They do matter if they remove the government, either by voting it out, or by violent overthrow.woodburner wrote:But they are only people, and people don't matter.
I think a lot of governments must be feeling rather nervous at present.
Moderator: Peak Moderation
They do matter if they remove the government, either by voting it out, or by violent overthrow.woodburner wrote:But they are only people, and people don't matter.
They weren't allowed to vote for Italy's current premier Monti (significantly, ex-Goldman Sachs, even more significantly a member of the Trilateral Commission and the Bilderberg Group).adam2 wrote:They do matter if they remove the government, either by voting it out, or by violent overthrow.
They should be. But with the force of arms and money on their sides?adam2 wrote:I think a lot of governments must be feeling rather nervous at present.
Eurozone crisis: Greece 'can't take any more cuts'
So in the year the modern Olympics is held in the cradle of modern democracy, the ancient cradle of both suffers the public desecration of its own modern democracy.But eurozone ministers demanded a further 325m euros of cuts and insisted that all major Greek parties promise to enact the cuts regardless of who wins a general election scheduled for April.
And he's right. The EU requires that member nations are democracies, but the EU itself is part of a troika which has invalidated Greek democracy.Nigel Farage has warned that Greece is on the verge of revolution, amid fears Athens will default on its debts.
Speaking in his characteristically confrontational style, he told MEPs on Tuesday that if he were Greek he would join in the violent protests against the imposition of austerity measures.
"Puppet Papademos is in place, and as Athens caught fire on Sunday night he rather took my breath away - he said violence and destruction have no place in a democratic country," Farage said.
"What democratic country? He's not even a democratically elected prime minister."
I wonder about this "getting everyone to sign" malarkey. I would have thought that there might be some room to implement cuts but not actually. For instance, why not sell off your utilities to, say, the Germans, and then enact legislation which makes it very hard to run (e.g. no cutting anyone off until after a 6 year trip through an incomprehensible Greek legal process; punitive fines for less than 100% performance; etc.). I would imagine that a determined people (and a determined government) could do a lot if it wanted,UndercoverElephant wrote: It could backfire though. Lets imagine all the major Greek parties agree to enact the cuts. Perhaps this just drives the voters into the hands of minor parties who haven't made that agreement. The result would be a new Greek parliament made up of independents, the far left and the far right.
Great idea Peter, I'm all for it. The hard bit is emboldened.Blue Peter wrote:I wonder about this "getting everyone to sign" malarkey. I would have thought that there might be some room to implement cuts but not actually. For instance, why not sell off your utilities to, say, the Germans, and then enact legislation which makes it very hard to run (e.g. no cutting anyone off until after a 6 year trip through an incomprehensible Greek legal process; punitive fines for less than 100% performance; etc.). I would imagine that a determined people (and a determined government) could do a lot if it wanted,UndercoverElephant wrote: It could backfire though. Lets imagine all the major Greek parties agree to enact the cuts. Perhaps this just drives the voters into the hands of minor parties who haven't made that agreement. The result would be a new Greek parliament made up of independents, the far left and the far right.
Peter.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... 6OCIn1QArw'Greece doomed, economy total farce & fiction!'
I don't think anybody believes the cuts are implementable. I have come to the conclusion that this election in Greece is going to be the point where the can can be kicked no further. Greece is going to default, and immediately attention will turn to Portugal and Ireland, which will both also default eventually. There will be a last, desperate attempt to build a wall to stop the contagion from reaching Italy, but by that point it will have already spilled out into the UK and the US.Blue Peter wrote:I wonder about this "getting everyone to sign" malarkey. I would have thought that there might be some room to implement cuts but not actually. For instance, why not sell off your utilities to, say, the Germans, and then enact legislation which makes it very hard to run (e.g. no cutting anyone off until after a 6 year trip through an incomprehensible Greek legal process; punitive fines for less than 100% performance; etc.). I would imagine that a determined people (and a determined government) could do a lot if it wanted,UndercoverElephant wrote: It could backfire though. Lets imagine all the major Greek parties agree to enact the cuts. Perhaps this just drives the voters into the hands of minor parties who haven't made that agreement. The result would be a new Greek parliament made up of independents, the far left and the far right.
Peter.
That's why they are now talking about withholding most of the money until after the election and the new government have signed up.Blue Peter wrote:I wonder about this "getting everyone to sign" malarkey. I would have thought that there might be some room to implement cuts but not actually. For instance, why not sell off your utilities to, say, the Germans, and then enact legislation which makes it very hard to run (e.g. no cutting anyone off until after a 6 year trip through an incomprehensible Greek legal process; punitive fines for less than 100% performance; etc.). I would imagine that a determined people (and a determined government) could do a lot if it wanted,UndercoverElephant wrote: It could backfire though. Lets imagine all the major Greek parties agree to enact the cuts. Perhaps this just drives the voters into the hands of minor parties who haven't made that agreement. The result would be a new Greek parliament made up of independents, the far left and the far right.
Peter.
Thanks for posting that. Very interesting, yes.Tarrel wrote:Interesting programme on Radio 4 last Monday, playing out various scenarios for what will actually happen when Greece defaults...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0 ... urogeddon/
Yes very interesting.Tarrel wrote:Interesting programme on Radio 4 last Monday, playing out various scenarios for what will actually happen when Greece defaults...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0 ... urogeddon/
That was just the start. It goes way beyond that now.vtsnowedin wrote:Yes very interesting.Tarrel wrote:Interesting programme on Radio 4 last Monday, playing out various scenarios for what will actually happen when Greece defaults...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0 ... urogeddon/
Now let me get this straight.
The austerity programs that the Greeks are against included things like not being able to retire after just twenty years at full pay and having a balanced budget which means getting rid of several thousand government workers.
No. You are misrepresenting the situation.
Instead of these Draconian measures they want to throw the country into chaos and have there money devalued by half or more and stiff any holder of Greek debt from fifty to one hundred percent insuring that all future international transactions will be on a Gold on delivery basis?
Are they really that stupid?