Police in Spain have clashed with so-called indignados demonstrators, protesting over the closure of Madrid’s main square.
Amateur footage purports to show scenes as the protesters tried to make their way to the Interior Ministry.
Several people were injured.
The unrest has been going on since Tuesday when police moved in to clear the remains of the Indignados camp – set up against the government response to the country’s econcomic crisis – from the Puerta del Sol square.
Normally bustling with tourists this time of year, the square is now empty with shops and restaurants shutting up too.
Riot police blocades have kept would-be indignados gathered in surrounding streets from returning to the square for now.
But officers say they will not be able to maintain the long hours asked of them much longer.
The three-day battle for Puerta del Sol — in pictures from our friend ROARMAG
For three days, the indignados have been trying to reclaim their square from the police. Tonight, an overwhelmed police force responded with violence.
Puerta del Sol was evicted by Spanish police on Tuesday, leading to a major popular backlash that same very night. For the past three days, thousands of outraged protesters have been trying to take back the square from police in a massive outburst of spontaneous non-violent civil disobedience.
Today, for the third day in a row, central Madrid was brought to a complete standstill. Sol remains occupied by police, who have blocked off all the access routes (itself an unprecedented feat in Spanish democratic history, and, according to the largest police union, a constitutionally illegal order by the government).
Tonight, a tired and overwhelming police force finally snapped and resorted to unprovoked and indiscriminate violence. Prepare for an even greater backlash when Spain wakes up to these images tomorrow!
Get Up Stand Up and Fight For Yours Rights
Showing posts with label Spanish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spanish. Show all posts
Friday, 5 August 2011
Puerta del Sol Madrid Spain: Spanish Fascist NWO Police Brutality Against Peaceful Protesters Photosotos
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Indignados Madrid Spain: Fascist New World Order Nazi Spanish Police Brutality Against Peaceful Protesters SpanihRevolution EuropeanRevolution WorldRevolution Video
Fascist New World Order Nazi Spanish Police Brute Force Brutality Against Peaceful Protesters in la Castelhana, Madrid, Spain.
Carga policial y detenciones en la Castellana, Madrid, el 4 de agosto
Police charges in the night of August 4 in Pso. de la Castellana next to the Internal Affairs Ministry. People been Arrested for sitting on the square.
Cargas policiales de la noche del 4 de agosto en el Pso.de la Castellana junto al Ministerio del Interior. Detenciones por estar sentado.
Carga policial y detenciones en la Castellana, Madrid, el 4 de agosto Video
Brute Force, New World Order Fascist, NAZI Police Brutality and people Arrested in La Castellan, Madrid Video
Carga Policial de lo Mossos 4/08 en el Ministerio del Interior.mp4 Video
Brute Force New World Order Fascist NAZI Police Against Peaceful Protesters in front of Internal Affairs Ministry
Carga policial durante la manifestacion en la Plaza de Colon. Heridos y detenidos durante la manifestacion.
Spanish New World Order Fascist, NAZI police loading against protesters during the demonstration in the Plaza de Colon.
People Injured and arrested during the demonstration
Carga policial y detenciones en la Castellana, Madrid, el 4 de agosto
Police charges in the night of August 4 in Pso. de la Castellana next to the Internal Affairs Ministry. People been Arrested for sitting on the square.
Cargas policiales de la noche del 4 de agosto en el Pso.de la Castellana junto al Ministerio del Interior. Detenciones por estar sentado.
Carga policial y detenciones en la Castellana, Madrid, el 4 de agosto Video
Brute Force, New World Order Fascist, NAZI Police Brutality and people Arrested in La Castellan, Madrid Video
Carga Policial de lo Mossos 4/08 en el Ministerio del Interior.mp4 Video
Brute Force New World Order Fascist NAZI Police Against Peaceful Protesters in front of Internal Affairs Ministry
Carga policial durante la manifestacion en la Plaza de Colon. Heridos y detenidos durante la manifestacion.
Spanish New World Order Fascist, NAZI police loading against protesters during the demonstration in the Plaza de Colon.
People Injured and arrested during the demonstration
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Wednesday, 27 July 2011
EuropeanRevolution MarchaBruselas: Spanish Indignants Start Long Protest March To Brussels
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'Indignants' set out through Madrid's streets - destination Brussels |
Spanish activists, known as "Indignados, "the Indignants", have set off from Madrid on a long march to Brussels.
