Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros
Monday, December 9, 2013
EU hopes Greece will soon meet bailout conditions
Dijsselbloem: We See Progress in Greece
Chobani Introduces Chobani Simply 100™ Greek Yogurt: The First and Only 100-Calorie Greek Yogurt Made With Only ...
Greece Nudged to Push Economic Overhaul, Wins Schaeuble Praise
Greece seeks financial freedom
Greek yogurt to be part of Kyrene menu next year
Greece urged to respect free expression while strengthening anti-racism bill
Foreign institutes in the great school of Hellas
Japonica head says his company will support a Greek bond issue
Greek deflation at record and could threaten future recovery from recession
Greece to Restore Electricity to Poor Disconnected Households
Greece has lost more than one-fifth of its pre-crisis economy
Greek silver tetradrachm realizes $653515 in auction
Amendment to CSL policy grants appellate jurisdiction over Greek life
Stournaras attends Eurogroup hoping 1-bln tranche can still be secured this month
New rules on home foreclosures even without troika approval, says minister
Greek recession slowed again in Q3 as economy shrank by 3 pct
Greece sees highest deflation on record in November as consumer prices fall 2.9 pct
Najib says warned of Greece’s folly, not bankruptcy risk
HMS Gala Raises Scholarship Funds
NEW YORK – “Celebrating ‘Service to Community’ was the theme of the Annual Scholarship Gala of the Hellenic Medical Society of New York that marked the Society’s 77th anniversary at Manhattan’s Palace Hotel on December 7. The guests were welcomed by the Gala committee Chairs, Dr. Eleni Andreopoulou and her sister Panagiota Andreopoulou, and Dr. […]
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The Greek Night Chill Kills
It’s getting cold in Greece as winter approaches, not the bone-freezing deep frost of a January night wind that blows in off Boston Harbor, but cold enough so that politicians are keeping their hands in their own pockets and people who can’t afford oil because of big tax hikes on fuel are burning wood, plastic, […]
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Greek Mortgage Ban Battle Set
ATHENS – Having passed a disputed and contentious 2014 budget that has a big hole in it, Greek lawmakers now will take up the tougher test for the government over whether to lift a moratorium against foreclosures when it expires on Dec. 31 as demanded by its international lenders who want to let banks confiscate […]
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BC-AP--Europe News Digest, AP
TOP STORIES FROM EUROPE AT 1200 GMT
UKRAINE-PROTESTS
KIEV, Ukraine — Ukraine's president agrees to talks with three former presidents in an effort to defuse the crisis triggered by his decision to turn his back on a treaty with the EU. Meanwhile, dozens of riot police in full gear positioned themselves outside the Kiev city administration on Monday, the deadline a court has set for the protesters occupying the building to leave. By Jim Heintz and Yuras Karmanau. Developing. SENT: 130 words.
TURKEY-POLITICS
ANKARA, Turkey — After dominating Turkish politics for a decade, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is entering election season on uncertain footing — without the support of key groups that had powered his previous electoral wins and facing divisions within his own party. Erdogan, whom critics accuse of cutting an increasingly autocratic figure, faces municipal elections in March that are largely seen as a vote of confidence in his Islamic-based government. A poor result could weaken Erdogan just as he seeks to shift into the presidency in an August vote while still maintaining enough influence in his party to choose his successor as prime minister in parliamentary elections expected next year. By Suzan Fraser. SENT: 760 words, photo.
NSA-SURVEILLANCE-TECH
LONDON — Eight major technology companies have joined forces to call for tighter controls on government surveillance, issuing an open letter Monday to President Barack Obama arguing for reforms in the way the U.S. snoops on people. The companies, which include Google, Facebook and Twitter, said that while they sympathize with national security concerns, recent revelations make it clear that laws should be carefully tailored to balance them against individual rights. By Danica Kirka. SENT: 450 words.
