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The section "The Monnet Plan, an European superstate" reads like Eurosceptic propagandism. "Right from the beginning the EU was not intended to be about sharing or cooperation..." is a grand assessment of the EU that is out of the scope of this article, as well as a wholly negative assessment to which no counter-points are made. The sentence ""a whole series of concessions in regard to their sovereign rights until, having been finally stripped, they committed hara-kiri by accepting the merger."" is not attributed to any source. "there is only a new, supranational form of government beyond all democratic control. Governments and parliaments are left in place, but are subordinated to the EU. " Whether this is accurate or not, this is not a sentiment shared by all those who study the EU and follow its developments. It does not reflect the public position of any European government. "Beyond all democratic control" is a sweeping statement with rhetorical, motivational overtones, not an assessment of whatever democratic deficits may or may not be present in the EU. The contrast drawn in the sentence between "where there are vetoes, there is still inter-governmentalism, still independent, sovereign nations;" and "where there are none... beyond all democratic control" is also apparently a rhetorical statement, not a structure used to convey facts or third-party opinions. The sin of this section is that it takes the views of one side of the debate over European integration and presents them as certainty and the only views, in an encyclopedia which is supposed to present all sides of a debate. Hasta luego --TParis23 05:21, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
I agree entirely with Tparis23. The text in this section is uneven and unsourced and while I'm not surprised that the edit is anonymous, I am somewhat surprised that it emanated from Holland. Unless anybody has any objections over the next few days, I'll remove these biassed and unpleasant anon edits -- they are worthless. Robindch 03:01, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
Also, it was no secret that many supporters of the early EEC envisioned a move to a federal state, and the academic literature was filled with discussions of neo-functionalism. When intergovernmentalism emerged dominate in the 70s, that created a lot of protest from those wanting a federal Europe. Bottom line: during the whole process those wanting a confederal "Europe des patries" knew that there were many who wanted a European state. It makes it sound like a group of "insiders" had a "scheme" that was secret to others. That's clearly not true. Scott Erb 16:27, 25 March 2007 (UTC)
I agree with TParis and Robindch. Monnet was a federalist but in relation to the issues which had served to cause both world wars. His idea of linking the economies of the Member States was as far as he was thinking and in any case the Superstate issue only came to the fore during the negotiations for the Maastricht Treaty and by that time Monnet had sadly died. Federalism certainly means closer union but on the German lines. Eurosceptics seem to live in a world in which fact and fiction merge. (PDF)
That is incorrect. Monnet was a founder of the Action Committee for a United States of Europe. He was fairly open in his commitment to a European superstate (a federal superstate is still a superstate, so I don't understand that counterpoint - a Eurosceptic Briton would hardly be placated by being told Britain shall be like Texas and not Hampshire in the Europe being built). This article greatly downplays or ignores his federalism, and speaks only vaguely of European Unity. It reads now at least more like Europhile propaganda. I would like to edit it, with reputable sources. 120.17.38.112 ( talk) 08:01, 14 June 2016 (UTC)
This article was automatically assessed because at least one WikiProject had rated the article as start, and the rating on other projects was brought up to start class. BetacommandBot 14:28, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
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Quoting from the lead:
What does this mean? — Brigade Piron ( talk) 18:07, 22 April 2016 (UTC)
I replaced the strangely worded sentence with a direct quote from the referenced article. Cunningpal ( talk) 14:07, 18 October 2016 (UTC)
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@ NJA: Now that you have protected the page, can you please remove the content recently added by the IP user. Endymion.12 ( talk) 16:27, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
@ Mélencron: and others: use this talk page to discuss the recent edits. Once there is consensus protection can be removed or otherwise temporary edits made by asking me or another admin. See the protection policy. NJA (t/ c) 16:30, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
Statement about allegations of vandalism: someone has alleged my edits of Jean Monnet construe vandalism. It is obvious that they do not. While my claim is extra-ordinary, I have also provided three sources, two of which are academic. I have kept to a NPOV. I have not used expletives. I have asked the edit war editor to WP:disengage on their talk page. I have also warned them to not engage in bad faith. They have promptly deleted both of my messages. Benito Mussolini's page also mentions he was a MI5 operative, I really do not see the problem. That fact is equally well sourced as my edit. I am in the right here. I hope we can reach a consensus about that on this talk page, and that other Wikipedia users will support my edits (rather than that I have to keep protecting them myself). 86.80.168.128 ( talk) 17:08, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
