This segment will describe the apprehended warfare that
is going on in Greece due to the invasion of the Troika.
Greeks, having been overrun by larger nations, are
sizing up their enemy and considering how to react.
The Greeks tend to have their own homes, free and clear
and they are beginning to fear losing their homes. One
source of that fear is a new property tax, paid through
the electricity bill and given to the government.
They already have problems paying for electricity and
heating.
Heating used to be with deisel central heating. Now,
many in Athens have gas. Neither of these combustibles
are cheap enough and so they are also cutting off their
fuel supply and so in the colds of winter, they burn wood
in a stove. The city stinks of burning wood. Some with
a bit of cash, have electric A/C-heat units for heating.
On the good side, light pollution is
way down as people are having their
electricity cut off as well, willingly. And the
candle business is seeing 10% growth.
And with no A/C unit, power use is way down!
It's a green revolution. thank you politicians!
You will save the world.
more seriously, it's literally a Cold War. brrrrr
The one thing the people are focusing on is keeping their
hard-won home. If the government takes homes
from families, they may as well roast the public
to keep the country warm.
Monday, 9 September 2013
Wednesday, 26 June 2013
Emerging markets are rising. That's good for Greece
because Greece is now part of the Second World.
It has left the room where the big boys are
playing and is waiting in the wings with
Mozambique, for example.
That is to Greece's benefit, because the
emerging countries are riding the BRICS
coattails to success.
So, Greece has a chance to start again, with
the minor issue of a mortal debt hanging
over its head.
checkit: Bloomberg
It has left the room where the big boys are
playing and is waiting in the wings with
Mozambique, for example.
That is to Greece's benefit, because the
emerging countries are riding the BRICS
coattails to success.
So, Greece has a chance to start again, with
the minor issue of a mortal debt hanging
over its head.
checkit: Bloomberg
Greece
Cut to Emerging Market at MSCI in World First
By
Tom Stoukas - Jun 11, 2013 10:32 PM GMT
Greece
became the first developed nation to be downgraded to emerging-market status by
index provider MSCI Inc. (MSCI) after the country’s stocks plunged 91 percent since 2007.
The
MSCI Greece Index will no longer be classified as a developed market as it
failed to meet criteria regarding securities borrowing and lending facilities,
short selling and transferability, New York-based MSCI, whose equity indexes
are tracked by investors with about $7 trillion in assets, said in a statement.
The gauge consists of two companies, Hellenic Telecommunications Organization
SA, the country’s largest phone operator, and Opap SA, Greece’s biggest
gambling firm.
Locked
out of bond markets since April 2010, Greece was forced to accept two European
Union-led bailout packages as public opposition to pension and wage cuts
derailed the pace of promised economic reforms. The benchmark ASE Index (ASE),
which has 60 members, sank 83 percent since October 2007.
Saturday, 22 June 2013
Operation a success, but patient died
This is as good an update on the situation in Greece
as you'll find in the Guardian.
Another source says that Prof Arweiller of Paris
was talking with a BIG international money
man, like Soros perhaps, who told her that Greece
will have a government at least until the
German elections. After that, it's all open.
Here's the review:
In a few words: Greece is still in freefall
checkit: Guardian
as you'll find in the Guardian.
Another source says that Prof Arweiller of Paris
was talking with a BIG international money
man, like Soros perhaps, who told her that Greece
will have a government at least until the
German elections. After that, it's all open.
Here's the review:
In a few words: Greece is still in freefall
checkit: Guardian
Talk
of recovery in Greece is premature – and all about justifying austerity
Bank
bosses and politicians are trying to convince the world that Greece is on the
mend – but this boosterism is all about justifying the shock therapy imposed on
the eurozone
Aditya Chakrabortty
Monday 3 June 2013 19.59
BST
Perhaps
you remember reading about a basket case called Greece. The first domino to
fall in the eurozone crisis, it was officially broke and only kept afloat by
hundreds of billions in euros from Europe and the IMF. To secure the loans,
Athens had to slash spending, lay off or cut pay for thousands of public
servants and flog state assets. The result was social uproar, political turmoil
and economic collapse. Hundreds of thousands of Greeks took to the streets. The
country faced ejection from the euro, what economists drolly dubbed a
"Grexit". In short, it was in a deep hole. But if that's your image
of Greece then you need to update it: that's so spring/summer 2012.
