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Wednesday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Why China can't be relied on (Parts 1-III); A fleeing central banker called Fitrat; The 3-D hurricane of debt; Wind farms blowing the earth off its axis; Dilbert

Wednesday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Why China can't be relied on (Parts 1-III); A fleeing central banker called Fitrat; The 3-D hurricane of debt; Wind farms blowing the earth off its axis; Dilbert

Here's my Top 10 links from around the Internet at 1 pm in association with NZ Mint.

I'll pop the extras into the comment stream. See all previous Top 10s here.

I welcome your additions in the comments below or via email to bernard.hickey@interest.co.nz.

Why are we so sure China will keep growing at 10% forever...

1. Why China can't be relied on (Part 1) - Famed US economist Gary Shilling predicted the US housing bust. Now he's saying in a 5 part series at Bloomberg there are risks in relying on China's growth to bail out the world.

This is crucial for New Zealand and seems to be at the core of the government's strategy.

John Key is relaxed about a high currency because it is a reflection of strong Chinese demand for our commodities.

He is betting on a decade or two of high commodity prices to power New Zealand's growth.

But what happens if China's growth slows.

How sustainable and reliable is it.

Shilling thinks not very in part 1:

Few countries are more important to the global economy than China. But its reputation as an unstoppable giant -- as a country with an unending supply of cheap labor and limitless capacity for growth -- masks some serious and worsening economic problems.

China’s labor force is aging. Its consumers save too much and spend too little. Its political and economic policy tools remain crude. Its state bureaucracy seems likely to curb spending just as exports weaken, and thus risks deflation. As U.S. consumers retrench, and as the global commodity bubble begins to dissipate, these fundamental weaknesses will combine in a way that’s unlikely to end well for China -- or for the rest of the world.

To start, China is much more vulnerable to an international slowdown than is generally understood.

2. Why China can't be relied on (Part 2) - Shilling goes into some depth about the issue of China's ageing workforce and the one child policy.

This kind of growth is unsustainable, and it won’t be able to cover up China’s underlying vulnerabilities forever.

China’s reliance on exports and a controlled currency for growth, for instance, will no longer work if U.S. consumers are engaged in a chronic saving spree, as I believe they will be. Chinese export growth, which averaged 21 percent per year in the last decade, is bound to suffer.

The country’s seemingly inexhaustible pool of cheap labor is expected to peak in 2014, in part due to its rigid one-child policy. By some estimates, ample labor has boosted GDP growth by 1.8 percentage points annually since the late 1970s, but the contraction of the working-age population will reduce growth by 0.7 percentage points by 2030.

3. Why China can't be relied on (Part 3) - Shilling then looks at how Chinese apartment building has been responsible for a good chunk of its growth in the last couple of years and how vulnerable it now is.

Inflation worries start with housing. With Chinese exports curtailed by U.S. consumer retrenchment, capital spending threatened by government restraints and excess capacity, and domestic spending less than robust, housing has been China’s big generator of economic growth in recent years. By some estimates, half of Chinese GDP is linked to real-estate activity.

The government is fearful of rising prices, and has moved to prevent speculation. Buyers must now put down 60 percent of the purchase price on second homes, and 30 percent on first homes. The government is pressing banks to contain mortgages, and some have raisedinterest rates. In January, the mayor of Shanghai announced a new tax on property transactions that may be copied nationwide as other officials attempt to cool prices.

With these restraints in place, and with supply starting to catch up with demand, housing sales have slowed. But this has not fully curtailed China’s real-estate bubble: Housing starts rose about 40 percent last year. Developers are rushing to build while they try to support faltering prices by delaying completions and creating artificial shortages. Of course, these efforts are difficult to maintain because they tie up capital in uncompleted houses. Houses are now being built at about twice the rate they’re being sold, well above earlier norms.

Shilling also makes some excellent points on how difficult it will be for the Chinese government to engineer a soft landing:

I suspect that such a hybrid market system is too unwieldy to allow the Chinese government to manage a soft landing for its economy. By my reckoning, the Federal Reserve has tried 12 times in the post-World War II era to cool an overheating economy without precipitating a recession. It succeeded only once. Can the politically controlled Chinese central bank, and the government leaders who really call the shots, be more successful than the independent Fed?

That seems unlikely. And the consequences, for China and the world economy, could be unfortunate.

4. Is a corporate a person under the law - Laura Flanders writes at The Guardian in the wake of the US Supreme Court decision in favour of Wal-Mart how large corporates are increasingly hiding behind the law and are using law reforms to strengthen their immunity.