FRANCE-HOPI-AUCTION
PARIS — A French auction house has ignored an urgent request by the U.S. Embassy to delay a sale of dozens of sacred Hopi masks. EVE auctioneers say Monday's sale of 32 artifacts, which the Hopis say represent their ancestors' spirits, will go ahead despite a plea from the Embassy on Saturday that the sale be delayed to give the concerned tribes time to travel and identify the artifacts. SENT: 130 words. UPCOMING: 450 words by 1300 GMT.
RUSSIA-NEWS AGENCY
MOSCOW — President Vladimir Putin has appointed a controversial news anchor known for his ultraconservative views to head a newly restructured state news agency. A decree published on the Kremlin's website on Monday announced the appointment of Dmitry Kiselyov to be head of Russia Today, which will replace RIA Novosti in a major structural overhaul of the company. SENT: 130 words.
FRANCE-CHAMPAGNE-WIDOWS
REIMS, France — For Champagne to become the tipple it is today — popped at weddings, quaffed in casinos, sprayed by racing drivers and smashed against ships — a few men had to die. Not just any old men. Young ones married to clever young women. By Thomas Adamson. SENT: 1,100 words, photos.
BUSINESS AND FINANCIAL
EUROPE-FINANCIAL CRISIS
BRUSSELS — Finance ministers from the 17 eurozone countries try to agree on setting up a fund to pay for bank rescues in Europe. They will also discuss whether Greece needs to do more spending cuts. By John-Thor Dahlberg
130 words by 1400 GMT, 400 words by end of meeting
GERMANY-ECONOMY
BERLIN — Germany's trade surplus narrowed and industrial production lost further momentum in October, according to reports Monday that raise concern over the strength of Europe's largest economy.
130 words out, 330 words by 1230 GMT
EU-NOKIA
AMSTERDAM — Europe's top regulator has warned Nokia not to try to become a "patent troll" after the Finnish company sold most of its cellphone-making business to Microsoft Corp. this year but retained its patent portfolio. Joaquin Almunia said in a speech in Paris on Monday he had approved the $7.2 billion sale as not presenting problems on Microsoft's side, but there is a danger Nokia will now attempt to "extract higher returns" from its patent portfolio. "In other words...behave like a patent troll, or to use a more polite phrase, a patent assertion entity." SENT: 130 worlds. UPCOMING: 250 words by 1330 GMT.
EU--GOOGLE
AMSTERDAM — Europe's top regulator says he has asked Google not to discriminate against companies that don't want it to use their content in Google's specialized search results, such as price comparison for plane tickets or reviews of restaurants. Joaquin Almunia said during a speech in Paris Monday that the Internet search giant currently "creates a link" between sites that cooperate with the practice known as "scraping" and how the sites appear on Google's general search results. SENT: 130 words.
News Topics: General news, Embassies, Executive changes, Mobile phone manufacturing, Patents, Government surveillance, International relations, Government and politics, Corporate management, Corporate news, Business, Personnel, Mobile telecommunications equipment manufacturing, Telecommunications equipment manufacturing, Telecommunications, Industries, Consumer electronics manufacturing, Consumer product manufacturing, Consumer products and services, Intellectual property, Political issuesPeople, Places and Companies: Google, Inc., Microsoft Corporation, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Barack Obama, Vladimir Putin, Joaquin Almunia, France, Kiev, Europe, Turkey, Ukraine, Paris, Russia, Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Middle East
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Chobani to Debut at Super Bowl in Major Ad Push
Greek deflation accelerates to new record as prices fall by 2.9%
Greek deflation hits record in November, at -2.9 percent
Solving the Greek Debt Crisis With Honey and Skincare Products
Heart belonging to suicide Marine was 'stolen by Greek doctors in illegal autopsy who then sent his family someone else's organ when they complained'
Greece Forecasts First Round of Growth in Six Years
EUROPEAN OPENING HEADLINES INCLUDING: A Greece deal before January 2014 is unrealistic
Greek Banks Find Mortgage Ban Exploiters
Greece passes 2014 budget in tight vote
Greek soccer federation bans player over Nazi salute
Greece passes 2014 budget based on recovery prediction
Greek pairings chosen with a new method
Independence gets a serving of family-style Greek cuisine
No troika deal in December as Greece falls behind with bailout pledges [update]
Kiev protesters topple Lenin statue as Ukrainians take to the streets
Occupiers of City Hall defy threat of police action as report of secret Ukraine deal with Putin is denied
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin was knocked from his pedestal, smashed into pieces by mallet-wielding men and carried off in hundreds of small granite chunks in Kiev after hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians took to the streets in the latest display of anger at President Viktor Yanukovich's rejection of closer ties with Europe.
