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Amy Goodman
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Thursday 12 July 2012
“As Rajoy was making his announcement in parliament, the miners were in the streets, joined by thousands of regular citizens, all demanding that government cuts be halted. ”

The Pain in Spain Falls Mainly on the Plain (Folk)

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As Spain’s prime minister announced deep austerity cuts Wednesday in order to secure funds from the European Union to bail out Spain’s failing banks, the people of Spain have taken to the streets once again for what they call “Real Democracy Now.” This comes a week after the government announced it was launching a criminal investigation into the former CEO of Spain’s fourth-largest bank, Bankia. Rodrigo Rato is no small fish: Before running Bankia he was head of the International Monetary Fund. What the U.S. media don’t tell you is that this official government investigation was initiated by grass-roots action.

The Occupy movement in Spain is called M-15, for the day it began, May 15, 2011. I met with one of the key organizers in Madrid last week on the day the Rato investigation was announced. He smiled, and said, “Something is starting to happen.” The organizer, Stephane Grueso, is an activist filmmaker who is making a documentary about the May 15 movement. He is a talented professional, but, like 25 percent of the Spanish population, he is unemployed: “We didn’t like what we were seeing, where we were going. We felt we were losing our democracy, we were losing our country, we were losing our way of life. ... We had one slogan: ‘Democracia real YA!’—we want a ‘real democracy, now!’ Fifty people stayed overnight in Puerta del Sol, this public square. And then the police tried to take us out, and so we came back. And then this thing began to multiply in other cities in Spain. In three, four days’ time, we were like tens of thousands of people in dozens of cities in Spain, camped in the middle of the city—a little bit like we saw in Tahrir in Egypt.”

The occupation of Puerta del Sol and other plazas around Spain continued, but, as with Occupy Wall Street encampments around the U.S., they were eventually broken up. The organizing continued, though, with issue-oriented working groups and neighborhood assemblies. One M-15 working group decided to sue Rodrigo Rato, and recruited pro bono lawyers and identified more than 50 plaintiffs, people who felt they’d been personally defrauded by Bankia. While the lawyers were volunteers, a massive lawsuit costs money, so this movement, driven by social media, turned to “crowd funding,” to the masses of supporters in their movement for small donations. In less than a day, they raised more than $25,000. The lawsuit was filed in June of this year.

Olmo Galvez is another M-15 organizer I met with in Madrid. A young businessman with experience around the world, Galvez was profiled in Time magazine when they chose “The Protester” as the Person of the Year. Rato’s alleged fraud at Bankia involved the sale of Bankia “preferred stock” to regular account holders, so-called retail investors, since sophisticated investors were not buying it. Galvez explained: “They were selling it to people—some of them couldn’t read, many were elderly. That was a big scandal that wasn’t in the media.” Some who invested in Bankia’s scheme had to sign the contract with a fingerprint because they couldn’t write, nor could they read about, let alone understand, what they were sinking their savings into.

This week, thousands of coal miners marched to Madrid, some walking 240 miles from Asturias, on Spain’s northern coast. When the miners arrived in Madrid Tuesday night, according to the online publication ElDiario.es, they chanted “somos el 99 percent” (“we are the 99 percent”) and were greeted like heroes. Wednesday morning, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, of the right-wing Partido Popular, made his latest pronouncement on austerity measures: an increase in the sales tax, cuts to the public-sector payroll, and shortening the period of unemployment support to six months.

As Rajoy was making his announcement in parliament, the miners were in the streets, joined by thousands of regular citizens, all demanding that government cuts be halted. The marchers were met by riot police, who fired rubber-coated steel balls and tear gas at them. Some protesters returned with volleys of firecrackers and other projectiles, and, in the ensuing melee, at least 76 were injured and eight arrested.

Stephane Grueso sums up the movement: “We are not a party. We are not a union. We are not an association. We are people. We want to expel corruption from public life ... now, today, maybe it is starting to happen.”

© 2011 Amy Goodman
Distributed by King Features Syndicate



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ABOUT Amy Goodman

Amy Goodman is the host of "Democracy Now!," a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 900 stations in North America. She is the author of "Breaking the Sound Barrier," recently released in paperback and now a New York Times best-seller.

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6 comments on "The Pain in Spain Falls Mainly on the Plain (Folk)"

Brian Glennie

August 11, 2012 1:56pm

The Upper Class is saved at the expense of Middle Class jobs, pensions and homes.
Where is Robin Hood when you need him ?

Rebel with a Cause

July 12, 2012 4:43pm

Nice wordplay in the title of this article!
But it doesn't detract from the actual fact that when people act the banksters get
sacked and then put in 'de bak' !!! (Dutch slang for 'jail' ;)
Looks like here in Britain at least some of the banksters are going to be prosecuted.
And we can all help by signing this petition now:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/bankers_behind_bars_g/?tWdFoab

go on, do yourself and all of us a favour! Wall Street is next!

wildthang

July 12, 2012 3:02pm

So in other words he is a scapegoat for us and what the IMF virus was that started on our Bully Market and quickly spread around the world. That was so the gain in Spain would mainly come from the pain of demolishing social programs due to economic hardship produced just in time for the end of the competition of communism and the glorious victory for the profit locomotive gone loco...

bladtheimpailer

July 12, 2012 12:27pm

Perhaps the Spainish should take a page from Iceland and let the banks fail. Either way the people take a hit, but letting the banks fail will not end their lives and will send a message that the people are not the slaves of bankers. "Let them fail."

Clarence Swinney

July 12, 2012 12:06pm

blood pressure raiser facts hurt

BLOOD PRESSURE RAISE WHO WILL TELL THE PEOPLE?
OBAMA ACHIEVEMENT LIST- (http://obamaachievement.org/li...
AFTER THIS INHERITANCE---
DEBT OF 11,900 ON 9-30-09
112% increase from 5800 on 9-30-01
doubled
Deficit of 1400 on 9-30-09
Spending increase 1800 to 3500 +92% Jobs decrease from 237,000 per month to 31,000 or lowest since Hoovertwo unfunded horrid unnecessary wars cost in billionsCbo reported Debt increase by Bush of 5100B from “new” programsSurplus turned into huge Tax Cuts 57% for Top 10%Expensive unfunded Part D MedicareGreat Recession from
Spend & Borrow
Housing Crash from inattention and free market ideology
Financial Crash from allowing Casino Derivatives to run wild GamblingExcessive spend on Pentagon1,300,000 jobs outsourced without a whimper

R FACTS HURT

luckylongshot

July 12, 2012 10:57am

While the pain in Spain is plain to see what is more difficult to make out is who really deserves to be blamed for it. While it is true that Spanish Banks did a lot of lending that they should not have done the mechanism that allowed them to do this was the fractional reserve banking system, which is privately owned. The role of the private bankers who own the system in the current mess has not been getting much attention. Hówever it should be getting a lot more for two reasons. One is that a significant percentage of the blame can be attributed to these people as without their support the debt situation would not have become so bad and the other is that they have the wealth to fix the problem overnight. Perhaps the people need to redirect the target of their protests from the politicians to their true masters,the private bankers.