• Welcome to the Internet Infidels Discussion Board.

Germany Says ‘Nein’ to Greece Bailout Request

Perspicuo

Veteran Member
Joined
Jan 27, 2011
Messages
1,289
Location
Costa Rica
Basic Beliefs
Empiricist, ergo agnostic
Germany Says ‘Nein’ to Greece Bailout Request
http://time.com/3714820/greece-bailout-rejected/

Greece caved in to pressure from the rest of the Eurozone Thursday and asked for an extension of its bailout program.
More
Jews Face Renewed Doubt Over Their Future in EuropeFormer Fed Chair Greenspan Predicts Greece Will Leave Euro'Sleepwalking' Into Crisis: How Putin Took West by Surprise NBC NewsMom 'Spent Countless Hours' Helping Suspected Killer NBC News15 Dead, Records Obliterated as Brutal Cold Hits U.S. NBC News

But euphoria in financial markets lasted less than two hours before the German finance ministry said the request wasn’t “substantial” and didn’t offer enough guarantees that it would continue to implement reforms.

Berlin’s rejection came barely an hour after Dutch finance minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem had confirmed that the Eurogroup’ (comprising the Eurozone’s 19 finance ministers) would meet again Friday in Brussels to discuss the request.
 
The word is capital. "Capitol" is a hill in Rome. I hope the guy who nicknamed the US congress "Capitol Hill" is burning in grammar hell now.
:angryfist:
 
The Greeks Blazing Saddles negotiating strategy does not seem to be working.

View attachment 2317

You mean the strategy of Greece saying they'll continue with the current policies for at least six more months?

I agree that was terrible.

To continue with their current policies they need their bail out package re-approved.

Since they require other people's money, they require other people's consent.
 
I would just like to be the first to point out (as everyone else seems to have missed it) that Harry made a minor spelling error in his post, and hilariously wrote 'capitol' instead of 'capital'. This error clearly outweighs in importance any possible circumstance in the Eurozone, so I suggest that we all spend the rest of the thread pointing out this small mistake.

Thank you all in advance for your cooperation.
 
I would just like to be the first to point out (as everyone else seems to have missed it) that Harry made a minor spelling error in his post, and hilariously wrote 'capitol' instead of 'capital'. This error clearly outweighs in importance any possible circumstance in the Eurozone, so I suggest that we all spend the rest of the thread pointing out this small mistake.

Thank you all in advance for your cooperation.

OK. So this thread is all about something like  Brasilia, or, about Brasilia's population inflation.

Inquiring minds .....
 
Germany Says ‘Nein’ to Greece Bailout Request http://time.com/3714820/greece-bailout-rejected/
First Law of Banking: don't chase bad Capitol with new.

First law in life: Don't enslave yourself to people who only wishes to use you for their purposes. The Germans never had good faith in mind for Greece. They and unscrupulous people in Greece created onerous debt that can NEVER BE RETIRED.:beatdeadhorse:

Whenever a weak party and a strong party have a conflict of interest, it is the strong party that has to make concessions or the weak party just continues to be weaker and buried deeper in undeserved debt. This was the case with IMF debt in Africa contracted by unscrupulous and uninformed dictatorial governments there who were robbing the people. Making these debts good to the loaner would have allowed the culprits to sneak away with their loot. Most of them did so anyway.

When you build an economic structure that unduly creates harsh, austere conditions for people the structure NEVER BENEFITTED, you are ignoring the wrongness of your actions. That is what the Germans are doing today in this matter. It is haircut time.
 
Those evil creditors, wanting to be paid back and not wanting to lend more. Don't they know it is the duty of lenders to continue to lend, no matter how much they lose out, because otherwise they are evil and don't care about people?
 
First Law of Banking: don't chase bad Capitol with new.

First law in life: Don't enslave yourself to people who only wishes to use you for their purposes. The Germans never had good faith in mind for Greece. They and unscrupulous people in Greece created onerous debt that can NEVER BE RETIRED.:beatdeadhorse:

Whenever a weak party and a strong party have a conflict of interest, it is the strong party that has to make concessions or the weak party just continues to be weaker and buried deeper in undeserved debt. This was the case with IMF debt in Africa contracted by unscrupulous and uninformed dictatorial governments there who were robbing the people. Making these debts good to the loaner would have allowed the culprits to sneak away with their loot. Most of them did so anyway.

When you build an economic structure that unduly creates harsh, austere conditions for people the structure NEVER BENEFITTED, you are ignoring the wrongness of your actions. That is what the Germans are doing today in this matter. It is haircut time.
If Greece had defaulted, wouldn't it be in much deeper sinkhole right now? Greece had and to some extent still has some structural problems in its government. It's easy to say that austerity doesn't work, but if you don't have the money and nobody will borrow you any, what other option is there?
 
Those evil creditors, wanting to be paid back and not wanting to lend more. Don't they know it is the duty of lenders to continue to lend, no matter how much they lose out, because otherwise they are evil and don't care about people?
It's not like banks actually have the money to start with. They just create, then "advance" it. You and I on the other hand have to actually have the money in the first place. Then we can "lend" it, rather than "advance" it.

But why did these banks "advance" Greece more than they were supposed to anyway.
Why shouldn't the banks take responsibility for advancing money they knew could never be repaid?
 
First law in life: Don't enslave yourself to people who only wishes to use you for their purposes. The Germans never had good faith in mind for Greece. They and unscrupulous people in Greece created onerous debt that can NEVER BE RETIRED.:beatdeadhorse:

Whenever a weak party and a strong party have a conflict of interest, it is the strong party that has to make concessions or the weak party just continues to be weaker and buried deeper in undeserved debt. This was the case with IMF debt in Africa contracted by unscrupulous and uninformed dictatorial governments there who were robbing the people. Making these debts good to the loaner would have allowed the culprits to sneak away with their loot. Most of them did so anyway.

When you build an economic structure that unduly creates harsh, austere conditions for people the structure NEVER BENEFITTED, you are ignoring the wrongness of your actions. That is what the Germans are doing today in this matter. It is haircut time.
If Greece had defaulted, wouldn't it be in much deeper sinkhole right now? Greece had and to some extent still has some structural problems in its government. It's easy to say that austerity doesn't work, but if you don't have the money and nobody will borrow you any, what other option is there?

Venezuelan style or, in the extreme, Zimbabwean style inflation? Print the money you need (which means leaving the euro) and hope inflation doesn't run away from you into hyperinflation?
 
Back
Top Bottom