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posted by martyb on Monday July 06 2015, @08:57AM   Printer-friendly
from the getting-what-you-asked-for-may-not-be-getting-what-you-want dept.

The Greeks voted no to the European Union's terms, despite warnings from the EU that rejecting new austerity terms would set their country on a path out of the Eurozone. 62% voted "No" while 38% voted "Yes".


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 06 2015, @11:27AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 06 2015, @11:27AM (#205564)

    What I think will happen is that this move will finally push Greece into the open arms of the Soviet bear, and any other state in danger of the same fate will begin to seriously consider their end of the EU deal. Incidentally, Germany and it's mercantile economy has the most to lose from fragmenting the EU.

    Nothing makes you public enemy #1 quite like being a vengeful debt slaver piece of trash.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 06 2015, @11:35AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 06 2015, @11:35AM (#205568)

    Please clarify: Is terrorist to vengeful debt slaver piece of trash a promotion or a demotion?

    • (Score: 5, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 06 2015, @12:03PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 06 2015, @12:03PM (#205576)

      It's an entirely different character class. Terrorists get lots of explosive weapon proficiencies and fear-based skills, while debt slavers are debuffing damage-over-time skills like "compound interest" and "protection racket". The later are totally OP because they get the "immunity: morals" at LV1 which is otherwise only available on the "suicide bomber" elite class, and that one is seriously gimped by the crappy respawn mechanics.

  • (Score: 2) by romlok on Monday July 06 2015, @01:24PM

    by romlok (1241) on Monday July 06 2015, @01:24PM (#205610)

    Interestingly, the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) have recently set up their own collective financial institution, to rival the US-centric IMF.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 06 2015, @01:28PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 06 2015, @01:28PM (#205612)

      That's great. Greece can stiff someone else for a change.

    • (Score: 2) by jmorris on Monday July 06 2015, @06:02PM

      by jmorris (4844) on Monday July 06 2015, @06:02PM (#205763)

      Which is a good thing. Regardless.

      Really only two ways it can play out:

      1. Considering the inclinations of the countries, we get yet another socialist inspired IMF clone and China and Russia (the others don't count) drain their resources trying to prop up client states again. We already know how that story ends, socialist economies just can't produce enough resources for that. China's mixed model works slightly better than the old Soviet model but it isn't enough. They are already having enough internal problems they can no longer mask them. So enemies expend themselves trying something stupid and everybody wins.

      2. They build something real based on hard money. China and Russia have been quietly stacking gold bricks like Ron Paul was giving them financial advice for years now. If they realize their real opportunity and build a new international banking system based on hard money then where is the downside of that? Ok, so we all have to learn Mandarin and Russian and those languages both kinda suck for hackers but in the bigger picture those are sorta minor downsides. Stranger things have happened... not often though.