Miffed by Miffy

I don’t know how it came about but the Miffy rab­bit char­ac­ter has for a long time been asso­ci­at­ed with the Earth First! move­ment and rad­i­cal eco­log­i­cal direct action. But do the cre­ators and copy­right own­ers of the char­ac­ter know or approve of Miffy’s polit­i­cal activ­i­ties?…



Rabbit under fence

EF! summer gathering 2007 logo



Rabbit with wrenchEF! gathering '07 logo (rabbit/fence)

I don’t know how it came about but the Miffy rab­bit char­ac­ter has for a long time been asso­ci­at­ed with the Earth First! move­ment and rad­i­cal eco­log­i­cal direct action. But do the cre­ators and copy­right own­ers of the char­ac­ter know or approve of Miffy’s polit­i­cal activ­i­ties?…

Miffy is a pic­ture book char­ac­ter cre­at­ed by Dick Bruna in 1955, after telling his one-year-old son Sierk sto­ries about a rab­bit they had seen on hol­i­day. Miffy now fea­tures in about 30 titles which have been trans­lat­ed into 40 dif­fer­ent lan­guages, sell­ing over 80 mil­lion copies all over the world.

Drawn in a very min­i­mal­ist style, Miffy requires only a few lines and one or two pri­ma­ry col­ors drawn in two dimen­sions to be recog­nis­able. Per­haps this, and the sense of air of inno­cence over mis­chief explains why she become involved in eco­log­i­cal direct action.

It’s unclear exact­ly when exact­ly it began but you can trace her polit­i­cal activ­i­ties, in this coun­try at least, back to the ear­ly 90’s and the anti-roads move­ment. Seen coy­ly hold­ing a span­ner behind her back, one could only imag­ine the trail of mon­key wrench­ing she left behind her in her efforts to defend the fields, wood­land and hedgerows she loved.

By the late nineties, with the roads build­ing pro­gram in retreat, Miffy joined the grow­ing anti GM move­ment, tak­ing up a spade to join the resis­tance. More recent­ly, Miffy joined her fel­low pro­test­ers for a game of golf up in Scot­land dur­ing the 2005 G8 sum­mit and who know, per­haps she also took part in the block­ades in Heili­gen­damm this year.

At over fifty years old you’d think that Miffy would be her own per­son, free to express her polit­i­cal beliefs as she sees fit but sad­ly it appears not. The copy­right own­ers of all Dick Bruna’s char­ac­ter con­stant­ly hunt down unli­censed users of her image in order to defend their prof­itable mer­chan­dis­ing busi­ness.

While Miffy was cre­at­ed for a chil­dren’s book, the design has been cap­i­talised on to sell numer­ous oth­er prod­ucts like clothes, sta­tionery, toys, glass­es, house­hold items etc. A search for Miffy prod­ucts on google brings up over 100,000 pages and no doubt many of the prod­ucts sold are unli­censed copies made in far east­ern sweat shops.

How­ev­er, Mer­cis, the Dutch com­pa­ny that owns the copy­right, are not con­tent to sim­ply take action on those pro­duc­ing ‘fake’ mer­chan­dise, they appears to have stum­bled on Miffy’s rad­i­cal secret life and they are not amused. They are deeply offend­ed, iron­i­cal­ly, by Miffys involve­ment in the cam­paign against patents on life, as depict­ed in stick­er pro­duced many years ago pro­mot­ing the (long dead), www.resistanceisfertile.com web­site — copies of which can now only be found in resource archives of the (no longer main­tained) Totnes Against Genet­ics (ToGG) web­site.

Mer­cis (www.mercis.nl) have unleashed their legal team to threat­en expen­sive legal action against who­ev­er might be held account­able — the inac­tive Totnes Genet­ics Group who’s long unmain­tained web­site sill con­tains a pic­ture of that Miffy stick­er.

While ToGG vol­un­teers try to get long for­got­ten pass­words and access from the inter­net ser­vice provider which hosts the web­site in order to remove the offend­ing image, more impor­tant ques­tions have been raised. Will Miffy tol­er­ate this attack on her free­dom of expres­sion and will her friends in the move­ment stand idly by and watch as her free­dom to protest is tak­en away?

Oth­er sit­ing of Miffy can be found at https://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/06/374195.html?c=on#comments

BILSTON GLEN 5TH BIRTHDAY PARTY

Bil­ston Glen 5th Birth­day Par­ty and Sun­day Free Cafe, on 24th June
Day time: Free food, work­shops, film show­ings, acoustic jam­ming


Evening: Sound sys­tem and par­ty. Also jam­ming and chill out space at the main fire-pit

Bil­ston Glen 5th Birth­day Par­ty and Sun­day Free Cafe, on 24th June
Day time: Free food, work­shops, film show­ings, acoustic jam­ming


Evening: Sound sys­tem and par­ty. Also jam­ming and chill out space at the main fire-pit


So come on down to the woods, if you haven’t been before, this is the PERFECT oppor­tu­ni­ty to get involved.
For more info and how to get there see our

home page


and our

myspace


Support pipeline protesters, stop G8 climate criminals!

6.06.2007
Pipeline and G8 sol­i­dar­i­ty protest out­side court in Cardiff tomor­row as author­i­ties attempt to evict Bre­con anti-pipe tree camp.

Pro­test­ers against the mon­strous pipeline plow­ing its way through Wales are in court tomor­row as author­i­ties attempt to evict the 5 month old tree camp in Bre­con Nation­al Park. This is just one exam­ple of how the state is fuel­ing cli­mate change and pre­vent­ing us from protest­ing about it. Gov­ern­ments all over the world behave sim­i­lar­ly and this week the 8 biggest lead­ers (G8) are meet­ing in Ger­many to make more deci­sions that will impose on our lives. Whilst many of our friends are in Ger­many protest­ing against this unde­mo­c­ra­t­ic, cen­tralised source of pow­er we will be protest­ing out­side the court against all gov­ern­ments intrud­ing in our lives and the envi­ron­ment, both local­ly and glob­al­ly.

6.06.2007
Pipeline and G8 sol­i­dar­i­ty protest out­side court in Cardiff tomor­row as author­i­ties attempt to evict Bre­con anti-pipe tree camp.

