Saturday, January 18, 2025

@Serbia: Letter to Students Around the World


Jan 17, 2025


From Balkan Anarchist Bookfair
December 2024 & January 2025

This letter is an urgent call to action!

Currently, in Serbia, students have full control over 62 out of 80 faculties. This is the largest student protest in our region since 1968. It was triggered by a series of tragic events caused by decades of repression, corruption, and violence perpetuated by the ruling regime. The opposition has so far proven itself incompetent with its methods, which is why we, the students, have taken matters into our own hands. We have suspended classes, dissolved all representative student bodies, self-organized plenums, voted on demands, formed work groups, and begun to apply pressure. We have moved into faculty buildings and adapted them for daily life. We have set up kitchens, dormitories, pharmacies, workshops, cinemas, and classrooms for self-education. In just three weeks, almost all university buildings in Serbia have become hubs for round-the-clock political self-organization. We have the full support of our fellow citizens, we survive on their donations, and every day, other vulnerable groups in society are joining our fight.

Faculty blockades are the most radical form of student self-organization. A blockade involves the suspension of classes, exam obligations and operates independently of the support of professors and administration. You have the right to self-organize in this way, and thanks to the autonomy of the university, you are also protected from direct police intervention. The faculty remains blocked until your demands are met. The suspension of a faculty’s operations itself serves as a form of pressure on state institutions. What a strike is for workers, a blockade is for students. Historically, faculty blockades have proven successful in the fight for more accessible education, but today, we must use them to address broader societal problems.

We organize blockades through work groups. Work groups are open to everyone who wants to participate and focus on strategy, public actions, media, security and activities within the blocked faculty. Work groups present their ideas and proposals to the plenum. The plenum is an open forum for all students of the faculty. Through plenary sessions, direct democracy is put in practice. Everyone has an equal voice and the right to decide on matters concerning the direction of the protest.

The world is on the brink of collapse, representative democracy is failing, and our future is at risk. This is the only way to take control and change the course of the world. There are countless reasons for a blockade, and you know best what yours is.

Translate and share this letter!
Self-organize and start practicing direct democracy now!
Students of the word, join the blockades!

https://www.instagram.com/sviublokade.fdu/

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What a strike is for workers, an occupation is for students: an interview with a student from Serbia
From Balkan Anarchist Bookfair
January 9, 2025

We share the translation into English (published by Transnational Social Strike) of the interview conducted by Inicjatywa Pracownicza with a student involved in the protests shaking Serbian universities. The protests were sparked by the collapse of the roof of the Novi Sad railway station on November 1, which killed 15 people.

Inicjatywa Pracownicza: Could you explain what’s happening in Serbia right now?

Veljko Radic: Seven weeks ago, a recently renovated train station roof collapsed and killed 15 people in Novi Sad. That has caused a series of daily commemorative 15-minute-of-silence actions and protests. During one of such actions, students and professors of the Faculty of Dramatic Arts in Belgrade were attacked by hooligans. The police did not identify the people who attacked them, and that made the students start the blockade of the Faculty of Dramatic Arts, demanding their identification and submitting criminal charges against them. Afterward, a group of students from various universities started a blockade of the rectorate, adding new demands: making all the documentation regarding the renovation of the train station open for everyone, cancelling all court cases against students who participated in the protests, and increasing the budget of universities by 20%. Shortly afterward, all faculties started their blockades having the same demands.

IP: Why have you decided to strike?

VR: What makes these protests so special for me is the fact that students are organized horizontally. Every faculty has a local plenum where anyone can say whatever they want, then there would be a short discussion and voting. Most often, it ends up almost reaching a consensus. Furthermore, every faculty has a lot of working groups for strategy, donations, media, communication with other faculties, security, activities during the blockade etc. Every decision made at local plenums is sent to a big delegate meeting where every faculty has a delegate who shares what has been decided at their local plenum. In that way, decisions concerning the whole university are made. Also, any kind of collaboration with political parties and NGOs is forbidden. However, the system should not be idealized, many people think that a lot of things that end up discussed at the big delegate meeting are redundant and have already been discussed in other ways. Anyway, despite the protests largely being “apolitical” and “anti-corruption”, I think the experience of direct democracy can radicalize people and eventually create a more leftist front.

