Archive for the ‘A FRENCH DILEMMA POURQUOI PAS’ Category

Germany Shakes Euro

February 17, 2011

GERMANY ECONOMIC ASSERTIVENESS SHAKES EURO ZONE

By STEPHEN CASTLE
Published: February 16, 2011

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Another story created but not researched.

**Take note Germany is not stressing control they are only stressing the fact that the rest of the countries need to clean up their act if they want to keep going back and asking for contentious bailouts. Greece was the first followed by Cypress then Italy next Spain. Ms. Merkel is anything but a Nazi or Faciest. She is concerned that if the rest of the nations do not want to take measures to protect their financial interest because all they have to do is run to the Bank, Germany- France, then Germany should put certain qualifications in place just like any respectable bank would when one applies for a loan. I would also like to point out that when Germany united they took all the worthless Russian currency and converted it  into Dueche Marks and still built their economy into one of the strongest in the world. It comes down to the banks and politics, there some who want the Euro to fall for profit and trade reasons and then there’s the one’s who want to play but have someone else pay.

BRUSSELS — For decades, Germans wanted to become more European and took care not to be seen bossing around their allies on the Continent. But now that the government in Berlin wants Europe to become more like Germany, the temperature is rising.

At a meeting of European Union leaders this month, tempers flared when Germany, backed by France, called on countries using the euro to agree to a pact enforcing German-style fiscal discipline and wage restraint.

The howls of protests from smaller countries illustrate the anxiety set off by the growing assertiveness of Germany, the most populous and economically successful European Union country, which fears it will have to pay the bill for the carelessness of others.

If Germany decides to call more of the shots on economic policy, that has big implications for European integration, for the relative influence of smaller members in the 17-nation euro zone and for countries outside the zone.

But it also raises a more fundamental question, one with important historical overtones, not just for smaller European countries, but for France as well: Is the rest of Europe ready to accept overt German leadership?

Germany is making its so-called pact for competitiveness the price for agreeing to expand the rescue fund set up for the euro zone. It will be introduced through an idea long championed in Paris — but until now resisted in Berlin — that could become an embryonic economic government for the euro zone as a whole.

According to the leaked German working paper, the country wants to establish German-specified, Europe-wide standards on a variety of issues, including corporate taxes, adjustments in pension systems and legal measures that would commit countries to tough fiscal policies through a “debt alert mechanism.”

Fears of French-German domination are nothing new. But for Germany to emerge from France’s shadow to press its own agenda is a departure, one that derives in large part from domestic political pressures.

Chancellor Angela Merkel faces regional elections this year, and her struggling coalition allies in the liberal Free Democratic Party are flirting with a more Euroskeptic message.

Throughout last year’s protracted debt crisis, Mrs. Merkel was largely on the defensive, unwilling to sanction a euro-zone bailout until the very last moment, when she could argue to Germans that action was vital to save the currency.

Her plan rests on an implicit bargain with the German public: By supporting the euro, even if it means added costs, voters need to be reassured that Germany’s approach to economic policy making will hold greater sway. Instead of Berlin making most of the compromises, most Germans believe, it is time for others to make concessions.

At the same time, the financial crisis has changed the terms of the debate.

“In good times the mood tends to be ‘I’m O.K.; you’re O.K.,’ ” said a European Union diplomat, who was not authorized to speak publicly. “In bad times it’s more like ‘I deliver; can you deliver?’ ”

And, as Germany’s ability to deliver economically grew compared with that of many neighbors, Mrs. Merkel began talking tougher. At a European Union meeting on economic targets in March 2010 she complained that, if the past were anything to go by, other nations would fall short and the Germans would have to work harder to compensate, a European Union diplomat said.

The assertive stance is creating greater anxiety in Brussels and elsewhere because of Mrs. Merkel’s evident loss of faith in the European Commission, which is the union’s executive arm and the traditional motor of European integration.

In a recent speech, Mrs. Merkel talked about the “union” method of integration — among governments — rather than the “community” method, led by the commission and including the European Parliament.

But this German preference for an arena where the big nations dominate sets off alarms in small ones, which see the European institutions in Brussels as a counterbalance to bigger states.

Mrs. Merkel’s competitiveness pact is bound to be watered down as it moves through the tortuous process of European agreement. That begins with a summit meeting on March 11. The goal is to settle on a package of measures by late March, at yet another meeting where members hope to agree on creating a larger bailout fund for the euro’s most vulnerable nations.

But the path to an agreement is littered with obstacles.

