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    Syriza ftw

    Indy

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    Post by Indy Mon Jul 13, 2015 4:33 am

    I nešto sa trgovcima oružjem, takođe. Donacije primio.
    Gargamel

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    Post by Gargamel Mon Jul 13, 2015 6:56 am

    Kondo wrote:ti ocigledno ne poznajes nemce te sojbleove generacije. on misli da time radi najbolju stvar jer ima stoprocentnu kontrolu nad situacijom. to sto ti mislis da je to konflikt interesa ili korupcija njemu jos nije doslo do mozga, a kad bude doslo, izbacice iz glave jednim lakonskim pokretom ruke i nastaviti ovo sto radi.
    nije to do Nemaca. pripadnici tehnomenadzerske elite tripuju kako znaju sve i mogu dolje od svih drugih. samo ih treba pustiti da rade, sve ce oni dovesti u red.Syriza ftw - Page 33 3826186726
    Erős Pista

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    Post by Erős Pista Mon Jul 13, 2015 9:29 am

    Gotovo.

    Živo me zanima kako će Cipras sa ovakvim dilom pred Grke.


    _____
    "Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."

    Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
    Erős Pista

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    Post by Erős Pista Mon Jul 13, 2015 10:02 am

    A Evans-Pritchard retweeted
    Syriza ftw - Page 33 E20UmDQS_bigger Alberto Bagnai@AlbertoBagnai 12h12 hours ago
    The missing item in the Eurogroup proposal to Greece.
     


    Syriza ftw - Page 33 CJvZNnrWsAAm9jW


    _____
    "Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."

    Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
    boomer crook

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    Post by boomer crook Mon Jul 13, 2015 10:14 am

    to bi bilo to. mada videcemo kako ce grci na ovo reagovati.


    _____
    And Will's father stood up, stuffed his pipe with tobacco, rummaged his pockets for matches, brought out a battered harmonica, a penknife, a cigarette lighter that wouldn't work, and a memo pad he had always meant to write some great thoughts down on but never got around to, and lined up these weapons for a pygmy war that could be lost before it even started
    uskok i ajduk

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    Post by uskok i ajduk Mon Jul 13, 2015 10:59 am

    Какву реакцију прижељкујете?
    Узгред, шта тачно садржи нови предлог?
    Сурфовао сам по гооглу, кажу: још се не зна.


    _____
    "Mogu li ja da kažem ili ćete Vi da vodite intervju sami sa sobom? Samo kad bih mogla da kažem nešto… Prvo, uvek smo govorili našim građanima da ne možemo i nećemo da gledamo na EU kao na ćup sa novcem. Da bolji kvalitet života, radna mesta i bolje plate moraju doći od nas samih i snage naše ekonomije. Želimo da budemo deo EU jer je to mirovni projekat i jer delimo vrednosti sa EU." - Ana Brnabić
    Ointagru Unartan

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    Post by Ointagru Unartan Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:00 pm

    Ovakav "dogovor" je Cipras mogao da postigne i bez referenduma.


    _____
    "Ne morate krenuti odavde da biste dosli tamo. Moguce je krenuti odavde i vratiti se ponovo tu, ali preko onoga tamo."
    Aca Seltik, Sabrana razmisljanja o topologiji, tom cetvrti.

    My Moon Che Gavara.
    kondo

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    Post by kondo Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:13 pm

    Radagast wrote:Ovakav "dogovor" je Cipras mogao da postigne i bez referenduma.

    sumnjam bi bio bas ovoliko los.
    Erős Pista

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    Post by Erős Pista Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:17 pm

    Jedino može da ga izvuče neki debt relief koji nije upisan u dogovor zbog nemačke javnosti, ali jeste dogovoren. Ali sumnjam da ga ima. Videćemo.


    _____
    "Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."

    Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
    Anonymous
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    Post by Guest Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:30 pm

    William Murderface wrote:Jedino može da ga izvuče neki debt relief koji nije upisan u dogovor zbog nemačke javnosti, ali jeste dogovoren. Ali sumnjam da ga ima. Videćemo.
    Jedna rec: Bundestag.