IP: What are your goals?

VR: I think that most people would say that they only want every demand to be met, or maybe that they secretly want to destroy the current ruling party. Some people, including me, hope that the protests and demands can be radicalized, connect with other groups, and create new demands such as anti-lithium mining, better student conditions, support for Palestine and against the sending of weapons to Israel from Serbia…

IP: What are your plans now?

VR: Honestly, I do not have a clear plan because I was not in Serbia when the blockade started. So, when I came back after 2 weeks of being abroad, I felt a huge cultural shock. It felt like there had been some kind of revolutionary spirit in the air. Personally, I have thought about starting some anticapitalist movie projections or reading groups, but I am not sure people would be into that at least at my faculty. At yesterday’s plenum, it looked like most people said that being an anticapitalist is almost like being mentally ill. It is of course an exaggeration, but it is not so far from what has actually happened.

The Faculty of Dramatic Arts proposed a letter with clear anticapitalist and anarchist ideas to be signed by faculties and then sent to international students. This letter was sent to all plenums and when it was about to be discussed at our plenum a few people just started shouting that it is obviously politically colored and that we are not communists and that it is even schizo because it says that the world is on the brink of a collapse and that representative democracy does not work. There was not almost any room for counterarguments, and comments of a few people made everyone think the letter was utterly stupid. Later, I talked to some people about it and they said that, even though they lean towards anticapitalism, they think the letter is cringe and common people would think we are idiots. I do not think it is cringe and to me it seems to be one of the best things that has happened in these protests. I do not know whether common people would think we are idiots, but to me that logic sounds populist and I do not like it.

It is quite impressive that all the universities (even in other cities) have organized horizontally and created a huge movement. None would have expected that a month ago, and that’s why it can give students in other places energy to work on their own issues. I think we all share similar problems. Neoliberalism made studying quite expensive, many students have to have a part-time job during their studies, then tuition is quite expensive, and dormitories are often non-existent, same with canteens. Then, there are other huge problems such as sending weapons to Israel to commit genocide and climate change… I think many people do not think these protests are connected to other struggles and find them as some kind of a moral issue that unites everyone. Sadly, maybe that is the main reason why they have arisen. Maybe because of that, we can hardly hope for any kind of anticapitalist front coming out of it. However, it is important to mention that the anarchist letter has been approved by a few faculties, so the situation is not the same everywhere.

IP: What does student life look like in Serbia? How much do you pay to live, accommodation and stuff like that? How many students live in a dormitory? How much does it cost?

VR: Well, when I tell international students about conditions for students in Serbia they tell me that I live in a utopia… Yes, there are a lot of awesome things that are Yugoslavian heritage. For example, dormitories and canteens are quite cheap: around 30€ monthly for accommodation and 2€ for all 3 meals. Even though tuition has recently started to increase tremendously, I believe that still around 50% of students are funded by the government and pay nothing for their studies. It is also important to mention that the prices for dormitories and canteens are only for students whose studies are funded by the government. For others, it gets around 4 times more expensive.

However, conditions for students who are not funded by the government are a lot worse. The tuition can rise up to 2500€ per year, which is very similar to the amount paid at local private universities. Actually, two years ago there was a huge protest against the rise of the tuition for architecture students. They also set a plenum and blocked the university, but after a few weeks, the movement ceased to exist. If I am not mistaken, the student parliament stopped supporting them, and then they slowly stopped existing.

Also, when your studies are not funded by the government, you have to rent a place and that gets a lot more expensive. There are private dormitories where the costs are around 250€/month. You can also live in a state dormitory and pay around 120€/month, but there are only a few places for that. Currently, I do not have the exact data, but I believe that no more than 20% of students who are not from Belgrade live in a dormitory.

On top of all that, it is important to mention that university dormitories are not in good condition. In almost every dormitory, there is no air conditioning in the rooms, and it gets extremely warm during the summer. Rooms are often quite small – just a few beds and little space to be able to move and place some stuff – almost like in a hostel.

IP: Which groups are supporting the students?

