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Bilan
20th October 2008, 03:02
As the tide of secondary and high-school squats rises again across Greece, the state responds with repression





More than 300 secondary and high schools (that is 1/6 of the national total) around Greece are currently occupied by their pupils who are demanding the reversal of several articles of the conservative educational reform that caused widespead revolt by students and university staff during the academic years of 2005-2006-2007. The renewed resistance to the law which has been rejected by the entire school and academic community and is considered to be the first step towards the abolition of student-pupil participation in management, is being faced with unprecedented measures of repression. There have been consistent efforts by the government and the local authorities to criminalise the school squats, whereas neonazi attacks against squatted schools in Athens have been reported.


Most recently, on the 17th of October, the president of the pupil's council and one more pupil of the 4th high-school of the city of Karditsa were arrested on charges of obstructing the function of a public service, after the pupils of the squatted school staged a demo against the installation of an iron fence around the premises, with the central slogan being "School is not a Prison". After the reaction of the Teacher's Union (OLME) the pupils were released.


While the repression escalates, several schools in Athens and Thessaloniki have opposed the annual election of representatives, opting for direct-democratic procedures without the realm of state-recognised legality. In the city of Peiraeus, on the 17th of October the Autonomous Coordination Squat Committee, held a protest march for "Liberatory free and public education".



Source (http://libcom.org/news/more-300-schools-squatted-throughout-greece-protest-against-educational-reform-face-repress)

magnus
20th October 2008, 03:08
While some of the students occupy schools for demands such as free education , better quality education etc, most of the students do it in order to smoke weed, drink and fuck.
So don't have your hopes high there comrade. I have been in occupations and I can tell you that it is not that revolutionary!

On the other hand there are a lot of students that through those occupations gain class consciousness and this is very good.

Bilan
20th October 2008, 03:13
That sucks. :\
But at least there's some good.
Thanks for the info, comrade. :)

Saorsa
20th October 2008, 05:50
What's wrong with smoking weed, drinking and fucking? :confused:

F9
20th October 2008, 11:32
What's wrong with smoking weed, drinking and fucking? :confused:

Exactly...!We have agreed once!:)
Occupations in there majority are more than useful!

Fuserg9:star:

Pogue
20th October 2008, 16:11
High school occuptations? As in, 11-18 year olds? Thats fucking awesome! Thats really revolutionary, why don't we see that over here? Why is there not more on this?

chimx
20th October 2008, 16:50
why don't we see that over here?

Socialist Alternative in Seattle had organized highschool walkouts recently. I'm sure others have done this in other areas as well, although granted, it's not quite the same thing. ;)

Pogue
20th October 2008, 17:50
See, it's a long way off seeing any student action at the college level over here, let alone high school. My high school had 10 leftist students max.

Enragé
20th October 2008, 18:28
What's wrong with smoking weed, drinking and fucking? :confused:

exactly!

I remember the high-school student uprising last year in the netherlands, where at some point i was smoking some weed with some high school peeps on the city square, laughing at some police fucker who crashed his motorcycle ^^

good times! :)

Wanted Man
20th October 2008, 19:01
Good news. It would be silly to say that it's completely non-revolutionary. Occupying a school, whether to drink, fuck, smoke or otherwise, is still valid as a rejection of the educational system.

chimx
20th October 2008, 19:10
Good news. It would be silly to say that it's completely non-revolutionary. Occupying a school, whether to drink, fuck, smoke or otherwise, is still valid as a rejection of the educational system.


Uhhh... what?

mykittyhasaboner
20th October 2008, 21:48
I think its amazing to see students occupying their schools. I couldn't imagine this happening at any school ive ever went to.

Drace
21st October 2008, 01:32
If thats the reason, sure its revolutionary but nothing left. You can have revolutionary fascists...


What's wrong with smoking weed, drinking and fucking?AIDS.


BTW, why don't we any fucking thing like this on American media?
All the news show is bunch of murders here and there. Nothing international and hardly anything national, mostly just about the elections.

zimmerwald1915
24th October 2008, 20:11
Most recently, on the 17th of October, the president of the pupil's council and one more pupil of the 4th high-school of the city of Karditsa were arrested on charges of obstructing the function of a public service, after the pupils of the squatted school staged a demo against the installation of an iron fence around the premises, with the central slogan being "School is not a Prison". After the reaction of the Teacher's Union (OLME) the pupils were released.
Unfortunately, the school will become a prison for any revolutionary or pre-revolutionary developments that may come out of this; from what the article said, there hasn't been much attempt to spread this beyond the school grounds.

Nevermore
25th October 2008, 08:47
I have been to several occupations on my school myself,the last one lasted like 1 month,me and some other students tried to organise it so it become revolutionary but we faced the complete ignorance of the stupid pupil's council(15 popular idiots with nothing to offer)and the ignorance of our teachers,anyway occupations of school in Greece is a chance for student to have extra days off,plus what the point of school occupations when knowledge is something weird and ignorance is celebrated?Our occupations did nothing to the goverment,We got completely ignored and accused of being vandals

Pogue
25th October 2008, 15:34
You guys don't seem to comprehend how alien and radical and exciting such a concept of a school occupation is over here. Its like something me and my mates dream about. Yet it seems unexciting and normal where you guys are at? How does it happen? Why? Whats the reaction to it? Over here it'd be big news, dealt with like a major event!

Pirate Utopian
25th October 2008, 15:50
Yeah, this does sound awesome.
Good luck to them.