Κυριακή 21 Οκτωβρίου 2007

Greek Sustainability?

Survey shows Greek lifestyle is increasingly unhealthy
(Athens News Agency, October 19, 2007)

Modern Greeks have adopted a lifestyle significantly less healthy than that of previous decades according to the findings of a survey released on Thursday, sending their life expectancy plummeting from the 2nd highest in European Union in 1991 to just 11th place in 2004.
According to its results, present-day Greeks are "committing a slow suicide" on a daily basis by eating too much, smoking incessantly, spending too much time in front of the television and completely ignoring the need to exercise or undergo regular medical exams.
The results of the survey were announced by professor of social medicine Ioannis Tountas and were based on an analysis of a number of European and Greek studies on lifestyle and habits.
They indicated that Greece currently holds one of the highest positions worldwide for rates of smoking, since 49.9 percent of men and 30.8 percent of women are smokers and the numbers are tending to increase.
About 60 percent of the population is overweight, with Greeks ranking as the most overweight and obese nationality in Europe after the British.
They also tend not to exercise, with one third of men and about half of women saying they do not do any exercise.
Most worrying is the evidence that Greeks have to a great extent abandoned their previously healthy Mediterranean diet, with current dietary trends diverging as much as 50 percent from the Med diet model, while they do not take precautionary action against disease, with 35 of Greek adults suffering from some chronic ailment.
Studies carried out by Tountas showed that the lower socioeconomic classes tended to have more health problems, with a rate of 36.9 percent, compared to the higher classes (30.4 percent).
The inverse relation between income and health also held true across regions, since areas with a low per capita GDP like Eastern Macedonia and Thrace tended to have a higher mortality index and a higher rate of cardiovascular disease.
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(Απόσπασμα από email που έλαβα...)
Σύμφωνα με μια έρευνα των Νέων, 8 στους 10 νεοπροσληφθέντες στην Ελλάδα αμείβονται με λιγότερα από 1000 ευρώ. Σύμφωνα με άλλη έρευνα της Marc για το Έθνος, τo 56% των Ελλήνων ηλικίας 18-30 αμείβεται με λιγότερα από 700 ευρώ το μήνα. Ένας στους δύο νέους είναι άνεργος.

Από τους τριαντάρηδες, μόνο το 29,5% ζουν εντελώς ανεξάρτητοι από τους γονείς.

Ένα 31,4% συντηρείται αποκλειστικά από αυτούς.

Μπορείτε να συλλάβετε αυτά τα νούμερα;

Αν κάποιος ξένος τα διαβάσει θα συμπεράνει πως είμαστε μια κοινωνία υπό κατάρρευση, όπου οι νέοι δεν μπορούν να παράγουν πλούτο, οπότε τρώνε τον πλούτο που έχει συσσωρεύσει η προηγούμενη γενιά, μέχρι αυτός να τελειώσει, οπότε προφανώς η χώρα μας θα χρεοκοπήσει.

Τετάρτη 3 Οκτωβρίου 2007

Free Burma!



What This Council Can Do For the People of Burma
Speech before UN Human Rights Council 5th Special Session
2 October 2007
_______________



Thank you, Mr. President.

We gather here today to discuss the emergency situation in Burma. The military regime cloaks its acts — and its shame — behind an iron curtain, and so we have no exact numbers of what has gone on in the past week. But all of the smuggled reports confirm one thing: a great many have been arrested, a great many have been killed. We know that we are dealing with crimes against innocent civilians on a massive scale.

But what can this Human Rights Council do? This body has no power to send boots on the ground. It has no physical power whatsoever. One is reminded of the famous story told about Joseph Stalin. On being warned that persecution of Catholics would anger the Pope, the Soviet dictator reportedly replied: “The Pope? And how many divisions does he have?”

The brutal junta that rules Rangoon may well be looking at our emergency session and thinking the same thoughts.

Mr. President, they would be wrong.

History teaches us that a moral voice can move mountains. We learned this from Mahatma Gandhi, whose birthday today is celebrated by the first UN International Day of Non-Violence. We learned this from Reverend Martin Luther King Junior, from Nelson Mandela, and indeed from Pope John Paul II, whose moral voice — armed only with truth and with principle — ultimately defeated the evils of Soviet totalitarianism.

Mr. President, we cannot send troops. But we can send a message.

And so today let us send a message to our brothers and sisters in Burma, who are suffering under the weight of oppression. Let us send a message, loud and clear, that we stand in awe of their heroic and peaceful challenge to the tyranny, brutality, and terror of their government. We stand in awe of the heroic Buddhist monks. We stand in awe of the heroic Aung San Su Kyi. We will never be silent until their shackles are broken, until they are free.

Let us send a message, also, to their wicked oppressors: When you trample the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, persecute the innocent, and murder your own people, the world will never forget your crimes. Let us send a message and a warning: Justice will come.

We have no boots, we have no weapons, we have no divisions. But faith in justice, in freedom, and in human dignity is stronger than any steel. Let this council do its part by adopting a firm resolution that will affirm this faith for the people of Burma.

Thank you, Mr. President.