ALEXIS TSIPRAS IS THE EUROPEAN TWIN OF OBAMA!
HE NAMED HIS SON AS A TRIBUTE TO CHE GUEVARA!
TSIPRAS ISN’T THE ANTICHRIST OR FALSE PROPHET,
BUT DANIEL’S PRINCE OF GRECIA MAY SPIRITUALLY
LEAD HIM TO TURN EU, UN, & POPE AGAINST ISRAEL,
AFTER ISLAM ANTICHRIST RISES IN GREATER SYRIA
TO UNITE 10 AIRSTRIKE RIDDLED ISLAMIC STATES +
ALL JIHAD FANATICS UNDER DANIEL’S NORTH KING
SCAN DOWN TO READ BLOG ON PRINCE OF GRECIA
AFTER READING THIS BLOG CONCERNING GUEVARA.
February 17, 2015
http://www.tribulationperiod.com/
Daniel 11:40 – And at the time of the end shall the king of the south push at him: and the king of the north shall come against him like a whirlwind, with chariots, and with horsemen, and with many ships; and he shall enter into the countries, and shall overflow and pass over.
Daniel 7:24,25 – And the ten horns out of this kingdom are ten kings that shall arise: and another shall rise after them; and he shall be diverse from the first, and he shall subdue three kings. [25] And he shall speak great words against the most High, and shall wear out the saints of the most High, and think to change times and laws: and they shall be given into his hand until a time and times and the dividing of time.
Excerpt from Wikipedia Encyclopedia
Alexis Tsipras (born 28 July 1974) is a Greek politician who has been the 186th Prime Minister of Greece since 26 January 2015, and the Leader of the Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA) since 2009. He was first elected to the Greek Parliament in 2009, and was the Party of the European Left nominee for President of the European Commission in the 2014 European Parliament election. On 25 January 2015, Tsipras led SYRIZA to victory in a snap general election, receiving 36% of the vote and 149 out of the 300 seats in the Parliament.
Tsipras was born in Athens on 28 July 1974, three days after the fall of the Greek military junta. His family has its roots in a village near Babaeski in Eastern Thrace (European Turkey), which moved to Greece during the population exchange between Greece and Turkey. His father was born in Epirus.[5][6] His mother was born in Eleftheroupoli.TURN
He joined the Communist Youth of Greece in the late 1980s. In the early 1990s, as a student of Ampelokipoi Multi-disciplinary High School, he was politically active in the student uprising against the controversial law of Education Minister Vasilis Kontogiannopoulos. He rose to prominence as a representative of the student movement when he was featured as a guest on a television show hosted by journalist Anna Panagiotarea. During the interview, Panagiotarea implied that Tsipras was being disingenuous in defending middle and high school students’ right to absenteeism without parental notification in the context of protests.
He studied civil engineering at the National Technical University of Athens, graduating in 2000, before undertaking postgraduate studies in Urban and Regional Planning following an inter-departmental MPhil at the School of Architecture of NTUA. Alongside his postgraduate studies, he began working as a civil engineer in the construction industry. He wrote several studies and projects on the theme of the city of Athens.
As a university student, he joined the ranks of the renascent left-wing movement, particularly the “Enceladus” group, and as member of it was elected to the executive board of the students’ union of the Civil Engineering School of NTUA, and also served as student representative on the University Senate. From 1995 to 1997 he was an elected member of the Central Council of the National Students Union of Greece.
After the departure of the Communist Party of Greece from Synaspismos, Tsipras remained in the coalition. In May 1999 he became the first political secretary of Synaspismos’ youth-wing, the Synaspismos Youth. During this period he was described as a centrist, other than the very clear radical, left-wing profile he would later maintain as Leader of Synaspismos. In November 2003 he was succeeded by Tasos Koronakis and moved on to the mother party. He managed quite efficiently to maintain a strong adherence to the policy of the party, effectively outvoicing political deviants to the left and the right. As Secretary of Synaspismos Youth, he took an active part in the process of creating the Greek Social Forum and attended all of the international protests and marches against neoliberal globalization. In December 2004, at the 4th Congress of Synaspismos, he was elected a member of the party’s Central Political Committee and consequently to the Political Secretariat, where he was responsible for educational and youth issues.
