Thursday, February 23, 2012

Pictures used without permission by El Mundo

A lion in winter by Teacher Dude's BBQ
A lion in winter, a photo by Teacher Dude's BBQ on Flickr.
Yesterday I received an email asking me to look at an article in the print edition of  the Spanish Daily El Mundo about the legendary Greek freedom fighter, Manolis Glezos, written by Greek journalist, Theodoris Georgakopoulos (See link to the journalist's site here)

It came as quite a surprise to see a picture I took in April 2008 was being used by the paper to illustrate the article.

The picture which appears on my Flickr page and on this blog is covered by various licences and is therefore not freely available. In the case of this blog images are covered by a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Greece License. which allows activists and bloggers to use the pictures but requires commercial users to ask permission.

As I am not a professional photographer I am not really an expert on different aspects of copyright, however,El Mundo did not contact me in order to ask permission to use the photograph. As people who follow this blog are aware times are especially tough in Greece and like so many others my income has been drastically reduced over the last couple of years. When you see a large commercial operation unwilling to pay even a token fee for your work, it sticks in your throat. 

Monday, February 20, 2012

Can you help?

Once again I am passing round the begging bowl in order to ask for your help, whoever you may be. I have run up against the limitations of the photographic equipment I have and while my Olympus E-450 is just fine for daytime shots, it's ability to take pictures at night or in low light situation is severely limited, meaning I either use flash (never a safe move in any tense situations) or put my camera down.

Now I have the chance to buy a used Canon ESO 40D from a friend for 300E, but that's more than I can get together in at the moment, for reasons that are obvious for anyone following the economic crisis in Greece.

To tell you the truth I feel terrible about asking for help again as I've done so in the past and was overwhelmed by people's generosity. Also when I look around the city and see the real want on display, spending money on something as frivolous as a camera seems somehow wrong. But yet I am asking for your assistance.

If you feel you can help please visit my Paypal account. using cpwefl2003@hotmail.com

If you won't fight for your own future, at least fight for the future of your kids

Friday, February 17, 2012

I protest, therefore I am - Protesto ergo sum"

Unpaid employees protesting outside one of Thessaloniki's culinary landmarks

Employees outside Hatzis patisserie, one of Thessaloniki's culinary landmarks, protesting over unpaid wages.

According to the demonstrators the owners of the business still enjoy a considerable degree of luxury whilst claiming that they do not have money to pay their staff.

Over the last year there has been an epidemic of such cases in both the public and private sector in Greece.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Greek protester wanders through clouds of tear gas holding a gallows - Thessaloniki, Greece



Taken during the anti-austerity protests in Thessaloniki, Greece that were violently ended when riot police attacked. The man was carrying a gallows and stayed behind even after tear gas cannisters starting landing in Aristotelous Square.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Greeks take to the streets over new austerity law - Thessaloniki, Greece

Sunday's protest rally saw a large turnout as about 20,000 people gathered in the central Aristotelous Square and then marched through down town Thessaloniki.

However, once the march returned to the Square violence broke out and police repeatedly attacked the rally, using tear gas and truncheons, often against people who had no involvement with any act of violence. (see video below).

www.youtube.com/watch?v=ulgStViF5lU&feature=player_em...

If you want to do more than just survive, learn to fight like a Greek -poster

Monday, February 13, 2012

Greece is now in the austerity hot seat

Tear gas and violence put an end to Greek austerity demonstrations

Greeks take part in anti-austerity protest march - Thessaloniki, Greece

Last night's protest rally saw a large turnout as about 20,000 people gathered in the central Aristotelous Square and then marched through down town Thessaloniki.

However, once the march returned to the Square violence broke out and police repeatedly attacked the rally, using tear gas and truncheons, often against people who had no involvement with any act of violence. (see video below).



Riot squad units also lashed out indiscriminately at marchers outside the Olympion cinema which had been occupied yesterday by groups opposed to the latest round of austerity measures.



At least two people were injured in the attack including one man who was taken to hospital with head wounds received during the police charge.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

ΟΥΣΤ (get lost) It ends tonight - Message to the Greek government from it's own people

ΟΥΣΤ  by Teacher Dude's BBQ
ΟΥΣΤ , a photo by Teacher Dude's BBQ on Flickr.

