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Showing posts with label BOOKS AND POETRY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BOOKS AND POETRY. Show all posts

November 26, 2012

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On Steven Runciman’s 1453: The Fall of Constantinople



This is a great book review from Hellenic Antidote about 1453: The Fall of Constantinople, by Steven Runciman (ISBN: 9781107604698). Paperback: £10.99.

I’m not sure if there’s much consolation in being a tragic hero – better to prevail than be transfigured – but tragic heroes is precisely how Steven Runciman describes the Greeks in his essential account of the siege and fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks in 1453, which has recently been reissued by Canto Classics.

Beleaguered, outnumbered 10 to one, waiting in vain for the Western aid they had been promised for agreeing to church union, the Greek defenders (and a small group of Genoan and Venetian confederates) refused the besieging sultan’s offer to surrender Constantinople or convert to Islam, and chose instead to trust in their own bravery, the righteousness of their cause and divine intervention to preserve one of the last vestiges of Greek liberty.

But after two months of relentless siege and assault, the Turkish warlord, Sultan Mehmet, frustrated by the resistance of the Greeks, ignoring the advice of some of his commanders to lift the siege and avert further humiliation, decided to make one, final overwhelming attack to take the city.

The speeches made by the Greek and Turkish leaders on the eve of the decisive assault reveal what the two sides believed they were fighting for.

The Byzantine emperor Constantine Palaiologos tells his soldiers that a man should always be prepared to die for his faith or country, his family or sovereign; but now, he says, we are being asked to give up our lives for all four; while Mehmet’s words to his forces are in stark contrast to the heroism and dignity of the Greek emperor. Mehmet urges his troops on by reminding them of the three days of looting they will be allowed should they capture the city, and he inspires his commanders not only with the promise of booty, but also by stressing their sacred duty as Muslims to vanquish this famous Christian capital.

And indeed, once Constantinople is taken, the story of the city becomes one of plunder and depredation.

AMAZON
Runciman describes the pillaging of private homes, churches, businesses; the massacres of men, women and children, the ‘rivers of blood running down the streets’; a slaughter that only abated when the Turkish soldiers realised that keeping the Christians alive and selling them as slaves was a better idea, not that this spared the elderly, infirm and infants who could bring no profit, and were consequently killed on the spot.

As commander in chief, Mehmet was entitled to the greatest share of the loot, which he had paraded before him so he could decide precisely what he wanted. Then the sultan selected 1200 Greek children to be sent as slaves, 400 each, to the three most important Muslim rulers of the time, the sultan of Egypt, the king of Tunis and the king of Grenada; while, from the most prominent Byzantine families, Mehmet had his pick of youths, girls and boys, for his personal seraglio, with those resisting a life of sexual slavery being put to death, as Runciman illustrates with the case of the Grand Duke Lucas Notaras and his son and son-in-law:
    ‘Five days after the fall of the city [Mehmet] gave a banquet. In the course of it, when he was well flushed with wine, someone whispered to him that Notaras’s fourteen-year-old son was a boy of exceptional beauty. The Sultan at once sent a eunuch to the house of the [Grand Duke] to demand that the boy be sent to him for his pleasure. Notaras, whose elder sons had been killed fighting, refused to sacrifice the boy to such a fate. Police were then sent to bring Notaras with his son and his young son-in-law, the son of the Grand Domestic Andronicus Cantacuzenus, into the Sultan’s presence. When Notaras still defied the Sultan, orders were given for him and the two boys to be decapitated on the spot. Notaras merely asked that they should be slain before him, lest the sight of his death should make them waver. When they had both perished he bared his neck to the executioner. The following day, nine other Greek notables were arrested and sent to the scaffold.’
But even if Runciman does not flinch from describing the Turkish capture of Constantinople as being a ‘ghastly story of pillage’ and is not prepared to cover up Mehmet’s ‘savageries’; he is not a crude Orientalist, out to demonise the Turks and Islam and portray Byzantium’s demise in terms of a heroic West versus a barbaric East.

For not only would associating Byzantium with the West be problematic, but it is also clear that, for Runciman, the external agents most responsible for the downfall of Byzantium were not the Turks, but the Franks and Latins, with the disaster of 1453 overshadowed by the catastrophe of the Fourth Crusade in 1204, during which Western Crusaders seized and devastated Constantinople and dismembered and irreparably weakened the Greek empire.

In the third volume of his history of the Crusades, Runciman famously says that ‘there was never a greater crime against humanity than the Fourth Crusade’, and describes the sacking of Constantinople in 1204 as an act of ‘barbarous brutality’, ‘unparalleled in history’, committed by ‘Frenchmen and Flemings… filled with a lust for destruction’.

Thus, the powerful, wealthy and magnificent city seized and sacked by Crusaders in 1204 (and which the West held until 1261, before Greek restoration), was not the city the Turks captured in 1453, which Runciman describes as dying and melancholy, poverty-stricken and sparsely populated.

For Runciman, the Turkish seizure of Constantinople in 1453 did not destroy Byzantium, it merely provided the coup de grâce to a doomed city.

Indeed, memories of 1204 and experience of repressive Western rule in places like Crete, Cyprus and the Peloponnese, provided evidence to many Greeks that the pursuit of church union with Rome in exchange for military support to fight the Turks was both a religious abomination and politically misguided. Not only was there no difference in terms of brutality between Western and Muslim rule – indeed, many Greeks believed the Franks and Latins to be less civilised than the Turks and Muslims; and not only did the policy of church union overestimate the ability and willingness of the West to aid Byzantium against an assertive and powerful Turkish empire; but there was also a case for maintaining the integrity of the Greek church and Greek culture, avoiding the bitter division bound to follow any attempt to enforce religious subordination to Rome, and accepting a period of Turkish subjugation as the most effective way of preserving the Greek nation and offering the best chance for its long-term revival.

Nevertheless, Runciman’s reluctance to demonise the Turks does, in places, lead him to express an undeservedly generous assessment of their ascent to power and rule, which is matched by an excessive willingness to pin the blame for Byzantium’s tragedy on the West.

Thus, after Byzantine defeat at the Battle of Manzikert (1071), Runciman is keen to stress the ‘orderly and tolerant state’ established in Anatolia and Asia Minor by the Seljuk Turks. He describes their government as ‘wise and able’ and argues that ‘the transition of Anatolia from a mainly Christian to a mainly Moslem country was achieved so smoothly that no one troubled to record the details’. Similarly, Runciman praises Osman, the founder of the Ottoman dynasty, as a ‘leader of genius’, while his son, Orhan, is described as a ‘great ruler’, whose administration was so reasonable that many of his Christian subjects preferred it to that of the Byzantines. There were no forced conversions, Runciman declares, and apostasy only occurred when Christians followed a natural inclination to join the religion of the ruling class. As for Mehmet, Runciman says, despite his savageries and the destruction in the immediate aftermath of conquest, under his rule, Constantinople was rebuilt and soon became a thriving city of commerce and finance. ‘Long before his death in 1481,’ Runciman writes:
    ‘Sultan Mehmet could look with pride on the new Constantinople… Since the conquest its population [of Turks, Greeks, Jews and Armenians] had increased fourfold; within a century it would number more than half a million. He had destroyed the old crumbling metropolis of the Byzantine Emperors, and in its place he had created a new and splendid metropolis in which he intended his subjects of all creeds and all races to live together in order, prosperity and peace.’
However, the ‘details’ that Runciman said do not exist to record the Islamisation of Anatolia and Asia Minor are, in fact, painstakingly chronicled by Spyros Vryonis in his The Decline of Medieval Hellenism in Asia Minor and the Process of Islamization from the Eleventh through the Fifteenth Century, in which the author describes a period of savage conquest, a succession of raids and annexations characterised by pillaging, massacre, enslavement and forced conversion of the Byzantine population. Thus the four centuries it took the Turks, from 1071 to 1453, to subjugate Anatolia, Asia Minor and Thrace, did not involve, as Runciman suggests, a ‘smooth’ evolution but was accomplished in a way that amounted to a holocaust for the vanquished.