HT from Troy via email who had this to say:

This is all going to come to a head soon where they will have to differentiate actually live people with corporate people.  I think the precedent will come from all places the patent system where the patent holder has to be an actual human being and not a corporation. A human can sell their rights to a corporation but a corporation cannot file. So the distinction of Human vs. Corporation has a long established history.

And here's Flanders:

The US supreme court in Dukes v Walmart recently rejected 1.6 million workers' attempt to bring a class action case – making it a whole lot harder for Americans to band together to hold corporations accountable. Go it alone and the deck is stacked, thanks to decades of effort by corporations and the politicians they pay for.

They don't pay fair wages; they don't pay their fare share of taxes. They evade liability. What gives? Says Saladoff: "When corporations harm, there should be some way to hold them accountable."

5. Today's Must Read - Rolling Stone's Matt Taibbi is usually brilliant and his piece here on Republican Presidential contender Michelle Bachmann is stunning. Read it and shudder.

America is in a dark place.

Here's a taste from Taibbi, who says she is nothing to laugh at:

Even other Republicans, it seems, are making the mistake of laughing at Bachmann. But consider this possibility: She wins Iowa, then swallows the Tea Party and Christian vote whole for the next 30 or 40 primaries while Romney and Pawlenty battle fiercely over who is the more "viable" boring-white-guy candidate. Then Wall Street blows up again — and it's Barack Obama and a soaring unemployment rate versus a white, God-fearing mother of 28 from the heartland.

It could happen. Michele Bachmann has found the flaw in the American Death Star. She is a television camera's dream, a threat to do or say something insane at any time, the ultimate reality-show protagonist. She has brilliantly piloted a media system that is incapable of averting its eyes from a story, riding that attention to an easy conquest of an overeducated cultural elite from both parties that is far too full of itself to understand the price of its contemptuous laughter. All of those people out there aren't voting for Michele Bachmann. They're voting against us. And to them, it turns out, we suck enough to make anyone a contender.

6. A fleeing Fitrat - WSJ reports Afghanistan's central bank chief Abdul Fitrat is on the run because of death threats he received after blowing the whistle to his own government about fraud at the country's biggest lender.

Why on earth does New Zealand still have troops in this corrupt and dangerous hell-hole?

Bank Governor Abdul Qadir Fitrat left Kabul for the U.S. about 10 days ago, one of these people said. Last year Mr. Fitrat opened an investigation into Kabul Bank, which nearly collapsed amid public allegations that its owners used it to make favorable loans to themselves and politically connected associates.

Mr. Fitrat's departure is a blow to the International Monetary Fund's attempts to reform Afghanistan's financial and regulatory system, which center on dissolving Kabul Bank, a U.S. official said. The IMF suspended its financial-assistance package last year, and many countries can't donate to Afghanistan in its absence.

A report published in March by the U.S. Agency for International Development, which was investigating the millions of dollars it spent on providing international mentors to the Afghan regulator, found that Kabul Bank's management "indirectly threatened" a central bank examination team in January 2010.

7. The 3-D Hurricane - Jason Hsu writes at Market Oracle about the effects of Debt, the Deficit and Demographics. His conclusion is the developed world will remain mired in debt, slow growth and weakening credit ratings.

There is an inconsistency though. How is the developing world going to keep growing when it is reliant on exporting to consumers in the developed world, who are now going into their shells (see Shiller above).

At the moment China is squaring the circle by building Ghost Cities in the interior...

Here's Hsu with the brave new world.

 In a sense, debt, deficit, and demographics will reset the world to a "New Normal" -- an extended period of lower economic and return expectations for the aging and debt-ridden developed world. In contrast, emerging economies with healthy government and household balance sheets, responsible fiscal policies, and young labor forces will be the drivers for global growth and will compete with their developed counterparts for economic and political leadership. More importantly, the emerging economies will demand their fair share in the consumption of resources and goods. That competition for resources and goods will lead to higher prices at a time when developed countries are less able to further finance their consumption.

Deficit spending, by itself, is not particularly worrisome. That is, borrowing today to invest for the future and/or borrowing to smooth temporary consumption shocks is perfectly reasonable. The danger occurs when chronic deficit spending compounds into high debt-to-GDP ratios. Aging demographics, while a headwind against future growth, can also be thoughtfully managed. Serious problems arise when countries have become so indebted that they are unable to raise debt to bail out retirees who have, by and large, under-saved.

Even high debt can be paid down if borrowed money were deployed toward investing for the future, which would result in greater innovation and productivity; technological advances can sustain future growth and consumption even in the face of a declining work force. However, if the borrowed money were largely consumed to provide current prosperity rather than invested for future prosperity, then the mounting debt will be our ugly legacy to the future generations.

