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Gerard Papasimakopoulos

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The Confusing Fires of The Athenian Landscape

Posted: 15/02/2012 00:00

There were people congregating there. Milling about, staring solemnly at the blackened walls and the collapsed ceilings that you could just make out behind the metal sheeting that was there more as a deterrent for the homeless than for anything else.

Strangely, some of them, quite a few of them actually, were holding candles, little slithers of flame flickering in the unusually cold February air. Strange being the operative word here, seeing as no one was dead. At least, not yet. It was a wake no less though. Held for one of the oldest movie houses in Athens, the Attikon, one of the 50 or so buildings that felt the full force of Sunday night's eruption of directionless rage, following the Greek parliament's yes-sir-ing of the latest bumper pack of austerity measures handed over by the "evil European overlords".

As is usually the case, the next morning, Greece was firmly split down the middle. One side gesticulating madly and tugging its hair out about another night of destruction, another night of disaster, in and around an already crippled city. The other side, not wanting to fall behind in the gesticulation stakes, doing its best to make anyone not on their patch of grass feel bad about the fact that they may have spent even a second feeling sorry for what they perceived as just a bunch of broken windows and corporate nonsense. The real tragedy, they roared, took place inside the parliament, where our buffooning political suits had just given Greece away to the slave traders from the evil side of the continent.

Ultimately, none of them were right. Neither am I. Or the guy next me, or the woman next to him. Because it seems no one in Greece is right. To be so, would mean being properly informed. To be so, would mean not living in a permanent state of informational confusion, to be so, would mean not being bombarded with another doomsday scenario every five minutes. To be so, would mean managing to successfully navigate through an overflowing skip of dark-forces-have-taken-over-the-country scenarios and climb out of said skip, still holding on to your sanity and your ability to think rationally.

There are easy targets, as there usually are. A completely inept police force, led by the Minister for Civilian Protection (hold your giggles, that is actually his full title) Hristos Papoutsis, who came just short of saying that Athens was destroyed by a small group of shrouded unknowns. We call them ninjas round my way. A mayor of deer-caught-in-headlights fame, who knew next to nothing concerning the chaos in his city, until well into the next morning, upon which time he was informed by journalists interviewing him. And a host of careless and criminally shortsighted parliamentary representatives, quite a few of which were caught watching a football match in the Parliament cafeteria, while Athens discovered new ways to make a name for itself as the barbecuing capital of Europe.

But this isn't a one-off. It wasn't the first incident of pointless destruction and I'm sure it won't be the last. So at some point, the blame and part of the responsibility for what happens within their own country has to fall on the Greek public. Ninjas did not destroy the Attikon. Ninjas did not set fire to nearly 50 buildings around Athens. Ninjas were not the ones asking for money so as not to burn down the Asty cinema house, just a short walk away from the Attikon. These were citizens of Greece. Whether provoked, coerced, brainwashed or otherwise, these were citizens of Greece.

The fact that they were unable to separate their need for reaction and the need to protect elements of their city that represent their culture and ultimately their pool of collective historical presence is at the heart of this entire sad state of affairs. A nation willing to set fire to its entire world, as its only available reaction toward a social or political system that it no longer feels represents it, is a nation in dire need of an educational wake up call. A nation unaware that it needs to keep hold of the historical elements that have served it throughout time, be they architectural or otherwise, is a nation in more danger than a "dark European overlord" could ever provide.

"Yeah, but its just a bunch of concrete. We can rebuild it", was the prevalent opinion making the rounds on the social networking circuit.

No you can't. You can't burn a symbol and expect a knock off to work in its place. Once you burn it, its gone. And you, as a nation, have just lost another rallying point. An image, a banner under which to gather.

And you had precious few of those left to begin with.

 
There were people congregating there. Milling about, staring solemnly at the blackened walls and the collapsed ceilings that you could just make out behind the metal sheeting that was there more as a ...
There were people congregating there. Milling about, staring solemnly at the blackened walls and the collapsed ceilings that you could just make out behind the metal sheeting that was there more as a ...
 