Pro­test­ers against the mon­strous pipeline plow­ing its way through Wales are in court tomor­row as author­i­ties attempt to evict the 5 month old tree camp in Bre­con Nation­al Park. This is just one exam­ple of how the state is fuel­ing cli­mate change and pre­vent­ing us from protest­ing about it. Gov­ern­ments all over the world behave sim­i­lar­ly and this week the 8 biggest lead­ers (G8) are meet­ing in Ger­many to make more deci­sions that will impose on our lives. Whilst many of our friends are in Ger­many protest­ing against this unde­mo­c­ra­t­ic, cen­tralised source of pow­er we will be protest­ing out­side the court against all gov­ern­ments intrud­ing in our lives and the envi­ron­ment, both local­ly and glob­al­ly.

Be at Cardiff Civ­il Jus­tice Cen­tre, 2 Park Street at 10.30am

In sol­i­dar­i­ty with our friends in trees and on the block­ades.

Cardiff Ris­ing Tide

Bristol Protest against G8 and Climate Catastrophe, 8th June

Stop them dri­ving the plan­et to destruc­tion

CRITICAL MASS, Fri­day 8th June — 8am in the MORNING!
Assem­ble on St. Augustines Parade at 8am sharp to move off when crit­i­cal mass forms.

G8 Bristol CM '07Stop them dri­ving the plan­et to destruc­tion

CRITICAL MASS, Fri­day 8th June — 8am in the MORNING!
Assem­ble on St. Augustines Parade at 8am sharp to move off when crit­i­cal mass forms.

What are we doing?
As a start we are call­ing for a crit­i­cal mass on the morn­ing of Fri­day June 8th as the wake up call to a day of action in sol­i­dar­i­ty with those protest­ing against the G8 meet­ing in Ger­many. We hope that this will act as a cat­a­lyst for oth­er groups and indi­vid­u­als in Bris­tol to mark the occa­sion how­ev­er they see fit.

Whether it be a pen­sion­ers mass march, a play­ground protest, or you and yer mates throw­ing a lit­er­al or sym­bol­ic wrench in the works, get off your arse and show ‘em you’re mad as hell and aren’t going to take it no more!

Why should you be angry?
CLIMATE CHAOS
We all know the ter­ri­fy­ing sta­tis­tics: a mil­lion species extinct by 2050, 19 of the 20 hottest years on record since 1980, Green­land and Antarc­ti­ca melt­ing, droughts, floods, famines. The G8 have had over 30 years to address cli­mate change and only suc­ceed­ed in pro­vid­ing tril­lions in sub­si­dies to the very indus­tries that are destroy­ing our plan­et and our future.

And while the G8 con­tin­ues to line their pock­ets, island states dis­ap­pear and hun­dreds of thou­sands die as a result of the freak weath­er con­di­tions caused by their irra­tional and uncon­trol­lable obses­sion with nev­er end­ing eco­nom­ic growth. We have a ten-year win­dow to act. As the mega­lo­ma­ni­ac G8 lead­ers meet in Ger­many, masked behind a bar­ri­er of fences and sol­diers, intent on lead­ing us fur­ther towards cat­a­stroph­ic and irre­versible cli­mate chaos, we must shout, scream and roar ˜no more”. Now is the time to take direct action and shut them down, them and their cli­mate crim­i­nal indus­try friends!

THE USUAL SUSPECTS
While cli­mate chaos effects us all, those on the front line are those already dev­as­tat­ed by the cru­el­ty of glob­al cap­i­tal­ism — the poor and dis­ad­van­taged. While the G8 looks to the mar­kets to solve the prob­lem by turn­ing emis­sions into a prod­uct that can be bought and sold, they pur­pose­ly ignore the only effec­tive solu­tion — an end to the con­sumerist mass-mar­ket soci­ety.

Iron­i­cal­ly con­sumerism is the way of life that the G8 is forc­ing poor­er coun­tries to adopt in order to have their pover­ty, debt and trade prob­lems alle­vi­at­ed. Soci­eties are manip­u­lat­ed into becom­ing pre­car­i­ous McCoun­tries: from export­ing cheap mass pro­duced goods from sweat­shops to feed west­ern appetites, to pro­vid­ing play­ground par­adis­es for the rich.

All this does is feed cli­mate chaos and cre­ate fur­ther car­bon emis­sions to be trad­ed as ‘cred­its’ between the rich­est coun­tries.

ANGRY YET?
So what are you going to do about it? Buy a wrist­band, go to a con­cert, sign a peti­tion, go on an organ­ised mass march?

Remem­ber Jubilee 2000? Third world debt is worse than ever.
Remem­ber Make Pover­ty His­to­ry? It didn’t.
Remem­ber Stop the War? We haven’t

The G8 lead­ers have car­ried on with their own agen­da and fan­cy foot­work. The only way that gov­ern­ments will lis­ten to us is if we force them to — this is the only effec­tive form of protest, which is why free­dom to protest effec­tive­ly is being erod­ed and out­lawed. We are sleep­walk­ing into a soci­ety where dis­sent will not be tol­er­at­ed, and it’s time to wake up!

Why June 8th?
The 8th of June Inter­na­tion­al Day of Action Against Cli­mate Change and the G8 has been called by the Inter­na­tion­al Ris­ing Tide Net­work. This is a call for autonomous, decen­tral­ized actions appro­pri­ate for your town, city, or local area.

We want to send a mes­sage to the pro­tes­tors on the streets and in the jails of Ger­many that we stand in sol­i­dar­i­ty with them and their actions.

Why a Crit­i­cal Mass?
Crit­i­cal Mass demon­stra­tions are not just about high­light­ing the prob­lems fac­ing cyclists, they are used effec­tive­ly across the world as an effec­tive way of protest­ing. The first one hap­pened in San Fran­cis­co in1992 and since then enthu­si­asts in many towns and cities world­wide have fol­lowed suit. It is dif­fi­cult to describe CM as opin­ions dif­fer wide­ly but they seem to range from a sim­ple cel­e­bra­tion of cycling to an anti-author­i­tar­i­an block­ade of traf­fic, par­tic­u­lar­ly cars, with many facets in between.

Cycling protests have already been hap­pen­ing as a part of the actions against the G8 sum­mit, and the heavy hand­ed response to them shows that the author­i­ties feel they are effec­tive and fear them.

On the 7th May in Utrecht (Hol­land), mount­ed police attacked, beat, arrest­ed and did sig­nif­i­cant dam­age to a peace­ful bicy­cle car­a­van on its way to Ger­many — http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/05/369998.html for details.

