While we
hear of the demonstrations in Greece and see the scenes of violence
and repression on our screens the message seems to be that it is just
Greece that is the problem, and once that is sorted everything will
be just fine. However, as I keep saying, this is not a national
problem, it is not something that the Greek people have done wrong
and now they have to pay. What is happening in Greece is happening
across the developed world, it is all a matter of degree. You would
be hard pushed to find a country in the developed world that doesn't
have mass demonstrations by the ordinary people shouting against what
is being imposed on them by the financial Mafia. Country after
country is ripping up the “social contract” with its people and
forcing through “austerity” measures, in other words taking the
contents of the public purse and giving it to the bankers, at the
dictate of the corporate fascists.
Each country likes to portray the unrest in other countries to convey the impression that we're OK, It is that other bunch over there that has the problems. However, if you have a system where there is not a country in that system that doesn't have mass angry demonstrations day in day out, weekend after weekend, then you have to ask yourself, is this system working? Is this system seeing to the needs of the people? Is this system worth keeping? Or is this a system that only sees to the desires of a small bunch of parasites at the expense of the vast majority of the people? What we are facing is a system of corporate fascism, an elitist system that will crush any group of people in an attempt to hold onto that privileged position, today Greece, to morrow Portugal, then Ireland, Spain and Italy with perhaps Romania and Hungary along the way. Meanwhile, those who don't suffer the same deprivation, cruelty and insult as the Greek people will still be hit with “austerity” cuts and the demise of the social fabric of our society.
GREECE.
SPAIN.
HUNGARY
PORTUGAL.
ITALY.
ROMANIA.