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trade2live
Registered: Jan 2009
Posts: 314 |
07-25-12 08:08 PM
Frankly, I consider myself a pacifist , but when something like what is happening in Greece and Spain threatens economic armageddon on your homeland, whether it's depression or runaway inflation, I can see that war becomes something
you consider.
But there is no need for a war, you would just put Greece etc. under EU administration, so they actually do cut their budgets drastically and to deal with violent protests, the EU would provide the support of its army.
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C6H12O6
Registered: Jan 2006
Posts: 291 |
07-25-12 08:15 PM
Quote from Grandluxe:
do they have a capable offensive army now?
Yes, they do, it's called "BUNDESBANK", even more dangerous than the nazi cr@p of 60 years ago.
Quote from trade2live:
Frankly, I consider myself a pacifist , but when something like what is happening in Greece and Spain threatens economic armageddon on your homeland, whether it's depression or runaway inflation, that 's a reason for war to me , ten times over Afghanistan and terrorists.
+1
The III (european) war is happening right before your eyes. 
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trefoil
Registered: Mar 2007
Posts: 3383 |
07-25-12 08:26 PM
This thread is proof, if more were needed now that the euro has turned into the disaster it was always heading for, that a currency union is, internally, a zero sum game, and always winds up being a transfer union from the winner out to all the losers.
In any currency union, there can only be one ultimate winner. For a nation, an acceptable outcome, perhaps, although not without friction sometimes; but put multiple nations together, and suddenly, not so much. The losers resent losing; the winners resent having to send money to keep the losers from doing something impolitic.
The EU becoming a currency union was, simply, a bridge too far.
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peilthetraveler
Registered: Jun 2005
Posts: 7057 |
07-25-12 09:42 PM
Quote from trade2live:
But there is no need for a war, you would just put Greece etc. under EU administration, so they actually do cut their budgets drastically and to deal with violent protests, the EU would provide the support of its army.
How much would that army cost though? If the army costs 1 billion euros per day, then after a year you've already spent more money than greece was in debt.
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morganist
Moderator
Registered: Sep 2008
Posts: 3404 |
07-25-12 09:43 PM
Quote from Covertibility:
Merkel doesn't want Greece to leave the zone, probably out of the fear that others will follow the Greeks out, and the Greeks don't appear to be doing anything other than waiting for bailout money. So why not let the Jerries annex Greece?
Headlines would be amsuing:
13:05 Germany declares war on Greece, demands immediate surrender
13:10 Greeks says will hold elections to figure out what to do, then will rehold elections if they voted for the wrong people, will hold new elections if the second elections were again, the wrong people were vote in, then may hold more elections depending on 3rd election
13:15 France surrenders
13:20 Switzerland declares neutrality, will accept all deposits from any and all nations, prefers Nazi gold deposits
Germay needs the weaker states in the Euro to make their economy work.
http://morganisteconomics.blogspot....omic-model.html
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