Thoughts about the Greek crisis
by Jordan Cooper
The prospect of financial liberation is very tantalizing to any individual and required for the success of a person’s future extended family. Loans are good for credit growth, business expansion, and government financial solvency. However, they should not be given without good faith and a fair chance that they can be repaid.
The banks and other financial institutions look for entities that can pad their coffers. So with faulty loans, unemployed people, and low-pay jobs in the Mediterranean, the Greek government is missing out on new tax money from citizens. And, so, what Greece should do to get out of this gris area is provide an action plan to combat their stalemated economy.
But that’s not all:
Afterwards, they should enlist prominent Greek citizens or those with Greek ancestry to be public diplomats to promote the country’s prosperity. If Greece’s economy doesn’t improve enough to the large wealth gap in this country, the situation there could turn violent like it has with its southern neighbor Egypt. This isn’t what God wanted for the place where Jesus found refuge and the ancestry that translated the modern bible. For goodness sake: we’re still trying to close the wealth gap here, so it will take some time to bring our friends in the Mediterranean back on their feet.
As a country, we definitely should look to see how we can help bring as many financial supporters as possible to the table to quiet their troubles in their walk to God’s destiny.
Jordan Cooper is a USC graduate who played football under Coach Steve Spurrier. He was the youngest African American to serve on a gubernatorial campaign staff at the age of 13 under then Congressman Bobby Jindal as his Co-Chair for Blacks for Jindal. He was the first African American to serve in the Gov. and Lt. Gov’s offices in S.C. as a Constituent Correspondent and Special Assistant respectively (Haley/Bauer). He was also the youngest to serve in on a GOP presidential campaign staff in America and youngest black Co-Chair of a Congressional campaign (Bauer for Congress 2012).
graphic via shutterstock.com