Earth First! Summer Gathering, 4th – 9th Aug 2010, Derbyshire – location & programme announced/set-up plans & call-out

Ecological Direct Action without Compromise

5 days of workshops, skill sharing and planning action, plus low-impact living without leaders.

Meet people, learn skills, take action.

For latest details, see http://www.earthfirstgathering.org.uk/
Set-up plans & call-out
Location
Programme

EF! Summer Gathering poster 2010Ecological Direct Action without Compromise

5 days of workshops, skill sharing and planning action, plus low-impact living without leaders.

Meet people, learn skills, take action.

For latest details, see http://www.earthfirstgathering.org.uk/
Set-up plans & call-out
Location
Programme
Want to do something to stop our planet from getting trashed?

EF! is about direct action to halt the destruction of the Earth. It’s about doing it yourself rather than relying on leaders, governments or industry. Direct action is at the heart of it, whether you’re standing in front of a bulldozer, shutting down an open-cast mine or ripping up a field of GM crops.

We’re a loose network of people, groups and campaigns coming together for ecological direct action.

Join us for 5 days of workshops, networking and planning actions, run without leaders by everyone who comes along. The gathering is also a practical example of low-impact eco-living and non-hierarchical organising.

What’s happening?
Over 80 workshops, discussions, planning, strategy and ‘where next’ sessions:

*Share and learn skills for kick-ass actions on land and water.
Small boat handling and blockading using kayaks / Blockading – tripods, lock-ons/ Fences / Climbing skills / Action reconnaissance / Security for Activists / Strategy and tactics / How to research corporations /

*Network current campaigns against ecological destruction
Open-cast mining / Genetic engineering / Agrofuels / Saving Iceland / Climate actions / Pipeline resistance in Rossport / Anti-nuclear / Airport expansion/ Tar Sands

*Think about eco-centric ethics and alternative ways of organising
Deep green ethics / Anarchist economics / Anarchist history / Radical Politics / Working without leaders/ Consensus decision-making

*Practical skills for ecological restoration and sustainable living.
Introduction to Ecology / Restoration ecology / Flora and Fauna identification / Vegan Cake making / Power from solar and wind / wild food / Squatting / Bike maintenance

As well as international campaigns round-up, networking and planning for future actions.

Cost and practical things
£20-30 according to what you can afford.
The gathering is in Derbyshire, the exact location will be announced the week before. More info on our website.

Find out more and join in!

Email us if you can offer a workshop, want to help out with the gathering or if you would like posters and leaflets to distribute.

We have now a stack of freshly printed posters advertising the gathering. If you’d like to send you some to stick up in your area or to take to events, festivals and the like, please email us. Alternatively you can also download the files and print your own. They are fairly large files! EF! gathering poster (A4)

We are now looking for people to run workshops and discussions at the gathering. Please contact us if you can offer something. Have a look at our programme page to see the kind of thing we’re looking for.

http://www.earthfirst.org.uk, summergathering _ NOSPAM _ @ _ NOSPAM earthfirst.org.uk

Coal Action Scotland InfoTour dates

The Mainshill Solidarity Camp is going on tour! Check our list of dates below to see if we’re coming anywhere near you. If you’d like us to to a talk where you are and its not on the list, email us at mainshill [at] riseup.net and we’ll get back to you as soon as possible.

10th March
Brighton
7pm at the Cowley Club
London Road

The Mainshill Solidarity Camp is going on tour! Check our list of dates below to see if we’re coming anywhere near you. If you’d like us to to a talk where you are and its not on the list, email us at mainshill [at] riseup.net and we’ll get back to you as soon as possible.

