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Tópicos - Dilath Larath

Páginas: [1]
1
Comunidade de Traders / Seca na Califórnia
« em: 2015-04-06 19:32:52 »
Para colocar o problema numa perspetiva mais vasta, deixo também o documentário "Green Gold", onde se focam diversos projetos para restaurar ecossistemas degradados, tanto em África como na Ásia, Médio Oriente e América do Sul.


Green Gold - Documentary by John D. Liu

Citar
"It's possible to rehabilitate large-scale damaged ecosystems." Environmental film maker John D. Liu documents large-scale ecosystem restoration projects in China, Africa, South America and the Middle East, highlighting the enormous benefits to people and planet of undertaking these efforts globally.

International Permaculture Day is an ongoing celebration of all things permaculture happening around the world, culminating in a global day of celebration on the first Sunday in May annually. The next global day will take place on Sunday 5th May 2013.


Citar
And we've only just begun to recognize the real value of natural capital. Surely investing in the recovery of damaged environments is a cost-effective way of solving many of the problems we face today.

The source of wealth is the functional ecosystems. The products and services that we derive from those are derivatives. It's impossible for the derivatives to be more valuable than the source. And yet in our economy now, as it stands, the products and services have monetary values but the source, the functional ecosystems are zero. So this can not be true, it's false. So we've created a global economic institution, an economic theory based on a flaw in logic. So if we carry that flaw in logic from generation to generation we compound the mistake.

(...) Wealth is being happy, living in nature, listening to the birds, breathing clean air. Not having chemical pollution throughout everything. Not having these horrible problems. So we need to redefine and revalue our belief systems. We need to understand that money is a belief system.There's nothing wrong with money, it turns out. The problem is, what is money based on? If money is based on functional ecosystems then the future will be beautiful. If money continues to be based on production and consumption of goods and services we'll turn everything into a desert! What is the future for our children and our children's children and generations to come in the future?



É uma frase um pouco vazia. Não se compreende sequer o que quer dizer, na prática.
 
O conceito de dinheiro estabelece um crédito de uma produção qualquer, e fungibiliza as produções. Na frase vazia não se compreende por que é que isso seria substituído.
 
(de resto os países mais desenvolvidos são aqueles que mais árvores plantam - não é linear que transformem algo em deserto)


A frase é cheia de significado, na realidade. E é muito clara e inteligível.

tal como dizes
Citar
O conceito de dinheiro estabelece um crédito de uma produção qualquer, e fungibiliza as produções.


1. É um conceito. É conceito que só é eficaz se as pessoas crerem nele. Quando as pessoas deixam de crer na capacidade do dinheiro, traduzir e fungibilizar a produção de bens e serviços, o dinheiro perde a sua utilidade. ninguém o quer, ninguém o aceita. É de facto um 'belief system'.

2. O que o Liu diz é bastante claro (talvez devesses ver o video de uma ponta à outra). A tese dele é a seguinte:

Todos os bens e serviços produzidos no planeta são derivados, em última instância, do ecosistema em que vivemos. Se o ecosistema falha, não há produção porque não há sequer vida. Se o solo deixa de produzir, se os sistemas hidrológicos colapsam, se o bioma (a massa viva, o conjuntos dos organismos vivos) morre, não vale a pena pensar em prudção de bens e serviços. Porque estaremos todos mortos.

No entanto o dinheiro é baseado na sua capacidade de traduzir e fungibilizar a produção e stock de bens e serviços.
Sendo que a produção e stock de bens e serviços é baseada (não existe sem) num ecosistema funcional.

O que o Liu quer fazer notar é que apenas os bens e serviços são traduzíveis em capital
Não há um sistema económico / monetário que traduza a funcionalidade de um ecosistema.
O Liu diz que há uma falha lógica e de base no sistema monetário.

O dinheiro traduz e fungibiliza o stock e a produção de bens e serviços.
O dinheiro não traduz e fungibiliza a capacidade funcional de um ecosistema.

Os derivados do ecosistema - a produção de bens e serviços - são monetarizáveis. Mas a sua fonte, a capacidade funcional de um ecosistema, não é.

Como não é, não há grande incentivo para o defender e melhorar.
Quando passar a ser, haverá um incentivo objectivo para a conservação e recuperação dos ecosistemas.

E isso é vital para o futuro da humanidade.


