VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД
breakingnews
Go to main page   News   Argentine advice for Greece: ‘Default Now!’  
MORE ON THE STORY
Fitch has downgraded Greece to a pre - default level
(Reuters / John Kolesidis) 22.02, 17:32 8 comments

Greece downgraded next to default level by Fitch

Fitch rating agency wasn’t impressed by the EU leaders’ decision to grant a second bailout for Greece.It downgraded the country to pre-default level.

Argentina, Buenos Aires : A woman passes in front of the window of an exchange in downtown Buenos Aires on October 28, 2011. (AFP Photo / Danniel Garcia) 19.12.2011, 05:05 10 comments

Argentina tango lessons: Europe’s turn for financial danse macabre?

Exactly ten years ago Argentina suffered a full-scale financial and governmental collapse. That was the end-result of over a decade of doing exactly what the IMF, international bankers, rating agencies and global “experts” told us to do.

The Parthenon on the Athens Acropolis is seen behind a Greek and an EU flag atop the Greek ministry of finance February 8, 2012 (Reuters / Yannis Behrakis) 21.02, 16:38 6 comments

Greece: deeper in debt and default-bound

After weeks of rollercoaster talks, Athens is finally getting a second bailout package, yet investors have doubts that debt problems can be solved with more debt. Many say the €130 billion injection will only postpone the inevitable default.

RT Photo / Irina Vaselivitskaya 21.02, 10:19 2 comments

Market buzz: Greek news to buoy markets

Russian markets are expected to grow on Tuesday, after the Finance Ministers in the eurozone finally agreed on a 130-billion-euro bailout package for Greece.

Steven Vanackere (L), Francois Baroin (2nd L), Lucas Papademos (C) and Evangelos Venizelos (R) attend a Eurogroup meeting at the European Union council headquarters in Brussels February 20, 2012 (Reuters / Yves Herman) 21.02, 08:02 10 comments

The path o’ non-resistance: Greece gets new lifeline

Eurozone finance ministers have reached a deal for a second 130-billion-euro bailout for crisis-stricken Greece. The country’s debt will also be lowered by private holders who agreed to face value loss of 53.5 per cent on their bonds.

Eurozone crisis
A woman raises a Greek flag during an anti-austerity rally in front of the parliament in Athens February 19, 2012. (Reuters / Yiorgos Karahalis) 20.02, 10:26 5 comments

Greek déjà vu: Austerity, tear gas, bailout

European ministers are going to decide if Greece has done enough blood letting to get its additional 130 billion euro financial aid package. The country, which is living under a looming default, is increasingly tired of submitting to more cuts.

Argentine advice for Greece: ‘Default Now!’

Published: 23 February, 2012, 20:43

A depositor dressed as Death displays a mock cross for Bank Boston 27 March, 2002 during a protest in Buenos Aires (AFP Photo / Ali Burafi)

A depositor dressed as Death displays a mock cross for Bank Boston 27 March, 2002 during a protest in Buenos Aires (AFP Photo / Ali Burafi)

TAGS: South America, Greece


Here in Argentina, when we watch the terrible things that are happening today in Greece, we can only exclaim, “Hey!! That’s exactly what happened in Argentina in 2001 and 2002…!”

­A decade ago, Argentina too went through a systemic Sovereign Public Debt collapse resulting in social turmoil, worker hardship, rioting and street fights with the police.  

Some months before Argentina exploded, then-President Fernando de la Rúa – forced to resign at the height of the 2001 crisis – had called back as finance minister the notorious pro-banker, Trilateral Commission member and Rockefeller/Soros/Rhodes protégée Domingo Cavallo.

Cavallo was the gruesome architect of Argentina’s political and economic capitulation to the US and UK when he was President Carlos Menem’s foreign minister and economy minister in the ’90s.

Menem and Cavallo are primarily responsible for Argentina’s signing of a formal Treaty of Capitulation with the UK/US after the 1982 Falklands War, opening up our economy to unrestricted privatization, deregulation and grossly excessive US Dollar-indebtedness, almost tripling our sovereign debt in a few short years (see my February 11, 2012 article British Laughter in the Falklands).  

