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they're showing their disapproval of getting loans and as a result are going to make a lot of cuts.. which they don't want the greeks don't realize they're deep in the crapper and they just want things to continue as they are... my friends are right in the middle of it at the moment, they say its not as bad as the media is showing it (not large scale that is) I just hope there's no protests when i head over for a wedding -_- |
^^^my family has said its also not nearly as bad as they show it on tv.....there are just some bad apples...but they are mostly peaceful protestors.. that being said, most of them live on corfu |
Blame the god damn rating agencies too. Those fucking morons downgrading PIGS's debt when they are already in trouble with the market frozen. Remember these are same guys who rated Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae's debt and securities AAA rating back in 2006 - 2007. |
^ the government in greece spent like mad for the last 10 years and kept taxes to a minimum. what did they expect to happen? Now the economy is bad and they can't make debt payments. The problem is that 1/4 of the country is working for the government public sector and they dont want to take any wage cuts or decrease the standard of living. There's also a significant proportion in large unions as well. Because they converted to Euros, they cant devalue their currency to make their country more competitive. as a metaphor, they basically bought big screen tvs and nice cars all on credit, and now they just got a pay cut and cant make all their debt obligations,. . . hoping for brother and sister to bail them out. many are to blame for this, including the government for messing up their cashflow the last 10 years, the people who elected them, and the people who dont want to take recessions in their standard of living when the economy is bad. |
when the Euro devalues bad, the last strong currency we have, - we go to world war 3 |
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Anyways. These protests are mostly anarchists and KKE members. Greece is embarrassing the world but the major concern is that when we take this loan that we literally sell greece to the germans. The shame that we can't devalue the euro and increase foreign trade... if we had the drachma still it would be fine. I saw this coming when they switched to the euro many years ago. The euro was horrible for greece since day 1. |
Greece should have never joined the EU. For such a small economy it was a stupid idea. Getting the Euro only increased the price of all products in the country. |
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Essentially they were making 500 euros a month, when realestate prices and rent decimated greece because of foreign investment (alot of rich brits, swedes and germans driving real estate up) This is all government misspending. This actually had nothing to do with greek banks, but Goldman sachs had their hand in it as they hid greek debt so they could enter the euro and then Illegaly took bets against greece. Seriously it's starting to see that goldman sachs owns the world. |
hahah just watched the video right now, and they are all yelling putanes and giving the greek version of the finger. Quote:
Their current president wasn't even born in greece! another article Quote:
btw be ready to accept a new wave of greek immigrants. You'd be suprised how many greeks hold canadian passports! also alot of greeks still hate germany because of wwII. They never gave repirations to greece for all the gold they plundered from our treasury. |
if im not mistaken the greek gov't pension plan can kick in at age 55 which is one of the reasons why germany is urging other EU nations not to help greece out is this true? |
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It may seem odd but I think that this is just Germany's way of saying "bad Greece, spend your money more wisely next time". |
bet the EU is wishing they let Turkey in instead and Turkey must be like "phew, thank god we're not stuck in that mess" |
In a nutshell, the two main problems plaguing Greece are excessively paid Civil Servants and tax fraud. In summary: -Greek civil gov jobs are guaranteed for life, and virtually impossible to get fired from. -Full retirement at 55 -If you die as a pensioner and your child is unmarried, they continue receiving YOUR pension -Many civil servants are called "ghost workers" - they don't even show up to work and work at a second job (two salaries). Second problem is tax fraud -- even the majority of Physicians collect fees in cold hard cash. The problem with the Greek situation is that 45% of its debt is owned by France and Germany, the strongest countries in the EU. If the EU & IMF cannot prevent Greece from defaulting and going bankrupt, it is likely that Spain/Ireland/Portugal will also collapse. If this happens, the Euro currency will plunge even further. Because many banks and funds invest all over the world, the Euro collapse could bring about a second crisis, and of course affect the globe. |
"Now, over to Europe where event risk has clearly moved to the front burner. Key elections in the UK and Germany late this week already had markets (and the euro) on the defensive. The Greek crisis continues to roil markets on fears that the severe cutbacks would neither be sufficient to bridge the fiscal gap, nor accepted by citizens. There were also fears of contagion to other countries which are suffering from their own budgetary issues. Yesterday, Greece’s parliament voted to pass an austerity package, but by mid-afternoon television networks were again dominated by footage of protests and riot police on the streets of Athens. In this context, yesterday’s decision by the ECB not to provide any additional stimulus was widely viewed as a disappointment." along with that....Speculations are that a trade by Citigroup (C) for 16 million shares was actually placed for 16 billion causing investors to panic and the market to dive |
EU, IMF agree $1 trillion emergency fund http://www.reuters.com/article/idUST...+Business+News) Quote:
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an IMF loan is like a death sentence |
Good time to buy a vacation home there. The Canadian dollar is so strong. |
olted by last week’s slide in the currency and soaring bond yields in Portugal and Spain, European Union finance chiefs met in a 14-hour session in Brussels overnight. The 16 euro nations agreed in a statement to offer as much as 750 billion euros ($962 billion), including International Monetary Fund backing, to countries facing instability and the European Central Bank said it will buy government and private debt. http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=alxKmD3w0yqY |
man conspiracy theorists must be having a field day right now. |
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I'm guessing NWO? Foreign politics(bankers) governing zombie people? Posted via RS Mobile |
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Greece has always had issues with members of parliament being corrupt and civil jobs protest way too much, as a result, corrupt members get elected then extend benefits to the civil jobs that protest. |
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NICE! Give a trillion euro loan to the same people that bankrupted the country. Effin GENIOUSES! |
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