Danilo
pre 10 godina
nope. Just pointing out the self-evidently obvious. It's my hobby.
Tuesday, 09.07.2013.
16:01
Slovenian appliance maker Gorenje on Tuesday opened its second refrigeration appliance plant in Valjevo, western Serbia.
Izvor: Tanjug
pre 10 godina
nope. Just pointing out the self-evidently obvious. It's my hobby.
pre 10 godina
@danilo
Basically, what I'm trying to say is typically only losers compare themselves with greater losers to feel better. Better to compare yourself with someone better so you have something to strive for.
(Danilo, 10 July 2013 09:05)
So then danilo,
do you leave derogatory and argumentative anti-Serb comments on this site because your a loser trying to feel better about yourself?
,,or are you here striving to better yourself by comparing your "fictional facts" and "inferior ideology" against B92's pro Serb commentators?
pre 10 godina
Oh, please send me a link where you got your 'information' from and enlighten me :)
(Comm. Parrisson, 11 July 2013 13:27)
The Slovenes have been demonstrating in large numbers over the austerity measures to be implemented. The question is, why are they doing this? Very simple answer. Slovenia like Croatia are financially unsustainable countries as they have very little apart from tourism. They were living off income from tourism, their share of moneys obtained from the breakup of Yugoslavia plus EU aid.
The money has run out, both from the EU and what they got from the breakup. During one major demonstration in Ljubljana in late May, people were interviewed by Croatian TV and one official said “our politicians promised even better standards of living if we broke away from Yugoslavia and now we want them to tell us what happened”. I’ll tell you what happened Milan Kucan lives in Germany
Slovenia was asked by Brussels to seek financial help back in April and not wait until September. So far Slovenia has been selling bonds but they are at the very high risk end of the market and they have to borrow even more next year just to survive. This all depends if things don’t get any worse on the world economy side, which even indictaor says yes it will get worse.
Slovenia has to reduce pension, wages, expenditure on health, education, transport etc. Try reading Money weekly May edition.
pre 10 godina
In the past, when Yugoslavia still existed, Gorenje was noted for importing German-made products and then putting the Gorenje lables over them.
(ida, 10 July 2013 01:24)
You confused something: In the past, Gorenje exported products which were sold under other labels to Germany and other western countries, thus being responsible for generating urgently needed hard currency for YU.
pre 10 godina
"For your information Slovenia is BANKRUPT, BROKE. Try and GDP your way out of that one. Stick for mixing dough."
(sj, 11 July 2013 01:38)
Oh, please send me a link where you got your 'information' from and enlighten me :)
pre 10 godina
If it 'collapses', i.e. GDP falls for, let's say, 3-5% for 10 years, Slovenia's GDP per capita will still be higher than Serbia's.
(Just for Information, 9 July 2013 18:07)
Ahh the GDP, always the GDP eh? For your information Slovenia is BANKRUPT, BROKE. Try and GDP your way out of that one. Stick for mixing dough.
pre 10 godina
(Danilo, 10 July 2013 09:05)
“Wages are around the same, so there's not much price advantage for hiring workers from Albania or Kosovo”
This, my dear fellow Serbs is the economic logic that has brought North America to its financial knees. Kosovo has the same wages as the rest of Serbia – brilliant Danilo.
I now expect the US Treasury department to hire you as an adviser.
I said it before - Serbia is the only one with potential to survive and achieve a great standard of living and moving industry to this region just proves that point.
pre 10 godina
I'm not sure I'm the one to help you if you're not intelligent enough to "decipher what I say". You, however, aren't hard. Hatred is pretty simplistic and you are the most very basic of simpletons.
So, what standard do you use to infer that someone stranger online is Albanian? I'm genuinely curious.
pre 10 godina
danilo,
stick to your albo sites (if you have any) maybe your brethren will be able to decifer what your trying to say..good luck
pre 10 godina
I don't know robert. Could have something to do with geographic proximity. Wages are around the same, so there's not much price advantage for hiring workers from Albania or Kosovo.
Why do Serbs and (more often) hobby-Serbs always compare the country they're rooting for to countries worse off than them anyway? I've always found that a bit strange. Basically, what I'm trying to say is typically only losers compare themselves with greater losers to feel better. Better to compare yourself with someone better so you have something to strive for.
pre 10 godina
In the past, when Yugoslavia still existed, Gorenje was noted for importing German-made products and then putting the Gorenje lables over them.
pre 10 godina
Gee Danilo, I wonder why Gorenje didn't open this factory in "kosova" or albania.
pre 10 godina
"At least Gorenje won't collapse. How about the rest of the Slovenian economy? "
(Doors (Wide Open), 9 July 2013 16:24)
If it 'collapses', i.e. GDP falls for, let's say, 3-5% for 10 years, Slovenia's GDP per capita will still be higher than Serbia's.
pre 10 godina
Thank god for the Serbs. Again.
