Sunday 28 April 2013


What is really happening in Germany?

There is sure something rotten up Merkel's Land.
To begin with the so-called miracle of Germany was never a miracle and was rather the result of shenanigans tolerated by, or imposed by the Americans on the other European states. Germany is the champion lawbreaker of the European Union.
 As a favorite child of the Americans during the cold war, Germany's prewar debt was pardoned and any payments to Greece for the devastation of the country in WWII were postponed to the Roman Calends.
On top of that for forty five years, i.e. until the reunification, despite explicit prohibitions  by the European Economic Community, Germany was allowed to subsidize all its industries that were located in the frontier zone with East Germany and sure enough the Germans saw to it that all new major factories were located there. At the same time all during the Cold War an American dictate prohibited Greece, because of the “misbehavior”  of its people in the early post-war period, from claiming the due reparations for the war damages of the Germans.
Following the reunification of Germany new illicit schemes were set in operation. The Landesbanks, a sort of local state banks, were recruited to subsidize industry through the simple device of granting loans that the industries never paid back. However in recent years some ominous clouds have been gathering over Germany. For one thing, after so many years of using this covert subsidization the Landesbanks today are effectively bankrupt and the German government fearing due sanctions fends off all attempts of inspection by the European Union and the European Central Bank with the feeble excuse that these banks do not have a federal charter and thus cannot operate outside Germany.
At the same time the German banks are being harassed by the equally serious problem that they now face as a result of Germany’s extensive involvement in shipping. In a renewed attempt to become a dominant force in international shipping, the Germans in a period of about fifteen years had built and financed the world’s largest container ship fleet, only to find out that what old Xenophon had said about twenty four centuries ago still holds true, i.e. that the art of fleet management is an art acquired through the experience of many generations. Right now all operators are being affected by the current slump in international trade, but the German container ships have another greater problem and that is the merciless competition from Cosco, their Chinese competitor.  The net result being that Germany’s major banks, such as Deutsche Bank, have suffered huge losses from bad loans and are in urgent need of recapitalization.
This problem and the miserable state of the Landesbanks are at the root of the recent concerted actions of the Germans to plunder the bank deposits in Cyprus, Greece and other Euro zone countries.