Astounding quote lifts veil on elite’s arrogance
Paul Joseph Watson
An astounding quote buried at the bottom of a CNBC article lifts the lid on the arrogance of the global banking elite and their desire to see Greece remain mired in depression.
Paul Joseph Watson
An astounding quote buried at the bottom of a CNBC article lifts the lid on the arrogance of the global banking elite and their desire to see Greece remain mired in depression.
The article, entitled Greece to Leave Euro Zone on June 18: Wealth Manager,
focuses on Integral Asset Management’s Nick Dewhirst’s contention that
Greece will exit the single currency the day after national elections on
June 17 if the populist party is victorious.
“Kit Juckes, global head of foreign exchange at Societe
Generale, told CNBC’s “Worldwide Exchange” (see video above) that the
best outcome was “the status quo.” “A Greek economy in depression,
austerity that guarantees they’ll stay in depression and living on life
support from the rest of Europe is the best,” he said.”
As the representative of Societe Generale, one of
Europe’s biggest banks, Juckes is brazenly admitting that the elite
would rather see Greece rot and decline into a failed state than allow
her to leave the euro and become economically independent once again.
Juckes’ quote also underscores how the austerity
measures imposed on Greece by European technocrats are not in the
country’s best interests at all and are in fact designed to keep
Greece’s economy under the dictatorial control of the banking elite.
As we have previously documented,
the biggest fear amongst technocrats is not for the welfare of the
Greek people in the event of bank runs and panic engendered by an exit
from the euro, but that a post-euro Greek economic recovery would
provide a good example for other countries in the eurozone to follow.
In a Financial Times piece
written by Arvind Subramanian, a Senior Fellow at the Peter G. Peterson
Institute for International Economics, which counts amongst its
directors numerous influential Bilderberg members, including former
Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker, former United States Treasury
Secretary Lawrence Summers, and Bilderberg kingpin David Rockefeller,
the elite’s true concerns over a ‘Grexit’ are perfectly encapsulated.
“Suppose that by mid-2013 Greece’s economy is
recovering, while the rest of the eurozone remains in recession. The
effect on austerity-addled Spain, Portugal and even Italy would be
powerful. Voters there would not fail to notice the improving condition
of their hitherto scorned Greek neighbour. They would start to ask why
their own governments should not follow the Greek path and voice a
preference for leaving the eurozone. In other words, the Greek
experience could fundamentally alter the incentives for these countries
to remain in the eurozone, especially if economic conditions remained
grim,” writes Subramanian, adding that Greece’s potential exit “may
prove an infectious model” and lead to the demise of “the eurozone and
perhaps for the European project.”
As Nick Dewhirst explains, the pro-euro camp has been
exaggerating the negative consequences of a Greek exit by ignoring the
fact that it would in fact be a boon for the Greek economy.
“Greeks would no longer be able to afford German cars
and Germans would be able to buy Greek villas and the young unemployed
in Greece would have jobs as tourism booms. The best thing would be that
they [Greeks] could blame the foreigners,” he said.
Globalists want to keep Greece in depression and “living
on life support from the rest of Europe” as Juckes puts it because they
know that if Greece escapes the clutches of the technocrats its
inevitable economic recovery will blaze a trail for other eurozone
countries to follow suit, leaving the elite’s 50-year plus project for a European federal superstate in tatters.
I heard that United States will take Greece's place in Euro Zone.
ReplyDeleteEuro Zone has the upper-hand, Greece will suffer economic crisis.
By: exchange rates
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