, bank card companies because they are part of the bank card system.

So in other words, European consumers have an account at a European bank that issues them a card they can use for purchases at European businesses, but US networks connect it all together.

vinay427 5 hours ago|||
US “bank cards” as in US payment processors such as Visa, not “US bank” cards.
basisword 4 hours ago|||
Debit cards also use Visa and Mastercard
Symbiote 5 hours ago||
On an article like this, I encourage anyone giving an opinion based on their own experience to say what country it's from. (Or have this in their profile.)
oAlbe 4 hours ago|
It's the Internet. Just assume they are American unless otherwise specified.
amadeuspagel 5 hours ago||
> The approval of draft rules by the economic committee of the European Parliament comes after three years of wrangling between the ECB and banks, which have been concerned about deposit outflows and lost revenues and sought to limit the scope of the project.

This kind of thing is why I'm optimistic both about Bitcoin and fiat currencies in third world countries like Brazil and India.

kittikitti 5 hours ago||
I am hoping this could be utilized by those living in the US who also don't want to use the dollar. The surveillance has grown too large and I don't trust my own money. The IRS requires all transactions sent to them if they total $600 or more on a payment app. Why would I want my money in US dollar when the Euro has vastly more robust protections and less corruption?
toomuchtodo 5 hours ago||
Related:

European Parliament committee backs digital euro - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48645468 - June 2026

stackghost 5 hours ago|
This is interesting and poignant less because of the digital currency aspect and more because of the geopolitics. In a world where technology touches everything, tech itself becomes political.

The boulder that is de-Americanization has rolled too far downhill now and gained too much momentum; it can no longer be stopped.

The two thirds of Americans who either voted for Trump or couldn't be bothered to vote against him because they aReN't PoLiTiCaL are going to have to come to terms with their new place in the world one way or another. The US is no longer seen as a stable military partner[0], nor a stable economic partner as evidenced by TFA. It's easy to blame Trump but he is merely a symptom of the root cause, which is the attitudes shared by a huge number of Americans.

America will cease to be (and in some cases already has ceased to be) the world's epicenter of geopolitical soft power, scientific innovation, and financial clout. Treaties to which the US is a signatory are not worth the paper they're printed on. The foundations have already been laid, and the de-Americanization trend can't be stopped. For a people so accustomed to feeling like a privileged special class of world citizens, I honestly wonder if the American psyche can handle it. Probably we'll see a wave of people who "never supported Trump in the first place", just like tons of Germans were "never Nazis in the first place" once it became socially unpalatable.

So, congrats, I guess. At least you guys got some people with brown skin deported.

[0] https://www.readtheline.ca/p/matt-gurney-we-will-never-fucki...

omnimus 4 hours ago|
Don't underestimate how much in bed are many of the european politicians/oligarchs with US neocon class. Trump is also problem for them. If Trump gets replaced by some moderate neocon on wave of “good old times” every one of these lobbied politicians will jump back hail comming of the golden age, buy everything american again and delete all this sovereignity out of the sky.

Trump moved overton window so much we will be fed story about how we shall be glad for the corrupted but not vulgar politicians that do barely minimum.

stackghost 2 hours ago||
>If Trump gets replaced by some moderate neocon on wave of “good old times” every one of these lobbied politicians will jump back hail comming of the golden age, buy everything american again and delete all this sovereignity out of the sky.

I don't think so. In fact I think you, like the American delegation in the article I linked to, are dramatically underestimating the degree to which a lot of US allies feel betrayed.

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