goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
cynic
- 13 Jul 2015 11:20
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max - don't see it myself ..... for sure the germans have been portrayed in traditional blitzkrieg and gestapo mode, but that is for (german) public consumption as much as anything else
had IMF/ECB openly caved in - rather than manipulating everything behind the scenes - then several other borderline countries would have had a good argument for having swathes of their own debts "forgiven" ..... surely that would have been an even worse scenario
TANKER
- 13 Jul 2015 11:39
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cynic . ukip will be a force next election rest assured on that I am now with my uncle and 4 brothers going to join the party and pay our membership .
our decision and freedom to do so
Haystack
- 13 Jul 2015 11:40
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A good thing to come out of the Greek situation is a message that it is a waste of time electing a loony left anti austerity government. That should shut up Spain, Portugal, Italy and Ireland.
TANKER
- 13 Jul 2015 11:50
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hay you are a bloody dimwit thick as shit shut up
cynic . eu leaders and family have made a fortune out of insider dealing
on the markets .
and the big winners financers made millions
cynic
- 13 Jul 2015 12:00
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portugal's present gov't is certainly far from "loony left", and i'm sure ireland's is too, and probably even those of spain and italy
MaxK
- 13 Jul 2015 12:11
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Who was in charge when all the bills were run up?
clue: It wasn't Syriza
cynic
- 13 Jul 2015 12:46
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and perhaps an inspection of the bank accounts of the main parties would be revealing too
Haystack
- 13 Jul 2015 13:05
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It is not the current parties that are in charge that is the oroblem in Spain etc. It is the growing left wing anti austerity parties that are pushung ahead. Success for Greece would have given Spain's left a boost before elections this autumn. I doubt the creditors have made much money. The money was lent at very low preferential EU rates and they are not going to get their money back for a very long time. The current Greek government really messed things up. Their games theory discussions made things worse. The game theory did not allow for pissing the creditors off in the process of talking. The government has had to renege on every policy that they promised in their election. Like all left wing governments, they are unrealistic about the economy. It is not possible to run a socialist economy in a capitalist world. Even Marx said the communism would not work unless the whole world was communist.
2517GEORGE
- 13 Jul 2015 13:48
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The Greek gov/people are the only section of europe to really stand up to the unelected prats intent on steamrolling a (dis)united states of europe on the people of Europe.
2517
Haystack
- 13 Jul 2015 14:01
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Unfortunately France, Germany and a couple of other countries are bent on federation. The Euro is still a project in development. They know that for monetary union, there must be fiscal union. The trend is that all budgets will be set centrally and all taxation rates the same. The aim is that individual governments will have no taxation powers and very little spending powers. It is the only way to stop another Greece happening. What they are insisting on for Greece is a taste of what is coming for the rest of the Eurozone.
TANKER
- 13 Jul 2015 15:03
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GERMANYS plan to rule the EU is on track now they will try and destroy the UK
Cameron is weak and they know .
thank god we have BRAVE AND HONEST PEOPLE LIKE FARAGE .
GET US OUT OF THE STINKING ROTTEN CORRUPT EU
GIVE US THE VOTE NOW
TANKER
- 13 Jul 2015 15:04
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THE NAZIS ARE BACK IN POWER AND STILL WANT TO RULE EUROPE
MaxK
- 13 Jul 2015 15:06
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Well worth a read imo.
Yanis Varoufakis full transcript: our battle to save Greece
The full transcript of the former Greek Finance Minister's first interview since resigning.
by Harry Lambert Published 13 July, 2015 - 09:54
http://www.newstatesman.com/world-affairs/2015/07/yanis-varoufakis-full-transcript-our-battle-save-greece
VICTIM
- 13 Jul 2015 15:26
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How is the ordinary man in the street supposed to decide what's right/wrong about all this . Personally I want out of the EU and any other sane person should too . It's looking very scary .
Haystack
- 13 Jul 2015 15:38
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The New Statesman article is interested but not unexpected. I think he was naive in his approach and expectations. He was taking a very ideological approach to what was a simple problem of discussing money owed to creditors.
It would be interesting to take a stance based on ideology when communicating with a credit card company or over a Bank loan. He seemed to think that because his party had won an election and their politics was different to the previous government that it gave them special treatment. In fact he seemed quite shocked that the response was to pay back the money.
The negotiations went badly and a very bad deal for Greece has been done. It was almost entirely due to the lack of experience of the members of the government.
MaxK
- 13 Jul 2015 15:42
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My take on that is very different to yours Haystack.
I don't think he was naïve in his intentions, he simply expected a level playing field, without the game's results having already been decided.
Of course, he may have been naïve in expecting a fair hearing.
Haystack
- 13 Jul 2015 16:04
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He was expecting negotiations because that is what Greece wanted. The Eurozone did not want negotiations. They just wanted to know how Greece were going to pay up. I would have liked them to have been even tougher with Greece. The country had never fulfilled the necessary conditions to save their economy. The new government reversed many of the policies of the previous one. They rehired civil servants that they could not afford to pay. They reversed pension reforms and lots of other requirements accepted when they received the previous bailout. The result was that a crisis was coming and it did. They promised anti austerity and that got them elected even though they could never deliver it. Other countries in the Eurozone had similar problems and austerity has got them out of it and they are now expanding. Greece steadfastly refused to take the medicine. They didn't collect the taxes in a country where tax is almost optional. Incomes are self declared with the result that no one apparently earns much at all including people in areas where all the houses are £1m plus. Greece lived it up after they joined the Euro. They spent cheap money on things they didn't need. They want to stay in the Euro because they want the gravy train to start again.
You need to have visited Greece before the Euro and their hosting the Olympics (another disaster for them). They were a borderline 3rd world country. Even now, with shortages and unemployment, they have no where near returned to their pre Euro level. They took the money, won't do what is necessary and really don't want to pay back the money at all.
Throw them out as it will all blow up asgain. I think the Eurozone has postponed their expulsion because Europe is not booming again yet.
Haystack
- 13 Jul 2015 17:05
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You have to remember that the article above was in the New Statesman, which is the voice of the Labour Party. It is a very left wing interview of a very left wing politician.
Fred1new
- 13 Jul 2015 18:05
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Oh, hang on. We haven't mentioned anything about brown envelopes, bribery and corruption.<
I thought that was the disease of the English tory party!