Originally posted by BrilloPad
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Will there be a Grexit?
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Originally posted by Unix View PostI doubt the ECB would allow that, I hope they are already printing plenty of Drachma as I doubt there will be an agreement come Sunday.Comment
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostHow would they stop it? Send in the tanks?Comment
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostHow would they stop it? Send in the tanks?
After all, what's to stop the Greeks, or any other country, from printing US Dollars - apart from a fleet of aircraft carriers, submarines and tomahawk missiles.Comment
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I would imagine the Euro could stay as a second currency - giving some transitional stability and indexing - as well as international trade capability, even if they switch to the drachma.
The Euro is in many ways a second currency in the UK; it is accepted in many shops.Comment
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Originally posted by Unix View PostThe Greeks aren't workshy they work harder than the Brits.
Of those working for the government, let's please not delude ourselves into thinking they're doing much of value or working particularly hard. Part of the problem was their highly entitled, bloated public sector and high levels of corruption. The Greek government has not enjoyed particularly high levels of approval or trust amongst Greeks historically for these very reasons. Maybe the creditor 'power' dimwits will now get the hint.Comment
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Originally posted by Zero Liability View PostOf those working for the government, let's please not delude ourselves into thinking they're doing much of value or working particularly hard. Part of the problem was their highly entitled, bloated public sector and high levels of corruption.Comment
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Originally posted by centurian View PostYou jest - but in all seriousness, probably yes - it would likely be considered an act of war.
After all, what's to stop the Greeks, or any other country, from printing US Dollars - apart from a fleet of aircraft carriers, submarines and tomahawk missiles.Comment
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I read an article in guardian earlier. Athens has a printing press. But it is only set-up for 10E notes!
Printing currency for another country would be difficult.
Lee Child's first book was about the process. There the issue was about getting the paper. So they used $1 notes to make blank $ notes and printed $100 on them. But I bet its more difficult than that.Comment
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Originally posted by Chuck View PostSorry, are you talking about the UK or Greece here? It isn't clear.Comment
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