Post date: Apr 27, 2013 6:37:5 PM
It is not just the bloodthirsty political puppets like the war mongering, environment-wrecking clown Stephen HAARPer who prance about the public stage wreaking mayhem on our world on behalf of the satanic global elite. It is also the continuous "public service" of the globalist world dictatorship.
Here in Canada, for example, we have a murderous bureaucracy established to squelch human and social development ... from the federal to the provincial to the municipal. No wonder Canada is such a model satanic collectivist inferno that has reduced its people to sheople.
There are variations of the same theme everywhere.
Take Greece. Beloved Greece.
Every human's heart cries out for the people of Greece in light of the bankster maw that country is now caught up in.
The puppet-ridden political class of course is largely to blame for this particular catastrophe.
But Greece has also been hampered by a quicksand bureaucracy.
The Greek version of an oppressive “public service” is ... surreal, for want of a more original way to describe it:
According to the Christian Science Monitor:
Greece starts firing civil servants for first time in a century
The Greek government began its first mass-firing of public-sector workers in more than 100 years this week, part of an effort to lay off 180,000 by 2015 under Europe-imposed austerity.
By Nikolia Apostolou, Correspondent / April 26, 2013 at 3:39 pm EDT
Athens
Pushed by its European creditors amid its crippling economic crisis, Greece began this week to do something it hasn't done in more than 100 years: fire public-sector workers en masse.
Following weeks of tough negotiations with its lenders – the "troika" of the International Monetary Fund, the European Union, and the European Central Bank – the Greek government started laying off public-sector workers in an effort to implement the austerity that the troika has demanded. The first two civil servants were let go on Wednesday under a new law that speeds up the process – one, a policeman, for stealing debit cards, and the other for 110 days of unexcused absence.
The mass layoffs were announced last week in a televised address by the Greek prime minister himself, Antonis Samaras. Despite the massive unemployment in Greece, the goal of the government has become the laying off of 180,000 civil servants by 2015. “This is not a human sacrifice," said Prime Minister Samaras. “It’s an upgrading of the public sector and it’s one demand of Greek society.”
Samaras though, promised new positions to be created: “An equal number [of employees] will be hired on merit,” he added.
A century without layoffs
Civil servants’ jobs have been protected by a law that dates back to the 1880s, which became enshrined in the century-old Greek constitution. Until that provision became law, each newly elected government would sack the civil servants hired by the previous government to replace them with their own party members, creating civil unrest and a dysfunctional state.
“The logic [behind this law] was that the public administration has to be politically independent, feel secure, and ensure the state’s continuity,” said Dimitris Charalambis, professor of political science at the University of Athens.
Even though the 19th-century law was initially intended to fight nepotism, it caused its own problem: Each successive government hired its own people, adding to a continually expanding civil service without making the public sector any more effective. As a result, the Greek public sector became infamous for being dysfunctional and bureaucratic.
Further, although the law had allowed the firing of civil servants convicted of misappropriation of public funds and other serious crimes or when their jobs are phased out, the civil servants were still guaranteed a right to appeal. The appeal process could take two to three years, during which they were able to remain at work.
The complete post is here.