As for Mehmet’s alleged vision of a tolerant, harmonious empire, this never materialised and could never materialise, given the nature of the Ottoman state, in which religious discrimination and persecution were ingrained. Order was maintained through terror and repression and peace dependent on the whims of the sultan or his pashas or beys who, at any moment, could decide that their Christian subjects, their culture, shrines and very lives, were an affront to Muslim ascendancy and should be suppressed if not extinguished.

Moreover, just as there were Greeks who believed, prior to the fall of Constantinople, ‘better the sultan’s turban than the cardinal’s hat’*, many others, from the political and intellectual elite, admired the West and believed church union would bring about a rich fusion of Greek and particularly Italian humanist culture. Indeed, something of this fusion occurred in Crete and the Ionian islands, on the periphery of the Greek world, where Turkish rule was delayed or never penetrated, with Venetian sway eventually contributing to a cultural breathing space and even flowering for Greeks that was never possible under the Turks. As Runciman himself acknowledges, the Ottomans’ narrow-mindedness, informed by fear and loathing of their Christian subjects, ensured that Greek learning, art and letters were discouraged and ceased to exist for the duration of the Turkish empire.

* Ironically, this statement is attributed to Lucas Notaras, who, as noted above, was executed for refusing to give up his son to become the sultan’s sexual slave.

November 23, 2012

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NEW BOOK - "A Cancer Answer" - Cancer is a word ... Not a sentence.

amazon - click here to buy book
Heather Callaghan
Activist Post

It's been said that a good book lets us know about the author, but a truly good book knows you. A reader of Catherine Frompovich's new book A Cancer Answer will understand why.

Hers is a real-time story of her empowering battle with breast cancer when she opted to take the road rarely traveled - a completely natural holistic treatment. Even though it focuses on breast cancer, what's truly amazing about her work is a truth that profoundly resonates with the following readers:
    Women who have just received a diagnosis.
    Breast cancer survivors - the amount of recurring cancers after allopathic (what we are trained to call 'conventional') treatment is staggering.
    Men with breasts and breast cancer (Yes, that scene in Fight Club was true - there are over 2,000 new cases of male breast cancer each year).
    People struggling with any type of cancer.
    Those recently or currently undergoing Western med treatments (chemo, radiation, surgery) and would like a better chance of healing.
    Women and men of any age with health issues.
    Anyone who wishes to reach their family and friends with both  holistic and allopathic solutions so that they have a fighting chance and better life.
    To support and understand a loved one during their fight.
    All ages and genders who want to be armed with the truth about the faltering modern medical paradigm, food and drug complex, and actual solutions to both fight and prevent cancer.
This book is set up so that you can read it in whole or first skip to the chapters you need in a dire situation to start healing now. It contains steps, suggestions, meal plans and a vast array of research. It is also a springboard, launching one into other resources and quickly connecting you to help in your locale. You will see why body chemistry and your immune system play important roles. Threaded throughout, her real-time writing makes for a compelling read with a surprise at the end.

Reading the first part is akin to G. Edward Griffin's Creature from Jekyll Island except instead of the money system, it's like a medical mystery thriller, connecting all the dots, misconceptions, and deceptions, tracing it to the top.
    Pink Money is infinite and talks with a megaphone and how it controls Congress and steers Western Med.
    Why is it that we are only presented with mammograms for a diagnosis when they don't detect pre-symptom cancer, and lead to cancer with ionized radiation and squishing the breast with 60 pounds of pressure likely to break open tumors?
    If billions have gone into the "Cure" and the "gold standard" treatment, then why have global breast cancer rates gone from 614,000 to 1.6 million annually in just 30 years?
    Why is there fear surrounding holistic treatment when you are 20 times more likely to be killed by "conventional" medicine than being killed in a car accident?
    Why does modern med destroy the immune system and attempt to "poison one into wellness"?
    Up to 91% of oncologists would never try chemotherapy if they had cancer.
It sets the perfect backdrop for what comes later.
These words do not come from Catherine herself - she is presenting words from the medical community's mouths, their studies, their admissions. She covers GMOs, chemicals, chemtrails, food ingredients, Pharma drugs and more. It's enough to make the average Joe or Joan walk away in disgust from modern medicine and the food and chemical complex. It is in no way a medical bash either.

In fact, did you know there are three allopathic methods of detecting cancer safely and years before a ionized radiation-inducing mammogram? All could be covered by your insurance. After reading this book you won't even want to look at the word mammogram ever again and won't have an issue saying "No" to a doctor or societal pressure.

It plainly shows what a dizzying and topsy-turvy Western med world we live in where cut-burn-poison are presented as the only options, and the only ones supported by insurance companies. What's called "quackery" has been tried and trued for millennia. She presents information in a way that flows, but also reaches out to the reader with understanding about the pressure to cave to predatory medicine - it induces so much fear, but her words offer profound courage with knowledge.

Just like a holistic approach to cancer, Catherine’s book builds you up. It becomes a comfort, even exciting, to change paths and try a new way - which is actually an old way. Ways that only seem unconventional now because we've been barraged by Big Pharma, the AMA, WHO, and corporate media pundits for just the last century - but enough time to grow up with and buckle in the pressure and fear.

Your immune system and empowerment are what's needed most to fight cancer, but the modern medical establishment is taught to tear both down. The body is truly amazing when it finally dawns on us that people survive despite modern treatments, certainly not because of them.

Did you know that a woman could live comfortably with a stabilized tumor for 20 years without losing her hair, suffering radiation burns and "chemo brain"? But, it's the pressure, fear and propaganda that tells patients to jump into cut-burn-poison methods. And yet, "Cancer" is written on the death certificates because it's accepted to be par for the course. It's not necessary to live with the tumor or the offered treatment.

How can one book encompass so much, leave no stone unturned? It was also heartfelt, like sitting down with a friend over coffee sharing the scoop. Most of our loved ones caught up in the corporate evening news will not listen to our words - but they'd be hard pressed to ignore Catherine's. She has gone through it and already has battled the confusion, pressure, and deception. She lights and shares a better path. So rather than tell loved ones what I've recently learned from reading A Cancer Answer: Holistic BREAST Cancer Management, I will let it speak for itself.

Think the holistic approach is too expensive because it's deliberately not covered by insurance? Then you'd be blown away to find out what percentage of the average cancer industry cost she spent following her protocol.

In case you're wondering, Catherine is doing exceptionally well. As an added bonus for those considering her path, everyone says "Look at your face!" incredulously when they find out her real age. She has been in the fight a long time and shows no signs of stopping. She didn't have to lose her hair or her sharp research and writing abilities to chemotherapy and burns. She didn't have to suffer or lose her burning drive to continue helping others.

Catherine’s latest book, A Cancer Answer, Holistic BREAST Cancer Management, A Guide to Effective & Non-Toxic Treatments, is available on Amazon.com and as a Kindle eBook.

November 19, 2012

NEW BOOK - "A PIG'S TAIL - Days of Hell with Dr. Lambrakis"


From the Author of "GREEK AMERICAN PIMPS: Charity Corrupted by Politics, Lobbies & Criminal Enterprises" comes a sequel and it is all true.

http://www.amazon.com/PIGS-TAIL-Lambrakis-AMERICAN-ebook/dp/B00A9HATRi

Georgios "George" Gialtouridis and Mitch Fatouros, two crusading activists for diametrically opposed causes and sworn enemies, had to bury their hatchets and join their intellects. They were fighting against time to save a country or two from embarrassment, in an insane web-based Transatlantic chase to stop a clandestine coup d' etat in the financially strapped nation of the Hellenic Republic. Dr. Emmanuel Lambrakis was the front man of END, a gang of rogues with an insidious plan, claiming they had a chest of $2.8 trillion in U.S. bonds, ready to give loans to governments, starting with Greece, Cyprus and Alabama! Yes, ALABAMA! Were they for real, or was Dr. Lambrakis trying to destabilize the currency of the country that had taken him to task, the U.S. Dollar? And who was the CIA general Lambrakis had allegedly met in 2012? Did he have to quit his CIA post afterwards? A TRUE STORY, an international web based thriller from the acclaimed author of "GREEK AMERICAN PIMPS," Mitch Fatouros.

