With
only 37% of the vote, does Syriza have the clout to stand up for Greece
against the looters? Can Greece escape from a situation comparable to
the European Dark Ages when populations were ravaged by marauding
raiders? Perhaps if Greece realigns with Russia and gains financing from
BRICS.
We
will find out the answer to the question posed in the title in the
outcome of the contest between the new Greek government, formed by the
political party Syriza, and the ECB and the private banks, with whose
interests the EU and Washington align against Greece.
The
Spartans, whose red cloaks and military prowess struck fear into the
hearts of both foreign invaders and Greek opponents in the city-states,
are no more.
Athens
itself is a ruin of its historical self. The Greeks, who were once to
be contended with, who were able with 300 Spartans, supplemented with a
few thousand Corinthians, Thebans, and other warriors, to stop a one
hundred thousand man Persian army at Thermopylae, with the final outcome
being the defeat of the Persian fleet in the Battle of Salamis and the
defeat of the Persian army in the Battle of Plataea, are no more.
The
Greeks of history have become a people of legend. Not even the Romans
were able to conquer Persia, but little more than a handful of Greeks
stopped the attempted Persian conquest of Greece.
But the Greeks, despite their glorious history, could not stop their conquest by the EU and a handful of German and Dutch banks.
If
the Greece of history still existed, the EU and the private banks would
be cowering in fear, because the EU and the private banks have
ruthlessly exploited the Greek people and represent the same threat to
Greek sovereignty as Persia did.
Greece,
stripped of its independence by its EU membership and acceptance of the
euro as its currency, has lost is sovereignty. Without control over its
own money, Greece cannot finance itself. Greece must rely on private
banks from other countries.
In
the 21st century European private banks are not allowed to lose money
simply because they are incompetent and over-lent to EU member
countries. This is not considered to be the fault of the banks, but of
the borrower governments and populations.
According
to reports, the American bankster firm, Goldman Sachs, sometimes known
as Gold Sacks, hid Greek debt from view in order that banks would extent
more credit to Greece, thus setting the Greek people up for looting.
The
EU’s disingenuous argument is that this bankster trickery benefitted
the Greek people. The people enjoyed the resources from these loans.
Therefore, the Greek people must pay back the loans through reductions
in old age pensions, through unemployment, through lower wages, and
through the sale of Greek national assets.
This is the austerity that has been imposed on ordinary Greek people by the EU and Greece’s creditors.
Greece
is prostrate. Greeks are actually committing suicide, because Greeks
cannot provide for themselves in the depressed conditions that the EU
and the private banks have created for them for no other reason than
that the private banks must not have to write down the loans.
So,
one result from “democracy” in Greece is suicide. With enough
democracy, we can control world population and halt the destruction of
nature’s capital. All we have to do is to enable the banksters to loot
the entire world.
What can Syriza do?
Without Spartans, very little.
The
party’s intentions and that of its leaders are honest and deserve our
respect. Syriza is a people’s party, and that is what marks it for doom.
The voice of the people is no longer permitted to affect politics in
the Western world. The powerful rich interest groups that rule the West
could not care less about the people over whom they rule.
No
sooner was Syriza in office than Bloomberg, a business news service,
conveyed to the new Greek Prime Minister, Alexis Tsipras, that Syriza
needs to play by the creditors’ rules.
Tsipras stated
that the new Greek government does not intend a “catastrophic clash”
with its creditors, only an acceptable amelioration of the unreasonable
conditions imposed on Greece, in order that Greece can give some
satisfaction to its private bank creditors and also avoid social,
political and economic instability in Greece.
Against this
reasonable statement, Bloomberg reports that the new Greek cabinet
contains communists who favor closer ties with Russia.
To
remind the newly elected Greek government of the whip that is held over
Greek financial markets, Greek bond and stock prices were assaulted and
driven down.
The warning from the EU and Wall Street is clear: Defy us and we will destroy you.
The punishment of the new Greek government was instant. This from Bloomberg:
“Greek
stocks and bonds slumped for a third day, after new ministers said they
will cease the sale of some state assets and increase the minimum wage.
Yields on three-year bonds rose 2.66 percentage points to 16.69
percent. The benchmark Athens General Index decreased 9.2 percent to its
lowest level since 2012, led by a collapse in the value of banks.”
Does
Tsipras understand that Greek financial institutions will continue to
be punished if they stand behind his government? Bloomberg makes it
clear: “Germany warned the Mediterranean nation against abandoning prior
agreements on aid, after analysts said that setting Greece on a
collision course with its European peers might lead to its exit from the
euro region.”
Statements
of newly appointed ministers “imply confrontation and tense
negotiations in the near future,” Vangelis Karanikas, head of research
at Athens-based Euroxx Securities, wrote in a note to clients.”
What
is Syriza’s “collusion course”? The new government wants to moderate
the agreements made by previous Greek governments that sold out the
Greek people.
The
new government wants to stop giving away at bargain prices Greek public
assets to clients of its creditors, and the new Greek government wants
to raise the Greek minimum wage so that the Greek people have enough
bread and water on which to live.
However,
for the private bank creditors, for Merkel’s Germany that stands behind
the banks, for Washington which could care less about the Greeks, for
the Greek elites who see themselves as “part of Europe,” Syriza is
something to be rid of.
And
so the Greek bonds are attacked, the Greek stocks are attacked, threats
are issued that arouse fear in that part of the Greek population that
is propagandized into the belief that Greece must be part of the euro
and the EU or be bypassed by history.
What
it boils down to is that the Greek people, like the Americans, are
insouciant. Only about 37% of the voters voted for Syriza. That is far
more votes than any rival party received, but it is not enough to show
Washington, the EU and creditors that Greeks stand behind their
government.
Instead
it shows that the new party had to form a government with another party
that money, perhaps, can buy off. It shows that Syriza can be demonized
in the Western media and presented to the Greek public as a threat to
Greece.
The
new government is aware of its weakness. The new prime minister says
that he does not want confrontation, but that the new government cannot
continue the kowtowing of previous Greek governments. A reasonable
accommodation must be reached.
Accommodation
is unlikely to occur, because a reasonable accommodation is not the
desire of Washington, the EU, or of Greece’s creditors.
A
purpose of the “Greek financial crisis” is to establish that EU members
are not sovereign countries and that banks that lend to these
non-sovereign entities are not responsible for any losses with regard to
the loans. The population of the indebted countries are the responsible
parties. And these populations must accept the reduction of their
living standards in order to ensure that the banks do not lose any
money.
This
is the “New Democracy.” It is a resurrection of the old feudal order. A
few super-rich aristocrats and everyone else serfs obliged to support
the ruling order. The looting that began in Greece has spread into
Ukraine, and who knows who is next?
With
only 37% of the vote, does Syriza have the clout to stand up for Greece
against the looters? Can Greece escape from a situation comparable to
the European Dark Ages when populations were ravaged by marauding
raiders? Perhaps if Greece realigns with Russia and gains financing from
BRICS.
Dr. Paul Craig Roberts, 4thmedia.org
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Κυριακή
Can Greece Escape from a Situation Comparable to Dark Age? Yes, If Greece Realigns with Russia and Gains Financing from the BRICS
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