Tsipras first entered the limelight of mainstream Greek politics during the 2006 local election when he ran for the municipality of Athens under the “Anoihti Poli” (“Open City”) SYRIZA ticket that gained 10.51% of the Athenian vote. He did not run for the Greek Parliament in the 2007 election, choosing to continue to complete his term as a member of the municipal council of Athens.
He was elected Leader of Synaspismos during the 5th Congress on 10 February 2008, after previous Leader Alekos Alavanos decided not to stand again due to personal reasons. Tsipras became Leader of Synaspismos at the age of 33, thus becoming the youngest ever leader of a Greek political party (after Nikos Zakhariadis, who became leader of Greek Communist Party in 1931 at the age of 28). In the 2009 election, he was elected to the Greek Parliament for Athens A and was subsequently voted unanimously to be the head of the SYRIZA parliamentary group. Tsipras led SYRIZA through the 2012 elections, overseeing a swing of over 22% to the party, and becoming the Leader of the Opposition.
In December 2013 he was the first candidate proposed for the position of President of the Commission of the European Union by the Nordic Greens/European Left. The vote will be a EU member states election to the European Parliament in May 2014.
Tsipras was campaigning as the only candidate of the south periphery countries. At the beginning of May 2014, in a speech in Berlin, he clarified many of his positions, in opposition to the allegedly Merkel-dominated neo-liberal political course in Europe.
Tsipras declared a substantial change for a better future for all Europeans is visible within 10 years. He addressed those who lost out in the fallout of the financial crises from 2008 to 2014, which produced unexpectedly high jobless rates in most of the EU. The speech was given in English to a German audience and probably intended to be listened to throughout Europe.
Tsipras led Syriza to victory in the general election held on 25 January 2015, falling short of an outright majority in Parliament by just two seats. The following morning, Tsipras reached an agreement with the right-wing populist Independent Greeks party to form a coalition.
On the same day he was sworn in by incumbent President Karolos Papoulias as the youngest Prime Minister in Greek history since 1865. Using the words “I declare in my name, honour and conscience to uphold the Constitution and its laws,” Tsipras was also the first to take a civil rather than a religious oath of office marking a rupture with Greek orthodox ceremonial culture. While reaffirming the good relations between his party and the Church, he explained Archbishop Ieronymos in a meeting, that as an atheist who didn’t marry in a religious ceremony neither baptised his children, he could not take a religious oath of office.
During the first meeting of the new cabinet, Tsipras declared the priorities of his government to be the fight against the “humanitarian crisis” in Greece, negotiations with the EU and the International Monetary Fund on restructuring the Greek debt, and the implementation of promises made by SYRIZA such as the abolition of the previous government’s privatization policies.
Tsipras is not married. His registered partner is Peristera Batziana, an electrical and computer engineer. The two met in 1987, when 13, at the Ampelokipoi Branch High School and both became members of the Communist Youth of Greece. They live together in Athens with their two sons. Their youngest son’s middle name is Ernesto, a tribute to *Che Guevara. Tsipras is an avid football fan and, having grown up near the stadium, supports Panathinaikos, attending every home game that he can. Tsipras is a self-described atheist, making him one of the at least four atheist leaders in the European Union (along with François Hollande, Miloš Zeman, and Zoran Milanović).
*READ FOLLOWING ABOUT *CHE GUEVARA EXCERPT
EXCERPT FROM WORLD AFFAIRS
MICHAEL J. TOTTEN
February 7, 2014
The truth about Che now has its boots on. He helped free Cubans from the repressive Batista regime, only to enslave them in a totalitarian police state worst than the last. He was Fidel Castro’s chief executioner, a mass-murderer who in theory could have commanded any number of Latin American death squads, from Peru’s Shining Path on the political left to Guatemala’s White Hand on the right.
“Just as Jacobin Paris had Louis Antoine de Saint-Just,” wrote French historian Pascal Fontaine, “revolutionary Havana had Che Guevara, a Latin American version of Nechaev, the nineteenth century nihilist terrorist who inspired Dostoevsky’s The Devils. As Guevara wrote to a friend in 1957, ‘My ideological training means that I am one of those people who believe that the solution to the world’s problems is to be found behind the Iron Curtain.’…He was a great admirer of the Cultural Revolution [in China]. According to Regis Debray, ‘It was he and not Fidel who in 1960 invented Cuba’s first corrective work camp,’ or what the Americans would call a slave labor camp and the Russians called the gulag.”
SCAN DOWN TO READ PREVIOUS BLOGS