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Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros

Monday, April 17, 2017

Go Greek for dinner with healthy chicken souvlaki, turkey burgers and tzatziki

Chef Michael Psilakis shares his recipes for authentic chicken souvlaki and Greek-style turkey burgers, plus the cucumber-yogurt dip (aka tzatziki), lemon-garlic sauce (aka ladolemono) and garlic confit puree you'll want to put on those sandwiches and just ...


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Greek Organizations at UAM Make Charitable Donations

MONTICELLO — Fraternities and sororities at the University of Arkansas at Monticello donated more than 500 cans of food, made 300 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and donated 50 blankets for premature babies to an assortment of charities as part of ...


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This GREEK Island Celebrated Easter The Correct Way….With Explosives

Every year, the GREEK island makes and stockpiles fireworks and rockets for their Easter celebration which draws tourists from all over the world.


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In a time of protest, taking a GREEK step back

Our primary reason for being in Chicago was GREEK Easter, which for the Sunflower of Sparta was cause for a family event to celebrate the holiday.


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Rescuers speed to save migrants from perils of sea

ON THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA — As usual, it started with a call on a satellite phone from Italian rescue officials in Rome. According to UNHCR, an average of 14 people died in the Mediterranean every day in 2016, the highest number ever recorded. Over the long Easter weekend, at least 8,300 migrants were rescued at sea, according to a U.N. refugee agency official, Carlotta Sami, who tweeted Monday that “rescuers worked incessantly for three days.” With the Greek smuggling route largely closed off, the path of least resistance has drifted to Libya — a sprawling, lawless country with a huge coast and competing rebel and government factions. On that April day aboard the Golfo Azurro, rescuers found two jam-packed boats with 152 people — 66 in a rubber boat, 86 in a wooden boat — 56 nautical miles from the Libyan coast. Fede Gomez, an Argentine rescuer, told those on the inflatable boat in English to remain calm if they wanted to avoid a tragedy. [...] the closest point is Lampedusa, a tiny Italian island 160 nautical miles away, a boat journey that takes more than 32 hours in calm waters.


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Why GREECE needs to start having babies again soon or face financial oblivion

It isn't just GREECE suffering low birth rates. In fact the trend spreads to most of Europe, with Spain, Portugal and Italy also reporting dangerously low ...


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Belief Briefs: LGBTQ 'Out of the Shadows' festival

Saint Barbara GREEK Orthodox Church will host its annual Durham GREEK Festival May 6 and 7 at 8306 NC 751 in Durham. The festival of culture, ...


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Turkey's neighbors weigh in on 'Yes' results in constitutional referendum

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region — Leaders from GREECE and Cyprus were quick to opine on the initial results showing the apparent approval of Turkey's ...


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Trump Administration Tips Its Hand, Oks Third Greek Bailout

The anonymous Trump administration tipster told its reporters: “We're looking for the Europeans to help GREECE to resolve its economic problems by ...


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The ancient Greek myths we still hold about immigrants

A statue of ancient Greek Goddess Athena is highlighted by the moon, in the center of the Greek capital after elections on Sunday, May 6, 2012. Voters in crisis-hit Greece punished parties that have dominated Even though the United States is worlds away ...


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Giannis Antetokounmpo Proves He Really is the 'Greek Freak' by Grabbing the Rim Without Leaving the Ground

We really didn't need more evidence to justify Giannis Antetokounmpo's "Greek Freak" moniker, but then the Milwaukee Bucks star went out and ruined the Toronto Raptors in Game 1 of their first-round playoff series, and we're still picking our jaws up off ...


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The popular 'paleo' diet is based on a myth

