It is harder and harder to avoid the conclusion that Germany, Austria, Finland and the Netherlands should leave the Euro. For economic reasons - because as long as they are in it, the euro is overvalued - and especially for political reasons, because the choices are as follows:
(a) endless austerity, which screws the Greeks, Spaniards, Portuguese etc., leading to a vicious political backlash in the peripheral countries (think Golden Dawn in Greece, or the neo-Fascists in Italy).
(b) endless financing of the periphery by the core, which runs the risk of a vicious political backlash in the core countries (think True Finns, or Geert Wilders in the Netherlands).
Anyone assuming that Germany's economy would nosedive if it weren't in the eurozone should explain why it is that industrialised economies smaller than Germany's - South Korea, Taiwan, Sweden - which have their own currencies appear to have done alright.l
I think maybe he licked out the norwegian prossie who had been marinaded in my footage
no wonder my feelings for him have died ...
she is a particularly horrible entity it says alot that he couldn't see that ...
Goodness, more distractions. Although I didnt invest capital in tittle tattle Im just glad my solid carbon dioxide and sand extraction companies are producing such dividends.
On second thoughts, its worth dumping all my Merde assets right now.
Boodge
9 September 2012 10:09PM
Happened to my sister and brother-in-law one morning. BIL had stumbled out of bed, turned on bath, gone back to bed to wait for bath to fill, and fallen asleep.
I was a bit alarmed when he posted on Facebook, at about 9 in the morning, 'The filth have just broken down the door to the flat.'
Hope your situation is something similarly underwhelming.
(a) endless austerity, which screws the Greeks, Spaniards, Portuguese etc., leading to a vicious political backlash in the peripheral countries (think Golden Dawn in Greece, or the neo-Fascists in Italy).
(b) endless financing of the periphery by the core, which runs the risk of a vicious political backlash in the core countries (think True Finns, or Geert Wilders in the Netherlands).
Anyone assuming that Germany's economy would nosedive if it weren't in the eurozone should explain why it is that industrialised economies smaller than Germany's - South Korea, Taiwan, Sweden - which have their own currencies appear to have done alright.l