Waiting for the Greek Götterdämmerung


Prime minister Lukas Papademos last night warned his fellow Greeks that failure to reach agreement on the latest austerity measures in parliament today would bring disaster to the indebted nation. Such dramatic talk in perhaps hardly surprising in the country that gave the world the word, apocalypse and reflects the fear those in power feel about the possibility that the legislation will not pass, or even worse will produce a wave of protest so intense that it will stall its implementation.

For the last three days there have been a series of strikes and marches against the latest cuts and job losses, but they are just a warm up for the big event which will take place later today at 5pm Athens times when people will start to gather for a series of nationwide rallies.

For over two years Greek voters have been told that austerity will save the country and yet all people have seen is a huge drop in living standards as the economy has collapsed and prices have soared. Caught between these two pincers many have despaired that will be able to survive financially as bills pill up and incomes from pensions and wages keep on falling.

Greek riot police outside finance minister's political office - Thessaloniki, Greece


The situation has not been helped by a political system that is widely despised as being both inept and deeply corrupt. This has been reflected not only in the falling poll figures for those parties in power but also the seemingly endless clashes between riot police and protesters that occur whenever government members are spotted in public.

Those who call upon Greeks to make more sacrifices are exactly those most unwilling to give up the priviledges they have accrued whilst in power, a fact that few outside parliament have failed to notice.

The reality is that Greece has ceased to be a sovereign nation in anything but name, it's economic policy, spending decision and hence the vast majority of decision usually made in the name of the nation state are being dictated by the country's creditors who have demanded a heavy tribute in return for their intervention.

Greek protester on anti-austerity demonstration in Thessaloniki, Greece

The fiscal policies being imposed have slashed GDP, pushed up unemployment and all but destroyed any real chance of the economy recovering for the forseeable future. In such a situation using talk of bankruptcy to scare people into supporting yet more of the same is simply not going to succeed as so many have, to all intents and purposes already been bankrupted.

What is left for the government and its supporters in the the media, (which to a large extent is controlled by domestic oligarchs heavily invested in the banking sector) are a series of crude threats warning of massive shortages in food and other basic goods should the country renege on its debt agreements.

Tonight in Athens's Syntagma Square we will see if the riot police can contain the groundswell of popular anger now building up. It will be a scene repeated in towns and cities across the country as people gather once more to say no to a future which holds nothing but poverty and decline for the next decade.

Anti - ACTA protest in Thessaloniki, Greece.

"ERROR 404 - Democracy Not Found". Anti - ACTA protest in Thessaloniki, Greece.

About 300 people gathered in the centre of Thessaloniki, Greece to protest against ACTA yesterday evening. The gathering is part of a European-wide series of actions against the anti-piracy bill.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Greek protesters occupy cinema in Thessaloniki, Greece

Taken after the end of the anti-austerity demonstration in Thessaloniki today. Protester occupied the Olympion cinema in the centre of the city and decided to use it as a launching pad for further anti-government actions planned for tomorrow.

Pensioner protesting - Thessaloniki, Greece

The sign reads

"Cuts in pensions.
There's no euros for taxes.
We are the tax dodgers.
You can arrest us.

SHAME

The pensioners association

Sysperiosi"

Which side are you on boys, which side are you on? - Greece



Minutes after anti - austerity protesters returned to the main body of the march Greek police grabbed and beat a photographer (see his Twitter feed here) for taking pictures of them.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Greek pensioner breaks down in tears during TV interview

When the interviewer asked him how the latest austerity measures had affected him the pensioner broke down in tears.

Thousands took to the streets of Thessaloniki, Greece for the latest in a series of protests aimed at overturning government plans to introduce yet more austerity measures.

More strikes and marches have been called for the next two days

Greeks take to the streets after austerity agreement

Taken tonight in the northern port city of Thessaloniki during a protest march against the latest round of austerity measures which have crippled the Greek economy. During the demonstration protesters briefly occupied two radio stations and read out messages on air calling upon people to join further demonstrations planned for the coming days.

Wednesday, February 08, 2012

As Greece drifts towards disaster, what happens next?

Protest march in Thessaloniki, Greece in support of nationwide general strike by Teacher Dude's BBQ

As the negotiations between Athens and the country's creditors over the terms of the next austerity measures wind up there is a growing sense on the internet and in the streets that Greece is tipping over into disaster. While it's easy to get carried away by the hyperbole and hysteria that accompanies much of the reporting of the present situation the reality may indeed be living up to the feverish imaginations of headline writers. 

