please excuse the self-promotion - blog post links the equality issue with 
ICTs, their distributive properties, and the emerging cooperative, egalitarian 
and sustainable global structures.
http://computingourwaytoparadise.wordpress.com/2011/08/10/british-roits-icts-and-neoliberalism-a-cure-worse-than-the-cause-or-disaster-capitalism/

--- On Sun, 8/14/11, Sally Lerner <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Sally Lerner <[email protected]>
Subject: [Futurework] FW: How Youth-Led Revolts Shook World's Elites
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Received: Sunday, August 14, 2011, 12:31 PM


________________________________________
From: Portside Moderator [[email protected]]
Sent: Saturday, August 13, 2011 2:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: How Youth-Led Revolts Shook World's Elites

How Youth-Led Revolts Shook Elites around the World

    From Athens to Cairo and Spain to Santiago, old
    certainties are being challenged after the Arab
    spring and financial crises

By Jack Shenker
Guardian (UK)
August 12, 2011

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/aug/12/youth-led-revolts-shook-world

Of all the millions of words expended in the global
media on this year's rash of youth-led revolts across
the globe, none are more relevant than those penned
 by
Alex Andreou, a Greek-born blogger who now lives in
Britain. "You have run out of ideas," he wrote in June,
echoing the message of Greek protesters to their
country's political and economic elites. "Wherever in
the world you are, that statement applies."

Andreou was writing as the occupation of Syntagma
Square - Athens's central plaza - was entering its
fourth week, and he went on to summarise what had moved
Greek demonstrators to take to the streets: a refusal
to suffer any further in order to make the rich even
richer, a withdrawal of consent and trust from the
politicians governing in their name, and finally that
simplest and most devastating of censures from one
generation to the next. Those in power, he said, were
devoid of fresh thinking, and this is why "the protests
in Greece affect all of you directly".

When the dust has settled on 2011 perhaps the aspect of
it that will prove
 most striking to historians is that
in a period where so many old certainties dissolved,
from the stability of dictatorships in the Middle East
to the sturdiness of the neoliberal economic framework
in Europe, America and beyond, those with their hands
on the levers of formal power had so few ideas to
offer. From Arab autocrats to eurozone finance
ministers, paucity of original thought has prevailed at
the top and the prescription has always been more of
the same: reheated rhetoric and stencil-cut solutions,
all worn lifeless with weary familiarity.

Little wonder then that from Santiago to Sana'a,
something else has arisen to fill the void - and that
those still rooted in the old models of thinking find
themselves lacking the linguistic tools necessary to
even describe the phenomenon, never mind understand it.

A "global temper tantrum" is the most historian and
empire cheerleader-in-chief Niall
 Ferguson could muster
in his effort to characterise this year's developments,
which have seen hundreds of thousands in north Africa,
led by the young, braving bullets to topple entrenched
regimes. Meanwhile in southern Europe, South America,
Wisconsin and London, city centres have been occupied
and youths have mobilised, challenging existing power
structures and fighting - with messy, uneven
consequences - to articulate an alternative.

We are witnessing, says Priyamvada Gopal, an English
professor at Cambridge, the "momentary transformation
of anger from a dirty word into the very currency of
political exchange".

Each of these struggles has been specific to local
contexts but they share more than just the imagery of
occupied squares, tents and teargas. They are bound
together by a common sense of disenfranchisement and
the belief that the participants have it in them to
create a new reality -
 and that at the moment, largely
inspired by the Arab spring and the global economic
meltdown, a window of opportunity to do so is open.

"The repression is brutal . and the teargas stronger
than ever," says Camila Vallejo, president of the
Chilean University student union which has brought
100,000 students on to the streets and taken control of
300 schools in an attempt to rebuild the country's
education system from scratch - holding mass kissathons
and Michael Jackson dance routines in the process. "We
have been protesting not about reform, but about
wholesale restructuring . if we don't have real change
now, it's not going to happen."

The scope of her ambition echoes that found in Syntagma
Square, where opposition to an EU/IMF bailout and its
accompanying austerity measures has morphed into a
broader critique of social injustice. "We are ordinary
people, we are like you," reads the mission
 statement
of the Real Democracy website - the online hub of the
Syntagma protests - before going on to explore the
alienation many Greeks feel from the organs of the
state. "Without us none of this would exist, because we
move the world . I am outraged. I think I can change
it."

