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Posts Tagged ‘Greece’

Turkish PM says all defense ties with Israel will be cut and warns over Cyprus

by Phantom Ace ( 5 Comments › )
Filed under Dhimmitude, Headlines, Islam, Islamic hypocrisy, Islamic Invasion, Islamic Supremacism, Islamists, Israel, Muslim Brotherhood, Turkey at September 6th, 2011 - 7:21 pm

The genocidal nation of Turkey again lashes out at Israel and Cyprus.  PM Tayyip Erdogan says all military ties to Israel will be cut. In addition he says he might visit Gaza and confirmed that Turkey will start sending warships to the Eastern Mediterranean. He also warned Cyprus about developing their gas fields.

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said on Tuesday that Turkey was “totally suspending” defense ties with Israel, after downgrading diplomatic relations with the country.

While it was initially reported that Erdogan had also suspended all trade ties between the two nations, this was later clarified to refer to defense-related trade only.

“Trade ties, military ties, defense industry ties – we are completely suspending them. This process will be followed by different measures,” Erdogan told reporters in Ankara.

But an official at Erdogan’s office later told Reuters the prime minister was referring to military and defense trade ties only, not overall trade, which last year reached a total bilateral volume of $3.5 billion.

[….]

Asked about exploratory drilling for natural gas by Greek Cypriots, Egemen Bagis, Turkey’s European Union minister, told Turkish media last week: “It is for this (reason) that countries have warships. It is for this (reason) that we have equipment and we train our navies.”

It’s time for Israel to stop being nice. They need to reach out to the Greek Cypriots and strengthen ties. Whatever information they have on Turkish capabilities should be given to Cyprus, Greece and Armenia. The Turks are genocidal monsters and I have no respect for their debased culture born of rape.

Greece: First the Bad News, Then the Good

by 1389AD ( 36 Comments › )
Filed under Dhimmitude, Europe, Islam, Sharia (Islamic Law) at August 27th, 2011 - 11:00 am


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Waving Greek flag

Winds of Jihad: Bankrupt Greece Builds a Mosque For Illegal Mohammedans

(also see: Christians Under Attack)

…What economic crisis? Greek government spending $15 million to build mosque in Athens

“Building To Be Reconstructed Into Mosque For Muslim Community In Athens,” by Penny Koutourinis for the Greek Reporter, July 23 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):

The Greek government will finance the reconstruction of building structures into mosques for the Muslim community in Athens. Estimated to cost less than 15 million, the existing plans for the mosque will serve 500 faithful Muslims.The building of the former Naval Base in Botanikos has been chosen and once it is renovated and converted, it will operate as an Islamic mosque in Athens. According to the amendment tabled in parliament it will be incorporated in a bill being debated by the Ministry of Environment Energy and Climate Change which governs energy issues…

Can this be true or have they just lost their minds? They don’t have money to pay their bills but they can find 15 million dollars to build a mosque?

INCREDIBLE!!!! INCREDIBLY STUPID!!!! As Pogo once said, “We have met the enemy and he is us.” I guess 400 years of subjugation by the Turks wasn’t enough. Now it appears that they are letting the wolf into the hen house.

Winds of Jihad: Anti-dhimmitude in Greece: Shari’a Abolished for Greek Muslims

According to an article of the Greek newspaper “Eleftherotypia”, under the scope of reforms in the Greek Family Law, the Shariah will be abolished for Greek Muslims.

This Muslim law establishes among others the right of polygamy and gives only to men the right to divorce their wives which constitutes a problem for the women in Thraki, Northern Greece. Even in Turkey, this law was abolished in 1926.

In addition, this law does not comply with the Greek constitution which establishes the equality of Greeks regarding the application of the laws and the equality of men and women. The National Committee on the Human Rights considers that the Shariah does not protect minorities but abuses the rights and values of all the Greek Muslims.

