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The man hasn't got any respect. Obviously. I suggest deleting your post.
It would be difficult to think of a less appropriate thread than this given the events of the last 48 hours.Have some respect BST.
Fair play to you for clarifying your point regarding Tunisia, perhaps the thread title could have done with a bit of work with the benefit of hindsight. As for the Greeks, sorry but I don't share your concern its all been a self fulfilling prophecy that is about to come to its natural conclusion. If they can't sort out their own tax system to the point where the business fraternity just rip up tax demands and use the money to purchase luxury items such as yachts why should the rest of europe be expected to prop them up! They've certainly been a net user of funds rather than a provider....the games up!!!
SavvyGreece. "If they can't sort out their own tax system..."You DO realise that Greece has turned round it's fiscal position faster than any country in the world don't you? They've reduced their deficit something like 3.5 times faster than we have done. And the consequences have been devastating. In 2010, they had a deficit of something like 16% of GDP. By last year, they were running a surplus. That is pretty much unheard of. Yes, there were kleptocrats in Greece who had corrupt fortunes. But they are not the ones who are being punished. It is ordinary folk. Pensioners. Kids who have no future (60% youth unemployment). Ordinary people who have seen their salaries reduced by 1/3rd on average. But actually, that wasn't what I was talking about. What scares the living shit out of me is what happens of Greece does leave the EU. Firstly, there's a serious danger of it becoming a failed state with a the internal horrors that that will entail. Breakdown of societal structures. Potential for civil war or the further rise of very extreme politics such as Golden Dawn. That might not give you pause for concern. Personally, it deeply depresses me because we are talking about human beings here. I know several Greek people through my work, who are noble, caring, intelligent, hard-working and thoughtful. I have a huge amount of respect for them (hear that Frosty?) and I fear for their futures. But even that wasn't what I was talking about. The real nightmare is if the contagion spreads and brings down Portugal, Spain and Italy, and the EU really starts to unravel. History says that an embittered, unequal and divided Europe is the most dangerous place on earth. And THAT is what I find truly scary.
Why are the Cricket Board getting involved?
Quote from: RedJ on June 28, 2015, 11:26:23 amWhy are the Cricket Board getting involved?Something to do with KP sending dodgy txt's about Greece, apparently
Back to Greece. There are many economists who aren't on Greece's side. Jeffrey Sachs is hardly a bleeding heart pinko. He wrote a reasonably supportive article about Osborne's Chancellorship just before the Election. So he's scarcely a wild lefty. But look what he has to say about Greece.https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/greece-endgame-eurozone-default-by-jeffrey-d-sachs-2015-06What Germany and the other Northern Europeans are doing to Greece is a crime of monstrous proportions. They deserve to rot in Hell for it.