Discussie: Griekenland
Los bericht bekijken
Oud 23 februari 2012, 17:25   #1435
Cornelius Suilenroc
Partijlid
 
Cornelius Suilenroc's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 5 februari 2012
Berichten: 219
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Savatage Bekijk bericht
Dat ook, maar dat is voor je eigen geld te redden dat je dat doet. I.h.g.v. Griekenland betaal je werkelijk de rekening van jarenlange peperdure compleet nutteloze ambtenarij.
Ihgv Griekenland, wie zou daar nu beter van worden?

http://rt.com/community/blogs/debunk...ology-economy/

Citaat:
So the Greek state is poor, the Greek are poor, but Greece is not … In fact Greece is filthy rich. Some facts.

Greek shipping companies own some 4,100 ships, 16 per cent of the world’s merchant fleet. In 2010 their annual income rose to 15.4 billion euro. On this, they pay next-to-no taxes. The Greek fiscal authorities cannot check their accounts. They are in Switzerland or London anyway.

The Greek Orthodox Church owns stock in the National Bank, hotels, parking lots, convenience stores, businesses, forests, mountains. It is the biggest landowner of the country. Most of this income is tax free.

Some 560 billion euro are stashed away in foreign banks. That is double the Greek GNP.

There’s more. France, one of the EU countries so eager to penalize Greece for its “bad behavior” sold 3 billion euro of navy ships and helicopters to the country in 2009. That’s right, in the middle of the crisis. In fact, defense is the only state department that does not have to cut down. The European Commission seems to have a blind spot there.

Here in Brussels, there’s an excellent new book out on this by Peter Mertens. It’s called “Hoe durven ze?” (How dare they?). Ignored by the mass media in Brussels, it’s a top-seller anyway. It has a whole chapter on Greece. In a decent world, this book would be translated to English (and Greek!). Well, not quite, in a decent world books like this one would not have to be written.

This is a social experiment. The bankers are trying out how much they can get away with. Their plan is to make future elections irrelevant, to make democracy redundant, empty, meaningless … penniless. More for us, nothing for you.

We can only hope for the resilience of the Greek people to keep up the fight for social justice and for massive international solidarity. The first thing is already happening, the latter not (yet). What the Greek now practice on the streets has a name: democracy (that is a Greek word, folks!)

It’s up to us to help them. We owe it to the Greeks. They are fighting for our future.
__________________
An emancipated society, on the other hand, would not be a unitary state, but the realization of universality in the reconciliation of differences. Theodor W. Adorno
Cornelius Suilenroc is offline   Met citaat antwoorden