Over
the past few weeks, Athens' top brass have been trying to convince the world
that happy days are here again. Prime minister Antonis Samaras now talks of the
Greek "success story". The boss of the central bank and the finance
minister say Greece has turned a corner. Editorialists in the national press
and parts of the international financial press dutifully nod their assent. And
those with Greek or European assets to sell clap along: "Forget Grexit –
it could be Greecovery instead," ran one particularly bone-headed
"research" note I received on Friday.
What's
at stake here is a much bigger prize than whether an economy worth 2% of
Europe's annual GDP really is on the mend. It's about justifying the shock
therapy imposed on distressed members of the eurozone.
This
was frankly put by Maria Paola Toschi, a market strategist at JP Morgan, in the
FT last week. "If Greece can present itself as a recovering economy,
having taken the medicine of fiscal austerity and supply-side reform, then the
reform agenda of the European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund will
be given a further boost."
If
the elites of Europe and Washington can claim to have "healed"
Greece, then they can shrug off criticisms of eurozone austerity. And they can
also defend an economic model that just three years ago looked as if it had
crashed into a wall.
Yet
the exhibits the boosters are using do not a case make. Athens shares doubled
in the past year? Cheap money from central banks and investors desperate for
returns can play funny tricks. Wages have fallen? Yes, but the business
investment that was meant to follow on
from that hasn't materialised. The public finances are back in some kind of
order? Taking an axe to the welfare state and public services will do that;
still, few think Athens could go a day outside the sovereign version of
debtor's jail.
And
no one is seriously disputing that the economy remains badly sick; the OECD
predicts Greece will face its seventh year of recession in a row in 2014. More
than one in four Greeks are out of a job; of young Greeks, nearly two in three.
Around 60% of those out of work haven't been employed in more than a year.
According to a recent piece by Nick Malkoutzis and Yiannis Mouzakis for
Ekathimerini, there are 400,000 families in Greece without a single
breadwinner.
Although
I was one of those who opposed the austerity imposed in Greece from the outset,
I would far rather have been proved wrong. As someone who reported from Athens
on a few occasions in 2011, and who has a number of Greek friends, I'd like to
see them flourishing.
As
it is, the most that can be said for the elusive recovery is that Germany and
the rest of Europe have decided to keep Athens in the single currency and to
keep supplying it with euros. From that has come a measure of financial
stability which has attracted investors. The silent run on the banks, with savers pulling out their money, has
stopped; but the financial institutions now function more like deposit vaults
than dispensers of credit. And there have been some important cultural and
institutional changes, as fund manager Jason Manolopoulos points out. Before
the crisis, the government didn't know
how many civil servants it employed; now it does. And, should you wish to
trade in the middle of a depression, it has got easier and cheaper to set up a business.
But
pit those gains against the near-collapse
of the health system, the rise of the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn and the clampdown on
investigative journalists such as Kostas Vaxevanis, persecuted for
publishing a list of super-rich tax
dodgers.
While
the economy remains catatonic and civil society is in crisis, all such
boosterism amounts to is a 21st-century version of claiming the operation was
successful; it's just a shame the patient died. It's a more dramatic variant of
something George Osborne and the austerity crowd are trying in the UK, too: to define down what success looks like.
Two
summers ago, I sat with economist Yanis Varoufakis
on his balcony overlooking the Acropolis, and asked him to sum up the outlook
for Greece. "It's in freefall."
Last night, I asked him the same question. "It's still in freefall."
Then
he told me a story. Last year, his book
The Global Minotaur was a bestseller in Greece, ahead even of Fifty Shades of
Grey. But, he said, he had not received a cent in royalties. Why not? His publisher hadn't received any money
from the bookshops, which were all bust. Rather than chase them, put
booksellers out of business and finally kiss goodbye to getting any money, the
publisher preferred to leave it be. So the shops, the imprint and the author all got by on nothing.
That
sweet little story of economic inertia seems to me to say a lot.