November 4, 2012

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BOOK - A World in Which Truth is a Dying Species


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Senior editor Gaither Stewart lives in Rome and serves as European correspondent for The Greanville Post,  His latest novel, Lily Pad Roll, was just published by Punto Press. Lily Pad Roll is volume two of Stewart’s Europe Trilogy, dealing with post Cold War espionage, the encirclement of Russia, and the maintenance of a global strategy of tension.

LILY PAD ROLL IS AVAILABLE AT AMAZON AND OTHER MAJOR VENDORS WORLDWIDE
$12.45
Paperback: 344 pages
Publisher: Trepper & Katz Impact Books (August 27, 2012)


LILY PAD ROLL
By Gaither Stewart
This article was originally posted at The Greanville Post

Hidden away somewhere within the labyrinth of the Pentagon there must be a top secret euphemism department engaged in the invention of the Orwellian surrogate words that have crept surreptitiously into the American English vocabulary and from there translated into many other languages. In my mind I see a unit of studiously serious executives, coffee mugs in their hands and their neckties awry, devising senseless terms for terrible things and used unthinkingly by people today from New York to California, from Maine to Texas. The goal of my imaginary secret unit is to render ugly terms meaningless or to transform them into their opposite. To quote the perceptive Scottish writer, Candia McWilliam, “plain words are always under threat.” There are words that don’t say what they mean and there are words that say what they don’t mean.

Intensified or enhanced interrogation sounds oh so much more genteel than the hideous word TORTURE. Collateral damage goes down quite well instead of the savage bombing and strafing of a funeral procession or a wedding party. Military leaders themselves have come to love the suggestive word “footprints” to indicate the evidence of America’s powerful presence throughout the world: “We were here and we leave this little sign with you.” A little footprint, maybe a fleet of super bombers or Predator drones.

The point to keep in mind is that the names of things, issues, objects of life change, but the substance of the object itself remains—torture will always be torture, no matter what the gnomes propose and the media parrot.

Today, though generally unknown among the public, the relatively new term, “lily pad”, is making its way forward to describe not that beautiful manifestation of nature but the new version of America’s over 1000 military bases and garrisons spreading across some 150 countries of planet Earth. You can always count on those Pentagon gnomes. They regularly come up with something new. It remains unclear however if they first invent the terms and the military executes their implications or if the military experiments with a new lethal strategy and the gnomes then give it a purified label.

In the case of the “lily pad”, this linguistic version of the sheep in wolf’s clothing, was allegedly conceived to spread the U.S. footprint into every corner of our planet and to make military bases more effective and comprehensive while giving the impression that the government is both protecting “our way of life”, while also saving taxpayer money—money then used for more weapons and the hiring of more mercenaries and for payoffs to eager satraps of the Empire’s vassal states; some nations, peoples, and even minor empires can be more easily bought than subdued militarily.

WHAT IS A MILITARY LILY PAD?

Nature’s lily pad is a floating leaf of the white water lily family. The scientific name of lily pad is nymphaea odorata. You might see a bullfrog sitting on a lily pad in a pond. The lily pad does not sink under its weight. The giant water lily, victoria amazonica, has the world’s biggest lily pad, up to four feet, which can support the weight of several people at once. The lily pad lies tranquilly on the surface of the pond, offering both refuge and camouflage for the frog, protecting it from predators. The lily pad fits in with its natural surroundings, as does the frog.

Some nature-loving gnome then had the genial idea of a military base-lily pad. Why? For what purpose? For it is not true that smaller, more mobile lily pad-like bases, remain hidden and much cheaper. Nor is it true that local people, even in the jungle of a Pacific island do not know about them, are blind to their presence. Soldiers in jungle clothing jogging through the bush are not invisible. That planes landing and taking off are unheard and unnoticed is absurd. The 1000 military bases today cost the U.S. taxpayer’s less? Not on your life, naïve taxpayer!

Is the U.S. objective to make less impact on local populations with a smaller presence, a less visible footprint and simultaneously perhaps offer employment to a few locals? Jamais de la vie! As if anyone in those secret Pentagon rooms gave one hoot in hell about those little brown people? Besides, just because a lily pad base appears to be the opposite of huge Ramstein or other city-like military bases in Germany and in the USA home territory itself doesn’t mean that what begins as a lily pad in Bulgaria will not quickly become small towns as well. Soldiers have to be offered comfortable living conditions, which means bars and shops and eating places and medical facilities and private rooms for many; it means no latrine cleaning and kitchen police jobs for soldiers; locals do that for low pay. Soldiers today demand to have their families with them, which means apartment blocks and private cars and schools and hospitals. Moreover, every job the lily pad gnomes remove from the USA and outsource abroad, means less jobs in America.

That 1000 lily pad bases across the world cost the American taxpayer less is thus an illusion, a false clue to the raison d’etre of the so-called lily pad bases. The law of the unstoppable growth of bureaucracy dictates that with enough time small bases will  become big bases. That is the way of the world. You build runways and training grounds and a few barracks and voila, the initially Spartan lily pad grows into another Ramstein. Meanwhile, military bases, whether lily pads or Ramsteins, continue to erode what remains of the U.S. image the world over, exacerbating hate for the USA wherever they are found.

So why? Why the string of America’s military bases. Why the already failed experiment of tiny lily pads when all they mean is expanded U.S. militarization of the world? The why lies in the answer: it is part and parcel of American occupation of the world. The New World Order. The American Century.

Of course U.S. world domination remains the ultimate goal but the explanation is insufficient. Though a great part of the globe is already under U.S. domination, whether of the direct military sort or purely economic, there are still some hurdles to achieve total dominion. Not only obstacles but America’s own manias and phobias to be overcome.

For there remains Russia and China to be dealt with. Touchy subjects indeed. Though total madness to consider, war with either is possible but in my estimation not probable. In any case, it is a mistake to lump the two great nations together or even to attempt to juxtapose the two. Russia is Russia; China is China. Russia is a much more immediate problem for U.S. aims than is China. As the astute student of international affairs and Presidential candidate Mitt Romney said in the third presidential debate “Russia is America’s greatest enemy.”

Here I have zeroed in on the Russian hurdle, wondering if the USA even has a legitimate Russian policy. In the mind of the mad planners, Russia is more than just a geopolitical problem. More than New World Order. The answer to the riddle to many like Romney is Russia. America rejects anything that can strengthen Russia. America fears Russia. America fears the revival of the Russian empire. The USA might prefer to bypass unbypassable Russia. But it cannot. Remember the old post-World War II quip that “the real role of NATO is to keep the Russians out (of Europe), the Americans in and the Germans down”?  Still valid today.

Ideologically Europe might agree with America even though it makes no economic sense because Europe’s real, long-term interests lie in Russia. It depends on its neighbor Russia. Russia is more European than America’s Neocons even imagine. Even Adolf Hitler knew that. Especially today, Europe depends on the natural gas of which Russia has the world’s greatest reserves.  Geopolitically, Russia was also the reason for America’s theft of the province of Kosovo from Serbia. It is not for oil. It is not to inch closer to Iran. It is Russia. Though Russia lost many lands after 1989, it still supported its brothers in Serbia, a nation which refused to embrace capitalism. America’s military establishment and their Neocon pals accused Serbia of genocide. But Serbs were no more criminal than Croats and Bosnians and Albanians … and Americans.

Like space shield bases in Czech Republic and military bases in Poland and the Baltic States, the encirclement of Russia lies at the heart of lily pad strategy, which means nothing more than more military bases. Crush the Russians so they never rise again. Russia and its Socialist messianism. Its mission to save the world! You cannot nuke Russia because they have the bomb too … and the possibility of delivering it. So encircle them. Then squeeze them.