On 25th May in Ham­burg (Ger­many), Over 250 peo­ple involved in the G8 mobi­liza­tion took to the streets of Ham­burg in a Crit­i­cal Mass. The police broke up the group of cyclists by dri­ving between them with vehi­cles and by run­ning and stand­ing in front of them. The cops fol­lowed the small­er groups of cyclists to get them to dis­perse. 12 peo­ple were arrest­ed and held for sev­er­al hours — http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/05/371656.html for details.

Also on the 25th, Bristol’s own Crit­i­cal Mass was sub­ject to a heavy-hand­ed police response. Although obvi­ous­ly not on the same scale, the rea­son behind it was the same — to smash the Crit­i­cal Mass as a form of protest because it is effec­tive. This forms part of a con­cert­ed effort by police across the UK to stop the protests, includ­ing attempts to crim­i­nalise the action and its par­tic­i­pants (that failed). See http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/05/371358.html for details. And see http://bristol.indymedia.org/newswire.php?story_id=24359&search_text=Critical%20mass&results_offset=15 for details of 200 plus rid­ers on Bris­tol CM on 28/11/05 held in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Lon­don CM after the cops threat­ened them. Who says CM isn’t polit­i­cal?

Why in the morn­ing?
The usu­al month­ly Crit­i­cal Mass in Bris­tol is a sep­a­rate enti­ty that focus­es on the rights of cyclists, while the inten­tion of the June 8th is to have a wider focus and so the change of time will dif­fer­en­ti­ate the two. Also there has been crit­i­cism that the month­ly Mass stops Bris­to­lians from get­ting home for the week­end, which can lead to a lack of wider sup­port.

This Crit­i­cal Mass is a present to the work­ing peo­ple of Bris­tol! If well attend­ed, the demon­stra­tion could mean big delays in get­ting to work on a Fri­day morn­ing, and a per­fect excuse for phon­ing in late — and who but the boss­es wouldn’t sup­port that! Spread the word to those you work with, but remem­ber we need the num­bers on the ride to make it hap­pen!

Remem­ber, the streets are ours, Crit­i­cal Mass is NOT ille­gal (yet!), and you have to get out of bed ear­ly in the morn­ing if you’re going to out­wit those who want to take away your free­dom to protest!

Bris­tol Ris­ing Tide Web­site — http://risingtide.org.uk/bristol

More info on the G8 protests in Ger­many -http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/05/371754.html

For posters and fly­ers see http://bristol.indymedia.org/newswire.php?story_id=26367

Rostock, Global Agricultural day of action

Video Rush of the anti GM March, 03/06/2007; part of the G8 protests — for full cov­er­age, see indymedia.org.uk

Video 20070603_Anti_GM_March — video/x‑ms-wmv 11M

Rostock agriculture demo 2Rostock agriculture demo 1Rostock agriculture demo 3Video Rush of the anti GM March, 03/06/2007; part of the G8 protests — for full cov­er­age, see indymedia.org.uk

Video 20070603_Anti_GM_March — video/x‑ms-wmv 11M

Mac Users, down­load Flip4Mac to view.
Watch video.
Be hap­py.

Can I be nom­i­nat­ed for the best shots of the cutest kid award?

—————————————————
Ros­tock Sun­day. Glob­al Agri­cul­tur­al day of action.

Despite its claims to the con­trary the G8 has done bug­ger all to alle­vi­ate star­va­tion in the world. In fact the num­ber of peo­ple starv­ing in the world is now at an all time high. Sun­day was the day nom­i­nat­ed to draw atten­tion to all things unfair in the world of agri­cul­ture so a rov­ing demo toured the town to tack­le the issues

It has to be said that fol­low­ing Sat­ur­days car­nage this decid­ed­ly fluffy affair was a wel­come assign­ment. There was a band on a float which sound­ed like a cross between Orbital and the Lev­ellers, also a Sam­ba band and oth­er assort­ed drum­mers and musi­cians. As well as the usu­al activists sev­er­al farm­ers from Ger­many and around the world were in atten­dance rais­ing aware­ness about every­thing from GM crops and live­stock to exploita­tion, pol­lu­tion and cor­rupt sub­si­dies.

One port of call was Lidl whose crimes include low pay, non recog­ni­tion of unions, pro­mot­ing GM and sell­ing shit food. Speech­es were made here and at sev­er­al oth­er loca­tions.

Despite the obvi­ous fact that this demo was going to be less con­fronta­tion­al than a sit-in by the Hare Krish­nas, two hun­dred cops in full riot gear were in atten­dance. This gives the impres­sion that their Polic­ing is not what you would describe as ‘intel­li­gence led’. With noth­ing else to do they kept them­selves occu­pied by search­ing any­one under the age of 30 who was wear­ing an item of black cloth­ing. No arrests were made.

The demo fin­ished with more speech­es in the square with plen­ty of inter­est­ing facts and fig­ures. One exam­ple is that milk pro­duc­ing EU cows are sub­sidised for two dol­lars a day. Mean­while starv­ing Africans? One dol­lar a day!

International Day of Direct Action Against Climate Change and the G8 — UK events: Haringey… (& Jeff Luers solidarity callout)

Fri­day 8th June 2007
Direct Action for Cli­mate Jus­tice – Resis­tance is Self Defense!

We all know the ter­ri­fy­ing sta­tis­tics: a mil­lion species extinct by 2050, 19 of the 20 hottest years on record since 1980, Green­land and Antarc­ti­ca melt­ing, droughts, floods, famines … the G8 have had over 30 years to address cli­mate change and only suc­ceed­ed in pro­vid­ing tril­lions in sub­si­dies to the very indus­tries that are destroy­ing our plan­et and our future. And while the G8 con­tin­ues to line their pock­ets, island states dis­ap­pear and hun­dreds of thou­sands die as a result of the freak weath­er con­di­tions caused by their irra­tional and uncon­trol­lable obses­sion with nev­er end­ing eco­nom­ic growth.

G8 2007 climate day flierFri­day 8th June 2007
Direct Action for Cli­mate Jus­tice – Resis­tance is Self Defense!