[Neanderthal]REUTERS/Nikola Solic _Peter S. Ungar is Distinguished Professor and director of the Environmental Dynamics Program at the University of Arkansas. He is the author of Evolution's Bite: A Story of Teeth, Diet, and Human Origins._ People have been debating the natural human diet for thousands of years, often framed as a question of the morality of eating other animals. The lion has no choice, but we do. Take the ancient Greek philosopher Pythagoras, for example: "Oh, how wrong it is for flesh to be made from flesh!" The argument hasn't changed much for ethical vegetarians in 2,500 years, but today we also have Sarah Palin, who wrote in _Going Rogue: An American Life_, "If God had not intended for us to eat animals, how come He made them out of meat?" Have a look at Genesis 9:3. While humans don't have the teeth or claws of a mammal evolved to kill and eat other animals, that doesn't mean we aren't "supposed" to eat meat, though. Our early Homo ancestors invented weapons and cutting tools in lieu of sharp carnivore-like teeth. There's no explanation other than meat eating for the fossil animal bones riddled with stone tool cut marks at fossil sites. It also explains our simple guts, which look little like those evolved to process large quantities of fibrous plant foods. But gluten isn't unnatural either. Despite the pervasive call to cut carbs, there's plenty of evidence that cereal grains were staples, at least for some, long before domestication. People at Ohalo II on the shore of the Sea of Galilee ate wheat and barley during the peak of the last ice age, more than 10,000 years before these grains were domesticated. Paleobotanists have even found starch granules trapped in the tartar on 40,000-year-old Neandertal teeth with the distinctive shapes of barley and other grains, and the telltale damage that comes from cooking. There's nothing new about cereal consumption. This leads us to the Paleolithic Diet. As a paleoanthropologist I'm often asked for my thoughts about it. I'm not really a fan — I like pizza and French fries and ice cream too much. Nevertheless, diet gurus have built a strong case for discordance between what we eat today and what our ancestors evolved to eat. The idea is that our diets have changed too quickly for our genes to keep up; and the result is said to be "metabolic syndrome," a cluster of conditions including elevated blood pressure, high blood-sugar level, obesity, and abnormal cholesterol levels. It's a compelling argument. Think about what might happen if you put diesel in an automobile built for regular gasoline. The wrong fuel can wreak havoc on the system, whether you're filling a car or stuffing your face. It makes sense, and it's no surprise that Paleolithic diets remain hugely popular. There are many variants on the general theme, but foods rich in protein and omega-3 fatty acids show up again and again. Grass-fed cow meat and fish are good, and carbohydrates should come from nonstarchy fresh fruits and vegetables. On the other hand, cereal grains, legumes, dairy, potatoes, and highly refined and processed foods are out. The idea is to eat like our Stone Age ancestors — you know, spinach salads with avocado, walnuts, diced turkey, and the like. I am not a dietician, and cannot speak with authority about the nutritional costs and benefits of Paleolithic diets, but I can comment on their evolutionary underpinnings. > I am not a dietician, and cannot speak with authority about the > nutritional costs and benefits of Paleolithic diets, but I can > comment on their evolutionary underpinnings. From the standpoint of paleoecology, the Paleolithic diet is a myth. Food choice is as much about what's available to be eaten as it is about what a species evolved to eat. And just as fruits ripen, leaves flush, and flowers bloom predictably at different times of the year, foods available to our ancestors varied over deep time as the world changed around them from warm and wet to cool and dry and back again. Those changes are what drove our evolution. Even if we could reconstruct the precise nutrient composition of foods eaten by a particular hominin species in the past (and we can't), the information would be meaningless for planning a menu based on our ancestral diet. Because our world was ever changing, so too was the diet of our ancestors. Focusing on a single point in our evolution would be futile. We're a work in progress. Hominins were spread over space too, and those living in the forest by the river surely had a different diet from their cousins on the lakeshore or the open savanna. What was the ancestral human diet? The question itself makes no sense. Consider some of the recent hunter-gatherers who have inspired Paleolithic diet enthusiasts. The TikiÄ¡aÄ¡miut of the north Alaskan coast lived almost entirely on the protein and fat of marine mammals and fish, while the Gwi San in Botswana's Central Kalahari took something like 70 percent of their calories from carbohydrate-rich, sugary melons and starchy roots. Traditional human foragers managed to earn a living from the larger community of life that surrounded them in a remarkable variety of habitats, from near-polar latitudes to the tropics. Few other mammalian species can make that claim, and there is little doubt that dietary versatility has been key to the success we've had. Many paleoanthropologists today believe that increasing climate fluctuation through the Pleistocene sculpted our ancestors — whether their bodies, or their wit, or both — for the dietary flexibility that's become a hallmark of humanity. The basic idea is that our ever-changing world winnowed out the pickier eaters among us. Nature has made us a versatile species, which is why we can find something to satiate us on nearly all of its myriad biospheric buffet tables. It's also why we have been able to change the game, transition from forager to farmer, and really begin to consume our planet. NOW WATCH: The diet made famous by star athletes like LeBron James is risky for most people


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Athens Seeks to Become Top Dental Tourism Destination

ATHENS (ANA) – The dental sector is playing an important role in boosting and promoting medical tourism in Greece. For that reason, a group of Greek […] The post Athens Seeks to Become Top Dental Tourism Destination appeared first on The National Herald.


