Reading that - which I doubt not for a second - I'd love to hear of life on a greek F-16 squadron !
Incidentally, dunno if they had to sell them but the Greek AF has / had the latest F-16's with all the bells & whistles & night vision kit most of the USAF can only dream of...![]()
Bob,
I'll have a check on what little info I have around there.
BTW the missile in your ( very enjoyable ) blog photo is a Harpoon anti-ship missile, can be surface, submarine or air launched; a bit faster and harder hitting than a conventionally armed Tomahawk cruise job but much shorter range.
However, once again in Greece, it's the system that's the problem and not the people.
The Post Office, like all other government run organisations, is staffed based on cronyism, corruption, toeing the line, brown-nosing, knowing the right people, etc. etc. It matters not a scrap what level of service they provide because their job does not depend on satisfying customers. There is no incentive at all for them to deliver a good level of service, they are not hired nor promoted based on performance, but based on who they know. This crippling and endemic cronyism starts (or used to start) right at the very top with the politicians themselves
Another Sea Harrier trial; with the Sea Eagle anti-ship missile ( UK's answer to Exocet but more powerful and intelligent, also much more expensive )
The Post Office, like all other government run organisations, is staffed based on cronyism, corruption, toeing the line, brown-nosing, knowing the right people, etc. etc. It matters not a scrap what level of service they provide because their job does not depend on satisfying customers. There is no incentive at all for them to deliver a good level of service, they are not hired nor promoted based on performance, but based on who they know. This crippling and endemic cronyism starts (or used to start) right at the very top with the politicians themselves, and that's one reason the Greeks voted for SYRIZA. As a young party with young leaders they are not (yet) caught up in the web of favours, backhanders, and patronage, they are thus the first (and only) government in post-Colonels Greece that stands even a remote chance of changing things.
NBG . . . National Bank of Greece, govt owned, monopoly of tax collection.
Just not not true! Last week I paid a tax bill at the Alpha Bank!
John
Electricity office, local tax office, water office . . . and watch the queues on Monday mornings at the NBG. That's where and when they collect VAT, only from the registered Principal mind you, of small businesses. NBG . . . National Bank of Greece, govt owned, monopoly of tax collection.
So half a day of each week of a business Principal's time is taken up queuing in a bank. And another half day a month paying attendingoffices to pay bills . . .
When you enter a Greek post office, you collect a little number. That must then be compared with the number on the board. The savvy Greek then makes an estimate of the length of time it will take before their number is due up, goes off to do some shopping, sips a cup of coffee in a street cafe over a lengthy natter, maybe an ouzo or so, then returns exactly at the moment their number appears.
It is a skill that can only be acquired from birth, possibly before. We tourists don't stand a chance. We dart nervously back after quarter of an hour (having achieved very little else in the mean time) to find the numbers have only gone up by two. Repeat again, and then once more. Next time the numbers have mysteriously advanced by a hundred, and we've lost our place in the queue. Come back tomorrow and repeat the whole charade.