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Ares
28th June 2011, 09:43 AM
Strip away the bailouts and the bogus austerity plans, and the truth is revealed: Greece is a kleptocracy, and the banks and the ECB Eurocrats are both complicit.

Despite a veritable flood of financial and political analysis about Greece, nobody seems to have noticed the obvious: Greece is a kleptocracy. Just as a refresher, here is the definition of kleptocracy. Ask yourself is this doesn't fit Greece like a supple leather glove:

Kleptocracy, alternatively cleptocracy or kleptarchy, from the Ancient Greek for "thief" and "rule," is a term applied to a government subject to control fraud that takes advantage of governmental corruption to extend the personal wealth and political power of government officials and the ruling class (collectively, kleptocrats), via the embezzlement of state funds at the expense of the wider population, sometimes without even the pretense of honest service. The term means "rule by thieves".

Here is a quote from a first-person report (via Zero Hedge) titled The Ugly Truth:

What angers me and most hard working Greeks is that the common workers are bearing the brunt of the austerity measures while the rich get off scot free.

In Greece, if you want to strike it rich, become a specialist dealing with critical life and death decisions, tax collector or a high profile minister in the government. The scandalous stories that are coming out now of doctors, tax collectors, and ministers with millions of euros in their bank accounts and villas in Santorini and Mykonos are no surprise to regular hard-working Greeks.

This is a classic description of a kleptocracy: a financial and political Elite which skims and concentrates the wealth of the nation via corruption and embezzlement while being protected by the winking complicity of their fellow plunderers who hold civil and financial authority.

Here's the real dynamic in Greece: The Kleptocracy--broadly, the political and financial Elites of the nation--saw a stupendous opportunity to embezzle hundreds of billions of euros from greed-blinded European banks at super-low rates of interest.

Being kleptocrats, they sniffed out the basics of the bezzle right away, and have been playing it ever since: we're not paying any of these loans back, so go get the money from the European Central Bank (ECB) and the German taxpayers, or declare bankruptcy. Your choice.

The Greek kleptocrats knew all along that the German, Dutch, French and Finnish taxpayers were easy marks, just as they knew the European Union Power Elites would fall all over themselves to "save the euro" which was the centerpiece of their "one Europe" strategy of domination.

Only the Greek kleptocrats just beat them at their own game. The entire game plan of the "one Europe" Elites depends on nation-states actually complying with non-enforceable codes of conduct and on European banks making prudent loans.

Neither condition held: Greece's Elites reckoned they could game the system and string along the Eurocrats, if not forever, then certainly long enough to engorge their Swiss accounts with euros skimmed from the banks, and they've played that hand to perfection.

Their performance is truly a thing of beauty, a masterful display of the Big Con. Yes, we will agree to austerity, but of course that is only for "the little people." Then, we'll renege on that, and demand another bailout. The Eurocrats will of course comply, lest their own plans for domination crumble along with the euro and the Eurozone edifice.

Meanwhile, the European banks were playing a similiar bezzle. They knew Greece had a history of defaulting on a regular basis, and any employee of the bank who lived in Greece could have briefed them on the kleptocracy's hold on that nation. But the banks knew they could play the Eurocrats and the ECB, too, as the Eurozone had what amounted to a "German Put": if any bad bank loans to Greece ever threatened the Eurozone, the German-led European Central Bank would make them whole.

Once again, the Eurocrats responded as expected, quickly massing hundreds of billions of euros to backstop the impaired loans to Greece and promising that bondholders would not suffer any losses.

The banks and the Greek kleptocracy are like the wife and the mistress of a prominent conservative socialite who absolutely needs to preserve a facade of conventional propriety. The kleptocrats, like the mistress, know they can blow down the entire charade, and so when they demand some baubles (bailouts) from their "Sugar Daddy" European Central Bank, the bank whimpers and complains but forks over the cash, lest the whole shaky facade collapses in a heap, along with the ECB's dominance.

The wife, meanwhile, also gets her demand met. Now that the European banks have leveraged themselves up to pre-implosion Lehman Brothers levels of 30-to-1, they need a bailout, too, and so they tell the ECB, don't even think about saying "no" because massive bank insolvency would also shatter the Euroland's thin veneer of permanence.

The euro system is already broken, but the ECB and its Eurocrats are desperate to maintain the facade. The game is untenable, however, because the Greek kleptocrats and the European banks have all the leverage and the ECB is the bleating mark trying to satisfy the dualing demands of its wife and mistress.