Thursday, 13 June 2013
IN-EPT. Greek government cries for help
In a few words, the Greek government has shut down
the national broadcaster, the equivalent of the BBC, CBC
and so on.
They have said that it wastes money, but Greeks are
charged, on their electric bills, well over a hundred
euros a year for this, so it should not necessarily be
government money that they're "wasting".
The gov says they need to cut 15 000 government jobs
by next year. I think if they waited, smoking employees
living in Athens would die at that yearly rate anyway.
It is true that the gov has difficulty firing employees
because most of them were installed due to favours
to one or another politician.
But when they shut the national broadcaster just to
cut 2900 jobs, temporarily, they're crying out for help.
Their desperate. Either that or they're simply suicidal.
How do you cut the "voice of the people" in a nation
like that, and not expect the streets to be filled with
protesters.
The channels are still going.
http://topontiki.gr/article/54289/Sugkentroseis-allilegguis-gia-tous-ergazomenous-tis-ERT
checkit: from Boing boing
1
European Broadcasting Union steps in to keep the Greek national broadcaster on the air after police shut it down Cory Doctorow at 5:09 pm Wed, Jun 12, 2013 Yesterday, the Greek government forcibly shut down the state broadcaster, ERT, sending in the police to drag journalists away from their microphones. The government claimed that the shutdown was the result of inescapable austerity measures. In response, the European Broadcasting Union -- an umbrella group representing public broadcasters across Europe -- has set up a makeshift mobile studio where ERT broadcasters can continue to work and stay on air. This is being fed around Europe on an EBU satellite as part of its European news exchange operation and can be picked up by commercial stations in Greece but not the general public. A spokesman for the EBU, which is headquartered in Geneva, said a "high-level meeting with a conference call" with the director general of ERT would take place later on Wednesday to decide on next steps. Roger Mosey, the BBC's editorial director, who is on the EBU board told the Guardian: "We're watching events in Greece with great concern. When countries are in difficulty, there's an even bigger need for public service broadcasting and for independent, impartial news coverage. I hope that's restored in Greece as soon as possible." The EBU spokesman said ERT staff in contact with the organisation have told them the power has not yet been cut by the government, but email servers have been taken down. They are now contacting the EBU through smartphones, using Facebook and personal email accounts. "This is unprecedented, stations have closed and re-opened for a number of reasons, but never with such abruptness," said a spokesman for the EBU. ERT shutdown: European Broadcasting Union sets up makeshift studio [Lisa O'Carroll/The Guardian]
Wednesday, 5 June 2013
Lagarde's stun grenade
It echoes around Greece, but only
wipes out journalists.
Now, Kostas Vaxevanis is a well-known
journalist who is being persecuted by the
Occupied Greek Government, or as it's known
in Greece, the Tsolakoglou, for publishing a
list of HSBC Swiss bank account holders.
So, he sent an open letter to the EU, just so that
Barosso can't manipulate his words. And he
said many things which, in the need to build an
argument, may be excused, if you can stop
laughing long enough to type it. Case in point:
"[Greece] claims to embrace European democracy "
Although the Tsolakoglou is very corrupt, I think
it's extra funny that Kostas would say that, seeing
as Barosso and Co. are presiding over the deaths
of Greeks, at the behest of the banks. I'm pissing
myself laughing. European democracy,ppffffft.
So Kostas wrote this "if anything happens to me,
tell my mommy" letter to tell the Capo Di Tutti
Commissioni about how his underlings, the
Tsolakoglou, are being wiseguys. OOOooh.
Not too smart, Kostas.
wipes out journalists.
Now, Kostas Vaxevanis is a well-known
journalist who is being persecuted by the
Occupied Greek Government, or as it's known
in Greece, the Tsolakoglou, for publishing a
list of HSBC Swiss bank account holders.
So, he sent an open letter to the EU, just so that
Barosso can't manipulate his words. And he
said many things which, in the need to build an
argument, may be excused, if you can stop
laughing long enough to type it. Case in point:
"[Greece] claims to embrace European democracy "
Although the Tsolakoglou is very corrupt, I think
it's extra funny that Kostas would say that, seeing
as Barosso and Co. are presiding over the deaths
of Greeks, at the behest of the banks. I'm pissing
myself laughing. European democracy,ppffffft.