    Mozda ce dobiti neki simbolicni debt relief, u smislu produzenja rokova isplate.

    No, to ne menja anahronu cinjenicu da suvereni dug Grcke vise nije suvereni dug, posto se Grcka obavezala na servisiranje duga putem prodaje imovine. 

    Ovaj model pritiska jako podseca na situacije sa kraja devetnaestog i pocetka dvadesetog veka, kao sto su bankroti Egipta i Osmanskog carstva, a ideja o isplati 37 milijardi evra od prodate imovine dovesce do neverovatnog zamaha korupcije, jer ce za ovakav poduhvat biti potrebno osnivanje administrativnog monstruma, sa hiljadama zaposlenih i sa milion konflikata interesa u vec izuzetno rovitoj zemlji.
    Erős Pista

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    Post by Erős Pista Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:34 pm

    Naravno. Ne, ovo nije poraz, ovo je satiranje.

    Ali, ali, ali... neko je rekao da je nemačka potrošila sav svoj moralni kapital u ovoj stvari. Slažem se, i dodajem, ćeraćemo se još.


    _____
    "Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."

    Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
    Ointagru Unartan

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    Post by Ointagru Unartan Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:39 pm

    Posto su male sanse da se Grcka oporavi uz pomoc mera koje su joj vec upropastile privredu, gledacemo  verovatno ovaj film jos jednom za par godina.


    _____
    "Ne morate krenuti odavde da biste dosli tamo. Moguce je krenuti odavde i vratiti se ponovo tu, ali preko onoga tamo."
    Aca Seltik, Sabrana razmisljanja o topologiji, tom cetvrti.

    My Moon Che Gavara.
    uskok i ajduk

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    Post by uskok i ajduk Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:41 pm

    Ако дозволите  Syriza ftw - Page 33 4101625831 потребна је велика стручност из области макроекономије да би се оценило који је споразум био бољи или гори. Штета што немамо директан пренос из грчког парламента. Syriza ftw - Page 33 4101625831


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    "Mogu li ja da kažem ili ćete Vi da vodite intervju sami sa sobom? Samo kad bih mogla da kažem nešto… Prvo, uvek smo govorili našim građanima da ne možemo i nećemo da gledamo na EU kao na ćup sa novcem. Da bolji kvalitet života, radna mesta i bolje plate moraju doći od nas samih i snage naše ekonomije. Želimo da budemo deo EU jer je to mirovni projekat i jer delimo vrednosti sa EU." - Ana Brnabić
    Erős Pista

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    Post by Erős Pista Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:43 pm

    Šta stručnost, koje pičke materine, etnopsihologija rešava sve, zar ne? Etnopsihologija i elementary calculus, ne možeš potrošiti pare koje nisi zaradio, i tako to.


    _____
    "Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."

    Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
    Erős Pista

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    Post by Erős Pista Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:43 pm

