Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Hey man, pull my finger

Historically, it's not been a good idea to give the Germans the finger. Not that it apparently stopped the man who is now finance minister of Greece:
The Greek prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, has been invited to Berlin during a new low in Greco-German relations, after the Greek finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, was forced to deny “giving the finger” to Germany in a two-year-old YouTube video.

The German leader, Angela Merkel, invited Tsipras for his first visit to Berlin since he came to power in January on an anti-austerity platform that has led to clashes with Greece’s creditors, including Germany.

This is soon after Varoufakis, appearing via videolink on Günther Jauch, one of Germany’s most-watched political discussion programmes on the state TV channel ARD, was shown a video of himself criticising the Greek government for accepting the European Union’s bailout conditions.

In the video, filmed at a conference in Zagreb in May 2013, the finance minister said in English: “Greece should simply announce that it is defaulting, just like Argentina did, within the euro in January 2010, and stick the finger to Germany” – at which point he appeared to raise his middle finger – “and say, ‘Well, you can now solve this problem by yourself’.”
Here is Mr. Varouakis in action:

The ol' Milwaukee skyline
When Frau Merkel summons you, you know the trouble is coming.



There's a confrontation brewing. The next 6-9 months are going to be very interesting, in the Chinese curse sense of the term.

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