Adbusters

The Passion in Quebec

Tuition peeve or spectacular revolt?

ELOI BRUNELLE

The mood on the streets of Montreal is electric, with growing numbers of activists flooding the streets nightly, banging pots and pans and vowing to protest until victorious. One jammer described the scene: “I come home from these protests euphoric. The first night I returned, I sat down on my couch and I burst into tears, as the act of resisting, loudly, with my neighbors, so joyfully, had released so much tension that I had been carrying around with me, fearing our government, fearing arrest, fearing for the future. I felt lighter… Every night is teargas and riot cops, but it is also joy, laughter, kindness, togetherness, and beautiful music. Our hearts are bursting…”

After over 100 days of protest, the question is whether the students will go beyond a simple demand for free education to begin struggling for a totally different future.

As one commentator put it: “While student issues are important, the Red Square has come to represent something much more than just disgruntled student demonstrators against tuition hikes. It has become another symbol – think the tent and the term Occupy – of a growing awareness that continuing the ‘business as usual’ model in Canada will not solve economic or social inequalities and we are, in fact, heading towards economic and social disaster.”

By pushing through an unpopular and authoritarian anti-protest law, Bill 78, which bans demonstrations near universities, and declares protests consisting of more than 50 people illegal (unless routes, times, and transportation methods have been cleared by police), authorities have handed students an opportunity to shift the uprising onto new terrain: the struggle over the future of democracy… the same struggle that animates the global Occupy insurrection.

Ultimately, youth have the passion and the daring to catalyze a spectacular global revolt. But to pull it off, they’ll need to keep going deeper, past Ivory Tower protests, and start rebelling against the black hole future that awaits us all.

82 comments on the article “The Passion in Quebec”

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Anonymous

Speaking of which, how can the Red Square Revolt be talked about, without mentioning Red Square and revolt?

Anonymous

The forces that be are protecting fixed public and private territory. We humans can exist without either of these or configure our public and private territories in different ways. But these territories cannot exist independently without us. That fact defines our relationship to each other. In order to excel, we must protect and nurture ourselves individually and collectively. This means telling the truth as it openly evolves. This means not helping each other--and ourselves individually-- be healthy and appreciative of life. This means dynamically sharing things while, appreciating them in peace and letting go of them as they lose their value.

War is the opposite of what I mean. War is taking and fixing territory, using physical and psychological violence to do so. War is lying, stealing, and hurting and killing for prediction, control, and domination.

What I mean is honor yourselves and the planet you live on, creating a more loving relationship to everything, so that we can have perspective and meaning in the mystery as our lives evolve.

Life is a grand work of art, which can be magnificent or poorly done. Our choice...

Anonymous

Were you here in Montreal on Saturday night?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-mD-JeYjozc

If not, you missed out!

Anonymous

You people are shameless - What's happening in Quebec has nothing whatsoever to do with Occupy. You'll try to co-opt anything you think looks like a successful "movement", just to try to make yourselves seem relevant, won't you?

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