Home Forums Chat Forum The Greek Referendum: I predict a Yes

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  • The Greek Referendum: I predict a Yes
  • Sui
    Free Member

    Anyone see Farage’s speech on the subject.. Not looking for UKIP yays or nays, just very interesting, though completely loaded which is not surprising.

    binners
    Full Member

    I did enjoy the anaology of the clearly mental, but quite amusing UKIP MEP who was on QT last night, comparing the ECB to Wonga – giving out loans to people they knew couldn’t possibly repay them, and then screwing them when they defaulted.

    As we’ve mentioned before, this farce is manna from heaven to Nige and chums as we aproach a referendum. Merkel is Niges secret weapon. He just has to let them get on with it in full view of everyone. Doesn’t even have to say anything

    DrJ
    Full Member

    +1 again. Merkel has done more for EU exit than UKIP ever could. Personally, I would never ever ever vote for UKIP, but I will vote NO.

    Edit – I think it is being kind to compare the ECB to Wonga – I think the mafia is a better analogy. Either your signature on the paper or your brains on the paper.

    v8ninety
    Full Member

    The scary thing is, this is the stuff that wars are made from. Countries backed into a corner with all reasonable options removed and an angry, impoverished populace. Europe is not in a good place at all right now.

    DrJ
    Full Member

    @v8ninety – what could possibly go wrong?

    v8ninety
    Full Member

    I’m sure it’ll all be fine… Lalalala… <eyes scrunched shut, fingers firmly in ears>

    chewkw
    Free Member

    Ya, there go UKIP the bashing. 🙄

    It hurts innit when they are saying the right thing.

    You can keep feeding Greece with loans but how are they going to pay back?

    Ya, they (EURO & UKIP) saw you coming and I told you so. 😯

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    @v8ninety – that was my thoughts last night. 🙁

    richc
    Free Member

    If you think the ECB and EU are some terrible oppressive regime are you hoping that Greeks escape the tyranny of the EU?

    Or are you happy for them to stay in? And stay under the cosh as you seem to think they are; or do you want option 3; a free money tree shipped to Greece

    v8ninety
    Full Member

    If you think the ECB and EU are some terrible oppressive regime are you hoping that Greeks escape the tyranny of the EU?

    Or are you happy for them to stay in? And stay under the cosh as you seem to think they are.
    Who are you asking?

    binners
    Full Member

    Ooooooooo – can I have a free money tree too please?

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Ernie, flawed design. Simple. No common fiscal policy.

    So, No common issuance of EZ debt allowed and when proposed Merkel & Co were opposed. Strongly so.

    While you can understand their reluctance to accept joint liability with “the flagrant” it is unfortunately (for them) an (ultimate) requirement for the project to work. But there are (as always) asymmetric wishes and a lack of desire to take on responsibilities. Please can we have the good bit but none of the bad bits please???

    richc
    Free Member

    Ooooooooo – can I have a free money tree too please?

    You need to be nicer to Merkel then, and may’be she will send one to you as well.

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    footflaps – Member
    Ultimately Brussels ALWAYS gets its way, no matter which way the electorate votes
    Well only one of 28 odd countries actually voted here wrt Greece and Austerity, so we don’t actually know what the whole EU electorate will is.

    If we take it that democracy is the many imposing their will on the few. (which is our piss poor form of it.)

    IMO, the larger the electorate gets the more it becomes blindingly obvious it becomes that Democracy can’t work on that scale. It barely works on a UK level.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    We’ve covered all that. I’m just making the point that this whole debacle has exposed the EU as the utterly authoritarian anti-democratic, self-interested shambles it is

    Now I’ve not been following that closely, but you’re going to have to explain that!

    aracer
    Free Member

    I posted this on an earlier thread:

    … (though the current situation isn’t exactly providing the best platform for sustained peace – is anybody involved paying any attention to history here regarding the required conditions for war?) …
    [/quote]

    http://singletrackworld.com/forum/topic/looks-like-greece-are-sticking-two-fingers-up-to-the-euro-bullies/page/3#post-7023891

    binners
    Full Member

    Now I’ve not been following that closely, but you’re going to have to explain that!

    Come on Mols. Did you miss the bit with the German politicions openly advocating forcing ‘Regime Change’ in Athens.

    Not very democratic that really, is it?

    DrJ
    Full Member
    dragon
    Free Member

    From that link the Greek government must have been really mad or stupid or both to think We went to a war thinking we had the same weapons as them.

    It was more like a 9 mm vs a H-Bomb.

    DrJ
    Full Member

    As I said before, I think they naively believed that the EU would listen to reason. However, it is now clear to them and to everyone else that it is a vicious profoundly undemocratic institution. This toothpaste won’t go back into the tube.

    stumpyjon
    Full Member

    Listen to reason!!! You mean continue dumping cash into a broken economy hoping this time will be different to the last. Everyone has their part to play in cooperative coexistance, I’m sure the EU have made mistakes but it’s generally to Greeks who’ve been in denial.

