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Saturday, June 11, 2011
By JOSH KRON and JEFFREY GETTLEMAN (NYT) The northern Sudanese military
is on a “house-to-house” hunt for opposition forces in the embattled city of Kadugli, near Sudan’s disputed
internal border.
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By
ANDREW JACOBS The ethnic Mongolian protests that have swept a number of China's cities in recent weeks are a sobering reminder
of discontent in some of China's 55 ethnic minorities.
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By
SEBNEM ARSU and LIAM STACK Syrian forces swept into the northern village of Jisr al-Shoughour, a town that has offered the stiffest challenge
to four decades of Assad family rule.
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By THE NEW YORK
TIMES Some
say the path forward must include radical changes and others are urging a more moderate political resolution endorsed by the
United States and Yemen's Arab neighbors.
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By
THOM SHANKER and STEVEN ERLANGER The warning by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates came amid growing U.S. resentment against NATO over the air war
in Libya.
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Bomb attacks kill 21 in Afghanistan KABUL,
Afghanistan — Afghan authorities say a roadside bomb has hit a bus in southern Afghanistan, killing 15
people, including eight children.
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How Gingrich's campaign crashed Newt Gingrich positioned
himself as the unconventional candidate with new, big ideas. But his campaign ran right into some traditional, tough political
reality.
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New challenge for U.S.-Pakistan ties Twice in recent weeks,
the U.S. provided Pakistan with the specific locations of insurgent bomb-making factories, only to see the militants learn
their cover had been blown and vacate the sites before military action could be taken, according to U.S. and Pakistani officials.
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Reuters is reporting that Hlllary Clinton is in talks that could lead to her assuming the presidency of the
World Bank next year, vacating her present position as U.S. secretary of state. Were Clinton to win the post, she would be
the first woman to head the global enterprise.
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Friday, June 10, 2011
By PAUL KRUGMAN (NYT) Who benefits from economic stagnation?
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By
CATHERINE RAMPELL As the economy recovers, companies' capital spending is growing faster than their spending on
employees, encouraged by tax breaks and falling prices for equipment.
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By
DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK and DINA SALAH AMER In a region where economic woes enraged an entire generation, whether and how Egypt can fix
its broken finances will be a key factor in determining the revolution's success.
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Gates says NATO has a dim future BRUSSELS
— America's military alliance with Europe the cornerstone of U.S. security policy for six decades faces
a dim, if not dismal future, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Friday in a blunt valedictory address.
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Barack Obama - the American
Idol President Another day, another
poll. On Wednesday, the latest CNN/Opinion Research poll was released, and to no one’s surprise, President Barack Obama’s
approval numbers have declined. His post-Osama bounce has become a dead terrorist bounce…and the POTUS is back where
he was back in April.
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How The GOP Sabotages
Obama’s Brilliant Economy. So Harry Blodget of
Business Insider asks what the Democratic Party hopes will be a helpful question. Are Republicans Intentionally Sabotaging
The Economy For Political Gain? It’s an interesting theory and perhaps the makings of an excuse for the profoundly inexcusable.
You see according to Harry Blodget’s friend and colleague Dan Gross, the GOP is on an economic sapping mission in the
run-up to the 2012 Elections.
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Thursday, June 9, 2011
Understand how the brain turns thoughts into words and you can make machines that read minds. Duncan Graham-Rowe
gathers other people's thoughts
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A recent string of data breaches has left many people wondering how they can keep their personal information secure
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Surviving a Heart Attack with thymosin beta-4
Mice in the lab were more likely to survive a heart attack if they had received daily
injections of thymosin beta-4 a week beforehand. Their stem cells were active within 24 hours of the attack instead of a week,
and they produced larger numbers. The treated mice regrew more heart muscle than the untreated mice and their hearts pumped
better (Nature, DOI: 10.1038/nature10188).
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US
and Greek military personnel exercise Greek and US military personnel
will undergo joint training for peacekeeping operations in populated urban areas, training that will be held at a special
training centre in Drossato, Kilkis prefecture in northern Greece, next week. The exercise will take place with the participation
of a small number of personnel from the 79th Airborne Brigade and a limited number of US military personnel. "The aim of the training
is familiarisation with the demands associated with the military missions abroad, more specifically, with participation in
peacekeeping and humanitarian aid missions, such as KFOR and ISAF," the Hellenic Army General Staff announced. "The aforementioned training
activity has absolutely nothing to do with policing-type actions inside the country, considering that they are not part of
the mission of the armed forces as defined in the Constitution," the same press release stressed.
