Xequecal wrote:
There is the slight problem of the Bundesbank maybe going bankrupt as a result of its exposure to Greek debt. The balanced budget amendment they have will prevent the German government from borrowing money to bail out checking and savings accounts, so a lot of Germans are going to lose everything.
Then perhaps they should have objected more strongly to lending that money in the first place... or maybe the government could bail them out if it stopped spending so much on healthcare and other programs that Europe has spoiled itself with for decades. It's best of they get off the social programs now anyhow; n 10 years they'll need that money for defense and its best to free it up early.
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I mean what is the alternative here? Tell Greece they have to pay, and make them suffer thirty years of 30%+ unemployment and suffer what is effectively the same intergenerational debt bondsge that we refer to as slavery when it occurs in Asia? If you let the market work here they're a literal third world country. They set up some free trade zones with China, the wages in those are something like 3000 euros a year with no benefits or insurance.
It's not slavery even when it occurs in Asia; that's just colorful language.. and really is it suddenly a bigger problem just because Europeans might experience it?
Yes, Greece might have to put itself through this. So what if they're a third world country? It's their own fault. They should have quit voting themselves public largesse years ago. What might be best is for them to have a military dictatorship for a few years so they understand that when you use democracy to vote yourself more and more government money, even when other countries have to lend you money you can't pay back to keep that going, that's where you end up. Either that or make the entire country a German protectorate and don't allow Greeks the vote, public protest, or free press until the debt is resolved.