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#613 | Democracy is born in the squares

The article below was written by C.G, a friend of Occupied London and published in Greek here.

 

Democracy is born in the squares

There may be no better proof of the rupture that is brought about by the “movement of the squares” other than its open, participatory, directly democratic way of organising and functioning. Within a single week it has given birth to a political culture of a different type, one that literally overcomes all known models of organising and struggle to date.

Even if the issue of its procedures is incomplete, it comes up again and again and comprises the most important legacy already left to the political and social life of the country. This does not mean there are no issues with disorganisation, inefficiency, delays. Taking into account however the explosive rhythm of its development, the lack of previous experience on the side of those who created it, along with the need to compile, step by step, heterogeneous and different opinions of all participants through open procedures, all this is to be expected. Even if time-consuming, its procedures are flexible and are altered by the day; they are self-criticised, adjusted according to mistakes, comments and suggestions deriving from them being tested in practice.

The open, egalitarian and participatory character of the procedures and ways of organising derives from the will to find such procedures that can unite all who are affected by the crisis and dissatisfied with the current political system. The pacifist and non-party character of the original call-out was the condition that shaped a common public sphere where everyone would meet without any badges to co-decide by discussing at the same level.

The refusal to assign or elect representatives does not only cause unease to the forces of the state who do not know how to deal with this, as it overturns their tactic of manoeuvring, of libelling and destroying popular expressions of rage. More than that, this “facelessness” as Pretenderis would have it [a well-know reactionary TV journalist — trans], is the best way for the movement to safeguard transparency in its organising, as well as the will for whatever is created to express everyone — not just its most so-called “vanguard” or “politicised” part.

And so, the matter of procedures is not simply a matter of organising but a key issue regarding its political essence. An issue of safeguarding the conditions of unity, involvement, free participation to the right of speech and in the decision making process of the people’s assemblies; working groups, thematic assemblies and their immediate review and control. This understanding that rejects any kind of representation or mediation, is safeguarded by the constant circulation of revocable positions and runs through all structures and functions born by this movement.

In this spirit, the stance of the movement toward Mass Media is also differentiated, with the refusal to engage with them, not even by way of issuing press releases. With the screening of what part of its procedures and organising is photographed or taped, and most importantly, with the creation of the movement’s own channels of communication — with its main website www.real-democracy.gr, being the only medium-voice of its decisions.

The people’s assembly

The daily people’s assembly of Syntagma square (at 9 pm), like the corresponding ones in other cities, is the only one that holds the right to decision-making. The topics in each popular assembly are defined according to discussion, the demands and the proposals submitted in previous assemblies.
These are recorded in minutes that are published on-line. Suggestions are also collected, both on-line and physically in person and these are all grouped together in the corresponding topical groups and return in the form of specific proposals to the popular assembly for its consultation and approval.
The final resolutions are shaped during the assembly according to the comments of the speakers and are put up for approval, always before midnight, in order not to exclude those who work and those who have to use public transportation to return to their neighbourhoods.

Everyone has a right to speak and in the beginning of each assembly, after reading out and approving its topics, tickets are distributed to everyone who wishes to do so; speakers are selected by draw during the assembly. Usually speakers range between 80 and 100 in their number, while more than 2000 people take part in the assembly on a daily basis. Despite this element of chance, experience so far has proven this to be the best way to avoid any phenomena of imposition of specific agendas or the influencing of the assembly’s decisions by organised interventions.

After midnight, which is the moment until when the assembly must make its decisions, the assembly continues as an open speaking forum.

The working groups

At the moment, there are more than 15 working groups and 12 thematic ones. The working groups comprise the cornerstone of life at the square and their contribution so far has been priceless. Not only because they offer practical solutions and because so far they have responded, despite many problems and delays, to the ever-increasing needs for the shaping, the functionality and the procedures at the square, but most importantly because these groups themselves comprise the spirit of contribution of the people, their will to take life into their own hands and the capacities of their self-organising, without experts and capital, based on their own capacities. Thousands have joined up the group lists and this availability is the driving force of the movement even though it has not been utilised in the most effective of ways so far, partly due to the movement’s swift growing.

It is indicative that despite the substantial financial needs and despite peoples’ offer to contribute financially in response, the idea of setting up a fund has been rejected. Not only because of the looming dangers in the management of the money but also in order to prove that there are other ways to get things done. And so, the practice is to propose instead for contributions in anything ranging from writing materials to food, PA equipment or film projectors. And the contribution of the people has exceeded all expectations.

Until now, functioning groups include those of technical support, material supply, artists, cleaning, administrative support, canteen-nutrition, translation, respect (patrol), communication/multimedia, legal support, neighbourhood outreach, health, time bank and service exchange, composure and messengers. Each groups has been divided into subgroups according to each specialist work section. The groups meet in open assemblies every day at 6 pm and the messenger group makes sure that their needs and suggestions are known to all groups in order to safeguard the smooth cooperation and solving of any problems that may arise.