Let me says a few words about the relationship between Russia and the U.S. theft of  the heart of Serbia. You might read entire studies that it was for protection of the oil pipelines. The Anglo-American alliance to dominate oil and gas routes and corridors from the Caspian to the Black Sea across the Balkans. The scramble for control of the national economies of the entire former Soviet bloc. The alliance between the U.S. Defense Department and oil cartels. OK! Granted, oil is a small part of the reason. Meanwhile all kinds of covert activities originate in Kosovo.CIA secret detention-torture centers. Drugs from Afghanistan and the recycling of drug money. Militarization along the strategic East-West corridors. Kosovo is a living footprint of American power moving steadily eastwards.Imposition of the sacred dollar over the euro. That is all part of it. But never forget the containment of Russia. Control of the Balkans starts in Russia’s friend, Serbia. To crush Russia, smash Serbia. That is the fundamental point. Behind every Serb, the saying goes, stands a Russian. Fucking Russian Commies anyway!  Let them drink themselves to death without ever ever regaining one centimeter of world control.

Think of U.S. policies toward Russia—“America’s great enemy!”—and remember that the old geopolitical encirclement philosophy is still on the table. Since 1917 when revolutionary Russia dared oppose capitalism encirclement of Russia has been right in the center of the table. Crush Russia and you crush Socialism. The final solution of the Russian-Socialism question. Crush any idea that smacks of Socialism, America’s eternal obsession.

For American planners Communism is always a threat and old habits of containment of Great Russia are hard to break. Russians believe U.S. hostility toward them derives from something buried in America’s puritanical genetic make-up. That Americans consider them barbarians they have to contain … as ancient Rome did the barbarians in the wild north. That America has to encircle and circumscribe them and dictate and preach to them and look down on them … just as one Adolf Hitler did. Maybe there is also jealousy, Russians suspect. Envy of Russia’s vast lands. Envy of its great culture. Russia has something that America lacks. Ignorant cynics might say that it has to do with the great natural gas reserves in Siberia. In any case, though the source of the perceived Russian threat is a mystery, the memory of competition with Russia for world domination during the Cold War remains alive in the West, especially across the Atlantic. Russia has something to do with the existence of the soul. That famous Russian soul that prompted the esoteric thinker Rudolf Steiner to predict that the “cultural epoch” after the present one dominated by Europe and the USA would be led by spiritual, messianic Russia.

Time lends transparency to events that are jumbled when they happen but which turn out to be historical landmarks. Post-communist Russia was defenseless. The USA could do as it liked in the world. Attack Iraq to get back at Russia. Establish lily pad bases along Russia borders to threaten Russia. Get Serbia to get Russia.

Despite Castro and Chavez and victories by left-leaning leaders in a handful of nations to the South, Latin America remains pretty much a great American colony. The Arab world and the Middle East are under attack and one nation after the other has already fallen. The little publicized U.S. penetration in Africa is practically unopposed. America controls Asia from Australia, Japan, Hawaii, the Guam military island and power economic influences in Southeast Asia. But there remain Russia and China. I believe Russia is truly American enemy number 1. I believe the attack on China is to be an economic-dominated one of accommodation in which the rest of the world becomes Coolies.

In any case, for now the lily pad bases spread from West to East along the belly of Russia. Step by step. From base to base. A new language of conquest. Creeping, creeping inexorably from West to East. Along the underbelly of deep, deep Russia, lying in wait.

For Russia is back. Russia is not about to roll over like a poodle for America. If Washington is pointing toward another Cold War—this time with even greater stakes and threats to world peace—Russia too is getting ready. Russia feels targeted by America. Russia asks which countries are targets for America’s space shields in East Europe? The U.S. answer is silence. What country has the type of missiles America aims at intercepting? The answer is Russia. Therefore Russia assumes the U.S. space shield is aimed at it. Now American-led NATO land forces have passed the River Oder into Poland—just as Hitler once did—and deployed its lily pads near Russia’s borders. This is much more menacing than another Cold War.

Russia, in American eyes the enemy of progressive mankind. Russia, guilty of the Great October Revolution of 1917. Russia, a threat to the New World Order. Communist Russia chose a new direction of social evolution, qualitatively different from the Western direction, and it achieved certain successes. Communist Russia’s solutions to fundamental social problems and its quickly developed scientific, intellectual and creative potential in such a short time frightened the West no less than Russia’s military potential and its messianism. For many nations of the world the experience of Socialist Russia became an infectious prototype, a paradigm for the poor of the world. The post-war Soviet Union imposed its social order on the countries of Eastern Europe, immensely increasing its influence in the rest of the world while the Communist idea expanded over the planet.

At that point Capitalism faced the threat of decline or historical death while Soviet Russia became the second Superpower. That meant Cold War. Cold because both sides had enough nuclear power to destroy the planet. For many decades the West feared the Russian threat because it realized that in an open military confrontation between the USA and Soviet Russia, the victory of world Communism might have become real. Under the influence of Russian Communism the West itself had to adopt socialist features for a short time—the profit motive was cut short, an antiracist movement was born in the West, working people insisted on social rights, social security was established, colonialism declined, a kind of popular democracy seemed to be developing; social democracy flourished.

Such is the accusation against Russia. The threat to “our way of life”. Thus the Russian nation is the heart of evil, the propaganda gnomes preached, guilty of crimes against humanity. We must inculcate in people the truth that Russia is the Empire of Evil, the Soviet period a black hole in the history of mankind, and Socialism a crime against human progress. Russia itself must be destroyed for the sake of the salvation of the Western world and its values.

For Russia the growing number of U.S. bases near their borders threaten to set off new Cold Wars. Great Britain, like empires before it, had to close most of its foreign bases in the midst of an economic crisis in the 1960s and 1970s. The United States is headed in that direction. For surely it is only a question of time before America is forced to do the same—its mountainous national debt ought to be crippling it. But it seems to have discovered the capacity to live on virtual money—at everyone else’s expense.

The USA is again facing the same old conundrum. The US military believes that America must maintain its advantage as Russia and China start to expand their own military. Both are starting from a base a tenth the size of the US military without all the overhead of the cold war infrastructure. But America can’t afford the military machine it maintains today. Meanwhile Neocon gnomes have convinced Americans that they have a divine right to protect their selfishly affluent lifestyle and the global corporate interests on which it depends—but that Russia, spiritual, messianic Russia, stands in the way to freedom and “our way of life”, the never-ending American dream, which must be preserved at any cost. “Freedom”, “democracy” and “our way of life” (selfish and unsustainable)—all lies in the service of American Empire.

October 24, 2012

,

I Am The Hellene That...


I am the Hellene that...
  • battled the barbarians and the Persians in Marathon and in Plataeas and defeated them all
  • the one who did not kneel at Thermopylae when faced with death
  • and the one who was never afraid to die, but rather chose to fall as a proud man that day

I am the Hellene that...
  • created language and words, founded the arts, set the foundations for the sciences and culture
  • the one who gave the world the Olympics and taught all of you about what "fair play" in sports is
  • taught the world how to sell their goods, and then enjoy life through art
  • and the one who mastered citadels such as the Acropolis, Epidaurus, etc.

I am the Hellene that...
  • taught the world how valuable FREEDOM is
  • and the one who made it clear that if man is deprived of this right, then he deserves to die for it while singing "Hail, Oh Hail ... Freedom ..."
  • the one who invented the word "filotimo", and showed all of you how to honor this word
  • and the one who showed you how to truly value friendship and family

But... I am also the Hellene that...
  • the world does not want to allow to thrive and prosper
  • the one that they strike at the most by sowing discord
  • the one that the world continually limits and does not allow to develop
  • and all this because I am probably the one you all envy the most ... 
Yes... I am an Hellene...
And I AM BACK!
 The Time For Re-Hellenization Has Arrived

Personal interpretation from a poem titled "Είμαι ο Έλληνας!" (video below)
Signed
Marina Spanos




October 21, 2012

Karl Kraus: In War, Business is Business - Ain't That The Truth...

