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Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Don't Look to Tsipras for Greece's Salvation


Don't Look to Tsipras for Greece's Salvation
Greek Reporter
Given the complete, total, abject, utter 40-year-long failure of the New Democracy Uber-Capitalists and PASOK Anti-Socialists who have put anyone with a pulse – and some without – on public payrolls in return for votes, drowning the country in debt, it ...


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My Life, My Words: Greece woman touched many lives


My Life, My Words: Greece woman touched many lives
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
Grace Lawrenson was an amazing woman. I was only one of her many nurses, taking care of Gracie for 17 years. Her optimistic attitude about life, inspite of her limitations, is to be admired. Grace contracted polio at the age of 15 and spent 19 weeks in ...

and more »

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Schaeuble Rules Out Greek Default as Samaras, Troika Bargain


Business Insider

Schaeuble Rules Out Greek Default as Samaras, Troika Bargain
Bloomberg
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble ruled out a Greek default as the cash-strapped country and international inspectors seek agreement on policies before an Oct. 18 European Union leaders summit. “It will not happen that there will be a ...
Greek PM sees austerity deal by Oct. 18 summitReuters
Greek Government Eyes Final Deal By End of October - ReportWall Street Journal
Euro zone mulls new ways to cut Greek debt mountainCNBC.com
Appeal-Democrat -RTE.ie -Business Insider
all 396 news articles »

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Business defections hit Greece amid recovery effort


Globe and Mail

Business defections hit Greece amid recovery effort
Channel News Asia
ATHENS: Efforts to restore investor confidence in Greece's struggling economy took a double blow this week when a major European bottler and a prominent dairy company announced relocation plans. Coca-Cola's second biggest bottler worldwide, ...
Why Coca Cola Is Leaving GreeceForbes
Greece's Largest Company Flees Crisis-Torn Home for UKBusinessweek
Greece's biggest company flees, bottler CCH to SwitzerlandReuters
Los Angeles Times -CNN
all 168 news articles »

READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.channelnewsasia.com

Schaeuble Rules Out Greek Default as Samaras, Troika Negotiate


Telegraph.co.uk

Schaeuble Rules Out Greek Default as Samaras, Troika Negotiate
Businessweek
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble ruled out a Greek default as the cash-strapped country and international inspectors seek agreement on policies before an Oct. 18 European Union leaders summit. “It will not happen that there will be a ...
Greek PM sees austerity deal by Oct. 18 summitReuters
Greek Euro Exit Unavoidable if IMF, Euro Zone Can't AgreeWall Street Journal
Euro zone mulls new ways to cut Greek debt mountainCNBC.com
RTE.ie -Irish Examiner -Greek Reporter
all 186 news articles »

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De Jager Says Greece Needs to Make Fiscal Reforms Immediately


De Jager Says Greece Needs to Make Fiscal Reforms Immediately
Bloomberg
“What we expect Greece to do is implement the economic reforms without further delay,” De Jager said in an interview with Bloomberg Television in Tokyo, where he attended the annual meeting of the International Monetary Fund. “Yes, they are painful but ...

and more »

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IMF warns recovery could be derailed


Globe and Mail

IMF warns recovery could be derailed
Financial Times
By Claire Jones in Tokyo The International Monetary Fund on Saturday sounded a note of cautious optimism on the global economy, but warned that recovery will be derailed if officials relent on policy commitments. In a communiqué to mark the conclusion ...
Highlights: IMF, World Bank meetings in TokyoReuters
Geithner: Work remains despite US fiscal progressBusinessweek
IMF Says Greece Needs More TimeWall Street Journal
Washington Post -CNN -AFP
all 1,904 news articles »

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German finance minister says Greece will not default

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said on Sunday that Greece would not default, but warned that if Athens did exit the eurozone it would be damaging not only for the zone as a whole but also Greece. "I think, it will not happen that there will be a state bankrupt in Greece", Schaeuble said at a meeting with business leaders in Singapore. "Greece has to take a lot of very serious reforms and this will harm. Everyone is trusting that the Greek government is doing what is necessary. ...

