The Greenfield Report with Henry R. Greenfield
Welcome to "The Greenfield Reportwith Henry R. Greenfield," where 50+ years of world travels across 10 countries shape insightful takes on current geopolitical events. Join Robert for eye-opening global reports with practical local solutions, and enjoy guest appearances offering fresh perspectives. Embark on a journey of understanding and lively discussion.
The Greenfield Report with Henry R. Greenfield
Episode 36- A Rainy Paris Day Becomes A Tour Of Europe’s Existential Crisis
Start with a grand Paris weekend—the thunder of the organ at a renewed Notre Dame, crowds winding through centuries of art—and watch it flicker into something more fragile as the TGV grinds to a halt. That sudden stall becomes our window into a tougher story: a Europe struggling with integration, security, and a welfare model built for a different era.
We unpack how protests at Charles de Gaulle and a brazen Louvre heist expose brittle public systems, then widen the lens to immigration policy, labor participation, and the political incentives that reward promises over performance. France, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain—each faces its own version of the same knot: generous benefits, slow integration, and a shrinking willingness to do the difficult work that funds the social contract. Populist parties capitalize on the anger; EU institutions move at committee speed while Russia tests the edges and NATO budgets inch upward.
Across the Atlantic, we contrast Europe’s bureaucracy with a U.S. drift toward privatizing public functions—private dollars plugging public holes while SNAP faces cuts and the federal minimum wage sits frozen. It’s two versions of gridlock, each eroding trust. We argue for a remedy that’s unglamorous but effective: localism with real accountability. Think Swiss-style governance—local taxes, local votes, transparent tradeoffs—so citizens see how money moves and why. Pair benefits with work, align immigration with jobs and language programs, and treat defense as an insurance premium that needs honest funding.
Along the way we talk farms and tariffs, guest workers and pensions, and why moving power closer to communities may be the only way to lower the temperature and raise performance. The train metaphor holds: systems are supposed to carry everyone, not just the lucky or the connected. If this resonates, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review to help more curious listeners find it. What would you fix first—security, welfare, or local control?