Greeks vent anger at entire political class
ATHENS |
ATHENS (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of Greeks vented their anger at the nation's political classes in Athens on Sunday, staging the biggest in a week of protests as the government seeks backing for yet more austerity.
The huge crowd packed Syntagma Square in front of the Greek parliament, booing, whistling and chanting "Thieves! Thieves" as they pointed at the assembly building.
"We've had enough. Politicians are making fools of us. If things stay as they are, our future will be very bleak," said a 22-year-old student who gave his name as Nikos.
Unlike the violent protests last year when radicals clashed with police, the peaceful crowds on Sunday were made up of ordinary Greeks, some of whom brought along their children.
Greeks are angry no politicians have been punished for the corruption they blame for the crisis, as well as the dire state of the economy and waves of austerity demanded under the terms of a 110 billion euro ($157.5 billion) bailout from the European Union and IMF last year.
Greeks have been protesting on Syntagma Square for five days, fired up by similar demonstrations across Spain. They were joined on Sunday night by a small group of Spaniards who had come to show their solidarity, raising banners in Spanish.
Spain has not had to seek an international bailout, unlike Greece, Ireland and Portugal, but it also faces major budget problems, lack of confidence in its debt, and demand for reform.
Police put Sunday's crowd at 30,000 although the protesters, who have few formal leaders and are prompted by Facebook, say official figures usually underestimate the size of demonstrations by a wide margin.
Before the Syntagma Square rallies began, some Spanish protesters had accused Greeks of being too passive.
But on Sunday Ifigenia Argyrou, a 57-year-old insurance consultant, said all that had changed.
"People were indignant but they needed a motivation to express that. The Spanish people gave us that motivation," she told Reuters. "We are not sleeping, we are awake. The IMF should get out. There are other solutions without them."
Officials from the International Monetary Fund, EU and European Central Bank are in Athens checking Greece's fiscal progress to approve a 12 billion euro aid tranche -- the fifth under the current bailout -- and possibly new funding the country needs to avoid debt default.
In return, the EU wants Athens to impose yet more austerity and reform, including privatisations.
Prime Minister George Papandreou's PASOK has a comfortable majority in parliament but one weekend opinion poll showed it had lost its lead for the first time since it won elections in 2009.
(Editing by David Stamp and Maria Golovnina)
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As soon as the Greek People learn that each individual’s dependence on the system begets subservience and corruption, suffocating the seed of virtue, and rendering each individual a fit tools for the design of the politicians’ ambitions, they will have taken the first step towards freedom.
As soon as the Greek People learn that so-called “rulers” are the servants and agents of the People; and that People are their masters, they will have comprehended the notion of self-representation.
As soon as the Greek People learn that rightful liberty is unobstructed action according to our will within limits drawn around us by the equal rights of others;
As as soon as they understand that this liberty doesn’t necessarily exist ‘within the limits of the law’, because law is often but the tyrant’s will, and always so when it violates the rights of the individual;
And as soon as they comprehend that “no man has a natural right to commit aggression, by law or otherwise, on the equal rights of another, and this is all from which the laws ought to restrain him;
And as soon as they comprehend that a “law by any collective consensus” becomes a tool of aggression or violence limiting or violating the equal, inalienable rights of some individuals over or against the equal rights of other individuals, such law becomes a law of tyranny and must be rendered null and void;
The Greek People will have become a free people and will be able to rid themselves of the tyrannical system they have subjected themselves to.



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