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FedEx Ground warehouse workers are unionizing right now.
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<blockquote data-quote="Ricochet1a" data-source="post: 867256" data-attributes="member: 22880"><p>This (with other posts in this string) are getting off the topic of the string, but since the diversion is already made... For the record, Soros isn't my favorite guy, but he is intelligent...</p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>Soros suggests Greece, Portugal quit euro-zone</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p>Some quotes from the above...</p><p></p><p>"One has so mishandled the Greek problem that the best way forward at present might be an orderly exit" with Greece leaving both the EU and the euro common currency, he said in an interview published Sunday by the German magazine Spiegel.</p><p></p><p>"Whether you like it or not, the euro exists. And for it to function properly, countries sharing the currency must be able to refinance a large part of their debt under the same conditions</p><p></p><p>...Berlin is opposed to the introduction of such bonds, but Soros suggested Germany, as Europe's <em>strongest financial partner</em>, should be responsible for defining the rules for its introduction....</p><p></p><p></p><p>.....</p><p></p><p>The only solution is for Greece to leave the Euro zone, they can't continue borrowing at higher and higher rates. The German taxpayer is finished bailing out the Greeks, so that is coming to an end. Since each country's economic policy is still determined individually by each country, there can be no such thing as a "Eurobond".</p><p></p><p>Institutions don't offer the same terms of credit to an individual with a score of 615 as they do to individuals with a score of 815 - just because they happen to live next to each other. To create a situation like Soros is hinting at (but knows will never happen) is to in essence make the individual with the credit score of 815 ultimately responsible for the debts of the individual with a credit score of 615 - the German taxpayer isn't going to accept that.</p><p></p><p>So, Soros making the points he did was merely an exercise in stating the obvious, and trying to push the issue of getting the Greeks and possibly the Portugese out of the Eurozone, so that the rest of Europe can get on with its business and let those nations who aren't able to act responsibily to sort out their problems on their own.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ricochet1a, post: 867256, member: 22880"] This (with other posts in this string) are getting off the topic of the string, but since the diversion is already made... For the record, Soros isn't my favorite guy, but he is intelligent... [B]Soros suggests Greece, Portugal quit euro-zone[/B] Some quotes from the above... "One has so mishandled the Greek problem that the best way forward at present might be an orderly exit" with Greece leaving both the EU and the euro common currency, he said in an interview published Sunday by the German magazine Spiegel. "Whether you like it or not, the euro exists. And for it to function properly, countries sharing the currency must be able to refinance a large part of their debt under the same conditions ...Berlin is opposed to the introduction of such bonds, but Soros suggested Germany, as Europe's [I]strongest financial partner[/I], should be responsible for defining the rules for its introduction.... ..... The only solution is for Greece to leave the Euro zone, they can't continue borrowing at higher and higher rates. The German taxpayer is finished bailing out the Greeks, so that is coming to an end. Since each country's economic policy is still determined individually by each country, there can be no such thing as a "Eurobond". Institutions don't offer the same terms of credit to an individual with a score of 615 as they do to individuals with a score of 815 - just because they happen to live next to each other. To create a situation like Soros is hinting at (but knows will never happen) is to in essence make the individual with the credit score of 815 ultimately responsible for the debts of the individual with a credit score of 615 - the German taxpayer isn't going to accept that. So, Soros making the points he did was merely an exercise in stating the obvious, and trying to push the issue of getting the Greeks and possibly the Portugese out of the Eurozone, so that the rest of Europe can get on with its business and let those nations who aren't able to act responsibily to sort out their problems on their own. [/QUOTE]
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