Κατα τα αλλα, θα ενωσει ολο τον κοσμο εναντια στον ISIS.
Θα επιστρεψει την εξουσια στον λαο, κοβοντας του το Obamacare. ( Ενταξει, αυτο δεν το ειπε, αλλα θα το κανει).
Αυταααααα!
Fiat Panda 7,6l/100km
REALZEUS έγραψε:nass έγραψε:Αλλά αυτό που έγραψες, ότι "το μόνο που αλλάζει είναι το όνομα" εσύ πρέπει να το τεκμηριώσεις, μη μου πετάς το μπαλάκι
Είχε ίδια πολιτική ο Obama με τον Bush ώστε "το μόνο που αλλάζει να είναι το όνομα" ?
Νομίζω ότι το είπα παραπάνω. Η μόνη διαφορά είναι ότι δεν έκανε land war.
REALZEUS έγραψε:Ξέρετε τι θα αλλάξει, ε; Το όνομα απλά.
nass έγραψε: και εφάρμοσε σωστή (όπως αποδεικνύεται εκ των υστέρων και όπως θα θέλαμε και στην Ευρώπη αλλά πέσαμε πάνω στη Μέρκελ) οικονομική πολιτική για αντιμετώπιση της κρίσης,
nass έγραψε:(φαντάζεσαι να έσκαγαν οι ΗΠΑ
kubiak έγραψε:Παρών για ημίγλυκο!
REALZEUS έγραψε:Γειά μας αδερφέ! Ντάξει, σε μπυροπότυρο, αλλά της Michelob τουλάχιστον. Στο γραφείο δεν έχω πολυτέλειες και όλα τα σερβίτσια. Το κρασί είναι καλό όμως.Υγεία!
Nato faces a shake-up
New cosier ties with Russia?
An end to free trade?
An end to the One China policy?
Iran nuclear accord could be rethought
More nuclear weapons in Asia?
Climate change revamp
REALZEUS έγραψε:Τζι-άκο μου τσίπ-ρα πίνεις; Έχεις καταλάβει ότι μιλάμε για την διεθνή σκηνή; Τι διαφορά έκανε δηλαδή ο Ομπάμα στον κόσμο, όχι στις ΗΠΑ.
The bankers in the room had seen some financial sleight of hand in their day, but the maneuver that Faissola’s staffers proposed was audacious. They described a simple trade in two parts. For one half of the deal, Paschi would make a sure-thing, moneymaking bet with Deutsche Bank and use those winnings to extinguish its 2008 trading losses. Of course, Deutsche doesn’t give away money for free, so for the second half of the deal, the Italians would make a bet that was sure to lose. But while the first transaction was immediate, the second would play out slowly, over many years. No sign of the €367 million sinkhole would need to show up when Paschi compiled its yearend financial reports.
ight years after the financial crisis, the stakes could hardly be higher. Being the biggest bank in Germany makes Deutsche the most important bank in Europe, and the Paschi trial is an uncomfortable reminder that its operations, already with barely enough capital to meet industry standards, are threatened by persistent scandal. Deutsche is also facing investigations into whether it helped clients launder billions out of Russia. This month the bank agreed to pay $7.2 billion to resolve a U.S. probe into its subprime mortgage business, admitting it misled investors. Deutsche has paid more than $9 billion in further fines and settlements related to claims of tax evasion; violating sanctions against Iran, Libya, Syria, Myanmar, and Sudan; rigging the $300 trillion Libor market; and other alleged breaches of the law.
The ensuing report has never been made public, but Bloomberg Businessweek obtained a copy. It shows that auditors asked Faissola what happened that afternoon in London. Other participants recalled details and dialogue, the report says, but Faissola drew a blank about the event he’d helped run. Broeksmit wasn’t interviewed. On Jan. 26, 2014, the day before the audit began, his body was found at his London home, hanging from a dog leash.
Faissola laid blame on Paschi and defended his role. “Nobody could have anticipated that the top management of a top European bank, fully regulated, with credible advisors and auditors, had allegedly ‘crooks’ on the board,” he told auditors hired by BaFin. Faissola left Deutsche Bank in 2015, as did Jain and his co-CEO, Jürgen Fitschen. (Neither Jain nor Fitschen is accused in the Italian case.)
Among the casualties was David Rossi, Paschi’s communications chief. At about 9 p.m. on March 6, a bank employee noticed that Rossi was missing from his fourth-floor office. A window had been left open. Authorities found Rossi’s body in a courtyard below. Rossi, 51, wasn’t himself the subject of any inquiries, but his home had been searched two weeks earlier by police. His death was at first ruled a suicide, but the inquest has been reopened based on evidence his wife presented, including security video that shows Rossi fell out backward.
Several months after Rossi’s death, in January 2014, Broeksmit was supposed to meet his wife of almost 30 years at a cafe near their home in the South Kensington neighborhood of London. He didn’t show. When she returned home, she found his body hanging from the leash attached to a door. In a dog bed, he’d left suicide notes, including one addressed to Jain, his longtime colleague. The New York Post reported last year that the note to Jain contained an apology. A summary of Deutsche Bank’s own review of the suicide, seen by Bloomberg Businessweek, doesn’t mention the note and says the review found no direct link between Broeksmit’s death and his work at Deutsche
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