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Who is the G8?

Who is the G8?. On the G8 Agenda: May 2011 Summit. Pushing debt deal in Greece that would enact extreme austerity measures on the people of Greece. (People of Greece would be forced to take one for the Global capitalist economy) Protecting the value of the Euro at all costs

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Who is the G8?

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  1. Who is the G8?

  2. On the G8 Agenda: May 2011 Summit • Pushing debt deal in Greece that would enact extreme austerity measures on the people of Greece. (People of Greece would be forced to take one for the Global capitalist economy) • Protecting the value of the Euro at all costs • Nuclear safety following the disaster at the tsunami-damaged Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan • Approving a multibillion funding package for Egypt and Tunisia “as part of broader support for democracy movements in the Arab world” (trying to play a role in new post-revolution governments in the Arab world) • Discussion about picking a new head of the IMF, after the former head was under house arrest under charges of sexual assault against a woman worker at a hotel in NYC • Discussion about the future of the internet, joined by the so-called E-G8, made up of heads of tech companies, including Google and Facebook.

  3. Who is NATO?

  4. Austerity Measures in Greece • 15,000 public-sector job cuts • Across the board cuts in nearly all of private sector wages and salaries; lowering the minimum wage by 20% from 751 Euros a month to 600 Euros • The dismantling of collective bargaining and the annulment of the current collective agreement. • Immediate elimination of rent subsidies for the poorer, cuts in pensions, mass privatization (including of water companies and the lottery).

  5. “In Iraq they were not negotiating with the government to accept their “structural adjustments” in exchange for a loan; they were the government.” –Naomi Klein

  6. Stories from Austerity • 2011- Tunisia—Tunisian Revolution begins against Ben Ali’s decade-long austerity imposing regime. (January 24, 2011) Tunisian police today used teargas to try to disperse protesters who gathered at the prime minister's office as part of a campaign to remove a government linked to ousted president Zine Al-Abidine Ben Ali. The protesters, most of whom came to the capitals from marginalised rural areas, surged into the office compound and broke several windows in the finance ministry building. More than a week after the prime minister, Mohamed Ghannouchi, assumed the helm of an interim coalition following the overthrow of Ben Ali, he and other former loyalists of the feared ruling party face mounting pressure to step down. • 2012- Nigeria—(January 3, 2012) One protester has been killed as thousands of Nigerians have demonstrated against the removal of a fuel subsidy, which has led petrol prices and transport fares to double. Officials say the man was killed by "mob action" in Kwara state, while witnesses say he was shot by police as they tried to disperse protesters. Police fired tear gas at youths in the commercial capital, Lagos, after they blocked main roads, set up burning barricades and tried to force petrol stations to close. Analysts say many Nigerians regard cheap fuel as the only benefit they get from the nation's oil wealth.

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