    newstatesman.com
    Yanis Varoufakis opens up about his five month battle to save Greece
    Read the full Q&A transcript of our interview with Varoufakis here.
    Greece has finally reached an agreement with its creditors. The specifics have not yet been published, but it is clear that the deal signed is more punitive and demanding than the one that its government has spent the past five months desperately trying to resist.
    The accord follows 48 hours in which Germany demanded control of Greece’s finances or its withdrawal from the euro. Many observers across Europe were stunned by the move. Yanis Varoufakis was not. When I spoke with Greece’s former finance minister last week, I asked him whether any deal struck in the days ahead would be good for his country.
    “If anything it will be worse,” he said. “I trust and hope that our government will insist on debt restructuring, but I can’t see how the German finance minister [Wolfgang Schäuble] is ever going to sign up to this. If he does, it will be a miracle.”
    It’s a miracle the Greek people are likely to be waiting for a long time for. On Friday night, when Greece’s parliament agreed to an austerity programme that voters had overwhelmingly rejected in a referendum five days earlier, a deal seemed imminent. A partial write-off of its debt owed to the so-called "Troika" – the IMF, the European Central bank and the European Commission – was unlikely but possible. Now, despite its government’s capitulation, Greece has no debt relief and may yet be thrown out of the Eurozone.
    Varoufakis, who resigned a week ago, has been criticised for not signing an agreement sooner, but he said the deal that Greece was offered was not made in good faith – or even one that the Troika wanted completed. In an hour-long telephone interview with the New Statesman, he called the creditors’ proposals – those agreed to by the Athens government on Friday night, which now seem somehow generous – “absolutely impossible, totally non-viable and toxic …[they were] the kind of proposals you present to another side when you don’t want an agreement.”
    Varoufakis added: “This country must stop extending and pretending, we must stop taking on new loans pretending that we’ve solved the problem, when we haven’t; when we have made our debt even less sustainable on condition of further austerity that even further shrinks the economy; and shifts the burden further onto the have-nots, creating a humanitarian crisis.”
    In Varoufakis’s account, the Troika never genuinely negotiated during his five months as finance minister. He argued that Alexis Tsipras’s Syriza government was elected to renegotiate an austerity programme that had clearly failed; over the past five years it has put a quarter of Greeks out of work, and created the worst depression anywhere in the developed world since the 1930s. But he thinks that Greece’s creditors simply led him on.
    A short-term deal could, Varoufakis said, have been struck soon after Syriza came to power in late January. “Three or four reforms” could have been agreed, and restrictions on liquidity eased by the ECB in return.
    Instead, “The other side insisted on a ‘comprehensive agreement’, which meant they wanted to talk about everything. My interpretation is that when you want to talk about everything, you don’t want to talk about anything.” But a comprehensive agreement was impossible. “There were absolutely no [new] positions put forward on anything by them.”
    Varoufakis said that Schäuble, Germany’s finance minister and the architect of the deals Greece signed in 2010 and 2012, was “consistent throughout”. “His view was ‘I’m not discussing the programme – this was accepted by the previous [Greek] government and we can’t possibly allow an election to change anything.
     “So at that point I said ‘Well perhaps we should simply not hold elections anymore for indebted countries’, and there was no answer. The only interpretation I can give [of their view] is, ‘Yes, that would be a good idea, but it would be difficult. So you either sign on the dotted line or you are out.’”
    It is well known that Varoufakis was taken off Greece’s negotiating team shortly after Syriza took office; he was still in charge of the country’s finances but no longer in the room. It’s long been unclear why. In April, he said vaguely that it was because “I try and talk economics in the Eurogroup” – the club of 19 finance ministers whose countries use the Euro – “which nobody does.” I asked him what happened when he did.
     “It’s not that it didn’t go down well – there was point blank refusal to engage in economic arguments. Point blank. You put forward an argument that you’ve really worked on, to make sure it’s logically coherent, and you’re just faced with blank stares. It is as if you haven’t spoken. What you say is independent of what they say. You might as well have sung the Swedish national anthem – you’d have got the same reply.”
    This weekend divisions surfaced within the Eurogroup, with countries split between those who seemed to want a “Grexit” and those demanding a deal. But Varoufakis said they were always been united in one respect: their refusal to renegotiate.
