This subverse is for news from all around the world.
Be sure to check out /v/news as well!
Related Subverses:
/v/WarFollowing - Sub for all things relating to combat, terrorism, battle or war related news, stories, videos, etc. Also contains content related to dealing with war in daily life.
/v/USNews - For U.S.-central news
/v/WorldNews2 - Our less-moderated anything-goes subverse
Rules & Guidelines
[0] Removed
[1] Please report rule violations instead of debating them in the comments.
[2] News must not be older than fourteen days at the time of submission.
[3] User-editorialized titles are subject to deletion. State only the facts, not opinions or speculation.
[4] No spam, advertisements or ref-links.
[5] Removed
[6] Use correct capitalization in titles (i.e. no caps lock).
[7] Link the desktop version of an article, not its mobile version, and if you can search for an archive and link to that on https://archive.is/
[8] This should go without saying, but this is an English-language subverse. Posts and comments in other languages may be removed.
The spirit of these rules is to foster a community where dissent, free thought and open discussions are encouraged. All moderation activity should operate within this spirit.
Please do not post links in other subverses pointing to specific submissions or comments here. Cite the source directly if you are interested in the content.
Sort: Top
[–] LabGhost ago
If Greece is forced out it makes it look like the EU is incapable of providing fiscal security to it's member nations. This damages the reputation of the alliance and lowers it's ability to get loans for the projects it already has. This is like a house in your neighborhood being foreclosed on. The problem as I see it is that the EU is relatively healthy except for nations that choose to let the EU pick up the tab for a lack of fiscal responsibility on their part. The problem is the Greek people's aversion to austerity and paying taxes and losing exorbitant benefits they thought they were entitled to.