The nightmare that the UK has been going through recently is not unfamiliar in our country.
Five years ago we experienced the same anxiety over a prospective exit from the European Union.
We experienced the same divisive climate and saw politicians without measure or prudence managing the fate of an entire country.
We found ourselves one step away from falling off a cliff and we were confronted with the prospect of a disorderly Grexit.
It is an odd twist of fate that two countries which are so different experienced a similar drama due to a referendum.
The difference is that the referendum crisis and its repercussions ended swiftly in Greece due to the fact that the prime minister reversed his position and ignored citizens’ rejection of the EU bailout deal that was on offer.
In Britain, on the contrary, the crisis has festered and by all indications the prospect of an about-face which would save Britain and the EU from a major and hugely costly adventure is becoming more distant under the current prime minister.
In other words, it is possible that Britain will fall off a cliff.
No one can predict the total cost of the British PM’s blinders.
Yet one can discern his irresponsibility.
He is sacrificing the public interest on the altar of his vain ambitions.
As in the Greek case no book or film can prettify or annul reality.
One cannot persuade that blindness is light.