Friday, June 15, 2012

Perfect set of William Banzai7 gems to lead into " Anything Goes " Week ! Blast off starts Sunday ! Last words from Tsipras and an inspiration ode to Greeks - keep the faith , don't bow to threats - throw out the failed politicians of the past - you can do it !

http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/2012-06-15/friday-afternoon-mayhem


FRiDAY AFTeRNooN MaYHeM...

williambanzai7's picture




GEORGE WASHINGTON MADOFF

The American way...

.
DIMONHEAD

Beware of this financial snake
He lies for the money he'll make
His venom is pure
There isn't a cure
Your life he is willing to take
The Limerick King

.
FIRST CABALLERO
.
EARL SCHEIB FOR PRESIDENT
.


ZOMBIE EXPRESSDEBT COASTER LUNACY


This coaster was such a fun ride
But Neo-Keynes morons have lied
When we get to the end
Of "Let's Play Pretend"
We'll see that our system has died
The Limerick King
POSTCARD FROM SANTORINI: PASOK STRESS TEST
This donkey is under some stress
He's wishing Frau Merkel weighed less
He can't bear the weight
Will death be his fate?
The voters may well decide "Yes"

The Limerick King

.
THE END IS NEAR



CALL ME AFTER...


and non humor ..... just sad ...... channeling Rajoy - the US is not Zimbabwe ( yet )

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/pictures-zimbabwe



Pictures From Zimbabwe

Tyler Durden's picture





Just because "Spanish banks are fine" 12 days before they got a full-blown bailout, and global hyperinflation can never happen in this world, where every central planner is now preparing to hold the CTRL and P buttons until the bitter end, here are some pictures from Zimbabwe.

And some charts:

And the chart most familiar to Americans as at least when it comes to government debt, Zimbabwe is America.
But don't worry. The USD will never lose its reserve status. Oh wait...
Finally, a timeline:
  • April 1980
    • The (first) Zimbabwean dollar replaces the Rhodesian dollar at par, which buys US$1.54. A series of bank notes is issued, ranging from Z$2 to Z$20.
  • From 1994 to 2006
        • The Reserve Bank issues a new series of notes, from Z$2 to Z$100. As inflation rises and erodes the currency’s purchasing power, Z$500 and Z$1,000 banknotes are issued from 2001 to 2005. In the first half of 2006, new Z$50,000 and Z$100,000 denominations debut.
      • Aug. 1, 2006
        • The first currency reform is implemented in an effort to contain spiraling inflation. The Zimbabwean dollar is redenominated by lopping off three zeros from the old currency. The new (second) Zimbabwean dollar is revalued at one new dollar = 1,000 old
          dollars.
      • July 1, 2007
        • The Z$500,000 note is introduced, valued at about US$16 at the official exchange rate.
      • Dec. 31, 2007
        • The Z$750,000 (US$25) note begins circulation.
      • Jan 1, 2008
        • The Z$1 million, Z$5 million and Z$10 million denominations debut.
      • April 2, 2008
        • Z$25 million and Z$50 million bills are introduced. Prices of basic goods are in millions—a T-shirt costs Z$276.5 million, pants Z$2.75 billion. Tomatoes and other local produce are priced in millions.
      • At a restaurant, two beers and water cost Z$1.24 billion.
      • May 2, 2008
        • The Z$100 million, Z$250 million and Z$500 million notes debut. Annual inflation reaches more than 100,000 percent.
      • May 15, 2008
        • Z$5 billion, Z$25 billion and Z$50 billion notes are printed.
      • July 1, 2008
        • A Z$100 billion note is issued, about the price of three eggs at the time.
      • Aug. 1, 2008
        • Another round of currency reforms is implemented. The government slashes 10 zeros from each second Zimbabwean dollar bill and the third Zimbabwean dollar is valued at 10 billion old dollars (second Zimbabwean dollars). Inflation continues rising.
      • Sept. 29, 2008
        • New Z$10,000 and Z$20,000 notes are introduced.
      • Oct. 13, 2008
        • The new Z$50,000 bill is printed.
      • Nov. 5, 2008
        • Z$100,000 and Z$500,000 notes are issued.
      • Dec. 4, 2008
        • The Z$1 million, Z$10 million, Z$50 million and Z$100 million bills appear. Ten days later, the Z$200 million and Z$500 million banknotes debut, followed by the Z$1 billion, Z$5 billion and Z$10 billion notes issued on Dec. 19, 2008.
      • Jan. 12, 2009
        • The government issues two new denominations: Z$20 billion and Z$50 billion bills.
      • Jan. 16, 2009
        • Even higher denominations are issued: Z$10 trillion, Z$20 trillion, Z$50 trillion bills and the largest banknote ever—the Z$100 trillion bill.
      • Feb. 3, 2009
        • The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe introduces the fourth Zimbabwean dollar, with 12 zeros removed from old bills, making 1 trillion old dollars equal to one new dollar. Denominations of the new currency are the Z$1, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 and 500 notes. However, loss of confidence quickly leads to abandonment of the Zimbabwean dollar in favor of foreign currencies, primarily the U.S. dollar and the South African rand.
      Source: Dallas Fed


      and......

      http://www.athensnews.gr/portal/8/56320





      Tsipras slams bailout, vows to stay in euro
      15 Jun 2012
      Alexis Tsipras waves at supporters at a party rally in Athens, 15 May 2012 (Eurokinissi)
      Alexis Tsipras waves at supporters at a party rally in Athens, 15 May 2012 (Eurokinissi)
      The Syriza leader promised on Thursday to rip up the conditions attached to the bailout memorandum but keep Greece in the eurozone after Sunday's election, which he said were a referendum on the "memorandum or Syriza".
       
      "The memorandum of bankruptcy will belong to the past on Monday," Syriza leader Alexis Tspiras told his last Athens campaign rally before the election, held on Omonia Square.
       
      Attacking New Democracy and Pasok, he claimed that the Greek people are abandoning leaving behind the two parties that were trying to "extort the Greek people and steal votes".
       
      He said corruption, vested interests and disaster were at the core of these parties and that they had "looted Greece".
       
      He dismissed fears that reneging on the accord with the European Union and International Monetary Fund would drive the country from the single currency, warning "speculators" not to bet on Greece's exit.
       
      "We will vote on Sunday with our eyes on Spain," he said, referring to the 100bn euro recapitalisation package offered by the EU to prop up the battered Spanish banking system.
       
      "It negotiated and succeeded despite the lenders' threats and blackmail. It is still in the euro, without an austerity plan." (Reuters, AMNA)
       


      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zOW2UfvWWAE



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