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Light earthquake 4.3 mag, 41 km SSE of Pirgos, Greece

A light earthquake with magnitude 4.3 (ml/mb) was detected on Monday, 41 kilometers (25 miles) from Pirgos in Greece. Exact location of event, longitude 25.3039 East, latitude 34.6469 North, depth = 25.07 km. A tsunami warning has not been issued (Does not ...


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Police worker running Boston marathon for Ben Needham GREEK search team

Hannah Bryan is taking part in the race to help fund the Hellenic Rescue team who took part in last year's search for the missing toddler on the GREEK ...


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Canterbury double bill features ancient GREEK comedy, world premier of murder mystery

As funny as it is, the story raises important issues and questions about how far women's rights have come, compared to ancient GREEK times, Sofie said ...


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ND VP: If left up to Tsipras elections wouldn't be held in GREECE again

An outspoken main opposition MP and party vice-president on Monday stirred up the usually tepid post-Easter week political landscape by charging ...


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“Greek Myths and Graffiti Murals”: “Collaboration With Resa McConaghy”:

The following article is composed of two sections, each one of them including murals from Argentina and Canada, respectively. This post aims to analyze with a with a free, but still judiciously, well-founded criteria how certain mythological greek themes ...


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Greek Yogurt Egg Salad with Smoked Paprika

Creamy Greek Yogurt Egg Salad with Smoked Paprika makes for a tasty, healthy lunch or snack. Greek yogurt keeps it light and smoked paprika elevates it’s flavor! Serve on bread or with crackers and veggies for a light meal! This is about as timely of a ...


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Win Tickets to The 1975 at the Greek Theatre April 26 + Meet The Band!

We’re hooking you up with the chance to win tickets to see The 1975 when they come to the Greek Theatre April 26th, plus you’ll get to meet the band! Purchase tickets via Ticketmaster.com. We’re also giving away tickets and meet & greet access in the ...


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Why Are Diners Traditionally Greek? It's an Immigration Story, Naturally

There's no official Bureau of Diner Ownership to keep count, but if you're a diner fan, you know that Greek families traditionally run the show at these beloved 24-hour joints, especially in the Northeast. Obvious giveaways include names like "Olympia ...


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Turks in GREECE voted overwhelmingly against constitutional changes

Turkish citizens in GREECE that took advantage of the opportunity to vote in Sunday's referendum in the neighboring country, by casting votes at Turkish ...


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Ryan Serhant Celebrated a Texas-Sized First Easter with Wife Emilia

"Being GREEK makes everything more eventful. At Easter you don't just wake up and go to church and look for Easter Eggs with candy or money in ...


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Christ is risen: Spectacular celebrations of GREEK Easter 2017

Easter or Pascha, is the most important GREEK Orthodox celebration. It is bound together with the GREEK traditions in ways that are really hard to explain ...


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OSCE: Turkish referendum vote falls short of international standards

An observer mission that has been monitoring the Turkish referendum campaign and vote on expanding presidential powers says the procedures used “fell short” of international standards. The criticism was raised by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) with reference to referendum voting and counting of ballots. The observers also expressed concerns about … The post OSCE: Turkish referendum vote falls short of international standards appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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Trump, A Symptom Of What? A Radical Message From a Half-Century Ago