The Plan? Prepare Argentina for planned weakening, bankster take-over and collapse, so that a new weakening-takeover-collapse cycle could begin.   In 2001, Cavallo was back to finish his work…

During that very hot summer in December 2001, true to its Latin temperament, Argentina even had four (yes, 4!) presidents in just one week.  One of them, Adolfo Rodriguez Sáa, who only lasted three days, at least did one thing right, even if he did it the wrong way: he declared Argentina’s default on its sovereign debt.

All hell broke loose! The international bankers and IMF did everything they could to break Argentina’s back; global media pundits predicted all kinds of impending catastrophes. Debt default meant Argentina would have to weather the pain and agony alone, being cast out by the “international financial community”.

‘You’re not the boss of me!’

But no matter how bad it got, it would always be better to do that without the bankers, without the IMF’s, European Central Bank’s, US Fed’s and US Treasury’s “help”.  Better to sort out your mess on your own, than to have parasitic banker vultures carving out their pound of flesh from your nation’s decaying social and economic body.

And how bad did it get in 2002? A 40 per cent drop in GDP; 30 per cent unemployment; 50 per cent of the population fell below the poverty line; dramatic, almost overnight, devaluation against the US Dollar from 1 peso per dollar to 4 pesos per dollar (then it tapered down to 3 pesos per dollar); if you had a US dollar Bank account, the government forced you to change it into pesos at the rate of 1.40 pesos per dollar.

What did Argentina’s government do wrong?  In the months leading to collapse it bowed to all the bankers and IMF-mandated measures and “recipes”, which were actually the very cause of collapse: Argentina was loaned far more than it could pay back….  And the banker knew it!  This was described in our December 19, 2011 article, Argentina: Tango Lessons

Successive governments since then have continued to be functional to banker interests by rolling over debt 30 to 40 years, aggregating huge interest and in 2006 paying the full debt to the IMF – almost US$10 billion in full, cash and in US dollars (sole entity given most-favoured creditor status).

­Same vultures circling Greece

Today, Greece is confronted with a similarly tough decision.  Either it keeps its sovereignty, or it capitulates to the “Vulture Troika” – the European Central Bank, European Commission and International Monetary Fund – who work for the Bankers, not the People.

Not surprisingly, today we find that Greece too has a Trilateral Commission Rockefeller/Rothschild man at the helm: Lucas Papademos who is doing the same things Argentina did in 2001/2.    

Argentina not only suffered Cavallo, but President De la Rúa himself was co-founder of the local Global Power Masters lobby, CARI – Argentine International Relations Council – local branch of the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations, networking with the Trilateral Commission / Bilderberg mafia.

Greece today should do what Argentina did a decade ago: better to endure pain and hardship, and sort out the mess made by your politicians in connivance with international bankers on your own, wielding whatever shred of sovereignty you still have than allowing the Banker Vultures sitting in Frankfurt, New York and London decide your future.  

It’s the Neocolonial Private Power Domination Model, stupid!

Or do you think it’s just bad luck, bad judgment and coincidence that countries – Greece, Argentina, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Brazil, Mexico, Iceland, Ireland, Russia, Malaysia, Ukraine, Indonesia, South Korea, Thailand, France, even the US and UK – always borrow too much from the bankers and then “discover” that they cannot pay it back and that, symmetrically, the same bankers – CitiCorp, HSBC, Deutsche, Commerz, BNP, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, JPMorganChase, BBVA lend too much to countries and then “discover” they cannot collect?

No!  That is the very yellow-brick road that leads to the Emerald City of  “debt restructuring”, “debt refinancing”, and “sovereign debt bond mega-swaps” that snowball sovereign debt, spreading it over 20, 40 or more years into the future. That guarantees unimaginably colossal interest profits for the Mega-Bankers and for all those nice politicians, media players, traders and brokers, without whom that would not be possible.

This is a Model.  It must keep rolling and rolling and rolling… As this Monster Machine steams forwards, it completely tramples on, overruns, destroys, flattens and obliterates people, jobs, workers, health services, pensions, education, national security and just about everything human on its path.  Run by parasitic usurer technocrats, it does not care what it destroys because it has no ethics; no Christian, Muslim or Buddhist morals.  It only worships a greedy golden idol of money, money and more money.  This is 21st-century Money Power Slavery.  

