Feta and Grape Leaves

Crossposted from The Stars Hollow Gazette

New general strike over Greek austerity program

By ELENA BECATOROS, Forbes

05.11.11, 06:57 AM EDT

The general strike suspended all train and ferry services, grounded flights between noon and 4 p.m. and disrupted Athens public transport. All radio and television news broadcasts were suspended as journalists walked off the job for the day. The Thursday editions of newspapers were not being published, and news websites were not updating their content.



“Every day that passes, (the government) takes back what the working class has won through blood and struggles all these years,” retiree John Pavlidis said.



Greek unions say the protracted austerity, amid a two-year recession and unemployment at around 15 percent, is unfairly targeting the less well-off.

A statement from the country’s largest union, the GSEE, said Wednesday’s strike expresses “strong protest at the unjust and cruel policies that have caused a surge in unemployment … violated labor rights, and squandered public wealth, while failing to insure an exit from recession.”

In Athens’ port of Piraeus, Greece’s biggest, striking ferry electrician Athanassios Sidiropoulos said the government was trying to scrap rights won over the course of decades by working classes.

“All seamen should have pension and healthcare rights, collective labor contracts, healthcare contributions,” he said.

An opinion poll commissioned by the private Mega TV station and published Tuesday said 71 percent of the public oppose the government’s handling of the economic crisis, compared with 66 percent in February.

Sing along with Mitch.

I solve my problems and I see the light

We gotta plug and think, we gotta feed it right

There ain’t no danger we can go to far

We start believing now that we can be who we are

Grease is the word

They think our love is just a growing pain

Why don’t they understand, It’s just a crying shame

Their lips are lying only real is real

We start to find right now we got to be what we feel

Grease is the word

Grease is the word, is the word that you heard

It’s got groove it’s got meaning

Grease is the time, is the place is the motion

Grease is the way we are feeling

We take the pressure and we throw away

Conventionality belongs to yesterday

There is a chance that we can make it so far

We start believing now that we can be wo we are

Grease is the word

Grease is the word, is the word that you heard

It’s got groove it’s got meaning

Grease is the time, is the place is the motion

Grease is the way we are feeling

This is the life of illusion

Wrapped up in trouble laced with confusion

What we doing here?

We take the pressure and we throw away

Conventionality belongs to yesterday

There is a chance that we can make it so far

We start believing now that we can be who we are

Grease is the word

Grease is the word, is the word that you heard

It’s got groove it’s got meaning

Grease is the time, is the place is the motion

Grease is the way we are feeling

Grease is the word, is the word that you heard

It’s got groove it’s got meaning

Grease is the time, is the place is the motion

Grease is the way we are feeling

Grease is the word

Is the word

Is the word

Is the word

Is the word

Is the word

Is the word

Is the word

Is the word

3 comments

    • banger on May 12, 2011 at 00:15

    It will be interesting to see if alternatives to austerity are suggested. There are alternatives pioneered by Argentina. Personally, the best thing the Greeks can do is give a big finger to EU and IMF it is time to dismantle the vastly outdated international financial arrangements starting with taxes, internationally applied, on speculation and currency trading. We need to drastically scale back the globalization program not because it is “bad” because it was useful for a time, but because it does not meet the real needs of society any more. We are in a different historical moment and we need major reform.

    I think a new localism and “letting a hundred flowers blossom and a hundred schools of thought contend…” may be the order of the day. We need societies to try a variety of solutions rather than the one-size-fits-all rules (favoring the financial elites) that are currently in force. To put it another way, imperialism must be smashed by asserting local autonomy. It will be opposed by the oligarchs but once enough people do oppose it it will probably unravel since, I think even the oligarchs are beginning to understand, the globalization regime is unsustainable without major repressions.  

  1. to Greece or Iceland in a heartbeat, if they’d have me, because people there are willing to fight back (also because of their amazing cultures-music, art, and yes,  food) and because there’s hope for change in those places, while there’s none in the US.  Mexico, where I live,  has an entrenched oligarchy, much like the US’s–more in the open, in a way.  The difference being that Mexico isn’t running around the world shooting anyone, nor is it ever likely to do so– it’s constitutionally prohibited from foreign wars.  

Comments have been disabled.