“At the height of the ‘Grexit’ crisis, Greeks were limited to cash withdrawals of about €60 a day. For nearly two weeks, under the terms of an emergency decree, they could not send money out of the country. But tens of thousands of Greek businesspeople had to pay for imported goods to keep their enterprises running. Those who’d thought ahead and stockpiled euros packed wads of currency into suitcases, flew to the countries where their suppliers were based and paid in cash. They didn’t have to declare anything and weren’t stopped as they boarded planes to other EU destinations. That will probably not be allowed to happen again.”
http://thesovereigninvestor.com/asset-protection/say-goodbye-to-open-borders/
Related posts:
Origins of the Israel-Palestinian Conflict
The core Internet institutions abandon the US Government
The definition of karma: PayPal president's credit card gets hacked
Bitcoin: A Bet Against the Stupid Horse
Safeguards can spot fake gold bars
Two giant US pension funds admit there’s a BIG problem
The 14 Most Ridiculous Things Police Bought With Asset Forfeiture
Mississippi Cops Hogtie and Kill ‘Widespread Panic’ Concertgoer
The new Russia sanctions: stalled FATCA talks
The Most Dangerous Pot Prohibitionist in the Trump Camp
The Future of Transportation
Portuguese Residency For Non-EU Citizens
Children Seized in Shocking German Homeschool Raid
The Anti-Default Pomposity of U.S. Officials
Propaganda Ban Repealed As Government-Made News Floods U.S.