VR: At the most recent protest on Sunday, there were 120 thousand people in the street, most of them were students, but also many agricultural workers and actors and actresses. There were also many high school professors and students, as they have largely joined the strike too. In general, people from various backgrounds donate food and everything else that is needed to universities every day. Unfortunately, a local neonazi group does that too. It is quite hard to make them stop doing that as it is impossible to know who gives you a donation. Also, some large companies donated some stuff to us. I think it is just a way to promote themselves by doing something good while actually paying their workers poorly and perpetuating capitalism.

IP: Do professors support your goals and actions?

VR: It depends on the faculty. At my faculty, professors support actions and goals, but it has not been like that from the beginning. At other faculties, professors do not support them, and sometimes students have even completely blocked their faculty, not allowing administration to come to the workplace or professors to enter the building.

A Depressed Anarchist’s Guide Surviving Winter



 January 17, 2025
Facebook

Image by Ales Krivec.

In case you haven’t noticed, dearest motherfuckers, my mental health is kind of a hot mess. OCD, ADHD, CPTSD, OSDID, all on top of LGBT and just a dash of BDSM for flavor. It seems like every year I add a few more letters to this dizzying alphabet soup, not to mention a few more prescriptions. I thought I was fucked up back when I was afraid to leave the house, then I escaped through the closet, switched genders, and stumbled headlong down a rabbit hole of repressed childhood trauma and began sprouting personalities like fucking mushrooms.

So, yeah, I’m a little bit fucked up, in fact all five of me are. If anything, qualifying my mental state as a hot mess is kind of an understatement, especially in January when the freezing cold has the odd tendency to make that hot mess a lot hotter.

Don’t get me wrong, the trials and tribulations of Stressmas can be quite the shit show in their own right, but at least there’s fudge. Then January rears its frigid head and there is no more fudge; no more lights, no more tinsel, no more sugar cookies, no more chestnuts roasting over an open fire or shimmering candy-colored Christmas trees. Only death; cold, dark, muddy, death.

Just one long slog through three more months of winter sludge without a goddamn thing to look forward to but a light so far at the end of the tunnel that it might as well be on another fucking planet. We don’t even get snow anymore in Central Pennsylvania thanks to those climate raping parasites over at Exxon Mobil. Just dead trees with no leaves and the wind whistling Morrissey up my spine. I wouldn’t exactly say that I’m suicidal but by February the barrel of a shotgun begins to look more appetizing than a chicken fried steak.

I survive because that’s what I do; I suffer, bitch, and survive. But a lot of people don’t, and I feel for them. As fucked up as I may be, I’m not alone and I’m not just talking about the alters in my internal family collective. Depression is booming in this country and for good goddamn reason. This country and much of the world it rapes sucks. In 2023, Statista reported that an estimated 17.8% of American adults report currently suffering from depression, which is a significant increase from the 10.5% in 2015.

Armchair normies stroke their beards at such numbers and call it a crisis. I look at those numbers and all I can think is that at least 17.8% of Americans are finally paying attention. Depression may suck but it isn’t a fucking illness, it’s a painful state of awareness. America is governed by dueling herds of white supremacists who are actively financing at least one full-fledged genocide in the Middle East and several uranium tipped cold wars pretty much everywhere else, including outer space where HAL 9000 will soon be deciding our collective fate with fucking laser beams.

You would be sick if you didn’t want to die and as something of a civil libertarian absolutist, I actually support that right. However, if everyone with enough of a conscience to feel like shit about this world being shit blew their fucking brains out there would be nothing left but Republicrats and Dempublicans to talk to and I would have little choice but to join you on the balcony out of pure boredom alone.

Such a fate would also let the dicks who currently run this world off way too goddamn easy, so this January I have decided to provide my unique services as a professional crazy person with a fifth-degree blackbelt in fending off the noose to anyone feeling tempted to eat their hardware in a Kurt Cobain club sandwich this winter. This is a brief guide from a depressed anarchist on how to be as fucked up as you have every right to be without blowing your brains out and these are a few things you might want to consider trying before pulling that trigger.

1.) Find Yourself an Advocate, not a Life Coach

As you can imagine, I have seen my share of shrinks and most of them deserved to be shot far more than I do. With that being said, contrary to what my screeds against the tyranny of the DSM may lead you to believe, I am not anti-psychiatry. I just happen to believe that like most authority figures, psychiatrists have way too much goddamn power in this country and that the burgeoning for-profit therapeutic state encourages downright tyrannical behavior from such professionals, but there are exceptions to this rule, and they can save your life if you let them.

