"Greece is great but only for holidays. Try actually living there for 6 months and you'll understand.
That is a Greek person speaking.
Food is great but that is if you have money to eat
Definitely a Greek person. British people don't talk about αν έχεις λεφτά να φας.
A prison that has destroyed my dreams and hopes and has confined me in it.
So, someone who lives in Greece and cannot leave, possibly because of family commitments (usually parents that are in their late 50s and 60s but behave like they are 90 and expect their children to stay close and be dependent on them for ever). An arrangement that worked well for some time, when there was enough money to go around, but has become troublesome nowadays.
it's dying and together with the country we are dying too.
Let me introduce you to
a Greek literary work of a similar title...
I am dying too. With lots of respect from a person with no tomorrow
He is not saying he is terminally ill. He is saying that he has no future because the country is the way it is.
Actually Theseus, the whole rant, especially the latter piece, is typical of the things one hears a lot since the beginning of the financial crisis. It's a kind of rhetoric that has been around for some time (see book above, published in 1978, and others), but you hear it more often nowadays.
I am at present seeking to understand the Greek political scene.
The Greek political scene consists of a centre left party that governed Greece for most of the time since 1974, which like most big parties offered shelter to an assortment of ideologies and opportunists. The opportunists abandoned ship when the financial crisis turned the voters against the parties they considered responsible for it, and joined a small left party, itself a splinter of the KKE, and helped bring it to power. That's the party that currently governs Greece. The original party is now too small and consumed in its own problems to be of any consequence.
It also consists of a centre right party that is also sheltering opportunists and loonies, and which now suffers from a major dilemma: ditch the opportunists and never get close to power or keep them and lose moderate voters? I'm afraid in Greek politics there is no choice: the majority of voters really want no change. They want to be reassured that there will be ρουσφέτια for ever, and that they will be able να διοριστούν στο δημόσιο. And they will vote for whoever maintains the status quo. As seen by the policies and politics of the current government.
There's KKE, which I think is still around because it is a very well organised and very wealthy political party but its supporter base is shrinking because the old comrades are dying. Being very far from power, they can say whatever they like and I sometimes I find myself agreeing with them, believe it or not. Despite never achieving the 17% that I remember them talk about, they have been the most successful political party in Greece. They managed to convince everyone (including you, Theseus) that they were the romantic heroes who fought valiantly for a noble cause etc etc. And that has not helped heal the social and political rifts in Greek society.
And there is also an assortment of fruitcake parties, some damaging because they are close to power, some of no consequence.
I don't know if that answers your question.
where we stayed & been entertained very hospitably and chatted about religion & politics over a (free) bottle of retsina, wine, ouzo or raki. Also I have even been taken to meet other Greek people in their homes.
Oι Έλληνες ήταν πάντα ξενομανείς και δουλοπρεπείς. Αν ο ξένος είναι από δυτική χώρα.
Αν πήγαινε από εκέι κανένας Έλληνας διεθνώς αναγνωρισμένος πανεπιστημιακός π.χ. με ειδικότητα religion and politics θα λέγανε έλα μωρέ, τί ξέρει να πει κι αυτός τώρα.