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tama Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-18-08 11:13 AM
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Inside Account of Activism in Greece
Inside Account of Activism in Greece

by Dollars and Sense
This is a letter forwarded to us from D&S collective member Amee Chew (sent to her from a friend of hers), with more details about the situation in Greece--lots of good inside info and links.

Friends,

I don't know if others have been following the daily news of what is unfolding in Greece. The press here has mostly reported events as another explosion of "riots" in response to a police killing, without context.

In fact, what is taking place in Greece is much larger than that. In its immediate context, the uprising of the last 10 days comes on the heels of a rising oppositional movement: recently, the Greeks managed to achieve a general strike with support from 80-90% of the working population against privatization of national industries and other neoliberal policies, and for doubling the minimum wage. A broad hunger strike among Greek prisoners, with mass solidarity from Greek society, has also compelled the government to agree to the release of about half the prison population (and the movement declared that this would not be enough).

The "spontaneous" anger of young people against police violence has beneath and alongside it long-standing movement structures that are allowing it not simply to "discharge" and dissipate, but to grow, strengthen itself and expand into new political areas. It is taking place in a population that is highly politicized and has a history of resistance to draw from.

But it's extraordinary to see the mass mobilization of very young people--high-school students between the ages of 11 and 17, taking to the streets, taking over their schools, developing a politics that addresses their lives directly. It's not just resistance to police repression now, but a wider discussion is taking place about education social organization--with students holding mass assemblies in their occupied schools, trying to decide what the meaning would be of an education that is part of the life they want for themselves, and not the life that is being prepared for them by the existing society.

(The flyer at the this link, from the website of the Coordination of Occupied Schools Alexandros Grigoropulos, says it well. The slogans translate as follows: across the top "The time has come for us to take the future into our hands." On the left, is the image of a student sleeping over books with the caption "School, home, tutoring". On the right are students filling the streets, marching behind a banner that says "These days belong to Alexi: cops, pigs, murderers!" and above it, the caption reads, "Struggle, rupture, revolution." )

At this point, hundreds of schools, colleges and universities have been occupied and are being transformed into centers of organizing. They are running their own radio stations, some of which are private stations now under occupation. They are occupying public buildings; attacking police stations and government ministries.

Yesterday, students occupied the central state-run television station during its news broadcast of the Prime Minister's speech and stood with a banner saying, "Stop watching and go out into the streets!" Two smaller placards read, "Freedom for all those who have been arrested," and "Immediate release for all the arrested." (Video here.)

In a separate action, another group attacked the central Athens headquarters of the MAT, burning vehicles and a portion of the building. The MAT (Monades Apokatastasis Taxis "Units For Restoring Order") are the "riot police"--a specifically political branch of the police force developed to suppress "civil unrest." They were developed by police who received training in the US. (Greece has been a central recipient of US police training and technology for repression.) The dissolution of the MAT is one of the central demands that has come out of the assemblies of occupied schools and universities. (This also has a particular topical appropriateness: the MAT were first introduced by Konstantinos Karamanlis, father of the current Prime Minister and leader of the same right wing party Nea Dimokratia, in the years following the fall of the Greek junta. The leader of the junta would later write in his memoir that if the MAT had existed at that time, the junta might not have fallen.)

A video from this past weekend shows a battle with MAT police in the Exarchia neighborhood--the area in which the police murder took place that sparked the current uprising, and a center of left organizing--in which youths defending their neighborhood are using laser beams to blind the police and also to pinpoint them as targets so that they can maximize the effect of their crude firepower (molotov cocktails and stones) by focusing a barrage on one target at a time. (Video.)

At the center of the battle in Athens is the historic Polytechnion--the university famous for the events of November 17, 1973, when the junta attacked protesting students with tanks. As a result of that history, the police are constitutionally unable to enter the university, making it a protected enclave for political organizing and a tactical base of operations. Every evening now, after the protests and street battles, students and other active members of the movement gather for a general assembly. The Coordination of the General Assemblies and Occupations in Athens has given the movement both a political face and a structure of continuity for building, planning and deepening its political consciousness. (Website and
blog.)

