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EU Video Going Viral: Nigel Farage Speaks Out on the Euro Debt Crisis

10:40 am in american taxpayer, daniel hannan, debt crisis, Editorials, eu countries, euro crisis, european parliament, European Union, francois hollande, indebtedness, Issues, Nigel Farage, president of france, retirement age, scapegoat, socialist, socialist president, Welfare, welfare state by David Leeper

Like Daniel Hannan, Member of European Parliament Nigel Farage is a plain-spoken Brit who sees what is happening across Europe and cannot remain silent.  The video below, uploaded June 13, 2012, is titled “The Genius of Mutual Indebtedness.”  It is fast going viral.

How will the EU countries respond to Farage?  Will they finally begin pulling back on their socialist welfare state?  Or will they perhaps re-lower the retirement age as the socialist president of France, François Hollande, just did? Or perhaps they will look for some convenient scapegoats?

Given our own debt and over-spending problems in the US, how much sympathy should we have for our EU friends who, protected for 60 years by an American-taxpayer-funded military umbrella, have fully embraced the socialist welfare state as their preferred political model?

For more on the EU debt crisis, see the video below in which Farage engages in dialog with Ken Livingstone, former Mayor of London.  The discussion is primarily about EU debt. Livingstone is known to Americans largely for his open policies on immigration that have led some to call London “Londonistan”.

Put “Nigel Farage” into a YouTube search box, and you will find many more occasions where Mr. Farage speaks out against the EU both in its concept and its execution.

Why should we in America care about all this? As I wrote in a post last October, “Europe is living in our future and we don’t want to go there.” Consider where Agenda 21 advocates are trying to take America and picture a global version of the EU enveloping and smothering our country.

If well-intentioned, kind-hearted Americans really want to help Europe in this looming debacle, the best thing we can do is (1) send the Obama entourage back to Chicago and the faculty lounges of the Leftist universities from whence they came, and (2) restore free markets, Constitutionally limited government, and fiscal/personal responsibility.  The resulting boom in America will be the example Europe and other countries need to set things right.

The Fanatical Face of France

6:38 pm in Editorials, Foreign Affairs, francois hollande, francois mitterrand, French Elections, International News, nicolas sarkozy by Scott Rohter

The Fanatical Face of France

By Scott Rohter, May 2012

“When the moon hits your eye like a big pizza pie that’s amore”

For over a hundred years the French people have had a big love affair, not with the moon, nor with pizza, but rather with big government Socialism. Last week they renewed their love affair once again by electing a member of the French Socialist Party to be the next President of France. He will replace their outgoing French President Nicholas Sarkozy, who by the end of his first term in office had already squandered most of the popular good will that he received five years ago when the French people literally handed him the keys to the Elysee Palace. Darn it! And I was just starting to get used to the pronounciation of his name! He squandered all of that good will on a legacy of controversial initiatives, followed by a regime of strict austerity measures that many Europeans, not just the French, didn’t like! And his equally tough approach to French unions didn’t earn him many friends on the Left either, nor win him the enduring affection of most of France’s blue collar workers.

The last time this happened in France was about thirty years ago when the French people elected another French Socialist by the name of Francois Mitterrand to be their President. But whether the French head of State is actually a card carrying member of the Socialist Party or not, every French leader since the days of Charles De Gaulle has been a Leftist to one degree or another, except for Sean and Marie Le Penn!

This time Francois’ last name happens to be Hollande, instead of Mitterrand. Francois Hollande. I guess I’ll just have to get used to his name. The new French Socialist President’s name is Francois Hollande, and he promises to restore France to its former heydays of greatness by doing away with the Troikas’s recently negotiated European austerity measures, and just taxing the hell out of the rich. Where have I heard that idea before? Oh yes, I know. That’s Barack Obama’s plan to cut the deficit right here in America. Just two Socialist peas in a pod: Barack Obama and his Socialist comrade from across the pond, Francois Hollande. And that goes for their respective Parties too, the French Socialist Party and its evil twin sister, the Democratic Party in our own country.

At least the French have the nerve to call something what it really is: Socialism! Francois Hollande’s plan is to tax the hell out of the rich is a Socialist plan. That’s how he intends to try to balance the French budget, restore the value of the Euro, provide for all of the French social programs that his sycophants clamor for, and restore the French economy to financial soundness again, yata, yata, yata, all on the backs of the rich. Well good luck Francois, but I don’t think that’s ever going to happen. Rob from the rich and give to the poor is not a sound economic policy, nor is it a prescription for national greatness. It sounds more to me like a recipe for overall mediocrity and total national disaster!