The thematic assemblies

The functioning of the thematic assemblies was born from the need and demand of the people, as expressed through the open channels of the assembly and the websites (real-democracy, facebook etc.) to have processes that will shape positions on the burning issues, on all those reasons that brought people to the streets and to the squares. They also serve the need for the shaping of appropriate conditions for a more extensive discussion of particular issues before their approval—something that the central popular assembly cannot, as a procedure, cater for. And so thematic groups have been formed for the crisis, for employment and the unemployed, education and students, health and insurance, environment, technology, solidarity, people with special needs, justice and legal issues, consultation of the debt. These assemblies meet daily between 7 and 9 pm and hundreds of people participate in some. Making their functioning substantial will largely aid and feed the discussion and topics covered in the main popular assembly, along with the attempt to articulate some concrete discourse for the overturning of the current system and the country’s escape from the crisis according to the will of the people.

C.G. June 6 2011

11 Comments

  1. flicks wrote:

    You people are doing a fine job; the criminal banksters and politicians must be brought to justice for their collusion crimes and their financial weapons – naked unlimited credit default swaps destroyed with the delete button and burnt in the fire of truth.

    Thursday, June 9, 2011 at 12:51 pm | Permalink
  2. Jimmi wrote:

    Yes, but what happens if you actually do bring this scum to juestice? Getting ris of one lot will only bring just as corrupt and criminal so called representitives of the people as before.

    Thursday, June 9, 2011 at 1:43 pm | Permalink
  3. flicks wrote:

    The people have to run the banks for the people not the greedy few. And have democratic votes on all the big issues. You need expert help from people like Bill Black and Michael Hudson plus the work that Dr Tobras is doing to get at the truth of what went on is very important. The derivatives are not regulated so finding out who has what is difficult people must come forward with evidence for Dr Tobras and contact him http://www.stopspeculators.gr/

    Thursday, June 9, 2011 at 3:01 pm | Permalink
  4. Exarchia wrote:

    @ Flicks

    you and all the others may find useful these links:

    http://www.cfeps.org/
    http://e1.newcastle.edu.au/coffee/
    http://moslereconomics.com/

    Thursday, June 9, 2011 at 11:24 pm | Permalink
  5. anónim@ wrote:

    I do recommend you greek comrades to carefully read what has been wrong these days in Barcelona:

    http://www.crimethinc.com/texts/recentfeatures/barc.php

    Friday, June 10, 2011 at 3:10 pm | Permalink
  6. C wrote:

    I’m curious if people participating in the assemblies feel like there is a “lowest common denominator” phenomenon happening.

    Is decision-making based on “majority rules” voting, consensus, or something else?

    Is taking initiative discouraged as anti-democratic?

    What has concretely come out of the assemblies (projects, expropriations, changing/claiming space, etc)… or what do folks expect to happen in the near future?

    Friday, June 10, 2011 at 9:32 pm | Permalink
  7. re: Anonim's suggest wrote:

    BARCELONA
    Wednesday, May 18: The encampment makes the front page of Barcelona’s various free newspapers, which are more trend- and controversy-sensitive than the traditional newspapers. Up until now, the latter had been silencing the events, but once the cat is out of the bag they take the lead in sculpting public opinion on the so-called 15 May or 15M movement. At the nightly cassolada (pots and pans noise demo) and assembly, the crowds in Plaça Catalunya reach 5-10,000. Many anarchists who had previously abstained from the pro-democracy protest, either out of disdain or because other protests were happening the same weekend, spontaneously converge in the crowd. Several bring whatever anarchist flyers and pamphlets they had laying around, and these are quickly snatched up by the crowd. Anarchists make plans to hold a debate on democracy the next day, without getting approval from the central assembly.

    Friday, June 10, 2011 at 9:38 pm | Permalink
  8. squares decision wrote:

    As we are unable to help to defend the hundreds of hunted and deported refugees in Igouminitsa and Patra we decided that the best solidarity is to stop all traffic (“traffic sucks!” is the therefore opted slogan).
    Beside that cars, ships and trucks all use petrol to gas the planet and therefore this kind of mobility is just awful crime the main reason for mass sweep operations against starving refugees the last months is to clean the streets for the tourrerists to be freed of ugly sight when they look through their car-window after 30 hours of total exhaust on the ferry and so the fat asses from germoney, austria and lowlands don’t need to complain about “the migrants” on the websites of their moto-clubs and other media.
    tommorrows decision will be about whether we sell the acropolis for 500 billions to facebook and burn it down a few months later or not…

    Friday, June 10, 2011 at 9:57 pm | Permalink
  9. INCUBUS wrote:

    Excellent link to superb critique ANONIM@!
    The road is long and hard.

    Sunday, June 12, 2011 at 9:37 pm | Permalink
  10. Stefan Szczelkun wrote:

    I found your list of thematic discussion groups fascinating: ie “thematic groups have been formed for the crisis, for employment and the unemployed, education and students, health and insurance, environment, technology, solidarity, people with special needs, justice and legal issues, consultation of the debt.”
    Are the results of these discussion summarised and published? Available in English?
    I’d particularly like to hear about special needs discussion as I’m involved with an inclusive education campaign…

    Saturday, June 18, 2011 at 11:56 pm | Permalink
  11. Curro wrote:

    Hördur Torfason Revolución Silenciosa

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLaqHdJIaak

    Thursday, June 30, 2011 at 2:19 pm | Permalink

6 Trackbacks/Pingbacks

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