tv Keiser Report RT September 14, 2013 3:29pm-4:01pm EDT
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unexplored antarctica what is it in this icy expanse that attracts the people who come here. and now i only go to the dock. and enter into. a new generation of polar explorers is coming. we have a new group of specialists here now all of them are young how are they going to get along with each other and i don't know. who. i used to be a bureaucrat. seriously. what adventures await in this mysterious land where they live what to eat and what are they actually doing in antarctica.
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biomass kaiser welcome to the kaiser report wow i can feel the fraud this give me the creepy creeps all over because i'm in connecticut stanford and greenwich this is the headquarters of the global financial weapons of mass destruction manufacturing business and that's why we've come to find out what the frick is going on stacy herbert talk to me this episode is going to be dedicated to the notion of day fraud because he must have felt that standing in front of u.b.s. anywhere there's a banker wielding a derivative there is deja fraud happening now this concept of deja fraud was introduced by ray mcgovern a former cia analyst and he just wrote a letter an open letter to president obama about the syria situation and he
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referred to obama's use of a government assessment being sold as an intelligence summary they said this is deja fraud it's like the downing street memo where tony blair ignored the advice of richard dearlove who is the head of m i six and just presented a sexed up dossier let's call it a selective amnesia is something that was reliable for years where the population could be counted on to forget anything that happened two years ago or three years ago but thanks to alternative media and the internet everything is online and being referenced and being shouted about by screaming bloggers and podcasters and of course the show is a big contributing factor to how those who want to believe that the current situation is not just recook. fraud intelligence fraud again are finding it difficult and this to me this smells like the richard nixon era which i'm going to ditto with that at some point but i get where you're going with this so well we're
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five years into the financial collapse five years since lehman brothers collapse and lehman brothers collapse due to a deja fraud a repo one o five repo one to five was what caused enron to collapse and then a few years later lehman brothers to collapse five years later usa today is asking . two thousand and eight financial crisis could it happen again and they're also asking well they're also saying we should be worried why max because repackaging of debt is bad right this repro one of five you talked about going back to lehman brothers and other scandals of the past five years ten years it goes back to understanding that banks essentially when they say they've got something on their books they don't really have anything on their books in fact they loaned out that thing that they say that have on their books to another bank that has in fact went out to some other bank it goes around in this daisy chain of fraud or deja fraud or a circle of fraud and the problem with the two thousand and eight two thousand one crisis is that there was no reform there was no bank reform nobody went to jail as
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people understand and so you have not only the situation getting worse as our guest in the second half will talk about i'm sure but you've got the potential for a much worse situation developing because of the leverage that's continuing to build you know under like a volcano in the system yes i'm going to get back to that repackaging of debt that's going to cause more deja fraud presumably quite soon in the future now i also want to look at this headline from the u.k. which is alistair darling interview britain was two hours away from total social collapse former chancellor on the crisis that erupted five years ago this week said so here's the chancellor of the checker at the time alistair darling and again this is just like these going back to the tony blair era where we were forty five minutes away from saddam hussein nuking us and wiping us away and here we have what reminder of alice to darling saying we are two hours away from societal collapse
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over in the u.s. we had hank paulson former goldman sachs c.e.o. saying that there would be revolution in the streets if you guys didn't pass tarp so deja fraud what's sad about the alice are darling quote that the world is two hours away from massive meltdown but what's sad about that quote is what really we . should understand is that we were two hours away from having some accountability in the banking sector early that you are is away from having honest accounting for two hours away from getting rid of the bad actors and the massive fraud in wall street the city of london with only two hours away from having an economy get rid of all these crooks and then regenerate itself which would have started we would be right now in an honest recovery with real jobs and real g.d.p. growth instead of this hyper levered comair of an economy that's set to blow once again exactly because we are stuck in a loop which is why we keep on having days off fraud we're stuck in the loop it keeps on happening over and over and had we had the societal collapse he threatened
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it would have ended that loop and we could have start some thing new now i know you were also in front of r.b.s. down in stanford you saw that and he said that was the scariest moment was when the chairman of r.b.s. called him and said all the money is leaving the bank the system is collapsing what are you going to do about it now mr darling said that was the scariest moment he wanted me to do something about it. right well once again r.b.s. just one of the four horsemen of the british financial apocalypse that is been allowed to missed half the size and grow even bigger in threat to the british economy and i notice that what's happening in britain and in the u.s. and around the world what we predicted on the show is that interest rates on the ten year note are creeping higher now above three percent or just around three percent both sides did land in the pond instead of spinning this positively say it's because of positive growth and yet don't think positive for the number of people on food stamps so that's obviously a lie deja fraud all over again as yogi berra might say but what is happening is that the cost of servicing this fraud is going higher for twenty five thirty years
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the cost of servicing fraud is going cheaper yes that's what kept it going is that the cost of fraud was cheaper ever cheaper that kept the bubble expanding but now the cost of fraud is going up so now we'll see as warren buffett said when the tide goes out who's not a wearing a bathing suit now i want to move to another thing that goes with this deja. fraud and that is nonsense jobs in fact david gruber who we've had on the show he's the author of five thousand years of debt well he used a little bit of a stronger word i'll just say it's often sort to be jobs so the modern phenomenon of nonsense. john maynard keynes predicted that by centuries and technology would have advanced sufficiently that countries like britain or the united states would have achieved a fifteen hour working week and he notes that in fact we have essentially achieved that but we keep on filling it up with nonsense jobs so people are still working fifty sixty seventy hours a week in nonsense jobs whether it's dog walking or serving hamburgers or things that look like hamburgers at various fast food outlets around the u.s.
