No it is not. That question is a side-show that is somewhere between marginally relevant and completely irrelevant. By elevating it to "the underlying question" you are ignoring the main point, which is that Greece's debt is unsustainable, and also ignoring the fact that Greece's debt was largely foisted upon it by the immoral actions of bankers who privatised their profits and socialised their losses.johnhemming2 wrote:Sigmar Gabriel who I referred to earlier (as also not being pale blue) is the leader of the German SPD.
I accept that most of the posters to this forum disagree with me.
The underlying question for Greece is whether to accept things like charging VAT on hotels in the Aegean Islands, not allowing people to retire at 50 etc etc
You are trying to make this out as "all the fault of Greece" and in doing so you are nothing more than a recycling machine for the propaganda of the bankers and the european elites.
Yes, we disagree with you, and quite frankly you should be ashamed of yourself, because you are not listening and should know better.
The changes you are suggesting are not going to save Greece. They do not offer Greece a way out.
OK, now I am losing my will to treat you reasonably. You are just a propaganda mouthpiece.What is clear, however, is that if the Greek government to not agree to the reforms above then Greece will continue suffering more.
Greece will continue to suffer whether it agrees to those reforms or not. The only way it will stop suffering is if the euro-authorities admit that Greek debt is unsustainable and writes a lot of it off.
Did you hear that? Or are your fingers still firmly inserted in your ears?
No it is not. It is the central, key issue, and if it is not addressed then there is no point in Greece agreeing to further austerity.The issue of the sustainability of Greek Sovereign debt is a separate issue.
Oh yes it f***ing does, John Hemming.It does not have to be resolved now.
"Can't be"? It *MUST* be. You are quite clearly stating that Greece should be made to pay an unpayable price as a warning to other countries! You are stating that European politics regarding other countries can trump economic reality in Greece.Politically it cannot be resolved in isolation as it also raises questions about Ireland and other countries.
I am out of here. I am going on holiday tomorrow and I have had enough of trying to get through to John Hemming. What a waste of time.
You're brainwashed, mate.