The 3-D hurricane is coming. With it will come high inflation rates, high costs for credit, low growth rates, and weakening developed country currency value. Ben Bernanke in a helicopter will not stop the hurricane's devastating path. More stimulus packages will not stop it. Blaming the Chinese for lending us too much money will not stop it. Pretending that the storm isn't coming will most assuredly not stop it.

8. Here's what happen when a nation goes bankrupt - Greece is now selling everything that isn't nailed down, and some more besides, the WSJ reports.

Debt-strapped Greece is about to hold an epic yard sale. For the taking: four wide-body Airbus jets, a state lottery, a state horse-racing concession and sports book, stakes in a casino, several ports, a national post office, two water companies, a nickel miner and smelter, a munitions maker, electricity and gas monopolies, a telecommunications operator, shares in a half dozen banks, hundreds of miles of roads, a defunct airport, old Olympic venues and thousands of acres of land, including magnificent stretches of Greece's famed coast.

But finding buyers for that grab bag of assets is likely to be a very tall order. Obstacles abound, including unions hostile to selling state-owned companies, citizens opposed to the privatization of state-owned land and a bureaucratic labyrinth that has long thwarted would-be developers.

To make matters worse, many of the available properties have already been offered for years, with no takers. Since 2000, Greece has netted some €10 billion from privatization. Now it must do five times that much in less than half the time.

9. Just default already - Wolfgang Muchau writes via the FT (BusinessSpectator) that Greece is being slammed up against a wall of austerity and now faces a choice of default next week or default next year.

One issue is the way privatisation proceeds will be used, he says.

The problem is that the entire process remains sensitive to sudden electoral mood swings in the creditor countries. 

The first priority of German, Dutch and Finnish politicians has been to reduce the costs of the programme as much as possible. They even went so far as to earmark uncertain Greek privatisation receipts as an integral part of the next finance package, rather than for debt reduction. Under the scheme now likely to be agreed, any shortfall in privatisation receipts would therefore open a finance gap. The creditor countries would then almost certainly ask Greece to plug the gap through even more austerity. Such a strategy is financially reckless and politically irresponsible.

10. Totally a video from The Onion on coal lobbyists' warnings that wind farms could blow the earth off its orbit...


In The Know: Coal Lobby Warns Wind Farms May Blow Earth Off Orbit

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29 Comments

Simple really...Fitrat do you have any money deposited in any bank accounts outside your home country?...no no no I am honest person who blew what you call it ..the wissal...

And a key is pressed once on a keyboard in an un named bank in Europe and flit...several tens of million are wiped from an account that was in the name of one "Fitrat" but that too has been wiped from the computer memory...party time!

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But they still gotta eat right...so it's lamb mutton beef fish venison and pig on the menu in the pop bloated east...washed down with freshly made milk!...so maybe JK has it right, although he probably doesn't know why...Throw in the end of oil and the rise of fine wool blended with Possum and cotton...so ok we miss out on the cotton. What the hell will they make carpet out of when the oil runs out.!

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The Greeks could send Cameron a bill for the Elgin Marbles that were stolen a few years back...oh about 100 billion euro would cover it.

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The Walmart lawsuit was an absolute joke. Thankfully it was thrown out of court.

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Jean-Claude has taken up gardening and needs BS for the bulbs.....

 "European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet urged policy makers to revitalize the vision of an integrated Europe"

 http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-28/trichet-urges-new-vision-of-europe-as-greeks-protest-austerity.html

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FYI Jim Grant of Grant's Interest Rate Observer reckons America needs to return to the Gold Standard

“No other reform would accomplish so much to hasten the return both of growth and fiscal balance. The reserve currency franchise, which America uniquely possesses, is a kind of global credit card on which the outstanding balance never seems to come due and payable. This country needs a debit card--and the gold standard is that debit card.”

Wall Street did not cover itself in glory in 2003, 4, 5, 6, and 7. There was widespread dereliction of duty, unpardonable ignorance, and outright rampant incompetence. The federal response to this has been what? It’s been to suppress the federal funds rate down to zero. To print vast sums of new dollars and to micromanage the banking system through Dodd- Frank. Each of these measures is rife with unintended consequences. I expect that the unintended consequences of zero rates and vast money-printing will be destabilizing and perhaps inflationary … and in any case will be dramatic.

Read more: http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Articles/2011/06/28/A-Solid-Gold-Fix-for-the-National-Debt.aspx#ixzz1QdHKUxvW
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Forgive him , Bernard ..... even amazing people such as James Grant can screw up sometimes ......

..... heck , I've even heard tell that the Dalai Llama gets hellishly shitty if the breakfast toast is burnt ..

