Athens, anyone?
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Don Petter
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I can well understand how the average family Antonopoulos, having seen price hikes, tax increases and pension cuts might be tempted to get rid of a government that dances to the tune of the EU and especially of Frau Merkel. Perhaps though they ought to be careful what they wish for.
Was #3 λογοπαίγνιο ?
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To be effective, any government needs a power base. It saddens me to have to say this, but Syriza would appear not to have one - self-sufficiency being declared out of the question, Greece having long been reduced to service industries and tourism in the post Reagan-Thatcher world carve-up that relocated wealth-creation to places that would threaten no obstacles to profitability. The BBC omitted to bring anyone questioning of austerity economics onto this morning's Andrew Marr and The Politics Show, natch: commentators to a man and woman proclaiming national suicide and even treason should the Greeks incorrectly posit their democratic inclinations.
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hedgehog
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostLast edited by Guest; 26-01-15, 06:34.
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Politics, anyone ? (yawn)
But seriously, anything can be 'politics', e.g. your kids' school needing repairs, the local library closing down, fracking under your house, county music shrivelling to nothing, It isn't (or shouldn't be IMVHO) something apart from everyday life.
I agree our own run-up to the May election is already yawn-worthy.
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Interesting Today interview with the chap who will apparently be the new Finance minister, it seems that Greece will stay in the Euro and try to reschedule its debts so that repayments come from future economic growth, which is to say no time soon given the terrible state of the Greek economy. Over to you Frankfurt.
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostProve me wrong, but I can't see this government lasting for very long.
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