    “There were people who were sympathetic at a personal level, behind closed doors, especially from the IMF.” He confirmed that he was referring to Christine Lagarde, the IMF director. “But then inside the Eurogroup [there were] a few kind words and that was it: back behind the parapet of the official version. … Very powerful figures look at you in the eye and say ‘You’re right in what you’re saying, but we’re going to crunch you anyway’.”
    Varoufakis was reluctant to name individuals, but added that the governments that might have been expected to be the most sympathetic towards Greece were actually their “most energetic enemies”. He said that the “greatest nightmare” of those with large debts – the governments of countries like Portugal, Spain, Italy and Ireland – “was our success”. “Were we to succeed in negotiating a better deal, that would obliterate them politically: they would have to answer to their own people why they didn’t negotiate like we were doing.”
    He suggested that Greece’s creditors had a strategy to keep his government busy and hopeful of a compromise, but in reality they were slowly suffering and eventually desperate.
     “They would say we need all your data on the fiscal path on which Greek finds itself, all the data on state-owned enterprises. So we spent a lot of time trying to provide them with it and answering questionnaires and having countless meetings.
     “So that would be the first phase. The second phase was they’d ask us what we intended to do on VAT. They would then reject our proposal but wouldn’t come up with a proposal of their own. And then, before we would get a chance to agree on VAT, they would shift to another issue, like privatisation. They would ask what we want to do about privatisation: we put something forward, they would reject it. Then they’d move onto another topic, like pensions, from there to product markets, from there to labour relations. … It was like a cat chasing its own tail.”
    His conclusion was succinct. “We were set up.”
    And he was adamant about who is responsible. I asked whether German attitudes control the outlook of the Eurogroup. Varoufakis went further. “Oh completely and utterly. Not attitudes – the finance minister of Germany. It is all like a very well-tuned orchestra and he is the director.
     “Only the French minister [Michel Sapin] made noises that were different from the German line, and those noises were very subtle. You could sense he had to use very judicious language, to be seen not to oppose. And in the final analysis, when Dr Schäuble responded and effectively determined the official line, the French minister would always fold.”
    If Schäuble was the unrelenting enforcer, the German chancellor Angela Merkel presented a different face. While Varoufakis never dealt with her, he said, “From my understanding, she was very different.  She tried to placate the Prime Minister [Tsipras] – she said ‘We’ll find a solution, don’t worry about it, I won’t let anything awful happen, just do your homework and work with the institutions, work with the Troika; there can be no dead end here.’”
    The divide seems to have been brief, and perhaps even deliberate. Varoufakis thinks that Merkel and Schäuble’s control over the Eurogroup is absolute, and that the group itself is beyond the law.
    Days before Varoufakis’s resignation on 6 July, when Tsipras called the referendum on the Eurogroup’s belated and effectively unchanged offer, the Eurogroup issued a communiqué without Greek consent. This was against Eurozone convention. The move was quietly criticised by some in the press before being overshadowed by the build-up to the referendum, but Varoufakis considered it pivotal.
    WhenJeroen Dijsselbloem, the European Council President, tried to issue the communiqué without him, Varoufakis consulted Eurogroup clerks – could Dijsselbloem exclude a member state? The meeting was briefly halted. After a handful of calls, a lawyer turned to him and said, “Well, the Eurogroup does not exist in law, there is no treaty which has convened this group.”
     “So,” Varoufakis said, “What we have is a non-existent group that has the greatest power to determine the lives of Europeans. It’s not answerable to anyone, given it doesn’t exist in law; no minutes are kept; and it’s confidential. No citizen ever knows what is said within . . . These are decisions of almost life and death, and no member has to answer to anybody.”
    Events this weekend seem to support Varoufakis’ account. On Saturday evening, a memo leaked that showed Germany was suggesting Greece should take a “timeout” from the Eurozone. By the end of the day, Schäuble’s recommendation was the conclusion of the Eurogroup’s statement. It’s unclear how that happened; the body operates in secret. While Greeks hung on reports of their fate this weekend, no minutes were released from any meetings.
    The referendum of 5 July has also been rapidly forgotten. It was preemptively dismissed by the Eurozone, and many people saw it as a farce – a sideshow that offered a false choice and created false hope, and was only going to ruin Tsipras when he later signed the deal he was campaigning against. As Schäuble supposedly said, elections cannot be allowed to change anything. But Varoufakis believes that it could have changed everything. On the night of the referendum he had a plan, Tsipras just never quite agreed to it.
