Margaretx, I'm not anti German, I like all the ones I have met, quite a few, and I also admire Germany as a nation. The Greeks, have of course been a law unto themselves, quite ridiculous in fact, but I still sympathise in what the ordinary Greeks have been reduced to. All the countries, including the UK, were wrong in being complicit in allowing Greece to join the Euro before they were ready, if indeed they ever would have been. However, I think it's true to say that the Eurozone is pitting individual countries against each other, look how Greece was depicting Germans as Nazis during Angela Merkel's recent visit there. Similarly Greeks and possibly Italians do not like to be viewed by Germans as lazy Southern Europeans and that was the point I was trying to make the Eurozone is not bringing us all together some are reverting to depicting each other as insulting national stereotypes, I think UK's relationship with France has reached an all time low just lately. In the meantime, in the countries who have been hit hard by the austerity measures, extremist political parties are emerging and as they gain momentum they could well affect the stability in those countries. NfkDumpling, I agree with you in that both Greece and Germany are two great countries but possibly they are not compatible in their customs and the way they manage their affairs. Greeks are easy going, but obviously their tax system has been a total disaster. Germans are hard working and efficient, they have benefited in finding markets for their products, but I can see they are losing patience with the countries who operate in what would seem to be a Mickey Mouse way. The Eurozone is a mass of different cultures, customs and attitudes I just wonder how it will become one big homegenous mass when so many countries seemingly unable to agree about so many issues and frankly if ever the German people decided they have had enough of subsidising Southern Europe then there wont be any United States of Europe to speak of.