Greeks voted a resounding Oxi to smug self-satisfied political-economic-media establishments, both Greek and non-Greek. Greeks did not care to think about what might happen afterwards: their overriding concern was to no longer fear fear, and instead cry out Oxi. The Greek establishment may be finally hearing the message (resignation of Samaras), but if the non-Greek establishment wants to continue to defy common sense, including the common sense of the IMF, then the political core of EU member countries will experience the same polarising that has befallen Greece: in other words, German voters will flee SPD (for Die Linke and AfD), French voters will flee PS (for Front National, and a new left-wing party), Spanish voters will flee PSP (for Podemos), UK voters will flee Labour (for Green Party and Ukip). Once the traditional left-of-centre parties have imploded (as happened to Pasok), the never-ending austerity policies of Europe will have to be carried by right-of-centre parties on their own, until eventually they also fall. What we are witnessing is probably the beginning of the end of European neoliberalism, a neoliberalism that was unwittingly imposed on European voters by the Euro project. If some political parties do not understand the change underway, then elements of the European project will fall apart: contrary to what Merkel and Hollande think, it is Nato, and not the European Union (and certainly not the Euro currency), that is the guarantor of peace in Europe. And if the European Union is increasingly a European Disunion (with regard to the nonsense of further austerity policy; with regard to the inaction against zombie banks that only lend money for property or investment speculation as opposed to business establishment; with regard to immigration policy) it is because the Euro currency has had massive disuniting effects, and as long as the EU institutions (Council of Ministers; Commission; Parliament) are not willing to admit the 'facts on the ground', Disunion will intensify.