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Sharing leads to learning. Learning turns us wiser. Wisdom blooms in solidarity.
5/14/11
Welcome to reality...Debtocracy is here, obey!
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4/23/11
A little bit of Soul...
For how long vanity will rule our lifes? Isnt it the time to make the next step and understand our role in this time-limited life?
What is your goal? To get rich? To make a happy family ? To be happy? Do you have in mind that as everything in this world you are gonna die? Whatever you own
will no longer be yours. It was never yours. No my friends, 'do whatever you can and want cause we're all gonna die' is not a path to be followed..I have to be cruel..
If there is nothing afterlife, there is NO point trying to build a better world...If void is waiting us, why should I care for my children - I will be nothing after my death
so inevitably I will not give a damn! It is a paradox! And really, i find it really not-clever to believe that we were born out of nothing, to live a life of 60-70-80 years and then
return to nothingness!!! What's the point ???? Well, My point is that life is more than this. You can feel it everytime you are helping someone or someone else is helping you without gain - that small little moment that
happiness and joy fills your very body and soul. These moments give us a sign of what's to come - what's to be lived...And these moments clearly point that our vanity
misleads us to wrong paths where this connection with eachother-nature-God-whatever is lost. And the lives of the poor,the sick,the innocent or the homeless are full of these moments...I wonder
about ours...
You are not living in this world only for your children or for planet Earth, but mostly for your Soul...Yes you got one...
Believe in It...Fight for It!
Peace and Love
4/10/11
Looking back and forth through world's polarity

“No need to hear your voice when I can talk about you better than you can speak about yourself. Only tell me about your pain. I want to know your story, I want to know your story and tell it back in a new way. Tell it back to you in such a way that It has become mine, my own. Rewriting you I will rewrite myself anew. I m still author, authority. I’m still colonizer , the speaking subject”.
This is a quote by Bell Hooks(popular postcolonial writer) in his effort to demonstrate the binary opposition of we –they , where in the one extreme position stands the Europeans and generally the West culture and in the other the East or the Orient, respectively.
Using this argument as a starting point, we’ll try to investigate briefly the roots and the influence of Eurocentric perception when making accounts or speak about the different cultures of the world.
Firstly, it is essential to examine the connection of politics and theory and theory here, stands for literary criticism, the language of the most popular books we read and teach, the discourse used by the university teachers, the material chosen to be presented in the class, the language of mass media etc. There is a widely admitted view that wants theory and especially the academic theory “as the realm of culturally and socially privileged”. Such an assumption is damaging, as it keeps theory and politics separated from each other, thus isolated from reality. The act of writing should be treated and viewed as a highly political activity, as an inseparable unity, because theory is always ideologically motivated and charged. Consequently, it is important to overcome any kind of binary fixity and investigate the possibility of a cultural politics that avoids politics of polarity and questions the established categorization. Moreover we need to erase the popular binarism between Orient (east) and Occident (west) world in terms of culture as it’s not only ahistorical but also intentional. It is intentional because the academic language is used as another mean of power producing a discourse of the “Other” reinforcing even more the disportionate influence of the West. What’s our response to H.Bhabha’s question “Are the interests of Western theory necessarily collusive with the hegemonic role of the West as a power bloc?”. And differently worded, what is at stake in the naming of theory as Western?
The response is obvious, by doing so, institutional power and ideological Eurocentricity immediately occur. No matter that many writers acknowledge and respect eastern cultures , many times they fail to confront the “other” as the active agent of articulation. They treat it as the periphery rather than the centre. The voice of the these people may be quoted or cited but it’s always considered secondary, valuable for comparisons, contradictions or when needed to point the differences. So, once again it’s a matter of vital importance to overcome the fixed opposition of the either-or and pass to both-and, whenever we speak about another culture or people from other countries. The East cultures have so many things to present in terms of history, philosophy, art, civilization and it is our responsibility to let them speak about themselves, because they know better and more. Let’s stop for a while and let them define themselves and their own identities instead of perpetuating predefined irrational ideas. The Western thinking underestimates the value of Orient and the only way to be heart is to be hidden in a western costume expressing opinions in English. The European-American discourse inevitably brings the colonizer’s perspective.
3/21/11
What do you see? ( For the worldwide day of Poetry)
And his First Word the Last of the Men shall speak:
Τhe grass to grow tall, the Woman at his side to emerge like a Sunbeam and again He shall adore the Woman and He shall lay Her on the grass, according to the order of things.
"Worthy it is(Αξιον Εστί), 1959
3/11/11
Living On The Edge...
If you hopefully understand this, you can connect the things happening nowadays in the world. Instability everywhere, people have lost hope for a better future in most of the countries, the faith in the current political systems is decreasing day by day, while no alternatives occur anymore! Yes, yes, again there are people trying, there are organisations that think, but νothing big, nothing new, nothing radical. Thats the biggest goal of the system we are living in. To destroy cultures,religions,local systems of beliefs and organisation in favor of their plan. The creation of a global system for everyone, that they will NOT imply on us but WE will ask for it. It's like our democracy dudes! They tell you that you have the power to elect and change everything, while all the parties are the same,controlled by higher powers,financed by the global monsters and in the end serving their purposes and not their peoples ones. Isnt it?? Thats exactly what they are trying to do in a global scale. And they are close to it! Open your eyes and minds, its there... I do not want to propagandize for anything and I know that many of you will laugh with all these.I do not care.I got nothing to lose and nothing to win. And so do YOU. But that's a different story - maybe we ll talk about it soon....For now,I just need to say to all, these :
Keep the Faith
1/15/11
Mankind's Gift
1/12/11
Think Different...Think of the World...
1/7/11
Wisdom Lost - Wisdom Found
10/18/10
It was always about the Journey - Ithaka
hope the voyage is a long one,
full of adventure, full of discovery.
