...
and how this is related mostly with the British, rather than with the
German elections
by
system failure
Early this
year we
saw that Greece's creditors pushed the country to
take measures even after the end of the "program", or, the
Greek experiment if you like.
Latest
developments led to the known scenery: Greece was pushed to take more
measures for 2018 and 2019, the creditors promised a form of debt
relief, but again, Alexis Tsipras didn't manage to take anything,
except the usual hypocritical sympathy for Greece by some of the
creditors in Europe. The roles are known: Wolfgang Schäuble has no
problem to play the bad guy, and everyone else, including IMF, is
hiding behind him.
We have
repeatedly said that the representatives of the neoliberal Feudalism
pretend that they have different positions concerning the unsolved
puzzle of the Greek debt, while in reality, they do not care at all
about "solving" it, but only to complete the neoliberal
experiment in Greece to the last detail.
And, despite
that only a few details are left for the completion of the Greek
experiment, it is certain that the European
Financial Dictatorship will keep the noose tight
around Greece at least until the next national elections in 2019,
where they hope that the neoliberal Right, New Democracy, will win.
Also, some
Greek government officials expressed recently their optimism that
Greece could return to the money markets during the summer with a
viable interest rate, but our guess is that it won't happen, because
this would give a certain degree of independence to Greece from the
ECB and Draghi's liquidity injections.
The
neoliberal priesthood knows that there is still a danger of a
possible sudden interruption, and even reversal, of the Greek
experiment, in case that Tsipras administration find an opportunity
to make independent moves, away from the creditors' tight scrutiny,
towards social policies and public investments. Then, their new
'model' for the whole eurozone, as they dream, could have been 'blown
up'.
Many
estimate that the German leadership deliberately postpones any
discussion about the Greek debt issue until the German elections,
hoping that the current political status quo won't change
dramatically. In reality, we don't have to wait until then because it
seems that the Left doesn't have any serious momentum that could
break the sovereignty of the current political establishment.
Therefore, not too many things are expected to change after the
result of the German elections.
Instead, we
should focus on the next crucial political event in Europe, the
oncoming British elections. The rapid rise of Jeremy Corbyn brings
additional heat to the Brussels-Berlin axis. The Labour party under his
leadership represents their worst nightmare. It would be a nightmare
for them to see the motherland of neoliberalism start turning to
social policies and massive nationalizations of key sectors.
A successful
Britain under Jeremy Corbyn that would manage to give rebirth to the
social state and hope to its citizens, could become an example for
the Greek people (and others). A significant percentage of the Greek
society already express quite negative feelings about the euro
currency and even the EU itself. Imagine what would happen if the
Greek people would realize that Britain (which is now out of the EU)
under Corbyn is bringing back social policies at the same time when
they experience the brutal neoliberal measures imposed by Greece's
creditors.
That's why
the European Financial Dictatorship will give nothing to Tsipras. He
will be forced to take only further measures against the Greek
society under tight scrutiny. The Brussels-Berlin axis will use him
and throw him to the dustbin, hoping to replace him with a more
secure puppet, like the neoliberal leader of New Democracy, Kyriakos
Mitsotakis.
We can only
hope for a miracle: that SYRIZA has realized that it's impossible to
achieve a decent deal with the Troika (ECB, IMF, European Commission)
mafia, and therefore, has built (at last) a plan for Grexit that will
lead Greece to freedom.
Comments
Post a Comment