Maybe the Germans could take the Greek antiquities—the Parthenon, the contents of the National Museum—that sort of thing—as partial payment and give Greece a few more months.
>>Maybe the Germans could take the Greek antiquitiesthe Parthenon, the contents of the National Museumthat sort of thingas partial payment and give Greece a few more months.
Take the Cyclades and put up resorts for German tourists.
The twenty-first century will be a century of iron and storms. It will not resemble those harmonious futures predicted up to the 1970s. It will not be the global village prophesied by Marshall MacLuhan in 1966, or Bill Gates planetary network, or Francis Fukuyamas end of history: a liberal global civilization directed by a universal state. It will be a century of competing peoples and ethnic identities. And paradoxically, the victorious peoples will be those that remain faithful to, or return to, ancestral values and realities which are biological, cultural, ethical, social, and spiritual and that at the same time will master techno-science. The twenty-first century will be the one in which European civilization, Promethean and tragic but eminently fragile, will undergo a metamorphosis or enter its irremediable twilight.
Guillaume Faye as stated in his book Archeofuturism: European Visions of the Post-Catastrophic Age
Blood and storms, indeed. And not just in Europe.