D


O GDP da california é de 1,958,904,000,000 USD - escala americana 1,9 quadriliões USD, escala europeia 1,9 biliões USD.
Se fosse um país independente seria a 10ª economia mundial.

De que vale isto tudo se a seca que assola a califórnia obrigar a sua população a emigrar?

se o ecosistema da califórnia colapsar e a população tiver que migrar para outros estados, ficamos a saber que pelo menos o ecosistema da califórnia vale 1.9 quadriliões.
pelo menos.

é isto o que o Liu quer dizer.

D


um pequeno pormenor.
o ecosistema da california vale pelo menos 1.9 quadriliões AO ANO!
e ainda teria de se lhe adicionar uma taxa de crescimento razoável (3%? mais?).

ao fim e ao cabo o valor do ecosistema californiano  é o valor de uma obrigação perpétua que paga anualmente 1.9 quadriliões com uma taxa de crescimento de 3%.

alguém sabe como calcular o valor de uma obrigação perpétua?

dá uma perspectiva diferente do valor da preservação ecológica, não dá?

D

Ele não colapsa, basta atacar o problema pelos dois lados. Pelo lado do consumo tornando a água mais cara para quem a consome, especialmente para quem consome muita. E pelo lado da oferta com essa água mais cara financiar operações de dessalinização (o que aliás acontece naturalmente se a água for cara o suficiente).

2
Comunidade de Traders / The Beggar of Baghdad
« em: 2015-03-31 21:19:17 »
Que a paz esteja convosco,

Vou contar-vos uma história que envolve o meu senhor, o grande Califa Haroun Al-Poussah assim como o meu patrão o Grão Vizir Iznogoud e uma estranha personagem que já será descrita mais adiante e a que decidi chamar O Pedinte de Bagdade.

Espero que seja do vosso agrado,
Salam,
D

3
Comunidade de Traders / Irão - Tópico principal
« em: 2015-03-28 22:20:21 »
No. 2 Negotiators in Iran Talks Argue Physics Behind Politics

LAUSANNE, Switzerland — At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the mid-1970s, Ernest J. Moniz was an up-and-coming nuclear scientist in search of tenure, and Ali Akbar Salehi, a brilliant Iranian graduate student, was finishing a dissertation on fast-neutron reactors.

The two did not know each other, but they followed similar paths once they left the campus: Mr. Moniz went on to become one of the nation’s most respected nuclear physicists and is now President Obama’s energy secretary. Mr. Salehi, who was part of the last wave of Iranians to conduct nuclear studies at America’s elite universities, returned to an Iran in revolution and rose to oversee the country’s nuclear program.

Forty years later, they are facing off in intense one-on-one talks as the deadline approaches for a nuclear deal that could be one of the most important, and disputed, international accords in decades.

Mr. Moniz and Mr. Salehi have emerged as their countries’ No. 2 negotiators, a pair of atomic diplomats taking on the vast technical issues that lie beneath the political disagreements. Their roles as deputies to the chief negotiators — Secretary of State John Kerry and Mohammad Javad Zarif, the Iranian foreign minister — signal that the two sides are down to the hardest issues about the kind of nuclear infrastructure Iran will be permitted to retain, and in recent days, those discussions have hit major road blocks.

The two had met only once before, in Vienna, more than a decade ago. But in the last five weeks, they have negotiated alone for more than 20 hours.

“We have a good rapport,” Mr. Moniz said as he poured himself a glass of well-aged Scotch and settled into the living room of his Lausanne suite, overlooking Lake Geneva. Over time, he said, Mr. Salehi has dropped his formality (Mr. Moniz calls him Ali), and the two now disappear for hours at a time into the conference rooms at the Beau-Rivage Palace Hotel, where the dismantlement of the Ottoman Empire was negotiated nearly a century ago.

The question is whether it is possible to dismantle enough of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure to assure the United States and its allies that they would have enough warning to stop Iran if it tried to build a nuclear bomb.

Mr. Moniz, 70, understands his role well: He is providing not only technical expertise but also political cover for Mr. Kerry. If a so-called framework agreement is reached in the next few days, it will be Mr. Moniz who will have to vouch to a suspicious Congress, to Israel and to Arab allies that Iran would be incapable of assembling the raw material for a single nuclear weapon in less than a year.

What the United States and Iran want out of discussions over Iran’s nuclear development.

“It wouldn’t mean much coming from Kerry,” said a member of the administration deeply involved in the strategy who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “The theory is that Ernie’s judgment on that matter is unassailable.”

