#spanishrevolution

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Asia Times said:
May 25, 2011
The Arab spring conquers Iberia
By Pepe Escobar

[...] The exhilarating northern African winds of the great 2011 Arab revolt/spring have crossed the Mediterranean and hit Iberia with a vengeance. In an unprecedented social rebellion, the Generation Y in Spain is forcefully protesting - among other things - the stinging economic crisis; mass unemployment at a staggering 45% among less than 30-year-olds and the ossified Spanish political system that treats the citizen as a mere consumer.

This citizens' movement is issuing petitions that get five signatures per second; it can be followed on Twitter (#spanishrevolution); streaming live from Puerta del Sol at Soltv.tv; to see its reach, click here. [...]

They call themselves los indignados - "the outraged". Puerta del Sol is their Tahrir Square, a self-sufficient village complete with working groups, mobile first-aid clinic, and volunteers taking care of everything from cleaning to keeping an Internet signal. The May 15 movement - or 15-M, as it's known in Spain - was born as a demonstration by university students which spontaneously morphed into an open-ended sit-in meant to "contaminate" Spain via Facebook and Twitter and thus turn it into a crucial social bridge between Northern Africa and Europe.

They were only 40 people at the beginning. Now there are tens of thousands in over 50 Spanish cities - and counting. [...]

The outraged want citizens to regain their voices - as in a participative democracy embodied by neighborhood associations, and in favor of the right to vote for immigrants. Practically, they want a reform of the Spanish electoral law; more popular say on public budgets; political and fiscal reform; increased taxes for higher incomes; a higher minimum wage; and more control over big banking and financial capitalism. [...]

The outraged respond they are not anti-system; "it's the system that it's against us." Their original manifesto condemned the Spanish political class as a whole, plus corporate media, as allies to financial capital; those that have caused and are benefiting from the economic crisis. The outraged J'accuse includes the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the European Union, financial risk agencies and the World Bank. [...]
 
Spain's primary problem is corruption. Fix that and the rest solves itself.

But corruption is something that may take generations to eradicate, or bring it down to acceptable levels. I'm waiting for the same thing in Illinois.
 
Spain's primary problem is corruption. Fix that and the rest solves itself.

What evidence do you have for this claim ?

Spain is currently number 30 in the Corruption Perceptions Index, the United States by comparison is joint 22nd, the UK is 20th so it's not squeaky clean but then again it's not so bad either

The way it's portrayed in the UK, the recent issues in the Spanish economy are due in the main to a debt-fuelled property bubble. The construction industry has fallen off a cliff and then there has been the knock on effects to the service and other industries (including a weakness in the banking industry for regional banks).
 
Number 1 on the corruption scale doesn't mean you are corruption free, just least corrupt. Same way Michael Jordan, at 6'5, was the LEAST tall member of the famous Bulls squad at the time.
 
Number 1 on the corruption scale doesn't mean you are corruption free, just least corrupt. Same way Michael Jordan, at 6'5, was the LEAST tall member of the famous Bulls squad at the time.

Fair enough, but do you have any evidence that Spain's primary problem is corruption as opposed to the collapse of a property bubble ?

Also MJ is usually listed at 6' 6"
 
What evidence do you have for this claim ?

Spain is currently number 30 in the Corruption Perceptions Index, the United States by comparison is joint 22nd, the UK is 20th so it's not squeaky clean but then again it's not so bad either

The way it's portrayed in the UK, the recent issues in the Spanish economy are due in the main to a debt-fuelled property bubble. The construction industry has fallen off a cliff and then there has been the knock on effects to the service and other industries (including a weakness in the banking industry for regional banks).

Plus: countries with pretty bad corruption can do very well.
See China and Israel.
 
I can understand their anger, but protesting is going to achieve about as much good as a Rage Against The Machine concert.

A lot of righteous indignation, loud noise and littering.

Protests have historically had little impact on the real estate market and government debt.
 
What evidence do you have for this claim ?
Why Is Spain So Corrupt

How corruption, cuts and despair drove Spain's protesters on to the streets

Spain's biggest ever corruption trial gets under way

Corruption in Spain and The New Politics

Etc etc.

Spain is currently number 30 in the Corruption Perceptions Index,
Perception and reality are often 2 wildly different things. When corruption is the norm it's not even perceived as corruption, it's just seen as the way things are. As Harriet Tubman once said "I freed a thousand slaves, I could have freed a thousand more if only they knew they were slaves."
 
Plus: countries with pretty bad corruption can do very well.
See China and Israel.
They can never do as well as they could without corruption. Just as an Olympic swimmer can do well with 10 kg weight on his back, he can do much better without it.
 