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By AGNES T. CRANE and RICHARD BEALES (NYT) As the government and private industry rewrite
home mortgage rules, it is crucial that they settle on the correct size of the future mortgage market.
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By JACKIE CALMES (NYT) Recent signs that the economic recovery is flagging
have introduced a new tension into the bipartisan budget negotiations.
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By
NEIL MacFARQUHAR This
oil-rich kingdom is spending $130 billion to pump up salaries, build housing and finance religious organizations, effectively
neutralizing any opposition.
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Unbelievable! NLRB’s Acting General
Counsel Opposes Boeing Employees’ Legal Involvement Last week, three Boeing
employees, whose jobs are at stake due to the National Labor Relations Board’s prosecution of their employer, filed
to intervene in the case. Now, just a few days later, Lafe Solomon has declared that he is opposed to their intervention in the case–even
though they stand a good chance of losing their jobs due to the union and the NLRB’s actions.
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Debt Limit Surrender Members of the Tea
Party and the conservative movement need to be prepared for some serious disappointment if news reports are correct. News
reports have emerged indicating that that “dollar for dollar” cuts to spending promised as part of a grand bargain
to increase the debt ceiling may be pro-rated over 10, 20 or even 25 years. It is easy for politicians to promise future cuts
to spending when many of these politicians cutting the deal will be long gone from Washington, DC. Politically this deal is very attractive
for incumbents of both parties. A $2.4 trillion debt limit increase would negate the need for a further increase in the debt
limit until after the next Congressional and Presidential election. This level of a debt limit increase would protect House
and Senate incumbent Republicans and Democrats from any further politically difficult votes before they have to face the voters
in November of 2012.
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Wednesday, June 8, 2011
Clashes Sunday on Syria’s border with the Israeli-occupied
Golan Heights show that the Israel-Palestine conflict is a persistent issue in the region that needs to be resolved, writes
Matthew Duss.
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The Sun lets loose a huge explosion
On June 7, the
Sun released a solar flare coupled with a prominence (a physical eruption of gas from the surface). This event blasted
something like a billion tons of material away from the sun. While it started from a small region on the Sun's surface,
it quickly expanded into a huge plume.
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By NICK BUNKLEY (NYT) Daniel F. Akerson, the chief executive of General Motors, said that he
hopes the government will be able to sell its stake in the automaker soon and expressed concern about the country’s
economic recovery.
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By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (NYT) Households borrowed nearly $7.2 billion,
but credit card use fell for the second time in three months.
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Greek News Getting in touch with Greek roots
The National Hellenic Society is providing fully funded
educational first-time visits to Greece for students via its Heritage Greece program.
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Greek News Greece drew 1-1 with Ecuador
By George Georgakopoulos - Greece drew 1-1 with Ecuador in a friendly in New York on June 7, after a modest display,
and risks missing out on getting seeded for the 2014 World Cup draw next month.
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Greek News
| Foreign pressure on Greece grows | | | American President Barack Obama warned on Tuesday that a Greek default
could have a disastrous impact on the US economy and called on Germany to help avert such a scenario. |
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Greek News
Καλό
μεσημέρι.Είναι γνωστό ότι
η κυβέρνηση, εδώ και 20 μήνες
κλήθηκε να αντιμετωπίσει
τη μεγαλύτερη κρίση πολλών
δεκαετιών στη χώρα μας.
Μια κρίση που σαφώς και
δεν δημιούργησε η ίδια,
αλλά κλήθηκε να την αντιμετωπίσει.
Είναι μια κρίση που κληρονόμησε
και οφείλει να τη διαχειρίζεται
μέσα σε πρωτοφανείς δύσκολες
συνθήκες.Ο πρώτος άμεσος
στόχος ήταν και [...]