We all know the ter­ri­fy­ing sta­tis­tics: a mil­lion species extinct by 2050, 19 of the 20 hottest years on record since 1980, Green­land and Antarc­ti­ca melt­ing, droughts, floods, famines … the G8 have had over 30 years to address cli­mate change and only suc­ceed­ed in pro­vid­ing tril­lions in sub­si­dies to the very indus­tries that are destroy­ing our plan­et and our future. And while the G8 con­tin­ues to line their pock­ets, island states dis­ap­pear and hun­dreds of thou­sands die as a result of the freak weath­er con­di­tions caused by their irra­tional and uncon­trol­lable obses­sion with nev­er end­ing eco­nom­ic growth.

We have a ten-year win­dow to act. As the mega­lo­ma­ni­ac G8 lead­ers meet in Ger­many, masked behind a bar­ri­er of fences and sol­diers, intent on lead­ing us fur­ther towards cat­a­stroph­ic and irre­versible cli­mate chaos, we must shout, scream and roar ‘no more’. Now is the time to take direct action and shut them down, them and their cli­mate crim­i­nal indus­try friends!

The 8th of June Inter­na­tion­al Day of Action Against Cli­mate Change and the G8 has been called by the Inter­na­tion­al Ris­ing Tide Net­work. This is a call for autonomous, decen­tral­ized actions appro­pri­ate for your town, city, or local area. Use this inter­na­tion­al day of action to sup­port local strug­gles against oil refiner­ies, gas pipelines, strip mines and coal-fired pow­er plants. Dis­rupt the finan­cial back­ers of the fos­sil fuel indus­try. Organ­ise work­shops to spread sus­tain­able post-petro­le­um liv­ing skills. Find a weak point in the infra­struc­ture of resource exploita­tion and throw a lit­er­al or sym­bol­ic wrench in the works. It’s time to vis­it your local pol­luters and give ’em hell!

We already know of actions planned across the UK, North Amer­i­ca, Ger­many, Cana­da and Aus­tralia and that’s just the start! By 8th June actions will be planned around the world. Pass this call out on to all envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice, cli­mate action, rad­i­cal sus­tain­abil­i­ty and relat­ed move­ments in all the G8 coun­tries and the Glob­al South.

Ris­ing Tide will cre­ate a col­lec­tion of out­reach and agit-prop mate­ri­als (includ­ing this call out in five dif­fer­ent lan­guages) that can be used by groups around the world to organ­ise local­ly. These mate­ri­als will be down­load­able from www.risingtide.org.uk and http://risingtidenorthamerica.org.
Direct action and civ­il dis­obe­di­ence are the ratio­nal response in this time of cri­sis. Sup­port the 8th of June Inter­na­tion­al Day of Direct Action against Cli­mate Change and the G8! Tell us about planned actions for cli­mate jus­tice being planned in your com­mu­ni­ty. Con­tact us — info@risingtide.org.uk and contact@risingtidenorthamerica.org

In June 2007 the G8 will under­stand the mean­ing of rebel­lion, revolt and rev­o­lu­tion. Their recipe for cat­a­stro­phe will be met with our world­wide resis­tance!

*G8 Day of Action Resources — Down­load­able G8 day of Action fly­ers and posters.
*Organ­ise a Crit­i­cal Mass Bike Ride on the 8th of June — here are some leaflet ideas to help you.

————————–
You could link your event in with Day of Sol­i­dar­i­ty with Jef­frey Free Luers, June 9, 2007:

June marks the sev­enth year that our friend and com­rade, Jef­frey “Free” Luers has been impris­oned and held cap­tive by the state. Sen­tenced to an out­ra­geous 22 years and 8 months for burn­ing three Sport Util­i­ty Vehi­cles (SUVs) at Roma­nia Chevro­let in Eugene, Jeff has con­tin­ued to be active in prison and fight back with his words and inspi­ra­tion. Although Jeff recent­ly won his appeal and is expect­ing a reduced sen­tence, this case is not over:

“I have spo­ken with my attor­ney and there are still many bat­tles ahead. Hard choic­es will have to be made. I am by no means close to walk­ing out of prison, just one step clos­er. This is a vic­to­ry, and while my own per­son­al strug­gle is mak­ing head­way oth­ers are just begin­ning.”

We encour­age peo­ple to orga­nize events for Jeff and oth­er polit­i­cal pris­on­ers, unit­ing strug­gles for human, earth, and ani­mal lib­er­a­tion. In Jef­f’s own words:

“This June, show your sol­i­dar­i­ty with me, and all those who have strug­gled, past and present, to make this world a bet­ter place. Strug­gle with us. Hold demon­stra­tions or gath­er­ings at fed­er­al build­ings or US embassies and demand change. It doesn’t mat­ter what cause or issue you fight for — we are all con­nect­ed. What does mat­ter is that we stand unit­ed and make our voic­es heard.”

More at http://freefreenow.org/june2007.html

»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»>ANNOUNCED UK EVENTS»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»>

HARINGEY CRITICAL MASS BIKE RIDE 2007

Can’t make it to Ger­many? Sick of the all those cars get­ting in your way on the auto­bahn! Don’t despair…join us on Sat­ur­day 9th of June for the 2007 Haringey Crit­i­cal Mass. A leisure­ly ride down the Green Lanes to reclaim our streets and send a breath of fresh air to those meet­ing in Ger­many.

Sat­ur­day 9th June • Assem­ble 12 Noon @ Manor House
• Fin­ish­ing at Chest­nuts Park for a pic­nic •

All Wel­come: espe­cial­ly cycles, scoot­ers, wheel­chairs, skate­boards, rollerblades, pedes­tri­ans…
Sup­port­ed by Haringey Sol­i­dar­i­ty Group www.haringey.org.uk

FOR CLEAN AIR AND A GREEN G8

WHY HAVE A CRITICAL MASS BIKE RIDE IN HARINGEY?
We are join­ing togeth­er on a Crit­i­cal Mass Bike Ride through Haringey as a colour­ful and fun way of high­light­ing envi­ron­men­tal and trans­port issues in the bor­ough. In the week when the G8 are gath­er­ing in Ger­many and the day
after the Inter­na­tion­al Day of Direct Action Against Cli­mate Change we should also be focus­ing on the glob­al cri­sis of cli­mate change and the envi­ron­men­tal impacts of oil depen­den­cy.

• It’s time we reclaimed our streets from the traf­fic and con­ges­tion that caus­es tox­ic lev­els of pol­lu­tion and injury and death.
• We want cycle lanes on Green Lanes and all over Haringey to make cycling a safer, more viable form of trans­port.
• We want mea­sures in place to reduce traf­fic speeds on all roads in Haringey, where dan­ger­ous dri­ving reg­u­lar­ly puts cyclists, chil­dren and pedes­tri­ans at risk.