[Combat operations at Ia Drang Valley, Vietnam, November 1965. (Photo: US Army)]Combat operations at Ia Drang Valley, Vietnam, November 1965. (Photo: US Army) You could hear the deep sadness in the preacher's voice as he named "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today -- my own government." With those words, the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., launched a scathing indictment of America's war in Vietnam. It was April 4, 1967. That first antiwar sermon of his seemed to signal a new high tide of opposition to a brutal set of American policies in Southeast Asia. Just 11 days later, unexpectedly large crowds would come out in New York and San Francisco for the first truly massive antiwar rallies. Back then, a protest of at least a quarter of a million seemed _yuge_. King signaled another turning point when he concluded his speech by bringing up "something even more disturbing" -- something that would deeply disturb the developing antiwar movement as well. "The war in Vietnam," he said, "is but a symptom of a far deeper malady within the American spirit." Many of those who gathered at antiwar rallies days later were already beginning to suspect the same thing. Even if they could actually force their government to end its war in Vietnam, they would be healing only a symptom of a far more profound illness. With that realization came a shift in consciousness, the clearest sign of which could be found in the sizeable contingent of countercultural hippies who began joining those protests. While antiwar radicals were challenging the unjust political and military policies of their government, the counterculturists were focused on something bigger: trying to revolutionize the whole fabric of American society. Why recall this history exactly 50 years later, in the age of Donald Trump? Curiously enough, King offered at least a partial answer to that question in his 1967 warning about the deeper malady. "If we ignore this sobering reality," he said, "we will find ourselves... marching... and attending rallies without end." The alternative? "We as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values."  Like many of my generation, I feel as if, in lieu of that radical revolution, I have indeed been marching and attending rallies for the last half-century, even if there were also long fallow periods of inactivity. (In those quiet times, of course, there was always organizing and activism going on behind the scenes, preparing for the next wave of marches and demonstrations in response to the next set of obvious outrages.) If the arc of history bends toward justice, as King claimed, it's been a strange journey, a bizarre twisting and turning as if we were all on some crazed roller-coaster ride. The Trump era already seems like the most bizarre twist of all, leaving us little choice but to march and rally at a quickening pace for years to come. A radical revolution in values? Unless you're thinking of Trump's plutocrats and environment wreckers, not so much. If anything, the nation once again finds itself facing an exaggerated symptom of a far deeper malady. Perhaps one day, like the antiwar protestors of 1967, anti-Trump protestors will say: _If the American system we live under can create this atrocity, there must be something wrong with the whole thing._  But that's the future. At present, the resistance movement, though as unexpectedly large as the movement of 1967, is still focused mainly on symptoms, the expanding list of inhumane 1% policies the Republicans (themselves in chaos) are preparing to foist on the nation. Yet to come up are the crucial questions: What's wrong with our system? How could it produce a President Trump, a Republican hegemony, and the society-wrecking policies that go with them both? What would a radically new direction mean and how would we head there? In 1967, antiwar activists were groping their way toward answers to similar questions. At least we have one advantage. We can look back at their answers and use them to help make sense of our own situation. As it happens, theirs are still depressingly relevant because the systemic malady that produced the Vietnam War is a close cousin to the one that has now given us President Trump. CHALLENGING THE DEEPER MALADY The Sixties spawned many analyses of the ills of the American system. The ones that marked that era as revolutionary concluded that the heart of the problem was a distinctive mode of consciousness -- a way of seeing, experiencing, interpreting, and being in the world. Political and cultural radicals converged, as historian Todd Gitlin concluded, in their demand for a transformation of "national if not global (or cosmic) consciousness." Nor was such a system uniquely American, they discovered. It was nothing less than the hallmark of Western modernity. In exploring the nature of that "far deeper malady," Martin Luther King, for instance, turned to the European philosopher Martin Buber, who found the root of that consciousness in modernity's "I-It" attitude. From early childhood, he suggested, we learn to see other people as mere objects ("its") with no inherent relation to us. In the process, we easily lose sight of their full humanity. That, in turn, allows us free rein to manipulate others (or as in Vietnam simply destroy them) for our own imagined benefit. King particularly decried such dehumanization as it played itself out in American racism: "Segregation substitutes an 'I-it' relationship for the 'I-thou' relationship and ends up relegating persons to the status of things." But he condemned it no less strongly in the economic sphere, where it affected people of all races. "The profit motive, when it is the sole basis of an economic system," he said, "encourages a cutthroat competition and selfish