"But you promised." Ah yes, Dearie, but I changed my mind.

It is almost laughable to see the Eurocrats desperately trying to get another "austerity deal" approved, even as everyone involved knows it's as phony as passing off your mistress as your "private secretary." The austerity plan will not actually be put in place, none of the line-in-the-sand fiscal targets will be met, and the Greek kleptocrats will be smirking as the frantic ECB marks scrounge up another bailout and another face-saving "austerity program."

The wild card here is the oppressed Greek citizenry, who might just spoil the fun by overthrowing their corrupt Overlords. They could also spoil the game by simply refusing to play any more, as a General Strike of any length would quash the fantasy of rising taxes and all the rest of the absurd assumptions at the heart of the "austerity program."

If the Eurocrats and the ECB really want to save the euro, then they should help the Greek citizenry evict their kleptocratic Elites. But that would take genuine courage and insight, and alas, the Eurocrats, like all bureaucrats seeking to protect their fiefdom at any cost, don't really care about the oppressed Greeks. They just want to play for time, and hope that a miracle will occur. Even as their fat, sweaty fingers hold a jumble of worthless cards--not even a pair of deuces--they persist in a laughably transparent charade of holding four aces.

The game is over for the ECB, the Greek kleptocracy and the european banks. All that needs to happen now is for the players to reveal their miserable cards and fold. The losses will be stupendous, but they will only get more horrendous the longer the game is allowed to go on.

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/guest-post-greece-kleptocracy

Hatha Sunahara
28th June 2011, 10:14 AM
The USA is also a kleptocracy. The problem is that the kleptocrats have the means (money) to survive for a very long time, while the people they are stealing from will run out of money very quickly if they engage in a general strike, or stop working for any length of time. The real, long lasting cure for this is the guillotine or the firing squad--to remove as much of the kleptocrats and their agents as possible. Like removing a cancerous tumor. Reshuffling the government just means giving the kleptocrats different jobs, or appointing new kleptocrats in an attempt to fool the people. A vote of no confidence is no such thing if the people voting are the kleptocrats themselves. The media support the kleptocrats, so the media controllers need to be brought to the guillotine as well. I remember in 1960, the videos of Fidel Castro's firing squads for Battista's corrupt government officials. The US media painted that as barbaric. But I think Castro had the right idea. That is what it takes to restore integrity into governments. Too bad he was a communist. Corruption only understands force.

Hatha

MAGNES
28th June 2011, 10:50 AM
Let Greece burn, let them learn, who did they think was going to pay the debts,
same applies everywhere else, maybe people will wake up for a better future.

Greece has a chance here to destroy the EUSSR and come out as leaders.

I don't think they will, what kind of stupid country follows IMF austerity measures, shame.

The Germans and the French are to blame too, they have one way trade going with
Greece, huge current account deficit on Greek side, what do they think is going to happen.
In 2009 the current account deficit was $60 billion, that would be like the USA running
a $1.8 trillion current account deficit in one year. This is the major underlying problem,
without this being solved everything else is meaningless, the Euro is bleeding them hard,
a devalued Dracma would correct some of these problems, the Euro is going down
inevitably, and it is not just because of Greece, others have the same problem.

ZeroHedge has some really good stuff.

General of Darkness
28th June 2011, 11:28 AM
Well I also think that Greece has become a large UNION so to speak. None of the Greeks cared where the money came from, they took it and retired at 55. It's all a fricken ponzi scheme. The PTB made it happen and the people allowed it. And the reason they allowed it is because they got PAID.

The people didn't care where the money came from, they just took it. NOW, they're going OH CRAP.

Greece is like a crack addict. The people wanted their fix, i.e. pensions, raises, etc, they got it and now that it's in jeopardy they want to get paid, and paid for what? For being a worthless lakey. The current Greeks aren't the Spartans from before, they're basically what Amerikwan union workers are now, worthless parasites. I know I'm being harsh on them, but they got soft and became reliant on the guberment tit. I feel no remorse for them, because we've done the same thing, and we're about 9 months behind them.

Blood will flow.

MAGNES
28th June 2011, 11:39 AM
they took it and retired at 55.

These are not most Greeks, these are some union people and mostly government employees.
Many different groups protesting, notice most of it is taking place in Athens, government central.

Many should be fired outright, their pay cut in half. They paid into plans from being overpaid to begin with, their payout packages/pensions are generous.

Going after these people will not solve all the problems either.