"This is the great Ukrainian revolution," screamed a man who had scrambled to the top of Lenin's former pedestal to plant Ukrainian and EU flags, as the crowd below shrieked approval, sang the Ukrainian national anthem and scrambled to gather souvenir chunks of the Bolshevik leader.
"Of course it would have been nice to have got rid of it in a more civilised way," said 36-year-old Mykola Boiko, clutching an apple-sized chunk of Lenin's body. "But he was a mass murderer. It's like having a monument to Hitler in your city. I'm glad he has gone."
Lenin's severed head reappeared after several hours at the pedestal, where protesters photographed it before a group of youths attacked it with hammers. "We are not against the Russian people, we are against Lenin and Putin," shouted one young protester before attacking the head with a huge mallet. The granite proved resistant although Lenin's facial features were damaged and one man pocketed an eyebrow. Shortly after, the head was rolled to a pickup truck and driven away.
Earlier, the opposition threatened to march on the presidential palace and seal Yanukovych inside if he did not sack his prime minister within 48 hours.
Hundreds of thousands of people crammed into Independence Square and nearby streets on Sunday, chanting "Ukraine is Europe!". They called on Yanukovych to resign in the biggest protest of a two-week movement to force the president to reverse a decision to halt European integration.
The protesters carried the yellow-and-blue flags of both Ukraine and the European Union. Although some protesters also waved flags of political parties, the majority of those on the streets were not supporters of particular groups.
One man wielded an effigy of the severed head of the late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi above a sign reading: "Vitya [Yanukovych], the game is over!"
"We do not want to be kept quiet by a policeman's truncheon," heavyweight boxer and opposition leader Vitali Klitschko told the crowd.
Since last Sunday, when protesters attempted to storm the presidential offices and riot police responded ruthlessly, there have been no violent clashes. The government has so far taken a hands-off approach to the protests but resisted concessions.
The prime minister, Mykola Azarov, survived a no-confidence vote in parliament on Tuesday and branded those on the square "Nazis and criminals", but after Sunday's violence increased the protest mood, police withdrew from the city centre. On Friday, however, police said that if two occupied buildings, including City Hall, were not vacated within five days, they would be cleared by force.
On Sunday, Eduard Leonov, an MP from the nationalist Svoboda party, was sitting at a desk inside City Hall marked "Committee for the self-government of Kiev", and described himself as the commander of the building.
He said protesters would not acquiesce to the police demands.
"First, it's an illegal order, as MPs have the right to hold meetings wherever they want. Second, it's an immoral order, as this is a humanitarian mission providing food and warmth to the protesters."
Hundreds of mattresses had been laid out on the floor in City Hall's main colonnaded room, and stalls handed out food, medicine and donated warm clothes.
"If the government decides to storm the building, then of course we will resist," said Leonov.
Across town, a low-key rally of pro-Yanukovych Ukrainians was guarded by hundreds of riot police. The crowd stood unenthused as pop music blared and a voice boomed from a loudspeaker that opposition forces were attempting to launch a coup d'etat. Many admitted they had been bussed into the capital from the Russian-speaking east of the country, and most did not look happy to be there.
