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drunkmonkey wrote:I'm filing a C&A report right now. Its nice because they have a drop-down for "jefjef".
jefjef wrote:A much welcome sight as soon as Greece and Germany collapse will be witnessed by those in their hour of need when AMERICA arrives to rescue them and stabilize the situation.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:nietzsche wrote:
There must be a lot of money entering by tourism too.
Doesn't seem that bad to me. Maybe it has to do with mortgages too?
(1) Greece had a successful lemonade stand. One of the best in the world.
(2) Greece used the proceeds from the lemonade stand to buy a 2010 Saab 9-3.
(3) No matter how good your lemonade may taste, you can't buy a Saab 9-3 off the profits from a lemonade stand.
(4) Greece is now so far in debt that they are in danger of default.
(5) As a risk of their default danger the Greek government's interest rates to borrow money have increased to 22%, loan-shark rates.
(6) At a 22% interest rate the Greek government can't pay the interest of new debt but can't survive without said new debt.
(7) Banks close. ATMs stop working. Inflation goes into quadruple digits. Unemployment hits 50%. Riots.
(8) These men arrive in Syntagma Square to fix everything:
saxitoxin wrote:jefjef wrote:A much welcome sight as soon as Greece and Germany collapse will be witnessed by those in their hour of need when AMERICA arrives to rescue them and stabilize the situation.
What kind of emergency are you envisioning jefjef where mosques will have begun to be constructed in Greece and palm trees started to grow by the time the US arrives?!
drunkmonkey wrote:I'm filing a C&A report right now. Its nice because they have a drop-down for "jefjef".
Phatscotty wrote:saxitoxin wrote:nietzsche wrote:
There must be a lot of money entering by tourism too.
Doesn't seem that bad to me. Maybe it has to do with mortgages too?
(1) Greece had a successful lemonade stand. One of the best in the world.
(2) Greece used the proceeds from the lemonade stand to buy a 2010 Saab 9-3.
(3) No matter how good your lemonade may taste, you can't buy a Saab 9-3 off the profits from a lemonade stand.
(4) Greece is now so far in debt that they are in danger of default.
(5) As a risk of their default danger the Greek government's interest rates to borrow money have increased to 22%, loan-shark rates.
(6) At a 22% interest rate the Greek government can't pay the interest of new debt but can't survive without said new debt.
(7) Banks close. ATMs stop working. Inflation goes into quadruple digits. Unemployment hits 50%. Riots.
(8) These men arrive in Syntagma Square to fix everything:
hopefully entitlement programs and massive unemployement plans and stimulus bills can make the USA complete shit also!
Symmetry wrote:nietzsche wrote:Pardon my ignorance, and my lack of will for using google.. but, what was the problem in Greece? Bad mortgages like in the US?
If Greece goes bankrupt, I'm willing to buy Athens, such a beautiful history. We should support them by visiting Athens. For those who know nothing, it was in Greece where civilization as we know it started.
Mostly the problem is massive state employment, as far as I understand it. Huge sections are employed by the government. When the government hit financial difficulties in the current crisis, there was no way to maintain the status quo.
That and Greece uses the Euro. Allowing it to fail would impact other Euro states and destabilise and delegitimise that part of the European economy.
The problem is that Greece needs to reform it's economy, but is too big to fail.
Phatscotty wrote:Symmetry wrote:nietzsche wrote:Pardon my ignorance, and my lack of will for using google.. but, what was the problem in Greece? Bad mortgages like in the US?
If Greece goes bankrupt, I'm willing to buy Athens, such a beautiful history. We should support them by visiting Athens. For those who know nothing, it was in Greece where civilization as we know it started.
Mostly the problem is massive state employment, as far as I understand it. Huge sections are employed by the government. When the government hit financial difficulties in the current crisis, there was no way to maintain the status quo.
That and Greece uses the Euro. Allowing it to fail would impact other Euro states and destabilise and delegitimise that part of the European economy.
The problem is that Greece needs to reform it's economy, but is too big to fail.
does greece have gov't run health care too? i mean, did they?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
Fitch Ratings lowered Greeceās long-term foreign and local currency issuer default ratings to BBB-, from BBB+. The outlook is negative, it said.
saxitoxin wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Symmetry wrote:nietzsche wrote:Pardon my ignorance, and my lack of will for using google.. but, what was the problem in Greece? Bad mortgages like in the US?
If Greece goes bankrupt, I'm willing to buy Athens, such a beautiful history. We should support them by visiting Athens. For those who know nothing, it was in Greece where civilization as we know it started.
Mostly the problem is massive state employment, as far as I understand it. Huge sections are employed by the government. When the government hit financial difficulties in the current crisis, there was no way to maintain the status quo.
That and Greece uses the Euro. Allowing it to fail would impact other Euro states and destabilise and delegitimise that part of the European economy.
The problem is that Greece needs to reform it's economy, but is too big to fail.
does greece have gov't run health care too? i mean, did they?
Greece has universal - but not government run - health care. Very few nations have government run health care. Only Canada, Cuba, UK, the Scandinavian nations and a handful of others. Most of continental Europe has private insurance systems that are universalized through government guarantee.
But, regardless, that doesn't mean too much. Uzbekistan, Mongolia, the UK and Panama all officially have universal health care. That doesn't mean you're likely to see a doctor, or even want to see one, in those countries.
Universal health care is only effective when the entire economic engine has been transformed into a Marxist-Leninist model. Universal health care stamped over a slave wage capitalist system, a la carte style, is always doomed to failure. I say this both as an expert in socialist economics and a former health care provider.