WHAT’S THE G8 GOT TO DO WITH THIS?

• The G8 (Group of eight, most indus­tri­al­ized nations) Sum­mits are host­ed, on rota­tion, by the group’s mem­ber states. In 2007 the sum­mit is to be held on 6–8 June in Ros­tock, Ger­many.
• While it seems to be in the news a lot, Cli­mate Change is per­haps the issue that has received least atten­tion com­pared to the scale of destruc­tion that life on earth is fac­ing. It is the most seri­ous prob­lem fac­ing the world, more seri­ous than inter­na­tion­al ter­ror­ism, accord­ing to the UK Government’s chief sci­en­tif­ic advi­sor.
• Cli­mate change needs to be high­er on the G8 agen­da. How­ev­er, we can­not leave it just to the sci­en­tists and politi­cians to dis­man­tle the car­bon machine.
• This bike ride aims to high­light this issue through action and the pro­mo­tion of cycling.

Let’s cel­e­brate the free­dom and plea­sure of trav­el­ling by bike – it’s much more fun and much health­i­er than being stuck in a car in a traf­fic jam. This will be a fun day out for every­one in a safe, sup­port­ive, pos­i­tive atmos­phere, show­ing how much safer and more pleas­ant our streets can be.

COME AND JOIN US!

If you feel it’s time to pro­mote cycling and encour­age a more sus­tain­able Haringey, or if you would like to get involved, vis­it the Haringey Sol­i­dar­i­ty Group web­site: www.haringey.org.uk

Earth First! summer gathering — Wednesday 18th July until Sunday 22nd July 2007 — location & programme announced

What is the Earth First! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing?

* Are you fed up with bare-faced lies from politi­cians, big busi­ness and the media?
* Have you had enough of a world where cor­po­rate prof­it comes before life and dig­ni­ty?
* Do you want to see an end to mind­less con­sump­tion>
* Then this Gath­er­ing is for you! Read on…

EF! gathering '07 logo (rabbit/fence)What is the Earth First! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing?

* Are you fed up with bare-faced lies from politi­cians, big busi­ness and the media?
* Have you had enough of a world where cor­po­rate prof­it comes before life and dig­ni­ty?
* Do you want to see an end to mind­less con­sump­tion>
* Then this Gath­er­ing is for you! Read on…

Explor­ing alter­na­tives to the cor­po­rate world of greed, lies & exploita­tion -

The Earth First! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing is the place where peo­ple involved in rad­i­cal eco­log­i­cal direct action — or those who want to be involved — get togeth­er for five days of time and space to talk, walk, share skills, learn, play, rant, find out what’s going on, find out what’s next, live out­side, strate­gise, hang out, incite, laugh and con­spire.

The gath­er­ing is also a prac­ti­cal exam­ple of non-hier­ar­chi­cal low-impact liv­ing in action.

We are a diverse com­mu­ni­ty with a wide range of approach­es to our action, so there should be plen­ty to inter­est and inspire every­one whether you have been active for years or are com­plete­ly new to it all.

More info at earthfirstgathering.org.uk

EAST KENT EARTH FIRST!

This report announces the for­ma­tion of a new cam­paign­ing and action group to be called EAST KENT EARTH FIRST!

The group is based in Can­ter­bury, but already has sup­port from peo­ple in the Med­way Towns, Sit­ting­bourne, Herne Bay and Thanet as well as Can­ter­bury. Most of the peo­ple involved have a back­ground in the Ani­mal Rights move­ment and recog­nise the need to broad­en out into Eco Action and relat­ed issues. Be it GM crops, Air­port expan­sion, unnec­es­sary devel­op­ment, or diverse oth­er issues we shall seek to edu­cate, inform and protest, notwith­stand­ing the cur­rent clam­p­down on rea­son­able protest. There will short­ly be a web­site up and run­ning, but in the mean­time any­one inter­est­ed in being involved should

This report announces the for­ma­tion of a new cam­paign­ing and action group to be called EAST KENT EARTH FIRST!

The group is based in Can­ter­bury, but already has sup­port from peo­ple in the Med­way Towns, Sit­ting­bourne, Herne Bay and Thanet as well as Can­ter­bury. Most of the peo­ple involved have a back­ground in the Ani­mal Rights move­ment and recog­nise the need to broad­en out into Eco Action and relat­ed issues. Be it GM crops, Air­port expan­sion, unnec­es­sary devel­op­ment, or diverse oth­er issues we shall seek to edu­cate, inform and protest, notwith­stand­ing the cur­rent clam­p­down on rea­son­able protest. There will short­ly be a web­site up and run­ning, but in the mean­time any­one inter­est­ed in being involved should
con­tact the fol­low­ing email address. mattclowes@riseup.net

G8 Bike Caravan Action Nijmegen

7.05.2007 — Today a bicy­cle demo against the G8 was held in Nijmegen, Hol­land..

Today the bicy­cle demo against the G8 was a suc­cess. Despite the pour­ing rain and the absence of the major­i­ty of the inter­na­tion­al bicy­cle car­a­van, there were still 30 cyclists ready for action. Sev­er­al loca­tions that had some con­nec­tion with the G8 pol­i­tics were vis­it­ed by bike for some good-spir­it­ed demon­strat­ing . Unlike in Utrecht the police was wise enough not to show up. Tonight the rest of the car­a­van will arrive in Nijmegen, where the cyclists will stop for the night. Tomor­row the car­a­van will con­tin­ue towards Ger­many, where the G8 sum­mit will take place from 6th to 8th of june, in Heili­gen­damm.

7.05.2007 — Today a bicy­cle demo against the G8 was held in Nijmegen, Hol­land..

Today the bicy­cle demo against the G8 was a suc­cess. Despite the pour­ing rain and the absence of the major­i­ty of the inter­na­tion­al bicy­cle car­a­van, there were still 30 cyclists ready for action. Sev­er­al loca­tions that had some con­nec­tion with the G8 pol­i­tics were vis­it­ed by bike for some good-spir­it­ed demon­strat­ing . Unlike in Utrecht the police was wise enough not to show up. Tonight the rest of the car­a­van will arrive in Nijmegen, where the cyclists will stop for the night. Tomor­row the car­a­van will con­tin­ue towards Ger­many, where the G8 sum­mit will take place from 6th to 8th of june, in Heili­gen­damm.