Mr. Salehi, 66, will have his own problems selling an agreement to the generals and clerics in Tehran, many of whom are suspicious of Iran’s Western-educated negotiators and will have to be convinced that Iran has not backed down in the face of American demands. In recent days, Mr. Salehi has taken a decidedly positive tone in public, suggesting that all technical disputes with the United States have been resolved — a move some American officials interpret as an effort to put the blame squarely on Washington if the talks fail.

“For both sides, there are big questions of optics and politics here,” Mr. Moniz said.

People who know both men say they have more in common than challenges at home.

They are “mirror images in different contexts, both very personable,” said Michael J. Driscoll, an emeritus professor of nuclear science and engineering at M.I.T. who advised Mr. Salehi on his dissertation. Over the years, Mr. Salehi fell out of contact with Mr. Driscoll and many of his M.I.T. colleagues, who were warned after the 1979 Iranian revolution, which swept out the Washington-supported shah and brought to power a virulently anti-American Islamic leadership, that corresponding with Mr. Salehi could place him in jeopardy.

Mr. Salehi and Mr. Moniz converged a little more than a month ago in the increasingly tense talks, brought together after the Iranians announced that Mr. Salehi, a former foreign minister who represented Iran at the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna, would have a seat at the negotiating table. It was a telling move: Mr. Salehi is considered close to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and behind the scenes in Tehran, he had just killed an American proposal to reconfigure Iran’s centrifuges in a way that would have made them far less capable of producing enriched uranium.

Soon, Mr. Moniz received a call from the White House: He would become Mr. Kerry’s negotiating partner.

Mr. Moniz was well suited for the job: After becoming energy secretary nearly two years ago, he brought in scientists from the United States’ national laboratories to work out options to present to the Iranians, based in part on a secret replica of Iran’s facilities that the United States built when it was mapping out cyberattacks against them during the Bush administration.

“Ernie loves to sit with these technical experts and challenge their conclusions,” said Elizabeth Sherwood-Randall, the deputy energy secretary. “I often see him doing the math in his head.”

Mr. Moniz’s arrival has, by all accounts, changed the dynamic of the negotiating sessions. “Occasionally, a scientist drops into the government at just the right time, with just the right expertise,” said John M. Deutch, a former director of the Central Intelligence Agency who appointed Mr. Moniz years ago as the head of M.I.T.’s nuclear physics laboratory. “And that’s what’s happened here.”

The Moniz-Salehi talks are a way to separate the heated arguments over sanctions and national sovereignty from a far more technical discussion that only two nuclear scientists could love.

They have spent much of their time in recent days arguing about the type and power of the advanced centrifuges Iran says it wants to continue developing during the 10 or more years of an agreement — one of the last stumbling blocks in the talks.

“We spend a lot of time on SWU,” Mr. Moniz said, referring to separative work units — the acronym is pronounced “swoo” in nuclear-speak — which underlie all the calculations about how long it would take Iran to produce a single bomb’s worth of enriched uranium. It is not the favorite subject of many State Department diplomats.

Mr. Moniz has also reached out to his vast network of nuclear scientists in the United States, giving them classified briefings about the details of the talks. His hope is that they will provide technical validation to Congress and nervous allies that the plan negotiated with Tehran will give enough warning time to head off an Iranian race for a nuclear weapon with economic pressure or, if need be, a bombing run.

Mr. Moniz, who was born in 1944 in Fall River, Mass., got hooked on science as a high school student in the post-Sputnik era of the late 1950s and early 1960s. After attending Boston College, he earned a doctorate in theoretical physics from Stanford and then he joined the faculty at M.I.T., where he fell in with a group of physicists who were active in the Union of Concerned Scientists and similar groups.

He soon found himself immersed in questions about managing the “nuclear fuel cycle” technology that was giving emerging nations the capability to build power reactors — and nuclear weapons. The spread of that bomb-making technology was an unintended consequence of President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s “Atoms for Peace” program. Mr. Moniz has spent the rest of his career trying to undo the damage.

“What couldn’t be realized back then,” he said, “was how fast the technology would create ‘threshold states’ ” on the verge of nuclear weapons. Iran is the classic example.