I can understand their anger, but protesting is going to achieve about as much good as a Rage Against The Machine concert.

A lot of righteous indignation, loud noise and littering.

Protests have historically had little impact on the real estate market and government debt.

You can't really quantify the effect of protests. Take the miners strike in britain in the 80s - the strikers lost, but had they and others not protested at all and just given in to every government demand, who knows how much further the government would have gone? Perhaps things would have been exactly the same, or perhaps with no protest the government would have dismantled the entire welfare state.

As the saying goes, "they can do whatever you can't stop them doing." This protest won't directly stop corruption, but it might go a way towards showing that the public will look kindly upon politicians who appear to be doing something about it.
 
I can understand their anger, but protesting is going to achieve about as much good as a Rage Against The Machine concert.

A lot of righteous indignation, loud noise and littering.

Protests have historically had little impact on the real estate market and government debt.

how do you suggest they tell their government what they want?
 
It's a bit more complicated than that. Many of the protesters are not happy with the electoral system and think that just voting every four years in a system which favors heavily a few big parties in detriment of smaller ones is unfair. One of the things they want is to change Spain's strange and mind-boggling mixture of electoral laws.

Just this morning, #acampadabcn, the gathering in Plaça Catalunya, in Barcelona, was told to go away since they wanted to clean up the square. See, there's this big soccer match, the Barça is playing, and if it wins there'll be celebrations and they may turn rowdy, so normally in these cases the squares and streets are cleaned so that there are no bottles or heavy objects that may cause harm in case of disturbances. So this morning the Mossos d'Escuadra (the Catalan police force) asked the people at #acampadabcn to clear out. Which they didn't. It turned a bit confusing, with some of the people in the square blocking the path of the cleaning trucks, and then the police charged them. There's maybe a hundred people lightly wounded and a LOT of indignation right now. #acampadabcn is Trending Topic in Twitter.

To be frank, up until yesterday the protests seemed to be dying out. There were "spirituality" commissions in Madrid, biodances, reiki, and other assorted, well-meaning, wool-gathering woo taking place. But today the anger has sparked out again. Twitter and other social networks are afire, all of them insisting to keep the protests peaceful. From what I've seen, that's what's happening. Even in BCN, the wounds were from the police's batons and some rubber balls. The people sat in the square, raised their hands, and simply refused to move. So the police charged. The next few hours will be interesting.It's a bit more complicated than that. Many of the protesters are not happy with the electoral system and think that just voting every four years in a system which favors heavily a few big parties in detriment of smaller ones is unfair. One of the things they want is to change Spain's strange and mind-boggling mixture of electoral laws.

Just this morning, #acampadabcn, the concentration in Plaça Catalunya, in Barcelona, was told to go away since they wanted to clean up the square. See, there's this big soccer match, the Barça is playing, and if it wins there'll be celebrations and they may turn rowdy, so normally in these cases the squares are cleaned so that there are no bottles or heavy objects that may cause disturbances. So this morning the Mossos d'Escuadra (the Catalan police force) asked the people at #acampadabcn to clear out. Which they didn't. It turned a bit confusing, with some of the people in the square blocking the path of the cleaning trucks, and then the police charged them. There's a few dozen wounded and a LOT of indignation right now. #acampadabcn is Trending Topic in Twitter.

To be frank, up until yesterday the protests seemed to have mellowed out. There were "spirituality" commissions in Madrid, and other assorted, well-meaning, wool-gathering woo. But today the anger has sparked out again. Twitter and other social networks are afire, all of them insisting to keep the protests peaceful. From what I've seen, that's what's happening. Even in BCN, the wounds were caused by police's batons and rubber balls. The people sat in the square, raised their hands, and simply refused to move. So the police charged.

The next few hours will be interesting.
 
It's a bit more complicated than that. Many of the protesters are not happy with the electoral system and think that just voting every four years in a system which favors heavily a few big parties in detriment of smaller ones is unfair. One of the things they want is to change Spain's strange and mind-boggling mixture of electoral laws.

Just this morning, #acampadabcn, the gathering in Plaça Catalunya, in Barcelona, was told to go away since they wanted to clean up the square. See, there's this big soccer match, the Barça is playing, and if it wins there'll be celebrations and they may turn rowdy, so normally in these cases the squares and streets are cleaned so that there are no bottles or heavy objects that may cause harm in case of disturbances. So this morning the Mossos d'Escuadra (the Catalan police force) asked the people at #acampadabcn to clear out. Which they didn't. It turned a bit confusing, with some of the people in the square blocking the path of the cleaning trucks, and then the police charged them. There's maybe a hundred people lightly wounded and a LOT of indignation right now. #acampadabcn is Trending Topic in Twitter.