It's easy to overstate the linkages; those joining the
anti-government uprising in the Syrian town of Hama and
los indignados of Barcelona and Madrid are striving to
confront very different enemies and are facing wildly
dissimilar levels of repression as a result. But
connections are apparent, not least in the protesters'
rejection of the old terms of debate and a commitment
to build something else in response on the streets - a
commitment most visible in Cairo's Tahrir Square, where
protesters congregated not only to face down the regime
but also to prove that an alternative was feasible; the
chant ahum ahum ahum, al
 masryeen ahum ('here, here,
here, the Egyptians are here) was a snub to Hosni
Mubarak, but also a reminder that the contours of
society were being reimagined from the ground upwards.

Elites have yet to grasp that hunger for meaningful
grassroots change and the desire to reclaim agency over
a future that appears depressingly predetermined, be it
under the crony capitalism and police brutality of
Middle Eastern despots or the more sanitised platter of
unemployment and austerity being handed down by
governments in the west. Those on the other side of the
divide have been unable to keep pace with the rapid
shift in thinking; in his analysis, Ferguson adopts the
kind of paternalistic tone that came easily to Mubarak
as the octogenarian gently chided Egypt's youth for
daring to question his authority, or to the unelected
rating agency chiefs who condemn whole nations to
poverty with a sad shake of the
 head and a well-
intentioned finger-wag against spending profligacy.

"Historically in any country and in any context it's
young people who are at the core of protests," says
Gopal. "But at this moment in history we're seeing a
shared sense of deprivation among the young, a shared
sense of there being a democracy deficit across the
world. In all these places neoliberal economic policies
have intensified their hold and affected young people
most directly, young people looking for employment,
study, prospects. I think it has cut young people to
the bone, and they're confronting it directly."

Two other common motifs run through this year's
rebellions. First has been the collapse in authority of
traditional institutions; from Mubarak's cult of
personality to the seemingly incessant scandals
engulfing Britain's arbiters of political, financial
and cultural control - bankers, MPs, and the
 Murdoch
media empire. The crumpling is contagious, fuelling
rebellions in the most of places.

"People are on the edge, you can't fool us anymore,"
says Avi Cohen, a 25-year-old drama student who has
joined a 2,000-strong tent protest on Tel Aviv's
exclusive Rothschild Avenue. The protesters say they
are campaigning for social justice, leaving the
question of Palestinian injustice off the table for now
in an effort to build the broadest possible consensus.

Like many of his counterparts elsewhere, Rotem Tsbueri
has lost faith in the official mechanisms of political
reform. "We're not interested in changing ministers or
governments, we want to change the way things are done.
It's not about who's in the government, it's about the
way they work and think."

The 15-M movement in Spain, which organised
demonstrations in 58 cities earlier this year under the
slogan "they don't represent us",
 embodies a similar
yearning for a new political framework to arise. "We
don't want to form a political party because it would
destroy the horizontal nature of the movement," says
Carlos Pederes, an IT worker who has been involved in
the protests from the beginning. "[Plus] the system is
rigged so that only the two big parties can win, so it
would be pointless."

The second commonality has been the tools used to
mobilise dissent. Although the role of online social
media in the Arab uprisings has often been overstated,
there can be no doubt that platforms such as Twitter
and Facebook have enabled diverse groups to quickly
garner broad support for acts of resistance - and that
this means of communication has coloured the internal
organisation of protest movements.

"One of the most unifying aspects between our own
organisation and other movements around the world is
that we're relatively
 non-hierarchical and
decentralised," says Steve Taylor, a campaigner with UK
Uncut.

"Today there may not be a single unifying ideology of
change among global youth protests of the sort that
united people in 1968, but there is a common ideology
embedded within our shared model of organisation - no
egos, no celebrities, no one telling anyone else what
to do and no one willing to take orders - one that
lends itself to online social media and has captured
people's imaginations."

The bonds between 2011's islands of youth dissent
remain limited. Although the root causes of anger may
be similar, the levels of politicisation among those
expressing that anger vary wildly; Gopal says she was
struck by the diffuseness and lack of direction in the
recent British riots, contrasting it with protests in
the Arab world, where "a focus and self-awareness that
comes from those countries' recent history of
 anti-
colonial struggle has been transmitted from one
generation to the next". But this year could still be
remembered as one in which, after many decades of
moribund political and economic realities, a new
narrative began to form.

As Andreou points out, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, the
philosopher who coined the term "Black Swan event" -
denoting a hugely consequential event that is utterly
unpredictable and can only be explained afterwards -
was recently asked by Jeremy Paxman whether the
violence on the streets of Athens fell into that
category. He demurred - and said that the real Black
Swan event was that more people weren't rioting
elsewhere. Additional reporting by Jonathan Franklin in
Santiago, Stephen Burgen in Barcelona and Harriet
Sherwood in Tel Aviv

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