The first stop was made at the local Mcdon­alds. This was sur­round­ed by the cyclists and the entrance road to the mcdrive was blocked with fences.This fast food chain is a sym­bol of exploita­tion of work­ers and envi­ron­ment in third world coun­tries by the rich west­ern soci­ety.

Of course Beren­don­ck was also vis­it­ed. Here, envi­ron­men­tal groups and local nature enjoy­ers are resist­ing the expan­sion of the golf ter­rain, into a valu­able for­est and lake area. The activsts reclaimed the pub­lic space by plac­ing signs pro­claim­ing “This is not a Golf State / Free access recre­ation­al area”. Trees were plant­ed in the holes, and there was a game of foot­ball. Like Beren­don­ck is wast­ed for a small group of rich peo­ple, the same goes for the G8 — on a world wide scale.

The last action was at the local head­quar­ters of the marechaussee (immi­gra­tion police). The gates to the build­ing were locked from the out­side by thick chains. Ban­ners were hung on the fences, on which was writ­ten “no human being is ille­gal” and “break the pow­er of the G8” By this way the activists protest­ed against the Fortress of Europe. The marechaussee plays an impor­tant role in the inhu­mane immi­gra­tion pol­i­tics. Migra­tion is one of the main themes of the protests against the G8.

Pho­tos: http://www.indymedia.nl/nl/2007/05/44322.shtml

Video : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n5LnmkG2zOQ

On how to block just about everything

The upcom­ing actions against the G8 sum­mit in Heili­gen­damm will present con­sid­er­able chal­lenges for the cre­ativ­i­ty and sta­mi­na of activists. After all, the idea is to effec­tive­ly block all the entry points. The prob­lem is that an enor­mous army of secu­ri­ty and pub­lic order forces will be present and try to pre­vent the same. But his­to­ry has shown that every­thing can be blocked. Below you will find some use­ful sto­ries about the prac­tice of block­ades. This text will be updat­ed as new ideas pour in.

The upcom­ing actions against the G8 sum­mit in Heili­gen­damm will present con­sid­er­able chal­lenges for the cre­ativ­i­ty and sta­mi­na of activists. After all, the idea is to effec­tive­ly block all the entry points. The prob­lem is that an enor­mous army of secu­ri­ty and pub­lic order forces will be present and try to pre­vent the same. But his­to­ry has shown that every­thing can be blocked. Below you will find some use­ful sto­ries about the prac­tice of block­ades. This text will be updat­ed as new ideas pour in.

Orig­i­nal ver­sion of the arti­cle, with many illus­tra­tions, can be found here: http://www.globalinfo.nl/content/view/1200/30/

Also writ­ten by the affin­i­ty group Wil­nis: 8 good rea­sons to block the G8 sum­mit ( http://www.globalinfo.nl/content/view/1209/30/)

——————————-

The roads to Heili­gen­damm come in all shapes and sizes. Except to the air­port, there are no big motor­ways, which require their own expert approach to block­ing. Most of the roads that will be used to trans­port peo­ple and goods to the G8 sum­mit are dual car­riage­ways, some­times with a crash bar­ri­er inbe­tween the lanes, often with crash bar­ri­ers (and cycle paths) along the sides of the road.

To begin an effec­tive block­ade is not that dif­fi­cult, but the skill lies in keep­ing it going. Good prepa­ra­tion is half the work. You can start with prepar­ing a few days before in the action camps, but it will be even eas­i­er if you have made plans before and have organ­ised your­selves in a so-called affin­i­ty group. Then you can think before­hand about how you want to do actions, what you need for it, you can also prac­tice already before­hand, etc. Dur­ing the prepa­ra­tions, you can ask oth­ers for advice, learn cer­tain tech­niques, etc. It is impor­tant to form a group of peo­ple who more or less agree on the man­ner in which they want to do actions, so that not too much time goes into dis­cus­sions or dis­agree­ments. If you have not organ­ised your­self in a group yet, or if you have ques­tions, you can always try and find con­tact through activist meet­ings. Con­ver­gence cen­tres, for exam­ple, are going to be set up in Berlin, Ham­burg and Ros­tock, amongst oth­ers for this pur­pose. In the Nether­lands, you can find fel­low activists at the dis­sent meet­ings.

More­over, dur­ing the prepa­ra­tions as well as the imple­men­ta­tion of the actions you should expect that the block­ade is going to be suc­cess­ful and that it will last long. The G8 sum­mit goes on for 3 days, and the block­ades will be imple­ment­ed for that peri­od of time. Make sure, there­fore, that at least for the first hours you have enough to eat and drink and some form of enter­tain­ment. Bore­dom is often one of the biggest prob­lems with suc­cess­ful block­ades and occu­pa­tions.

Inbe­tween block­ades, you can hold sports com­pe­ti­tions, lec­tures, teach-ins, etc. Or you can think about which new func­tion Hotel Kempin­s­ki will have after­wards… Also, make sure (espe­cial­ly if you’re in a big group) that you are accom­pa­nied by activist first aid and legal observers, activist media, etc. Make sure you have com­mu­ni­ca­tion chan­nels with oth­er block­ades and action camps so that you know what’s going on. If the block­ade per­se­veres, bet­ter com­mu­ni­ca­tion and sup­ply struc­tures can be start­ed lat­er and you can com­mu­ni­cate to oth­ers that the block­ade has start­ed and that oth­er peo­ple can help to secure it.

It can be use­ful to have (in a side street near­by?) one or more cars so that peo­ple can get mate­ri­als there and back.

Make sure you have nice dec­o­ra­tions for the block­ade, ban­ners, flags and, for exam­ple, these things (link to demo units: http://www.demotech.org/d‑design/d‑construct.php?p=69), so that it is clear to the view­er what it’s all about.

The most sim­ple way to block­ade is to just sit on the street with a few peo­ple. This is already enough to stop car traf­fic and if there’s a lot of it, the result­ing traf­fic jam will cre­ate even more prob­lems for mobil­i­ty in the sur­round­ings. The more peo­ple take part in the block­ade, the more dif­fi­cult it will be to break it. How­ev­er, past expe­ri­ences have shown that if the police real­ly want to, they can chase away the block­ade fair­ly eas­i­ly. There are meth­ods to make the block­ade some­what stronger. For exam­ple, by link­ing arms or by prac­tic­ing resis­tance meth­ods against being dragged away. This will delay the evic­tion. But keep in mind that the police can apply force­ful mea­sures: water can­nons, tear gas, hors­es and even dogs. More­over, it often uses vio­lence when drag­ging peo­ple away (twist­ing of arms, fin­gers in the nose, bat­ter­ing with the stick, etc.) Make sure cam­eras are direct­ed towards the police, that might restrain them in their vio­lence.

