A
Greek Tragedy!
(A
Very Personal Viewpoint)
As
EU Ministers mull over what financial (crumbs) to throw off the EU
table to the Greek people, I cannot but sigh for what might have
been.
I
have covered this 'Greek Tragedy' in previous comments (review my earlier blogs) where I look in detail at the mechanics of Greek
debt, but just to recap and summarize:
The
Greek people were 'sold a pup' when a bailout was agreed.
To
simplify a series of complex arrangements (all of which I cover in
detail elsewhere) it was not the Greek people who were bailed out but
U.S. institutions, the German and other European Governments which
had underwritten bank loans to Greece.
The
objective was never to bail out the Greek people – who have all
been press-ganged to pay for the banking and political incompetence of bureaucrats
and financiers.
So
why did the Greek government capitulate? Why did it not give the
'two fingers up' to Brussels, leave the Euro and plot a recovery
course free of debt enslavement? At least, under such conditions, as
Argentina and Iceland have shown, you can succeed, if you have enough
determination.
Don't
believe a word of what they tell you about the IMF lending billions
to Greece with nothing to show in return.
This
money went (in the main) to bail out the foreign banks and
institutions on the understanding that the Greek government would
implement disasterous government cutbacks (in the Civil Service,
local government, hospitals, schools and across all sectors of the
public service) to 'pay' for the IMF/European Union 'loans' and
so-called bailout.
It's
both a scandal and a tragedy.
If
there was any semblance of integrity in the mainstream Western
European and U. S. media (which there is not) it would be crying
'foul' in support of the Greek people and exhorting citizens to
pressure their respective U.S. and European politicians and
governments to end this charade and 'freeze' all repayments until
the Greek economy is financially able to support debt restructuring
and sensible non-extortionate repayment of outstanding loans.
History
will be left to explain to future Greek generations as to why it's
own politicians agreed payment restructuring which has devastated the
public sector infrastructures, nursery, primary, secondary schools,
universities, hospitals, social care, agriculture, central and local
government employment, pensions, services for the very young,
refugees, those least able to care for themselves, students and the
elderly.
It's
both an outrage and a scandal of epic proportions – yet nobody is
writing about it in these terms.
I
see disgraceful comments about 'lazy Greeks'; 'too much time spent in
leisure and not enough in productivity'; the 'incompetence' and
'coruption' of the Greeks and past government administrations - as if
Greece is the birthplace of both - rather than consider where we would
all be today without the Greeks and their many sacrifices over the
millennia.
On
the contrary, the rest of Europe would do well to learn about health
and lifestyle from Greece and it's people prior to it joining the
European Monetary Union, rather than vice versa.
One
of the great problems of our time is the obsession with money,
political power and influence to the extent that we often loose touch
with 'the fundamental basics.'
In
my short lifetime I am only too aware how a single bullet, a bomb,
aeroplanes used as de facto bombs, coup d'etats, civil wars, disease
and famine can turn princes into paupers, presidents into corpses,
send millions fleeing for their lives with little more than the
clothes they possess, thanking their god (if they have one) that they
and their family are (at the very least) still alive. And only
yesterday such people were professionals, businessmen, individuals of
wealth, influence and power in their home countries. Now they are
just refugees, discarded, unwelcome and unloved, shunned by
politicians and described as 'swarms' like locusts 'overwhelming' us
with their pleas for sanctuary in Christendom, fleeing as many are,
from problems others have created for them.
Who
would 'volunteer' to become a refugee?; or an economic migrant in search of hope and a better life?
We
need to re-focus on what are really important beyond the financial
priority of draining Greece, in a vampire-like manner, of every Euro
it possesses - and making diseased beggars of it's ordinary jobless
and homeless citizens in the process.
Greek
history will never forgive those politicians and bankers who cut the
umbilical cord and left millions in penury and to die for want of a
dignified response to what it a personal tragedy for every ordinary
Greek citizen, who, in the main, share no collective responsibility
for the machinations of a few.
©Patrick
Emek, May 2016