Yanukovych has kept a low profile since the protests started, even flying to China for a three-day trip last week as the centre of Kiev remained under siege. He returned to Ukraine on Friday, stopping over in Russia to meet Vladimir Putin, with rumours circling in Kiev that the pair had agreed for Ukraine to join the Russian-led Customs Union. That sparked fury in Kiev but was denied by spokespeople for both presidents.
Russia and the west have traded allegations over which side is putting pressure on Ukraine. On Saturday, former Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili told the crowd on Independence Square that Putin had performed a "raider attack on a whole sovereign country", attempting to steal Ukraine's fate from its own people.
Alexei Pushkov, the head of the Russian parliament's foreign affairs committee, struck back: "Saakashvili is kind of right. There is an attempted raid on Ukraine, not from Moscow but Brussels, grabbing it by the neck and dragging it to paradise," he tweeted. "The word 'paradise' should be in inverted commas, of course. For Bulgaria, Greece and even for Serbia which is just an EU candidate country, the promised 'paradise' turned to hopeless gloom."
Yanukovych has insisted he still wants integration with Europe, but could not sign the EU deal as it would have caused further damage to Ukraine's suffering economy.
UkraineProtestRussiaEuropeEuropean UnionShaun Walkertheguardian.com © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More FeedsSlovenian and Greek troubles to dominate Europgroup talks
Why Americans Are So Angry
BELIEVE the polls, and Americans have decided that they live in Italy: hobbled by dishonest leaders and such endemic corruption that only fools would trust strangers.
Grim findings have been coming thick and fast. Most Americans no longer see President Barack Obama as honest. Half think that he “knowingly lied” to pass his Obamacare health law.
Fewer than one in five trust the government in Washington to do what is right all or most of the time.
Confidence in Congress has fallen to record lows: in America, as in Italy and Greece, just one in ten voters expresses trust or confidence in the national parliament. Frankly straining credulity, a mammoth, 107-country poll by Transparency International, a corruption monitor, this summer found Americans more likely than Italians to say that they feel that the police, business and the media are all “corrupt or extremely corrupt”.
Americans are also turning on one another. Since 1972 the Chicago-based General Social Survey (GSS) has been asking whether most people can be trusted, or whether “you can’t be too careful” in daily life. Four decades ago Americans were evenly split. Now almost two-thirds say others cannot be trusted, a record high. Recently the Associated Press sought to add context to the GSS data, asking Americans if they placed much trust in folk they met away from home, or in the workers who swiped their payment cards when out shopping. Most said no.
The press is full of headlines about an American crisis of trust. That is too hasty. Lexington spent years in Asia and Europe reporting from countries cursed by official corruption and low trust among strangers. America is not that sort of society.
In genuinely low-trust societies, suspicion blights lives and hobbles economies. In China, even successful urbanites distrust business and government, worrying constantly about the food they buy and the air they breathe. Yet those same successful Chinese have little confidence in the poor. Chinese friends used to urge Lexington never to play Good Samaritan at an accident scene, insisting that anyone rich who stopped to help would be blamed for the victim’s injuries and pursued for compensation.
It is true that America faces grave problems. Congress has had an unproductive year: shutting down the federal government was a notable low point. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) confessed to subjecting Tea Party and other political groups to special scrutiny, enraging conservatives. But to put such antics in perspective, this year Italy’s richest media tycoon and its ex-prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, was convicted of tax fraud, of paying an underage prostitute and abuse of power.
In genuinely low-trust countries, tax evasion comes naturally: when those at the top cheat, only dupes follow the rules. But America shows few signs of surging tax evasion. The most recent IRS “tax gap” estimates found no significant decline in the proportion of taxes paid voluntarily and on time.
Nor are Americans at soaring risk of being ripped off in daily life. The latest survey of consumer fraud by the Federal Trade Commission found a fall in the prevalence of scams. Payment-card fraud is rising, but only in proportion with overall card use, says FICO, a fraud-management firm: crooked shop staff affect “percents of a percent” of transactions.