    The Eurozone can dictate terms to Greece because it is no longer fearful of a Grexit. It is convinced that its banks are now protected if Greek banks default. But Varoufakis thought that he still had some leverage: once the ECB forced Greece’s banks to close, he could act unilaterally.
    He said he spent the past month warning the Greek cabinet that the ECB would close Greece’s banks to force a deal. When they did, he was prepared to do three things: issue euro-denominated IOUs; apply a “haircut” to the bonds Greek issued to the ECB in 2012, reducing Greece’s debt; and seize control of the Bank of Greece from the ECB.
    None of the moves would constitute a Grexit but they would have threatened it. Varoufakis was confident that Greece could not be expelled by the Eurogroup; there is no legal provision for such a move. But only by making Grexit possible could Greece win a better deal. And Varoufakis thought the referendum offered Syriza the mandate they needed to strike with such bold moves – or at least to announce them.
    He hinted at this plan on the eve of the referendum, and reports later suggested this was what cost him his job. He offered a clearer explanation.
    As the crowds were celebrating on Sunday night in Syntagma Square, Syriza’s six-strong inner cabinet held a critical vote. By four votes to two, Varoufakis failed to win support for his plan, and couldn’t convince Tsipras. He had wanted to enact his “triptych” of measures earlier in the week, when the ECB first forced Greek banks to shut. Sunday night was his final attempt. When he lost his departure was inevitable.
     “That very night the government decided that the will of the people, this resounding ‘No’, should not be what energised the energetic approach [his plan]. Instead it should lead to major concessions to the other side: the meeting of the council of political leaders, with our Prime Minister accepting the premise that whatever happens, whatever the other side does, we will never respond in any way that challenges them. And essentially that means folding. … You cease to negotiate.”
    Varoufakis’s resignation brought an end to a four-and-a-half year partnership with Tsipras, a man he met for the first time in late 2010. An aide to Tsipras had sought him out after his criticisms of George Papandreou’s government, which accepted the first Troika bailout in 2010.
     “He [Tsipras] wasn’t clear back then what his views were, on the drachma versus the euro, on the causes of the crises, and I had very, well shall I say, ‘set views’ on what was going on. A dialogue begun … I believe that I helped shape his views of what should be done.”
    And yet Tsipras diverged from him at the last. He understands why. Varoufakis could not guarantee that a Grexit would work. After Syriza took power in January, a small team had, “in theory, on paper,” been thinking through how it might. But he said that, “I’m not sure we would manage it, because managing the collapse of a monetary union takes a great deal of expertise, and I’m not sure we have it here in Greece without the help of outsiders.” More years of austerity lie ahead, but he knows Tsipras has an obligation to “not let this country become a failed state”.
    Their relationship remains “extremely amicable”, he said, although when we spoke on Thursday, they hadn’t talked all week.
    Despite failing to strike a new deal, Varoufakis does not seem disappointed. He told me he is “on top of the world.”
     “I no longer have to live through this hectic timetable,” he said, “which was absolutely inhuman, just unbelievable. I was on two hours sleep every day for five months. … I’m also relieved I don’t have to sustain any longer this incredible pressure to negotiate for a position I find difficult to defend.”
    His relief is unsurprising. Varoufakis was appointed to negotiate with a Europe that didn’t want to talk, no longer feared a “Grexit” and effectively controlled the Greek treasury’s bank accounts. Many commentators think he was foolish, and the local and foreign journalists I met last week in Athens spoke of him as if he was a criminal. Some people will never forgive him for strangling a nascent recovery by reopening negotiations. And others will blame him for whichever harsh fate awaits Greece this week.
    But Varoufakis seemed unconcerned. Throughout our conversation he never raised his voice. He came across as imperturbably calm, and often chuckled. His conservation wasn’t tinged with regret; he appears to be treating the loss of power as ambivalently as he treated its acquisition.
    Now he will remain an MP and continue to play a role in Syriza. He will also return to a half-finished book on the crisis, mull the new offers publishers have already begun to send him, and may return to the University of Athens in some capacity after two years teaching in Texas.
    By resigning and not signing a deal he abhorred, he has kept both his conscience free and his reputation intact. His country remains locked in a trap he spent years opposing and months fighting, but he has escaped.
    Harry Lambert (@harrylambert1) ran the New Statesman's UK election site, May2015.com.
    This article was corrected at 14.18 on 13/7/15 to say it was Jeroen Dijsselbloem, not Tusk, who issued the communique, and was also changed to reflect the fact that Varoufakis wishes to continue being in politics.

