Spinning Out of Control - Will the Euro collapse bring down U.S. economy?
- Will Europe print endless money to cover their insane Big Government Socialist spending?
- Spain, Cyprus, Italy, Greece, Ireland. Everyone and their banks are going broke.
- There is not enough money in the world to bail out fantasy la-la land Socialist programs.
- Will there be massive inflation and extreme politics?
The so-called "best and brightest" who run the governments and banking systems of the world are fucking morons. No more. No less. Only a total idiot would loan money that could never, ever be repaid. And don't get me started on the Welfare State and the Marxist re-distribution of wealth.
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We have been down this road of stupidity before. After World War I the utterly insane ruling elites left the world in total anarchy. Inflation, violence, revolutions, mass murder by Communists, Imperialism and the rise of Fascism. One hopes history will not repeat itself.
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The ratings agency Fitch just slashed Spain's credit worthiness by three notches to just above junk status and warned that its estimate of the cost of a bank bailout had doubled to €60 billion (£49 billion).
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"The government of Spain has realised the seriousness of their problem," a senior German official told the news agency Reuters.
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He added that an agreement had to be reached before a Greek general election on 17 June. If parties opposed to the terms of a European Union-International Monetary Fund bailout win, it could cause market panic and lead to Athens leaving the eurozone.
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Spain's banks lent heavily to the construction sector during the government created property bubble in the first half of the last decade and are now being doubly squeezed because they hold large quantities of Spanish government bonds. Translation - they invested in crap and want to be bailed out with other people's money.
Italian Fascism - Instability brought extreme politics.
Over the course of the past week, Cyprus's president, finance minister and central bank governor have all admitted an urgent need to recapitalize Popular Bank, the island's second largest lender. Translation - the bank is broke.
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Having been affected by non-performing loans in Greece and by the restructuring of the country's debt in March, the bank now needs a €1.8 billion (£1.5 billion) lifeline by the end of June – a deadline described as "an important crunch time" by Panicos Demetriades, the country's central bank governor.
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If the bank cannot raise the funds privately, the government – itself cash-strapped by its exclusion from international capital markets – will have to step in.
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(UK Guardian)
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