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U.S.-Germany Security Cooperation  Release Time: For
Immediate Release The United States and Germany share a unique
history of security cooperation that began in the aftermath of World War II, developed throughout the Cold War – especially
after German accession to NATO in 1955 – and grew even stronger following the reunification of Germany. Today,
the United States and Germany are allies in confronting challenges around the world, from combating terrorism and piracy to
stemming nuclear proliferation. Germany is home to the largest permanent American force contingent outside the United
States with 51,000 troops. This forward presence enables the United States to maintain a strong and robust transatlantic
relationship with its European partners and allies and demonstrates America’s enduring commitment to European security
and collective defense. The training provided at the 13 major U.S. installations in Germany prepares NATO and
partner forces for vital multi-national operations overseas.
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Release
Time: For Immediate Release The United States and Germany highly value science and technology (S&T); both have committed to spend 3% of GDP
on S&T research and development. More than 50 bilateral cooperation agreements exist between U.S. and German government
agencies and scientific institutions along with over 1,500 university partnerships.
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Release Time: For Immediate Release WASHINGTON – Today, President Barack Obama
announced his intent to appoint the following individual to a key Administration post: - Peter Schaumber, Member, Board of Trustees of the Christopher Columbus Fellowship Foundation
President Obama announced his intent to appoint the following individual to a key Administration
post.
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Release Time: For Immediate Release WASHINGTON – Today, President Obama nominated Margo Kitsy Brodie, Jesse M. Furman, Susie
Morgan, and Mary Elizabeth Phillips to seats on the United States District Court.
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Henry A. Kissinger The U.S. transition is
long on exit and short on strategy.
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Pressure builds for sale of F-16 jets to TaiwanBy Bill Gertz - The Washington Times Congress is
stepping up pressure on the Obama administration to sell more F-16 jet fighters to Taiwan as the island’s air defenses
deteriorate and China’s air power grows.
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By Stephen Levy - The Washington Times NATO’s senior leader on Tuesday rejected a Russian government proposal that would have
required the European alliance to share details on a continentwide missile-defense system.
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By Patrice Hill - The Washington Times Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke sounded an optimistic note Tuesday that economic growth will pick up in
the summer and fall after softening this spring under the weight of high gasoline prices and disruptions from the Japanese
earthquake.
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Goolsbee exit comes at tough time for Obama, economyBy Dave Boyer - The Washington Times President Obama’s chief economist is departing as the administration’s nearly trillion-dollar recovery
is losing steam and Mr. Obama concedes that lackluster job growth could become a trend.
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Germany and other strong euro-zone countries want private-sector creditors
to bear some of the burden for another bailout of Greece. But the European Central Bank, backed by France, doesn't want
to do anything that would cast Greece into default.
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President Ali Abdullah Saleh's injuries from an attack last week
are much graver than initially disclosed and could keep him out of the country for months, Yemeni officials said, raising
the likelihood that he will be forced to yield power.
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Pawlenty proposed big reductions in the corporate and individual tax
rates while calling for deep spending cuts that could see the government abandon its role delivering mail or backstopping
home loans.
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Fed Sees U.S. Recovery
Lagging Bernanke offered a relatively glum view of the economy,
acknowledging that it is growing more slowly than the Fed had expected, but predicted improvement later this year.
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A Private Life, Tested She is married to one of the most bombastic, sociable and now scandal-tarred politicians in the country. But Huma Abedin is
an intensely private person whose quiet commitment to her husband, Rep. Anthony Weiner, has resulted in the two having rarely
spent a weekend apart since their wedding last summer, friends say.
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Morgan Stanley offered a glimpse into Wall Street's future,
and the outlook has changed so much from the heady days of the past that the firm is planning to keep a close watch on BlackBerry
usage.
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Billions of dollars in Afghanistan development programs at risk
The hugely expensive U.S. attempt at nation-building in Afghanistan has had only limited success and may not
survive an American withdrawal, according to the findings of a two-year congressional investigation to be released Wednesday.
The report, by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee's Democratic staff, calls on the administration to rethink its assistance
programs as President Obama prepares to begin drawing down the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan this summer.
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Tuesday, June 7, 2011
By JULIA PRESTON
Massachusetts
has joined New York and Illinois in refusing to participate in a fingerprint-sharing program that is central to the Obama
administration's immigration enforcement strategy.
