pavlos: i don't want greece to leave the euro. then all the austerity measures up to now will have been for nothing, at all. reporter: the paliakis family have made a lot of investments - - in this gyros and souvlaki shop, for example. they hope it'll be immune to the crisis. pavlos: even if the taxes keep rising and eating up all the profits, we go on the assumption that the customers will have enough cash left to afford a souvlaki. reporter now, if the grexit : becomes a reality, pavlos says the no-voters in the referendum will be to blame. ioanna kapatou opposes the austerity policies demanded by the eu. like many young greeks, she voted no. ioanna: no doesn't mean, you know, that we want to be bankrupt, or we want to exit the eu or anything like that. it's because we want to support the choice we made in the elections five months ago. it's because, you know, we want to see through our government and, you know, what we voted for. reporter in january, ioanna : expressed the same hope and optimism that prompted many greeks to vot