They are protesting against what they see as governments bowing to financial markets and ignoring the needs of their own people in the economic crisis.
As they head north, the protesters plan to hold meetings, collecting complaints and proposals as they go.
Since the movement began in Madrid two months ago, similar groups have sprung up across Europe.
The Indignants have added a new chant to their repertoire: "To Brussels!" they sing.
It will have to keep their spirits up for fully 1,000 miles (more than 1,500k), as they march across three countries.
Many of them have already spent weeks on the road, walking across Spain to Madrid, says the BBC's Sarah Rainsford in the Spanish capital.
Protester hug goodbye at start of march to Brussels on 26 June Protesters from across Spain gathered in Madrid last weekend. Next stop; Brussels
Following a mass rally there, the Indignants are heading for the heart of Europe.
They say they are marching because they are fed up with the way the economic crisis is playing out in Europe, with spending cuts, job losses, and privatisations, while those they blame for the recession remain unaffected.
The aim is to link up with fellow indignants from across Europe for a mass rally in October.
The Madrid protest began on 15 May and spread to other Spanish cities as word got around via Facebook and Twitter.
Spain's unemployment rate is the highest in the EU, at 21.3%. For the under-25s, it has risen to 44.6%.
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Friday, 22 July 2011
MarchaIndignada Spanish Outraged Marches Videos: SpanishRevolution EuropeanRevolution WorldRevolution
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España MarchaIndignada Spanish Outraged Marches |
The six marches headed for Madrid will arrive on the 23rd and 24th of July, here you can find a schedule for all the activities going on during that weekend (the site is in Spanish but can be translated easily using Google toolbar). They will be received by a huge protest, complete with buses coming from all over the country.
![]() |
Marcha Indignada Spanish Outraged Marches |
Happiness is overwhelming as one of the marches arrives to one of the towns near Madrid:
![]() |
Marcha Indignada Street Map |
LLEGADA DE LA MARCHA INDIGNADA ESTE A ARANJUEZ
El Indignado Hidalgo Don Quijote de la Marcha
M15 Pamplona March entering Segovia
José Luis Sampedro y las Marchas Populares Indignadas.
In Aranjuez, south of Madrid, police officers inexplicably did not let the people pass. As shown in the video below, people are apparently not allowed to walk through their own streets.
LA POLICIA NOS IMPIDE EL PASO.
La policia nacional impide el paso la Marcha Indignada Este y a la Asamblea Popular de Aranjuez cortando el acceso de la calle Valeras.
La calle será de todos pero de unos más que de otros.
Marcha Popular Indignada - Caminante No Hay Camino - Ruta NorOriental
Video resumen de algunas vivencias de la Marcha Popular Indignada - Ruta NorOriental en su paso por Tarragona y Teruel.
La Marcha Popular Indignada es una caminata de más de 15 rutas y sub-rutas procedentes de toda la península que confluirá el día 23 de julio en Madrid. Los indignados recogen el testimonio de la gente de los pueblos y ciudades por donde pasan para llevarlo a la capital. Así se hace una asamblea-coloquio con la gente de la zona..
Nos queda mucho camino por hacer !!!
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Thursday, 21 July 2011
MarchaIndignada Spanish Outraged Marches Reach Madrid on July 23: EuropeanRevolution WorldRevolution
Marches from around Spain will reach Madrid on the 23rd, protest planned marcha indignada European Revolution World Revolution
Originally published in Spanish at www.publico.es
“Indignants” from all around Spain are marching towards Madrid. The expedition, of around 500 people, will reach the capital on the 23rd of June, where they will be received with a protest outside Congress. The first walkers will be seen outside the city on Friday the 22nd, and on Saturday they will join other protesters that will arrive in buses to walk the last stretch of the way.
The initiative started in Barcelona, but it was in Valencia where they first set themselves on the road on the 20th of June. After they started, many other cities with 15M camps followed suit. The march is divided in six routes: eastern, southern, southeastern, northern, northeastern, northwestern. The western route did start to march but went home soon.
The walkers’ routine
The day starts, for most of the travelers, at five in morning. After lifting camp and having some breakfast they prepare themselves to march the daily 20 to 22 km.