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so we keep on having these nonces jobs what is that about so he reckons it's partly like the soviet union where everybody was guaranteed a job in order to prevent any revolution or uprising and the same thing here is that they keep people in these nonsense jobs just to keep them occupied and feel like they're doing something otherwise you might have revolution but just like the soviet union you would find three four five six people serving you a hamburger and because they all needed a job we have the same thing here you have five six seven eight nine ten thousand bankers delivering you the same asset for ten this is a mortgage well they rip it up rip it up rip it up and disperse it to tens of thousands of bankers to sell and package and resell i mean they take a mortgage like this and they say oh here's a mortgage are going to sell to bank b. from bank day and then bank big simply repackages it as another set of mortgages all these are for mortgages collateralized by the same single mortgage that they had from bank they sell to banks see the other sixteen mortgages are going to sell
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at the bank say that we got from bank b. eleven a bank and this goes on in the days of fraud circle of fraud and creating a snowglobe of fraud creating the illusion of growth but what you have is just more fraud and i think what keynes fail to four see is number one the rise of the parasite banking class and number two all the productivity gains that would have been there due to mechanization and industrialization of effectively been stolen by the parasite banking class so by failing to see the rise of the what i call the jamie diamond tapeworms syndrome. is why you got it was so wrong. david gruber also looks at the rise of resentment that goes along with this so the actual people who are the working class have this sort of resentment through propaganda but he compares it to say the case of say they hired these expert excellent cabinet makers but instead they show up at the job and they discover that they have to spend the whole time frying fish so everybody in this cabinet making factory is actually
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frying fish all day and by the end of the week every week you have fish piling up all over the workshop so it stinks like to high heaven well i think you could see that too in the banking industry because remember u.b.s. and deutsche bank are two the biggest banks they say you know take all the highest trained engineers out of french universities british universities german universities they hire all these engineers. and then they go and rip up the same piece of paper over and over a faster faster to create more deja mortgages what deja fraud everyone is specializing in jobs that they're no good at yes effectively yeah so you take a somebody who was perhaps a specialist in one area but because the economy is not rewarding. excellence in these areas per some kind of meritocratic system you'd expect in a free market capitalist society because you have money printing and you have subtle planning and you have america's version of the pole of bureau you end up with people not doing what they can actually do well being shuffled around of this
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economy doing stuff that they don't know how to do it all and he goes on to say in that article that the people who end up doing the job like fish frying with no matter if their cabinet makers as they begin to resent the cabinet makers and this is happening in america is that people are beginning to resent everyone else in this economy because everyone is doing something that they don't really want to do so that resentment quotient is rising and when that becomes what the economists might call a breakdown in social cohesion civil unrest well you know the countdown has begun now that's a good point to segue to porn. now you're talkin wow and it goes with these nonsense jobs these are actually the real real jobs i think in the porn industry sizing up or its power to crush the american workforce so you know we had a dismal jobs report come out and the participation rate is now at thirty five year lows not since one thousand nine hundred eighty eight and we had so few americans working here but the unemployment rate fell from seven point four percent to seven point three percent the recent three hundred thousand people dropped out of the
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labor force so they buried in friday morning's rather dismal jobs report was a particularly strange bit of government data the motion picture and sound recording industry shed more than twenty two thousand jobs in august a six percent drop over july's number and the biggest workforce decline of any sector last month and they reckon it could be the porn industry well that brings up an interesting point economics was prices are really. discovered on the margins so here you have the mainstream economic model suggesting that all is good to some degree if you will but on the margins you see a collapse in a niche market but that becomes the definition of what's happening in the market overall and so now you understand that by looking at the porn industry you can extrapolate and understand that the core working environment the us is collapsing as well that's why the japanese are developing porn bots so porn box japanese porn bots and some of them are mighty attractive i might add are engaged in japanese
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porn but sex and this is becoming a major industry in japan and i would imagine a major industry of their export business which hopefully will take the place of all that energy they're losing now that tepco is nucular reacting into the pacific ocean and has diminished in value to that country's economy all right stacy herbert that's going to do it thanks so much for being on the kaiser report thank you max state of the second half i'll be speaking with jim rickards. compounder girl on the market is mother nature. to struggle with to. fight for each growth. through the.