On a (hope­ful­ly unnec­es­sary) side note: before you sit on the street, the traf­fic has to have stopped. You also have to make sure that new­ly arriv­ing cars can­not dri­ve into the block­ade. There are many ways to stop traf­fic, you can also decide to choose a spot near traf­fic lights. Make sure you have a group of peo­ple warn­ing the traf­fic some hun­dred metres before the block­ade that they have to stop. If blockad­ing roads at night, make sure there is suf­fi­cient light­ing. Nev­er block a road with traf­fic on it or if you are not sure that the traf­fic has been stopped, and nev­er block a road just after a curve. Also, do not just throw things on the road and walk away, this can cause acci­dents. Once the road is out of use, by police or activist inter­ven­tion, then throw­ing things on the roads is, of course, pos­si­ble. In prac­tice, how­ev­er, a block­ade that is defend­ed by peo­ple is much more effec­tive than just some objects left behind.

Using lock-ons is anoth­er way to make your block­ade stronger. You can get them in all shapes and sizes. (link: http://www.eco-action.org/rr/ch12.html) Most often they are met­al pipes in which you can stick your arm in one side and anoth­er per­son in the oth­er, this way you can make human chains. You can, for exam­ple, make a cir­cle of peo­ple and link this to anoth­er cir­cle, etc. By mak­ing bar­rels with con­crete short­ly before blockad­ing you can link the lock-ons to heavy objects. Remem­ber though that the police does not shy away from being heavy-hand­ed against you in this sit­u­a­tion either. Make sure that you can always free your­self and that there are oth­er ‘unlocked’ peo­ple around you (who can also bring food, scratch your back, etc.)

The more mate­r­i­al you have, the more sta­ble the block­ade. You can use mate­ri­als you find in the area around you (wood, stones, con­tain­ers, etc.) or by plan­ning the block­ade in areas where you have a lot of mate­r­i­al at your dis­pos­al. You can also bring your own.

A famous exam­ple is the tri­pod. (pic­ture)

The high­er it is the more dif­fi­cult it is for police to break it down. You can make it from tree trunks, met­al pipes, etc. But tripods can cause acci­dents; you have to know what you’re doing, first prac­tice and ask advice from peo­ple who have used them before. Also keep in mind that some­times the police is will­ing to let peo­ple fall, as was the case dur­ing the G8 sum­mit protests in Lau­sanne.

It is eas­i­er to strength­en the block­ade with dif­fer­ent kinds of mate­r­i­al. First make sure the block­ade is erect­ed, then you can make it stronger. Speed is essen­tial, if the block­ade has been secured well before the police arrives, it will be more dif­fi­cult to push it to the side. Organ­ise groups of peo­ple to get mate­ri­als and make sure there are always enough peo­ple left over to form the block­ade. Some­times it is use­ful to have thought in advance about what you need to get the mate­ri­als there: ropes, if objects have to be towed, or saws if you want to cut bits of woods loose. Depend­ing on the sit­u­a­tion, you can also fix cables inbe­tween the crash bar­ri­ers or trees. Make sure, how­ev­er, that you make them clear­ly vis­i­ble with flags and keep in mind they can be a hin­drance for you, too, if you need to get away.

Always try and stay friends with peo­ple liv­ing in the neigh­bour­hood. Do not use their front gar­den fence for you bar­ri­cade and explain to peo­ple what the block­ade is about. Invite them to have a look at the action camps. Be pre­pared that not all of them will be friend­ly. The same applies to car dri­vers. It can be use­ful to decide before­hand who will act as a spokesper­son (cer­tain­ly for the media). It can also be use­ful to have one or more person(s) act­ing as a con­tact per­son to the police.

The response of the police will depend on the cir­cum­stances and the time they have at their dis­pos­al. If there are block­ades every­where, they will not able to tack­le them all at the same time. In any case though, you have to expect an attack by the police at some point in time.

They can arrive with vehi­cles to push aside the block­ades (armoured cars, pic­ture), with water can­nons to attack groups of peo­ple or with groups of police offi­cers wear­ing pro­tec­tive gear to attack peo­ple with batons, etc.

It is impor­tant to have dis­cussed in advanced about how you want to defend the block­ade. In Seat­tle, it appeared that a big group of deter­mined peo­ple can be much more effec­tive than strong mate­ri­als. Make sure the atmos­phere on the block­ade is good. Pre­vent peo­ple being sur­prised by fel­low activists using meth­ods that not every­one sup­ports. But also pre­vent peo­ple from being intim­i­dat­ed and leave the block­ade soon­er than nec­es­sary. It often takes hours before police takes heavy hand­ed action and most of the time you can pre­dict their actions by watch­ing their moves close­ly. For exam­ple, you only have to start wor­ry­ing about tear gas when they put on their gas masks. Keep in mind that the police that is keep­ing you busy can­not be deployed else­where.

Anoth­er strat­e­gy to delay the break­ing of a block­ade is to sit down and link arms. But be pre­pared for police being heavy hand­ed in haul­ing you away. The fact that you do not use vio­lence is not a guar­an­tee that they will not use it either (in fact, often the oppo­site seems to be the case). There are, of course, oth­er and more mil­i­tant ways to keep the police at bay. A sud­den attack by clowns can also con­sid­er­ably dis­turb the plans of the pub­lic order troops. There is lit­tle you can do against armoured police vehi­cles (unless the bar­ri­cade is very sta­ble indeed) but they do, for exam­ple, hate paint on the wind­screen. In fact this applies to all police vehi­cles. And it has been proven that even armoured cars and water can­nons can get stuck in a ditch.

Set­ting a bar­ri­cade on fire helps also dur­ing a ‘man­u­al’ evic­tion by the police, that is with­out vehi­cles. Do con­sid­er that after a while the bar­ri­cade will be gone. Also make sure the fire can­not spread to near­by objects or areas such as a for­est. This would be the last effect you would want your ‘protest’ to have. If locat­ed near build­ings, make sure they are not endan­gered. Do not leave bot­tles with inflam­ma­ble flu­ids lying around, they can cause nasty acci­dents.