On corporate taxes, Ireland worries about losing the support of Britain, which has retained the pound and serves as a counterweight to France and Germany in wider European Council meetings. Without that, Ireland fears that it may be forced to raise its own low rate — which it sees as vital to its economic health — to match bigger countries.

Others, like Belgium, object to Berlin’s call to sever the link between wages and inflation. Countries outside the euro, including Poland, fret about being relegated to second-class status.

And even nations with no such fears worry about being dominated by the biggest of the big member states.

“It has a lot to do with history,” said Frans Timmermans, a former European affairs minister from the Netherlands. “States like the Netherlands are a little confused. On the one hand we always say we want Germany to take its rightful position as a leader of Europe, but once that happens old reactions come out and we say, ‘That’s not what we meant!’ ”

“They are asked to play a leading role,” Mr. Timmermans added. “But God forbid that they do.”

 

She was….

November 14, 2010

Red high heeled shoes   Intense Baby Blues

Fish Net stockings      Red Ruby lips

Perfect Pearly White teeth

She was so hot she was smoking, though the temperature was close to sub zero, standing there in her suede angle length wool lined coat slightly unbuttoned showing her Grey turtle neck pull over accented by her matching skirt. Yeah I could even see her perfectly shaped legs, which were delicately encased by her semi fishnet nylons high-lighted by a pair of red high-heeled  shoes.
You didn’t have to be a poor smuck like me to see that this babe had money, or knew someone that had it and though she looked like she had stepped out of a Roy Liechtenstein picture you knew she was real because you could see the vapor in the air every time she exhaled, as she stood there on the Quay.

“Steady boy” I told myself, “you don’t want to scare her but getting closer would be nice.”
As I discreetly made my way toward her she looked right at me with her intense baby blues and honed right into me as if I were an attack jet coming in for the kill I had been caught red handed like a little kid caught with hands in the cookie jar.
“So what took you so long. I been standing here waiting for you to make a move,” she said through a pair of red ruby lips that showed perfect pearl white teeth. “I could have frozen to death before you got to me,” she smiled with a face of an angel that would have put Michelangelo, De Vinci or any of the great artists to shame.

“Were you talking to me…?”

I asked innocently like some high school pimple faced teenager who had been staring at his classmates crouch through the whole lesson until the chick looked at him and smiled and then turned around.

“Did you have to ask?” she asked with a touch of a Parisian accent.

“Yeah I guess I did,” I blushed.

“How sweet how innocent” she cooed “I haven’t had a man blush for me since I was in the Lycee, High School. I assume you’re taking the same train I am to Paris, yes?’

As far as I was concerned the train could have been going to hell and I would have still nodded my head.

“That’s great we can ride together in my first class cabin.”

“I love to I responded but I am afraid I am in second class.”

“You American’s you worry about everything. Don’t worry they never check me and if they do let me handle everything,” she assured me taking me by the hand and literally pulling to toward the first class section as the train arrived.

 

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Surprise

November 1, 2010

A FRENCH DILEMMA                                POURQUOI PAS

ONLY IN FRANCE                                  A FRENCH DREAM

Well if you don’t know it the votes have been cast in the French Senate to make the official retirement age 62, semi, the full retirement at 67, here is your news flash..

As Mme. Lagarde said “You have the right to strike but not block. You have the right to demonstrate but not break.”  They never heard her a typical reaction from angry thoughtless people.

The strikes cost millions of Euro’s not just from the destroying and breaking but causing people to lose their businesses.

A truck driver caught on camera who was trying to pick up gas at one of the refineries responded to one of the strikers who was adamant about him joining the strike and was not sympathetic to their cause. “What about my family and all the ones that depend on gas to get to work, the store, church etc. What about the Gas Station owners who depend on the sale of the gas to keep their doors open what about them?”

Good question what about  them and others like this truck driver? Many of the small gas stations have gone out of business or will need Governmental aide to stay open.  Some the boats in the Harbors sat there for over 35 days their expenses didn’t go on strike and most of them were not oil carriers. This will have an inflationary effect on everything from food to cloths and everything in between.

What’s really revolting is the Gangster rapper want ta be’s who destroyed properties, public and private, costing in the millions, weren’t so active the last week of October when the final vote was cast. Why? Well they were on vacation something that happens around this time every year in France for the schools. Which shows how dedicated they were to their “weak as water” cause. Most of them have never worked a day in their lives and what’s even scarier is that they will have adopt a system like the U.S. if they want to keep their Socialized System going before most of them are in their mid 30’s.

My heart goes out to the ones who believe in their country and want to do everything they can to make life better for their families may they prosper.