Κυριακή 9 Μαΐου 2010

ΤΡΕΜΟΥΝ !!!!


Τρέμουν όλοι μην τυχόν και αρνηθούμε να πληρώσουμε τα χρέη και δεν γίνουμε οι πουτάνες του ΔΝΤ. Ειλικρινά, μπορούμε να τους κάνουμε να χορέψουν ,αρκεί να μην φανούμε κότες, τώρα όμως που είναι αδύναμοι και τρέμουν μην καταρρεύσει το άθλιο πιστωτικό τους σύστημα.
Που είναι ρε ένας πρωθυπουργός με Π κεφαλαίο ;Να αρπάξει από τα αρχίδια όλη την άθλια τρόικα και όχι τους συμπολίτες του;
Διαβάστε το άρθρο του BBC να δείτε πως φοβούνται την κατάρρευσή αν τυχόν και αρνηθούμε ή επαναδιαπραγματευτούμε το χρέος που μας φόρτωσαν.
Οι μεγάλοι ηγέτες και οι μεγάλοι λαοί στα δύσκολα φαίνονται.
Χωρίς υπερβολή , αυτές είναι οι σύγχρονες Θερμοπύλες μας και η Σαλαμίνα μας.
Αρκεί να μην φοβηθούμε και αρκεί να βρεθεί ένας Λεωνίδας και ένας Θεμιστοκλής , αλλά μην ψάχνετε κανέναν τέτοιον ανάμεσα στα 300 τρωκτικά.
Πιστέψτε το , ΜΑΣ ΦΟΒΟΥΝΤΑΙ

Δείτε....



EU finance ministers are set to meet in Brussels to discuss establishing a new "stabilisation mechanism" to prevent the Greek debt crisis from spreading.

The mechanism, which is being compared to a European-style IMF, would be available to the 16 member states in the eurozone.

Some leaders want details agreed before markets open on Monday, to prevent investor fears over the euro spreading.

But other countries, including the UK, oppose such large-scale support.

On Friday, the leaders of the 16 countries that use the single currency approved an 110bn euro ($145bn; £95bn) loan package to Greece, which is backed by the EU and IMF.

They also agreed to take whatever steps were needed to protect the euro, and to accelerate budget cuts and ensure deficits were addressed.

Correspondents say they are looking to agree on funding of between 50bn and 70bn euros that could be made available immediately to countries in trouble.

While bail-outs are banned under EU rules, the Commission reportedly plans to extend an existing clause in the Lisbon Treaty originally designed to allow it to provide aid to member states experiencing serious difficulties that was used to help Hungary and Latvia.

'Watertight defence'

But the Commission is also seeking approval for a much more ambitious mechanism that could be used to fund hundreds of billions of dollars of loans.

The BBC's Jonny Dymond in Brussels says officials at the European Commission have laboured throughout the weekend to rush through these plans.

Under the proposals, the Commission would borrow money for the stabilisation mechanism directly on the markets to guarantee troubled country's debts.
Officials hope the loan guarantees would prevent the crisis in Greece spreading to other eurozone countries with high deficits or debts as well as low economic growth, most notably Portugal, Spain and Ireland.

"Between now and Sunday night we will have a watertight line of defence," Eurogroup Chairman Jean-Claude Juncker said on Saturday.

"We have to make it clear that all eurozone countries are ready to defend each and every eurozone country, because they want to defend the eurozone as a whole," he added.

Our correspondent says political acceptance from EU nations is critical.

The UK may be happy with the 70bn euro emergency package, but it is not prepared to be part of any EU-style IMF guaranteeing loans.

Deciding the contribution of each country to the stabilisation mechanism could also be a stumbling block.

Fears that a debt default by Greece could paralyse the world's financial system - just as the collapse of Lehman Brothers did two years ago - caused European, US and Asian stock markets to plunge in the past week.

President Obama wants a stable European economy

On Friday, bankers urged the European Central Bank to become the "buyer of last resort" of eurozone government bonds to steady markets.

The president of the European Central Bank, Jean-Claude Trichet, said it had not yet discussed the move but was willing to respond to unfolding events.

The Italian Prime Minister, Silvio Berlusconi, and French President Nicolas Sarkozy have cancelled foreign trips because of the severity of the crisis.

In an interview with Russian media on Saturday, US President Barack Obama said: "I am very concerned about what's happening in Europe. But I think it is an issue that the Europeans recognise is very serious."

Πηγή : BBC

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