The user that edit warred my comments (against the rules and despite my request to disengage as per WP:DISPUTE) is moving the goalposts. At first, they were claiming I was violating WP:VANDALISM. Now, they complain I have violated WP:3RR instead of WP:VANDALISM. But, the editor was violating WP:3RR and WP:DISPUTE himself before I violated any rules. Hence, the user is moving the goalposts. I think the edit ban should be lifted and the other editor given a warning for edit warring and engaging in bad faith with new users. 86.80.168.128 ( talk) 18:36, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
We have some people reverting my edits to remove the "visionary" term WITHOUT commenting. They use a political newspaper as a source. I'd like them to get blocks or warnings, but i don't know how. I understand they like Mr. Monnet, personaly i don't, but this is not the point of an encyclopaedia. The point is to describe reality with terms that have accurate meaning, that describe categories of people. Monnet is EXACTLY a federalist activist who had significant political success in the past, but the usefulness of his views and legacy is a matter of debate today, especially in COVID times. Maybe the EU will entirely disappear, maybe not, but it has already lost a major country and damaged its reputation with Greece. At any rate, as Stalin is not a "visionary" in his article, Monnet who wasn't elected either shouldn't be. People who strongly believe in federalism are just people who believe in federalism, nothing more, nothing less. If they managed to create a federation that lasts a given length of time, very well, but it's not the equivalent of inventing electicity which will ALWAYS be used. They cannot have different adjectives, even clearly hagiographic ones, because they have more living supporters. People who have neutral attitudes towards the EU and federalism should take total control here. 77.131.39.197 ( talk) 12:10, 16 April 2020 (UTC) PS: De Gaulle, to give an extreme counter-example with a reliable source, thought Monnet was an american agent because he took the ACUE money instead of trying to get elected. This is why the NYT cannot be used as a source, because NPOV cannot be guaranteed and qualified opinions differ. We have to stand the middle ground here! BTW the french article is much less hagiographic and politically classifies Monnet's ideas. It should be used to increase accuracy — Preceding unsigned comment added by 77.131.39.197 ( talk • contribs) 09:53, 19 April 2020 (UTC)
"Three separate editors" ahahah, stop trying to self-aggrandize, clicking the button "undo" without giving any reason can be done by anybody, editing an encyclopaedia without proper source handling or in-depth thinking too, by the way. Having a masters degree in political science and experience in journalism, i'm probably more competent than you are in the matter, but i called for a debate before you. That should tell you everything you need to know about my intentions. The term "visionary" coming from a political newspaper is not "reliable", data or numbers from this newspaper can maybe be considered reliable, cause lying would damage their reputation, but "visionary" is an OPINION. Also, it doesn't mean anything inside an encyclopaedia which is, again, a way to describe things using categories. Does that mean he was right? How do you know that? Does that means he succeeded better than others? So why Napoleon is not a "Genius"? Or Marx just a "socialist revolutionary" instead of a "political visionary"? The federation founded by Georges Washington seems to be doing way better in terms of debate about leaving it = there is none to speak of. Should he be called a "federalist god"? In his article, he's just a "founding father". I'm guessing it's because the editing was done by competent people without biases. Of course i personally dislike Monnet, but the problem isn't here because contrarily to you, i state my opinions openly. A united europe was never Monnet's idea, it was formulatedby countless others before him and happened only because Europeans wanted peace, because Americans funded federalist organizations and because the USSR had already taken what it wanted. The accent put on Monnet and Schuman is the same as the accent put on Mao in China, it's a "myth of the origins". As a majority of americans and half of europeans have a strong bias towards federalism, it's no surprise that their newspapers reflect this reality, or that they try to pitch a story about a man with above-normal qualities. I don't think you understand clearly = federalism is not "the future", nobody know the future, it's just a modality of organization that has nothing special compared to others. It is more powerful than a state but frequently, an hyper-center is exploiting the periphery towards its own ends. But it's actually political science, from universities, that should decide if Monnet is an important person or just a mean for the great powers to implement a new diplomatic order after a world war. It's also the job of people who can handle sources properly and have no biases FOR or AGAINST, which is neither your case not mine, to decide how "visionary" he was and if this blatant hagiographic writing has its place inside an encyclopaedia. I'm requesting an in-depth analysis of Monnet compared to other equivalent thinkers, and i'm requesting an edit from competent people. By the way, your answer is in no way sufficient, and invoking policies you managed to use towards your opinions and those of a newspaper doesn't solve the debate in my eyes. Your answer is empty, and i'm inclined to think it's on purpose. 77.131.39.197 ( talk) 17:41, 19 April 2020 (UTC)