 
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08:56 PM on 02/19/2012
Perhaps eveyone should return to Diogenes and they won't have to worry about their country. I tried some of this juest slept where I found anywhere in fields or whatever.
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lambdin1
What's this?
08:27 PM on 02/16/2012
Ultimately every nations people are respondsible for the nation. Too few will take their own fate in their own hands.
03:19 AM on 02/16/2012
Actually, all of the blame goes to the rioters. Whatever fault anyone else has is of a different, and lower level, of magnitude.
01:03 AM on 02/16/2012
Mr Papasimakopoulos you 've just accomplished to make a lot of greeks feel a bit naucious with your article. Not for strange reason I suppose, as it was as vommituous as the mainstream media rulling greek puplic opinion these days are.. If you measure the greek people's sense of duty to their homeland , and other countries' people, by the petty fires on a couple of souless buildings' entrances, no matter of their historic value (19th cen. aristocrat residencies turned into malls and bank offices) then you are either an idiot or a payed agent.. You also seem to forget to mention that 500,000 peacefull protesters where ruthlessly chased and gased throughout the athenian center streets by ''police'' forces who where in complete correspondance with the major tv channel news to blacken every sense of demonstration. Instead of telling the people what are the true price they're paying, having the corrupt political class implementing horrific acts regarding labour and so on, imposed of course from a handfull of bankers who can't take any loss because its their game after all.. I regret i haven't joined the Sunday;s protest, but I don't live in Athens and I m unemployed, so there goes my ability to travel.. But I assure mr Papasimakopoulos, if that's his true name, there won't be long untill the greek people summon a few million protesters in Athens and overrulle every scum playing with our fortune, including the journalists-safeguards of the regime...
03:22 AM on 02/16/2012
"imposed of course from a handfull of bankers who can't take any loss because its their game after all"

What nonsense. Greece is passing the austerity measures because it wants to borrow billions MORE. It is one thing to think that those who were stupid enough to loan Greece money should lose it. But by what possible standard do you think the rest of Europe is obliged to loan Greece billions more, if it won't even get its financial act together?
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Saint wright
Dyslexic old chippy
07:56 PM on 02/15/2012
The Greeks up to know retired on two thirds pension at 55, the rich didnt pay taxes, and most people had none jobs for Goverment, so there you go as you sow so shall you reap?

let them go to the wall and eat what ever than can grow?
05:40 PM on 02/15/2012
If Germany would pay back the money it stole from Greece during the war + interest of course, as they did France (years ago) who they claimed were 'civilised' which was why they paid them back, Greece would not have been in anywhere near the mess its in now.
Come on Germany pay your debts and then let them go, the majority of Southern Europe would be better off out of the Euro once the dust settled.
As would we if our lily livered politicians weren't enslaved to an utterly Europhile civil service and extracted us from Europe. The world is much bigger than Europe -the markets are huge if only they would have the courage to step outside.
05:06 PM on 02/15/2012
maybe they are trying what the romans did a couple of thousand years ago burning it so they can make a fresh start.and you know what they say dont make fires when ur in greece
lastpost
see biography
01:23 PM on 02/15/2012
"no one in Greece is right. To be so, would mean being properly informed."
Knowledge, like real democracy, is power. Heaven help us, should it fall into the hands of the (wrong?) people.

"think rationally"
What would Greece be now, had it not been fraudulently inveigled into joining the EU?

"Athens was destroyed by a small group of shrouded unknowns. We call them ninjas round my way.
We call them Unaccountable EU Elite ‘round mine.

"these were citizens of Greece."
But these were not just ordinary citizens of Greece. These were S&M disenfranchised citizens of Greece.

"A nation willing to set fire to its entire world"
Just taking step(p)s. Like retreating Russians igniting their’s.

"Once you burn it, its gone."
Fortuitously the fate of many a vanity.