It is also announced that the family and hereditary relations of all Greek citizens will be regulated by Greek Laws. Thus, the Mufti will only be religious leader of Greek Muslims and will no longer have judicial authorities. (wow! just wow! from the Greek Reporter)




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Greek Coast Guard Stops Hamas Flotilla

by 1389AD ( 8 Comments › )
Filed under Europe, Gaza, Hamas, Headlines, Islamic Terrorism, Israel, Military, Palestinians at July 2nd, 2011 - 1:09 pm

Greek coast guard boards US boat to Gaza
Greek Coast Guard boards US boat to Gaza (h/t: The Jawa Report)

JPost: ‘Hamas leader is brain behind Dutch flotilla’

Hamas leader from Holland Amin Abu Rashid has been seen in recent days training with a Gaza-bound flotilla crew in Greece, according to a report by Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf on Thursday.

Rashid, described as the “brain” behind the flotilla, helped arrange the purchasing of the Dutch boat expected to be used in the expedition, De Telegraaf reported.

Rashid also allegedly organized the majority of the funding for the flotilla, the report said.
[…]
“The participation of Hamas member Amin Abu Rashid in the flotilla, who is known for fundraising money for Hamas terror operations, is clear proof that this is not a humanitarian flotilla, but a provocation and a terror operation in disguise of a flotilla,” Edelstein said. [emphasis added]

“In the previous flotilla, Abu Rashid expressed his intentions to clash with IDF soldiers and we must take into account that this will be his intention in the current flotilla. Israel is prepared for every scenario and the world’s countries must now reinforce the country seven-fold,” the minister added.

Activist flotilla stopped in Greece

ATHENS — An activists’ flotilla, including a Canadian vessel, that is trying to breach the Israeli sea blockade of Gaza Strip has been stopped in Greece.

Coast guard officials in the country intercepted one of the flotilla’s vessels Friday after it tried to defy a Greek ban on boats sailing to Gaza.

The Audacity of Hope, a U.S. vessel, sailed without warning, leaving behind nine other boats that were supposed to be taking part in the protest.

It was quickly intercepted by a coast guard boat with six masked, armed men on board.
[…]
As the news spread Friday that the U.S. boat had been stopped, activists slammed what they called an “out-sourcing of Israeli foreign policy.”

The group behind the Canadian ship that’s part of the flotilla, the Tahrir, issued a statement on its website, saying their vessel was now blockaded in Greece.

“We have been unjustly and duplicitously treated.” said Irene MacInnes of the Tahrir organizing committee, in an online statement.

“The government of Israel, shamefully with the tacit support of the Harper government, is doing everything in its power to maintain the blockade.”

“Israel has in effect extended the illegal blockade of Gaza to Greek ports, using the Greece’s economic difficulties to influence the government’s position”, said David Heap of the organizing committee.

Activists also blamed Israel for the sabotage of two of their boats and for a campaign of harassment and dirty tricks against activists.

Israel has flatly rejected accusations of skulduggery as “paranoid.” A foreign ministry spokesman accused the activists of “living in a James Bond film.”

But Israeli has repeatedly said it is determined to stop the flotilla and on Thursday urged defiant organizers not to create “new friction” in the region.

Flotilla activists’ called for Greece to resist Israel’s diplomatic pressure.

But on Friday, the Greek coast guard announced that the Gaza-bound mission could not leave their ports — at least for the moment.

“The departure of ships with Greek and foreign flags from Greek ports to the maritime area of Gaza has been prohibited today,” the coast guard said in a statement, an hour before the ship set sail.

“All appropriate measures” should be taken to implement the ban, it said.

When the Audacity tried to break the ban, they were quickly intercepted and escorted back to Keratsini port Friday evening, said a spokesperson for the activists.

“Six masked men on a Greek coast guard boat came up along side and pointed their weapons at the passengers,” said Jane Hirschmann, forcing the captain to turn back “for the safety of everyone on board.”

Activists on the other boats meanwhile would not say if they too would try to defy the authorities and break for the open seas later Friday or early Saturday.
[…]
More here.


How “hope and change” worked out for Greece

by Mojambo ( 101 Comments › )
Filed under Economy at June 29th, 2011 - 12:00 pm

I am afraid that if Obama gets a second term (and in my opinion his odds of winning reelection are at least 50/50), we will be facing a future as bleak as Greece’s.  I do recall Andreas Papandreou.  He was a demagogic, left-wing former academic Prime Minister of Greece who despite spending a lot of time living in America, became an anti-American demagogue when he became Prime Minister.  His son George, is continuing the economic path of ruination.

by Napoleon Linardatos

Thirty years ago this fall, on October 18, 1981, a charismatic academic with rather limited government experience and with a one-word slogan, “Change,” was elected prime minister of Greece. His name was Andreas Papandreou. Greeks may now wish that 30 years ago they had had a Tea Party movement. Things could have turned out differently.