ambition that inspire men to be more I-centered than thou-centered... Capitalism fails to realize that life is social." Another influential thinker of that era was a German-American philosopher, Herbert Marcuse. (Some radicals even marched in rallies carrying signs reading "Marx, Mao, Marcuse.") For him, the dehumanization of modernity was rooted in the way science and technology led us to view nature as a mere collection of "things" having no inherent relation to us -- things to be analyzed, controlled, and if necessary destroyed for our own benefit. Capitalists use technology, he explained, to build machines that take charge both of the workers who run them and of aspects of the natural world. The capitalists then treat those workers as so many things, not people. And the same hierarchy -- boss up here, bossed down there -- shows up at every level of society from the nuclear family to the international family of nations (with its nuclear arsenals). In a society riddled with structures of domination, it was no accident that the US was pouring so much lethal effort into devastating Vietnam. As Marcuse saw it, however, the worst trick those bosses play on us is to manipulate our consciousness, to seduce us into thinking that the whole system makes sense and is for our own good. When those machines are cranking out products that make workers' lives more comfortable, most of them are willing to embrace and perpetuate a system that treats them as dominated objects. Marcuse would not have been surprised to see so many workers voting for Donald Trump, a candidate who built his campaign on promises of ever more intensified domination -- of marginalized people at home, of "bad hombres" needing to be destroyed abroad, and of course, of nature itself, especially in the form of fossil fuels on a planet where the very processes he championed ensured a future of utter devastation. One explanation for the electoral success of Trump was the way he appealed to heartland white working-class voters who saw their standard of living and sense of social status steadily eroding. Living in a world in which hierarchy and domination are taken for granted, it's hardly surprising that many of them took it for granted as well that the only choice available was either to be a dominator or to be dominated. Vote for me, the billionaire businessman (famed for the phrase "You're fired!") implicitly promised and you, too, will be one of the dominators. Vote against me and you're doomed to remain among the dominated. Like so many other tricks of the system, this one defied reality but worked anyway. Many Trump voters who bought into the system will find themselves facing even harsher domination by the 1%. And as the Trumpian fantasy of man dominating nature triggers inevitable twenty-first-century blowback on a planetary scale, count on growing environmental and social disasters to bring disproportionate pain to those already suffering most under the present system. In every arena, as Marcuse explained back in the 1960s, the system of hierarchy and domination remains self-perpetuating and self-escalating.  "THE LONG AND BITTER BUT BEAUTIFUL STRUGGLE FOR A NEW WORLD" What's the remedy for this malady, now as lethally obvious at home as it once was in Vietnam? "The end of domination [is] the only truly revolutionary exigency," Marcuse wrote. True freedom, he thought, means freeing humanity from the hierarchical system that locks us into the daily struggle to earn a living by selling our labor. Freedom means liberating our consciousness to search for our own goals and being able to pursue them freely. In Martin Luther King's words, freedom is "the opportunity to fulfill my total capacity untrammeled by any artificial barrier."  How to put an end not only to America's war in Vietnam, but to a whole culture built on domination? King's answer on that April 4th was deceptively simple: "Love is somehow the key that unlocks the door... The first hope in our inventory must be the hope that love is going to have the last word." The simplicity in that statement was deceptive because _love_ is itself such a complicated word. King often explained that the Greeks had three words for love: _eros _(aesthetic or romantic love), _philia_ (friendship), and _agape_ (self-sacrificing devotion to others). He left no doubt that he considered _agape_ far superior to the other two. The emerging counterculture of those years certainly agreed with him on the centrality of love to human liberation. After all, it _was_ "the love generation." But its mantra -- "If it feels good, do it" -- made King's rejection of _eros_ in the name of self-negating _agape_ a non-starter for them. King, however, offered another view of love, which was far more congenial to the counterculture. Love unites whatever is separated, he preached. This is the kind of love that God uses in his work. We, in turn, are always called upon to imitate God and so to transform our society into what King called a "beloved community."  