10th March
Brighton
7pm at the Cowley Club
London Road

12th March
Leeds
7pm at the Bandstand Community Allotments
Woodhouse Ridge, Meanwood Road
15th March
Bradford
7pm at the 1 in 12 Club
21-23 Albion Street

16th March
Lancaster
7pm at the Lancaster Action Resource Centre
78a Penny Street

EARTH FIRST! WINTER MOOT: 5th – 7th Feb 2010, County Durham – exact location released, & other info (incl. for cyclists)

EARTH FIRST! WINTER MOOT
6pm Fri 5th – Sun 7th Feb 2010
North-east England

“A weekend of networking, reflection, strategic discussions & campaign planning for anyone involved in ecological direct action who believes in non-hierarchical organisation and directly confronting the forces responsible for the destruction of the Earth and its inhabitants”

EF! earth fist logoEARTH FIRST! WINTER MOOT
6pm Fri 5th – Sun 7th Feb 2010
North-east England

“A weekend of networking, reflection, strategic discussions & campaign planning for anyone involved in ecological direct action who believes in non-hierarchical organisation and directly confronting the forces responsible for the destruction of the Earth and its inhabitants”

Venue:
The Winter Moot will be taking place at the Dipton Community Centre, Front Street (A692), Dipton, Stanley, County Durham, DH9 9DR. Further information on getting there can be found via the How to get there link (now including cycling directions).

New poster to download
New flyer to download

Details of EF! Winter Moot announced:

The Earth First! Winter moot is an opportunity for people who feel affiliation with the ideas behind Earth First! to network, discuss and reflect on the UK ecological direct action movement and to plan for the future. Earth First! is about direct action to halt the destruction of the Earth. We believe we can make a real difference by doing it ourselves rather than relying on leaders, governments or industry.

This years Earth First! Winter Moot will be taking place in Co. Durham on the weekend of 6/7th February. As well as evaluations and updates from a number of ecological campaigns from around the country, this year we will have a themed event – The Crisis: evaluation, analysis and possible responses. We will be exploring the interactions between the various ecological, financial and resource crises, examining our own conceptions and experiences of crisis, then tying it altogether to find a way forward using non-hierarchical approaches.

We will also be hosting a discussion on how Earth First and the Camp for Climate Action intersect, to deal with quite a number of issues that emerged at the EF! Summer Gathering, including issues of generational understanding, anarchism vs. liberalism, are we seperate networks, and how can we go forward together in the future. This debate will be taking from 6.15-7.30pm on the Saturday evening of the Moot, and is open to all.

Everyone welcome

If your campaign (local or national) is interested in participating in the feedback please get in touch.

The venue will be accessible, and parent-friendly. Vegan food provided. Suggested donation for the weekend is £20. The venue will be announced one week beforehand so keep an eye on the website for details; however, for those who want to purchase advance tickets, the nearest station will be Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

For more information visit http://earthfirst.org.uk/ & http://www.earthfirstgathering.org.uk/2010moot/front.html
Tel: 0777 114 2131

1. It is in doors with communal sleeping areas (no camping – we’re not that mad 🙂 )

2. The actual venue will be announced a week before hand, so please check the website then, or email us.

For enquiries, offers of facilitation & help, ideas for workshops and TO LET US KNOW YOU ARE COMING! email : wintermoot@earthfirst.org.uk

More about the Moot
The EF! Winter Moot is an opportunity for people who feel affiliation with the ideas behind Earth First! to network, discuss and reflect on the UK ecological direct action movement and to plan for the future.

Following a popular discussion at 2009’s EF! Summer Gathering 2010’s Moot also aims to hold discussions on the theme of “readying ourselves for unpredictability and instability in the UK and globally”. The current & impending crises of economics, ecology, energy & society fundamentally alter the terrain of struggle; this in turn impacts both the practice and possibilities for a radical ecological movement.

2010’s Winter Moot is to be held in County Durham, an area with a large number of opencast coal mines, both active and at the application stage. The weekend will include opportunities to meet with activists involved locally in campaigns against these.

Cost including vegan food & crash-pad accommodation £20-£30 (depending what you can afford-but please don’t blag-even the organisers will pay).

If you have particular accommodation, access or dietary needs or are bringing children it would help us to know as soon as possible so we can plan suitable facilities; whoever you are please do try & drop us an email at least a week in advance so we can gauge how many to cater for.

www.earthfirst.org.uk

Hot off the press and packed with Direct Action – the new Earth First! Action Update is out!