(Doors (Wide Open), 9 July 2013 16:24)
bwa ha ha....
pre 10 godina
This is the end, my only friend the end...
At least Gorenje won't collapse. How about the rest of the Slovenian economy?
Thank god for the Serbs. Again.
pre 10 godina
Gee Danilo, I wonder why Gorenje didn't open this factory in "kosova" or albania.
pre 10 godina
This is the end, my only friend the end...
At least Gorenje won't collapse. How about the rest of the Slovenian economy?
Thank god for the Serbs. Again.
pre 10 godina
"At least Gorenje won't collapse. How about the rest of the Slovenian economy? "
(Doors (Wide Open), 9 July 2013 16:24)
If it 'collapses', i.e. GDP falls for, let's say, 3-5% for 10 years, Slovenia's GDP per capita will still be higher than Serbia's.
pre 10 godina
danilo,
stick to your albo sites (if you have any) maybe your brethren will be able to decifer what your trying to say..good luck
pre 10 godina
I don't know robert. Could have something to do with geographic proximity. Wages are around the same, so there's not much price advantage for hiring workers from Albania or Kosovo.
Why do Serbs and (more often) hobby-Serbs always compare the country they're rooting for to countries worse off than them anyway? I've always found that a bit strange. Basically, what I'm trying to say is typically only losers compare themselves with greater losers to feel better. Better to compare yourself with someone better so you have something to strive for.
pre 10 godina
I'm not sure I'm the one to help you if you're not intelligent enough to "decipher what I say". You, however, aren't hard. Hatred is pretty simplistic and you are the most very basic of simpletons.
So, what standard do you use to infer that someone stranger online is Albanian? I'm genuinely curious.
pre 10 godina
If it 'collapses', i.e. GDP falls for, let's say, 3-5% for 10 years, Slovenia's GDP per capita will still be higher than Serbia's.
(Just for Information, 9 July 2013 18:07)
Ahh the GDP, always the GDP eh? For your information Slovenia is BANKRUPT, BROKE. Try and GDP your way out of that one. Stick for mixing dough.
pre 10 godina
(Danilo, 10 July 2013 09:05)
“Wages are around the same, so there's not much price advantage for hiring workers from Albania or Kosovo”
This, my dear fellow Serbs is the economic logic that has brought North America to its financial knees. Kosovo has the same wages as the rest of Serbia – brilliant Danilo.
I now expect the US Treasury department to hire you as an adviser.
I said it before - Serbia is the only one with potential to survive and achieve a great standard of living and moving industry to this region just proves that point.
pre 10 godina
"For your information Slovenia is BANKRUPT, BROKE. Try and GDP your way out of that one. Stick for mixing dough."
(sj, 11 July 2013 01:38)
Oh, please send me a link where you got your 'information' from and enlighten me :)
pre 10 godina
In the past, when Yugoslavia still existed, Gorenje was noted for importing German-made products and then putting the Gorenje lables over them.
(ida, 10 July 2013 01:24)
You confused something: In the past, Gorenje exported products which were sold under other labels to Germany and other western countries, thus being responsible for generating urgently needed hard currency for YU.
pre 10 godina
Oh, please send me a link where you got your 'information' from and enlighten me :)
(Comm. Parrisson, 11 July 2013 13:27)
The Slovenes have been demonstrating in large numbers over the austerity measures to be implemented. The question is, why are they doing this? Very simple answer. Slovenia like Croatia are financially unsustainable countries as they have very little apart from tourism. They were living off income from tourism, their share of moneys obtained from the breakup of Yugoslavia plus EU aid.
The money has run out, both from the EU and what they got from the breakup. During one major demonstration in Ljubljana in late May, people were interviewed by Croatian TV and one official said “our politicians promised even better standards of living if we broke away from Yugoslavia and now we want them to tell us what happened”. I’ll tell you what happened Milan Kucan lives in Germany
Slovenia was asked by Brussels to seek financial help back in April and not wait until September. So far Slovenia has been selling bonds but they are at the very high risk end of the market and they have to borrow even more next year just to survive. This all depends if things don’t get any worse on the world economy side, which even indictaor says yes it will get worse.
Slovenia has to reduce pension, wages, expenditure on health, education, transport etc. Try reading Money weekly May edition.
pre 10 godina
@danilo
Basically, what I'm trying to say is typically only losers compare themselves with greater losers to feel better. Better to compare yourself with someone better so you have something to strive for.
(Danilo, 10 July 2013 09:05)
So then danilo,
do you leave derogatory and argumentative anti-Serb comments on this site because your a loser trying to feel better about yourself?
,,or are you here striving to better yourself by comparing your "fictional facts" and "inferior ideology" against B92's pro Serb commentators?
pre 10 godina
Thank god for the Serbs. Again.
(Doors (Wide Open), 9 July 2013 16:24)
bwa ha ha....
pre 10 godina
In the past, when Yugoslavia still existed, Gorenje was noted for importing German-made products and then putting the Gorenje lables over them.
pre 10 godina
nope. Just pointing out the self-evidently obvious. It's my hobby.
pre 10 godina
Thank god for the Serbs. Again.