So Kostas wrote this "if anything happens to me,
tell my mommy" letter to tell the Capo Di Tutti
Commissioni about how his underlings, the
Tsolakoglou, are being wiseguys. OOOooh.
Not too smart, Kostas.
Checkit: index
on censorship
An
open letter to European Commission President José Manuel Barroso
04
Jun 2013
Dear
President Barroso,
I
will be standing trial on 10 June because, as a journalist, I published the
names of Greek bank account holders contained on the Lagarde list in my
anti-corruption magazine, HOT DOC. I am being accused of violating privacy
laws.
On
28 October, a special section of the Hellenic police, under orders from the
public prosecutor’s office, arrested me before the ink was dry on the issue of
the magazine containing the names of people who should have been investigated
for alleged tax evasion.
I
was ushered hastily into a trial which ended with my acquittal. The court found
that I had violated no privacy laws. I had published only the names of people
who held bank accounts at HSBC without any other details, such as the amount of
their deposits. My argument to the court was that someone’s relationship with a
bank is not a personal detail, since no one covers their face to walk up to an
ATM. The court also accepted my contention that there were reasons of public
interest for the publication of the names on the Lagarde list.
As
you may already know, a disk with the names of the Lagarde list was officially
handed over to the Greek government for purposes of investigating corruption
and tax evasion. This investigation never happened because ministers said the
list is illegal and cannot be utilized. They reached to the point of claiming
that they’d lost the data.
The
lack of an investigation created an atmosphere of mistrust in the political
system. Greek governments appeared to be protecting alleged tax-dodgers making
the public angry. At the same time, behind the scenes, the list was being used
for blackmail and defamation.
At
HOT DOC, we decided to publish the list as soon as we reached the conclusion
that the data we had was valid. This was our duty, as citizens and as
journalists. This is when we found ourselves confronted with the events
described by the New York Times and other international media: “Instead of
hitting tax evasion, they chose to hit the journalist who exposed it.”
The
Lagarde list is not only a list of potential tax dodgers. It captures the way
corruption functions in Greece—with, unfortunately, the support of the
political system.
After
I was acquitted, the public prosecutor’s office did something unheard of in the
annals of the judiciary for a court chaired by a single judge. They appealed my
acquittal, claiming that not all the incriminating evidence was taken into
consideration. The original case file did not include a single element of
evidence, not even the incriminating issue of the magazine. The charges were so
hastily put together that they even forgot to put the official stamp of the
prosecutor on the file.
President
Barroso, this is a targeted and selective persecution against a magazine that
fights corruption. We had to be punished. Since HOT DOC published the Lagarde
list, three Greek newspapers also published lists of taxpayers who are being
investigated. One of the papers even ran the Lagarde list names with the amount
of individual deposits. No charges were brought against them.
The
trial on 10 June is not my trial but the trial of the independence of the Greek
press. The current climate is asphyxiating freedom of the press, as independent
media is heavily indebted and owners of
TV channels pressure the government for contracts. Greece ranked 71st in
press freedom this year, behind several developing
countries and military regimes. A Greek minister recently said he would sue
The Guardian for revealing that Greek police were using torture.
Everyone
is entitled to their opinion with regard to addressing the Greek crisis. But
the crisis cannot be addressed without democratic principles. Greece is drifting away from the standards of western
democracy as they were established after World War II. Truth in the media
is the first victim.
I
would like you to know that, if I am found guilty, I will not ask for a
suspension of my sentence. I will let myself be taken to jail. This is the only
way for me to show what is truly happening in this country, which has its roots
in ancient Greek democracy and claims to embrace European democracy. A corrupt
system of power in my country is persecuting me for the very same reasons for which I was awarded two international
journalism prizes this year.
I
believe that Europe is able to preserve democracy, to highlight its
civilization and to unite its citizens. This cannot be achieved when people are
not free and when the press is silenced.
Thank
you for your attention.
Kostas
Vaxevanis
Kostas
Vaxevanis is a Greek investigative journalist and Index on Censorship
Award-winner.
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