Peter Economides is the evangelist for re-branding Greece, i.e. Greeks, i.e. showing them for what they really are, as opposed to what others and they themselves think of themselves -- miserable, loser-minded and not surprisingly lacking in self-confidence. Let's hope that many join his bandwagon.
I admit that Peter is addictive and, having listened to him last W-E I looked him up. He is into people and so am I. And being addictive, he has no side effects, other than good ones, so I can say that Economides is good for you, especially if you're Greek.
At one point in one speech, speaking about self-realisation and how one communicates (works on "branding") and he says: "we have to describe /show, Who we are, where we come from, where are going, how we doing it, why..."
The unfortunate answers to a mostly silent majority of Greeks nowadays is "I don't know anymore, from Ancient Greece, I don't know, fortuitously, den variese (oh well, let's not bother...).
Economides points to Greeks who stand out because they shed the constraints of a miserable, depressive, attitude and acted.
These very successful Greeks that stand out because they have genius, resilince, they wanted to do things, and were not afraid to do them against all odds and demons...
The challenge is to rally the silent majority as well; get them out of the rut and into the sunlight -- of which there is much to have in Greece.
For very many years I have felt that a lot of Greece's misery hinges upon the misery of the Greeks and it comes as a great relief that a public figure such as Economides also makes this point.
I.e. the fundamental question is "How we feel, as Greeks"
I will answer that question as well I can through my experience.
First, a small story that may offer more than any of my own analyses and conclusions. There was a very popular and heated discussion -- subject-related heat, not controversy -- on huge special interest site (diy, music & audio) 7-8 years ago. It attracted responses by the minute, as usual, 24/7 and the attendance was impressive as well: industry designers and figureheads were following.
Two of the active posters in this discussion were Greek - apparently as their residence indicated and confirmed later. One young in his 20's, one in his early 60's. Some altercation took place between them, and one responded in scathing tones -- such that it created a lull in the discussion and one other contributor, from Norway and another from the US, both very senior, chipped in to placate what had become an personal affront. The US poster noted that it was just a discussion, an exchange of opinion and of objective info and we are all, at the end of day, friends here -- not only, but we share a common interest! The Norwegian went further: he posted something along the lines of ".. you are both from Greece, a prestigious and very important country, and this is a very international site, so in a way you are representing the country..."
The young poster's response was shocking and saddening and ultimately very revealing: "I have nothing to do with that country, it doesn't represent me, I don't want to have ties..."
The guy was 27 years old at the time, Greek.
I think he said what many Greeks think. And when they do, it is the Administration they think of, the politicians they think of and ultimately, the impression these people give to the outside world. And they say, that's not me!
They say, I am not a genius, not a self-starter, not crazy pioneer -- but, neither am I a thief, lazy, con man, hypocrite, etc. I too am entitled to a country where negativity, corruption, inefficiency... do not prevail!
They say, "as I see things, it is an insult for me to have a GREEK NATIONALITY for all that that represents; yes I am Greek, but I don't want to be linked to "Greece" the brand. I am Greek but not a citizen of Greece...
How can Greeks pull themselves out of this rut???
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