Karl Kraus (April 28, 1874 – June 12, 1936) was an Austrian writer and journalist, known as a satirist, essayist, playwright and poet. Wikipedia describes him as being one of the foremost German-language satirists of the 20th century, especially for his witty criticism of the press, German culture, and German and Austrian politics. One of his prized masterpieces is a satirical play about the First World War, titled Die letzten Tage der Menschheit (The Last Days of Mankind). It combines dialogue from contemporary documents with apocalyptic fantasy and commentary from two characters called "the Grumbler" and "the Optimist". Here are a few extracts from the play:

From Last Days of Mankind (1922)
Translated by Max Knight and Joseph Fabry


Grumbler:…A sermon for peace is not as effective as an editorial for war. But since all sermons are preached to support war…

Optimist: I’ll admit, that wasn’t the message of salvation prophesied at Bethlehem.

Grumbler: Oh, but Bethlehem in the United States corrects the mistaken prophesies of nineteen hundred years ago.

Optimist: In the United States?

Grumbler: Bethlehem Steel, the greatest arms manufacturer in the world. Every German church contributes its mite to that new spirit of Bethlehem.

Optimist: A mere coincidence that Germany’s enemies are supplied with arms by a company called Bethlehem.

Grumbler: Headed by Germans.

Optimist: You must be joking. The American steel trust is headed by Carnegie.

Grumbler: No, by Charles M. Schwab.

Optimist: What? German-Americans produce weapons for the enemy?

Grumbler: No, German nationals.

Optimist: Who says so?

Grumbler: The Wall Street Journal. It says that twenty percent of the Bethlehem stock is held by Germans – not German-Americans, but German nationals. And why not? Business is business.

Optimist: In politics, success is success. That’s why I think that the sinking of the Lusitania will not fail to impress the world.

Grumbler: Yes, indeed. At least that part of the world where people are not yet numb to horror. The reaction in Berlin is characterized by an announcement in a cabaret showing a film about the catastrophe. It says: “The Sinking of the Lusitania. See It As It Happened! During This Number Smoking Is Permitted.”

Optimist: A lapse of taste. But to me the Lusitania is not a matter of sentiment.

Grumbler: No, it’s a matter of crime.

Optimist: The people had been warned.

Grumbler: What you call a warning was a threat to commit a crime – the mass murder was preceded by blackmail. A blackmailer cannot plead innocent for having announced his crime in advance. If I threaten to kill you unless you do what I have no right to ask you to do, I’m not a warner but a blackmailer. And afterwards I’m not an executioner, but a murderer. Smoking permitted. My country right or wrong; so what if a few children are drowned.

Optimist: The U-boat had no choice but…

Grumbler: …to play the part of the iceberg that struck the Titanic a few years back. At that time it was the wrath of God about the arrogance of this technical age that tried to teach men through horror what he wouldn’t learn through reverence. But now the God of technology does the teaching – that’s progress. As the smasher of the Titanic, the name of the Lord was still mentioned. This time the heroes of the U-boat remained anonymous. The story that the captain received an award is branded enemy propaganda.

Optimist: Of course, the captain has no such claim to heroism as, say, William Tell.

Grumbler: Why not? His deed is being praised as heroism, instead of being kept secret like his name.

Optimist: The deed might not be heroic but it served a purpose. The Lusitania carried arms that would have killed Germans.

Grumbler: And were manufactured by Germans.

References
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Kraus
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2012/10/21/karl-kraus-in-war-business-is-business/

October 14, 2012

Review On New Biography of Patrick Leigh Fermor

130
130 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Robert MacFarlane reviewing Artemis Cooper's new biography of Patrick Leigh Fermor in Saturday's Guardian...

Perhaps the most remarkable thing about Patrick Leigh Fermor's legendary life is that it lasted as long as it did. He died in 2011 at the age of 96, having survived enough assaults on his existence to make Rasputin seem like a quitter. He was car-bombed by communists in Greece, knifed in Bulgaria, and pursued by thousands of Wehrmacht troops across Crete after kidnapping the commander of German forces on the island. Malaria, cancer and traffic accidents failed to claim him.

He was the target of a long-standing Cretan blood vendetta, which did not deter him from returning to the island, though assassins waited with rifles and binoculars outside the villages he visited. He was beaten into a bloody mess by a gang of pink-coated Irish huntsmen after he asked if they buggered their foxes. He smoked 80 cigarettes a day for 30 years, and often set his bed-clothes ablaze after falling asleep with a lit fag in hand. He drank epically, and would 'drown hangovers like kittens' in breakfast pints of beer and vodka. As a young SOE agent in Cairo in 1943, the centrepiece of his Christmas lunch was a turkey stuffed with Benzedrine pills; at the age of 69 he swam the Hellespont — and was nearly swept away by the current.

Yes, Leigh Fermor was an insurer's nightmare, an actuary's case-study, and his longevity was preposterous. He might best be imagined as a mixture of Peter Pan, Forrest Gump, James Bond and Thomas Browne. He was elegant as a cat, darkly handsome, unboreable, curious, fearless, fortunate, blessed with a near-eidetic memory, and surely one of the great English prose stylists of his generation.

Fermor wrote two of the last century's outstanding travel books — A Time Of Gifts (1977) and its sequel Between The Woods And The Water (1985) — about a walk he did as a young man from the Hook of Holland to Constantinople. I've read and enjoyed immensely both these books. The final volume of the trilogy will appear posthumously from John Murray next year. I can hardly wait.

http://solitary-walker.blogspot.gr/2012/10/an-adventurous-life.html

Slavoj Žižek And His Book "The Year of Dreaming Dangerously"


The Year of Dreaming Dangerously
By Slavoj Žižek
Verso Books & Google Books


Call it the year of dreaming dangerously: 2011 caught the world off guard with a series of shattering events. While protesters in New York, Cairo, London, and Athens took to the streets in pursuit of emancipation, obscure destructive fantasies inspired the world’s racist populists in places as far apart as Hungary and Arizona, achieving a horrific consummation in the actions of mass murderer Anders Breivik. The subterranean work of dissatisfaction continues. Rage is building, and a new wave of revolts and disturbances will follow. Why? Because the events of 2011 augur a new political reality. These are limited, distorted—sometimes even perverted—fragments of a utopian future lying dormant in the present.

Exclusive final chapter from Žižek’s new book, The years of dreaming dangerously

So where do we stand now, in 2012/ 2011 was the year of dreaming dangerously, of the revival of radical emancipatory politics all around the world. Now, a year later, every day brings new proofs of how fragile and inconsistent the awakening was, with all of its many facets displaying the same signs of exhaustion: the enthusiasm of the Arab Spring is mired in compromises and religious fundamentalism; the OWS is losing momentum to such an extent that, in a nice case of the “cunning of reason,” the police cleansing of Zuchotti Park and other sites of the OWS protests cannot but appear as a blessing in disguise, covering up the immanent loss of momentum. And the same story goes on all around the world: the Maoists in Nepal seem outmaneuvered by the reactionary royalist forces; Venezuela’s “Bolivarian” experiment more and more regressing into a caudillo-run populism… What are we to do in such depressive times when dreams seem to fade away? Is the only choice we have the one between nostalgic-narcissistic remembrance of the sublime enthusiastic moments, and the cynically-realist explanation of why the attempts to really change the situation had to fail?

The first thing to state is that the subterranean work of dissatisfaction is going on: rage is accumulating and a new wave of revolts will follow. The weird and unnatural relative calm of the Spring of 2012 is more and more perforated by the growing subterranean tensions announcing new explosions; what makes the situation so ominous is the all-pervasive sense of blockage: there no clear way out, the ruling elite is clearly losing its ability to rule. What makes the situation even more disturbing is the obvious fact that democracy doesn’t work: after elections in Greece and in Spain, the same frustrations remain. How should we read the signs of this rage? In his Arcades Project, Walter Benjamin quotes the French historian André Monglond: “The past has left images of itself in literary texts, images comparable to those which are imprinted by light on a photosensitive plate. The future alone possesses developers active enough to scan such surfaces perfectly.” Events like the OWS protests, the Arab Spring, demonstrations in Greece and Spain, etc., have to be read as such signs from the future. In other words, we should turn around the usual historicist perspective of understanding an event out of its context and genesis. Radical emancipatory outburst cannot be understood in this way: instead of analyzing them as a part of the continuum of past/present, we should bring in the perspective of the future, i.e., we should analyze them as limited, distorted (sometimes even perverted) fragments of a utopian future which lies dormant in the present as its hidden potential. According to Deleuze, in Proust, “people and things occupy a place in time which is incommensurable with the one that they have in space”: the notorious madeleine is here in place, but this is not its true time. In a similar way, one should learn the art to recognize, from an engaged subjective position, elements which are here, in our space, but whose time is the emancipated future, the future of the Communist Idea.

