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Friday, 11/11/2011 1:31:55 PM

Friday, November 11, 2011 1:31:55 PM

Post# of 704019
reality from The Daily Bell.
excerpt:


The top Greeks – the ones that will compose the unity government – basically intend to ram through a restructuring of Greece's entire society. It's already begun with the raising of taxes, spying on people and throwing them in jail if they don't pay up – while putting more and more people out of work in both the private and public sector.

When the state controls money, the state controls much of what life is about, certainly economic life. This is the idea behind all this. The elites that seek one-world government are using the crisis to continue to consolidate power. Consolidate, consolidate. And use the good, gray men to do it. The bankers.

Lewrockwell.com is carrying a short article pointing out that Papademos is not alone in his banking credentials. Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank as of November 1, was vice chairman and managing director of Goldman Sachs Int. Mario Monti who may well succeed Silvio Berlusconi as prime minister of Italy, is European Chairman of the Trilateral Commission and a member of the Bilderberg Group. Here's some more from the article excerpted above:

But Papademos assured Greeks and anxious Europeans elsewhere that he would push through the austerity measures that are a condition of the $177 billion bailout plan announced at the end of October. The country is weeks away from running out of money, officials have said. Greece's "problems will be solved with unity, understanding and prudence," Papademos told reporters after his selection was announced. He called Greece's membership in the euro zone "a guarantee for monetary stability."

As governor of the Bank of Greece from 1992 to 2002, Papademos helped usher Greece into Europe's currency union, an achievement that the country's financial crisis has threatened ... Papademos's aversion to corrupt dealmaking could be a good thing amid the highly charged process of making painful cuts, although some Greek commentators said the incoming prime minister's cautious nature would not necessarily inspire the country in a time of crisis.
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