auscyclefan94 said:
Yet you live in the greatest capitalist country at all. Have you joined any Marxist groups in America to suit your beliefs. What does money laundering have to do with capitalism. Hugo Chavez was the head of a socialist Government in Venezuela and did some very similar things.
Socialist cronies like yourself are massive hypocrites.
Jebus, what do they put into the water down under?
Seriously?
Anyhow, I am a self-admitted Marxist crony.
However, what we would need here in Europe is precisely liberal capitalism that would save enterprises and encourage profit making. What we have is some preverted bankruptocracy, wherein the finance capitalists and speculants and their politician backers-up basically hold a whole continent as a hostage. And yes, it will get worse, and a lot worse.
During the first months of 2013 any economist with half a functioning brain has admitted that the neoliberal responses to the crisis have, putting it bluntly, sucked. The Euro is basically built upon an "Austrian"-esque foundation wherein the strict separation of politics and finances and monetary institutions was, is and unfortunately remains a key goal of the Elite. Add in the neoclassical / neoliberal dogma that crises are virtually inexistent (that is: provided that we remain "virtuous"; i.e. play along with the "design for life" that the elites impose).
Turned out really well, did it now? The mess we have at our hands at the moment has nothing, and I repeat: nothing, to do with liberal capitalism.
As of now, the ECB and the Troika are essentially forcing the Cyprus government to commit a bank robbery. The game is on, as it were, and it's getting tougher by the minute. It is my recollection that it was my fellow countrymen, ie. Mrs Urpilainen, who demanded the strictest measures towards Cyprus. The EU commission would have been lesss strict, allowing for a rebalancing programme of say, 2-3 years. But not so with our ambassador of social democracy and welfare.
It should be pretty clear to anyone that if Friedman, Hayek and Mises are indeed the doctors, this is
not what they ordered...
Let me quote Yanis Varoufakis, one of the best commentators of the crisis, at length:
"While the politicians are working out the new deal that will be brought to Parliament, it is imperative that the rest of us, whether in Cyprus or the four corners of the world, keep pressing them in two directions: First, to re-commit to the June 2012 EU Summit decision to have the ESM recapitalise banks directly in exchange for shares that would go to the ESM and be sold back to the private sector once the banks have been cleansed (a move that would end immediately the Cyprus crisis, but also the crises in Spain, Italy, Ireland, even Greece). Secondly, if direct re-capitalisation does not proceed (due to Berlin’s stubborn refusal) at the very least our leaders must respect (a) the idea that the Cypriot taxpayers should not be forced to borrow more than 10 billion on behalf of banks, and (b) the deposit insurance scheme that guarantees all deposits below 100 thousand. If this means a 16% haircut for uninsured deposits over 100 thousand, so be it."
http://yanisvaroufakis.eu/2013/03/20/cyprus-parliaments-gift-to-the-eurozone/
And we're not allowed to spend, as we are told that this is the end.