Greece asking for $59 billion now, yes more bailouts and absolutely no such thing as failure!!

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by S2007S, Jul 10, 2015.

  1. Germany never set any deadlines. Germany is not Europe and Europe not Germany. Germany is just one member state and actually one of the least vocal (though possibly the most important and heavyweight) about distrust towards Greeks. Check out what Eastern European, Baltic, Belgium and now Finland has to say about Greeks.

     
    #61     Jul 13, 2015
    TooOldForThis likes this.
  2. sheda

    sheda

    After talks between Athens and its creditors failed to reach an agreement on Thursday, a further meeting of eurozone finance ministers will be held on Saturday in a bid to achieve a breakthrough. With the German chancellor Angela Merkel insisting that a deal must be reached before markets open on Monday mornin
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    Uhuh..
     
    #62     Jul 13, 2015
  3. So you paid theta for nothing huh?

     
    #63     Jul 13, 2015
  4. sheda

    sheda

    The draconian list of demands eurozone leaders handed to the Greek government in return for a European bailout has inspired a social media backlash against Germany and its hawkish finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble.

    ž#ThisIsACoup was the second top trending hashtag on Twitter worldwide – and top in Germany and Greece.

    The tag was attached to tens of thousands of angry comments denouncing German-inspired proposals for European Union-directed reforms of Greece’s public administration and demands that Athens pass new laws within days to raise taxes and cut back on pensions.

    It was given impetus when Paul Krugman, the Nobel laureate economist, praised it on his New York Times blog: “The trending hashtag ThisIsACoup is exactly right,” he wrote. “This goes beyond harsh into pure vindictiveness, complete destruction of national sovereignty, and no hope of relief.

    “It is, presumably, meant to be an offer Greece can’t accept; but even so, it’s a grotesque betrayal of everything the European project was supposed to stand for.
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    The world is starting to acknowledge the true face of germany in this situation.
     
    #64     Jul 13, 2015
    Ditch likes this.
  5. sheda

    sheda

    Maybe in between the 120 hours of "crisis meetings" this week they will throw a few hours to the NEIN SPECULATIONZ and further discuss how to freeride and push the cost of the euro troubles onto the rest of the world who have nothing to do with it under the guise of saving people from evil markets, something I belive you will be paying as early as Jan.
     
    #65     Jul 13, 2015
  6. yes, yes, and yes. ;)

     
    #66     Jul 13, 2015
  7. sheda

    sheda

    The Franco-German impasse threatened to strain Ms Merkel and Mr Hollande’s recent efforts to bolster the EU’s key political alliance. At one point, arguments got so heated that one participant described the atmosphere among finance ministers as “violent”. The eurogroup meeting on Saturday night was suspended after German finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble lashed out at Mario Draghi, the European Central Bank’s president, during a tense stand-off.

    European unity.
     
    #67     Jul 13, 2015
  8. Anyway, you can calm down, a deal has just been reached. :):):)

    By the way, copying others' material is called plagiarism unless you attribute the work by citing the source. I read your lines word for word in the FT hours ago.

     
    #68     Jul 13, 2015
  9. sheda

    sheda

    The weekend has seen only germans in rooms screaming at people I think you will find, I would not call scribblings on a forum "work" and try to get all your comment down without having to come back and edit it...
     
    #69     Jul 13, 2015
  10. you are plagiarising the Financial Times in case you are too dumb to get the point.

     
    #70     Jul 13, 2015