Rebellion, a spark in search of a powder keg – the new Action Update is out, the quarterly round-up of ecological direct action from the UK and beyond.

What’s in this issue?

EF! gathering '07 logo (rabbit/fence)Rebellion, a spark in search of a powder keg – the new Action Update is out, the quarterly round-up of ecological direct action from the UK and beyond.

What’s in this issue?
Old King Coal meets his Match, but the Nuclear Empire Strikes Back! Read tales of flotillas, bishop-bashing, blockades and occupations as the Rebel Alliance takes on the Empire. The rebels have also been hanging around in nets and on platforms, occupying and locking-on at coal terminals, and passionately attacking power station fences around the world, trying to shut ’em down. Mainshill protest camp continues to pro-actively resist open-cast mining – they climb, occupy, and by night, anonymous pixies sabotage. Who knows when they sleep – with a strong alliance with local villagers, they welcome YOU to come and play anytime, with a gathering at the end of October.

Want more? Radio-towers toppled, dams and trucks seized, naked oil streaks and green smears in defence of the wild, a shit dumped with shit…resistance to peat mining, genetic engineering, logging and Shell in Ireland, and for Vestas wind turbine factory and workers on the Isle of Wight.

Still not enough? Stopping Tesco, climate campaigning successes, runway invasions, more ecotage, and the EF! Winter Moot, plus contacts and upcoming dates.

To download your copy go to this website:

http://www.earthfirst.org.uk/efau/actionupdate_oct09.pdf

If you want paper copies to distribute, contact us at: actionupdate@earthfirst.org.uk or pick up a bunch from our stall at the Anarchist Bookfair in London. To print your own, download from http://www.earthfirst.org.uk/efau/actionupdate_oct09print.pdf

Wanted: We are very skint! Please send us some dosh to help us pay for the printing.
Cheques can be made out to Earth First! Action Update, and posted to The Basement, 78a Penny St, Lancaster LA1 1XN

Love and Rage
Your Action Update collective

EF! summer gathering – exact location, travel info & updated workshop programme announced; coal-blighted communities visit

Earth First! Summer Gathering, 18th-24th August 2009, Cumbria

Never has halting the destruction of our planet been so important… Learn how to make them stop!

The gathering this year will be held at Seathwaite in the beautiful Borrowdale. The site is right in the heart of the Lake District and surrounded by mountains, streams and tarns. The nearest train station is Penrith. More detailed directions, public transport, walks & cycle rides to the site

Workshop programme in a variety of formats

EF!-rabbit-in-canoeEarth First! Summer Gathering, 18th-24th August 2009, Cumbria

Never has halting the destruction of our planet been so important… Learn how to make them stop!

The gathering this year will be held at Seathwaite in the beautiful Borrowdale. The site is right in the heart of the Lake District and surrounded by mountains, streams and tarns. The nearest train station is Penrith. More detailed directions, public transport, walks & cycle rides to the site

Workshop programme in a variety of formats

WHO
Earth First! is a network of people and campaigns who fight ecological destruction and the forces driving it. We believe in doing it ourselves rather than relying on governments or industry. Direct action is at the heart of what we do, whether we’re standing in front of a bulldozer, shutting down an opencast mine or ripping up a field of GM crops.

Join us for 5 days of workshops, networking and planning actions at a low impact eco-living camp organised non-hierarchically

WHAT
Planning actions and campaigns, meeting and sharing skills with others who care. Over 80 training workshops plus games and evening fun:
Learn skills for direct action. Tree Climbing, Orienteering, Security for activists, Legal briefing, Escaping public order situations, street medics – first aid, self defence, Boat blockading using kayaks, radio procedures and rock abseiling.
Network your campaign against ecological destruction. opencast mining, genetic engineering, agrofuels, dam-building, hunt-sabbing, climate actions, oil pipeline resistance, road stopping, anti-whaling, squatting, rainforest protection.
Learn about ecology, ecocentric ethics and alternatives to the corporate world of exploitation.
Practical skills for ecological restoration and sustainable living, field trips and hands-on work.

