What does "austerity cuts" really mean. We here in the UK still haven't yet had our full dose of financial Mafia medicine. there is more coming down the pipeline. If you want to see what is in store for you just look across at Greece. There they have seen their education system disintegrate, schools with no books, etc. their health service devastated, hospitals and clinics closing, running short on medicines, unemployment stratospheric, with all that, that entails. So it goes on, a sea of human suffering, misery and deprivation, all summed up in those nice sounding words, "austerity cuts".
Our shiny millionaire politicians along with the media, (the babbling brook of bullshit), are forever pouring out those nice sounding euphemisms. "Wage freeze" translates into possible malnutrition, foreclosure, or hypothermia in the winter. "Benefit reform", attacking the meager living standards of the lowest paid and most vulnerable. "Capping housing benefit" throwing families onto the street. There is always a reality to their respectable sounding words, words that taken together really mean plundering the public purse for the benefit of the financial Mafia.
Like I said, we haven't been pushed down as far as Greece, YET, but where is the guarantee that we will somehow be saved from that. Do you think that the compassion of the millionaires and their friends in the financial Mafia will some how see our suffering, and stop stuffing their bank accounts? As far as they are concerned, everything is working fine, we the public are pouring billions into their pockets, in the hope that they will be nice to us in the future.
The ministry of education decided to close down 140 higher
education departments including entire institutes. In an effort to
keep the society as less educated as possible, and given that a lot
of young people are developing a radical political identity and
practice within the universities, the government now closes down
entire departments while from this year on the free textbooks policy
comes to an end, while there are systematic efforts to introduce
tuition fees.
Meanwhile the union of the hospital doctors yesterday announced
that they are going on a partial-strike accepting only A&E
patients and rescheduling every arranged appointments with patients.
Hospital doctors protest because the Ministry of Health does not pay
them for work they done, while doctors salaries have fallen circa 40%
the last couple of years.
ann arky's home.