However, while one should learn to watch for such signs from the future, we should also be aware that what we are doing now will only become readable once the future will be here, so we should not put too much hopes into the desperate search for the “germs of Communism” in today’s society. One should thus strive for a delicate balance between reading signs from the (hypothetic Communist) future and maintaining the radical openness of the future: openness alone ends up in decisionist nihilism which constrains us to leaps into the void, while full reliance on the signs from the future can succumb to determinist planning (we know what the future should look like and, from a position of meta-language, somehow exempted from history, we just have to enact it). However, the balance one should strive for has nothing to do with some kind of wise “middle road” avoiding both extremes (“we know in a general sense the shape of the future we are moving towards, but we should simultaneously remain open to unpredictable contingencies”). Signs from the future are not constitutive but regulative in the Kantian sense; their status is subjectively mediated, i.e., they are not discernible from any neutral “objective” study of history, but only from an engaged position—following them remains an existential wager in Pascal’s sense. We are dealing here with the circular structure best exemplified by a science-fiction story set a couple of hundred years ahead of our time when time travel was already possible, about an art critic who gets so fascinated by the works of a New York painter from our era that he travels back in time to meet him; he discovers that the painter is a worthless drunk who even steals from him the time machine and escapes to the future; alone in today’s world, the art critic paints all the paintings that fascinated him in the future and made him travel into the past. In a homologous way, the Communist signs from the future are signs from a possible future which will become actual only if we follow these signs—in other words, they are signs which paradoxically precede that of which they are signs. Recall the Pascalean topic of deus absconditus, of a “hidden god” discernible only to those who search for him, who are engaged in the path of this search:

“God has willed to redeem men and to open salvation to those who seek it. But men render themselves so unworthy of it that it is right that God should refuse to some, because of their obduracy, what He grants others from a compassion which is not due to them. If He had willed to overcome the obstinacy of the most hardened, He could have done so by revealing Himself so manifestly to them that they could not have doubted of the truth of His essence; as it will appear at the last day, with such thunders and such a convulsion of nature that the dead will rise again, and the blindest will see Him. It is not in this manner that He has willed to appear in His advent of mercy, because, as so many make themselves unworthy of His mercy, He has willed to leave them in the loss of the good which they do not want. It was not, then, right that He should appear in a manner manifestly divine, and completely capable of convincing all men; but it was also not right that He should come in so hidden a manner that He could not be known by those who should sincerely seek Him. He has willed to make himself quite recognizable by those; and thus, willing to appear openly to those who seek Him with all their heart, and to be hidden from those who flee from Him with all their heart. He so regulates the knowledge of Himself that He has given signs of Himself, visible to those who seek Him, and not to those who seek Him not. There is enough light for those who only desire to see, and enough obscurity for those who have a contrary disposition.”

God gives these signs in the guise of miracles, and this is why the same mixture of light and obscurity characterizes miracles: miracles are not visible as such to everyone, but only to believers—skeptical non-believers (to whom Pascal refers as “libertins,” in a typical 17th century way, as opposed to the 18th century predominant meaning of debauchery) can easily dismiss them as natural phenomena, and those who believe in them as victims of superstition. Pascal thus openly admits a kind of hermeneutic circle in the guise of the mutual interdependence of miracles and “doctrine” (the church teaching): “Rule: we must judge of doctrine by miracles; we must judge of miracles by doctrine. All this is true, but contains no contradiction.” Perhaps, one can apply here Kant’s formula of the relationship between reason and (sensuous) intuition: doctrine without miracles is sterile and impotent, miracles without doctrine are blind and meaningless. Their mutual independence is thus not symmetrical: “Miracles are for doctrine, and not doctrine for miracles.” In Badiou’s terms, miracle is Pascal’s name for an Event, an intrusion of the impossible-Real into our ordinary reality which momentarily suspends its causal nexus; however, it is only an engaged subjective position, a subject who “desires to see,” which can truly identify a miracle.

Read more - http://www.lacan.com/thesymptom/?page_id=2354

May 13, 2012

E-BOOK - The True Story of the Bilderberg Group

The book "The True Story of The Bilderberg Group" is an investigative report that provides a fascinating account of the annual meetings of the world’s most powerful and influential people. Since its inception in 1954 at the Bilderberg Hotel in the town of Oosterbeek, the so called "Bilderberg Group", comprised of European prime ministers, American presidents and the wealthiest personalities in the whole world, comes together to discuss the economic and political future of humanity.

The press has never been allowed to attend, nor have statements ever been released on the attendees' conclusions or discussions, which have ramifications on the citizens of the world.

Using methods that resemble the spy tactics of the Cold War, the author describes what was being said behind the closed doors of the opulent hotels and has made it available to the public for the very first time. This is a MUST READ





March 26, 2012

e-BOOK - Greece's 'Odious' Debt:The Looting of the Hellenic Republic


In his book titled "Greece's 'Odious' Debt:The Looting of the Hellenic Republic by the Euro, the Political Elite and the Investment Community" Jason Manolopoulos combines his experience of the global financial system, European politics and Greek society to demonstrate how one of the EU's smaller countries played a catalytic role in a crisis that threatens the future of the euro, and possibly even of the European Union itself.

The book which we choose to feature here on hellasfrappe explores the historical legacy and psychological biases that have shaped an on-going drama. While leaders of the European Union criticise ;the markets' for destabilizing the single currency, Manolopoulos book interrogates the shared beliefs of the EU and the investment banking community ; and how they colluded for a decade in the illusion that lending huge sums to peripheral eurozone countries was safe. Policy and investment errors bear marked similarities with earlier financial crises ; in particular the Exchange Rate Mechanism system and the Argentine debt crisis.

This inability to learn history's recent lessons, says Manolopoulosin his book, begs fundamental questions of policy making, which this book discusses. Greek society also comes under scrutiny, as shocking details of a kleptocratic political class and a wasteful public sector are revealed. Manolopoulos traces these developments back to dictatorship and civil war, but argues that there is no excuse for their continuation in a modern democracy.

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March 3, 2012

Lord Byron's "Modern Greece- Through A Timelapse Lens (VIDEO)



Modern Greece
(song of the Greek poet in "don Juan")

George Gordon Lord Byron
born 1788, died 1824
 
The isles of Greece, the isles of Greece!
Where burning Sappho loved and sung,
Where grew the arts of war and peace, -
Where Delos rose, and Phoebus sprung!
Eternal summer gilds them yet,
But all, except their sun, is set.

The Scian and the Teian muse,
The hero's harp, the lover's lute,
Have found the fame your shores refuse;
Their place of birth alone is mute
To sounds which echo further west
Than your sires' "Islands of the Best."

The mountains look on Marathon -
And Marathon looks on the sea;
And musing there an hour alone,
I dream'd that Greece might still be free;
For standing on the Persian's grave,
I could not deem myself a slave.

A king sate on the rocky brow
Which looks o'er sea-born Salamis;
And ships, by thousands, lay below,
And men in nations; - all were his!
He counted them at break of day -
And when the sun set where were they?

And where are they? and where are thou,
My country? On thy voiceless shore
The heroic lay is tuneless now -
The heroic bosom beats no more!
And must thy lyre, so long divine,
Degenerate into hands like mine?

'Tis something, in the dearth of fame,
Though link'd among a fetter'd race,
To feel at least a petriot's shame,
Even as I sing, suffuse my face;
For what is left the poet here?
For Greeks a blush - for Greece a tear.

