Instead of thanks, rioting
and death. AFP/Getty Images/Newscom
Socialism: The left has falsely demonized Tea Party
protests in the U.S. as violent. But it ignores real violence in Greece,
where leftists and anarchists have rioted and even murdered to fight
cuts in their welfare state.
A week ago, the European Union and the U.S.-backed International
Monetary Fund came through with $146 billion to bail out the biggest
spendthrift in Europe. Greece didn't deserve it.
For years it lied about its finances and when the truth finally
spilled out, its deficit as a share of GDP stood at 13.6% (vs. the 3%
required of EU members) and the debt had swelled to 115%. Parties left
and right were to blame, having spent wildly to feed a socialism so
institutionalized it became an insatiable Minotaur.
But the rescue funds came anyway, courtesy of U.S. and European
taxpayers, with the hope that Greece never again will have to suffer
such humiliating treatment. Instead of thanking their benefactors,
Greeks attacked the very capitalist countries that bailed them out.
Greece's powerful public sector unions, not the private sector, led
the effort.
Defending their entitlements and privileges, they led 25,000 on a
two-day general strike, blasting the EU and IMF austerity measures as an
attack on their shiftless lifestyles. Thugs among them, many of them
idle youths and students from the rich northern part of Athens, targeted
the very private sector that pays their bills.
They went after Greece's tourism industry, one of its last sources of
legitimate revenue, and trashed the capital, including areas that had
been spruced up for the 2004 Olympic Games.
They pick-axed marble off buildings to hurl at police and sprayed
graffiti on buildings, imagining themselves Che Guevara-style
guerrillas. Worse, they firebombed a bank, murdering three innocent bank
employees. To underline their barbarism, they then blocked firefighters
attempting to rescue them.
Underscoring the violence, Greek President Karolos Papoulias said
Wednesday that Greece had "reached the edge of the abyss."
This is real violence, none of which has ever been remotely visible
at Tea Party protests in the U.S. Media pundits and politicians have
attempted to smear these millions of Americans as violence prone, but
now it's clear they are patriots, doing a public service by calling for
the government to halt its socialist binge spending.
Unfortunately, Greece-style rage may be the future for America as
public sector unions swell, and the Obama administration moves to
nationalize one sector of the U.S. economy after another.
The people trying to halt this march toward socialism stand in stark
contrast to those in Greece, which shows just how unreformable socialism
is and just how inevitable Greece's crash was.
Far from being demonized, the Tea Party participants should be
considered true heroes trying to save America from an inevitable slide
into Greek-style socialism.