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[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Hands down the best free Greek course I ever came across, can't recommend it enough for anyone interested in Greek.

[–] [email protected] 30 points 1 month ago (2 children)

It's hard to really give a true representation of the general atmoaphere in Serbia during these times. For as long as I've been conscious, Serbia was a land of cynics and depression. Negativity was the norm, and even I said back in November that these protests would last until new year / Christmas, then the students will go back home to get drunk or whatever and that will be the end of it. If someone had told me 3 months ago that almost the entire country would be optimistic about the future, that there would be a real chance to finally end the rule of SNS, that students would walk over 100km to places and be greeted as liberators by huge masses, fireworks and food, I'd ask them what movie were they watching. Also protests are being held all over the country, so much so that someone made a website to keep track of the future ones: kudanaprotest.rs

The next big gathering will be in Niš on the 1st of March.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago

I'm so used to seeing English everywhere that I actually have trouble navigating things like settings in my native Serbian.

[–] [email protected] 49 points 1 month ago (5 children)

Imagine if he went to Korea

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

That's a tough question, I gave a more detailed answere here: https://slrpnk.net/comment/13457345

The opposition parties are not very popular, but the general idea is that we need to primarily get our institutions to actually function so that another Vucic doesn't happen again, no matter who forms the government. Nobody really knows how this will play out exactly, since the students are vocal about the fact that they're unaffiliated with any opposition or NGO, which is one of the reasons why they are so popular with the people. All major opposition parties rejected the idea of participating in any snap elections this year, and the students are asking for an expert transitional government to enable free elections. This is something most people support.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 months ago (3 children)

Yeah, someone made a joke about how our president is a master of diplomacy: he managed to build a bridge between Serbs and Croats (as we all despise him), and also make the US, Russia and China agree on something (all 3 have dismissed the student-led protests).

Not directly related to the anti-corruption protests, but Croats started boycotting their local supermarkets due to high prices, and the whole region soon followed suit. It's honestly almost bizarre that while most of the world is looking bleak, the Balkans are now engaging in optimism and mutal support. This is the first time since I developed self-consciousness that I can say that Serbs are optimistic about the future, as many believe that this might very well be the end for the current regime, and that a new system with an emphasis on direct democracy will take its place.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I have to ask, as someone who has only a basic understanding of the philosophies, how are the end goals of Anarchists and Marxists different? I understood them as only having different methods of arriving to the same state of society without class, states and money - communism.

By my understanding, Anarchists go bottom up by propping up a parallel system based on voluntary cooperation and mutual aid, to the point where the state is no longer needed for anything, and Marxists (or rather Marxist-Leninists) go top down by seizing control of the state in the name of the workers, and then gradually give the workers more and more direct control until the state is no longer needed ("The withering of the state").

Assuming what I just wrote is wrong, what faults would Anarchists and Marxists find in each other's end goals, assuming they succeed in establishing their ideal societies?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago

The PM's resignation is thought to have happened in order to force new elections and thus kill the momentum. The fact that they can win any election was used almost every time we had unrests (we had elections in 2012, 2014, 2017, 2020, 2022, 2023, 2024 and now they want 2025).

All relevant opposition parties agreed (they very rarely agree on anything) that there will be no elections. Everyone is in agreement with that: prison time, a transitional government to enable free elections, and then we get elections. Who will form the transitional government? I'm not sure, but the atmosphere is generally that this has to be the end of SNS and all prominent members, nothing less is acceptable.

As for villages/cities: rural areas get most of their information from TV, and the few non-propaganda channels that exist are not even an option in remote areas, so a lot of them don't even know anything from media besides "some students are protesting". But these protests were held in places we would never expect (someone joked that places are rising up that didn't rise up even against the Ottomans), so I'm not sure how are these events seen in remote villages.

Funny that you mentioned Bangladesh, because I remember reading about it being the "first gen z revolution" and thought how this could be the second. Students from Belgrade announced that they will walk to Novi Sad tomorrow to join the huge protests announced on Saturday, where again a bridge will be blocked for 24h (and another 2 for 3h each)

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 months ago (3 children)

That's a tough one. First, the current state of politics here is as follows:

The main character here is president Aleksandar Vucic. He was the head of the Serbian Progressive Party (Srpska Napredna Stranka, SNS), the party that has been in power since 2012, until a few years ago. He's officially not the head anymore, but he still holds rallies and campaigns for SNS, even though he's not on any lists or positions during election campaigns. The president has a ceremonial role according to the Serbian constitution, but you can see him almost every day (I'm not even joking) on TV answering questions on everything from infrastructure projects to how many peas and beans we have in stock (not joking). Not a single institution is doing its job because everything has to go through him.