Must w e but weep o'er days more blest?
Must w e but blush? - Our fathers bled.
Earth! render back from out thy breast
A remnant of our Spartan dead!
Of the three hundred grant but three,
To make a new Thermopylae!

What, silent still? and silent all?
Ah! no; - the voices of the dead
Sound like a distant torrent's fall,
And answer, "Let one living head,
But one arise, - we come, we come!"
'Tis but the living who are dumb.

In vain - in vain; strike other chords;
Fill high the cup with Samian wine!
Leave battles to the Turkish hordes,
And shed the blood of Scio's vine!
Hark! rising to the ignoble call -
How answers each bold Bacchanal!

Yor have the Pyrrhic dance as yet,
Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone?
Of two such lessons, why forget
The nobler and the manlier one?
You have the letters Cadmus gave -
Think ye he meant them for a slave?

Fill high the bowl with Samian wine!
We will not think of themes like these!
It made Anacreon's song divine:
He served - but served Polycrates -
A tyrant; but our masters then
Were still, at least, our countrymen.

The tyrant of the Chersonese
Was freedom's best and bravest friend;
T h a t tyrant was Miltiades!
Oh! that the present hour would lend
Another despot of the kind!
Such chains as his were sure to bind.

Fill high the bowl with Samian wine!
On Suli's rock, and Parga's shore,
Exists the remnant of a line
Such as the Doric mothers bore;
And there, perhaps, some seed is sown,
The Heracleidan blood might own.

Trust not for freedom to the Franks -
They have a king who buys and sells:
In native swords, and native ranks,
The only hope of courage dwells;
But Turkish force, and Latin fraud,
Would break your shield, however broad.

Fill high the bowl with Samian wine!
Our virgins dance beneath the shade -
I see their glorious black eyes shine;
But gazing on each glowing maid,
My own the burning tear-drop laves,
To think such breasts must suckle slaves.

Place me on Sunium's marbled steep,
Where nothing, save the waves and I,
May hear our mutual murmurs sweep;
There, swan-like, let me sing and die:
A land of slaves shall ne'er be mine -
Dash down yon cup of Samian wine!

January 27, 2012

Tribute To Hope: Elytis And A Solitary Swallow


A SOLITARY SWALLOW
Lyrics: Odysseas Elytis
Music: Mikis Theodorakis

A solitary swallow
and Spring’s great worth is found.
It takes a lot of work
to make the sun turn round.
Their shoulder to the wheels
it takes a thousand dead.
It also takes the living
to offer up their blood.



ΕΝΑ ΤΟ ΧΕΛΙΔΟΝΙ
Στίχοι: Οδυσσέας Ελύτης
Μουσική: Μίκης Θεοδωράκης

Ενα το χελιδόνι κι η άνοιξη ακριβή
για να γυρίσει ο ήλιος θέλει δουλειά πολλή
Θέλει νεκροί χιλιάδες να 'ναι στους τροχούς
Θέλει κι οι ζωντανοί να δίνουν το αίμα τους.

Θε μου Πρωτομάστορα μ' έχτισες μέσα στα βουνά
Θε μου Πρωτομάστορα μ' έκλεισες μες στη θάλασσα!

Πάρθηκεν από μάγους το σώμα του Μαγιού
Το 'χουνε θάψει σ' ένα μνήμα του πέλαγου
σ' ένα βαθύ πηγάδι το 'χουνε κλειστό
μύρισε το σκοτάδι κι όλη η άβυσσος

Θε μου Πρωτομάστορα μέσα στις πασχαλιές και Συ
Θε μου Πρωτομάστορα μύρισες την Ανάσταση



August 31, 2011

"Capitalism and Freedom"

In my quest to promote reading I came across a book several weeks ago, that I thought was quite extraordinary and quote controversial.  "Capitalism and Freedom" was published in the 1960s and some describe it as the Bible of Economics. A little boring yes, but if you want a good "backdrop" to the current global economic crisis, then it is a must read.


In his 1962 book entitled "Capitalism and Freedom", Milton Friedman (July 31, 1912 – November 16, 2006) advocated policies such as a volunteer military, freely floating exchange rates, abolition of medical licenses, a negative income tax, and education vouchers. Some say he is the essence of the so called "Chicago school of conservative/libertarian economics", while others claim that he is the driving force behind former US President Ronald Reagan's supply side economics. 

The book was originally published in 1962 by the University of Chicago Press. It sold over 400,000 copies in the first 18 years and more than half a million since 1962. It has been translated into 18 languages. 

The book is a compendium of all the things that governments should NOT be and should NOT be involved with, for the simple reason that they restrict individual freedom. Unfortunately several of the things he argues about have been dismantled since the 60s, while others have grown, and his theories on government regulation might sound a bit out of base in the light of the economic crisis we face in 2011. Nonetheless there is some logic in this book. It does not surprise me thereafter that the Times Literary Supplement chose it as one of the "hundred most influential books since the war (WWII)". A little dry yes, but nonetheless a worthwhile read.

Friedman was an American economist, statistician, academic, and author who taught at the University of Chicago for more than three decades. His books and essays were well read and were even circulated illegally in Communist countries.Most economists during the 1960s rejected Friedman's economic views, but since then they have had an increasing international influence. Some of his laissez-faire ideas concerning monetary policy, taxation, privatization and deregulation were used by governments, especially during the 1980s. A man with a huge intellect and education, but... little regard for human beings (that is totally my opinion).



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August 19, 2011

New book says 9/11 might of been a CIA cover-up

September 11, 2001 attacks in New York City: V...Image via Wikipedia 
Did the CIA keep mum about two 9/11 hijackers because it tried and failed to recruit them? Anthony Summers and Robbyn Swan, authors of 'The Eleventh Day,' on whether there’s any truth behind ex-Bush official Richard Clarke’s claim.

Former White House counterterrorism coordinator Richard Clarke has reignited controversy by speculating, in an interview cited in Thursday’s Daily Beast, that the CIA intentionally withheld advance knowledge of two of the 9/11 hijackers from the White House and the FBI, in an attempt to cover up the agency’s failed effort to recruit the two men as assets.

Clarke’s comments—and immediate, emphatic denials from former CIA director George Tenet and two senior CIA officials involved—go to the core of one of the enduring enigmas about 9/11.

Things began to unravel for the CIA on the day of the attacks, just four hours after the Qaeda strikes, according to research we conducted for our new book, The Eleventh Day. Soon after 1 p.m. that day, at agency headquarters in Langley, an aide handed Director Tenet the passenger manifests for the four downed airliners. “Two names,” he said, placing a page on the table where the director could see it, “these two we know.”

Tenet looked, then breathed, “There it is. Confirmation. Oh, Jesus ...”

There on the manifest for Flight 77, listed as traveling in first class, were the names of Nawaf al-Hazmi and his brother, Salem. Also on the manifest, near the front of the coach section, was passenger Khalid al-Mihdhar.

The names Hazmi and Mihdhar were instantly familiar, Tenet has said, because his people had learned only weeks earlier that both men might be in the United States. According to the director’s version of events, the CIA had known of Mihdhar since as early as 1999, identified him as a terrorist suspect by December that year, had him followed, learned he had a valid multiple-entry visa for the United States, and placed him and comrades—including Hazmi—under surveillance for a few days in Southeast Asia. Later, in the spring of 2000, the agency had learned that Hazmi, who also had a multiple-entry visa, had arrived in California.

The director said after 9/11, though, that—in spite of having gained such dynamite information—the CIA had done absolutely nothing about it. The agency had not asked the State Department to place the two terrorists on watch lists at border points, nor asked the FBI to track them down if they were in the United States—not until 19 days before 9/11. The omission, according to the CIA, was simply the result of multiple mistakes.

Historical puzzles are as often explained by screw-ups as by darker truths. What is known of the evidence on Hazmi and Mihdhar, however, makes the screw-up version hard to swallow. Not least because the CIA version of events suggests its officials blew chances to grab the two future hijackers time and time and time again.
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More sex please, we’re Greek: Exposing the myth of "Platonic" love


Plato lent his name to Platonic love but a new book reveals that the ancient Greek philosopher never advocated love without sex.

