Great Socialist Victory In Greece A Reminder That Laissez-Faire Does Not Exist!

mascale

Gold Member
Feb 22, 2009
6,836
800
130
The Bachman Party of Old Fat White People, Cavorting About Naked On Other People's Yachts--Dumping Substance And Other Treasure Into The Sea: Is not aware of the concept that, "Spending Cuts Create Spending Cuts."

Greek rioters, on the other hand, seem to have a handle on the concept.

Mainly, the Bachman Party of Old Fat White People, Cavorting about Naked on Other People's Yachts--Dumping Substance And Other Treasure, Into The Sea: Seems mainly to know that it takes a nine-year old, to start a Revolution.

Bond rating service Moody's knows that $1.00 cuts in spending cuts $1.40 from GDP. Unemployment rises, and mortgage-paper holders, even go bankrupt.

Suppose that math now occurs in Europe, and then is manipulated in the usual manner: Then even in Matthew 25::14-30, (KJV or Catholic Edition), then clear no "free market" is in place, but "failed system" is in place. The rich get richer. The poor get poorer. Prices rise, for too many greater than the increase of income. Mortgage Payments stop being made. Millions get cast into Outer Darkness, and the Rich then follow them along.

So it's in the Arithmetic That Tea Party GOP fails. If Greece has cut back on incomes largesse--and espcially at upper levels--and is further imposing extended qualifications for benefits--Like Senator Lieberman and Actual Conservative GOP are proposing, for USA: Then no laissez-faire is underway, but a rational intervention into a failed system is under way.

The New Deal Did That. The Ivy League still seeks, "Change It Can Believe In," at this time: Even thinking it has it all right now!

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(Young warrior speed like chicken hawk--careening from sky to commence Great Feast post--rendering-of-prairie-mouse--unencumbered, like forefathers--in "Land, That They Love(?)!"
 
Sausalito, even: Not too thrilled at concept, at all.

The right-wing menagerie--and especially on CNBC, "Everybody's Business" channel, on cable TV: Will fail as always to note that Great Free Markets are places like Haiti, and East Africa, in the drought. As soon as arithmetic is introduced--through currencies--then manipulations creating systems are in place.

So any "free Marketeer," probably with white little mouse-eared caps, would have to point to a story like that one in Matthew, cited: And conclude that the "free Market" they are for is a history of failed systems, forever, and all over again.

Greece is about putting Socialist models back on track--clearly also subject to computing--and Lieberman and Cochran are all about putting the U. S. Credit Maket back on the Socialist Track as is usual.

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(Great Chicken Hawk even leave many entrails--for friends among vultures of the great American desert, and prairie--often called, "Midwestern Banks!")
 
Sausalito, even: Not too thrilled at concept, at all.

The right-wing menagerie--and especially on CNBC, "Everybody's Business" channel, on cable TV: Will fail as always to note that Great Free Markets are places like Haiti, and East Africa, in the drought. As soon as arithmetic is introduced--through currencies--then manipulations creating systems are in place.

So any "free Marketeer," probably with white little mouse-eared caps, would have to point to a story like that one in Matthew, cited: And conclude that the "free Market" they are for is a history of failed systems, forever, and all over again.

Greece is about putting Socialist models back on track--clearly also subject to computing--and Lieberman and Cochran are all about putting the U. S. Credit Maket back on the Socialist Track as is usual.

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(Great Chicken Hawk even leave many entrails--for friends among vultures of the great American desert, and prairie--often called, "Midwestern Banks!")

1378872-1376752_1249214_what_the_fuck_am_i_reading_super_super_super.png
 
You post this as Greece crumbles in the streets under the sheer weight of it's massive entitlement system?

How fucking stupid are you?
 
Voters have already found that the GOP MediCare reform plan is good way mainly to kill off the GOP.

The financial analysts, on the other hand, can actually look seriously at Liberman-Coburn, and show new concepts worth supporting: In genuine MediCare reform.

The Coburn-Lieberman Medicare Proposal – The Good, The Bad And The Ugly - Rick Ungar - The Policy Page - Forbes

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(As in Crow, Not Coburn--Different kind of concept, entirely--Different kind of creature, entirely!)
 