The party has over 700k members (more than 10% of the population) because if you want to hold a job in any public position, you have to be a member of the party, attend rallies, vote for SNS (with photo evidence that you did it, even though that's illegal) , otherwise you get fired. Almost all the media in Serbia is SNS propaganda. So, given that they hold all the media, institutions, governmental positions and decide whether a large chunk of the population will have food tomorrow, elections are kinda meaningless in places outside of Belgrade and maybe Novi Sad, because they can do whatever they want with no reprecussions. For example, in 2023 they literally brought 10k people from Bosnia to vote in local Belgrade elections, swiftly giving them citizenship and registering them where they could. You had apartments of like 30m^2 that had 60 people registered as living there. They also moved people from other places to Belgrade so that they could vote there, and then they re-registered them back so that they could vote also back home. This was all proven without a shadow of a doubt, and absolutely nothing was done about it. So the prime minister resigning is honestly almost meaningless because there are no institutions or ministers in Serbia, there is only Vucic.

As for the opposition, on the one hand you can't blame them too much because there's not much they can legally do, but on the other hand they often screw up whatever they can. They used to take control of protests that emerged, led people to walk up and down all over Serbia for months, and then nothing. In 2023 we had the huge protests with the oposition parties leading them, and an election was held in December. The elections were a scandal fest as they always are, but even with those 10k Bosnians, SNS did not manage to get a majority in Belgrade, and they had to hold elections again. It was a huge moment since it was the first time SNS did not manage to win something (keep in mind that every city, every municipality, every local body is controlled by SNS), and people very actually pretty hyped that Belgrade will be freed. And then, in a move probably unseen in the history of parliamentary politics, half the oposition decided to boycott the elections. They said that the conditions for fair elections were not met and they would not participate, but only in Belgrade and Nis (the third biggest city), they would participate in other cities. That was one of the biggest wtf moves ever recorded, and ofc SNS won almost everything in Serbia again (one municipality in Nis had the oposition win I think). So they are either disliked ("they're all the same" etc), or seen as incompetent by the majority.

One idea that has been floating in the public is for the students to form a government by appointing the professors they deem best suited for a transitional government, and then turn the country upside down and punish the members of SNS for everything they did, and then hope for the best that we will have new, younger people emerge. This is a very special time because very many people are really sympathetic towards the students, as they should be since they have been nothing short of excelent in almost every respect. The majority really just want the whole system and political class to burn down and to start again, but I think that's the case almost everywhere.

Sorry for the long post, just thought I'd clarify the situation here since this is hitting the news in a lot of places.

tl;dr - Some opposition parties are at best alright, but non really inspire anyone. Ideally the students will lead us out of this mess into a new era, but in any case the number one priority is to fill the prisons to max capacity with the mafia running this country.

[–] [email protected] 17 points 2 months ago (5 children)

Vucevic said the immediate cause for his quitting was an attack on a female student in Novi Sad early Tuesday by assailants allegedly from the ruling Serbian Progressive Party. Vucevic said that “whenever it seems there is hope to return to social dialogue, to talk ... it’s like an invisible hand creates a new incident and tensions mount again.”

For those wondering on the nature of the attack: students were putting stickers on objects in the city calling for protests this Saturday, then two guys from the ruling party (read: hooligans) came at them with baseball bats, broke one girl's jaw, and chased the rest with a car.

These are hopefully the final stages of a cancerous regime coming to an end. Keep in mind that the students didn't ask or care about any resignations or elections, they have 4 concrete requests that, if fulfilled, will lead to most of the ruling party going to prison. This is just replacing one puppet with another.

But we can still nontheless rejoice in the government collapsing.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 months ago (1 children)

There was an incident in Belgrade yesterday where a 25 year old woman ran over 6 people with her car.

Farmers came to Novi Sad today to join the students in the blockades. The students also announced a major event on Monday, though they're keepinh it secret for now.

They also announced blocking 3 major bridges that lead to Novi Sad on the 1st of February.

My personal opinion: this year will either be the end of the ruling party in Serbia, or the year of the biggest repressions in Serbian history. Most people support the students, many businesses (even big ones) joined the call to a general strike yesterday. Teachers continued their strike, with parents supporting them, the bar association also extended their strike, even IT workers joined in.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago

Same, just created an account on metapixl.com even though I never used Instagram before

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