Sunburning, Getting Blasted and Chasing Bikinis on the Algarve is a "Human Right" - EU
Byron Wein once called Europe an "open-air museum." It is hard not to see why.
The European Union has declared travelling a human right, and is
launching a scheme to subsidize vacations with taxpayers' dollars for
those too poor to afford their own trips.
Antonio Tajani, the European Union commissioner for enterprise and
industry, proposed a strategy that could cost European taxpayers
hundreds of millions of euros a year, The Times of London reports.
"Travelling for tourism today is a right. The way we spend our holidays
is a formidable indicator of our quality of life," Mr. Tajani told a
group of ministers at The European Tourism Stakeholders Conference in
Madrid on April 15. Mr. Tajani was appointed to his post by Italian
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.
The plan -- just who gets to enjoy the travel package has yet to be
determined -- would see taxpayers footing some of the vacation bill for
seniors, youths between the ages of 18 and 25, disabled people, and
families facing "difficult social, financial or personal" circumstances.
The disabled and elderly can also be accompanied by one other person.
The EU and its taxpayers are slated to fund 30% of the cost of these
tours, which could range from youth exploring abandoned factories and
power plants in Manchester to retirees taking discount trips to Madrid,
all in the name of cultural appreciation.
"The commission is literally considering paying people to go on
holiday," Mats Persson, of pro-reform think-tank Open Europe, told
Britain's News of the World. "In this economic climate, it's astonishing
that the EU wants to bribe people with cheap holidays."
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