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all right i'm back kaiser report with you max kaiser reporting from the sanctuary in this connecticut enclave hedge fund in greenwich in stamford but this is a head free zone i in the backyard of author jim rickards jim welcome back to the kaiser report thank you max welcome to connecticut our love it out here and of course you're working on a new book and show me the galleys of that very exciting can't wait for that to come out but i wanted to cover some of the recent stories in the news you've recently come back from safari in africa which which is more dangerous jam the african rhinos you encounter in the bush or the banks the sharks you encounter here on metro north train well banks there's a definite a lot more dangerous than riders because right first of all you don't over well behaved but you know they can only charge one person at a time was bankers can take out entire countries entire populations so because of leverage i'd be a lot more worried about the bankers on the line us while in transit back from africa you tweeted hashtags fed relationship to brics is like
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a drunk driver who runs down pedestrians and then blames the pedestrians for being in the way but we don't say i wasn't so far but the reason i was in south africa in the first place was to attend investment conference hosted by the one of the largest insurance companies in south africa so i had the opportunity to meet really the top institutional investors in the entire country as you know some of the wealthiest individuals government officials got a very good perspective you know we talk about bricks in emerging markets like there are you know on the dark side of the moon actually go visit them in me where there are government officials in the policymakers you really understand how heartfelt they're feeling as about what the fed is doing to the entire world now the fed officials the reserve bank governors members of the board of governors have said well that we kind of know what's going on emerging markets but we don't care and so our job is to take are the united states economy and you guys are on your own well that's fine but the problem is when you're manipulating every market. in the world i don't think you can be quite so cavalier about what's going on in the rest of the world and that's why i say they're like
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a truck driver running people off the road they're having an enormous impact on these emerging markets these lows merging markets capital markets are just not that big relative to the u.s. and even even europe by comparison so when you you know when you called interest rates zero everybody wants to the carriage has to borrow dollars you know then buy the local currency invest in foreign assets the cetera they can spread leverage it up make a lot of money will this is the feds are going to raise interest rates you know so-called tapering everyone on ones that can't be traced so this mess of lee dumping assets in indonesia malaysia singapore south africa and elsewhere dumping the currencies south africa seen their currency go from a to the dollar to almost eleven to the dollar in a matter of weeks this is you know incredibly disruptive and down when she did i mean the fed just says well it's your problem you know you've got central banks said your own policy oh so so i was supposed to raise interest rates when unemployment is sky high i mean the problem is there's no anchor in the financial system right now for for you know for eight hundred seventy to two thousand and two
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two thousand and ten we either had a gold standard or from one thousand nine hundred two thousand we had a dollar standard not as good as the gold standard but at least it was a standard says two thousand and ten we've had no standard so everyone's adrift and i don't think the sense i don't think the fed can be quite so dismissive of these markets are also of a reply let me jump in here sure i can because you're saying that a gold standard from an eight hundred seventy or so going forward to two thousand and ten and then there is no standard with the interregnum or the period of the dollar standard but let's go back to our second because starting in the early seventies you had all you had to oil petrodollar sure and isn't that right now part of this on a winding in the macro sense and we should point out that you're a macro analyst you've got the currency war without a macro look at things you're going on your background you know you helped long term capital management here as an advocate and you're very keen on this macro issues but to. they was what's happening politically in america some are positing that it's a breakdown of that petro dollar because it ties in saudi arabia seems to be
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matched up against putin over syria for rights to build a new pipeline from saudi arabia to europe to compete with putin's pipeline from russia to europe which is a cat i want to go on a huge expansion politically but what happened to the petro dollars my question is the gold standard was a bit of the one nine hundred seventy one in the late seventy's kind of seventy one through seventy nine he really had a period of chaos here people in the shia fixed rates for the weights go back to gold been a gold setter and you know the u.s. was actively disparaging gold dumping gold at the time and sister no dollar stands for the arabs are very worried so the kissinger cut this deal you're right so look you guys agreed to sell us oil for dollars and we'll maintain the value of the dollar that was backed up by vulcan reagan and carried all the way through republican and democratic administrations not just by you know volcker reagan but also by bush james baker bob rubin bill clinton backed it up by raising interest rates only said you know we're going to make the dollar valuable again we're going to make we did it was the king dollar period that's the sound dollar period it's ok