None of this justifies complacency. Americans are dangerously angry. But when they voice Italian levels of distrust for authorities, or sweepingly accuse fellow-citizens of being crooks, they are not describing reality. Here is a theory: Americans are instead revealing how deeply they are divided. Dig into headlines about “half of all Americans” thinking this or that, and large partisan or demographic divides lurk.
Take that poll finding that half of voters think Mr Obama lied to pass his health plan. Look more closely, and eight in ten Republicans think he fibbed, but fewer than one in four Democrats. As for headline GSS numbers about overall trust between Americans, they conceal a big race gap: for decades around 80% of black Americans have consistently said that most people cannot be trusted. The bulk of the recent decline involves whites becoming less trusting, says Tom Smith, the survey’s director.
Explaining that decline is a complex business, but over the same period society has become more impersonal and more economically unequal. Robert Putnam of Harvard University, a pioneer in the study of “social capital”, argues that Americans’ trust in one another has been declining steadily since the “golden” aftermath of the second world war, when civic activity and a sense of community among neighbours were at a peak.
Trust in institutions has risen and fallen over that same post-war period in line with external events, plunging after the Watergate scandal, for instance, and during recessions. Yet something new seems to be happening. Anti-government cynicism is feeding on gulfs in society.
Conservatives think Democrats buy votes with welfareConsider the crisis around Obamacare. Forget fussing about its useless website: websites can be fixed. The president’s headache is that voters see his plan as welfare for the poor rather than a better way of delivering medical care.
That is exposing ugly divisions. Most starkly, a majority of whites think the law will make life worse for them, a National Journal poll found, while most non-whites believe it will help people like them. That in turn tallies with a big change over the previous 15 years: a collapse in support among conservatives for government safety nets.
This is America’s real problem with trust. The country faces a crisis of mutual resentment, masquerading as a general collapse in national morale. Sharply-delineated voter blocs are alarmingly willing to believe that rival groups are up to no good or taking more than their fair share. Polls describing America as a hell-hole of corruption are not to be taken literally. They are a warning. America is not a low-trust society. But it risks becoming one.
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Center-Left Olive Tree Movement Set
ATHENS – With the decline of the once-dominant PASOK Socialist party into irrelevance, a new center-left political movement called Elia (Olive Tree) which brings together 58 personalities from the worlds of politics, academia and the arts is to be launched officially in Athens on Dec. 9 even though its leaders are already squabbling over what […]
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Olympiakos Beats Asteras 2-0
ATHENS – Late goals by Alejandro Dominguez and Michael Olaitan helped defending champion Olympiakos to a 2-0 victory over visiting Asteras in the Greek league on Dec. 7. Asteras played for a draw and frustrated Olympiakos’ efforts until the 74th minute, when Vladimir Weiss was brought down in Asteras’ area. Dominguez converted the penalty. In […]
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Greece 200-1 Shot in World Cup
If you’re a betting man and missed your chance to score a fortune by not picking Buster Douglas at 42-1 to beat Mike Tyson for the World Heavyweight Championship, you could get rich betting on Greece to win the World Cup in soccer – what the world outside of the U.S. calls football – in […]
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Quartz Daily Brief—Asia edition—Thailand's opposition walkout, Greece's ...
The Greek paradox
Cuba the Day After: Chimeras, Transitions and Stages
"Every frustration is the daughter of an excess of expectations," a friend repeated to me when the forecasts of beautiful tints that I invent every now and then fell short. The last decades of my life -- like that of so many Cubans -- have been a kind of unfulfilled forecasts, scenarios that never materialize, and archived hopes. A sequence of cabals, rites of divination and staring at the moon, that collide head-on with the stubborn reality. We are a people of frustrated Nostradamuses, of soothsayers who won't win at life, of prophets who weave predictions together, without getting any of them right.
