Archive note: This text comes from the old archive of Nomika Epilekta and is carefully preserved for historical and informational reading.

A storm of protests broke out over the interventions of prominent Europeans in the country’s political developments.

Many protest hypocritically about the surrender of “national sovereignty.”

Cheap nationalist statements are made by the parties with their many-member delegations.

The threats of the European commissioner for economic and monetary affairs about Greece’s exit from the euro are condemned.

The involvement of the German chancellor, the French president and the other leaders of the European Union in internal political developments is criticized.

The interventions are anathematized by those responsible for the economic impoverishment that is evolving with unimaginable speed into a national tragedy.

The citizen is in unprecedented confusion because he cannot decide whom to support and who will represent him, apart from the rotten people without a profession.

The confusion is intensified by widespread disappointment. Insecurity now accompanies the country’s inhabitants, together with disgust mixed with anger.

Those enrolled in party ranks continue to propagandize the goods we supposedly will enjoy if their party prevails, reciting the over-heard and cheap political poems of mildew.

Our ears are tormented by foolish propaganda that cannot distinguish the serious from the ridiculous.

From all this, from the announcements of party representatives, the analyses of experts and the proclamations of the incapable who play leaders, the unrestrained statements of the former deputy minister and minister in the governments that led Greece into monstrous debt stand out. He was an exponent of the principle “give it all”! Give all the borrowed money, plunge the country into debt, and then come out to teach ethos, morality and principles of economy, goodness and prudence.

For these unrepentant and shameless people the saying was uttered with timeless force: “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites”! The same “woe” is repeated by the popular majority, which has evolved into “get out”...

The audacity of these people is unbelievable: they condemn foreign interventions while making shameless interventions themselves, without remorse, self-criticism or shame.

Apart from Mr. “give it all,” who does not feel the elementary sense of shame, other colleagues of his also appear. Such as the former foreign minister, with a brother member of parliament and a son mayor, who condemns the old and frayed parties in which she had played a leading role. The constitutional-law expert of the vice-presidency who butchered the constitution. The failed founder of a springtime splinter party and so many other indescribable and miserable figures who continue to drag the Greek name and the honest citizen through disgrace.

The problem for Greece is not economic collapse and the inability to control monstrous state spending, nor is it foreign interventions. The problem lies in the interventions of the unrepentant failed political swindlers whom society has not already expelled with contempt and disgust.

The torrent of interventions by the failed intensifies the national destruction and disgust...

They manage to disorient. They block every effort for a wind of optimism to blow.

With ceaseless statements and empty admonitions they do not believe, the failed make worse and recycle the disease they themselves caused.

The time has come for the interventions of political swindlers to stop. Society has tolerated them enough. In serious countries, the failed, the incapable and the frauds withdraw. And if they do not leave on their own, they are pursued. They do not intervene.

E. Papadakis