Three generations of Argentines saw hopes dashed and dreams thwarted by this Monster Machine, suffering the hardship, woes and humiliations that come when countries give up sovereignty.

­Bring back the drach!

So, Greece: Just default on your “sovereign debt”!  Just revert to the drachma!  Just say “No, thanks!” to the German bankers and the Troika Vultures.   

Please, Greece: just say “No!” to your Trilateral Commission president!   

You will be setting a strong precedent for your European neighbours.  Like Spain, which is hurting so badly right now for similar reasons.  Like Italy, with its Trilateral Commission Prime Minister Mario Monti (also Trilateral’s European Chairman!).  

Greece, the Cradle of Democracy, can teach the world a lesson in True Democracy by kicking these parasites out of the country, which will hopefully trigger kicking them out of Europe and one day, kicking them out of the global economy.

Because what Greece and Argentina and Italy and Spain suffer today is not True Democracy, but rather a distorted bastard imitation that systematically yields control to the Global Power Masters at the Trilateral Commission, Bilderberg and Mega-Banking Overworld.  They run the whole “democracy show”, whereby all countries end up having “the best democracy that money can buy”… which is no democracy at all…  

The Money Power juggernaut is steaming full speed towards us all.  If Greece falls, who’ll be next? Spain? Italy? Portugal? Argentina (yet again!!!)?
So what if Greece’s reverting to the drachma marks the beginning of the end for the euro?  Let Italy revert to the lira, Spain to the peseta, Portugal to the escudo…!  A National Currency is a key National Sovereignty factor.

All governments should understand that you either govern for the people and against the bankers; or you govern for the bankers and against the people.  

­Adrian Salbuchi for RT

­Adrian Salbuchi is a political analyst, author, speaker and radio/TV commentator in Argentina. www.asalbuchi.com.ar

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in the story are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

+109 (111 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
Syrian soldiers shout pro-Syrian President Bashar Assad slogans  (AFP Photo /Str) 23.02, 15:58 37 comments

Frontier front: Syrian rebels trapped near Turkey

Syrian frontier guards are battling militants who have infiltrated from Turkey, as the army deploys troops to quash hostile forces trapped in the mountains. The clashes highlight claims outside forces are actively fueling the conflict in Syria.

Syria unrest
An undated portrait of German-born Swiss-US physicist Albert Einstein (1879-1955), author of theory of relativity, awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1921 (AFP Photo) 23.02, 22:13 14 comments

Was Einstein right after all?

The CERN laboratory in Switzerland has found a flaw in an experiment that was set to prove Albert Einstein's social theory of relativity wrong. It will be carried out again in May 2012.

Carpenter March 11, 2012, 07:10
-1

"Just say “No, thanks!” to the German bankers and the Troika Vultures."

--The Greek government used the services of Goldman & Sachs to hide its debt, so that Greece could keep borrowing from German banks. Those banks would have refused to lend them more money if the true nature of their lousy economy had been known.

Greece also lied to enter the European Monetary Union. They hid their debt, far higher than the allowed levels. So they could get the euro, protected by the Germanic industrious nature, instead of their own free-fall currency, which made investors leave their country.

It was Greece that wanted debt. It was Greece that kept borrowing and borrowing to pretend their living standard could be as high as that of north Europeans. As if they ever worked that hard. It was Greece that desperately wanted to join the EMU.

And it was Greece that enlisted Goldman & Sachs in their scheme to hide their economy's rotten nature from Germany.

I have no love for Goldman & Sachs. But that doesn't mean I can't see the Greek blame for their own lousy economy. Just like in Argentina.

YOU DIDN'T HAVE TO BORROW! Don't blame others for your own laziness and greed.

Enzo Lion February 26, 2012, 21:53
+7

Thanks again Mr. Salbuchi for having clarified a few points to my questions and thanks again for having written this clear and interesting article.

rbblum February 25, 2012, 06:49
+8

It is bad enough not to have a truly free market place that would have spurned any consideration to accept fiat currency . . . but to have the presence of any central banking system that has partnered with politicians to maintain an overbearing, overextended money and banking system that has corrupted and enslaved the common man is beyond unconscionable.

 

It is the responsibility of the individual to pursue due diligence in knowledge and understanding . . . . each and every day.