Mr. Salehi, who was born in 1949 in Iraq, studied in Lebanon at the American University of Beirut and went on to become chancellor of Iran’s Sharif University of Technology. Britain and other European nations have put him on sanctions lists, and he has been dogged by suggestions that he knew of shipments of banned technologies to Iran. When M.I.T. invited him to speak on campus a number of years ago, the State Department blocked his appearance, saying he could not leave the neighborhood near the United Nations in New York.

This weekend, Mr. Salehi and Mr. Moniz are talking once again, mostly to resolve the dispute about whether research on new centrifuges will take Iran too close to bomb-making capability.

But they are clearly bound by an old-school tie: Mr. Salehi recently became a grandfather for the first time, and Mr. Moniz showed up with baby gifts, each embossed with the M.I.T. logo.

nyt

4
E entendes o que ali está escrito?

É possível ver documentos que agregam e contabilizam coisas em moeda Alemã sem que os activos/passivos sejam expressos em moeda Alemã. Um empréstimo que é pago em drachmas tem forçosamente que ser denominado em drachmas.

ainda não traduzi.
isto dá trabalho, apurar algo que se aproxime minimamente à verdade.
mas penso que é indesmentível que a quantia que ali está são os 476 mi reischsmark.
penso (tenho uma boa dose de certeza) que este é o documento dos auditores a que te referiste.
não vejo nenhuma menção a dracmas e a quantia bate certo com o que temos falado até agora.
está tudo em reichsmark.

D

5
Nazi Extortion: Study Sheds New Light on Forced Greek Loans

By Manfred Ertel, Katrin Kuntz and Walter Mayr

Is Germany liable to Athens for loans the Nazis forced the Greek central bank to provide during World War II? A new study in Greece could increase the pressure on Berlin to pay up.

Loukas Zisis, the deputy mayor of Distomo, a village nestled in the hills about a two hour drive from Athens, says he thinks about the Germans every day. On June 10, 1944, the Germans massacred 218 people in Distomo, including dozens of children. Zisis, who is just 48 years old, wasn't yet born at the time of the attack.

"We can't forget the Germans," Zisis says. They came to Distomo 71 years ago with their guns. "Today they are exerting power over our village with their banks and policies," he adds. He's standing in the wind on a rocky ledge, a small man in a leather jacket, and looking out over the town. Two-thousand people live here.

The massacre, which continues to shape the place today, was one of the most brutal crimes committed by the Nazis in Greece, with the carnage lasting several hours. For decades, a trial over the massacre wound its way through the courts at all levels in Greece and Germany. Greece's highest court, the Areopag, ruled in 2000 that Germany must pay damages to Distomo's bereaved.

"But we are still waiting," says Zisis. "There has been no compensation."

Last week in Greek parliament, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras demanded German reparations payments, indirectly linking them to the current situation in Greece. "After the reunification of Germany in 1990, the legal and political conditions were created for this issue to be solved," Tsipras said. "But since then, German governments chose silence, legal tricks and delay. And I wonder, because there is a lot of talk at the European level these days about moral issues: Is this stance moral?"

Tspiras was essentially countering German allegations that Greece lives beyond its means with the biggest counteraccusation possible: German guilt. Leaving aside the connection drawn by Tsipras, which many consider to be inappropriate, there are many arguments to support the Greek view. SPIEGEL itself reported in February that former Chancellor Helmut Kohl used tricks in 1990 in order to avoid having to pay reparations.

A study conducted by the Greek Finance Ministry, commissioned way back in 2012 by a previous government, has now been completed and contains new facts. The 194-page document has been obtained by SPIEGEL.

Outstanding German Debt

The central question in the report is that of forced loans the Nazi occupiers extorted from the Greek central bank beginning in 1941. Should requests for repayment of those loans be classified as reparation demands -- demands that may have been forfeited with the Two-Plus-Four Treaty of 1990? Or is it a genuine loan that must be paid back? The expert commission analyzed contracts and agreements from the time of the occupation as well as receipts, remittance slips and bank statements.

They found that the forced loans do not fit into the category of classical war reparations. The commission calculated the outstanding German "debt" to the Greek central bank and came to a total sum of $12.8 billion as of December 2014, which would amount to about €11 billion.

As such, at issue between Germany and Greece is no longer just the question as to whether the 115 million deutsche marks paid to the Greek government from 1961 onwards for its peoples' suffering during the occupation sufficed as legal compensation for the massacres like those in the villages of Distomo and Kalavrita. Now the key issue is whether the successor to the German Reich, the Federal Republic of Germany, is responsible for paying back loans extorted by the Nazi occupiers. There's some evidence to indicate that this may be the case.