Unemployment has continued to climb as the number of businesses going under increases, in part the result of falling incomes and a series of crushing demands by Athens for more and more tax revenue. The irony is that each increase in either direct taxation such as that on properties or indirect via VAT has brought less and less money into government coffers. Yesterday's Greek Finance Ministry report showed that instead of an expected  rise in revenue Greece's income has dropped by 7%. 

At every single turn price hikes have resulted in fall of consumption, even for items as basic as heating oil, as people either do without or turn to alternative sources such as wood often illegally logged from the country's forests. 

Yet despite all evidence to the contrary, the European Union and in particular the German political leadership  is insisting on yet more cuts in public spending on pensions and health, more job losses and a drastic cut in the minimum wage. Hardly surprising, given this and the years of vilification the German right wing press Greeks are becoming more open to anti-German feeling, as witnessed by the burning of a German flag outside  parliament during yesterday's demonstrations in Athens. While many have been quick to condemn such actions such sentiments are the exception rather than the rule as anger, frustration and indignation replace calmer analysis.

Greek trade unionists march against latest austerity measures

In response to the latest cuts trade unions called a general strike for Tuesday with limited results, many public sector employees carried on working while the turnout for marches was low, with just a few thousand participating in Athens and Thessaloniki. Some argued that the last minute nature of the call combined with unusually low temperatures were to blame. However, I believe there is a growing despondency which has taken hold of people, the conviction that whatever they do nothing will change, feed by the fact that after two years of austerity and four years of economic decline marches, strikes and other protests have not succeeded in halting the malaise.

This, however, should not be mistaken for acceptance, no matter how grudging, of the new economic measures, anger over those and disgust with the current political system is greater than ever. It's is now an article of faith that no member of government can appear in public without presence of riot police units to protect them from their own voters, sometimes even members of their own party. What people lack is a focus for their frustration and the possibility that they can change the present situation.

With the dissolution of established forms of protests and dissent there is a growing danger that popular anger will explode in ways that cannot be directed or contained in the traditional way and with unpredictable consequences. With money drying up and families resources dwindling more and more people will be open to any suggestion, no matter how radical or extreme that offers them even a glimmer of hope for the future.

Tuesday, February 07, 2012

No public protest is complete in Greece without presence of riot police

Taken during an anti-austerity protest march in Thessaloniki. 2000-3000 people took part in two separate demonstrations in the centre this morning.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Collecting food and other basics for TRASTIC employees

Collecting food and other basics for TRANSTIC employees


Employees at the Greek company TRASTIC are currently on strike in order to get pay back owed from June 2011.

On Saturday volunteers asked shoppers in the Botsari neighbourhood of Thessaloniki to contribute food and other household necessities.

ΚΑΝΕΝΑΣ ΜΟΝΟΣ ΤΟΥ ΣΤΗΝ ΚΡΙΣΗ

ΑΛΛΗΛΕΓΓΥΗ ΣΤΟΥΣ ΑΠΕΡΓΟΥΣ ΤΗΣ ΕΛΛΕΝΙΤ (TRASTIC)

Εδώ και τέσσερις μήνες οι εργαζόμενοι στην εταιρεία TRASTIC (πρώην ΕΛΛΕΝΙΤ) βρίσκονται σε απεργία διαρκείας, διεκδικώντας την πληρωμή των δεδουλευμένων τους. Οι απεργοί είναι απλήρωτοι από τον Ιούνιο και μέχρι στιγμής η εργοδοσία έχει χρησιμοποιήσει κάθε μέσο, συμπεριλαμβανομένης και της αστυνομικής συνδρομής για να σταματήσει τον αγώνα τους. Τους τελευταίους μήνες και μέρα με τη μέρα όλο και πιο συχνά κινητοποιήσεις σαν και αυτήν των εργαζομένων της ΕΛΛΕΝΙΤ είναι πια καθημερινότητα. Εστίες αντίστασης ξεσπάνε σε όλους τους εργασιακούς χώρους, από τα ΜΜΕ και της εστίαση μέχρι τα μεγάλα εμπορικά κέντρα και τις βιομηχανίες, με πρωτοπόρους τους ηρωικούς απεργούς της Χαλυβουργικής. Η σιωπή των ΜΜΕ, οι εκβιασμοί και οι απειλές των εργοδοσιών δεν φαίνεται πια να μπορούν πια να σταματήσουν τον αγώνα των εργαζόμενων που παλεύουν για την επιβίωση"

syneleysigeitonias,blogspot.com

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Greece's Dark Knight returns



