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'This is a war against the people'

vast minority | 06.03.2012 07:29

"THIS is a war against the people, entire the entire community" warns a powerful message from a doctor in the front line of the resistance to neoliberal dictatorship.

It adds that the current 'austerity' measures are part of carefully designed plan is to reduce the bulk of the population to the level of slaves to the corrupt elite.

Leta Zotaki is director of the radiological unit of the Hospital of Kilkis in Greece, which has been occupied by its workers since February 20.

The open letter to the people of Greece and the world (posted by From the Greek Streets) declares: "This occupation does not merely concern us, the doctors and the workers at the Hospital of Kilkis. Nor does it only take place in response to the greek National Health System, which is indeed collapsing.

"We are undertaking this struggle because what is under threat today is human rights. And this threat is not even made against one nation, or a bunch of countries, or social groups: it is a threat made against the lower and middle classes in Europe, America, Asia, Africa; across the entire world.

"Greece’s today is the tomorrow of Portugal, Spain, Italy and the rest of the countries around the world.

"This is a war against the people, entire the entire community. Those who claim that the public debt of Greece is a debt of the Greek people are lying. It is not a debt owned by the people. It was amassed by the governments, in cooperation with the banks, with the aim of the enslavement of the people.

"The loans toward Greece are not used to pay wages, pensions or public healthcare. The exact opposite is happening: wages, pensions and healthcare cuts are used to pay the bankers.

"They are lying. In opposition to what they are declaring, they do not wish to see a society free of debt. They are creating debt themselves (with the aid of corrupt governments and politicians) for their own benefit.

"They gave a banker to Greece for prime minister, to ensure that the 'job' will be executed correctly. Our prime minister Loukas Papadimos has not even been elected. He was appointed by the ECB and the bankers, with the aid of European and Greek corrupt politicians. This is their own interpretation of the word ‘democracy’.

"Debt is caused by bankers, who create money out of thin air and receive interest, merely because the governments gave them the right to do so. And they continue to say that those who are called to pay the debt are you, and me, and our children and grandchildren; with personal and national wealth, with our lives.

"We owe them nothing. To the contrary, they owe to the people a large part of their wealth, which they amassed thanks to political corruption.

"If we do not open our eyes to this truth, we shall soon all turn into slaves, and we will be working for 200 euros or less per month. Those of us, that is, who would be able to find a job.

"Without healthcare, with no pensions, homeless and hungry, just like it’s already happening with my fellow inhabitants in Greece. Thousands of these live in the streets and are going hungry.

"We do not have any intention to paint any gloomy picture; this is the truth. The current situation has not been caused by a financial or monetary accident or error.

"It is the beginning of the ugly stage of a long procedure following a carefully designed plan, a procedure that started decades ago.

"We must fight together against this neoliberal plan. And this is what we are doing here, in Kilkis, this is what people are doing in many, many cities around the world."

vast minority
- Homepage: http://vastminority.blogspot.com/2012/03/this-is-war-against-people.html

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Advice

06.03.2012 10:31

This might sound trivial, but it's not - if you clumped these sentences together into proper paragraphs this article would be alot easier to read

Teach


Hidden Comment

This posting has been hidden because it breaches the Indymedia UK (IMC UK) Editorial Guidelines.

IMC UK is an interactive site offering inclusive participation. All postings to the open publishing newswire are the responsibility of the individual authors and not of IMC UK. Although IMC UK volunteers attempt to ensure accuracy of the newswire, they take no responsibility legal or otherwise for the contents of the open publishing site. Mention of external web sites or services is for information purposes only and constitutes neither an endorsement nor a recommendation.

???

06.03.2012 16:28

Nothing wrong with this article that a reasonably intelligent person can make sense of.

Obviously the illiterate and stupid are going to have problems!

Me


Hidden Comment

This posting has been hidden because it breaches the Indymedia UK (IMC UK) Editorial Guidelines.