My advice is to proceed with caution. A good therapist is a lot like a good whore. If they aren’t willing to be upfront with you about their ethics, then no condom on earth is going to keep you safe. Seek out a therapist who behaves more like a collaborator than a doctor. The quickest way to do this is to tell any prospective therapist upfront that you don’t view your pain as an illness and that you think that the DSM is the shittiest self-help rag since the Old Testament. If they respond by just taking notes and asking how that ‘makes you feel’, get the fuck out of their and find an actual human being to talk to. Therapy should be an informed conversation between consenting adults. Anything less is just abuse with a bill.

2.) Drop Out of Anything that Makes You Want to Die

We live in a society that ties up way too much self-worth into some strange sense of duty to do things that are soul crushing for a paycheck or a diploma. We all need to make a living but if you’re spending nine to five wondering which AR-15 goes best with the color of your manager’s empty chest cavity then you really aren’t making a living, you’re making a dying. Get the fuck out and try to find a way to get by that doesn’t feel worse than cancer. Maybe that’s flipping pancakes at a greasy spoon in Montana or selling whippets in the parking lot of a Phish concert. Shit, maybe that’s begging for change and drinking fortified wine beneath a freeway overpass.

Define your own goddamn happiness and to hell with everyone else. I’m a welfare queen myself and as much as I despise living on money stollen by the state from other taxpayers, I’d much rather see that money go to putting a downpayment on my first novel then see it go to more scatter bombs for Israel. Stop concerning yourself with pleasing an unwell society and focus on what kind of living you can actually live with instead. One good way to start is by dropping out of society altogether.

3.) Find a Cause that You are Willing to Fail Trying to Achieve and Build a Community Around It

In my experience most people labeled as mentally ill like me just care way too much about all the right things in all the wrong ways. It’s easy to get overwhelmed when you look at the crisis that our entire planet has put itself in since the Agricultural Revolution; AI, climate change, genocide, nuclear war, Nickelback… The stakes are high, and they just keep getting higher but putting all your focus on the whole damn world is only going to burn you out quicker than the sun.

In fact, this whole global universalist mindset is a big part of what has fucked the globe up so badly. No one person can save the world and trying to do so has an ugly tendency of resulting in attempts to rule it. Think smaller. Think locally. Think about the kind of community that you would like to live in right now if the rest of the world would just fuck off and start living it.

I’m an obnoxiously Queer anarchist who lives in the rusty outback of Central Pennsylvania tetanus country. The weight of the military-prison industrial complex crushed me into an agoraphobic mess for most of my twenties. Then I stopped plotting to overthrow the new world order and started to focus on creating a way for people like me to live rurally without having to rely on the vanilla technocracy of big government and big business. It’s an endless work in progress. I volunteer at local shelters, take part in local support groups, and help out with my little found family’s struggling homestead, but it is both work and progress.

I may never live to see my goal of a Queer hillbilly utopia that’s equal parts Mad Max, John Waters, and Ziggy Stardust but I don’t mind if I die trying and something tells me that if more people did the same while keeping their finances off the books and between friends instead of with the banks, maybe a lot of this evil global shit that makes so many of us want to die would simply fall apart.

Maybe I am pretty fucked up. Hell, I’ll own that shit, all day, every day. But I am not ill, at least not from anything innately biological. I am simply too sensitive to coexist peacefully with a society that considers voting for war criminals and spending two thirds of your life in a cubicle to be normal. This society is the sickness, I’m just slightly more allergic to the pollution than most, but not for long. The rate of despair in the wealthiest nation on earth is booming because human beings simply weren’t designed to live this way and we sure as shit weren’t designed to die this way.

If this makes you want to kill yourself then that’s OK. You’re not alone and you’re not the one with the real fucking problem here because you’re not the one hurting everyone around you like all those successful people do on their way to the office every morning.

But killing yourself is quite simply letting those cunts off way too easy. Do yourself a favor, stick around for a while and embrace going nuts as way of life instead of a way of death. The sun is going to explode anyway, right? We might as well make things a little more interesting before it does.

Nicky Reid is an agoraphobic anarcho-genderqueer gonzo blogger from Central Pennsylvania and assistant editor for Attack the System. You can find her online at Exile in Happy Valley.