Apparently, ex-law and order minister, Mihalis Chrysohoidis was too busy fighting crime to even read the terms of recent austerity legislation before signing it. The measures, which have brought about an economic crisis unprecedented in modern Greek history are loathed by the overwhelming majority of Greeks and are now being seen internationally as a failure. The admission made during a TV interview has been seen as a crude, not to mention misguided attempts by the minister to distance himself from previous government policies which have cost his PASOK party more than 30 points in the polls over the last two years.

Just when you think that the Greek political caste can fall no lower in the eyes of the public they manage to drop yet another bomb shell.


Tuesday, January 24, 2012

#De_diavasa_to_mnimonio_giati Add your own captions

The Greek language Twittersphere is having a field day with the admission by Greek minister, Mihalis Chysohoidis that he didn't even bother reading the terms of austerity package imposed on Greece by its Troika creditors before signing it into law.

Feel free to download this and add your own caption about what excuse the minister might have for passing legislation (unexamined) that has pushed millions of Greeks into poverty.

For novices I'd recommend Speechable for adding speech bubbles and text easily.

en.speechable.com/

Monday, January 23, 2012

They Live. We Sleep - The Poster



Science fiction, whether by intent or not is more a reflection of what scares or ails a society than a prediction of what will happen in the future. Whether it is HG. Wells's tale of class conflict in late 19th century England (The Time machine) or Orwell's commentary on the propaganda and the power of the state (1984) science fiction has provided writers, film makers and others with a powerful tool to look their societies straight in the eye. This is no less true in John Carpenter's 1988 B-Movie sci-fi classic, They Live with it's scathing indictment of 80's Reagonomics.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Which side are you on ?




Last summer at the height of the Indignant movement in Greece I want down to Athens with fellow demonstrators to take part in the anti-austerity protests outside parliament. The video is probably as accurate an account of what happened next as anything I have seen anywhere. Please remember this when you see the next clash in Greece in order to understand why people fight so fiercely for what they believe in.



Resistance. The choice of a new generation

Monday, January 16, 2012

What we've lost - A personal account of the crisis in Greece

Lydia


I could give you a list of statistics and figures that show just how grim the situation has become in Thessaloniki, such as the rise in unemployment or I could tell you how many businesses have closed down in the city over the last 12 months. Then, there are the number of suicide attempts "successful" and "unsuccessful" that have taken place in Greece recently. But I doubt that they would mean much to you. Numbers have a strange way of draining the life out of any disaster, reducing it to simply an accountant's end of year report.

Instead I would like to talk about what I have lost and through that give you an idea of the what people are going through. For me, the most poignant memory of late has not been people sleeping out in freezing temperatures or pensioners scavenging for for food in rubbish bins, nor has it been the sight of kids as young as eight years old collecting scrap metal from bins and off the street to sell. No, for me the worst image has been that of a cardboard box, inside it the things my daughter will be taking with her to her new home 200km from here.

Unable to survive economically in the city Lydia's mother has decided to move away to be closer to her side of the family. The small flower business Maria has struggled to keep afloat for the least two years is now completely unviable and so is being closed down. With people now waiting to see what happens before getting married and fewer and fewer buying flowers to take as presents to friends and family the shop has become a liability and will shut in the next few days.

For my daughter it means leaving her friends, school and home to start out afresh in a new community, a tough challenge for anyone but especially so for a twelve year old on the brink of teenage.

As for me, that means the amount of time I get to spend with her will be drastically reduced, no longer will she be just a bus ride away but every visit will need to be co-ordinated and so will lose the spontaneity I so cherish. Of course, 200km away is not another world but it is far enough to make visiting much more difficult.

So far I have hidden all these thoughts from my daughter, she has enough on her mind without an adult's compliment of concerns, so instead I've kept on emphasising the benefits of moving to a smaller community where she's have more freedom to roam and even have her own cat.

