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This Irish journalist persevered to get his answers from multiple bankers with avoidance ...
• http://www.trueactivist.comPay attention, world. Irish journalist Vincent Browne has figured out how to make bankers actually answer an honest question, and the exchange is worth a watch.
In the video above, the journalist asks why the Irish people are required to pay billions to unguaranteed bondholders under threat from the ECB.
He has to fight to get an answer, but the effort is worth it.
The transcript follows:
Vincent Browne: "Klaus Masuch, did your taxi driver tell you how the Irish people are bewildered that we are required to pay unguaranteed bondholders billions of euros for debts that the Irish people have no relation to or no bearing with, primarily to bail out or to ensure the solvency of European banks? And if the taxi driver had asked you that question, what would have been your response? That's my first question."
Barbara Nolan: "Well, well, well, can we take a couple together? Can you ask the second question?"
VB: "Well, my second question is a completely different issue and it may have a follow-through if Mr Masuch doesn't answer the question in a way that would illuminate the taxi driver's understanding of all this, I would have a follow-through question."
Nolan: "Right, can I ask you then to pass the mic, and we'll come back to you for the second question?"
Browne: "Well, if you don't mind, that's a way of breaking up the exchange, and I would prefer if it went this way: We've a tradition in Irish journalism that we pursue issues and that when somebody doesn't ask [answer] a question we follow through on it and I hope that tradition will be respected on this occasion. So could you answer the question?"
Masuch: "I have answered a very similar question of you – I think it was two reviews ago – and can…"
Browne: "[inaudible] the question"
Masuch: "… and I answered it. I can understand that this is a difficult decision to be made by the government and there's no doubt about it but there are different aspects of the problem to be, to be balanced against each other and I can understand that the government came to, came to the view that, all in all, the costs for the, for Irish people, for the, for the stability of the banking system, for the confidence in the banking system of taking a certain action in this respect which you are mentioning could likely have been much bigger than the benefits for the taxpayer which of course would have been there. So the financial sector would have been affected; the confidence of the financial sector would have been negatively affected, and I can understand that there were, that there was a difficult decision but that the decision was taken in this direction."
Browne: "That, that… Well, that doesn't address the issue. We are required to pay, in respect of a defunct bank – that has no bearing on the welfare of the Irish people at all – we are required to pay in respect of this defunct bank, billions on unguaranteed bonds in order to ensure the health of European banks. Now how would you explain that situation to the taxi driver that you talked about earlier?"
Masuch: "I think I have addressed [looking to Barbara Nolan] the question."