Yannis did say that Greece is a great country.
Well, yes, in many ways but not economically!! This interview with The Australian earlier this year makes me think he gives out confusing messages:
he resigned as Greece’s finance minister, in the wake of the referendum in which the Greek people voted to reject the demands of the country’s creditors, the so-called “troika” of the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund. It was the result that Varoufakis and the Greek prime minster Alexis Tsipras had campaigned for. But within 24 hours Tsipras performed a volte-face, accepting the troika’s terms. Varoufakis resigned.
A politician without office, Varoufakis now spends his time writing, giving speeches and campaigning to reform Europe from the grass roots up. In February he launched Diem25, a pan-European umbrella group aiming to pull together left-wing parties, protest movements and “rebel regions” from across the continent, with the object, as he puts it, to “shake Europe — gently, compassionately, but firmly” and bring “democracy back to EU decision-making”.
He has published a new book, And the Weak Suffer What They Must? — a detailed historical analysis of the origins of Europe’s financial crisis. Its basic thesis is that the eurozone is not the route to shared prosperity it was intended to be but “a pyramid scheme of debt with countries such as Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain at its bottom”. Its conclusion, put bluntly, is that Europe “is too important to be left to its clueless rulers”, and that the eurozone must be fully recalibrated if Europe is to avoid a repetition of the 1930s, with financial chaos, the rise of fascism and the spectre of conflict
Too important to be left to its clueless leaders - yes, but trying to implement change was like beating heads against proverbial walls, which I think is why some people I know voted Brexit. They thought that change from within was nigh on impossible.
I did think that David Dimbleby was very ineffectual last night, allowing everyone to talk over the top of everyone else. DH said that it is way past the time he should retire and give way to a better chairman.