YOU
We are all crew! This is your gathering come prepared to help run the camp and contribute to the programme. Contact us in advance with ideas for workshops, help with organising the gathering, come early to help setup the site or stay on for a couple of days for takedown.
If you can help get in touch!

BRING
Bring tent and sleeping bag. You can either cook food for yourself or for £4 per day chip in with collective cooking of delicious vegan organic food. There’ll be quiet sleeping areas, toilets and running water, a children’s space and spaces for workshops and info stalls.
Veggies will provide vegan cake and snacks. Children and young adults welcome with subsidized meals.

Arrive Tues pm. Workshops from Wed am until Sun pm.

Loads of campaigns are taking to the water in defence of the planet, like at Rossport where Shell are trying to lay onshore pipelines and the Great Rebel Raft Regatta at last summers climate camp. This summer’s EF! gathering will be building on these tactics with training in water based actions.

An excursion to visit communities in the North East threatened by an expansion of coal mining on Monday 24th August. Visit beautiful valleys and strong spirited communities and make links for ongoing resistance.

We aim to make the site as accessible as we can please contact us in advance if you have special needs, questions or concerns.

WHERE
The site is near in the Lake District, Cumbria. The nearest train station is Penrith and there is a bus service to the site, there are car and living vehicle spaces outside the camp.

Dogs: We are fortunate this year to be able to accommodate well behaved owners with dogs on leads but think about whether your dog will feel comfortable in workshops. Please call beforehand so we know numbers.

Cost: £20 – £30 according to what you can afford. We are not for profit all extra cash goes to help fund next year. Under 14’s free.

For more info contact us at :
summergathering@earthfirst.org.uk
www.earthfirstgathering.org.uk

Camp for Climate Action Scotland

There is no time to act but now! Come to the Camp for Climate Action in Scotland 3-10 August

ccs stickerThere is no time to act but now! Come to the Camp for Climate Action in Scotland 3-10 August

For a week of low-impact living and high-impact direct action, keep 3-10 August free and join us in Scotland to take direct action against the root causes of climate change and ecological collapse. This summer the struggle against a capitalist system intent on extinguishing life on the planet will hit the Firth of Forth!

What’s happening:

We’re going to set up camp somewhere around the Firth of Forth, a part of the central belt of Scotland littered with power stations, corporate HQs, gas and oil refineries, open cast coal mines, a nuclear power station and a cement factory. We want you to join us to hold the people and systems responsible for climate change to account.

The camp will focus on supporting groups of people taking action against a whole range of targets. If you’re coming with a group of friends that’s great – we’ll help you choose targets and actions, and if you’re coming alone there will be plenty of opportunity to meet other people to work and take action with.

The camp will have as low an ecological impact as possible so expect compost toilets, grey water systems and micro-renewable energy. There will be kitchens on site where campers will make three meals a day so there’s no need to bring any food or cooking equipment. Organised horizontally, the camp will provide lots of opportunities to get involved, be creative and practical and learn new skills. There will be workshops, discussions and opportunities to link up with other people, groups and campaigns.

We hope to work with and in solidarity with local communities and ongoing campaigns around the camp’s locality to build on what others are already doing and for the camp to have long-lasting positive impacts.

How to get there:

The location of the site will be announced just before the start of the camp – check here or phone the info number which will be available shortly before the 3rd for directions to the camp. If you’re coming by public transport get yourself to Edinburgh Waverley or Glasgow Central train stations and be prepared to travel – info-points will tell you the train station to get to and how to get there. There will be shuttle buses from the nearest train station to the camp. If you can’t make all of the camp, just come along for a day, a weekend or whatever you can.

What to bring:

Camping gear – a tent, sleeping bag and mat, practical clothing and footwear. Be prepared for rain and sun. Banners and decorations to make our site beautiful and anything else that you would like to see. But most importantly, bring all of your friends!