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not a gold standard but a dollar stand and that actually worked fairly well from one nine hundred eighty two thousand and ten the problem is in two thousand and ten obama geithner bernanke he tore up the dollar standard said we're going to chip in the dollar we want to important. we're going to cut it short you guys are on your own in others no standards at all so you have a new period of chaos if you're the arabs you know the deal has been torn up they say you know we're not going to maintain the value of the dollar so they are silly well ok what do we get for oil just paper money that you say you're trying to cheapen so now they're like they're exploring a lot of alternatives the g.c.c. may have a common currency europe is creating ripples on this in the g.c.c. being they cooperation operation how the arabs are. exactly right you're seeing the emergence of a regional reserve currencies you know korea japan and china despite all the tensions around the islands and all the. the fact is they're trilateral trade is exploding and they start to accept each other's currency so and then of course you have the brics and you know by putin most recently and they're going their own way
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so what you're see is this slow diminution in the role of the dollar sign overnight it's on the media but if the u.s. foreign policy if u.s. doesn't care if the u.s. isn't in charge nobody's in charge we see that playing out in syria same thing with the dollar if the dollars not the global reserve currency then it's jump ball and you don't know what you're going to get a return to gold standard is a possibility but i don't see that the immediate future i think we have to have a collapse first a collapse of the dollar standard in the petrodollar deal then had to be replaced with something now that will either be the s.t.r. which is the i.m.f. world money special drawing rights or gold or some combination of the two that remains to be seen but the dollar state is definitely claps and has been abandoned by the united states so they were under attack were abandoning it ourselves ok so to two thousand and eight two thousand and nine collapse period were about five years going into that post that period and we've been saying on the show that and really looking at a lot of your work is
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a lot of the conditions that led up to the collapse are still there but it got much worse because the leverage has got a lot worse so now we're set up for another collapse and coming out of that collapse you're saying there will be some other reserve currency status cut could be the special drawing right the s.t.r. or looking at gold again or some combination of the two so the question is is this collapse a baked into the cake in other words it's going to happen with a high degree of certainty and b. will it be in fact a magnitude larger than what we saw in two thousand and eight yes both of those things are quite the collapse is definitely coming because there were no structural reforms no changes so in two thousand and eight we heard about too big to fail guess what the five biggest banks in two thousand and eight are bigger today they have a higher concentration of all bank assets to drive as opposed to larger the leverage is larger we have new bubbles coming up in student loans or we don't have so prime mortgages anymore particularly the student loan market over trillion dollars. it's a another accident waiting to happen so all the conditions are there but here's the difference max when this happens not only will it be bigger it will be bigger than
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the fed the west on the fed bell without a load the fed has taken a bouncy from eight hundred billion to over three point two trillion in the last four years we haven't had a crisis since two thousand and nine there's no shortage of liquidity if they've taken their balance sheet to over three trillion without a liquidity crisis what are you going to do if we have a liquidity crisis which i expect they can take it to six trillion or nine trillion there at the limit the fed is technically insolvent on a mark to market basis they don't have the capacity so the only clean balance sheet left in the world is the i.m.f. so when this crisis happens the only way going to be able to reliquefy the world is by printing us three hours later when they said there was no a liquidity crisis back five years there there was a liquidity crisis yes they met their liquid reisa by expanding their balance sheet and what you're saying is that unlike that period this next wave will overwhelm any capacity for the fed to expand to what would need to be thirty trillion co-operatively in bad debt so it's like a hurricane sandy crisis where they entire lower manhattan was going please
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underwater and the lights went out and my correct i separate q.e. one from q.e. two and q e three q e one was a legitimate role the central bank where there's a liquidity crisis you're supposed to provide liquidity going back to you know in his description of what a central bank does in the nineteenth century in the fed into it the right way but they were they were right to provide liquidity but once q.e. one was over beginning we q.e. two that was not about liquidity anymore that was about propping up nominal g.d.p. because velocity was imploding that's really micromanaging the economy that's not the fed's job security too in q e three were completely wasteful we will look back and see it as the greatest failed experiment you know in history but the problem is they did it anyway so now with the balance sheet of three point two trillion if you have a liquidity crisis what are they going to do as i say go to six trillion there is a limit actually spoken to a president of the chicago fed and present walker they land the fed they say. that there is no theoretical limit to the fed's balance sheet maybe legally but i think that's wrong i think there's a political limit there's