In terms of the amount of the loan debt, the Greek auditors have come to almost the same findings as those of the Nazis' bookkeepers shortly before the end of the war. Hitler's auditors estimated 26 days before the war's end that the "outstanding debt" the Reich owed to Greece at 476 million Reichsmarks.

Auditors in Athens calculated an "open credit line" for the same period of time of around $213 million. They assumed a dollar exchange rate to the Reichsmark of 2:1 and applied an interest escalation clause accepted by the German occupiers that would result in a value of more than €11 billion today.

'No Ifs or Buts'

This outstanding debt has to be paid back "with no ifs or buts," says German historian Hagen Fleischer in Athens, who knows the relevant files better than anyone else. Even before the new report, he located numerous documents that prove without any doubt, he believes, the character of forced loans. Nazi officials noted on March 20, 1944, for example, that the "Reich's debt" to Athens had totaled 1,068 billion drachmas as of December 31 of the previous year.

"Forced loans as war debt pervade all the German files," says Fleischer, who is a professor of modern history at the University of Athens. He has lived in Athens since 1977 and has since obtained Greek citizenship. He says that files from postwar German authorities about questions of war debt "shocked" him far more than the war documents on atrocities and suffering.

In them, he says German diplomats use the vocabulary of the National Socialists to discuss reparations issues, speaking of a "final solution for so-called war crimes problems," or stating that it was high time for a "liquidation of memory." He says it was in this spirit that compensation payments were also constantly refused. Fleischer had long been accused of bias and he says he is now pleased to have support from Athens -- particularly given that the present study has nothing to do with Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras' Syriza government.

When work on the study first began in early 2012, the cabinet of independent Prime Minister Loukas Papademos still governed in Athens. A former vice president of the European Central Bank, Papademos formed a six-month transition government after Georgios Papandreou resigned. In April 2014, the successor government of conservative Prime Minister Antonis Samaras decided to continue work on the study and appointed Panagiotis Karakousis to lead the team of experts. The longtime general director of the Finance Ministry was considered to be politically unobjectionable.

50,000 Pages of Documents

Karakousis spent five months reading 50,000 pages of original documents from the central bank's archives. It wasn't easy reading. The study calculates right down to the gram the amount of gold plundered from private households, especially those of Greek Jews: 7,358.0014 kilograms of pure gold with an equivalent value today of around €235 million. It also notes also how German troops, as they pulled out, quickly took along "the entire cash reserves from branch offices and regional branches" of the central bank: Exactly 634,962,691,995,162 drachmas in notes and coins, which would total about €40 million today.

Above all, the study, with some reservations, provides clarity about the forced loans. "No reasonable person can now doubt that these loans existed and that the repayment remains open," says Karakousis.

This history of the loans began in April 1941, after the German troops rushed to assist their Italian allies and occupied Greece. In order to provide their troops with provisions, the German occupiers demanded reimbursement for their expenses, the so-called occupation costs. It's a cynical requirement, but one that became standard practice after the 1907 Hague Convention.

Out of the ordinary, though, was the Wehrmacht requirement that the Greeks finance the provision of its troops on other fronts -- in the Balkans, in Russia or in North Africa -- despite Hague Convention rules forbidding such a practice. Initially, the German occupiers demanded 25 million Reichsmarks per month from the government in Athens, around 1.5 billion drachmas. But the amount they actually took was considerably higher. The expert commission determined that payments made by the Greek central bank between August and December 1941 totaled 12 billion rather than 7 billion drachmas.

'Unlimited Sums in the Form of Loans'

With their economy laid to waste, the Greeks soon began pushing for reductions. At a conference in Rome, the Germans and Italians decided on March 14, 1942 to halve their occupation costs to 750 million drachmas each. But the study claims that Hitler's deputies demanded "unlimited sums in the form of loans." Whatever the Germans collected over and above the 750 million would be "credited to the Greek government," a German official noted in 1942.

The sums of the forced loans were up to 10 times as high as the occupation costs. During the first half of 1942, they totaled 43.4 billion drachmas, whereas only 4.5 billion for the provision of troops was due.

A number of installment payments, which Athens began pressing for in March 1943, serve to verify the nature of the loans. Historian Fleischer also found records relating to around two dozen payment installments. For example, the payment office of the Special Operations Southeast was instructed on October 6, 1944 to pay, inflation adjusted, an incredible sum of 300 billion drachma to the Greek government and to book it as "repayment."

