Wednesday, 27 July 2011

Graffitti, banners and placards

It has taken me a while to get all of this together, but here is some of the graffitti to be found around Athens at the moment, as well as some of the posters and placards that are still around Syntagma Square.





The picture is of a Third World child eating, the caption at the bottom says I ate it and someone has scribbled on top: they are talking about profits and damage and we are talking about human lives.





We are taking control of our lives: self rule, compassion, change





A list of all the MPs who voted for the mid-term plan and in red: Traitors





The end of fear





Let's take to the streets to break the terror




Thieves - on the marble exterior of a bank




We are only targetting banks and Ministries   (the exterior of another bank)




Crisis is when you are being surrounded by poverty and the police





Class uprising, not patriotic indignation






Cog of the beast, exhume the riot police  (I love the poetry of this one)




Life, not survival




Colour television, black and white life





and here is one in English





and another one





and another one (the arrow is pointing at a window with bars)





together we have had our fill of tear gas





Difficult to translate, but I included this one because of the picture of Che




Long live utopia





Special department of the Greek police: Open school for coppers - you can enrol too. Special offer!!!
* Free enrolment + your first baton so that you can beat your mother up. tel. 090-100-100-100





PIGS are the bankers and not peoples





End of  the present situation , magic life....





Waged labour is terrorism





We should become 'their' crisis














3 comments:

  1. You got the disease
    We got the solution
    REVOLUTION

    ReplyDelete
  2. Cog of the beast, exhume the riot police? What on earth does that mean?
    There was some graffiti in Athens along the lines of 'Eat meat, consume your local police officer' which I guess is always a standby in times of austerity.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Is Plaka a bit like Free Derry then?

    ReplyDelete