THE LOW CARB DIABETIC

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THE LOW CARB DIABETIC

Promoting a low carb high fat lifestyle for the safe control of diabetes. Eat whole fresh food, more drugs are not the answer.


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    Far more to worry about than diabetes!

    Eddie
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    Post by Eddie Tue Jul 07 2015, 12:28

    "Long after Greece has left the Eurozone and Germany is using the Deutsche Mark as its currency, the people of the two nations, antagonized to a level unseen since World War II, will be accusing each other of benefiting more from the brief but tumultuous period of the common currency.

    In reality, nobody had put a gun to Greece's head and told it to lever up, enriching local oligarchs and corrupt politicians, taking advantage of credit that was artificially cheap only due to the common currency and an implicit monetary, if not fiscal, union.
    Germany, whose exports account for nearly 50% of GDP, on the other hand experienced an unprecedented exporting golden age, made possible only due to an artificial currency, the Euro, that was by definition created to be weaker than the Deutsche Mark and benefitted from any bout of weakness in Europe's periphery, such as the past 5 years.
    The truth is, when things were good nobody second-guessed any decisions for a second, and since the rising economic tide lifted all boats, nobody cared.

    And then the tide rolled out, displaced by trillions in bad loans and gargantuan mountains of sovereign and financial debt, which ultimately would lead to the first, then second, then third and then an all-out cascade of sovereign defaults.
    Sadly, the losers - regardless of the propaganda and jingoist rhetoric - are the ordinary, common, taxpaying people of Germany and Greece (and every other European nation), who enjoyed a few brief years of artificial prosperity, which in retrospect was entirely due to debt, masked well by the "currency swaps" and other financial engineering concocted by banks such as Goldman Sachs, in clear violation of the Maastricht treaty which is now a long-forgotten memory of the founding ideals behind the Eurozone.

    For every loser there is a winner, and in the case of Greece and its tragedy, just as millions are about to lose everything, a few not only made billions but quietly, under the guise of "sovereign bailouts" transferred their entire risk onto the taxpaying public."

    More on this article here. http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-06/who-biggest-winner-greek-tragedy

    For years this has been coming, the great Euro project was doomed from the start. As we have seen in recent years in the UK, when Banks operate like a casino and suffer huge losses the liability is shifted to the tax payer. Banks are seen as too big to fail and they know it. Few people realise only around 5% of money is cash (paper or coin) the rest is debt, with never enough issued to pay the interest. Therefore the worlds monetary system is a massive ponzi scheme, which can only carry on with ever more debt. In short, it is a mathematical certainty the whole bent scheme must come crashing down. We are seeing the start of the financial Armageddon now.

    When the Tories came to power the UK sovereign debt was around £700 billion now it stands at over £1500 billion, doubled in five years. It will not be reduced, but will continue rising until we cannot afford to pay the interest. This is the situation in Greece, they will never be able to pay off the 300 billion plus Euro debt. The Greek economy is reducing and is about to go to third world levels. Even if all the sovereign debt of Greece is written off, they will still require huge sums of money to stay afloat.

    In the UK much has been said about the £12 billion welfare cuts. This will have a massive effect on the poor and disabled, but in the overall scheme of things is petty cash. We are heading in the same direction as Greece, it's just a matter of time.

    From the excellent blog of a retired Army Officer here. https://moraymint.wordpress.com/2015/07/07/perhaps-europeans-are-waking-up/

    "The Greek tragedy is now an epic political ‘game’ about saving the Euro and, by extension, saving the European Union. On the one hand, the bankers and all the banking vested interests are desperate not to lose (more) money in Greece and so are unwilling to chuck good (?) money after bad; on the other hand, the politicos need money to be poured in to the black hole that is the Greek economy to sustain the unsustainable (the Euro). Everybody’s now buggered if they do and buggered if they don’t, whatever they do! The situation in Greece is truly extraordinary; predictable, but truly extraordinary nonetheless.