Though few people at the time made the connection, King's Christian understanding of love was strikingly similar to Marcuse's secular view of erotic love. Marcuse saw _eros_ as the fulfillment of desire. He also saw it as anything but selfish, since it flows from what Freud called the id, which always wants to abolish ego boundaries and recover that sense of oneness with everything we all had as infants. When we experience anyone or anything erotically, we feel that we are inherently interconnected, "tied together in a single garment of destiny," as King so eloquently put it. When boundaries and separation dissolve, there can be no question of hierarchy or domination. Every moment that hints at such unification brings us pleasure. In a revolutionary society that eschews structures of domination for the ideal of unification, all policies are geared toward creating more moments of unity and pleasure. Think of this as the deep-thought revolution of the Sixties: radically transformed minds would create a radically transformed society. Revolutionaries of that time were, in fact, trying to wage the very utopian struggle that King summoned all Americans to in his April 4th speech, "the long and bitter but beautiful struggle for a new world." FIFTY YEARS LATER: THE THREAD THAT BINDS At this very moment 50 years ago, a movement resisting a brutal war of domination in a distant land was giving birth to a movement calling for the creation of a new consciousness to heal our ailing society. Will the resistance movement of 2017 head in a similar direction? At first glance, it seems unlikely. After all, ever since the Vietnam War ended, progressives have had a tendency to focus on single issues of injustice or laundry lists of problems. They have rarely imagined the American system as anything more than a collection of wrong-headed policies and wrong-hearted politicians. In addition, after years of resisting the right wing as it won victory after victory, and of watching the Democrats morph into a neoliberal crew and then into a failing party with its own dreary laundry lists of issues and personalities, the capacity to hope for fundamental change may have gone the way of Herbert Marcuse and Martin Luther King. Still, for those looking hard, a thread of hope exists. Today's marches, rallies, and town halls are packed with veterans of the Sixties who can remember, if we try, what it felt like to believe we were fighting not only to stop a war but to start a revolution in consciousness. No question about it, we made plenty of mistakes back then. Now, with so much more experience (however grim) in our memory banks, perhaps we might develop more flexible strategies and a certain faith in taking a more patient, long-term approach to organizing for change. Don't forget as well that, whatever our failings and the failings of other past movements, we also have a deep foundation of victories (along with defeats) to build on. No, there was no full-scale revolution in our society -- no surprise there. But in so many facets of our world, advances happened nonetheless. Think of how, in those 50 years just past, views on diversity, social equality, the environment, healthcare, and so many other issues, which once existed only on the fringes of our world, have become thoroughly mainstream. Taken as a whole, they represent a partial but still profound and significant set of changes in American consciousness. Of course, the Sixties not only can't be resurrected, but shouldn't be. (After all, it should never be forgotten that what they led to wasn't a dreamed of new society but the "Reagan revolution," as the arc of justice took the first of its many grim twists and turns.) At best, the Sixties critique of the system would have to be updated to include many new developments. Even the methods of those Sixties radicals would need major revisions, given that our world, especially of communication, now relies so heavily on blindingly fast changes in technology. But every time we log onto the Internet and browse the web, it should remind us that -- shades of the past -- across this embattled Earth of ours, we're all tied together in a single worldwide web of relations and of destiny. It's either going to be one for all and all for one, or it's going to be none for 7.4 billion on a planet heading for hell. Today is different, too, because our movement was not born out of protest against an odious policy, but against an odious mindset embodied in a deplorable person who nonetheless managed to take the Oval Office. He's so obviously a symptom of something larger and deeper that perhaps the protesters of this generation will grasp more quickly than the radicals of the Vietnam era that America's underlying disease is a destructive mode of consciousness (and not just a bad combover). The move from resisting individual policies to transforming American consciousness may already have begun in small ways. After all, "love trumps hate" has become the most common slogan of the progressive movement. And the word _love_ is being heard in hard-edged political discourse, not only on the left, but among mainstream political voices like Van Jones and Cory Booker. Once again, there is even talk of "revolutionary love." Of course, the specific policies of the Republicans and this president (including his developing war policies) must be resisted and the bleeding of the immediate moment staunched. Yet the urgent question of the late 1960s remains: What can be done when there are so many fronts on which to struggle and the entire system demands constant vigilant attention? In the age of a president who regularly sucks all the air out of the room, how do we even talk about all of this without being overwhelmed? In many ways, the current wave of regressive change and increasing chaos in Washington should be treated as a caricature of the system that we all have been living under for so long. Turn to that broader dimension and the quest for a new consciousness may prove the thread that, though hardly noticed, already ties together the many facets of the developing resistance movement. The largest mobilization for progressive politics since the Vietnam era offers a unique opportunity to go beyond simply treating symptoms and start offering cures for the underlying illness. If this opportunity is missed, versions of the same symptoms are likely to recur, while unpredictable new ones will undoubtedly emerge for the next 50 years, and as Martin Luther King predicted, we will go on marching without end. Surely we deserve a better future and a better fate.