... no one is perfect , in this world .......

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Absolutely. Imagine how grumpy I have been today because Bernard's site isn't exactly optimised for downloading. My normally perfect disposition :) was upset this morning when to my horror my bandwith cap ran out today and I am down to dial up speed. 

I can't get interest.co in a timely manner, the world is going to end.

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FYI JP Morgan on the stresses in the Australian economy and how a high A$ is changing the structure of the economy. However, it doesn't see a Dutch Disease problem.

https://mm.jpmorgan.com/stp/t/c.do?i=935A-393&u=a_p*d_619333.pdf*h_d4tj…

 

Different industries and regions are growing at markedly different rates, such that the “multispeed” economy has become more pronounced. The terms of trade has scaled to 140-year highs on the back of booming commodity prices, marking the largest external shock to income in the nation’s history. But, conditions in those sectors not directly exposed to the commodity-price boom have become increasingly difficult.

Indeed, the resource sector is thriving, but the other 92% of the economy is facing much tougher conditions, partly owing to elevated AUD, barring those benefiting from cheaper imports. The shift in the weight of global activity toward EM Asia is triggering major structural change in the economy. China already has catapulted into the position of Australia’s number one export destination, accounting for 25% of all exports, compared to less than 3% twenty years ago (second chart).

But, resource demand should remain solid for some time yet provided that China and India follow the same course of steel intensity in production as seen in other developing economies. This means that commodity prices should remain high, as China and India are far from reaching the income levels enjoyed by other DM economies. Australia’s terms of trade should, therefore, remain well above its long-run average and the boost to nominal income should be more permanent, insulating Australia from socalled Dutch Disease.

First, the boost to national income should be more permanent than was the case for the Netherlands, thanks to our proximity to Asia and its seemingly insatiable appetite for raw materials. Indeed, in 1950, most of Australia’s exports (60%) were directed to Europe and the UK. Now, China and India receive close to one-third of Australia’s exports, compared to around 3% in 1950, with massive growth potential. Second, Australia is not relying just on one single commodity, but a diversified range of commodities that are in abundant supply.

While in 1950 exports were dominated by wool (65%), they now are dominated by coal and iron ore, which account for nearly 50% of all exports. Exports of other commodities, such as gold, crude petroleum, and natural gas also account for a significant share of the export basket.

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Bachmann, she and Palin have a lot in common..... both stupid which makes them both dangerous and both quite electable in the eyes of the right in America.  If they were sensible they should get together....they could probably do it.....Obama is looking toast anyway if only for the un-employment rate...so its got to be a Republican win....I look at Republicans and think of white sharks smelling  blood in the water, hello feeding frenzie....

Then if you were not worried about a massive Depression before you should with those two crazy women...

regards

 

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I don't think they could get together, Steven, the Right don't tolerate that kind of thing until after sundown.

But you're right, she's a scary beast.

There again, the US of A has gotten by with some pretty stupid Presidents. More stupid than not, when you tote them up.

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What I find interesting is that MSM coverage on Ron Paul is so obviously thin.

It's as if MSM would rather the election were decided on matters such as gay marriage, abortion, God in schools, handbags and hairdos.  I wonder why that is?

 

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I think it goes back to what we were talking about - the big picture.

Media are - by and large - businesses. Our local Editor, for instance, I'm sure was appointed because of his ability to increase hick-town circulation. You and I, we want facts. The two may not be compatible.

There has to be a 'business as usual' mindset in a ususl buisness. Hence the factual news, is more and more becoming the domain of the 'net - the trick being to separate out the fact from the spin.

My better-half was involved in a Uni study into a thing called 'Critical Literacy', I guess we'd have called it "reading between the lines'.

T'was always thus, though.

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It is enough to make you cry how stupid people can be. Just look at the TV available these days.

Interestingly PDK is something I have eluded to before, Myers Briggs Typology. One of the attributes measure is sensing vs intuition. Intuiting being the ability to link pieces of already stored information and form a conclusion. There is also feeling vs thinking, which is how decisions are make. The temperament type that are formed by the intuitive/thinking (NT) combination are a quarter of the 16 types, but represent probably only 5% of the population.

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We sat down in front of the tv for the first time this year and watched a half wit "blonde" journalist/presenter accept that fontera was good in switching from sugar to fractose in dairy food....we decided we hadnt missed much in many many months and unplugged it again...

God TV just sucks....

regards

 

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yeah TV is just appalling

We've got SKY and thats about all we watch - cricket, rugger, league, football, basketball. Sometimes BBC or CNN, or for comedy Fox

The late NZ news on  Sky is quite good - only 30 minutes and minimal Womans magazine type content 

I usually only tune into TV1 or 3 news if theere is a major event.

