The international trade as a, quasi, “hostage” |
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Συνεννόηση για Δράση - Απόψεις | |||
Συντάχθηκε απο τον/την Χρήστος Μπούμπουλης (Christos Boumpoulis) | |||
Παρασκευή, 14 Απρίλιος 2017 18:41 | |||
The international trade as a, quasi, “hostage”
This article uses the term, hostage, for indirectly referring to the various States organizations' practice of making innocent civilians, “targeted individuals”, in order to satisfy their political reasons. Hostage taking is a despicable, criminal offense. This crime defers only slightly from “targeting” individuals, which is also a crime, as the late, devastates the victims' lives, equally. Nobody can stop mighty State's organizations from “targeting” defenseless individuals, though, their immoral and illicit practices, sooner, or, later, they are, probably, going to both, minimize the international trade, as well as, they are going to lead, the Nations which follow rules, to invent and then to adopt, means and methods which will manifest extreme energy conservations. The disgracing, for the perpetrators, practice of making innocent civilians, quasi, “hostages”, may threaten the economies of entire, irrelevant, Nations. Every rational and prudent human being wishes that, the most powerful of the countries, to come to their senses, to drop any violent thought they might nurture, to free immediately and unharmed each and every hostage, and/or, quasi “hostage” they may have taken and to unconditionally “surrender” their corresponding Nations' future, to the universal, Peace, Freedom, Cooperation and frugal Prosperity.
Christos Boumpoulis economist
P.S.: I condemn any kind of violence. The message of this article is peaceful and intends to remind, those who possess excess power, the destructiveness of power's misusage.
Apendix A hostage is a person or entity which is held by one of two belligerent parties to the other or seized as security for the carrying out of an agreement, or as a preventive measure against war. However, in contemporary usage, it means someone who is seized by a criminal abductor in order to compel another party such as a relative, employer, law enforcement, or government to act, or refrain from acting, in a particular way, often under threat of serious physical harm to the hostage(s) after expiration of an ultimatum. A person who seizes one or more hostages is known as a hostage-taker; if the hostages are present voluntarily, then the receiver is known as a host.
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