Aleksandar Gubas on 26 Sep 2000 03:57:05 -0000 |
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<nettime> Bono and Sting |
-------Lorenzo Taiuti wrote: > Is it true? Are quite sure? > Then let's have a Party! > A Big Web Party! * * * Yeah, Milosevic is definitely over! We already have the off-line party. And we (we = Zadruga, the independent association of Serbian audio-visual artists) will make the on-line party in Amsterdam, on October 6, at the opening ceremony of the net.congestion festival. So, everybody please consider yourself invited. ;-) * * * BTW, some more news and analyses from here: 1. The final result will be approximately 55:35 for Kostunica - so, there will be no need for the second round. 2. The Socialist Party will try to announce the second round and a slight advantage by Milosevic in the first round. 3. DOS (Democratic Opposition of Serbia) will not respect that act by the socialists. 4. Then the socialist hawks will want to use the force - but it's pretty likely that they will find themselves faced with the lack of will among their to-date supporters to confront the very convincing majority. They are threatening by empty gun. It's really amazing how the people were motivated to tell what they think. That strong wish to get rid of Milosevic at last could be taken as the explanation how DOS managed to establish so efficacious electional control, which made stealing ballots almost impossible. And that's another Milosevic's problem: his men can't do anything else but announce the partial results, given from a freely chosen sample of voters. All they managed to fake is 18,000 ballots in Montenegro! There's no comfort for the socialists in their hopes that they could control the Federal Assembly. Maybe they could, formally - but who cares? All their power was lying in Milosevic's charisma, which has vanished in the haze after the elections. Milosevic has been heavily humiliated on this 24th of September, and he and his party will never recover psychologically. The vision of Milosevic as a ridiculous clown has become too contagious among Serbs. What will really kill the Milosevic star is his new image of a loser. And besides, who really needs Yugoslavia and Federal Assembly? * * * Please forgive me for some emotional outbursts here. You people don't know how it was to live 12 years under Milosevic. Now Serbia will become a boring country, with changeable government (really, how boring!). Seselj's and Draskovic's parties are practically wiped out from the political scene (what a pity!). I foresee some other consequences too: - Yugoslavia will disappear as a name. Kostunica's Serbia will probably try to get rid of Montenegro. Peacefully. - The young Army deserters will be allowed to return to the country freely. Thus the Serb population in Budapest will diminish. - The Otpor movement will disappear or turn into a street art movement. - The most influential radio station in Belgrade will be Radio Index. Maybe there will appear B3-92 radio, but it will not be able to compete with Radio Index. But ANEM network of the Serbian electronic media will survive. - The Chinese immigration to Serbia will be stopped. - We could expect Bono Vox to hold a concert in Belgrade for young Serbian democracy. Also, Sting could be expected to turn his lobbying interests from Amazon Indians to Kosovar Serbs (it will be trendy). - Everybody will love Serbia, and the Serbs will be everybody's pets like the Croats are now. - Borka Pavicevic will be the minister of culture. That's another one of the boring prospectives. So, what to tell at the end? Milosevic is gone, and life is beautiful. But now Serbian artists will have to fight with the new pro-Western bureaucracy and Soros establishment, and they'll have to fulfill some new politically correct application forms when fundraising. The brave Western world will embrace the Serbs, but there will be some unpleasant mockers among them. Discover the Serbian politically incorrect artists. mrmr, Aleksandar Gubas >--<___/\::> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net