    • Now read the full Q&A transcript of our interview with Varoufakis.




    _____
    "Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."

    Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
    паће

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    Post by паће Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:44 pm

    William Murderface wrote:Šta stručnost, koje pičke materine, etnopsihologija rešava sve, zar ne? Etnopsihologija i elementary calculus, ne možeš potrošiti pare koje nisi zaradio, i tako to.

    Чегбре, мене нико ништа не обавештава... Америка је банкротирала пре пет година и мени нико ништа не каже?


    _____
       cousin for roasting the rakija
       И кажем себи у сну, еј бре коњу па ти ни немаш озвучење, имаш оне две кутијице око монитора, видећеш кад се пробудиш...
    Anonymous
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    Post by Guest Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:46 pm

    Radagast wrote:Posto su male sanse da se Grcka oporavi uz pomoc mera koje su joj vec upropastile privredu, gledacemo  verovatno ovaj film jos jednom za par godina.

    To zavisi od toga hoce li se artikulisati politicka opcija koja ce uopste biti voljna da ulazi u konflikt sa kreditorima. Siriza je cao, dead as a dodo, ceased to be, bereft of life, shuffled off its mortal coil, run down the curtain and joined the bleeding choir invisible.

    Bojim se da nas mozda ceka drugaciji scenario: dugotrajna, mozda i duza od 10-15 godina, sukcesija slabih, neodlucnih vlada, uz izuzetno slabu ekonomiju iscrpljenu kamatama i merama stednje, sve do kraja ovog istorijskog ciklusa, sta god da se nalazi na njegovom kraju. A uz ovaj scenario idu sve zamislive posledice na planu dalje organizacije kontinenta, od kojih je najvaznija potpuni povratak u sferu realpolitike.  Nemacka je nocas napravila veoma ozbiljan korak u tom pravcu.
    Erős Pista

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    Post by Erős Pista Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:47 pm

    Varoufakis said that Schäuble, Germany’s finance minister and the architect of the deals Greece signed in 2010 and 2012, was “consistent throughout”. “His view was ‘I’m not discussing the programme – this was accepted by the previous [Greek] government and we can’t possibly allow an election to change anything.
     “So at that point I said ‘Well perhaps we should simply not hold elections anymore for indebted countries’, and there was no answer. The only interpretation I can give [of their view] is, ‘Yes, that would be a good idea, but it would be difficult. So you either sign on the dotted line or you are out.’”


    _____
    "Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."

    Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
    Erős Pista

    Posts : 82754
    Join date : 2012-06-10

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    Post by Erős Pista Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:48 pm

    паће wrote:
    William Murderface wrote:Šta stručnost, koje pičke materine, etnopsihologija rešava sve, zar ne? Etnopsihologija i elementary calculus, ne možeš potrošiti pare koje nisi zaradio, i tako to.

    Чегбре, мене нико ништа не обавештава... Америка је банкротирала пре пет година и мени нико ништа не каже?

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    "Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."

    Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
    Erős Pista

    Posts : 82754
    Join date : 2012-06-10

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    Post by Erős Pista Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:49 pm

    In April, he said vaguely that it was because “I try and talk economics in the Eurogroup” – the club of 19 finance ministers whose countries use the Euro – “which nobody does.” I asked him what happened when he did.
     “It’s not that it didn’t go down well – there was point blank refusal to engage in economic arguments. Point blank. You put forward an argument that you’ve really worked on, to make sure it’s logically coherent, and you’re just faced with blank stares. It is as if you haven’t spoken. What you say is independent of what they say. You might as well have sung the Swedish national anthem – you’d have got the same reply.”


    _____
    "Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."

    Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
    Anonymous
    Guest

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    Post by Guest Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:51 pm

    Sada makar znamo zasto je Varufakis podneo ostavku.
    boomer crook

    Posts : 37657
    Join date : 2014-10-27

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    Post by boomer crook Mon Jul 13, 2015 4:45 pm

    da, ovaj varufakisov intervju je odlican. inace kevin ovendan lepo primecuje da u sirizi nemaju lako resiv problem. na primer, za dezurne staljiniste/jakobince sve bi bilo pitanje kadrova i pronalazenja ne-korumpiranih ali, kaze on, cipras je zapravo taj nekorumpirani. onda nije samo ni pitanje politike odnosno politickog kompasa: votdafakisov naslednik klackalotas je zapravo levlje i doktrinarniji marksista. takodje nije ni pitanje ekonomije iz razloga koje je votdafakis vec objasnio u ovom razgovoru.

    ovo je pitanje jednog ozbiljnog loma na koji izgleda siriza nije spremna. jednostavno nasuprot svi optuzbama svakakvog polusveta za sarlatanstvo oni nisu hazarderi.