In our national history the nineties held the greatest concentration of failed prognostications. I remember imagining people in the street, the shouts of freedom, the pressures of need and social misery exploding in a peaceful revolt that would change everything. I was a teenager and we were a beardless society... we still are. So the mirage of before and after, of an event that would again split the calendar of the nation, of our going to bed one night thinking of political change and before the sun set again it would be done. Like all immature people, we believed in magicians. In those who will come with a wand or banner or dais, to resolve everything. And then it happened. Although it didn't seem anything like what I had imagined. We had the Maleconazo in August of 1994, but what brought people to the streets wasn't an attempt to transform the country from within, but rather to bypass the insularity and escape to another place. There was no flag waving, no shouts of "Viva Free Cuba!" Rather doors were torn off to make rafts with a long delayed goodbye on our north coast. My wise friend repeated it... "I told you, you're disappointed because you always expect too much." Two decades have passed, our society never matured but some stubborn gray hairs started to appear on my head. I now know that between desire and events most of the time there is a divorce, an uncomprehending widow. I became pragmatic, but not cynical. Everything I learned about reality -- paraphrasing a good poet -- was not everything there was in reality. When I woke up thinking "this system already died," then its capacity to be the "living dead" for 54 years bit me. So now I've stopped believing in the solutions accompanied by smiles and hugs in the street. Hard times are coming. The transition will be difficult and there won't even be a day to celebrate it. Most likely there will be joy and singing. We have been late to everything, even change. The images of the Berlin Wall falling to pieces were only possible once. For us, and here I venture another prophecy, there will be a gray transformation, without snapshots to record it.A day after the Castros... if after the Castros there is a day. One day we will look back and realize that the Castro regime fell or simply ceased to exist, taking with it the best years of my mother, my best years, the best years of my son. But perhaps it's just as well, not having another January first, no photos of Greek-profiled gentlemen with pigeons perched on their shoulders. Perhaps a change that goes through the waters of apathy is better than another carnivorous revolution that devours us all. Afterwards, afterwards there won't be much time for festivities. The bubble of false statistics will pop and we'll be struck by the country we actually have. We'll realize that the infant mortality rate isn't what we've been told all these years, that we aren't the "most cultured people in the world" and that the nation's coffers are empty... empty... empty. We will hear a chorus of "with Raul Castro everything was better." We will have to start to change the name of the Stockholm Syndrome and relocate it to this tropical geography. Responsibility will come, a concept few are prepared for. Taking over our own lives and putting "Daddy State" in its rightful place, without protectionism but also without authoritarianism. Democracy is profoundly boring, so we'll get bored. That permanent fear that we listen to, that panic that a neighbor or friend could be an informer for State Security, will no longer exist. Then we will see if we dare to say out loud what we are thinking, or if we prefer that the politicians of tomorrow can comfortably manage our silence. The first free elections will find us arriving early at the polling stations, talking and smiling. But by the third or fourth time the turnout at the polls will be around half the population. Being a citizen is a full-time job and, as you already know, we are not used to efficient and constant work, nor to tenacity. So eventually we'll again delegate our responsibility to some "sweet talking" populist who promises us paradise on earth and assures us that in the dilemma between "security and freedom" he will be charged with enforcing the first. We will fall into his trap, because we are an immature people, a beardless people. The scars will take a long time to fade, but the new wounds are rapidly appearing. This combination between high level professional and low level ethics will be a bitter pill for us to swallow. It wouldn't surprise me if we become an emporium of drug manufacturing and trafficking. This would be another of the many legacies left to us by the Castro regime: a predatory people, where the word "values" is uncomfortable... and unnecessary. Lurching to the fiercest consumption also seems inevitable. Years of rationing, shortages and pitiful goods with outdated labels, will make people hungrily throw themselves at the market. Time will pass before we see environmental movements, natural food movements, or we are called to moderation and to not be wasteful. The