BoganGod wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Symmetry wrote:nietzsche wrote:Pardon my ignorance, and my lack of will for using google.. but, what was the problem in Greece? Bad mortgages like in the US?
If Greece goes bankrupt, I'm willing to buy Athens, such a beautiful history. We should support them by visiting Athens. For those who know nothing, it was in Greece where civilization as we know it started.
Mostly the problem is massive state employment, as far as I understand it. Huge sections are employed by the government. When the government hit financial difficulties in the current crisis, there was no way to maintain the status quo.
That and Greece uses the Euro. Allowing it to fail would impact other Euro states and destabilise and delegitimise that part of the European economy.
The problem is that Greece needs to reform it's economy, but is too big to fail.
does greece have gov't run health care too? i mean, did they?
Greece has universal - but not government run - health care. Very few nations have government run health care. Only Canada, Cuba, UK, the Scandinavian nations and a handful of others. Most of continental Europe has private insurance systems that are universalized through government guarantee.
But, regardless, that doesn't mean too much. Uzbekistan, Mongolia, the UK and Panama all officially have universal health care. That doesn't mean you're likely to see a doctor, or even want to see one, in those countries.
Universal health care is only effective when the entire economic engine has been transformed into a Marxist-Leninist model. Universal health care stamped over a slave wage capitalist system, a la carte style, is always doomed to failure. I say this both as an expert in socialist economics and a former health care provider.
bollocks you republican git. Australia and New Zealand both have universal health care. Australia's economy shits on most of europes and USA.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
nietzsche wrote:Pardon my ignorance, and my lack of will for using google.. but, what was the problem in Greece? Bad mortgages like in the US?
If Greece goes bankrupt, I'm willing to buy Athens, such a beautiful history. We should support them by visiting Athens. For those who know nothing, it was in Greece where civilization as we know it started.
KraphtOne wrote:when you sign up a new account one of the check boxes should be "do you want to foe colton24 (it is highly recommended) "
saxitoxin wrote:Breaking Update: Germany Just Agreed to Lend to Greece at 5% instead of 22%
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-0 ... ate1-.html
Good News: Greece Will Survive
Bad News: Germany is Now in a Suicide Pact with Greece; if this doesn't work out both Greece and Germany will collapse into anarchy
The meetings are over,
The treaties suspended,
The armies start marching,
The EU is ended.
saxitoxin wrote:1. Not being a USA citizen I am not a Republican. As an affirmed atheist, revolutionary Dadaist and former member of the DDR Socialist Unity Party
DeltaFormation wrote:I really didn't want to bump this but Greece is about to receive the largest bailout ever.
Estimated to be a package worth just under $150bln. The IMF will provide approx. $40bln of those loans and the EU lead by Germany will provide the rest.
To put this into perspective:
The largest bailout before that happened to South Korea in the 1997-98 Asian Crisis was $58bln.
South Korea had a population of 45 million at the time of their bailout... Greece has under 12 million.
It's just ridiculous. On top of that their economy is practically in shambles, most people don't pay taxes, etc...
This is where it gets interesting: Germany opposed the bailout at the start but now seems to be encouraging it. Why? Because Germany is the second largest exporter in the world behind China... It exports to almost every other European country and to some extent China and the developing nations.
So if Greece were to go bust, they would start to lose their markets very rapidly. If Greece goes, it's a matter of time before Spain and Portugal go, and then maybe even Italy or the UK.
So basically this amounts to Germany trying to plug the hole in the dam with a finger, not only for the sake of the Euro and the EU but for their export markets, if Greece goes, it's a domino effect and you can be sure the middle class and wealthier Greeks (and later the Spaniards, Portuguese, Italians, English) will no longer be buying German cars and TVs.
I don't see how this is going to get the EU past Greece unscathed... I really don't. Even with this bailout, Greece will probably run out of the money in less than a year if nothing changes.
A tumble in global stocks spread to Asia on Wednesday on heightening fears that Greece's debt woes could spread to other countries.
Greek-Debt Pressure Sends Europe Off 2.9%
bedub1 wrote:Oh, and how does loaning a country more money make their debt woes go away? Doesn't that just create more debt for them? People keep saying a country can borrow itself out of debt (whereas that's obviously impossible for an individual) but it doesn't appear to be working....
Sorry Greeks. You did not stand up against debt soon enough. Your bad. The USA will strive to answer your prayers that we wake up and spare ourselves a repeat of your tragedy
Woodruff wrote:saxitoxin wrote:1. Not being a USA citizen I am not a Republican. As an affirmed atheist, revolutionary Dadaist and former member of the DDR Socialist Unity Party
You wrote Dance Dance Revolution?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
BigBallinStalin wrote:DeltaFormation wrote:I really didn't want to bump this but Greece is about to receive the largest bailout ever.
Estimated to be a package worth just under $150bln. The IMF will provide approx. $40bln of those loans and the EU lead by Germany will provide the rest.
I don't see how this is going to get the EU past Greece unscathed... I really don't. Even with this bailout, Greece will probably run out of the money in less than a year if nothing changes.
And even if the Greeks do make it, they'll be in the pocket of the IMF (or in reality, the USA). Never a pleasant situation.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
bedub1 wrote:Oh, and how does loaning a country more money make their debt woes go away? Doesn't that just create more debt for them? People keep saying a country can borrow itself out of debt (whereas that's obviously impossible for an individual) but it doesn't appear to be working....
jaimito101 wrote:ok, apparently my point didn't get across last time so i'll bump and fill in the blanks
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
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