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The section "The Monnet Plan, an European superstate" reads like Eurosceptic propagandism. "Right from the beginning the EU was not intended to be about sharing or cooperation..." is a grand assessment of the EU that is out of the scope of this article, as well as a wholly negative assessment to which no counter-points are made. The sentence ""a whole series of concessions in regard to their sovereign rights until, having been finally stripped, they committed hara-kiri by accepting the merger."" is not attributed to any source. "there is only a new, supranational form of government beyond all democratic control. Governments and parliaments are left in place, but are subordinated to the EU. " Whether this is accurate or not, this is not a sentiment shared by all those who study the EU and follow its developments. It does not reflect the public position of any European government. "Beyond all democratic control" is a sweeping statement with rhetorical, motivational overtones, not an assessment of whatever democratic deficits may or may not be present in the EU. The contrast drawn in the sentence between "where there are vetoes, there is still inter-governmentalism, still independent, sovereign nations;" and "where there are none... beyond all democratic control" is also apparently a rhetorical statement, not a structure used to convey facts or third-party opinions. The sin of this section is that it takes the views of one side of the debate over European integration and presents them as certainty and the only views, in an encyclopedia which is supposed to present all sides of a debate. Hasta luego --TParis23 05:21, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
I agree entirely with Tparis23. The text in this section is uneven and unsourced and while I'm not surprised that the edit is anonymous, I am somewhat surprised that it emanated from Holland. Unless anybody has any objections over the next few days, I'll remove these biassed and unpleasant anon edits -- they are worthless. Robindch 03:01, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
Also, it was no secret that many supporters of the early EEC envisioned a move to a federal state, and the academic literature was filled with discussions of neo-functionalism. When intergovernmentalism emerged dominate in the 70s, that created a lot of protest from those wanting a federal Europe. Bottom line: during the whole process those wanting a confederal "Europe des patries" knew that there were many who wanted a European state. It makes it sound like a group of "insiders" had a "scheme" that was secret to others. That's clearly not true. Scott Erb 16:27, 25 March 2007 (UTC)
I agree with TParis and Robindch. Monnet was a federalist but in relation to the issues which had served to cause both world wars. His idea of linking the economies of the Member States was as far as he was thinking and in any case the Superstate issue only came to the fore during the negotiations for the Maastricht Treaty and by that time Monnet had sadly died. Federalism certainly means closer union but on the German lines. Eurosceptics seem to live in a world in which fact and fiction merge. (PDF)
That is incorrect. Monnet was a founder of the Action Committee for a United States of Europe. He was fairly open in his commitment to a European superstate (a federal superstate is still a superstate, so I don't understand that counterpoint - a Eurosceptic Briton would hardly be placated by being told Britain shall be like Texas and not Hampshire in the Europe being built). This article greatly downplays or ignores his federalism, and speaks only vaguely of European Unity. It reads now at least more like Europhile propaganda. I would like to edit it, with reputable sources. 120.17.38.112 ( talk) 08:01, 14 June 2016 (UTC)
This article was automatically assessed because at least one WikiProject had rated the article as start, and the rating on other projects was brought up to start class. BetacommandBot 14:28, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
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Cheers. — cyberbot II Talk to my owner:Online 09:54, 18 October 2015 (UTC)
Quoting from the lead:
What does this mean? — Brigade Piron ( talk) 18:07, 22 April 2016 (UTC)
I replaced the strangely worded sentence with a direct quote from the referenced article. Cunningpal ( talk) 14:07, 18 October 2016 (UTC)
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@ NJA: Now that you have protected the page, can you please remove the content recently added by the IP user. Endymion.12 ( talk) 16:27, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
@ Mélencron: and others: use this talk page to discuss the recent edits. Once there is consensus protection can be removed or otherwise temporary edits made by asking me or another admin. See the protection policy. NJA (t/ c) 16:30, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
Statement about allegations of vandalism: someone has alleged my edits of Jean Monnet construe vandalism. It is obvious that they do not. While my claim is extra-ordinary, I have also provided three sources, two of which are academic. I have kept to a NPOV. I have not used expletives. I have asked the edit war editor to WP:disengage on their talk page. I have also warned them to not engage in bad faith. They have promptly deleted both of my messages. Benito Mussolini's page also mentions he was a MI5 operative, I really do not see the problem. That fact is equally well sourced as my edit. I am in the right here. I hope we can reach a consensus about that on this talk page, and that other Wikipedia users will support my edits (rather than that I have to keep protecting them myself). 86.80.168.128 ( talk) 17:08, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
