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Lessons for US Radicals: Students Rise Again in Québec

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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-15-05 07:17 PM
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Lessons for US Radicals: Students Rise Again in Québec
Right next door to the apathy that is almost universal on U.S. campuses, there has been an amazing revival of student activism unseen for decades in Québec. Yet almost no U.S. students will know anything about it because of a virtually complete black-out in mainstream U.S. media--and very little coverage even on U.S. alternative and left-wing sites. Perhaps that doesn't matter, since most U.S. students seem perfectly content with the status quo. But if U.S. radicals knew more about the Quebec upheaval, they might find ways to spread the fire to the young south of the border.

Between 60,000 and 100,000 militant students marched in Montréal on March 16. Thousands more marched in Québec City, Sherbrooke, Trois-Rivière, and just about every other Québec locality with a CEGEP (somewhat similar to U.S. community colleges) or University. Students blocked the Port of Montréal, closed down the lucrative Montréal casino, blocked Federal Highway 40, and occupied various government and Liberal party offices in Québec City and Montréal--often for days at a time. In all, close to 300,000 students went on strike, closing almost all public higher education in Quebec for up to seven weeks (and continuing on many campuses). Up to 15,000 secondary school students joined demonstrations in solidarity--with backing from teacher's unions. Many University and CEGEP professors' and administrators' associations also endorsed the strike--as did a wide range of Quebec's other labor unions.

The strike began February 23 with a walkout by 30,000 CEGEP and University students, organized by the most radical of the three major student associations, CASSÉÉ (a coalition of the Association for Student Union Solidarity--ASSÉÉ--and unaffiliated student groups). The motivating grievance was a drastic cut in student stipends from the Quebec government, announced by the Liberal Minister of Education--some $103 million (Canadian dollars--U.S. equivalent about $80 million)--per year, beginning with this academic year's promised amount. ASSÉÉ included in its demands an end to the Liberal government's planned privatization and decentralization of some CEGEPs and other higher education programs, as well as a call for free tuition, and "humanistic curricula."

Tuition in Quebec is already the lowest in Canada--which is, of course, lower than almost all public institutions in the United States. Disabled and very low income students receive further assistance, which were not included in the cuts. Yet student groups were nearly unanimous in outrage at the take back of scholarship money. The two largest federations of students--FECQ for CEGEPs and FEUQ for universities--endorsed the strike almost immediately. Even traditionally conservative associations representing students in medicine, law, business and education, joined in. The elite private, English-speaking universities took symbolic but important steps by staging a one-day strike (Concordia) and issuing supportive statements--though the militant atmosphere did not carry over to the Anglo institutions, for the most part. (Concordia's radical student government was ousted after a huge and heavily funded media campaign vilifying it's pro-Palestinian stance last year.) Among the French-speaking, working-class students, CASSÉÉ itself grew rapidly in membership--now up to about 60,000. <snip>
Lessons for US Radicals: Students Rise Again in Québec

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FtWayneBlue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-15-05 08:06 PM
Response to Original message
1. Something that huge going on, and not a peep about it here
in good ol' US of A. Something else that I think is sic and rong is a student gov't being ousted for being Pro-Palistinian?!?!?!?!!!??!!!
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October Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Apr-16-05 08:55 AM
Response to Original message
2. Not a peep have we heard...
No wonder we're not hearing about this...it was effective.

Nominated for "greatest page" because no one else has brought this story to our attention -- via msm or here at DU.

Thank you, struggle4progress.
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GOPFighter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Apr-16-05 01:08 PM
Response to Original message
3. We have forgotten how to march...
...we have forgotten how to show our anger. We have forgotten how large demonstrations energize the participants and encourage people to speak up and speak out. Maybe if Frist pursues the "nuclear option" Democrats will finally find their voice and march on Washington and tell America "We're not going to take this shit from Republicans anymore!"

:mad:
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ReadTomPaine Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Apr-16-05 02:22 PM
Response to Original message
4. Something like this could be done in a week here..
If there were senior Democratic political leaders who organized and funded it. So why don't they?

RTP
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