Post by account_disabled on Mar 7, 2024 6:02:07 GMT -5
Autonomous Moment. In a Situation of Strong Mobilization, but Without the Horizon of Occupying the State, the Zapatista Insurrection in Mexico Offered a "Way Out": "Change the World Without Taking Power," as Proposed in the Book by the Irish-mexican John Holloway, Who in the Days After December Gathered Crowds in Argentina, Like When He Filled the Aula Magna of the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Buenos Aires. The Idea of a Politics That "Prefigured" the New Society From the Margins and Not From State Institutions.
Then Captured a Large Part of the Imaginaries of Change and Militant Energies. Already Before, in , a Group of Students Had Devised the " Movement" to Not Vote in the Presidential Elections of That Year (in Argentina Voting is Mandatory, but Not Going to the Polls UK Mobile Database Can Be Justified if You Are More Kilometers From the Address on the Electoral Roll). Among the Main Organizers of This Small Feat Was the Young Economist Axel Kicillof, Later Cristina Fernández De Kirchner's Minister of Economy and Currently Re-elected Governor of the Province of Buenos Aires, the Most Populated in the Country. Two Years Later, in the Legislative.
Elections, the Star Was the So-called "Rout Vote" (White and Null). If There is a Book That Reflects, From Its Title, the Climate of Those Years, It is Politics is Elsewhere. In Fact, Detachments of Sociologists Then Dedicated Themselves to Going to That "Other Part" and Studying in in the Deep Areas of Greater Buenos Aires, but Also in the Oil Provinces of the North and South, Peasants, "Recovered Factories." Self-managed by Their Workers, Etc. But There Was Also Another Book, by the Writer Dalmiro Sáenz, Titled I Hate You, Politician. The Book for All Citizens Who Do Not Make a Living From Politics, Which Was in Line With a Media and Cultural World That Expressed Dominant Nonconformism and Even Profited From the Industry of Political Pessimism.
Then Captured a Large Part of the Imaginaries of Change and Militant Energies. Already Before, in , a Group of Students Had Devised the " Movement" to Not Vote in the Presidential Elections of That Year (in Argentina Voting is Mandatory, but Not Going to the Polls UK Mobile Database Can Be Justified if You Are More Kilometers From the Address on the Electoral Roll). Among the Main Organizers of This Small Feat Was the Young Economist Axel Kicillof, Later Cristina Fernández De Kirchner's Minister of Economy and Currently Re-elected Governor of the Province of Buenos Aires, the Most Populated in the Country. Two Years Later, in the Legislative.
Elections, the Star Was the So-called "Rout Vote" (White and Null). If There is a Book That Reflects, From Its Title, the Climate of Those Years, It is Politics is Elsewhere. In Fact, Detachments of Sociologists Then Dedicated Themselves to Going to That "Other Part" and Studying in in the Deep Areas of Greater Buenos Aires, but Also in the Oil Provinces of the North and South, Peasants, "Recovered Factories." Self-managed by Their Workers, Etc. But There Was Also Another Book, by the Writer Dalmiro Sáenz, Titled I Hate You, Politician. The Book for All Citizens Who Do Not Make a Living From Politics, Which Was in Line With a Media and Cultural World That Expressed Dominant Nonconformism and Even Profited From the Industry of Political Pessimism.