TV1 in particular is appalling. You get that git Hickey (a relative Bernard?) coming up with some corny cheese just before 6pm. F%$k off! I just want the news, old school. Not inane "entertainment"

Its a national embarrassment I tell you, up there with the cheap and Tacky Air NZ on flight safety videos    

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Interesting.....he's more of a libertarian, but for me a genuine one....at least he's fairly honest and open in what he believes in......unlike most of the Republican party who dodnt even have any economics behind them....

regards

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Yes, but in the few soundbits I've seen, he was pointed about the ills of the US military-industrial complex - anti all this TBTF nonsense - pro business paying (as opposed to dodging) taxes ... in other words seemingly forthright about the corporotocracy the US has become.  He might just have the guts to dismantle it - and I imagine TPTB know it.  I'd say he's gotta be a brave man.

He was asked in one debate what his position on gay marriage was - you could see he thought it was a 'who cares' type question - but of course, it's a polarising issue in the US.  He said he doesn't see a role for the state in marriage at all - said leave it to religions/churches/whatever type of non-state congregations - which I though ever so practical. 

In that social/moral issue sort of question he is so different to the two tea ladies.

 

 

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They are no more scary than some who comment on this site though

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I think 99% of ppl need a lot more....like a collapse into the second Long Depression...then maybe they'll stop playing with their ipods long enough to realise they are in deep doo doo.

regards

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Yep, damn those people with no grasp on science!!!

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Kunstler grasps it:

"By the by, many observers were amused by last week's cute trick of releasing sixty million barrels of oil from the world's strategic reserves at the rate of two million-a-day in an effort to pretend that the world doesn't have a basic oil production problem. It is, of course, at the bottom of the world's financial disarray, because if you can't increase energy inputs that feed an industrial economy you don't get growth and then the whole idea of compound interest falls apart because it is predicated on a perpetual increase in wealth. Hence, debt collapses in on itself. The world is caught up in an epochal contraction now, and it manifests in situations like the Greek emergency. But soon it will be a universal emergency".

Well put, that man!

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Dibs on the Greek munitions factory

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The rentier regime

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/06/06/the-rentier-regime/

"What explains this opposition to any and all attempts to mitigate the economic disaster? I can think of a number of causes, but Kuttner makes a very good point: everything we’re seeing makes sense if you think of the right as representing the interests of rentiers, of creditors who have claims from the past — bonds, loans, cash — as opposed to people actually trying to make a living through producing stuff. Deflation is hell for workers and business owners, but it’s heaven for creditors."

regards

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c "Greece is effectively black mailing core euro-zone nations into making funding available whether or not they actually implement any of the economic austerity plans as Greek politicians are likely to succumb to the greater weight of voters than follow through on demands from core euro-zone financing countries, after all what does most of the Greece population care, their money is safe against hyper-inflation, whilst they continue to evade taxes and the state runs a large budget deficit, instead letting the tax paying suckers of mainly Germany and France pick up the bill"

 http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article28957.html

Outlook....the game of hide the default will continue until the German and French taxpayers have had enough. Greece will be booted out before they walk....

The only question to answer is: how long will the German and French pollies wait before realising they are stuffed if they don't boot out the Greeks.

 "European leaders on Wednesday rushed to congratulate the Greek government adopting a £25billion austerity programme drawn up in Brussels to secure EU-IMF payments that save Greece from default" telegraph

Have a party...drinks and stuff...celebrate...put on a good show for the voters...but don't expect the Greeks to abide by the "austerity programme"....because they bloodywell won't. haha

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Parky...of course it's all shit...some of us know that...but most peasants are too bloody thick to know what day it is...and selling them a line of flimflam is easy...

Now go away and answer that question I threw at you!

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Wolly,

"Have a party...drinks and stuff...celebrate...put on a good show for the voters...but don't expect the Greeks to abide by the "austerity programme"....because they bloodywell won't. haha"

I agree the Greeks kind of deserve everything they've got coming, lazy feckess sods.  However, I see no reason why they should abide by this externally imposed austerity programme which is selling its citizens into debt peonage for many generatuions to come, and placing the country iteself into a situation of suzerainty. 

No good will come of it. Personally, I'd rather see them spit the dummy and bring the whole house of cards down now -  a well-deserved plague on all our heads.  Better to get it over with now. Still, the longer the banksters stall for time, the more opportunity it creates for me to build my defensive position ("such hubris" I hear you say) :-)

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Oh they deserve to be done over TOR....pop off and read all of the Market Oracle report...Greece is what it is because of the Greek culture.

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