University of Manchester science historian Dr Jay Kennedy, who hit the headlines last year after revealing he had cracked the code in the great thinker’s writings, has now published a decoder’s manual that lays bare the secret content of Plato’s ancient works.

“Plato – the Einstein of Greece’s Golden Age – was long thought to favour love without sex, or ‘Platonic love’, but this new research reveals Plato was far from being a prude,” says Dr Kennedy, who is based in the Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine, part of the University's Faculty of Life Sciences. “The decoded symbols in fact show that Plato was not an advocate of Platonic love at all; rather he urged a middle path. For him, morality meant moderation – he wanted people to avoid both promiscuity and abstinence.

“Before Plato, sex was about rutting and producing heirs. Plato marks a shift in the history of Western sexuality and some say he invented romance, but, for him, erotic passion was a spiritual force that helps us find our true selves within the deepest, human bond. Eros, or love, was a creative force that inspired art, literature, and the sciences.”

Dr Kennedy cracked the code within Plato’s texts last year when an unexpected insight led him to realise that Greek music was key to interpreting the writings of the Athenian philosopher and mathematician. Kennedy’s new book, The Musical Structure of Plato’s Dialogues, reports on the hidden doctrines revealed so far, including those in The Symposium, a philosophical text concerned with love.


August 11, 2011

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New book claims that the Simitis gov’t had agreed in 2002 not to extend Greece’s territorial waters

From what it seems exploratory talks –via secret diplomacy - about natural gas and petroleum in the Aegean have been going on for decades! A former Turkish foreign ministry diplomat, Deniz Bolukbasi, claims that the former PASOK government under Costas Simitis (with Foreign Minister George Papandreou) had agreed with the Turkish government in 2002, that Greece would refrain from expanding its territorial waters to 12 nautical miles from the current six in specific areas of the Aegean. He also spoke of “grey zones” in the Aegean.

According to his book, which was featured in an article on the Sabah newspaper, the Simitis government had agreed on not extending Greek territorial waters to 12 nautical miles in the following areas:
  • East Aegean islands and regions in front of the Turkish coast.
  • The islands of Samothrace and Limnos and the northern coasts of Turkey, overlooking the eastern and southern fronts.
  • The islands of Mytilene, Psara, Chios on the northern and southern facades.
  • The northern side of the island of Samos.
  • Ikarya Island's north, south and west facades.
  • Extending from the Mediterranean Sea offshore from the islands of Mykonos-Ikarya zone status.
  • Rhodes-Karpathos channel, Anti-Kithra Kassos-Crete-and Crete’s channel.
In other words…. All of the Aegean!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Commenting on this startling news, the Greek Communist Party said on Wednesday that Hellenes should be on their guard regardless of what the government will say or not say.  The KKE underlined that “the risk for sovereign rights is huge,” considering that “the NATOisation and co-exploitation of the Aegean is always on the table - as KKE has revealed long ago - because this is what certain powerful representatives of the Greek and Turkish plutocracies want.”

The Opposition Coalition of the Left, Movements and Ecology (Synaspismos) Party also referred to the issue requesting a parliament briefing on the Greek-Turkish negotiations on the Aegean and called for a meeting of the National Council on Foreign Policy.

Synaspismos lashed out at the government stressing that it is “unacceptable for the political parties and public opinion in Greece to be briefed by unofficial Turkish press reports on aspects of the 50, so far, rounds of talks between Greece and Turkey that focused on sensitive national issues.” Synaspismos added that “secret diplomacy does not benefit the people and entails the risk of being utilised for self-serving purposes, even for domestic consumption.”

“The continental shelf issue, and the differences between the two countries that stem from it, should be settled based on international law and the joint recourse to the International Court of Justice in The Hague,” Synaspismos stressed. It also maintained that this prospect “is a solution that will safeguard transparency and the peaceful settlement of differences for the benefit of the two neighbouring peoples in a period of time when the deep economic crisis allows for no petty-opportunism or relaxation.”

Sources:




July 26, 2011

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New Turkish film casts light on 1954 events in Constantinople (VIDEO)


The Turkish government has never formally apologised for the state`s role in the violence 54 years ago. Mihail Vasiliadis's friends warned the teenager to leave work early and go home to his family on Sept. 6, 1955. Within hours, mobs were attacking thousands of shops, churches and homes throughout Istanbul in a rampage against ethnic Greeks that eventually led thousands to leave Turkey. "It was the shock of a lifetime, but it was something that wasn't talked about for 50 years," said Vasiliadis, who was aged 15 at the time and is now one of just 2,800 or so Greeks left in Istanbul. He is now the editor of Apoyevmatimi, Constantinople's last Greek-language newspaper.


Now a film entitled "Guz Sancisi," or "The Pain of Autumn", tells the story of that night more than half a century ago, the first time a Turkish movie has tackled the events that Constantinople Greeks call their "Kristallnacht". The fictional love story of Behcet and Elena, a Turkish man and a Greek woman, is set against the tension that culminated in the real-life destruction of 5,300 businesses and houses owned by Greeks, Armenians and Jews. More than 500,000 people have seen the film since its release last month, according to its distributor Ozen Film.

Television talk shows and newspapers have covered both the film and the discussion of the events on which it is based. Its makers say the public debate is a result of an easing of curbs on freedom of expression accompanying Turkey's drive to meet European Union membership standards. This film couldn't have been made 10 years ago, screen writer Etyen Mahçupyan told Today's Zaman, Though the laws on the books still limit free speech, the reality is there's less and less that can't be criticized.

Rev. Dositheos Anagnostopoulos, a spokesman for the Greek Orthodox Church in Constantinople said, The chances of something like this happening again are slim, because Turkish youth today are more critical in their thinking. But to be sure, they need to learn that this catastrophe occurred, that's why the film is important.

A film like this might be just a film in another country, Mahcupyan continued, because there's been a vacuum and this issue was never discussed, the film now fulfils an important mission. 

Guz Sancısı (Autumn Pain) w/ English subtitles, 9 (TURN ON YOUR YOUTUBE CAPTIONS)


June 22, 2011

New Book: Why Leaders Lie (VIDEO)




"Why leaders lie" is the title of a book that was recently published by John Mearsheiner, professor of political science at the University of Chicago (Internazionale, 27-05 - 2011, p. 5). The book lists serious lies proclaimed by Donald Rumsfeld, former Secretary of Defence of the United States ("We know there are weapons of mass destruction"), the Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi ("The Italian left wants to turn our cities into camps of gypsies, invaded by aliens) and presidents of several democratic countries. 

The lies of the powerful are of various kinds. There are those of a personal character, as when once elected, politicians forget or deny campaign promises. There are lies with economic content. And there are those who justify or provoke wars, massacres of entire peoples and countries launching into inconceivable and meaningless adventures, as did George Bush and now the governments that coordinate military action in Libya and other countries. A Catholic bishop of Tripoli declared: "NATO troops are dropping bombs on civilian targets, destroying hospitals and making our lives unbearable."

They were allies of Gaddafi until a few months ago. Now they are supporting the rebel terrorists to ensure the continuity of their interests in oil wells and minerals in the country."  In the U.S., Nethanhyahu, Prime Minister of Israel, said he is in favor of peace in the Middle East, but at the same time, made it clear he opposes a Palestinian state. What is behind this lie is: "We need to sell the weapons that we manufacture and we do not have anyone to use them against except the Palestinians. Therefore, we will continue the war."

Corruption is not only theft and wealth acquired in a clearly dishonest form. The exorbitant profits of big banks, against which no one protests, is a form of corruption of power. A politician elected for a type of government program that betrays his voters, and carries out a program counter to that for which he was elected commits political corruption.

To destroy a pest, you must remove the roots of the problem. We will only win against deep corruption when we, from the grassroots, organize a participatory society that not only elects governments, but controls and has power over them at any moment, to confirm or dismiss our legal representatives. Elsewhere in the world that is beginning to be done. The powerful who lie and that defend structural injustices had better take care. 








Translated from the Portuguese version by:

Lisa Karpova
Pravda.Ru


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