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From the #SpanishRevolution to Democracy 2.0 May 20, 2011

Posted by ortegarance in Democracy 2.0.
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Translation to English of my article in the newspaper La Crónica de Hoy:

“Something big is happening here. ” This phrase from periodismohumano.com sums up the feeling you get when you reach Puerta del Sol square in Madrid and see people who are so different from each other that, sick of the situation in their country, decided to do something about it.

They arrived on Sunday, May 15th to camp in the plaza of  Spain’s  “kilometer zero”, without a clear agenda, distributed in various initiatives with names from twitter hashtags like #nolesvotes, #democraciarealya, #tomalacalle, #acampadasol and #yeswecamp.

By Wednesday, May 18th, the “Acampada Sol” had become a small town divided in commissions to resolve  immediate needs, with an assembly to vote the direction of the protest, and an effective communication strategy through social networks that has allowed to replicate Acampadas (campings) in Spain’s main cities and even in other European cities like London, Paris, Berlin and Rome. And it’s still growing …

This is the #SpanishRevolution, a movement that emerges spontaneously and peacefully, without a clear identity, but with a shared and strong message: “they do not represent us.”

Spain, with a fifth of the workforce unemployed and a third of young people without access to a home or work, with a completely polarized electoral process which has been based on mutual insults from left-wing and right-wing parties, has met the necessary conditions for Civil Society to reach the critical point of not trusting the way their country is being administered, or the process by which the administrators are chosen, and deciding to protest outside the establishment. They have three very concrete demands: electoral reform, true separation of powers and political regeneration.

Constructing Democracy 2.0

Underlying this collective awakening of the Spaniards there is an idea which is similar to what has inspired the protests in Arab countries, the protests on Saturdays in Iceland’s financial crisis of 2008 and the main motivation for Wikileaks.

Citizens around the world feel alienated from decisions affecting the course of their lives by a political structure that they feel fails to represent them and listen to them, has not been transparent and has also driven the global economy to a scandalous failure.

It no longer makes sense to divide political ideologies into arbitrary and obsolete packages such as “left and right”, it no longer makes sense to wait four or six years to express our opinion in an election when we do it regularly in social networks, it no longer makes sense that the only way we have to express is voting for a party with a mark on a ballot when there are means now to have a more active and participatory communication with the people we elect to represent us.

Democracy 2.0 is the same good old democracy, but with more efficient mechanisms to fulfill it. It’s letting people who govern actually represent the majority, expanding freedom in the election process, and letting their decisions reach a real consensus, broadening the channels for citizens to participate, especially in crucial areas such as education.

How far will the # SpanishRevolution get?

Nobody knows where this will end, but Spain is perhaps the ideal starting point for a transformation that has significance. It is a natural connection point among Europe, Latin America and Africa. It is a key economy which is at the same time, part of the European periphery in danger of needing a bailout, and one of the five pillars of Europe (along with Germany, France, Italy and the UK). It is a country characterized by great solidarity at critical moments, in which the lack of clear solutions and opportunities has led the youth to a situation where their only alternative is to devote all their energy and talent to change the world.

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1. Get Political Fund » Blog Archive » From the #SpanishRevolution to Democracy 2.0 « The Glocal Citizen - May 20, 2011

[...] Read more: From the #SpanishRevolution to Democracy 2.0 « The Glocal Citizen [...]


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