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UPDATE 1-German finance minister says Greece will not default


Economic Times

UPDATE 1-German finance minister says Greece will not default
Reuters
SINGAPORE Oct 14 (Reuters) - German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said on Sunday that Greece would not default, but warned that if Athens did exit the eurozone it would be damaging not only for the zone as a whole but also Greece. "I think, it ...
IMF, Europe Remain Deadlocked Over GreeceWall Street Journal
Euro zone mulls new ways to cut Greek debt mountainReuters India

all 179 news articles »

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Greece Will Probably Leave Euro Within Six Months: Borg


Telegraph.co.uk

Greece Will Probably Leave Euro Within Six Months: Borg
Businessweek
As European Union leaders prepare for a summit next week devoted to saving the euro, Swedish Finance Minister Anders Borg said Greece may quit the common currency within the next six months. “It's most probable that they will leave,” Borg said today on ...
Sweden Predicts Greece May Quit EuroWall Street Journal
Greece poised to leave euro, Swedish finance minister saysTelegraph.co.uk
Anders Borg says Greece could exit Eurozone in next 6 monthsGlobalPost
Sky News Australia -Interactive Investor -The Local.se
all 36 news articles »

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'Prince' Roy Bates dies at 91; adventuring monarch of Sealand

Paddy Roy Bates occupied a derelict North Sea military platform and declared it the Principality of Sealand in 1967, complete with passports, its own currency, and himself as sovereign.

A born swashbuckler, Paddy Roy Bates fought in the Spanish Civil War as a teenager, faced a Greek firing squad in World War II and had a German stick bomb explode in his face.




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Most Insane Photos Of The Week

Every week, we bring you some of the most fascinating photos from around the world. This week, we've got wild mud cow racing in indonesia,...

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IMF Urges Leaders to Act Decisively on Debt


Globe and Mail

IMF Urges Leaders to Act Decisively on Debt
New York Times
TOKYO — World finance officials called on the United States and Europe to quickly resolve their debt problems, saying on Saturday that more decisive action was needed to restore confidence in the faltering global economy. In a communiqué at the end of ...
UPDATE 2-Euro zone mulls new ways to cut Greek debt mountainReuters
Greece, Troika in Talks as Summit Deadline LoomsBloomberg
IMF: Act now to create jobs, Lagarde warns governmentsBBC News
Financial Times -Wall Street Journal -CNBC.com
all 1,972 news articles »

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The week I shed my anti-Tory taboos | Nick Cohen

There are often as many differences within right and left as between them about the big issues – except one

If the Observer had sent me to a Conservative party conference 20 years ago, I'd have written that seeing Tories herded together made me realise how much I hated them. A little late in life for my own comfort, I have since learned that every man and woman must cross-examine their prejudices before they can truly grow up. After scrutinising mine, I realised that my taboos against Tories had to go.

If you had been in Birmingham, you would have seen that Conservative activists are no different from activists in other parties: admirable and, alas, rare people, prepared to give up private pleasures to try to change their country. As for the politicians, we met a health minister and former obstetrician called Daniel Poulter, who was so obviously committed to the NHS, so clearly concerned about the sick, that only my promise to the Observer's political editor not to embarrass him in front of his contacts stopped me reaching for his lapels and bellowing: "What the bloody hell are you doing in the Tory party?"

According to leftist orthodoxy, Tories are sexist and racist. On the sex question, it is true that our upper-class leaders condescend to women as if the second wave of feminism had never reached the shore. Nothing they have done, however, matches the spectacle of the "socialist" government of Ecuador and assorted celebrities and conspiracy theorists helping Julian Assange evade charges of sexual molestation and rape. It was hard to be too harsh on Tory sexism last week when others of a leftish perspective have denounced women who allege that they are victims of abuse and the due process of laws against sexual exploitation as a CIA plot.

As for racism, you will find figures on the Tory right who go along with prejudices about blacks and Asians. But then there are Labour leftists who go along with radical Islamists and their prejudices against Jews (and women and gays). You choose your politics and you picks your prejudice. Although it is better to resolve when you make your choice to take on the bigotries on your own side with as much determination as you lacerate the failings of your opponents. For as a rule you will find that the great questions of an age create divisions within the left and within the right rather than between the left and the right In every instance, that is, except one.

More significant than any party conference speech was the admission last week by the International Monetary Fund that the assumptions about austerity it shared with the British Treasury, the finance ministries of the eurozone and the Romney campaign were hopelessly wrong. The IMF thought that every £1 of cuts or tax rises took 50p off GDP growth. In those circumstances, getting control of the budget deficit quickly seemed a hard but practical task.