Read the IMF austerity measures, they are destroying and shrinking the economy,
how is this going to help pay down debt in the future ? It's a freaking joke.
Third world countries like Egypt said no, lol .

Rural Greece retires when they die, that's where my family comes from.

Hatha Sunahara
28th June 2011, 12:40 PM
Austerity measures are a workaround for bankruptcy of the banks--the Too Big To Fail banks. When I see people writing about the Greeks, or the French or the Germans, or any nationality, they are referring to the 'people' of those countries. I look at the world as consisting of three parties: 1)the people; 2) the Governments, and 3) the Banks.

The governments and the banks have ganged up to exploit the people. Austerity is nothing more than making the people pay more taxes, and get less services. The bankers have the ability to create money out of thin air. The governments have the ability to borrow this 'air money' and obligate the people to repay it. The people have no say in anything, but they can oppose any and all of it. So, the banks and the governments bribe the people so they won't oppose borrowing excessively. Everybody gets a small cut of the wealth, except the bankers and politicians get the largest cut. When things go to hell, the bankers get to keep whatever they have, they get to make the people repay what they owe. The bankers can't go bankrupt because of the 'horrendous implications to society'. Too big to fail. The people have to pay.

If the government of Greece defaults, then the Banker (not the people) have to write off the unpaid portions of the loans they conjured out of thin air. Nobody loses any money. The unpaid balances go right back into thin air. What the bankers do not want to lose is the profit stream from those loans. All of the interest paid on those loans is profit for them. So the people have to pay.

This is an example of how one class--the one that does not do any work-the class that owns everything makes slaves of the other class, the people, the ones who have to work for everything they have. This is how the value of labor--the only source of value humanity creates, is transferred from the people who engage in labor to the ownership class. This is why the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.

Hatha

Horn
28th June 2011, 01:34 PM
This is why the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.

And where they pull out the "Freedom & Democracy" card if opposed.

Then and only then.

Neuro
28th June 2011, 01:46 PM
One thing I noticed about my recent 24 hour visit to two Greek Islands, is that nowhere where they willing to accept payment by credit card. IOW cash is king, and probably the restaurants that we visited, just take the cash and don't pay any tax on it. This is the private sector which is supposed to pay for the bloated government sector, and the very generous pensions in the latter... They can agree on a new austerity program, but no one is paying for the debt allready accrued, the IMF and the bankers can postpone the payment of the debt, to keep up the appearance, but it is never going to be paid. Greece is in the terminal state, but technology and delusions is keeping the patient appear alive...

letter_factory
28th June 2011, 02:16 PM
One thing I noticed about my recent 24 hour visit to two Greek Islands, is that nowhere where they willing to accept payment by credit card. IOW cash is king, and probably the restaurants that we visited, just take the cash and don't pay any tax on it.


Sounds smart to me.

willie pete
28th June 2011, 02:53 PM
One thing I noticed about my recent 24 hour visit to two Greek Islands, is that nowhere where they willing to accept payment by credit card. IOW cash is king, and probably the restaurants that we visited, just take the cash and don't pay any tax on it

last week I heard an npr journalist from greece talk a little about the "mindset" of your average greek, his conversation condensed is; .....most greeks don't feel the need to pay income taxes, as an example he said; in greece IF you have a swimming pool in your yard, you are to report it on your tax return, he said for the last year only 300 people reported their swimming pools, but if you take a helicopter and fly over, there are literally thousands of pools...lol ....here's an interesting "Linky" ( http://www.csmonitor.com/Business/Mises-Economics-Blog/2010/0503/Why-are-Greeks-not-paying-their-taxes )

MAGNES
29th June 2011, 12:29 PM
One thing I noticed about my recent 24 hour visit to two Greek Islands, is that nowhere where they willing to accept payment by credit card. IOW cash is king, and probably the restaurants that we visited, just take the cash and don't pay any tax on it. This is the private sector which is supposed to pay for the bloated government sector, and the very generous pensions in the latter... They can agree on a new austerity program, but no one is paying for the debt allready accrued, the IMF and the bankers can postpone the payment of the debt, to keep up the appearance, but it is never going to be paid. Greece is in the terminal state, but technology and delusions is keeping the patient appear alive...

No molotov cocktails on the island, I'd be very interested in more reports if you have them.
I have 2 relatives in Northern Greece now, it is quiet, funny thing is they are from Illinois,
lol, wait till they get back.