    IMO, the larger the electorate gets the more it becomes blindingly obvious it becomes that Democracy can’t work on that scale. It barely works on a UK level.

    Got a sensible less bad alternative or is it you just didn’t vote Tory in the election so now consider the concept of democracy is flawed cos you didn’t get your way.

    athgray
    Free Member

    IMO, the larger the electorate gets the more it becomes blindingly obvious it becomes that Democracy can’t work on that scale. It barely works on a UK level.

    It’s called diversity of views and can be healthy for a democracy. What system of government would you suggest for India, Brazil or USA?
    Of course life would be easier if all of a small electorate shared the same opinion, but what a narrow insular world they may share.

    I hope some deal can be done, but rather than it being Germany forcing it’s wish on Greece, Greece will be reliant on the good will and money of smaller and poorer EU nations such as Slovakia and Latvia. Even Finlands exposure to Greek debt amounts to 10% of it’s national budget.

    DrJ
    Full Member
    athgray
    Free Member
    seosamh77
    Free Member

    athgray – Member

    It’s really not worth reading.

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    athgray – Member
    IMO, the larger the electorate gets the more it becomes blindingly obvious it becomes that Democracy can’t work on that scale. It barely works on a UK level.
    It’s called diversity of views and can be healthy for a democracy. What system of government would you suggest for India, Brazil or USA?

    india, brazil and the usa, all countries riddlied with poverty, you’re not disproving my point with those examples.

    athgray
    Free Member

    Seosamh. Perhaps you should speak to the people of these countries and ask if they would prefer a different system of governance. Might be the last democratic choice they make. Perhaps the Chinese system may eradicate poverty? They could seek guidance from other failed reasonably populace democracies such as Germany, France, Australia or Canada on how not to do it.
    It is a shame you have such a low opinion of democracy. I hope a national population of 5,000,000 is not deemed too large in your opinion to be worthy of democracy. 😉

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    I don’t have a low opinion of democracy at all. I just don’t think corporate democracy is democracy.

    Show me a system that isn’t weighted towards the few and I’ll vote for it tomorrow regardless of size. But as we are seeing quite clearly, that’s not what the EU or the UK is.

    And don’t think the UK is immune from what’s happening to greece, same thing is happening here, never ending deficit, and a debt we can never pay back ring any bells? Only difference is that the hawks haven’t **** up the balance of that particular rob here like they did in Greece to make it blatantly obvious(yet) to the general populace.

    Look at the UK, what choice do we have? It’s between making the debt rise a bit slower (labour) or ramp it right up with the tories.

    That is not democracy. Oh but wait, you get to tick a box every 5 years, must be democratic.

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    Btw I love how your UK is developing post ref. You know the one about about solidarity with the poor in Glasgow and Liverpool. Good one that…The budget fair shafted them both equally!

    You must be proud. 😐

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Never miss a cheap shot if you can think of one.

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    ernie_lynch – Member
    Never miss a cheap shot if you can think of one.

    It’s not a cheap shot, it’s a genuine question. What happened to it?

    btw I wasn’t the one who brought up the ref. I’m responding to his cheap shot.

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    Hint: tax credit savings go directly to the corporation tax giveaway.

    Solidarity, old chap. 😐

    athgray
    Free Member

    Calm down seosamh. Never had you down as a euro sceptic. As I said, I hope a deal can be done, but compromise will be the order of the day. Greece is not only looking to Germany, but other nations within the EU with an equal vote but more at stake.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    And don’t think the UK is immune from what’s happening to greece, same thing is happening here, never ending deficit,

    Really? What level of deficit is Greece running and what level is the anti-austerity government proposing going forward? How does that compare with Austerity George?

    Look at the UK, what choice do we have? It’s between making the debt rise a bit slower (labour) or ramp it right up with the tories.

    Now I know politics gets messy and we have just had an un-Tory budget, but are you sure thats right?!? So Austeriy George is ramping up the deficit? He really does need to loose the austerity tag then!

    And what is the link to…

    That is not democracy. Oh but wait, you get to tick a box every 5 years, must be democratic.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    we have just had an un-Tory budget

    You mean the one which made the poor poorer ?

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    You can be disingenuous as hell at times thm. Or don’t you know the difference between debt and deficit? 😆

    Osborne has ramped up the debt much quicker than the previous labour gov.

    Un tory budget. Haha haha haha haha! 😆

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Thanks for your concern Joe, but I am aware of the difference between debt and deficit.

    More confused by your attempt to suggest that the same thing is happening in Greece and the UK when it could hardly be further from the case.

    Greece: anti-austerity party running and proposing a budget surplus (deflationary) at the height of a recession. Detb declining but debt to GFP rising due to collapse in deniminator.

    UK: (misnamed) austerity party running a budget deficit (inflationary and more so than most of our peers). Debt rising but GDP also doing the same thing.

    So other than we have parties doing the opposite of what most people think, where are the similarities? Chalk and feta to me.

    You are correct on the UK debt trajectory – and how does this fit with the usual Tory narrative? Please enlighten the thickies like me….

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