“It’s a beating, but by now are bodies are used to it”, says Aldo, who is taking part in the march that started in Barcelona. They walk for six hours every morning and spend most of the afternoon speaking with the people in the small villages that they pass on the way.
“We started out with a mentality that we had to change. At first we had a megaphone and we shouted out slogans. But as we went further into the heart’s of the towns we tried a warmer approach, which in the end was more productive”, explains Guzman, from the Valencian march.
The ones who started the march know that is isn’t an easy job to get people to join them. Jorge, from Murcia, explains:
“We have 16 and 200 km behind our backs. Every town motivates us, telling us to keep on going. They know what we’re doing and they support us”
David says: “The Civil Guards accompanied us because we were walking by a highway, but they didn’t fine us”. One of the most surprising aspects is the attitude that the Security Forces of the State have taken. “Three days ago, the Civil Guard escorted us because we were walking near highway, they left us on service road and didn’t fine anyone”, says David from Bilbao.
The peculiar note comes from the Northeast. Pablo Novoa, from Galicia, says that for four hours he had some very strange partners. “The public television from South Korea accompanied us for an interview. They were interested in the movement because in their countries they have protests coming form the Universities”.
An unforgettable experience
“The most important thins is that from different points of Spain people have decided to walk to Madrid, rejecting corruption, with the desire of more government transparency and asking for a new model of participative democracy”, states Pablo. Fro Daniel, from the march of Asturias, participating is a challenge: “It is an incredible experience and for me, with my crutches, it’s huge challenge. On a collective level it is has been very gratifying, we complement each other and we make it work”.
The movement has different platforms of diffusion via social networks that are being updated frequently. They have a blog where they are sharing the adventure through a diary, where they tell their experience, the place they are, as well as anecdotes or needs.
Every march has similar needs: food, water, sanitary material, backup cars, but above all, solidarity. The are looking for people that want to collaborate offering a place to rest or a hand setting up tents, and of course, people willing to share ideas. Enrique from La Rioja, says that the march has fundamentally two objectives. It’s about “extending and informing about the movements ideas to people who cannot move to capitals or larger cities, as well as collecting proposals and ideas to put them all together and keep on working”.
Even though there are 100 days left for the massive protest planned for the 15th of October, the plans for the future are much larger and more ambitious, such as the creation of a social forum for the people of Spain and a larger one for Europe as a whole. The people that are marching are planning the creation of a book that will collect their experiences.
“We are telling the villages that they are not alone”
Interview with Carlos Pinto. From the Southeastern route.
1 – Since when are you part of the 15M movement?
From the first day. I was camped for two weeks in Malaga, but I had to go home because of my University. I feel fully identified with the eight points that have been put forth by Real Democracy Now.
2- What led you to join the march?
I had always wanted to walk through Spain with nothing but a backpack. In the camp we had talked about the possibility, half jokingly, to go to Madrid. When the possibility became an actual chance then I didn’t hesitate.
3 – What has been your role in the project?
Organizing the Malaga route, and afterwards, when Granada decided to join us, adapting it.
4- How is your day by day?
We are a very diverse group. We had a 17 year old girl that already left us and at the same time we have a 71 year old man that is still going on, and by now we are great friends. We are joined together by the common cause. Even though the heat is extreme and the water isn’t readily available, the hospitatily that people from these rural areas have shown towards us is huge.
5- What objectives are you after?
We are trying to explain the participative model as well as to collect propositions and demands. It is about telling the villages and rural areas that they are not alone.
Originally published in Spanish at www.publico.es
“Indignants” from all around Spain are marching towards Madrid. The expedition, of around 500 people, will reach the capital on the 23rd of June, where they will be received with a protest outside Congress. The first walkers will be seen outside the city on Friday the 22nd, and on Saturday they will join other protesters that will arrive in buses to walk the last stretch of the way.
The initiative started in Barcelona, but it was in Valencia where they first set themselves on the road on the 20th of June. After they started, many other cities with 15M camps followed suit. The march is divided in six routes: eastern, southern, southeastern, northern, northeastern, northwestern. The western route did start to march but went home soon.
The walkers’ routine
The day starts, for most of the travelers, at five in morning. After lifting camp and having some breakfast they prepare themselves to march the daily 20 to 22 km.