IMC UK is an interactive site offering inclusive participation. All postings to the open publishing newswire are the responsibility of the individual authors and not of IMC UK. Although IMC UK volunteers attempt to ensure accuracy of the newswire, they take no responsibility legal or otherwise for the contents of the open publishing site. Mention of external web sites or services is for information purposes only and constitutes neither an endorsement nor a recommendation.

paragraphs

06.03.2012 17:00

These short paragraphs are typical of something that is written for the kind of print newspaper that has narrow columns. In this context normal-length paragraphs would look too long. The optimum for readability is about 10 words per line, if I remember correctly, which is why newspapers have several narrow columns. Otherwise is make it difficult for the eye to follow where the next line is.

Of course on a wide website like this, it means the paragraphs look strangely short. But it would be a hassle to reformat it all.

So the real problem is Indymedia's page format! But, Indymedia does have a "liquid" page layout, so if you adjust your browser window size to something more narrow (10 words per line ideally), you can get it looking nice.

So really it is your fault for viewing Indymedia with your browser window too large.

anon


the importance of drawing the correct conclusion

06.03.2012 17:15

Take a look at any bank note and you will see the words 'I promise to pay the barer on demand the sum of...'. Common sense should tell you that any promise to pay, is a debt. A society without debt would be a society without money.

Although we are told that the banks are privet sector and supposedly trade in a free market. Common sense should tell us that nothing could be further from the truth. Otherwise lots of people would be printing bank notes and forging coins, and trying to get others to use their money. The banks are clearly nothing but a privilege bestowed by the state up on its mates.

When we hear people say that "the market has failed" we should say: "no the state has failed".

'What sets the state apart is a monopoly on violence' (according to Barack Obama, and he should know!). So when we complain about greed in the banks and corruption in the state, should we campaign fore even more power for the state to deal with its own corruption and regulate the greedy, supposedly, free market, or should we take away the states monopoly on violence and demand real freedom.

The conclusions we draw today will determine wether we live in a society with a gun pointing against our heads in the future.

anarchist


Look at nature

11.03.2012 11:41

>> Take a look at any bank note and you will see the words 'I promise to pay the barer on demand the sum of...'. Common sense should tell you that any promise to pay, is a debt. A society without debt would be a society without money.

I wouldn't call money a debt, its is more a credit note of a certain value. You can use money to pay for goods, services or repayment of debts. So it isn't a "debt", it is a "credit" which is actually the opposite of a debt.

Money is readily adopted because it is damn convenient. I can't go around bartering for a gallon of petrol in exchange for grain. We could use gold, but money is a heck of a lot easier and its value doesn't fluctuate in a local economy like precious metals do.


>> Although we are told that the banks are privet sector and supposedly trade in a free market. Common sense should tell us that nothing could be further from the truth. Otherwise lots of people would be printing bank notes and forging coins, and trying to get others to use their money. The banks are clearly nothing but a privilege bestowed by the state up on its mates.

I think you are confusing the Bank of England with high-street banks. They are apples and oranges. Only the bank of england can print bank of england notes. If lloyds bank printed Bank of Lloyds notes, i doubt anyone would use them. They print bonds which are similar but those are not used like money is.


>> When we hear people say that "the market has failed" we should say: "no the state has failed".

Not necessarily! If there was no state in existance, then the market's could still fail. Hence, it cannot just be the state that is responsible.


>> 'What sets the state apart is a monopoly on violence' (according to Barack Obama, and he should know!). So when we complain about greed in the banks and corruption in the state, should we campaign fore even more power for the state to deal with its own corruption and regulate the greedy, supposedly, free market, or should we take away the states monopoly on violence and demand real freedom.

I think the system works, just that it has flawed and could work better. No state = no taxes = no benefits for poor people; no law and order etc. It would be returning to the stone age. The state would be replaced by powerful war lords who have the muscle to exploit the weak. Just look at Somalia for an example of a country with no state.

You can see other examples in nature. No state in the African veld means that a zebra can't get to a waterhole because the lions are hanging out there squandering all the water resources. If there was a state in animal world, then Zebras would be able to form an orderly queue at the watering hole, without fear of persecution from the lions due to a group of heavily armoured elephants ensuring that the zebras had their right to water. The elephants would be employed by the state and paid for through taxes from the Zebras

anon


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