TakingArms wrote:QUOTE (TakingArms @ May 25 2012, 02:00 AM) Not that any of this is relevant, but...
His office address per
his website is:
Economic History Department
London School of Economics
Clare Market Building, C415
Houghton Street
London WC2A 2AE, England
Per his CV he's been working at the London School of Economics for 5 years. Sorry, UK, you let him in and you employ him. I think you own him now!
You are truly an imbecile. A mere look at his CV and he is clearly German, went to Uni of Munich and is a German economic historian. If I was born in Australia and went to work in China as an adult it makes me Chinese now? You are truly a total clown.
Charges of hypocrisy
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_financi...es_of_hypocrisy
Hypocrisy has been alleged on multiple bases. "Germany is coming across like a know-it-all in the debate over aid for Greece", commented Der Spiegel,[229] though German economic historian Albrecht Ritschl describes his country as "king when it comes to debt. Calculated based on the amount of losses compared to economic performance, Germany was the biggest debt transgressor of the 20th century."[229]
Despite calling for the Greeks to adhere to fiscal responsibility, and although Germany's tax revenues are at a record high, with the interest it has to pay on new debt at close to zero, Germany still missed its own cost-cutting targets in 2011 and is also falling behind on its goals for 2012.[230] There have been widespread accusations that Greeks are lazy, but analysis of OECD data shows that the average Greek worker puts in 50% more hours per year than their German counterpart,[231] and the average retirement age of a Greek is, at 61.7 years, older than that of a German.[232]
US economist Mark Weisbrot has also noted that while the eurozone giant's post-crisis recovery has been touted as an example of an economy of a country that "made the short-term sacrifices necessary for long-term success", Germany did not apply to its economy the harsh pro-cyclical austerity measures that are being imposed on countries like Greece,[233] In addition, he noted that Germany did not lay off hundreds of thousands of its workers despite a decline in output in its economy but reduced the number of working hours to keep them employed, at the same time as Greece and other countries were pressured to adopt measures to make it easier for employers to lay off workers.[233] Weisbrot concludes that the German recovery provides no evidence that the problems created by the use of a single currency in the eurozone can be solved by imposing "self-destructive" pro-cyclical policies as has been done in Greece and elsewhere.[233] Arms sales are another fountainhead for allegations of hypocrisy. Coalition MP Dimitris Papadimoulis:
If there is one country that has benefited from the huge amounts Greece spends on defence it is Germany. Just under 15% of Germany's total arms exports are made to Greece, its biggest market in Europe. Greece has paid over €2bn for submarines that proved to be faulty and which it doesn't even need. It owes another €1bn as part of the deal. That's three times the amount Athens was asked to make in additional pension cuts to secure its latest EU aid package. . . .
Well after the economic crisis had begun, Germany and France were trying to seal lucrative weapons deals even as they were pushing us to make deep cuts in areas like health. . . . There's a level of hypocrisy here that is hard to miss. Corruption in Greece is frequently singled out as a cause for waste but at the same time companies like Ferrostaal and Siemens are pioneers in the practice.[234]
Yet even more hypocrisy stems not from the fact of the arms sales but from the way in which they conducted: Germany complains of Greek corruption, yet the murky arms sales meant that the trade with Greece became synonymous with high-level bribery and corruption; former defence minister Akis Tsochadzopoulos was gaoled in April 2012 ahead of his trial on charges of accepting an €8m bribe from
Ferrostaal
Who is ferrostaal?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrostaal
Headquarters Essen, Germany
Who are Siemens?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siemens
Siemens AG (German pronunciation: [ˈziːməns]) is a German multinational conglomerate company headquartered in Munich, Germany.
Greek bribes, greek metro and traffic lights controversy
In 2008, it was revealed that Siemens had bribed the two main political parties of Greece for approximately 10 years to be the sole provider of mechanical and electrical equipment of the Greek state. After the apocalypsis the German authorities arrested the Siemens representatives of Greeks, who escaped from Greek authorities. German justice didn't allow the Greek justice to cross-question the representatives. As a result, typically there isn't any evidence against the corrupt politicians, they haven't been arrested and continue to be in the Greek political system. Meanwhile, the Greek state cancelled the planned trades. Since all the parts of mechanical equipment were provided by Siemens, the equipement eventually breaks down, like traffic lights, and the projects are abandoned like the metro expansion
There's much more but fakingbrains you are incapable, blocked you are like that inept fool