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Government Sources: We Support the Stability and Democracy in Turkey

Athens sent a message in support of the stability and democracy in Turkey underlining that GREECE wants a Turkey that will support dialogue and ...


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The “Breath” of Kolumbo Submarine Volcano of Santorini

SANTORINI, Greece – Scientists from Italy and Greece proved that a submarine volcano ‘breathes’ during its active phase. Their research focused on the volcano Kolumbo. […] The post The “Breath” of Kolumbo Submarine Volcano of Santorini appeared first on The National Herald.


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Capiche? Portfolio Margin Part 2: GREEKS, Unveiled

Now is a good time for a refresher course on the GREEKS—theoretical metrics that describe how things like stock price, time, and volatility “vol” can ...


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Simple Weeknight Greek Chicken Burritos {or Wraps!}

These simple Greek chicken burritos (or wraps!) with quick pickled onions and easy tzatziki sauce are amazingly delicious and are perfect for a weeknight meal (or lunch)! There are a couple recipes (ok, hundreds) that make me wish I could reach through ...


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PM suggests removing Greek sculpture from SC

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has suggested the Chief Justice (CJ) for removing the Greek sculpture from the Supreme Court premises. She disclosed the information at a regular weekly meeting of the cabinet on Monday. The sculpture was set up without any ...


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5 Tips for Cooking with Greek Yogurt

I believe one of the most valuable tools you can have in the refrigerator is a tub of Greek yogurt. It's what I lean on most mornings for a quick and satisfying breakfast, but I know that it can also do so much more. I find myself reaching for it when I ...


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Greek Police Arrest Pakistanis Holding 16 Migrants Hostage

Hellenic Police on Saturday arrested three Pakistani nationals for holding 16 undocumented migrants hostage and demanding money for their release. The perpetrators were holding the hostages in a farmhouse outside Thessaloniki. Thirteen of the hostages were ...


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Migrants including a Nepali held hostage spurs arrests in Greece

ROME, April 17: Police in Greece have arrested three Pakistani nationals for holding hostage 16 migrants including a Nepali national without authorization to be in the country and demanding money for their release. Police said Sunday that the three were ...


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Sailboat With 48 Refugees Arrives at the Port of Argostoli

A sailboat with 48 refugees that had sent a distress signal early Saturday while sailing 28 nautical miles southwest of the island of Cephalonia, Greece, arrived on Saturday evening at the port of Argostoli. According to sources, the refugees (23 men, 12 women and 13 children) are Kurds and Syrians and were sailing two days […]


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The Hellenic Navy maintains a reconstruction of an ancient Athenian trireme, the HS Olympias (PHOTOS)

… in the Hellenic Navy of Greece, the only commissioned vessel of … from Greek history, art, and literature. (The museum of Ancient Greek Trireme …


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The alarming worldwide alliance of parties on the far right hasn’t been seen since the 1930s

… to as fascist: Greece’s Golden Dawn. Exploiting Greece’s economic crisis … supposed racial superiority of Greeks to emerge as Greece’s third-largest party … far right into ecstasy. In Greece, thousands of Golden Dawn supporters …


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No EU leader congratulates Erdogan awaiting OECD report on Referendum irregularities

Leaders of  member states of the European Union have been cautious about the results of the referendum in Turkey. No EU leader sent the traditional congratulations message to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for his victory so far. They are reportedly awaiting for the independent OECD report on alleged voting irregularities, especially after Turkish opposition parties … The post No EU leader congratulates Erdogan awaiting OECD report on Referendum irregularities appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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Luxurious Wedding in Mykonos, Greece

We strongly believe there’s no better way to kick off the week than a beautiful destination wedding, especially when it’s Mykonos, Greece! The popular locale boasts some pretty incredible views of the water, and the views are only enhanced by the ...


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Construction of TAP compressor stations began in GREECE and Albania

The construction of the compressor stations (one in Kipoi, GREECE, and one in Fier, Albania) of TAP began in the first quarter of 2017, Lisa Givert, TAP ...


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Greek Heritage Olympus Piano Trio Make Local Debut in Reading, PA

READING, PA – The Olympus Piano Trio – named for Mount Olympus in Greece where, in ancient Greek mythology, the gods made their home – […] The post Greek Heritage Olympus Piano Trio Make Local Debut in Reading, PA appeared first on The National Herald.