To read more and to see all photos please visit my website    http://www.lessgovisthebestgov.com/Nicolas-Zarkozy-Francois-Hollande-France-elections.html

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Europeans Vote for New Dark Age

8:19 pm in communist party member, credit default swaps, democratic socialists, francois hollande, french president elect, greek communist party, insurance underwriter, International News, Issues by mrcurmudgeon

Democratic Socialists aren’t going to be pushed around anymore. At least that is what the French electorate thinks. Speaking for many nanny states across the Atlantic, French President-Elect Francois Hollande told his supporters, “Europe is watching us. I’m sure that in many European countries there is relief and hope at the idea that austerity does not have to be our only fate.”

Meanwhile in Greece, former Greek Communist Party member and current President of the Coalition of the Left and Progress (the party expected to win big in Greece’s weekend election) told England’s Observer Newspaper, “If the politics of austerity continue, Europe is in big danger of breaking up. These policies are causing unhappiness, unemployment and poverty, as in the 1930s. Europe needs social solidarity and not to work according to market laws.”

Euro-socialists face one big problem, however: they need those dirty old markets to sell their lousy nanny-state debt. Even worse, they need greedy investors to buy it. But only the most deranged investor would buy European debt after witnessing Greek bondholders take a 75% haircut.

Just in passing, many Greek bondholders purchased Credit Default Swaps (insurance policies) on their bonds in case that profligate government failed to pay on its debt. When investors were told they would be forced to lose three-quarters of their Greek investment “voluntarily” (wink, wink), many a bondholder contacted their insurance underwriter and insisted they pay up.

Unfortunately, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association ruled “it had not received any evidence of an agreement which meets the requirements of Section 4.7(a) of the 2003 Definitions” and “determined that a Restructuring Credit Event has not occurred …”

Apparently, a loss is not a loss when a crooked nanny-state borrower defines your loss as voluntary.

Art Cashin, Director of Floor Operations for UBS Financial Services, told the Wall Street Journal, “Traders fear a worse outcome might occur if the CDS [Credit Default Swap] contracts do not kick in. What good is insurance that doesn’t pay off? That would stratify debt around the globe. Great credits could get all the money they wanted, but less than great credit would be shut out because it could not be insured. That could make the future one in which ‘the haves’ will have whatever they want and all the others nothing. Welcome back to the Middle Ages.”

“So what?” you say, “That has nothing to do with little old me.”

Well, according to a recent report by the U.S. Treasury’s Office of the Currency Comptroller, America’s top five banks have underwritten 96% of the estimated $250 trillion in insurance on debt. In the event European governments default, these U.S. underwriters must pay policy holders for their losses.

The top five are: JPMorgan Chase Bank, Citibank National, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs Bank and HSBC Bank USA.

Suppose French socialists decide they won’t pay their bondholders and trigger a dreaded “credit event”?

Remember Ben Bernanke at the fabulous Fed? During the early stages of the Greek debt crisis, he helped float European banks by making America’s national bank the international lender of last resort.

Federal Reserve swap-lines provided short-term, low-interest loans to Euro-banks to bolster credit, allowing the creation of even more bad European debt.

Europeans just said, “Goodbye austerity, hello stimulus!” Something tells me old Ben will crank up the printing presses for quantitative easing part III in order to meet socialist Europe’s insatiable demand for more of Obama’s “investment” money.

Dark Ages, here we come!

France election: How Francois Hollande won

2:44 pm in Dominique Strauss-Kahn, election victory, Foreign Affairs, france election, francois hollande, good fortune, living memory, rocky path, Sex Scandal, socialist party, word growth by PinkTeaPatriot

Francois Hollande C), Socialist Party candidate for the 2012 French presidential election, kisses a woman as he visits a street market with his companion Valerie Trierweiler (R) in Tulle, May 5, 2012. (credit)-Regis Duvignau

Source: BBC.com

By: Hugh Schofield

Posted: May 6th, 2012

Here are some of the merits that have brought Francois Hollande to election victory: intelligence, patience, consistency, likeability, and a hidden vein of steel.

And here is another: exceptionally good fortune.

Events have conspired to aid this patently decent, but patently inexperienced, socialist along the rocky path to the Elysee.

First there was the unexpected sinking of the party favourite, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, in a lurid sex scandal – a bolt from the blue if ever there was one.

