Despite claiming to not understand UE you're doing far better than many who job it is to follow this.UndercoverElephant wrote:It's getting hard to keep up with the developments. In the last 24 hours we've had Gordon Brown saying Italy and France are close to needing bailouts, Angela Merkel attacking the French for "allowing their economy to stall", the Spanish PM calling for Greeks to vote to stick with the euro (but not saying who they should actually vote for) and central banks all over the place promising to print however much money is asked for.
What I want to know is this: do the people who are running the EU actually have a plan for what Europe is going to look like when this is all over, or have they really spent the last four years failing to make any contingency plans for the inevitable disaster that is about to happen? Because I rather suspect the answer is the latter. I think their only plan, throughout, was to try to save the status quo by any means possible, and that now they may have no more idea where this thing is going than you or I do.
ALL the economies in the Eurozone are in danger, all that remains uncertain is the order of their collapse (just like the banks as above). Germany and Denmark will probabily be the last ones standing.
The Mont Pelerin crowd (who are behind all this) always believe a setback is temporary and a step forward permanent. That's why there's no exit strategy from the Euro. That piece of arrogance is going to bring it all down hard. You're right they are clueless