The Horrific and Wonderful 2024



 January 17, 2025
Facebook

Image by Planet Volumes.

Let’s review.

2024 was an especially violent year. It was also the hottest on record. While most countries exist in high states of peace, we live in times of rising conflict and a climate crisis. We also live in times of optimism and hope. Let’s explore recent trends and apparent contradictions in the complex world that we all share.

“Is it getting better? Or do you feel the same?” Bono asks in the U2 song One. It can be difficult to make sense of the world. Professor Max Roser, who runs the website Our World In Data and said “The world is awful. The world is much better. The world can be much better…It is wrong to think these three statements contradict each other.”

2024 was the hottest year on record and was the first year to average more than 1.5 degrees Celsius over the pre-industrial average. The last 10 years have been the hottest 10 on record. Fires in Los Angeles have displaced 180,000 people and destroyed or damaged some 12,000 structures. News makes it easier to understand the impact on humans than the wider ecology and annoyingly centers the stories of impact on celebrities more than regular people.

In some ways the world is getting safer. The Institute for Economics and Peace note that the impact of terrorism and homicides reduced in 2024. The organization notes that “There are currently 56 active conflicts, the most since the end of [the] Second World War.” Truly apparently contradictory: globally the world is getting less peaceful and that “North America recorded the largest regional deterioration in peacefulness, with both Canada and the US recording large falls in peacefulness.” The organization attributes the deterioration to “increases in violent crime and perceptions of criminality.”

Further, they say, “the conflict in Gaza has had a very strong impact on global peacefulness.” A January 2025 study in The Lancet journal published last week suggested that the “Palestinian MoH under-reported mortality by 41%” and estimated “64,260 deaths due to traumatic injury” between October 7 2023 and June 30 2024. The total death toll in wars includes not just deaths from violence, but from diseases too. Israel’s destruction of Palestinian healthcare facilities is deadly.

154,626 people were killed in wars in 2023. 2024 data isn’t compiled yet. We currently live in some of the highest fatality rates from war since the Rwandan genocide. Homicides typically kill even more people than war, ending the lives of 415,000 people a year. Suicides kill 760,000 annually.

The biggest killers of people are diseases. 74 percent of annual deaths are from non-communicable diseases. 14 percent die from infectious diseases. About 1.3 million people die in transportation accidents. Public conversations and media reporting tend to disproportionately focus on the violent deaths and road safety more than deaths from disease.

In addition to the human cost, violence had a devastating financial cost. Violence costs the world $19.1 trillion a year. That’s 13.5 percent of global economic activity. It is more than the total spending on health, it is more than the GDP of China. Imagine what we could invest in if the costs of violence did not consume so much. Economists tend to be united in pointing out that prevention work is massively less costly than emergency response. I wonder, if we took a rational approach to peace promotion, how much we should spend on teaching people about peaceful ways to resolve disagreements, both locally and internationally.

2024 was the most deadly year for humanitarian workers. 325 humanitarian workers were killed in 2024, 96 percent of them local staff, and most killings occurred in Gaza.

Humanitarian needs are rising. The United Nations identified 307 million people in need of aid in 2025. So far, their appeal for funding was 1.2 percent met–woefully inadequate. UNICEF identifies Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Sudan and Haiti as locations with the greatest level of emergencies, they also note major Mpox and Polio outbreaks.

While humanitarian needs are generally trending upwards, for the past three years funding to help people affected by climate, conflict and other crises has reduced. The world continues to spend more than double on ice cream than it does on helping those affected by crises. I wonder about our priorities.

Despite all of this, many things are getting better. People are living longer. Global life expectancy dipped at the start of COVID, but is now rising again. Infant mortality continues to reduce, the rate of infants dying before reaching the age of five has halved since 2000. Thanks to advances in medical science and access to healthcare, fewer women are dying in childbirth. The global literacy rate for men and women continues to climb. More people are getting access to electricity, the internet and jobs.

We live in times that, in some ways, feel self-contradictory, but it’s not so much oxymoronic as it is endlessly, frighteningly, wonderfully complex.

Chris Houston is the President of the Canadian Peace Museum non-profit organization and a columnist for The Bancroft Times.