    Notwithstanding, it seems to me that the majority of my fellow citizens here in the UK and the other peoples of Europe have yet to grasp the enormity of what’s going on at the moment. The Euro/EU crisis has barely begun. This is but the thin end of a very thick wedge."
    Eddie
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    Post by Eddie Tue Jul 07 2015, 18:03

    From William Hague today.

    Former foreign secretary William Hague has broken cover to urge Greece to abandon the Euro or be stuck in a 'permanent crisis'.

    Mr Hague, who stood down from politics at the election, said Greece had no chance of turning its economy around within the single currency unless Germany agreed to hand over big subsidies 'forever'.

    But the former Tory leader went even further, warning that the 'Greek debacle of 2015' will not be the end of the euro crisis 'but its real beginning' – eventually dragging in Italy, Spain, Portugal and other southern European countries.

    Mr Hague said Germany will have to pay Greece 'big subsidies forever' to keep the currency together.
    He said that even though the hard-left Syriza government has rejected 'reasonable terms' in return for a bailout the crisis is not the fault of the Greek people.

    'Greeks have experienced the loss of one quarter of their entire national income, following an unsustainable inflation of spending and debt which Eurozone membership facilitated.

    Info from here. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3151947/This-BEGINNING-Euro-crisis-William-Hague-warns-Greece-debacle-minor-rehearsal-coming-crash.html

    A point worth remembering is we pay in a net £35,000,000 per day, every day of the year to keep the EU farce going. What do we get out of it? I don't know. And why are so many Politicians from almost all parties so keen on us staying in? Just think what that £35 million could do to help the poor and disabled of our country.


    zand
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    Post by zand Tue Jul 07 2015, 19:06

    Sorry Eddie. I have tried 3 times to make a half decent post about this. I failed. So I'll just say The Euro was a daft idea in the first place. It was always going to end in tears for someone. The exchange rate mechanism gave governments an extra tool to help their own economies, why take that tool away? It never made any sense to me at all.

    Eddie
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    Post by Eddie Tue Jul 07 2015, 19:42

    zand wrote:Sorry Eddie.  I have tried 3 times to make a half decent post about this.  I failed.  So I'll just say The Euro was a daft idea in the first place.  It was always going to end in tears for someone.  The exchange rate mechanism gave governments an extra tool to help their own economies, why take that tool away?  It never made any sense to me at all.  

     

    This has all been about control. An easier way to control over 500 million people. One set of laws, one currency, one Parliament taking over with minimal power held by individual countries Governments. On paper it looked a great idea, but could never ever work.

    This has been tried before by Joseph Stalin et al. Millions murdered, deported and sent to the Gulags, and the big scheme still fell apart. It has been a long wait, but the EU is now falling apart. The great project was doomed from the start. Never in peace time have I seen such an impossible to resolve situation as we have now. Greece has to leave, issue it’s own currency and start again. The alternative is other more productive nations continuing to prop up black hole economies for ever more. The stooges controlled by the Banks have decided Banks are too big to fail, but now countries are failing. The $64,000 question, which country will be next?

    “The most puzzling development in politics during the last decade is the apparent determination of Western European leaders to re-create the Soviet Union in Western Europe” Mikhail Gorbachev
    graham64
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    Post by graham64 Tue Jul 07 2015, 22:25

    I reckon there's even more problems looming if the The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) gets off the ground.


    Probably the most controversial element of TTIP is Investor State Dispute Settlement (ISDS). These provisions allow investors to bring proceedings against foreign governments that are party to the treaty. These cases are heard in tribunals outside the domestic legal system. The concern is that the ISDS provisions might affect governments’ ability to determine public policy if they are concerned they might be sued by corporations. In the UK, the main area of concern has been the NHS – in particular, whether any future measures to reduce the private sector’s involvement might be challenged under these provisions. The UK Government and the European Commission have sought to allay these concerns but critics remain to be convinced. Besides ISDS, there are a number of other areas of concern with TTIP including food standards, public procurement, intellectual property, transport and financial services.

    http://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/SN06688


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