Laistrygonians and Cyclops,
angry Poseidon—don’t be afraid of them:
you’ll never find things like that on your way
as long as you keep your thoughts raised high,
as long as a rare excitement
stirs your spirit and your body.
Laistrygonians and Cyclops,
wild Poseidon—you won’t encounter them
unless you bring them along inside your soul,
unless your soul sets them up in front of you.
Hope the voyage is a long one.
May there be many a summer morning when,
with what pleasure, what joy,
you come into harbors seen for the first time;
may you stop at Phoenician trading stations
to buy fine things,
mother of pearl and coral, amber and ebony,
sensual perfume of every kind—
as many sensual perfumes as you can;
and may you visit many Egyptian cities
to gather stores of knowledge from their scholars.
Keep Ithaka always in your mind.
Arriving there is what you are destined for.
But do not hurry the journey at all.
Better if it lasts for years,
so you are old by the time you reach the island,
wealthy with all you have gained on the way,
not expecting Ithaka to make you rich.
Ithaka gave you the marvelous journey.
Without her you would not have set out.
She has nothing left to give you now.
And if you find her poor, Ithaka won’t have fooled you.
Wise as you will have become, so full of experience,
you will have understood by then what these Ithakas mean.
10/8/10
On Globalization and NeoColonialism....Games of Power
10/2/10
Liberty??? Are you sure? ...Living in the Big Brother State ...
Greek subs in http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xf0rtj_tvxs-gr-yyyyyy-yyyyyyy-yyyyyyy_people
8/24/10
The heresy of the Greeks offers hope
The crisis that has led to Greece's "rescue" by European banks and the International Monetary Fund is the product of a grotesque financial system that itself is in crisis. Greece is a microcosm of a modern class war rarely reported as such, but waged with all the urgency of panic among the imperial rich.
What makes Greece different is that it has experienced, within living memory, invasion, foreign occupation, military dictatorship and popular resistance. Ordinary people are not cowed by the corrupt corporatism that dominates the European Union. The right-wing government of Kostas Karamanlis that preceded the present Pasok (Labour) government of George Papandreou was described by the sociologist Jean Ziegler as "a machine for systematically pillaging the country's resources".
Epic theft
The machine had infamous friends. The US Federal Reserve board is investigating the role of Goldman Sachs, which gambled on the bankruptcy of Greece as public assets were sold off and its tax-evading rich deposited €360bn in Swiss banks. This haemorrhaging of capital continues with the approval of Europe's central banks and governments.At 11 per cent, Greece's budget deficit is no higher than America's. However, when the Papandreou government tried to borrow on the international capital market, it was effectively blocked by the US corporate ratings agencies, which "downgraded" Greek debt to "junk". These same agencies gave triple-A ratings to billions of dollars in so-called sub-prime mortgage securities and so precipitated the economic collapse in 2008.
What has happened in Greece is theft on an epic, though not unfamiliar, scale. In Britain, the "rescue" of banks such as Northern Rock and the Royal Bank of Scotland has cost billions of pounds. Thanks to Gordon Brown and his passion for the avaricious instincts of the City, these gifts of public money were unconditional, and the bankers have continued to pay each other the booty they call bonuses and to spirit it away to tax havens. Under Britain's political monoculture, they can do as they wish. In the US, the situation is even more remarkable. As the investigative journalist David DeGraw has reported, the principal Wall Street banks that "destroyed the economy pay zero in taxes and get $33bn in refunds".
In Greece, as in America and Britain, the ordinary people have been told they must repay the debts of the rich and powerful who incurred them. Jobs, pensions and public services are to be slashed and burned, with privateers put in charge. For the EU and the IMF, the opportunity presents to "change the culture" and to dismantle the social welfare of Greece, just as the IMF and the World Bank have "structurally adjusted" (impoverished and controlled) countries across the developing world.
Greece is hated for the same reason Yugoslavia had to be destroyed physically behind a pretence of protecting the people of Kosovo. Most Greeks are employed by the state, and the young and the trade unions comprise a popular alliance that has not been pacified; the colonels' tanks on the campus of Athens University in 1967 remain a political spectre. Such resistance is anathema to Europe's central bankers and regarded as an obstruction to German capital's need to capture markets in the aftermath of Germany's troubled reunification.
Shock therapy
In Britain, such has been the 30-year propaganda of an extreme economic theory known first as monetarism, then as neoliberalism, that the new Prime Minister can, like his predecessor, describe his demands that ordinary people pay the debts of crooks as "fiscally responsible". The unmentionables are poverty and class.Almost a third of British children remain below the breadline. In working-class Kentish Town in London, male life expectancy is 70. Two miles away, in Hampstead, it is 80. When Russia was subjected to similar "shock therapy" in the 1990s, life expectancy nosedived. In the United States, a record 40 million cannot afford to feed themselves.
In the developing world, a system of triage imposed by the World Bank and the IMF has long determined whether people live or die. Whenever tariffs and food and fuel subsidies are eliminated by IMF diktat, small farmers know they have been declared expendable. The World Resources Institute estimates that the toll reaches between 13 and 18 million child deaths every year. This, wrote the economist Lester C Thurow, is "neither metaphor nor simile of war, but war itself".
The same imperial forces have used horrific weapons against stricken countries where children are the majority, and approved torture as an instrument of foreign policy. It is a phenomenon of denial that none of these assaults on humanity, in which Britain is actively engaged, was allowed to intrude on the British election.
The people on the streets of Athens do not suffer this malaise. They are clear who the enemy is and regard themselves as once again under foreign occupation. And once again, they are rising up, with courage. When David Cameron begins to cleave £6bn from public services in Britain, he will be bargaining that Greece will not happen in Britain. We should prove him wrong.