Then when Francois Hollande was chosen as candidate in his place, it was by a Socialist Party totally fixated (against all precedent) on the need to show unity.

The knives were stowed.

Third, when it came to the campaign, he was up against a man whose personal unpopularity was legend.

Despised

Nicolas Sarkozy had led the country through the worst economic crisis in living memory. His promises of a better life had come to nothing.

By the left he was despised as the uncultured friend of the rich; by the far right as the man who broke his word; by liberals as the president who began to reform then stopped.

If ever there was a leader waiting for a walloping, it was he.

But Mr Hollande’s luck didn’t end there. In mid-campaign something bizarre started happening in Europe.

The world’s applause for the Sarkozy-Merkel axis, and their combined efforts in staving off a euro crisis, suddenly dried up.

The words “austerity” and “budget discipline” were eclipsed by another word: “growth”.

Little did it matter that the need for austerity in the eurozone had not simply vanished; or that monumental rows lay ahead about how to achieve this cherished “growth”.

The fact was that out of nowhere Mr Hollande’s Keynesian nostrums were suddenly in tune with the times. Such runs of good fortune do not strike often, and who can blame Francois Hollande for seizing his?

‘Placid’ Hollande

Indeed from another aspect, it is not so much that the circumstances have fitted Francois Hollande – it is also Francois Hollande who has answered to events.

First of all he is the quintessential anti-Sarkozy.

In the same way that positive ions repel negative ions, Mr Hollande corresponds to a public demand for someone who is as different as possible from the outgoing president.

If Nicolas Sarkozy was to his enemies “l’agite” (the agitated one), Francois Hollande is “le placide”.

At a deeper level, though, Mr Hollande also responds to the times. As Gerard Courtois – a pro-Hollande journalist – wrote in Le Monde, the president-to-be is a kind of “anti-hero”.

Previous French presidents have been either old warriors like Francois Mitterrand and Jacques Chirac or impetuous newcomers like Nicolas Sarkozy and Valerie Giscard d’Estaing.

But by being so unremarkable – so “normal” – Mr Hollande fulfils a new prevailing mood. In Gerard Courtois’s words, this consists of “a disenchantment towards politics… and a fatalistic acceptance of the limitations of political action in the face of the economic crisis”.

France’s problems

The big question now is whether the qualities that appear to have brought Mr Hollande into the Elysee will serve him as well once he is there. Because the problems that lie ahead are truly enormous.

He will govern a country at a turning-point in its history. As the historian and economist Nicolas Baverez says: “By 2025, we will know if France still ranks as a leading nation in the world.”

Decisions will have to be taken about what parts of the prized social model need to be preserved; and what parts are simply unaffordable.

Today France has unemployment of more than 10%. Public spending is 56% of GDP. Public debt will hit 90% of GDP this year.

In 2012 the country needs to raise 180bn euros on the bond markets. Next year it needs 200bn.

As Mr Baverez says: “There is no way that France will be able to keep borrowing the same volumes at the same rates over the coming years.

“That is why there is no alternative to austerity – which will be either decided voluntarily by our national authorities, or imposed by the markets and Europe.”

But if tough reforms are inevitable, the fact remains that Francois Hollande has not mentioned this once in his campaigning. Certainly he has spoken of controlling the budget deficit – bringing it to zero by 2017 is the manifesto pledge.

But the argument that this might require painful choices affecting his core constituency among the urban poor and public sector workers has been assiduously avoided.

For Sophie Pedder, Paris correspondent of The Economist magazine: “What is worrying is not so much that he won’t have the room for manoeuvre to carry out his promises like the 60,000 new teachers.

“It is that he has not in any way prepared the voters for the inevitable disappointment. That is politically a high-risk strategy.”

One other thing. He may have won the election, but Francois Hollande does not come in riding a wave of popular support.

Considering the fate reserved for other European leaders through the last years of crisis, Nicolas Sarkozy did remarkably well: only a few hundred thousand votes separated him from Francois Hollande in round one.

Added to which is the awkward fact that the fastest growing party in France is the National Front. The country, in other words, is not moving leftwards. If anything, it’s moving to the right.

In one of his famous maxims, the great 17th Century French aphorist Francois de la Rochefoucauld said this: “Il faut de plus grandes vertus pour soutenir la bonne fortune que la mauvaise.” Translated this means: “We need greater virtues to sustain good than evil fortune.”

Francois Hollande’s good fortune has served him well. Now is the time for those virtues.

Read More: BBC.com