'Debts Have to Be Paid Back'

In Fleischer's opinion, the report makes unequivocally clear that the Greek demands do not relate to reparations for wartime injustices that could serve as a precedent for other countries. "One can negotiate reparations politically," Fleischer says. "Debts have to be paid back -- even between friends."

Postwar Greek governments sought repayment early on. The German ambassador confirmed on October 15, 1966, for example, that the Greeks had already come knocking "over an alleged claim."

On November 10, 1995, then Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou proposed the opening of talks aimed at a settlement of the "German debts to Greece." He proposed that "every category of these claims would be examined separately." Papandreous' effort ultimately didn't lead anywhere.

So what happens now? What should become of this new study, the contents of which had remained secret before now?

"I am not a politician," says Karakousis, "I've just done my duty."

But the question also remains whether the surviving relatives of the victims of Distomo will ever be provided with justice -- and whether there are similar cases in other countries.

German lawyer Joachim Lau, whose law firm is based in Florence, Italy, represents the interests of village residents of Distomo even today. Lau, born in Stuttgart, a white-haired man of almost 70, is fighting for compensation in the name of the Greek and Italian victims of the Nazis. "I am disappointed by the manner in which Germany is dealing with this question," he says. He says it's not just an issue of financial compensation. More than anything, it is one of justice.

Careless Statements

In February, Lau warned German President Joachim Gauck in an open letter against propagating the "violation of international law" with careless statements about the reparations issue. In his view, the legal situation is clear: Greek and Italian citizens and their relatives affected by "shootings, massacres by the Wehrmacht, by deportations or forced labor illegal under international law" have the right to individual claims.

For the past decade, Lau has been pursuing the claims of the Distomo victims in Italy. The Court of Cassation in Rome affirmed in 2008 that the claims were legitimate and that he could pursue the case. Earlier, the lawyer had already succeeded in securing Villa Vigoni, a palatial estate on the shore of Lake Como owned by Germany -- and used by a private German association focused on promoting German-Italian relations -- as collateral for the suit. In 2009, Lau succeeded in having €51 million in claims made by Deutsche Bahn against Italian state railway Trenitalia seized. On Tuesday, the high court in Rome is expected to rule on the lifting of the enforcement order.

Following a ruling made by Italy's Constitutional Court in October 2014, private suits in Italy against Germany have been possible again. One of the justices who issued the ruling is the current president of Italy, Sergio Mattarella.

It remains unclear whether this ruling will unleash "a wave of new proceedings" in Italy, says Lau, who currently represents 150 cases, including various class-action lawsuits.

Present and Past, Guilt and Anger

Everything connects in the mountain village of Distoma -- the present and past, guilt and anger, the Greek demands on Germany today and past calls for reparations. Efrosyni Perganda sits in the well-heated living room of her home. The diminutive woman, 91 years of age, has alert eyes and wears a black dress. She survived the massacre perpetrated by the Germans at Distomo and she's one of the few witnesses still alive in the village.

When the SS company undertook a so-called act of atonement in Distomo following a fight with Greek partisans, the soldiers also captured her husband. Efrosyni Perganda stood by with her baby as they took him. She never saw him again.
As the Germans began to rampage, she hid behind the bathroom door and later behind the living room door of the house in which she still lives today. She held her baby tightly against her chest. "I forgive my husband's murderers," she says.
Loukas Zisis, the deputy mayor, silently leaves the house as the woman finishes telling her story. He needs a break and heads over to the tavern, where he orders a glass of wine. "I admire Germany: Marx, Engels, Nietzsche," he says. "The prosperity. The degree to which society is organized. But here in the village, we aren't finding peace because the German state isn't settling its debt."

Zisis admires Germany, but the country remains incomprehensible to him. "We haven't even heard a single apology so far," he says once again. "That has to do with Germany's position in Europe." This is something that he just doesn't understand, he says.

spiegel

6
Comunidade de Traders / Dilath's Ops
« em: 2015-02-24 15:45:08 »
O meu patrão, o grande vizir Iznogoud mandou-me iniciar este tópico.
Aqui deixarei as operações feitas na conta demo e os seus statements

primeiro statement

D

EDIT: e primeira ordem

sell limit 2.00 EURUSD @ 1.3555 1.13555

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