Wednesday, July 15, 2015
"Riot police have clashed with anarchist groups in Athens tonight, as Greece’s PM Tsipras faces rebellion over the country’s bailout plan" So anyone who does not appreciate being fucked over by their own lying gutless back peddling government for the sake of the Troika and the thugs they represent, is automatically an Anarchist?
European Commission will use €7bn from an EU bail-out fund for Greece, as Tsipras says banks might not reopen for months
What is legal basis to use EFSM? The treaties establishing the new rescue fund ruled out the use of the previous EFSM to rescue a eurozone member. Mr Dombrovskis is asked on what the legal basis is for using the moribund fund. "Given the very difficult situation, and given the urgency, and given the way we are addressing the real concern, I think it is still possible," he says. "There are technical interpretations of this decision. There is a political problem that needs to be addressed. At the end of the day, the decision is to be made by the Council. Currently, we don't have better solutions on the table." He adds that by just helping one eurozone country, and not the bloc as a whole, the Commission can get round its own prohibition.
By: Credit Suisse
Will 2015 be the year Europe’s sluggish economy finally sputters to life? Time will tell, but the European Central Bank’s quantitative easing policy, low oil prices, and a weak euro should all help bolster economic growth in the coming months.
Watch our video to see what experts such as José Manuel Barroso, former President, European Commission, and Richard Fisher, former President and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, had to say at the Credit Suisse 18th Annual Asian Investment Conference.
- See more at: http://www.thefinancialist.com/is-the-eurozone-ready-for-healthy-growth/#sthash.1iRVoHdS.dpuf

The comment comes on top of a widely publicised report by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), one of Greece's creditors, which also said the country's debt mountain is hindering growth. IMF chief Christine Lagarde repeated the stance on Wednesday, saying that while Greece needs structural reforms and fiscal consolidation, "the other leg is debt restructuring, which we believe is needed in the case of Greece for it to have debt sustainability”. Debt sustainability - along with the various formats for getting there - has been a central sticking point for the Greek government, which says it cannot support its debt. Germany, Athens' biggest eurozone creditor, has already rejected an outright debt write-off as illegal under the EU treaties, amid a general hardening of euro countries' attitudes to the Tsipras government. The hardening came after Tsipras called a snap referendum on creditors' terms, resulting in a rejection of them by Greek citizens. Since then, creditors have insisted Greece will have to commit to more reforms as the economic situation has deteriorated further, amid closed banks and capital controls, now in place for over a week.
Greece, for its part, asked for a three-year bailout on Wednesday, with the European Commission and the European Central Bank currently looking at whether it is eligible for a further (third) loan.
Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Monday, July 13, 2015

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Greeks are historically hard-working people, betrayed by banksters and their elected tools. The debt isn't THEIRS!! They live under a giant currency-swap turned loan-sharking scam, pushed onto these people without their consent. The people actually got 3% of the loaned money, the rest going to to JP Morgan and the rest. In other words - only an idiot can fall easily to whatever crap media feeds Europe ...
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