“It’s a beating, but by now are bodies are used to it”, says Aldo, who is taking part in the march that started in Barcelona. They walk for six hours every morning and spend most of the afternoon speaking with the people in the small villages that they pass on the way.
“We started out with a mentality that we had to change. At first we had a megaphone and we shouted out slogans. But as we went further into the heart’s of the towns we tried a warmer approach, which in the end was more productive”, explains Guzman, from the Valencian march.
The ones who started the march know that is isn’t an easy job to get people to join them. Jorge, from Murcia, explains:
“We have 16 and 200 km behind our backs. Every town motivates us, telling us to keep on going. They know what we’re doing and they support us”
David says: “The Civil Guards accompanied us because we were walking by a highway, but they didn’t fine us”. One of the most surprising aspects is the attitude that the Security Forces of the State have taken. “Three days ago, the Civil Guard escorted us because we were walking near highway, they left us on service road and didn’t fine anyone”, says David from Bilbao.
The peculiar note comes from the Northeast. Pablo Novoa, from Galicia, says that for four hours he had some very strange partners. “The public television from South Korea accompanied us for an interview. They were interested in the movement because in their countries they have protests coming form the Universities”.
An unforgettable experience
“The most important thins is that from different points of Spain people have decided to walk to Madrid, rejecting corruption, with the desire of more government transparency and asking for a new model of participative democracy”, states Pablo. Fro Daniel, from the march of Asturias, participating is a challenge: “It is an incredible experience and for me, with my crutches, it’s huge challenge. On a collective level it is has been very gratifying, we complement each other and we make it work”.
The movement has different platforms of diffusion via social networks that are being updated frequently. They have a blog where they are sharing the adventure through a diary, where they tell their experience, the place they are, as well as anecdotes or needs.
Every march has similar needs: food, water, sanitary material, backup cars, but above all, solidarity. The are looking for people that want to collaborate offering a place to rest or a hand setting up tents, and of course, people willing to share ideas. Enrique from La Rioja, says that the march has fundamentally two objectives. It’s about “extending and informing about the movements ideas to people who cannot move to capitals or larger cities, as well as collecting proposals and ideas to put them all together and keep on working”.
Even though there are 100 days left for the massive protest planned for the 15th of October, the plans for the future are much larger and more ambitious, such as the creation of a social forum for the people of Spain and a larger one for Europe as a whole. The people that are marching are planning the creation of a book that will collect their experiences.
“We are telling the villages that they are not alone”
Interview with Carlos Pinto. From the Southeastern route.
1 – Since when are you part of the 15M movement?
From the first day. I was camped for two weeks in Malaga, but I had to go home because of my University. I feel fully identified with the eight points that have been put forth by Real Democracy Now.
2- What led you to join the march?
I had always wanted to walk through Spain with nothing but a backpack. In the camp we had talked about the possibility, half jokingly, to go to Madrid. When the possibility became an actual chance then I didn’t hesitate.
3 – What has been your role in the project?
Organizing the Malaga route, and afterwards, when Granada decided to join us, adapting it.
4- How is your day by day?
We are a very diverse group. We had a 17 year old girl that already left us and at the same time we have a 71 year old man that is still going on, and by now we are great friends. We are joined together by the common cause. Even though the heat is extreme and the water isn’t readily available, the hospitatily that people from these rural areas have shown towards us is huge.
5- What objectives are you after?
We are trying to explain the participative model as well as to collect propositions and demands. It is about telling the villages and rural areas that they are not alone.
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Saturday, 28 May 2011
AcampadaBCN Spanish Revolution: Barcelona Police Violence Assault on Peaceful Protesters Videos
Police just cleared the protest camp on the Plaça de Catalunya in Barcelona, firing rubber bullets at protesters and hitting indiscriminately.
NOTE: I just published another article: Why the police violence in Barcelona was a big mistake.
Information is still sketchy (if you’re in Barcelona, please give us an update!) but it appears that riot police have just cleared the peaceful protest camp at Plaça de Catalunya in Barcelona with force.
At least 43 are reported to have been treated for injuries, although actual numbers are likely to be higher.
