Hello all,
Thank you so much for your interest and support.
The occupation of our hospital in Kilkis by its workers started on Monday, February 20th, at 8:30 local time. This occupation is not only about us, the physicians and the workers at the Kilkis Hospital. Neither is it only about the Greek National Health System, which is collapsing, indeed. We are in this fight because what are in real danger now is the human rights. And this threat is not against just a nation, or against a few countries, or a few social groups, but against the low and middle classes in Europe, America, Asia, Africa, in the whole world. Today’s Greece, is tomorrow’s picture of Portugal, Spain, Italy and the rest of the countries worldwide.
The workers at the Kilkis Hospital and at most of the hospitals and health centers in Greece are not paid on time and some of them see their salaries being cut down to practically zero. A fellow-worker of mine was transferred to our cardiologic clinic in shock, when he realized that instead of receiving the usual check of 800 euros (yes; that is his monthly salary) from the state, he received a note saying that not only he will be paid nothing for this month, but he is also to return 170 euros. Other workers were paid only 9 (nine) euros for this month. Those of us who still receive some kind of a salary will support them in any way we can.
This is a war against the people, against the whole community. Those who say that the public debt of Greece is the debt of the Greek people are lying. It is not the people’s debt. It was created by the governments in collaboration with the bankers in order to enslave people. The loans to Greece are not used for salaries, pensions and public care. It is exactly the opposite: salaries, pensions and care are used to pay the bankers. They are lying. Contrary to what they declare, they do not want a debt-free society. They create the debts themselves (with the help of corrupt governments and politicians) for their own benefit. They gave Greece a banker as prime minister to ensure that the “job” will be done properly. Our Prime Minister Lucas Papademos was not elected at all. He was appointed by the ECB and the bankers with the help of European and Greek corrupt politicians. This is their interpretation of the term “democracy”.
The debts are created by bankers who create money out of thin air and collect interest, just because our governments gave them the right to do so. And they keep saying that for those debts it is you and me and our children and grandchildren that will have to pay with our personal and national assets, with our lives. We do not owe them anything. On the contrary, they owe the people a great part of the fortunes they made thanks to the political corruption.
If we do not open our eyes to this truth, we will soon all become slaves, working for 200 or less a month. That is those of us who will be able to find a job. No medical care, no pensions, homeless and starving, as now is the case with my fellow citizens in Greece. Thousands of them live outdoors and starve.
We have no intention to paint the reality with dark colors, but this is the truth. This situation is not due to a financial or monetary accident or mistake. It is the start of the ugly phase of a long process following a carefully designed plan, a process that has started decades ago.
We have to fight together against this neoliberal plan. And this is what we, in Kilkis and in so many cities around the world, do now.
For the time being, we are not considering the opening of a donations account. We might, however need to do this in a few months or even weeks, if the situation worsens. What we currently need most of all is moral support and publicity. Local struggles all around the world have to spread and gain massive support if we are to win the war against the corrupt system. If you can think of any additional ways to spread our news and ideas, it would be great.
You can contact us at enosi.kilkis@yahoo.gr
Again, we can’t thank you enough for your kind thoughts and words.
Yours,
Leta Zotaki, director of the radiology department, Kilkis Hospital
member of the workers’ general assembly
president of the Union of the Hospital Doctors in Kilkis (ENIK)
Source: Contra Info, 26 Feb 2012
Comments
Re: Message from a member of the workers’ general assembly, ...
AS LONG AS I HAVE MINE
If I were in Greece, I would try to hang on a couple more weeks until the weather warms up. Then I would try to get out. I don’t know how. I would have no money, no friends, and nowhere to go. But I’d try to get out of Greece.
Before the war began, Greece had the lowest suicide rate in Europe. Now Greece has the highest suicide rate, especially among males aged 30 to 50. A Greek person in despair has no one to turn to. The Greek Orthodox Church refusals burial to anyone who commits suicide. It worships the Beast that prowls the streets.
Crime continues to skyrocket, but the police are only concerned with protecting the rich and the politicians.
The masses in other countries say, “Good. As long as I have mine, fuck ‘em.”
Their time is coming, and right soon. For those living in gutters, in storm drains, and in tent cities, their time has already come. And still the world says, “Good. As long as I have mine, fuck ‘em.”
This is the way the world ends. “As long as I have mine, fuck ‘em.”
Nothing can stop this as long as the Greek military sides with the bankers and their puppet politicians, and as long as the world blesses the increasing genocide against the Greek masses.
“As long as I have mine, fuck ‘em.”
Greece has long since defaulted on all loans, but the bankers will not call this a “default,” since then the bankers would have to pay on the insurance they sold (credit default swaps). If that happened, countless banks would become insolvent overnight, triggering a domino effect around the world. So the Greek masses will continue to be exterminated.
Incidentally, this is the reason MF Global went bust. MF Global had used massive leverage to invest heavily in Greek and other European bonds. When the ECB said some investors in those bonds might have to take a 50 percent haircut (that is, receive half the profit they expected), MF Global was in trouble. It was so over-leveraged that even a 3 percent haircut would have finished the company. MF Global filed insurance claims, but the banks refused to pay on the insurance they sold. So the MF Global leaders stashed their duffel bags with $1.2 billion in cash, and bolted. CEO John Corzine was a former U.S. Senator, former governor of New Jersey, a Goldman Sachs man, and a main player in the Bilderberg Group.
Oh well.
“As long as I have mine, fuck ‘em.”