Política e economia internacional 2015

  • Thread starter Thread starter Vince
  • Data de início Data de início
Estado
Fechado para novas mensagens.
Orionão e opost: 487077 disse:
No Reino Unido vai haver eleições. Não acompanho com particular atenção mas aqui ficam algumas notícias que têm saído relativamente ao atual PM:



http://www.theguardian.com/politics...rain-fade-for-getting-his-football-team-wrong



https://twitter.com/MichaelPDeacon/status/590792407882604544





http://uk.reuters.com/article/2015/04/29/uk-britain-election-tax-increase-idUKKBN0NJ2R520150429

Por fim:



O Cameron diz que a eleição é determinante para a carreira (a dele, claro). Depois emenda o erro (substituiu a verdade por uma mentira) dizendo que eleição é determinante para o país.




Mas isso não e o que todos os políticos , sejam de esquerda ou direita , pensam ?

Só que alguns foge - lhes a boca para a verdade .
 
Até porque (2006):

The senior Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee proposed Monday that Iraq be divided into three separate regions — Kurdish, Shiite and Sunni — with a central government in Baghdad.

In an op-ed essay in Monday's edition of The New York Times, Sen. Joseph Biden. D-Del., wrote that the idea "is to maintain a united Iraq by decentralizing it, giving each ethno-religious group ... room to run its own affairs, while leaving the central government in charge of common interests."

The new Iraqi constitution allows for establishment of self-governing regions. But that was one of the reasons the Sunnis opposed the constitution and why they demanded and won an agreement to review it this year.

Biden and co-writer Leslie H. Gelb, former president of the Council on Foreign Relations, acknowledged the opposition, and said the Sunnis "have to be given money to make their oil-poor region viable. The Constitution must be amended to guarantee Sunni areas 20% (approximately their proportion of the population) of all revenues."

Biden and Gelb also wrote that President Bush "must direct the military to design a plan for withdrawing and redeploying our troops from Iraq by 2008 (while providing for a small but effective residual force to combat terrorists and keep the neighbors honest)."

http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/washington/2006-05-01-biden-iraq_x.htm
 
Última edição:
The lower house of the French Parliament overwhelmingly approved a sweeping intelligence bill that, if it passes in the upper house, would give the government broad surveillance powers with little judicial oversight.

The measure would give French intelligence services the right to gather potentially unlimited electronic data from Internet communications, and to tap cellphones and capture text messages. It would force Internet providers to comply with government requests to sift through subscribers’ communications.

“It is a state lie,” said Pierre-Olivier Sur, the head of the Paris bar association. “This project was presented to us as a way to protect France against terrorism, and if that were the case, I would back it,” he said.

“But it is being done to put in place a sort of Patriot Act concerning the activities of each and everyone,” he said, referring to the American legislation that among other things authorized extensive electronic surveillance as a way to intercept terrorist activity.

Mr. Sur said he and others worried that the measure could be used to monitor any behavior the government viewed as potentially disruptive.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/06/w...-approve-sweeping-intelligence-bill.html?_r=0
 
The Danish government has proposed getting rid of the obligation for selected retailers to accept payment in cash, moving the country closer to a "cashless" economy.

Nearly a third of the Danish population uses MobilePay, a smartphone application for transferring money to other phones and shops, and Sweden, Denmark and Finland lead the European Union in credit card payments per inhabitant.

The Danish government said as of next year, businesses such as clothing retailers, petrol stations and restaurants should no longer be legally-bound to accept cash.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...-step-closer-to-being-a-cashless-country.html
 
Sondagem em Espanha confirma a queda livre do " podemos " . Depois da confirmação de que o " Siryza " nada tem para oferecer , a não ser a continuação da degradação da economia grega ( isso os governos anteriores já estavam a fazer muito bem ) .

A Europa precisa com muita urgência de uma esquerda e uma direita reinventadas , o que temos já cheira a mofo ( podemos , sirysas, frentes nacionais cheiram a soluções falhadas do passado ) .
 
Estado
Fechado para novas mensagens.