appetites to have, to buy, to show off, will skyrocket and will also be a part of the sequels left to us by a system that preaches austerity while the higher ups exercise hedonism. We will see them mutate, like chameleons swearing "I never said such thing." We will watch them exchange ideology for economics, their Manual of Marxism for a Guide to Business, their olive-green uniforms for suits and ties. They will speak of necessary reconciliation, of forgetting, and remind us that "we are all one people." They will go from acts of repudiation to amnesia, from spying to continuing to spy because once an informer, always an informer. Every person who was once critical of the government will be, for these "converts" of tomorrow, deeply uncomfortable. Because to look at them will be a reminder that they did nothing to change things, that, from cowardice and opportunism, they kept their mouths shut. So among their objectives will be to bury what was once the Cuban dissidence. They will use it and set it aside. We will hear stories of people beaten and incarcerated being told by the forgotten old men of social security; like today we see Olympic boxers begging on the street. The medals of the past will be offensive to the cynics of the future... there will be no space for heroism, because it's uncomfortable. The dates celebrated in the textbooks will change. Many statues will be removed and in their place they will erect some whose names we will have to learn and at whose bases we will have to leave flowers on their anniversaries. One epoch will be replaced, another will be established. With all those who will then say they were opponents and helped "to overturn the Castro regime" we could, right now, establish a civic force of millions of individuals. There will be a competition to see who is more responsible for the change and has more medals to hang on their lapels.Bad predictions, good preparation Tired of throwing flowers at the future and imagining its luminosity, I have come to believe that the more we paint it in dark tones the more energy we can put into changing it. The time to think about tomorrow is now because the Castro regime has died but still walks, breathes, tightens its fist. The Castro regime has died because its life cycle expired some time ago, its cycle of illusion was brief, its cycle of participation never existed. The Castro regime has died and we must begin to plan for the day after its funeral. I look forward to reading proposals and platforms that address the dilemmas that will confront us one hour after the coffin of this so-called revolution rests under the earth. Where are the programs for that moment? Are we prepared for this gray change, without heroes or falling walls, but that will inevitably come to pass? Do we know how we are going to face the new problems that will arise, the problems that will appear on all sides which are here now, but muted and distorted? If we prepare ourselves for the worst case scenario, it will be a sign of maturity that will help us overcome it. The civic network will play a key role in any case. Only by strengthening this civic structure can we stop ourselves from falling into the arms of the next political hypnotist or into networks of chaos and violence. We are not looking for presidents -- they are already here -- we are looking for citizens. Let's forget the river of people celebrating in the streets and the Ministry of the Interior opening its archive to find out who was and wasn't an informant. Most likely, it won't be like that. The enthusiasm for public demonstrations is exhausted and the most revealing documents will no longer exist, they will have burnt them or taken them. We have come late to the transition. But that doesn't mean it will go badly for us, that we will regret taking it on. We can, this at least we can, start from scratch in so many things. Drinking in the experiences and disasters of others; realizing that we have the chance to sow the seeds of democracy in world where so many try to straighten a trunk that was born crooked. If our change turns out badly, we will have half the planet pointing at us and asking, "Is that what they wanted for Cuba? Is that the change they yearned for?" With no apologies, we have a responsibility not only to our nation, but to the better part of humanity that believes it can still transition successfully from an authoritarian to a participative system.Realization is the daughter of a difficult challenge I know what my skeptical friend will say when reading this article. He will chuckle and say, "Even when you're pessimistic you're still a dreamer." But he will also recognize that I am no longer that teenager who hoped to one day wake up to cries of joy in the street, to join the crowd and head to the statue of José Martà in Central Park. I know it won't be like that. But it can be much better.Yoani's English Language blog is here, and her posts also appear in TranslatingCuba.com here, along with those of over 100 independent voices writing from the Island. You can help translate Cuban bloggers at HemosOido.com here.