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By ISABEL KERSHNER
Israeli military
officials disputed Monday the casualty figures announced by Syria a day earlier, after Israeli forces fired on protesters
who had tried to breach the Syrian frontier.
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By MICHAEL S.
SCHMIDT American
commanders say troops could be easy targets for insurgents as they depart along a 160-mile stretch.
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Santorum omits details on deficit, health care, Obama's
record in announcing bid In announcing his Republican presidential bid, former Sen. Rick Santorum blamed
President Barack Obama for a federal deficit that has many contributors, and he omitted important details about Obama's
comments on America's past.
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The Triumph of Politics I am sure you will
read a lot about Congressman Weiner and his scandal and morality and failed politicians and us versus them and David Vitter,
Larry Craig and Ted Kennedy and what have you. I am sure you will. I am not sure you will read anything similar to my take
on this, which is admittedly not as partisan as some other takes may be. But, I think it is the right take. In a different age, Anthony Weiner would
have packed up shop and left Congress with a bag over his head in disgrace. Certainly Congressman Lee left in disgrace, but
that had as much to do with his family demands and the demands of his constituency as anything else. In noting that Congressman
Weiner staying in office is a failure of morality in the present age, left-wing partisans were quick to bring up the names
of Sen. David Vitter, Sen. Larry Craig, Sen. John Ensign, and others.
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Michele Bachmann is bring Ed Rollins on board to run her Presidential
campaign. Rollins was Ronald Reagan’s campaign manager in 1984, a fact downplayed
by a lot of people who think Reagan’s landslide in 1984 had nothing to do with Rollins.
Whether you are impressed by that or not, pay attention to the next one: Rollins took Mike
Huckabee’s 2008 upstart campaign into overdrive and gave Romney, McCain, and the rest a run for their money.
I’m already hearing from people on the ground in Iowa that Bachmann
has the potentially to make huge waves there. Given what Huck did in 2008 and Rollins’ knowledge of the lay of the land,
it could turn Michele Bachmann into a serious contender for evangelicals and transition her from just being seen as a tea
party candidate.
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Monday, June 6, 2011
Greek News This Forum is great!
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Greek News
| Where did it go wrong? | | | The country’s Finance
Ministry officials have a duty to explain to members of Parliament, as well as the public, where the first m... |
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By DANNY HAKIM
A seemingly
inexplicable willingness by supervisors to tolerate abuse seems to pervade institutions that house residents with developmental
disabilities, a New York Times investigation shows.
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By LIAM STACK
Security forces
appeared to redeploy from other towns to join the latest front in the harsh crackdown on a three-month-old popular uprising
against the government.
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By
ISABEL KERSHNER Israeli forces fired at protesters on the Syrian frontier after protesters tried to breach the border for the second
time in three weeks. A Syrian news agency reported 22 killed.
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By DAVID E. SANGER,
ERIC SCHMITT and THOM SHANKER President Obama's national security team is pondering greater troop reductions, with some officials saying the
rising cost of the war and the death of Osama bin Laden justify a change.
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Sunday, June 5, 2011
Oil
Companies Tax Loopholes Researched by Gabriel Kazakias
Americans
eager to reduce the mammoth federal debt that threatens our economy’s long-term prosperity overwhelmingly support ridding
the tax code of these unnecessary subsidies.
The cost of Big Oil’s loopholes
· $4 billion: Cost of Big Oil tax breaks in 2011. · $2 billion: Cost of Big Oil tax breaks eliminated by S. 940. ·
$77 billion: Cost of Big Oil tax breaks from 2011 to 2021.
Big Oil profits
·
$902 billion: Total profits
for the five biggest oil companies in the United States, 2001–2010 (in 2011 dollars).
- $32 billion: Total Big Oil earnings, first quarter of 2011. Exxon Mobil alone accounted for $10.7 billion of that figure.
- 38 percent: Big Oil’s first-quarter-2011 profit increase over the first quarter of 2010.
- 28 percent: Increase in gasoline prices compared to 2010.
- 53 percent: Portion of their profits that both Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips spent repurchasing stock to drive up their
companies’ share values in the first quarter of 2011.