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    And Will's father stood up, stuffed his pipe with tobacco, rummaged his pockets for matches, brought out a battered harmonica, a penknife, a cigarette lighter that wouldn't work, and a memo pad he had always meant to write some great thoughts down on but never got around to, and lined up these weapons for a pygmy war that could be lost before it even started
    boomer crook

    Posts : 37657
    Join date : 2014-10-27

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    Post by boomer crook Mon Jul 13, 2015 4:49 pm

    Kevin Ovenden
    General strike called in Greece against the deal
    - there are more powerful things than Troikas
    - solidarity needed more than before
    (Please share)
    >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
    The public sector trade union federation in Greece, ADEDY, has called a general strike for Wednesday.
    The strike against the Third Memorandum will be officially announced tomorrow. But activists throughout the public sector unions have begun organising for the stoppage this afternoon.
    Activists in other sectors - the private sector, the universities, the school students, etc - are also agitating for whatever action they believe they can get.
    The parliament has to agree the new memorandum by midnight on Wednesday.
    If MPs are to vote tomorrow, then the strike will be brought forward to tomorrow. Militants of the fighting left are pushing for an "active strike" - in the streets with mass demonstrations, not staying at home.
    Angela Merkel *increased* the pressure on the Greek government even after it capitulated. She said that monitoring of moves to implement the memorandum would be strict and begin immediately.
    German media sources report that she is not certain that this government can pass the memorandum - still less implement it.
    The fight is now on. It is not off: it's the period of shadow boxing that is over.
    The Greek government may have capitulated rather than rupture with the mafia eurozone.
    Now an attempt to impose an austerity "*July coup" against the Greek popular masses risks a different rupture. Between working class Greece and the powers which should not be.
    The Brussels talks settled nothing. They did crack apart and severely weaken the capitalist institutions of Europe.
    The power that delivered the Oxi revolt was not in Brussels, but its spectre felt there.
    That power is the Greek working class with the political independent fighting forces of the radical left at its heart.
    Solidarity with resisting Greece. Not one step back!
    >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
    *The last such attempted parliamentary coup against the popular will (as opposed to coup d'etat) of this magnitude was 50 years ago this week - July 1965.
    It marked the beginning of the end of the post-civil war order in Greece. It finally ended with the overthrow of dictatorship in 1974. It is from that date that the rise of the modern radical left in Greece, as an open force, begins.


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    And Will's father stood up, stuffed his pipe with tobacco, rummaged his pockets for matches, brought out a battered harmonica, a penknife, a cigarette lighter that wouldn't work, and a memo pad he had always meant to write some great thoughts down on but never got around to, and lined up these weapons for a pygmy war that could be lost before it even started
    plachkica

    Posts : 16550
    Join date : 2014-11-06

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    Post by plachkica Mon Jul 13, 2015 4:50 pm

    Varufakis, vođa revolucije koja će doći.
    boomer crook

    Posts : 37657
    Join date : 2014-10-27

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    Post by boomer crook Mon Jul 13, 2015 5:57 pm

    misa brkic u novom pescaniku. da vam sumiram da ne morate da naprezete oci

    Syriza ftw - Page 33 Danilo-Bata-Stojkovi%C4%87-Ko-to-tamo-peva


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    And Will's father stood up, stuffed his pipe with tobacco, rummaged his pockets for matches, brought out a battered harmonica, a penknife, a cigarette lighter that wouldn't work, and a memo pad he had always meant to write some great thoughts down on but never got around to, and lined up these weapons for a pygmy war that could be lost before it even started

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