To be frank, up until yesterday the protests seemed to be dying out. There were "spirituality" commissions in Madrid, biodances, reiki, and other assorted, well-meaning, wool-gathering woo taking place. But today the anger has sparked out again. Twitter and other social networks are afire, all of them insisting to keep the protests peaceful. From what I've seen, that's what's happening. Even in BCN, the wounds were from the police's batons and some rubber balls. The people sat in the square, raised their hands, and simply refused to move. So the police charged. The next few hours will be interesting.It's a bit more complicated than that. Many of the protesters are not happy with the electoral system and think that just voting every four years in a system which favors heavily a few big parties in detriment of smaller ones is unfair. One of the things they want is to change Spain's strange and mind-boggling mixture of electoral laws.

Just this morning, #acampadabcn, the concentration in Plaça Catalunya, in Barcelona, was told to go away since they wanted to clean up the square. See, there's this big soccer match, the Barça is playing, and if it wins there'll be celebrations and they may turn rowdy, so normally in these cases the squares are cleaned so that there are no bottles or heavy objects that may cause disturbances. So this morning the Mossos d'Escuadra (the Catalan police force) asked the people at #acampadabcn to clear out. Which they didn't. It turned a bit confusing, with some of the people in the square blocking the path of the cleaning trucks, and then the police charged them. There's a few dozen wounded and a LOT of indignation right now. #acampadabcn is Trending Topic in Twitter.

To be frank, up until yesterday the protests seemed to have mellowed out. There were "spirituality" commissions in Madrid, and other assorted, well-meaning, wool-gathering woo. But today the anger has sparked out again. Twitter and other social networks are afire, all of them insisting to keep the protests peaceful. From what I've seen, that's what's happening. Even in BCN, the wounds were caused by police's batons and rubber balls. The people sat in the square, raised their hands, and simply refused to move. So the police charged.

The next few hours will be interesting.

OK, thanks.

In stereo, no less. ;)

The protests seemed to lack direction to me.
I was unaware of the demands for electoral reform.
 

Thank you for the articles. From the first one:

THE provocative title of this posting is not my own. It is the headline from a thought-provoking, if not completely convincing, opinion piece published today in Spain's best newspaper, El País

There is no doubt that the protesters think that corruption is at heart of the problem, but it wasn't such an issue when the property boom was in progress. Even if the corruption is eliminated, or reduced to manageable proportions, the Spanish economy is left with a stagnant construction industry and eye watering levels of debt.


Eta....

But I stand corrected.
 
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The protests do lack direction. They've tried to put in writing what they want, and this produced a long, rambling, mostly unfeasible list full of things from the restoration of the Republic to the compulsory re-establishment of the €400 monthly aid for long-term unemployed people.

Lately they've realized this and they went back to a minimum requirements list, which is:
- Electoral reform to allow smaller parties to achieve representation in Congress.
- Measures against corruption favoring political transparency, esp. regarding where the money goes.
- Effective separation of legislative, judiciary and executive powers.
- Citizen-driven measures of control as a way to demand political accountability.

The finer points of how to do this are still being debated, and they're asking for everybody to participate and give ideas, encouraging citizens to gather together by neighbourhoods and areas, to make this a regular thing, and to come up with more ideas to send their way.

Yeah, I still see it as something quite idealistic, utopic, unfocused, you name it, and it won't probably change the world much -- reality will reassert itself, hard, sooner or later -- but encouraging this kind of discussion is good no matter what. Many foolish things will be said, no doubt, but it's refreshing to see the normally apathetic Spaniards so fired up about something other than soccer.
 
Even if the corruption is eliminated, or reduced to manageable proportions, the Spanish economy is left with a stagnant construction industry and eye watering levels of debt.
When individuals and corporations are convinced that all the breaks and contracts will go to the politically connected, and the laws written for their benefit, they do not participate in the economy becaause they figure the system is rigged against them. Businesses are not started, existing businesses don't bid for contracts, corruption isn't even reported. The economic damage from corruption is many, many times the cost of the actual corruption.
 
When individuals and corporations are convinced that all the breaks and contracts will go to the politically connected, and the laws written for their benefit, they do not participate in the economy becaause they figure the system is rigged against them. Businesses are not started, existing businesses don't bid for contracts, corruption isn't even reported. The economic damage from corruption is many, many times the cost of the actual corruption.

companies will then work on better political connection and participate in the economy.
 

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