I cannot fault her mother for her decision as things have got so bad in Thessaloniki that any alternative form of decent employment is just a pipe dream. Even when work is available friends have been telling me that wages as low as 300 euros a month are bring offered. And if you don't like it there are plenty more desperate people who do. Just to give you a sense of perspective 300 euros is barely enough for rent let along food and bills. And of course such wages come without health benefits or unemployment insurance.

Lydia's mother is making a rational choice and abandoning a sinking ship and in that she is not alone, so many friends have left the city either to return to the small towns or villages they came from or alternatively gone abroad to places as diverse as Germany and China. Indeed, anywhere where they can have something resembling a living wage and a future.

On the other hand I've been lucky in being to keep my head above water financially, but that is just for the time being, my lessons are growing fewer and no new ones are coming along. Occasionally, I am asked if I want to take on new students but almost invariably it doesn't work out as people struggle to pay yet more taxes and rising prices for basics such as power, food and transport.

Like so many others I have had to give up so much over the last 12 months, eating out is just a memory as is going to the cinema or buying new clothes. instead you feel happy if you can earn enough to pay your rent this month and still have enough left over to go food shopping. And I'm one of the lucky ones. Today 20,000 households and businesses will have their power cut off as they did not pay the latest property tax hike included in their electricity bills. The total number of accounts under threat is estimated to be a quarter of a million.

In the meantime Greece's political leaders bicker and pose for the cameras daily issuing statements that show that they have lost touch with the mounting crisis outside parliament. locked away in their offices, surrounded by police guards they indulge in power struggles over who will take over once the present party leaders are toppled. However, given the plummeting poll figures for all three parties involved in the present coalition government whoever the the next leader is, they are about to be charge of not much at all as much of the Greek electorate has written them off as corrupt, venial and inept.

But little of that matters, the packing cases containing my daughter's possessions are still in her bedroom, awaiting a removal van to take her off to a new life and I'm still here trying desperately not to get sucked down into the kind of despair that has debilitated so many people I know.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Trekonomics - The German finance establishment's contribution to the Dismal Science



The term Trekonomics (neologism derived from Star Trek & Economics) was inspired by the article, Germans and Aliens in the New York Times by economist Paul Krugman. In a nutshell Krugman argues that the insistence by German leaders on all EU members producing a budget surplus can only be achieved if we start exporting off-world.

"But the Germans believe that their own experience shows that austerity works: they went through some tough times a decade ago, but they tightened their belts, and all was well in the end.

Not that it will do any good, but it's worth pointing out that Germany's experience can only be generalized if we find some space aliens to trade with, fast."


New York Times

Here's to you, Mr Cameron. Now with new, improved lyrics



And here's to you, Mr Cameron
The markets love you more than you will know (Wo, wo, wo)
God bless you please, Mr Cameron
The City holds a place for those who obey
(Hey, hey, hey...hey, hey, hey)

He'd like to know a little bit about you for their files
He'd like to help you learn to help yourself
Look around you, all you see are CCTV eyes
Staring at you even when you're at home

And here's to you, Mr Cameron
The markets love you more than you will know (Wo, wo, wo)
God bless you please, Mr Cameron
The City holds a place for those who obey
(Hey, hey, hey...hey, hey, hey)

Hide your money off-shore where no one ever goes
Put it in Swiss accounts with all your gold bars
It's a little secret, just the Camerons' affair
Most of all, you've got to hide it from the poor.

Coo, coo, ca-choo, Mr Cameron
The market loves you more than you will know (Wo, wo, wo)
God bless you please, Mr Cameron
The City holds a place for those who obey
(Hey, hey, hey...hey, hey, hey)

Sitting on the front bench on Monday afternoon
Going to the candidates debate
Laugh about it, shout about it
When you've got to choose
Ev'ry way you look at it, people lose

Where have you gone, Maggie Thatcher?
The wealthy turn their lonely eyes to you (Woo, woo, woo)
What's that you say, Mr Cameron
The Iron Lady has left and gone away
(Hey, hey, hey...hey, hey, hey)



Song to the tune of Mrs Robinson.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Monday, January 02, 2012

What the Olympics will really cost you.

"There is a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious,makes you so sick at heart, that you can't take part



"There is a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can't take part; you can't even passively take part, and you've got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you've got to make it stop. And you've got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you're free, the machine will be prevented from working at all! "

Mario Salvio - Berkeley, California 1964