Only now, after all these years, has the IMF noticed that the great crash of 2007/8 paralysed the banking system. Only now has it grasped that if, say, every country in Europe is cutting spending and raising taxes no country in Europe will be able to expand by increasing its exports to its depressed neighbours. Its long struggle to see the blindingly obvious completed, the IMF decided that, in fact, every £1 in tax rises and spending cuts takes between 90p and £1.70 of GDP. Far from setting us on the road to recovery, austerity has pushed us into stagnation without end.

The consequences for Britain have not been as grave as for the eurozone. We do not have the 50% youth unemployment of southern Europe. There is no fascist movement that apes Greece's Golden Dawn by attacking immigrants and proudly displaying a party flag that does not even bother to pretend that it isn't a swastika.

For all that, Britain has not escaped the suffering brought by a monumental economic blunder. As our business editor, Heather Stewart, reports, the TUC says that if the coalition had merely taken a modest estimate from the middle of the IMF's range, and assumed that every £1 in tax rises and cuts would take £1.30 from GDP, it would have realised its austerity programme would suck an extra £76bn from the British economy. It did not and delivered recession, an assault on public services and the fastest collapse in living standards since the 1920s.

The coalition and the Bank of England never admit their failure. But you could sense the fear that failure brings in Birmingham last week. The press said that the Tory leaders were frightened of Ed Miliband because he made a decent speech at the Labour conference. I suspect the knowledge that history was proving Ed Miliband and Ed Balls right frightened them more. George Osborne did not mention the word "growth" once. He and his colleagues said they wanted to help the "strivers": the broad mass of working- and middle-class families who are finding the cost of the weekly shop or of filling up the car ever more burdensome.

I am sure they were sincere. But because they cannot match their words with actions, they retreated to offering cheap and pointless gestures on crime, the last resort of the despairing politician. The Conservatives in Birmingham were happy to talk to householders who want to kill burglars. But they had nothing to say to the young who cannot afford to pay for a home or to the middle aged and elderly who are finding it harder to afford to heat a home.

Beyond the strivers lie the poor. The failure of austerity economics has hit them hardest, although Establishment commentators will not admit it. They praised David Cameron's "moral" mission to grind down welfare benefits. They applauded his declaration that he was cutting only because he wanted the unemployed to enjoy the independence and self-respect that work brings. Neither they nor Cameron acknowledged that with six unemployed people for every vacancy, it is disgraceful to cloak the slashing of benefits with windy moralising. The state may force a few into finding work by threatening them with penury. But it cannot compel the majority because there is no growth and hence not enough work to find.

Cameron did not come to power wanting to deepen poverty, but that's not the point. His economic failures leave him with no choice. You do not need to believe that Tories are necessarily wicked people to see that their refusal to rectify their mistakes has wicked consequences.


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"Taste of Greece," Gallery Night (and Day)


"Taste of Greece," Gallery Night (and Day)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, 9400 W. Congress St., will serve up some of its favorites - including saganaki, pastichio, gyros and chicken - today from noon to 8 p.m. at its "Taste of Greece" open house. Visitors may come for the food but will ...


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Greece, Troika in Talks as Summit Deadline Looms


HispanicBusiness.com

Greece, Troika in Talks as Summit Deadline Looms
Businessweek
Greece and its international inspectors are racing to find agreement on economic policies ahead of the Oct. 18 summit of European Union leaders, where Prime Minister Antonis Samaras will seek more time to implement the budget cuts required to keep ...
IMF, Europe Remain Deadlocked Over GreeceWall Street Journal
UPDATE 2-Euro zone mulls new ways to cut Greek debt mountainReuters
Germany Resists Call to Give Greece More TimeNew York Times
Bloomberg -HispanicBusiness.com
all 1,998 news articles »

READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.businessweek.com

Greek Peak To Remain Open, Fall Festival


WBNG-TV

Greek Peak To Remain Open, Fall Festival
WBNG-TV
Through some fancy financial footwork Greek Peak has been able to remain open. That's good news for the resort which is one of the largest employers in the area. "We are in the middle of a chapter 11 re-organization. We're working with the FDIC. They ...


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Presidents, Protests and Prayer: The Best Pictures of the Week

From the vice-presidential debate in Kentucky to angry protests against the German Chancellor's visit in Greece, TIME presents the week's best images

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