The user that edit warred my comments (against the rules and despite my request to disengage as per WP:DISPUTE) is moving the goalposts. At first, they were claiming I was violating WP:VANDALISM. Now, they complain I have violated WP:3RR instead of WP:VANDALISM. But, the editor was violating WP:3RR and WP:DISPUTE himself before I violated any rules. Hence, the user is moving the goalposts. I think the edit ban should be lifted and the other editor given a warning for edit warring and engaging in bad faith with new users. 86.80.168.128 ( talk) 18:36, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
We have some people reverting my edits to remove the "visionary" term WITHOUT commenting. They use a political newspaper as a source. I'd like them to get blocks or warnings, but i don't know how. I understand they like Mr. Monnet, personaly i don't, but this is not the point of an encyclopaedia. The point is to describe reality with terms that have accurate meaning, that describe categories of people. Monnet is EXACTLY a federalist activist who had significant political success in the past, but the usefulness of his views and legacy is a matter of debate today, especially in COVID times. Maybe the EU will entirely disappear, maybe not, but it has already lost a major country and damaged its reputation with Greece. At any rate, as Stalin is not a "visionary" in his article, Monnet who wasn't elected either shouldn't be. People who strongly believe in federalism are just people who believe in federalism, nothing more, nothing less. If they managed to create a federation that lasts a given length of time, very well, but it's not the equivalent of inventing electicity which will ALWAYS be used. They cannot have different adjectives, even clearly hagiographic ones, because they have more living supporters. People who have neutral attitudes towards the EU and federalism should take total control here. 77.131.39.197 ( talk) 12:10, 16 April 2020 (UTC) PS: De Gaulle, to give an extreme counter-example with a reliable source, thought Monnet was an american agent because he took the ACUE money instead of trying to get elected. This is why the NYT cannot be used as a source, because NPOV cannot be guaranteed and qualified opinions differ. We have to stand the middle ground here! BTW the french article is much less hagiographic and politically classifies Monnet's ideas. It should be used to increase accuracy — Preceding unsigned comment added by 77.131.39.197 ( talk • contribs) 09:53, 19 April 2020 (UTC)
"Three separate editors" ahahah, stop trying to self-aggrandize, clicking the button "undo" without giving any reason can be done by anybody, editing an encyclopaedia without proper source handling or in-depth thinking too, by the way. Having a masters degree in political science and experience in journalism, i'm probably more competent than you are in the matter, but i called for a debate before you. That should tell you everything you need to know about my intentions. The term "visionary" coming from a political newspaper is not "reliable", data or numbers from this newspaper can maybe be considered reliable, cause lying would damage their reputation, but "visionary" is an OPINION. Also, it doesn't mean anything inside an encyclopaedia which is, again, a way to describe things using categories. Does that mean he was right? How do you know that? Does that means he succeeded better than others? So why Napoleon is not a "Genius"? Or Marx just a "socialist revolutionary" instead of a "political visionary"? The federation founded by Georges Washington seems to be doing way better in terms of debate about leaving it = there is none to speak of. Should he be called a "federalist god"? In his article, he's just a "founding father". I'm guessing it's because the editing was done by competent people without biases. Of course i personally dislike Monnet, but the problem isn't here because contrarily to you, i state my opinions openly. A united europe was never Monnet's idea, it was formulatedby countless others before him and happened only because Europeans wanted peace, because Americans funded federalist organizations and because the USSR had already taken what it wanted. The accent put on Monnet and Schuman is the same as the accent put on Mao in China, it's a "myth of the origins". As a majority of americans and half of europeans have a strong bias towards federalism, it's no surprise that their newspapers reflect this reality, or that they try to pitch a story about a man with above-normal qualities. I don't think you understand clearly = federalism is not "the future", nobody know the future, it's just a modality of organization that has nothing special compared to others. It is more powerful than a state but frequently, an hyper-center is exploiting the periphery towards its own ends. But it's actually political science, from universities, that should decide if Monnet is an important person or just a mean for the great powers to implement a new diplomatic order after a world war. It's also the job of people who can handle sources properly and have no biases FOR or AGAINST, which is neither your case not mine, to decide how "visionary" he was and if this blatant hagiographic writing has its place inside an encyclopaedia. I'm requesting an in-depth analysis of Monnet compared to other equivalent thinkers, and i'm requesting an edit from competent people. By the way, your answer is in no way sufficient, and invoking policies you managed to use towards your opinions and those of a newspaper doesn't solve the debate in my eyes. Your answer is empty, and i'm inclined to think it's on purpose. 77.131.39.197 ( talk) 17:41, 19 April 2020 (UTC)