yes, what do you know? because pumping vast amounts of money into the economy was precisely what europe opted for several years later (after the insurgent and rebellious greeks were put to the whip, evidently much to your satisfaction). what was quantitative easing? what are all these ‘stimulus bills’ that get cooked up with haste in a week when the banks get threatened?
how quaint that you buy the line that greece's own elite, with its local corruptions and wastefulness, it's 'small envelopes' and fakelaki, are the reason their economy crashed. nothing to see here. europe the beneficent alma mater!
the stock market is volatile because it has been allowed to ‘grow’ using shady means and lax oversight. just like the giant bubble that burst in 2008. we learned nothing. trump and his cronies were reliant on the stock market’s record highs for their news churn. it’s good for ratings. trump could go on tv and brag about ‘the biggest numbers ever’ and give americans the impressions that his shitshow of cronyism and deregulation were achieving great things. similar to how european centrist governments kept repeating their record unemployment levels and stressing the great recovery of their economies. well that’s all being nicely put to the test, now that the third of every country's population who are without secure employment are applying to have the government pay their wages, isn’t it? bad solutions, fake recovery, and the same people making off into the sunset with the wealth generated.
yet again the executives who were spared prison and spared iniquity in 2008 are giving themselves bumper bonuses — and expecting nationalisation of their industries when the vehicle they’re driving inevitably spins out of control. the same people who took the bailout money post-2008, with a firm admonishment, and then proceeded to refuse credit to struggling businesses and little men, are queuing up for another tranche of fed handouts. nothing has changed.
can you believe sarkozy said this at the time?
‘A particular notion of globalisation is over, along with the end of finance capitalism, which imposed its logic on the entire economy and helped to distort it.’
recent commentary on macron's address to the nation about coronavirus:
Up at the top of the speech, Macron insisted that it was impossible to put a price on health. By the end, he was extolling the virtues of the welfare state and arguing that certain goods and services ‘must be placed beyond the laws of the market’. In a glancing blow at globalisation, he identified a ‘model’ with ‘great flaws’: it was ‘madness’ to delegate the nation’s basic needs – food, ‘protection’ (a reminder that he regards Nato as ‘brain-dead’) and health – to others.
you've got to laugh -- that or you'd cry.
Last edited by uziq (2020-03-25 06:59:24)