Video footage shows police beating away indiscriminately at protesters sitting on the ground. Reports say police even fired rubber bullets to disperse a small group of protesters that peacefully resisted eviction.
The Barcelona camp has been the second biggest in Spain, after the Puerta del Sol in Madrid, and had been occupied ever since the national protests on May 15th. Just yesterday, we shared a short documentary that showed the good-natured spirits of the peaceful protest camp.
Check out the videos below (NOTE: one of the most shocking videos cannot be embedded, but can be seen in 20minutos TV en la plaza de Cataluña):
NOTE: I just published another article: Why the police violence in Barcelona was a big mistake.
Information is still sketchy (if you’re in Barcelona, please give us an update!) but it appears that riot police have just cleared the peaceful protest camp at Plaça de Catalunya in Barcelona with force.
At least 43 are reported to have been treated for injuries, although actual numbers are likely to be higher.
Video footage shows police beating away indiscriminately at protesters sitting on the ground. Reports say police even fired rubber bullets to disperse a small group of protesters that peacefully resisted eviction.
The Barcelona camp has been the second biggest in Spain, after the Puerta del Sol in Madrid, and had been occupied ever since the national protests on May 15th. Just yesterday, we shared a short documentary that showed the good-natured spirits of the peaceful protest camp.
Check out the videos below (NOTE: one of the most shocking videos cannot be embedded, but can be seen in 20minutos TV en la plaza de Cataluña):
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Spanish Revolution AcampadaBCN: Barcelona Police Violence Assault on Peaceful Protesters
The violent assault on peaceful protesters will only further reinvigorate the 15-M movement and boost the resolve of the Spanish youth uprising.
What had been a 12-day long peaceful protest against austerity, corruption and a lack of economic opportunity and political representation, today saw its first outbreak of violence, as Spanish riot police cleared out the incredibly positively-spirited protest camp at the Plaça de Catalunya in Barcelona.
But while the mainstream media spoke of ‘clashes‘ between protesters and police, the violence was really rather one-sided: the vast majority of the 120+ injured were peaceful protesters. While the people in the square wielded flowers, the police came crashing in wielding full-armor protective gear, batons, shields, pepper spray and rubber bullet shotguns.
Clearly, it was the stupidest thing Spanish authorities could have decided to do at this point. While the attack was explained as an attempt to ‘clean up’ the square ahead of tomorrow’s Champion’s League final, there were clearly ulterior (political) motivations behind the sheer brutality of the attack (I’ll let the images speak for themselves, no need to delve into this point any further).
The unprovoked violence of the ‘Mossos d’Esquadra’ will only further reinvigorate the determination of the 15-M movement to push for real democracy now. The popular Facebook group Spanish Revolution today posted the following ‘call to arms’ (although it was very clear to tell its followers to refrain from using violence and only to use passive forms of resistance and civil disobedience):
In this respect, there are a number of clear lessons to draw from the past. In their early stages, the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions actually thrived because of the excessive use of force of the state security apparatus. The images of brutality helped radicalize large segments of the population that would otherwise never have engaged with the protests.
The exact same happened in Madrid last week. When riot police cleared some 150 peaceful protesters off the square in the night from Monday the 16th to Tuesday, the protesters — instead of backing down — came swarming back in the thousands. People just kept pouring into the Puerta del Sol until late in the night, occupying the square and still refusing to budge.
Today, while the international media was slow to pick up on the crackdown, footage of police brutality quickly spread around on social media. Facebook, Twitter and the blogosphere were abuzz with outrage at the entirely unprovoked and unnecessary violence, especially against women — and even a protester in a wheelchair carrying nothing but a flower in his hand.
Within hours, the Facebook group of the AcampadaBCN, which had previously counted only a few thousand members, boomed to over 38,000 followers. An online petition denouncing the police violence has already been signed by some 40,000 people. By the late afternoon, thousands of peaceful protesters had retaken the square and forced police into a humiating retreat.
Right now, as I write this on Friday night, tens of thousands of peaceful protesters have flocked to the Plaça de Catalunya to show their defiance and resolve. Now this is no longer just about idealism or changing the world. This is about preserving our most basic human rights to freedom, physical integrity and a dignified life.
y doing what they did, the authorities only confirmed what the 15-M movement has been arguing for almost two weeks now: “they call it a democracy and it’s not.” The movement will only swell in numbers. Now, more than ever before, it will have something to fight for, which is particularly important as the endless general assemblies of recent days had slowly begun to wear out morale.
