BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
#31
Lost in BE Cyberspace
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Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
Famous last words
#32
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Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
By the way, exactly the same thing has happened in the UK and US with just one very important difference. They can refinance their debt much more cheaply on the markets - and can simply print money off on the printing press to pay public employees. Which is why even with all the Euros problems it is still holding up against the dollar and pound.
Even this report points out that the usual result is a devaluation of the currency. Unfortunately, a Spanish Euro cannot be worth less than a German Euro, so it's the Spanish people who must bear the burdens of the Eurocrats determination to keep the Euro intact.
I may not agree with all of Rajoy's policies, but I tend to support his holding Spain's economy as a trump card in the face of the Eurocracy who demands giving up Spain's autonomy to bureaucrats, who've yet to prove any more competency at anything, let alone autocratic management of an economy that it desperately needs in order to keep its blessed Eurozone intact.
There is no "happy" solution, but I think there is some point where imposed austerity and dictatorial economic management by a distant, virtual autocracy becomes a worse option than simply leaving the Euro.
If Rajoy plays his cards right, I believe there should be some pretty good compromises from the powers that be. Better to have Spain IN under good terms for Spain, than to have Spain OUT, in which case, everybody loses, but Spain eventually wins.
#33
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Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
What struck me in the programme was that very little blame was placed on the Spanish Govmnt, they even said the national government was very well run, it was the local government bodies that ran up massive debts
#34
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Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
You seem to have missed the interview with the pharmacist who had not been paid for months wringing her hands because she had no cash to buy medicines for those suffering with angina, hypertension and diabetes? The piece about makeshift schools made out of shipping containers was more BBC left wing propoganda?
In my local pharmacy she is holding much less stock than before and when patients prescriptions need filling they are told to go a few days before and then she orders them in for delivery the next day.
As for the two container schools whats the big deal?? containers are being used now in all sorts of situations worldwide, indeed Lincoln University in the UK use them for student accommodation.
#35
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Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
Shucks, if they'd all just listened to you in the first place, we'd now be living wonderfully easy and carefree lives (provided by the fair and compassionate state, of course), all holding hands and singing "we are the world".
No doubt someday when the average IQ exceeds 1000, you'll be considered a prophet in the history books.
No doubt someday when the average IQ exceeds 1000, you'll be considered a prophet in the history books.
#36
Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
No I did not miss that section but am sure when asked she mentioned only blood pressure, cholesterol and diabetes tablets which happen to be among the cheapest drugs available in Spain costing just a couple of euros for a months supply.
In my local pharmacy she is holding much less stock than before and when patients prescriptions need filling they are told to go a few days before and then she orders them in for delivery the next day.
As for the two container schools whats the big deal?? containers are being used now in all sorts of situations worldwide, indeed Lincoln University in the UK use them for student accommodation.
In my local pharmacy she is holding much less stock than before and when patients prescriptions need filling they are told to go a few days before and then she orders them in for delivery the next day.
As for the two container schools whats the big deal?? containers are being used now in all sorts of situations worldwide, indeed Lincoln University in the UK use them for student accommodation.
#37
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Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
What I found a little tawdry was the spectacular lack of coverage of the almost dedicated corruption amongst all levels of government from the higher echelons down to the local adjuntamento’s which accounted for the misappropriation of billions of Euros... Included in the theft of this money were many small and medium sized companies in the public sector who in cahoots with these fraudsters have deprived a generation from the possibility of living a normal life.
It was a free for all for a few!
It was a free for all for a few!
#38
Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
Perhaps not the best examples if comparing with Spain - Wembley was built using private money, albeit borrowed. The Dome was a white elephant that cost the taxpayers close on £1b and was eventually given away to O2 to redevelop it. Prior to giving it away, the Dome was costing over £1m a month in running/maintenance costs
What struck me in the programme was that very little blame was placed on the Spanish Govmnt, they even said the national government was very well run, it was the local government bodies that ran up massive debts
What struck me in the programme was that very little blame was placed on the Spanish Govmnt, they even said the national government was very well run, it was the local government bodies that ran up massive debts
#39
Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
A lot of what has been reported in the UK and US media about the crisis featured strongly on Spanish news reports this evening.
I don't think there was any resentment about it, because the reports all seemed very accurate and in accord with their own views.
There was one interesting interview with a Benidorm hotel manager who was extremely irate that although his large hotel had been fully booked and doing excellent business for many months previously, no money had been forthcoming to pay the staffs wages.
He was understandably very perplexed regarding where all the incoming funds had disappeared to and gave the impression that he suspected that corruption must still be continuing much as before.
I don't think there was any resentment about it, because the reports all seemed very accurate and in accord with their own views.
There was one interesting interview with a Benidorm hotel manager who was extremely irate that although his large hotel had been fully booked and doing excellent business for many months previously, no money had been forthcoming to pay the staffs wages.
He was understandably very perplexed regarding where all the incoming funds had disappeared to and gave the impression that he suspected that corruption must still be continuing much as before.
#40
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Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
What I found a little tawdry was the spectacular lack of coverage of the almost dedicated corruption amongst all levels of government from the higher echelons down to the local adjuntamento’s which accounted for the misappropriation of billions of Euros... Included in the theft of this money were many small and medium sized companies in the public sector who in cahoots with these fraudsters have deprived a generation from the possibility of living a normal life.
It was a free for all for a few!
It was a free for all for a few!
On a separate but perhaps related point, is the BBC TV programme 'Watchdog'. On the infrequent occasions I watch it, I always think how and if such a programme would survive on Spanish TV!
#41
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Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
I don't think any blame for lack of coverage of the corruption etc can be placed at the door of Paul Mason & the BBC. I'm confident, being familiar with Mason's journalistic work and reputation, that he would have made great efforts to dig deeper and higher, but he would I suspect, have faced a wall of silence and non-cooperation from many organisations and individuals.
#42
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Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
And the programme was only an hour long, would need to be a series if they were going to include corruption. Saw the Panorama programme last night about the reclusive Barclays twins, they didn't pull many punches there. Worth a watch if you haven't seen it.
#43
Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
Usual old stuff, food banks with expensive branded goods, regular meat eater who can only afford meat once a month......
There was a UK fuel poverty story on Sky News yesterday. Chap moaning he couldn't afford his heating bills, yet indoors with just a T-shirt on!!
There was a UK fuel poverty story on Sky News yesterday. Chap moaning he couldn't afford his heating bills, yet indoors with just a T-shirt on!!
#44
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Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
Saying that, the programme seemed pretty fair, there was too much emphasis on the Brits, but then again it is for the BBC
Talking about budget deficits, there is some interesting stuff being written about the US' "fiscal cliff". The US' budget deficit is worse than Greece's every year - makes Spain's numbers look healthy!
And there is no "wall of silence" from the important people, Jordi Evole regularly interviews and provokes them about everything they have done wrong/corruption etc. Paul Mason is a very good journo, but I dont know why he was concentrating on a few down and outs in an inconsequencial little town. It would be like interviewing people from Middlesborough to understand why the UK banks crashed in 2008
Last edited by cricketman; Dec 18th 2012 at 11:08 am.
#45
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Re: BBC2 The Great Spanish Crash
Again I suspect there is no custom or history of the Spanish media challenging authority and certainly no 'doorstepping' of politicians and others as is commonplace in the UK, so any cooperation may have been somewhat 'controlled'.
Others with a far better knowledge of the Spanish culture will perhaps put me right on this.