They take credit cards everywhere in Greece, apparently the country is having a bank run.
Zerohedge even reported on this, austerity or not the Greeks are taking their money out.
I can't see them not taking credit cards in Rhodes. And personally I would pay cash and
not use cards anywhere, to be prudent.

Horn
29th June 2011, 12:33 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8y_BeZ5Tg-g

keehah
3rd July 2011, 11:01 AM
Now comes stage two. International Kleptocracy.

http://theautomaticearth.blogspot.com/2011/06/june-30-2011-impossible-and-inevitable.html

...Ilargi: Greece Inc. Put up for sale by a bunch of foreign governments and creditors and a government made up of domestic elites. Something here stinks. Did the IMF, ECB and EU really have no idea at all that the firesale sale profits would be far short of €50 billion? And if they did, which looks far more likely, what does that tell us? And what happens after that disppointing sale?

First, back to the reasons behind the expected firesale shortfall. Rupert Neate for the Guardian:

Debt-laden Greece finds no buyers in 'fire sale' of national asset (http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/jun/28/greeces-fire-sale-shunned?CMP=twt_gu)s


Nikos Stathopoulous, managing partner of BC Partners, which has invested more than €3.5bn in Greece, said investors are put off by bureaucracy, strong unions, corruption and a lack of transparency. "Even in the good times Greece is not a country that attracts investment. Foreign investors don't want to invest in a country where there is no flexibility in hiring and firing people," he said. "You don't want to invest in a country in which you wake up and a new law has been passed which totally undermines and destroys the value of the investment you've just made."

Stathopoulous said investors were finding it very hard to assess the risk of investing into Greece, which means assets "will be priced at lower than they are worth, lower than the Greek government, and even the European Union, expects". Aref Lahham, managing director and founding partner of Orion Capital Managers, said most private equity firms would not buy Greek assets because the "risks are too high". He added: "I think people will not buy those assets, that is the sad truth." [..]

Lahham said Greece's ambition to sell €15bn of assets by 2012 and the full €50bn by 2015 meant there was not enough time to carry out due diligence properly. "I simply do not believe the timescale. I'm afraid it is not going to happen within times - I'm afraid it is a fire sale."

Christodoulakis denied that the hastily arranged sell-off was a fire sale, preferring to describe it as a "professionally managed privatisation plan". "We may sell them cheaper than [during normal conditions] but we will devote the funds to buying back debt, that means we are going to buy it back when it is cheaper." When a fellow Greek interrupted to say the sell-off was "destroying our country", Christodoulakis said there was "no point crying over spilt milk" and told his countryman to "try and be optimistic".

Ilargi: Well, we stand corrected. It's not a fire sale, but a "professionally managed privatisation plan". Yeah, exactly. That's what stinks here. isn't it? That's where that familiar smell comes from. It has the fingerprints of the IMF all over it. All the way back to the economic warfare the institution initiated in South America, Asia, Eastern Europe, and everywhere it goes.

Greece has become the next chapter in Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine. Some of the faces at the IMF may have changed, but the blueprints for these kinds of operations are still the same; if anything, they've become even more perfected. Teams of economic hitmen and henchmen are sent into a country to sell everything that isn't nailed down to the highest bidder, but for the lowest price.

In order to achieve the last bit, all you need to do is write an agreement that is one on one contingent on an unrealistically high estimate of a group of assets, make sure their sale falls short of that estimate, and send in the hitmen again. And then you rinse and repeat until everything has been sold off. In Greece's case, it's all transport infrastructure first, because you know nobody really wants it, hence the sale price will be much lower than what the agreement called for, and in subsequent auctions you pick up the Acropolis and other national treasures.

Meanwhile, you raise taxes as much as you can, and then come back to do it again, while the public sector is gutted, along with health care, education and all those useless non-profitable parts of a society that benefit the people instead of the banks. Talking about banks, do we all still realize that all this is done to pay off debts to international banks that in many if not most cases would not even exist anymore if not for the tax revenues paid by the people of Greece, the rest of Europe, the US etc.? Or have we come to believe in "the recovery", do we now think it's real? ...

Trinity
3rd July 2011, 06:22 PM
One thing I noticed about my recent 24 hour visit to two Greek Islands, is that nowhere where they willing to accept payment by credit card. IOW cash is king, and probably the restaurants that we visited, just take the cash and don't pay any tax on it. This is the private sector which is supposed to pay for the bloated government sector, and the very generous pensions in the latter...

If I had a private sector job in Greece this is exactly what I would do also. Operate by cash and tell the government and their employees to pound sand.