Saturday 7 May 2011

Enslavement via Euro bondage

"that is what you do with a pig: tie him upside down, slit his throat and drain him dry." Robert Pye, Irish bureaucrat

I working on a theory that the Euro, and the whole EU, for that matter,
are just designed to be the plaything of the large Northern-European economies.

It seems likely that, even without the financial crisis, the powers in Europe,

the Euro/ECB and Germany seem to be all too willing to
throw a country or two into the fire.
The former Irish Finance Minister said that he was invited to
a kind of mafia dinner, in Brussels, and then presented with the baseball bat
that would bust his head open if he didn't play ball,
i.e. default, or you're screwed. [see stories below]


There are more than just rumours that Greece's PM, Uncle Pap
went to the IMF, secretly during November/December 2009 (before their bailout)
to sign up his country for enslavement. There's a court case which seeks to
prove that it took a series of illegal actions for people in the Greek government
to push the country into 'receivership.'
But, besides the waxing and waining of small-time generals like them,
the Euro/EU seem to have a policy that in exorably leads small,
peripheral countries into enslavement, crisis, and destitution.

I'll explain briefly:
1
If , as we can see, Germany's money-making exporting policy leads to
it getting 'most favoured nation' status at the ECB, then monetary policy
is designed to help Germany, and maybe a couple of other similar countries,
by chance, e.g. France and Holland.
The small, largely tourist-dominated economies are left with no growth, and
pressure to lower deficits when they haven't the economic strength to do so.
So, they eventually all fail, under this system.
2
It seems that Germany needs a weak Euro to sell more stuff abroad.
The ECB and Germany/France collude to foment rumours of Euro failure, and
when that doesn't work, they start pushing small peripheral Euro countries into default,
just to help those Northern countries.
3
The Common agricultural policy helps the big Northern European farmers and their mechanised, chemicalised, financialised farming methods, to the detriment of people's health.
The EU doesn't care. It closes borders to food trade
from poor parts of the world i.e. Africa,
and does so even though it's illegal under GATT.
In return for Africa's mute response,
(because they know they'll get worse if they don't f^&*8k off)
they get excess European production dumped on their markets,
bankrupting farmers and dealers everywhere.

What's an African with no job or food going to do?
He's gonna hop on a boat in the Mediterranean,
and go to France? Germany?
NO! they're gonna go to Italy, Spain and Greece.
So, agricultural policy brings big protected bucks to Northern farmers
and a social crisis to the southern countries. I exaggerate not.
an invasion

Do you think that Brussels will give money and manpower to stem this tide?
perhaps an EU border patrol?
at least, as a sign of penance?
Not a freaking chance.
they want to change the Shengen agreement
to keep the poor Africans and Asians from
going "up North".
Policeman says: "Ahmed, Jugdish, Mbanawanda!"
"Get back to your homeland, you scumbags!"
"Greece! It's nice.... really! Lots of sun."

So, as with all societies, the weak get trampled. and so,
the small peripheral EU countries
become the slaves of the North,
their countries overrun from above and below.

-Costick67 ~(8^P

checkitout: 2 stories
1 from Directdemocracy.ie
European Central Bank accused of forcing Ireland into a bailout
Monday, 25 April 2011 23:20
rte.ie
Former finance minister Brian Lenihan has accused the European Central Bank of forcing Ireland into a bailout.
Speaking on a BBC Radio 4 Documentary about the Irish bailout, Mr Lenihan said that the governing council of the ECB had appeared to have believed that Ireland 'needed to be nailed down'.
He said he felt that the European Commission had a more relaxed attitude to Ireland.
Mr Lenihan said that the major pressure for the bailout came from the ECB and also said he came under pressure at a meeting on European Finance Ministers on 16 November 2010 to agree to a bailout.....

2
Ireland told: Take EU bailout or trigger crisis

Dublin warned it has 24 hours to make decision as EU emergency talks loom amid fears Irish banks' contagion may spread to other eurozone countries
Comment: Crisis puts Germany in the driving seat
o Share905
* Henry McDonald, Elena Moya and Larry Elliott
* guardian.co.uk, Monday 15 November 2010 17.59 GMT

Brian Lenihan, Ireland's finance minister, will discuss the situation with eurozone finance ministers in Brussels tomorrow.

An increasingly isolated Irish government was coming under mounting pressure tonight to seek an EU or International Monetary Fund bailout within 24 hours amid fears that contagion from its crippled banking sector might spread through the weaker eurozone countries.

Portugal, Spain, the European central bank and opposition parties urged Brian Cowen's coalition government to remove the threat of a second crisis in six months by putting a firewall between Ireland and its 15 partners in the single currency....