ena apospazma :
DIMITRIS DAMIANIDIS is a high school teacher and a strong supporter of Greece’s socialist government. But that won’t deter him from going on strike with hundreds of thousands of other public sector workers next week to fight for the 28,000-euro pension that he expects to receive annually after he turns 60 next year.
TO be sure, Mr. Damianidis is among the smallest of actors in this saga.
Yet his sense of entitlement shows how hard it will be for governments in Portugal, Spain and Italy to persuade their citizens to accept cuts demanded by Brussels as well as bond investors.
Etsi....mia zwh o zitoulas o Ellhnas, nomizh oti dikeoute na pernei, xeris na plironei....
Like many public-sector workers and civil servants in Greece, Mr. Damianidis has led a comfortable middle-class life over his 34 years working for the state. His house is paid for, he can afford to go away for a two-week vacation every year, and he has a daughter in a private school.
Etsi leme !!!!!!!!!
The bonuses, he concedes with a smile, have nothing to do with his skill as a high school teacher. “Over the years, whenever workers would strike, they would in some cases get a bonus,” he said, as he sat in a local union office here.
Etsi re lamogia......aksiokratia miden.....
me tis ugies sas.