"you, as a nation, have just lost another rallying point."
Never fear. What say we wrap ourselves ‘round with democracy, and dispense with the dusty drapes?
11:25 AM on 02/15/2012
Good article about the mindset of people in corner. Thank you.
10:50 AM on 02/15/2012
The demonstrators have no coherent plan other than venting their anger and teaching the Greek establishment a lesson. Goody for them,hope they have fun in the clouds of tear gas.

What next? Ah yes we've been there before....The Greek Army walks in,tanks and machine guns on on the street, democracy suspended [ EU membership thus ends] and enforces martial law viciously. People get even poorer whilst a corrupt power elite have a whale of a time.
beachgirlchix
We Will Not Be Silent!
03:11 PM on 02/15/2012
How are the elites going to get all that money from selling off the Greek islands and historical sites if they are all on fire? What about the money from tourism? I'd rather they burn the country to the ground than give it to the people who caused this global recession in order to get at nations' resources. This is a classic case of the Shock Doctrine, and many of the Greeks know this.
10:07 AM on 02/15/2012
DRG40.

No I wouldn't offer more of OTHER people's money to recreate a failed attempt to quench a debt fire by drowning it in more debt.

The solution is two stage and painful -but obvious. Leave the Euro and then leave the EU. In 5 years Greece will again be able to compete for what it produces in manufacturing, shipping or tourism.

The pain comes from failure to admit that the Euro is killing not just Greece but everyone except Germany. The only EU country who's unemployment levels have dropped -significantly- is Germany.
The Euro has replaced the DM but so it has for the other eurozone members.

If anyone had said before the euro, 'hey we're going to adopt the DM as our currency' everyone would have been giving it 'What? Are you mad?' But that is what has happened.

and the consequence was as predictable then as now.

Greece get out.

It doesn't matter what 'binding' the EU what parliament to apply to political parties, they do not have to abide by it. The Greek supreme court can strike down that legislation at a stroke. No democracy can be hamstrung by such demands.
beachgirlchix
We Will Not Be Silent!
03:13 PM on 02/15/2012
No doubt! Refuse to pay the debt that your elites and our banksters forced on you. Look at Iceland, Ecuador and Argentina! They told the IMF to get bent, and they all seem to be doing just fine now. DO NOT allow them to take your resources; that was their goal to begin with. That is the Shock Doctrine they force on people all over the world, and they are trying to do it in the US now. We are on to them.
05:26 PM on 02/15/2012
I hear what you say but stop short of suggesting it was 'their goal' from the start.
I hate the EU with every fibre of my body as it strips freedom from country, aided and abetted by my own government BUT the vast majority of them think they are doing it for our own good.

They can't get it through their thick heads that it is up to us to decide what is for our own good not the EU or IMF or Germany -same for the Greeks.

I hope that Demos returns and the cracis gets back in the box
03:26 AM on 02/16/2012
beachgirl, what you fail to say is that the austerity measures are not just about Greece paying back the debt that exists now. It is about getting the rest of Europe to loan them billions more.

No rational country or bank will loan Greece billions more if there is no prospect of ever getting it back.
04:28 AM on 02/15/2012
It's not the trashed buildings that matter it's what is happening to democracy in Greece, courtesy of the EU. Their latest EU rebuttal of the austerity measures agreed by the government there is in part based on the demand that the opposition parties enter into irrevocable undertakings to honour those measures themselves. That means that the next time there is an election in Greece, all of the current political parties would effectively be forbidden to campaign on the economy.

This one demand has taken the arrogance of the Eurozone establishment to new heights towards the very country where the notion of democracy was born. No wonder they're out on the streets.
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Drg40
Representative Democracy is all we have.
09:21 AM on 02/15/2012
I.m sure you feel that you have a logical complaint, but you offer no alternative. I, for example, would oppose offering the Greeks more money when their commitment was until they ejected the current govt. from power and the new lot kept the money and repudiated their part of the agreement.

IOW, good anti-Europe stuff, but short on political reality.
01:24 PM on 02/15/2012
The alternative is to raise taxes on the wealthy and make sure they pay them.