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a practical limit and when you have a liquidity crisis you know the bank of england so better bank of japan so better you look around the world people's bank of china put in more money than the fed and so the only place you're going to get new money printing is from the i.m.f. but let's talk about that limit for a second because the place where that might show up is in the bond market sure so the ten year bond market which is the linchpin of the global banking system global economy all credit reversed of the ten year bond market about six months ago or so seemingly hit. low on yields in other words the high on the bonds themselves in the united states it was at a two hundred forty year high and in england i was at a three hundred year high so some are saying that the rise in yields telegraphed economic growth but that seems odd given that there's a huge people on food stamps and hourly wages are down and the job picture is a bunch of part time jobs doesn't seem like growth to me so is that rising by a is a telegraphing what you're saying that there's nowhere to hide and they're heading
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toward another crisis and being is it a secular move in other words is this like a going to be a ten to fifteen year bear market as you do see these larger cycleways in markets well it's very good question max but you have to remember the fed has been it played in everything so it's hard to look at history know exactly how it's going to play out the thing is there is such a thing as a bull steeping or like an expanding economy with expanding credit you know more demand for long the interest rate should go up that's a normal cyclical expansion that's not what we're saying this is much more of a bear steeping or it's because frankly china and japan are buying fewer u.s. government securities and the fed may taper and that will turn increase interest rates now i spent a lot of time saying with the fed once just because you want something doesn't mean you get it this is part of the fed's impotence in the opponents of policy what the fed wants is either extremely low real rates or even negative real raise they want to situation where inflation is higher than the ten you know. does this put the ten year note at say three percent you've got to get the four percent inflation or three and a half percent inflation to have negative real rates what's been happening is the
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opposite nominal rates are going up inflation is going down so real rates are getting higher and this kills the economy so i mean we'll see what happens with the fed tapering my view all laws that they won't taper but it's a really close call but the let me jump in really about thirty seconds left isn't there a huge problem i guess you could call the transfer mechanism between what's happening in the central bank level and that money getting into the real economy because it's being aborted by the banks to get in the middle or using it to lend back to the fed or to speculate or to buy assets and again this predatory banking class is becoming highly destructive right i mean this is part of financial repression to say you're a banker ok so you borrow a twenty five basis points you invest that three percent and you make two hundred seventy five. basis point i would tend to want to get twenty some percent returns on equity it's free money why would you do that gives a gives the treasury a cap to buy or the banks are kept to buyers of the treasury ok we've got only ten seconds left we didn't get the gold exactly but i take it you're still bullish on
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gold absolutely longtime got a seven thousand dollars now it's probably higher all right fair enough jim records out there currency wars thanks so much break on the kaiser report thanks max and that's going to do it for this edition of the kaiser report with me max keiser and stacy herbert our thank our guest author jim wreckers if you want to tweet us do so at kaiser report until next time max guys are saying. that you know the price is the only industry specifically mentioned in the constitution and. that's because a free and open press is critical to our democracy which is. in fact the single biggest. threats facing our nation today is the corporate takeover of our government and across several we've been hijacked lying handful of
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transnational corporations that will profit by destroying what our founding fathers but once i'm job market and on this show we reveal the big picture of what's actually going on in the world we go beyond identifying the problem try rational debate and a real discussion critical issues facing america if i ever go ready to join the movement then welcome to. new york london. the whole world is on the whole. country to yoke of the original one a father one found the end there are five the two hang up the corners that building at the end of the street another one the more transparent society gets the money or the puppet tears become we see military and state and for least falses mobilized
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against people who blend into the city in hobbit the city the more people trust electronic devices the more defenseless they are the fear that it has a thousand on. on our key. unexplored antarctica what is it in this icy expanse that attracts the people who come here. but you know now i only go to the dog show. and enter into. a new generation of polar explorers is coming. we have a new group of specialists here now all of them are young how are they going to get along with each other and i don't know. who. i used to be a bureaucrat's. so you seriously. want to adventure as a way. this mysterious land where do they live want to eat and what are they actually doing in antarctica.
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russia and the u.s. agree how to remove syria's chemical weapons giving it a week to provide a list and a month to stop the solving of moscow says only the un security council can decide on punishment for not complying. the fear of a western intervention prompted a mass exodus of syrians to the e.u. when those hiding from war meet the cynicism of the taxpayers funding their safe haven. and light at the end of the tunnel for the crisis stricken eurozone but fresh bailouts missed deadlines and overwhelming debt threaten to suck it back into the financial.
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