The uprising in Greece has a particular relevance at this moment in history. If you read the military manuals and strategy papers of the US architects of empire, Greece is a centerpiece of "counterinsurgency" doctrine. In the immediate postwar period, the US and England fought an extended counterinsurgency war to suppress the left (communist and anarchist), which had become the most powerful political force in the country through the years of resistance to the German occupation. The strategy was to brutally repress the armed resistance (80,000 British troops and the arming of domestic fascists to kill, imprison, and torture left guerillas), while at the same time promoting elections and including a legitimate "socialist" opposition, which supported surrendering arms and using the parliamentary system.

This is the "handbook" which the US uses in its imperial wars of conquest and occupation. It's called "promoting Democracy." Appropriate then, this declaration of the Greek uprising: "Their Democracy murders..." (here: http://katalipsipolytexneiou.blogspot.com/).
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Robbien Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-18-08 07:42 PM
Response to Original message
1. Another blog writing along the same lines
However, it is hard to escape the feeling that there is more to the riots and the popular tolerance (or even support) that they enjoy than simple outrage over this particular incident. Greece nominally emerged from civil war and dictatorship in 1975, and it became a self-confident democracy in the 1980s. At that time, people of my parents' generation really did believe that their children's future was finally secure. But for more than a decade now most Greek families have seen their real incomes stagnate or shrink; while at the same time (mostly due to phenomenal levels of corruption) a few individuals have succeeded in accumulating ostentatious wealth. People of 30 or younger are locally known as the 700 Euro generation, because this is what the average job pays every month. Greeks (like many others) borrowed to maintain a middle-class life-style, as wages failed to keep up with the cost of living. Now that unemployment is rising and middle-class income is tanking, those debts are becoming unsustainable. The self-confidence of the middle-class, acquired only very recently, is shattering. These people, if not themselves rioting, were certainly ready to see a huge middle-finger waved in the direction of the government, the political parties, the E.U. and anyone else in a position of authority.

http://dagblog.com/politics/greek-riots-332

It goes on to say

No-one knows yet where all this is going to go. Although it looks likely that the riots will prove a death-blow to the current conservative government (Which in any case was paralyzed by corruption scandals hilarious and sad at the same time), there is no serious alternative waiting on the wings. The opposition Socialist Party has itself not recovered by its own reputation of corruption, and in any case it does not have a seriously different agenda. Most people feel that nothing is really going to change, and they are probably right. So they are just taking the opportunity to say "fuck you" as loudly as they can.


So while the riots may topple the government, unless the rioters have something in place themselves, the establishment has nothing to offer.
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tama Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-19-08 02:00 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. "fuck you" as loudly as they can?
There's more to this than just venting anger. Much more

Revolutionary moment is not about future being planned and programmed - controlled. The image that comes to mind is a burning trash can with words "NO CONTROL" sprayed on its side.



What is happening is anarchy - there is no-one in control, not the governement, not the political opposition, there is no central committee in control of an centrally organized resistance. There is just network of general, diverse and autonomous resistance against - control. They occupy universities, schools and other buildings where they meet to discuss their actions. They exchange text messages with mobile phones and flood the net with news, blogs, pictures, poetry, videos, music to share information.

The Economist magazine seems to be very afraid of what they call "Anarchist International, a trans-national version of the inchoate but impassioned demonstrations that have ravaged Greece this month". That the anti-capitalist movement stops following the Powers where they hold their Big Meetings to organize mass demonstrations and morphes into "AI": "The spread of sympathy protests over what began as a local Greek issue has big implications for the more formal anti-globalisation movement. That movement has ignored the idea of spontaneous but networked protest, and instead focused on taking large crowds to set-piece events like summits. Such methods look outdated now."
http://www.economist.com/world/international/displaystory.cfm?story_id=12815678

But most of all, what is really happening is a change in spirit and attitude, something that cannot be analyzed and explained. It can be only felt and acted out.


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