This morning, the authorities showed that they’re afraid of us. The resort to violence is an attempt to exert physical authority in the absence of political legitimacy. They’re hoping to scare us off, to put the youth of Spain and Europe back in its place. But the genie is out of the box by now and any attempt to stuff it back in will only make it bounce back with even greater thrust and resolve.
Today, Spain, Europe and the world were handed the images of injustice that will become the very symbols of our peaceful resistance. This will only strengthen our resolve. La lucha continua. The revolution is only just getting started, and the people are back in control of the streets:
Source: http://roarmag.org/2011/05/barcelona-spanish-police-violence-protests-revolution/
What had been a 12-day long peaceful protest against austerity, corruption and a lack of economic opportunity and political representation, today saw its first outbreak of violence, as Spanish riot police cleared out the incredibly positively-spirited protest camp at the Plaça de Catalunya in Barcelona.
But while the mainstream media spoke of ‘clashes‘ between protesters and police, the violence was really rather one-sided: the vast majority of the 120+ injured were peaceful protesters. While the people in the square wielded flowers, the police came crashing in wielding full-armor protective gear, batons, shields, pepper spray and rubber bullet shotguns.
Clearly, it was the stupidest thing Spanish authorities could have decided to do at this point. While the attack was explained as an attempt to ‘clean up’ the square ahead of tomorrow’s Champion’s League final, there were clearly ulterior (political) motivations behind the sheer brutality of the attack (I’ll let the images speak for themselves, no need to delve into this point any further).
The unprovoked violence of the ‘Mossos d’Esquadra’ will only further reinvigorate the determination of the 15-M movement to push for real democracy now. The popular Facebook group Spanish Revolution today posted the following ‘call to arms’ (although it was very clear to tell its followers to refrain from using violence and only to use passive forms of resistance and civil disobedience):
In this respect, there are a number of clear lessons to draw from the past. In their early stages, the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions actually thrived because of the excessive use of force of the state security apparatus. The images of brutality helped radicalize large segments of the population that would otherwise never have engaged with the protests.
The exact same happened in Madrid last week. When riot police cleared some 150 peaceful protesters off the square in the night from Monday the 16th to Tuesday, the protesters — instead of backing down — came swarming back in the thousands. People just kept pouring into the Puerta del Sol until late in the night, occupying the square and still refusing to budge.
Today, while the international media was slow to pick up on the crackdown, footage of police brutality quickly spread around on social media. Facebook, Twitter and the blogosphere were abuzz with outrage at the entirely unprovoked and unnecessary violence, especially against women — and even a protester in a wheelchair carrying nothing but a flower in his hand.
Within hours, the Facebook group of the AcampadaBCN, which had previously counted only a few thousand members, boomed to over 38,000 followers. An online petition denouncing the police violence has already been signed by some 40,000 people. By the late afternoon, thousands of peaceful protesters had retaken the square and forced police into a humiating retreat.
Right now, as I write this on Friday night, tens of thousands of peaceful protesters have flocked to the Plaça de Catalunya to show their defiance and resolve. Now this is no longer just about idealism or changing the world. This is about preserving our most basic human rights to freedom, physical integrity and a dignified life.
y doing what they did, the authorities only confirmed what the 15-M movement has been arguing for almost two weeks now: “they call it a democracy and it’s not.” The movement will only swell in numbers. Now, more than ever before, it will have something to fight for, which is particularly important as the endless general assemblies of recent days had slowly begun to wear out morale.
This morning, the authorities showed that they’re afraid of us. The resort to violence is an attempt to exert physical authority in the absence of political legitimacy. They’re hoping to scare us off, to put the youth of Spain and Europe back in its place. But the genie is out of the box by now and any attempt to stuff it back in will only make it bounce back with even greater thrust and resolve.
Today, Spain, Europe and the world were handed the images of injustice that will become the very symbols of our peaceful resistance. This will only strengthen our resolve. La lucha continua. The revolution is only just getting started, and the people are back in control of the streets:
Source: http://roarmag.org/2011/05/barcelona-spanish-police-violence-protests-revolution/
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