There are ways of mak­ing a road unus­able for longer term, but that often takes a lot of time and/or spe­cif­ic hard­ware. Dur­ing the anti-nuclear protests in Gor­leben, for exam­ple, local inhab­i­tants and activist dug tun­nels under­neath the roads so that trucks could no longer pass. If you want to stop reg­u­lar cars, you will have to take off the top lay­er of asphalt or con­crete as well, for which you need a jack-ham­mer, pick­axe and shov­els. Nat­u­ral­ly, if the road is not asphalt­ed you can dig holes in it. Non-asphalt­ed roads some­times lead to big­ger roads that you might want to block and they are often used by police as access road to the block­ade. If you dig a hole, pile up the sand on ‘your’ side, if it lies on the side of the police they sim­ply shov­el it back in. Dur­ing evic­tions in Ams­ter­dam some peo­ple even man­aged to get a dragline exca­va­tion machine going which was parked in the neigh­bour­hood…

Until now, we dis­cussed the tra­di­tion­al road block/blockade. There are many more ways to inter­vene in road traf­fic. Keep in mind that the police also knows them and under­goes train­ing pro­grammes to deal with them, so be cre­ative and invent new meth­ods! Sit in a tree next to the road, that’s dif­fi­cult for police to evict and often they do not dare to con­tin­ue let traf­fic go through, at least not their high­er vehi­cles. Even bet­ter: choose two trees stand­ing across the road from each oth­er, tie a rope between them high above the street and hang in them, that’s a so-called walk­way. The idea is that police and oth­er road users will not risk dri­ving under­neath the rope as they fear the peo­ple hang­ing in it will drop some­thing or jump down onto the street. This meth­ods requires a lot of expe­ri­ence. Make sure you have a good accom­pa­ny­ing group with you and stop the traf­fic dur­ing the set­ting up. Do not start hang­ing in the ropes before the traf­fic has been stopped!

You can also park one or sev­er­al cars on a cross­ing and lock your­self to them (pic­ture Gle­nea­gles). Again, take all the above-named pre­cau­tion­ary meth­ods. You can also secure the bar­ri­cades with turned over cars (for exam­ple old cars you took with you).

Most action meth­ods are crim­i­nalised and made ille­gal in order to make it dif­fi­cult for activists and be able to dish out pun­ish­ments after­wards. But it is, of course, not explic­it­ly ille­gal to dri­ve real­ly slow­ly with your car. Or to have a break-down in the mid­dle of the road some­where…

The expe­ri­ence from Gle­nea­gles has shown that a block­ades that uses dif­fer­ent meth­ods in one is the most dif­fi­cult to break. One road, 3 km from the sum­mit, was cho­sen because it passed a small bridge. On both sides of the bridge peo­ple built bar­ri­cades from mate­ri­als they found in the for­est (tree trunks, car tires, etc.). Inbe­tween, two groups used lock-ons and just after the bridge peo­ple had start­ed tree-sit­ting. When the police rushed to the scene, five min­utes after the start of the block­ade at 6 am in the morn­ing, we heard them dis­cuss the sit­u­a­tion and they esti­mat­ed they need­ed “at least 80 men and a crane” to get rid off the block­ade, which they sim­ply did not have at their dis­pos­al. The road block last­ed the whole day and peo­ple even left to secure anoth­er block­ade a few streets fur­ther which had been bro­ken off and was tak­en up again.(pictures here: http://www.indymedia.nl/nl/2005/07/29208.shtml)

If the block­ade is bro­ken up by police, those that have not been arrest­ed should swarm out (link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swarm_Intelligence) (look out for each oth­er, try not to pan­ic, try and make sure each group that swarms out has peo­ple who know the way or have a map, accom­pa­ni­ment by mem­bers of first aid and legal teams, etc…). You can swarm out to new places to con­tin­ue block­ing. Small groups of peo­ple can also be dis­rup­tive. It also helps to ran­dom­ly block police cars, even if they use roads not used for the sum­mit. You there­by stop them from break­ing up block­ades else­where or trans­port­ing arrestees.

——————

There are, of course, oth­er means of trans­port that will be used for the sum­mit. These are main­ly heli­copters and ships. They are more dif­fi­cult to block, but also for the author­i­ties more dif­fi­cult to use. Only a small num­ber of peo­ple can be trans­port­ed by heli­copter. Heli­copters can also be blocked; espe­cial­ly take-off and land­ing spots, but also in mid-air: in Gor­leben, for exam­ple, peo­ple used sky rock­ets and some peo­ple flew around with hang glid­ers which forced heli­copters to leave. You can also think about tak­ing with you heli­um bal­loons on very long ropes so that heli­copters do not dare come clos­er. The sea can also be blocked, even though you need boats, which are expen­sive when they get dam­aged or con­fis­cat­ed. But you can always block the entrances to the har­bour, so that peo­ple can­not be trans­port­ed to the ships to leave.

In short: we will win this bat­tle, if every­one joins in!

(Affin­i­ty Group Wil­nis, Dutch Pold­er)

Web­sites with more infor­ma­tion on meth­ods and tech­niques:

ENGLISH:
http://www.uhc-collective.org.uk/webpages/toolbox/index.htm
Delia Smiths basic blockad­ing guide (pdf): http://www.sprayism.com/dawiki/lib/exe/fetch.php?id=guides&cache=cache&media=guides:basic_blockading.pdf
Every­thing about doing direct action: http://www.sprayism.com/dawiki/doku.php?id=guides

On Affin­i­ty Groups: http://www.rantcollective.net/article.php?id=30
(Noam Chom­sky: “If you assume cor­rect­ly that what­ev­er group you are in is being pen­e­trat­ed by the FBI, when some­thing seri­ous is hap­pen­ing, you don’t do it in a meet­ing. You do it with some peo­ple you know and trust, an affin­i­ty group and then it does­n’t get pen­e­trat­ed. That’s one of the rea­sons why the FBI has nev­er been able to fig­ure out what’s going on in any of the pop­u­lar move­ments.”)

DUTCH
dissent.nl and dissent.be
http://www.directe-actie.nl
Arti­cle on the his­to­ry of direct action: http://www.globalinfo.nl/content/view/1068/41/