Τετάρτη 10 Δεκεμβρίου 2014

ASE price index down by 4.11% today Dec. 10nth and 12.78% yesterday .Yet "The Olive Tree Will Always Be Here"

ASE opening: Further decline

The morbid facets of our  actual socio-economic   state of affairs,  in our continuously psychologically stressed sickly society,  have placed us globally on a crumbling , deteriorating ,
self-extinction avenue.Each nation as per their geopolitical and strategic position and as per their particular characteristics and inheritance.
To intercept this ominous future and counteract the increasing, negative , developments, we have to turn ourselves and our societies to appreciating and cultivating the Human Values and the Nature's Values. It is not as difficult as it  possibly looks like in some people's eyes. It can be done.It must be done. 
The pseudo-economics of paper money, feverish sweaty greed and monkey stock exchange games will evaporate in the thin air soon ,  polluting it , along with the rest of the chem trails. Yet, the Olive Tree will always be here,  as long as Gaia exists . 
The Olive Tree is the Beautiful, True, Winner.      m.l.p.
The Athens Stock Exchange (ASE) extended its loses on Wednesday morning with the basic share price index down 4.11%, standing at 865.70 points at 11:00 am and turnover at 36.18 million euros.
The FTSE/ASE Large Cap index for blue chip and heavily traded stocks fell 2.82%, and the FTSE/ASE Mid Cap index fell 4.47%.
16 of the stocks traded were rising, 56 were falling and 6 remained unchanged.

                                    ''The Olive Tree will always be here''


In the well-known ancient myth about how the Athenians chose their patron deity, the Greek goddess Athena won the sympathy of the city’s people by offering them the olive tree as a gift. This myth, placing the origin of the olive tree in the hands of the goddess of wisdom sometime in a very distant past, is but one of many stories about how important the olive tree is for the Greeks and the Mediterranean in general, from Palestine to Portugal and Tunis to Trieste. For example, on the island of Crete, the largest and most populous of the Greek islands, the production of olive oil dates back to the Minoan kingdoms (i.e. around 4,000 years ago); some of the island’s olive groves are actually thousands of years old, having grown under the care of countless generations of Cretans.


Honouring the ancient tradition of extracting the precious oil from the olive tree's fruit, Greek food brand GAEA specialises in producing and exporting fine olive oil and related products. By establishing exclusive collaborations with farmers and producers, GAEA ensures for some of the finest olive oil that Greek olive groves can offer. A captivating visual journey that conveys these and more interesting facts about the culture of olive oil farming, together with a truly heartfelt story about an old man from Crete who literally spent his entire life amongst the olive trees, are part of a short film produced by Indigo View for GAEA which celebrates the values and tradition surrounding the olive trees and the people who take care of them on Crete.