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The Latest: Monitors: Turkish vote falls short of standards

An observer mission that has been monitoring the Turkish referendum campaign and vote on expanding presidential powers says the procedures used "fell short" of international standards. The monitoring group described a series of irregularities in the referendum, including a skewed pre-vote campaign in favor of the "yes" vote, intimidation of the "no" campaign and the fact that the referendum question was not listed on the ballot. Gabriel said the EU would first wait for the opinion of international observers of Turkey's referendum, adding that "We will be able to assist Turkey in its economic development only if it remains a democracy" and not if it reintroduces the death penalty. Hollande said in a statement Monday that France "takes note" of accusations of substantial voting irregularities in Sunday's referendum giving Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sweeping powers. The French leader warned that if Turkey reinstates the death penalty, that would "constitute a rupture" with Turkey's pledges to respect human rights as part of efforts to join European institutions. A leading German lawmaker has called on Turkish immigrants to show more commitment to Germany's democratic values after a clear majority of the 1.4 million Turkish immigrants who were eligible to vote in the Turkish referendum cast their ballot in favor of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. According to state-run Anadolu Agency, 63.07 percent of the Turks in Germany voted in favor of Erdogan's plans to greatly expand the powers of his office. Cem Ozdemir, one of the heads of the Green Party and a son of Turkish immigrants himself, told German news agency dpa on Monday the strong support for Erdogan was also the result of decades of failed integration policies in Germany, which as a society never gave Turks a sense of fully belonging. A Greek Cypriot official says that irrespective of the outcome of Turkey's referendum on expanding presidential powers, the Cyprus government is hopeful that Turkey will "positively and effectively" contribute to ongoing talks aimed at reunifying the ethnically divided island. Cyprus government spokesman Nicos Christodoulides told the Associated Press Monday that it's hoped Turkey's stance will move the peace talks forward toward the stated goal of reunifying the island as a federation. Christodoulides said Turkey should refrain from throwing up obstacles to the process, like making the "unacceptable demand" of granting Turkish citizens the right to relocate and transfer money, services and goods to Cyprus as part of any peace deal. Bulent Tezcan, deputy chairman of Turkey's main opposition Republican People's Party, is citing irregularities in Sunday's referendum which approved constitutional changes that will grant the country's president greater powers. Germany has called on the Turkish government to engage in a "respectful dialogue with all political and civilian forces of the country" after "the narrow outcome of the referendum showed how deeply Turkish society is divided." German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said in a joint statement Sunday the German government respects the Turkish people's right to decide over their constitution.


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‘Opulent’ body with ‘Greek’ artifact unearthed at a 1,500-year-old cemetery by the Silk Route

Archaeological excavations at China’s Inner Mongolia region have uncovered a series of fascinating finds, including a silk-wrapped body dating back to the era of the Northern Wei dynasty and an ornate silver bowl with engravings of Greek gods. Found at a ...


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Davidson Wow House: $1.4M For GREEK Revival Home In Historic District

DAVIDSON, NC -- A five-bedroom GREEK Revival-style home is on the market in Davidson for $1.4M. This home, which sits in the historic district, ...


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Greedy Girl in Cleveland Heights combines Indian and Greek with street food flair: The Lunch Break

The Lunch Break is cleveland.com's look at the city's best bites to grab on the go, from street food to fast-casual. CLEVELAND, Ohio - Chef Eustathea Kavouras owes her cooking techniques to the mix of her Greek upbringing and observing street food vendors ...


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Akinci says July is a 'natural timetable' for the talks

Although the GREEK Cypriot side does not want to hear about timetables, July will be the “natural end date” for the talks, Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa ...


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Documenta 14 – Learning from Athens

… without a sense of irony. Greece’s long economic crisis has … , this plane is stuck in Greece. Another large gallery at EMST … Conservatoire, Greece’s oldest music school. Graphical scores by Greek composers such …


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An idyllic retreat near Athens, Greece

… heard many good things about Greece, my excitement at finally seeing … did my firsthand experience of Greece exceed my expectations, I had … , crusty Greek bread, and, best of all, the yogurt Greece is famous …


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Referendum shows a deeply divided Turkey: What’s next?

A slim victory that is a defeat in a divided country. Turkey’s referendum result is tight, with a gap of some 1.3 million votes between winner Yes and loser No. Opposition parties cry ‘foul’ because the Supreme Electoral Council allowed non-stamped ballots to be counted as valid. One and a half million votes were invalid, … The post Referendum shows a deeply divided Turkey: What’s next? appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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After Economic Crisis, Low Birthrates Challenge Southern Europe

A hot spot for childlessness is rising in Greece and neighboring countries, heralding weaker growth and productivity, and creating fiscal problems.


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