Estou a falar dos jornalistas do "Guardian" e dos responsáveis pelo que aquele jornal publica.
Então não querem lá ver que ontem, dia 18, foram escarrapachar nas suas british pages que José tinha andado a telefonar à Tia Angela a pedir ajuda, a pedir para ela ralhar com os outros meninos que queriam bater no Zé-zé, perdão, em José.
Dizem aqueles malandros no subtítulo da notícia:
«José Sócrates reportedly begged for help last week as Portugal became the latest eurozone country tipped for a bailout. But the cynical response reveals rising tensions within the bloc»
«Angela Merkel was locked in talks about the euro crisis when the phone rang in the gleaming chancellery in Berlin.Para quem desejar ler o resto da notícia, e vale o esforço, encontra-a
The Portuguese prime minister, José Sócrates, was on the line from Lisbon with a plea for help. Portugal is tipped to be the third of 17 eurozone countries to collapse under the weight of its sovereign debt, needing a German-led bailout. Sócrates sounded desperate and eager to please, according to witnesses.
He asked Merkel what he should do, promised to do anything she wanted, with one big exception. He would not ask for money – for a eurozone bailout with extremely tight strings attached.
[This update was inserted on 19 January 2011. Since publication of this story, a spokeswoman for Portugal's prime minister has contacted the Guardian to say that the phonecall described in this story did not take place, and that no such conversation between the two leaders had occurred: "This is not true," Mafalda Costa Pereira said.]
According to accounts circulating in Berlin, Merkel left Sócrates to wait while she sought the views of her high-powered visitors – Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the French head of the International Monetary Fund, and Giulio Tremonti, the highly regarded Italian foreign minister who has recently been lobbying for the introduction of "Eurobonds" as part of a solution to the year-long crisis.
Merkel asked Strauss-Kahn about Sócrates' dilemma. The German-speaking IMF chief was dismissive. The Portuguese plea was pointless, he said, because Sócrates would not follow any advice he was given.
The exchange, which occurred last week in Berlin, highlights what a senior German official describes as "Europe's big communication problem".»
AQUI,
desde já adianto que termina assim:
«• This article was amended on 19 January 2011, to update the text by including a post-publication denial from the Portuguese prime minister's office.»
Jetzt... (que é como a Tia Angela diz Agora...)
das duas uma:
Ou os tipos do "Guardian" são uns grandes mentirosos,
andam a inventar telefonemas entre governantes europeus e ainda têm a lata de inventar quem foi que os testemunhou - e não propriamente o mordomo ou o motorista.
Merecem que o nosso primeiro os processe, os obrigue a retratarem-se - sim, que virem com falinhas mansas publicar que o Gabinete de José disse que é mentira e que nunca aconteceu, é um desmentido do Gabinete, não uma retratação do "Guardian"
Ou os tipos do "Guardian" não são uns grandes mentirosos...
E Angela Merkel sabe,
Dominique Strauss-Kahn sabe,
Giulio Tremonti sabe,
mais meio mundo do mundo destas andanças sabe,
até o mordomo da Tia Angela sabe.
Boa José, continuas a reforçar a tua credibilidade.
Que vergonhaça!
Mas a gente habitua-se a tudo. Cada um que pense por si...
.
ATE PARECE UMA TANGADA. Porra para este pais
ResponderEliminarNão parece... o rapaz já disse publicamente "que le gusta el tango" e, digo eu, tanbien le gusta la tanga
ResponderEliminar