Thirty years ago, Greece was in an enviable position on the matter of national debt, with its debt just 28.6 percent of GDP. Few advanced countries can manage that kind of debt-to-GDP ratio. By the end of Papandreou’s first term in office, that ratio had nearly doubled, with debt at 54.7 percent of GDP. By the end of his second term, the figure was in the mid 80s.

The 1980s in Greece were a time of dramatic expansion of government. Papandreou and his Socialist party created a new government-run health-care system, dramatically expanded employment in the public sector, nationalized failing companies, and increased government handouts of every shape and form.

It was a government expansion so large and many-sided that in the end it generated a revolution of expectations and attitudes about the role of government in society. No government since then has been able to reverse that revolution, no matter how willing it was or how pressing the circumstances.

It is in this detrimental position that the current prime minister, George Papandreou, son of Andreas, finds himself. A sorry state of affairs created by one generation to be dealt with by another, the sins of the father to be paid for by the son — this is the material that Greek tragedies are made of.

[…]

Now the Greek government finds itself with a debt-to-GDP ratio somewhere north of 140 percent and quickly rising. Since May of 2010, that problem has also become the European Union’s problem. Because Greece is a member of the EU and the eurozone, it is feared that her instability will lead to the destabilization of other weak members of the EU. Greece cannot go out to the markets to service her debt and finance her new deficits; that has become the care now of other nations’ taxpayers across the continent.

[…]

The absolutely dismal results of those tax increases have not persuaded the younger Papandreou and his colleagues to reduce the size of government and its tax, regulatory, and corruption burden on the economy. The Greek government employs lots of people, even by European standards; the increase in unemployment since the crisis started has come exclusively from the private sector. Finland may have the best educational system in Europe, but its ratio of students to teachers is double that of Greece, which has one of the worst educational systems. In area after area of governmental activity, Greece has the most people employed per population but also the worst results: a way-above-average number of tax collectors but very poor tax collection; an above-average number of policemen but dismal public order; a record number of local courts but perhaps the slowest justice system on the continent; a record number of hospitals but one of the worst systems of health care.

There are hundreds of governmental organizations that employ thousands of people and no one knows what they do, how they do it, or indeed if they do anything at all. Recently it was found that there was a government agency for the preservation of a lake that was drained decades ago.

Then there are the companies owned or controlled by the government. One of them is the Railroad Organization, which has annual revenues of €100 million, pays annual salaries of €400 million, and each year has a loss of about €1 billion. Now the government pretends that it is cleaning up the Railroad Organization’s finances by transferring the employees from the company to the central bureaucracy of the government. That kind of cleaning up would embarrass even an Enron executive.

On the other hand, the Greek government has no problem increasing taxes. Taxes on income and property, on sodas and swimming pools, on cars and natural gas, on corporate profits of years past, on everyone’s electricity bill. The Valued Added Tax (VAT) for many goods is now at 23 percent.

[…]

Greeks like me cringe when we hear people like Paul Krugman lecturing Americans on how a government takeover in a certain sector of the economy will facilitate in the future reforms that are necessary now.

There stands Greece today, a year after it was bailed out by the taxpayers of other countries, facing the choice of reforming itself or going to utter ruin, and it cannot make up its mind.

The thirty years of hardcore statism have destroyed not only the economy of the nation, but also its ability to do politics, to articulate choices and ideas for the crisis at hand. Everything seems already decided, pre-determined, and set in stone, like the annual government budgets with their immovable expenditures tied to vote-rich constituencies.

Back in the mid-Eighties I was a primary-school student. I didn’t understand the politics, but I could feel the pathos of a country that had just “discovered” that there is a thing called a free lunch. Oftentimes, one is asked what one most missed having in one’s childhood. I couldn’t have told you at the time, but I can with certainty answer today: a Tea Party.

There are Americans who wonder what American exceptionalism is. I know.

Read the rest: the Greek way of Sorrow