Saturday, January 28, 2012

George Soros: Germany Throws Europe Into Debt Crisis



George Soros seems to think that Germany throws Europe into a debt crisis.

The situation is more complicated than that.

It is both a religious and political problem.

Most countries in Europe are socialist republics, where you pay a lot of taxes, but get nothing back.

Bureaucracy, hate toward all kinds of technical innovations, and socialism are serious problems indeed.

If you import a car from the U.S. to France for example, you must first change most things on the car, which takes several months.

Then you need to have all the paperwork and everything confirmed, which takes another couple of months.

The cultural racism between the continents is exceedingly profound.

I remember how easy it was for people to make 5.000 euro per month in Sweden 15 years ago.

Now, I saw on the news that only 3 percent of the French make more than 4.600 euro per month, and everything today costs the double..

The truth is that France, with the rest of the world, is getting poor and more bureaucratic.

Greece is an even more a backward republic today, although it has the right religion - Christian Orthodoxy - just like Russia.

Unfortunately, oriental despotism, with its communist tendencies is what is prevalent also on all levels of the modern Greek society.

I think it is very wrong to blame Germany for doing the right thing.

The problem is that countries like France and Greece almost treat their peoples like shit.

They should be better than that!

This is very sad, because there are good people in both countries, and especially in Greece.

But those who decide on the top level have an inferior set of mind; they are both incompetent and arrogant.

When the U.S. becomes a Christian Orthodox nation, we can all relax, because then Russia will get its well needed Western influences, and at the same time the U.S. can replace the folly of Protestantism and Catholicism, and centralize the political power and decision-making in spiritual harmony.

Europe is too divided in different languages and cultures to become a serious world power.

The nations here are destined to watch and to follow what happens in the U.S. and in Russia, and then to try to make the best of the situation.

There will probably be many attempts to try to unite Europe, but they are all doomed to fail, because Europeans don't like democracy, freedom, or religion.

But I hope the Orthodox Church and Constantinople will be able to give the nations an entrepreneurial spirit, and couple the spirit of unity, with a spirit which supports modernization and technological advancement.

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