(Doors (Wide Open), 9 July 2013 16:24)
bwa ha ha....
pre 10 godina
This is the end, my only friend the end...
At least Gorenje won't collapse. How about the rest of the Slovenian economy?
Thank god for the Serbs. Again.
pre 10 godina
I don't know robert. Could have something to do with geographic proximity. Wages are around the same, so there's not much price advantage for hiring workers from Albania or Kosovo.
Why do Serbs and (more often) hobby-Serbs always compare the country they're rooting for to countries worse off than them anyway? I've always found that a bit strange. Basically, what I'm trying to say is typically only losers compare themselves with greater losers to feel better. Better to compare yourself with someone better so you have something to strive for.
pre 10 godina
danilo,
stick to your albo sites (if you have any) maybe your brethren will be able to decifer what your trying to say..good luck
pre 10 godina
"At least Gorenje won't collapse. How about the rest of the Slovenian economy? "
(Doors (Wide Open), 9 July 2013 16:24)
If it 'collapses', i.e. GDP falls for, let's say, 3-5% for 10 years, Slovenia's GDP per capita will still be higher than Serbia's.
pre 10 godina
Gee Danilo, I wonder why Gorenje didn't open this factory in "kosova" or albania.
pre 10 godina
In the past, when Yugoslavia still existed, Gorenje was noted for importing German-made products and then putting the Gorenje lables over them.
pre 10 godina
I'm not sure I'm the one to help you if you're not intelligent enough to "decipher what I say". You, however, aren't hard. Hatred is pretty simplistic and you are the most very basic of simpletons.
So, what standard do you use to infer that someone stranger online is Albanian? I'm genuinely curious.
pre 10 godina
If it 'collapses', i.e. GDP falls for, let's say, 3-5% for 10 years, Slovenia's GDP per capita will still be higher than Serbia's.
(Just for Information, 9 July 2013 18:07)
Ahh the GDP, always the GDP eh? For your information Slovenia is BANKRUPT, BROKE. Try and GDP your way out of that one. Stick for mixing dough.
pre 10 godina
(Danilo, 10 July 2013 09:05)
“Wages are around the same, so there's not much price advantage for hiring workers from Albania or Kosovo”
This, my dear fellow Serbs is the economic logic that has brought North America to its financial knees. Kosovo has the same wages as the rest of Serbia – brilliant Danilo.
I now expect the US Treasury department to hire you as an adviser.
I said it before - Serbia is the only one with potential to survive and achieve a great standard of living and moving industry to this region just proves that point.
pre 10 godina
"For your information Slovenia is BANKRUPT, BROKE. Try and GDP your way out of that one. Stick for mixing dough."
(sj, 11 July 2013 01:38)
Oh, please send me a link where you got your 'information' from and enlighten me :)
pre 10 godina
In the past, when Yugoslavia still existed, Gorenje was noted for importing German-made products and then putting the Gorenje lables over them.
(ida, 10 July 2013 01:24)
You confused something: In the past, Gorenje exported products which were sold under other labels to Germany and other western countries, thus being responsible for generating urgently needed hard currency for YU.
pre 10 godina
Oh, please send me a link where you got your 'information' from and enlighten me :)
(Comm. Parrisson, 11 July 2013 13:27)
The Slovenes have been demonstrating in large numbers over the austerity measures to be implemented. The question is, why are they doing this? Very simple answer. Slovenia like Croatia are financially unsustainable countries as they have very little apart from tourism. They were living off income from tourism, their share of moneys obtained from the breakup of Yugoslavia plus EU aid.
The money has run out, both from the EU and what they got from the breakup. During one major demonstration in Ljubljana in late May, people were interviewed by Croatian TV and one official said “our politicians promised even better standards of living if we broke away from Yugoslavia and now we want them to tell us what happened”. I’ll tell you what happened Milan Kucan lives in Germany
Slovenia was asked by Brussels to seek financial help back in April and not wait until September. So far Slovenia has been selling bonds but they are at the very high risk end of the market and they have to borrow even more next year just to survive. This all depends if things don’t get any worse on the world economy side, which even indictaor says yes it will get worse.
Slovenia has to reduce pension, wages, expenditure on health, education, transport etc. Try reading Money weekly May edition.
pre 10 godina
@danilo
Basically, what I'm trying to say is typically only losers compare themselves with greater losers to feel better. Better to compare yourself with someone better so you have something to strive for.
(Danilo, 10 July 2013 09:05)
So then danilo,
do you leave derogatory and argumentative anti-Serb comments on this site because your a loser trying to feel better about yourself?
,,or are you here striving to better yourself by comparing your "fictional facts" and "inferior ideology" against B92's pro Serb commentators?
pre 10 godina
nope. Just pointing out the self-evidently obvious. It's my hobby.
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