The post you are reporting:
Brian, in the USA, unemployment is at 9.1%, in Britain it's 7.9%.
The USA has debt as a proportion of GDP at 72.6%, Britain at 72.9%.
The American second quarter (Q2) GDP growth was at 0.25%, Britain's at 0.2%
Greece has unemployment at 16.3%, and debt as a proporton of GDP at 153.1%. Greece's Q2 GDP growth was -1.8%.
France has unemployment at 9.8%, and debt as a proportion of GDP at 80.9%, and Q2 GDP growth was 0%.
The French banking sector has a large exposure to Greek debt.
No let's see, how according to you, America should collapse economically, even though the American economy has a similar situation to Britain's, while France's economy should remain unaffected, with all it's debt exposure to Greece, and a higher debt in proportion to GDP than the USA.
And how will Greece fare?
It's quite obvious that the Greek finances are at an end, and depend entirely on injections from France and Germany and a few other EU states, and possibly from the IMF too.
The European Central Bank is already arguing among themselves (among its directors and policy makers) as to whether it should buy up even more Italian and Spanish debt, and the second Greece bailout (109 billion eros) is still not decided.
Greece is still receiving the last payments of last year's bailout, which was 110 billion euros.
"if the facts don't fit the theory, change the facts" won't help either, Brian!
It's pointless trying to change the figures, they tell a clear story, and it won't be America on the way to economic collapse while Greece remains afloat on bailouts.
The money for bailouts isn't there.
Hope these "facts" that I provided above will be of some help to you when summing up the equation.