Greece comin' apart at the seams...
:eusa_eh:
Rough Road Ahead for Greece Despite Austerity Measures
June 29, 2011 - Greek politicians have voted in favor of $40 billion worth of austerity measures that were a precondition for Greece to receive international loans and stave off financial disaster. But as strikes take place across the nation and thousands gather in the capital Athens for a second day of protest.
Root problem

Democracy was born in Greece and many still consider it the cradle of Western civilization. But in 2011 the bedrock of democracy in Greece, its parliament, has been defended by armed police against battalions of citizens who say their voice has been forgotten. The root of this crisis is money. After years of borrowing, Greece is in debt. Faced with a massive deficit and under pressure from the international community, the government has revved up taxes and put the brakes on spending. That's been bad news for most Greeks. Business profits are low and poverty rates are high.

Austerity, many in Greece say, is destroying lives. Babis Papadimitriou, a journalist with the daily paper Kathimerini, says some Greeks conclude that the country would be better to default on its debt and leave the eurozone. "The same people who think the austerity measures are too harsh and too difficult to implement, the same people think that if we go out of the eurozone, we will not need such austerity measures," Papadimitriou said.

Government protection

Many protestors say the rights and well-being of Greek citizens are not at the heart of government policy. They say their government is making decisions that serve the interests of global economic powers and wealthy nations, while Greek people suffer the costs. "This is a game of the global financial government. They want people to be down, not any resistance, absolutely nothing. So we have to fight for this," one protester said.

"I don't need them," added another protester. "I want to feel Greek again. But I'm not Greek. I'm German, I'm American. I don't know what I am." Many though still believe that Greece is made stronger by its partners in the EU. "I think the policies are a good step towards finding common ground with the European Union, which is I think a vision that all Greeks should aspire to," a bystander told reporters. "I don't think any country can operate in isolation these days, especially a country the size of Greece."

European 'dictatorship'

See also:

Greeks Dig in Their Heels, Protest Against Austerity Measures
June 28, 2011 - About 20,000 people rallied in square in front of parliament where lawmakers considering PM Papandreou's latest austerity measures
Police in Athens have fired tear gas on angry protesters in Athens. The street clashes on Tuesday came on the first day of a 48-hour general strike. These are just the latest episodes in an ongoing campaign by Greek citizens against their government’s austerity measures. Gut anger is hurled into the Greek night air as protesters rally outside parliament to tell their elected politicians that they’ve had enough. Both night and day, a community of protesters has also formed in the main square outside parliament. They’ve been here for over a month now. Foula Farmakidi is one of them.

“I’m here actually because I don’t think I have any other choice than to be here. We don’t have any future so we have to do something about it,” Farmakidi explained. They’re disputing cuts in public spending and tax hikes, which over the past year have weakened the welfare state and made many jobless. They eat here, some sleep here, and most debate politics and economics. It’s a form of peaceful and contained action. But the outlook on the streets has at times been more militant. Police have fired tear gas at activists, many of them young men throwing stones and fire bombs.

And trade unions play their own major part. They’re fighting hard with strikes and marches against cuts and government plans to sell public assets, including roads, water companies, and banks. Ektoras Kavadias is the vice-president for the union of a Greek savings bank that the government wants to sell off part of. Workers, he says, shouldn’t have to pay the price for the government’s debt. “It’s as if there was a party going on somewhere," Kavadias said. "Some people went to the party and had a good time. Then they left the party and sent me the bill. And I wasn’t even at the party.” Greece isn’t the only European country seeing unrest.

MORE
 
I couldn't even comprehend the OP... can someone translate to normal english?
 
You post this as Greece crumbles in the streets under the sheer weight of it's massive entitlement system?

How fucking stupid are you?

Well, 'male sac' is an anagram of 'mascale', so I guess that makes him a scrotum. Perhaps he comes from a long line of wrinkled old retainers.
 
People talk about bailing out Greece.

But who are they really bailing out?

The banks that are holding Greece's debts.
 

Forum List

Back
Top