- $8 billion: The amount
of first-quarter profits the big five companies spent on stock buybacks.
Low effective tax rates
for Exxon Mobil
· 17.6 percent: Average effective federal corporate tax rate paid by Exxon Mobil, 2008–2010. ·
20.4 percent: Average American individual federal effective tax rate in 2007 (the last year of available data).
Oil campaign cash and votes to close loopholes
·
$273,500: Big Oil campaign contributions
to Republican senators and representatives in the first quarter of 2011. · $7,000: Big Oil campaign contributions to Democratic senators
and representatives in the first quarter of 2011.
Public supports ending tax breaks
·
66 percent: The proportion of Americans who say gas prices are taking a toll on their personal finances, according to
a recent CNN poll. · 74 percent: The proportion of Americans who favor “eliminating tax credits for the oil and gas industry,” according to a NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey.
What oil tax dollars could
buy
·
$21 billion reduction in the federal budget deficit by enactment of the Close Big Oil Tax Loopholes Act (S. 940), which would close tax loopholes for the big five oil companies over the next 10 years. ·
$30 billion for Medicare if tax loopholes were eliminated for all Big Oil companies. This would offset the Medicare cuts
in the fiscal year 2012 budget resolution that was passed by the House on April 15.
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By
ANDREW POLLACK A drug now used to prevent recurrences of breast cancer can also prevent it from occurring in the first place.
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By ANDREW
MARTIN
Programs
already plagued by delays and poor participation were not designed to fully address unemployment, now the primary cause of
foreclosures.
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Egyptians say economy is top concern
A U.S. government-funded
poll finds most Egyptians say they backed the revolution because of their economic difficulties, not a lack of democracy.
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House Democrats call on the president to stand firm on entitlements in debt
negotiations with the GOP.
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By MICHAEL D. HAIS & MORLEY WINOGRAD | 6/2/11 4:54 AM Opinion: America is neither center-right, as conservatives claim, nor center-left,
as liberals wish.
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By REP. PAUL TONKO | 6/2/11 4:41 PM Opinion: Balancing our spending on the backs of our nation’s seniors is not the right
approach.
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Greek News Troika clears fifth bailout tranche Greece’s creditors are expected to release the fifth tranche of money
from the 110-billion-euro support package next month after European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary
Fund representatives visiting Athens expressed their satisfaction with the country’s progress.
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I read Alexis Papachelas' commentary published on Wednesday, June 1, 2011 ("What are they trying to save?")
with a mixture of amusement and indignation. Does he really believe that the European technocrats who are ordering the Greek
government to give them oversight authority and veto power over the actions of a sovereign government are nothing more than
a benevolent humanitarian force focused on the altruistic mission of rebuilding Greece and the Greeks for the natives’
own good? Apparently he does. How else can one explain statements such as this one: "Let us look at our state straight
on and accept all the help we can get in order to rebuild it properly. Even now things are getting better in some crucial
sectors, with a lot of blood, sweat and tears." Leaving aside the obvious question of which sector exactly is «getting
better» and how exactly this «gain» is being measured, one is tempted to point out that this kind of rhetoric
is reminiscent of the kind to be found in the mouths of a portion of the population living in so-called banana republics.
This self-proclaimed «enlightened» portion of the community constantly denigrates the ability of the natives to
make decisions for themselves and persistently calls for foreign intervention to help the locals reach objectives that their
limited intellectual capabilities cannot possibly achieve without the altruistic and benign intervention of a foreign agency.
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Greek News By Stavros Lygeros It took one publication saying that Germany was ready to agree to an additional loan of 60-65
billion euros for optimism to soar in Greece. Even the gasping Athens stock exchange perked up. The truth, however, is that clouds continue to darken the horizon, as the memorandum is based on the assumption that
by early 2012 Greece will be ready to return to the markets. The way things look right now, though, it is unlikely that the
markets will be ready to open their doors to Greece. In order for a default
to be avoided, Greece needs to either restructure its debt or to receive additional loans. The European Central Bank rejects
the idea of restructuring. The only option that is under consideration is a voluntary reprofiling to avoid triggering credit
default swaps. This is the reason why the eurozone is increasingly warming to the solution of a new loan package.
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