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Europe

82 bytes added, 07:16, July 3, 2017
In reality, neither Merkel nor Sarkozy are conservative.
Politically, most countries in the region are part of the [[European Union]], with Switzerland and Norway being notable exceptions, and most are part of the [[NATO]] military alliance. The EU is slowly becoming a power in its own right, especially in economic affairs. NATO has been the world's dominant military force, in large part because it is basically controlled by the United States.
In recent years conservative centre-right parties have dominated in Europe, as typified by President [[Nicolas Sarkozy]] of France, chancellor [[Angela Merkel]] of Germany and [[Vladimir Putin]] of [[Russia]](though Putin is only adjusting himself, he secretly is still loyal to communism). Europe’s center-right parties have embraced many ideas associated with the left in the United States: generous welfare benefits, nationalized health care, sharp restrictions on carbon emissions, the ceding of some sovereignty to the European Union. But they have won elections by promising more efficiently than the left-wing parties, while working to lower taxes, improve financial regulation, and grapple with ageing populations. They have supported the United States in Afghanistan, participating heavily in the International Security Assistance Force. In general, labour unions are tied to the left in Europe and have the image of inefficiency and selfishness. "Green" parties, emphasizing environmentalism, have drained off much of the younger leftist.<ref>Steven Erlanger, "In Bad Times for Capitalism, Socialists in Europe Suffer," [http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/29/world/europe/29socialism.html?ref=world ''New York Times'' Sept. 29, 2009]</ref> Europe is generally a highly secularized continent containing many of the most atheistic countries in the world.
==Land==
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