We will also be asking for donations to cover costs of food and expenses for the camp. Suggested amounts will be made available closer to the time.

What not to bring:

It is possible that you will be searched by police on entering the site – penknives and anything that may be construed as a weapon is best left behind. You may also want to protect your personal details but remember, if you don’t bring a cash card, bring enough cash to cover your transport, food donations etc.

Know your rights!

Checkout the websites below for some advice on dealing with the police.
http://www.faslane365.org/en/legal
http://www.g8legalsupport.info/guide/

Up to date legal information and advice will be available at the camp.

Children:

Are most welcome and there will be a kids space that people will be able to volunteer for.

Dogs:

If you bring dog(s) please take responsibility for them. We ask that you keep them on a lead as there have been incidents at past camps that we’d prefer to avoid.

If you want more information or to get in touch email us on climatecampscotland@riseup.net

See you there!

Come to our next meeting!

Edinburgh, Wednesday 29th July, 12:00-16:00, Forest Cafe Action Room, 3 Bristo Place

in the meantime, get yourself down to Mainshill Solidarity Camp!
See: http://coalactionedinburgh.noflag.org.uk/

Bath Bomb #20 Out Now

THE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and distribute!
Issue #20
free/donation
Mar 09

“News and abuse from Bath and beyond”

Somer Tenants Do ‘Ave ‘Em

Bath Bomb logoTHE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and distribute!
Issue #20
free/donation
Mar 09

“News and abuse from Bath and beyond”

Somer Tenants Do ‘Ave ‘Em

Ever got that sinking feeling that your landlord is a little more concerned with cash than your wellbeing? That must be the feeling amongst Somer tenants who now face a well-above-inflation rent hike of 7.5%. Somer’s justification? They say that their rent is below the local average, and that they need the money for maintenance work. Hmm… A couple of points spring to mind here that may go some way to debunking Somer’s greedy little lies. One, being a supposedly social housing trust, specifically set up for people on low-to-no incomes, having a lower than average rent rate is nothing to boast about – it is the sole function of Somer to provide low cost housing for Bath residents after all. Their claim to provide “lower than regional average” rent also falls down when a brief look at local property websites reveals the regional average monthly rent for a 2 bedroom flat to be a whopping £894.00! In an area with a far higher than usual (you might say disgustingly high) percentage of toffs, the rent is obviously going to be wildly beyond the budget of the average person in social housing. Somer also claims to need the additional rent money for maintenance work. Okay, this sounds reasonable, but should that cash be sucked from the pockets of residents or from the coffers of Somer’s directors? A recent advert to recruit another director to Somer reveals a £125,000 annual salary (plus bonuses, plus 10% car allowance) – so who best should shell out for the work? And what have our brave Council done to come to our aid? Don Foster – as well his other admittedly urgent duties of posing for the local press with mouthfuls of banana (what are you good for?) – has asked Somer to introduce the hike over two years instead of one. We’ll, we’ve got news for you Donny boy, whether they ram it home hard, or slide it in gently, we’re still getting screwed! With the recession worsening, Somer have once again showed that they value profit over people and that the Council prioritises business interests over Bath residents. If we want fair rent, it looks like we’ll have to fight for it ourselves, and not rely on Dodgy Don’s dastardly deals with degenerate directors to denigrate dwellings.

On a similar note, it turns out that the equally dodgy Nightstone housing association are leaning on elderly residents on Walcot Street to move out, as they want to bump up the rent and lure in young professionals instead. But the residents are still refusing to budge – we’ll keep you posted.

http://www.thisisbath.co.uk/news/Somer-tenants-face-7-35-rent-rise/article-725102-detail/article.html
http://www.thisisbath.co.uk/news/slip-ups-banana-record-attempt/article-752574-detail/article.html

Game On!

Whilst big business and the state claimed “We didn’t know” when the economic collapse kicked in last year, anybody with half a brain could see the recession coming from miles away. Maybe all these wealthy capitalists thought it was just a game. Well now it is: BAN presents the ‘It’s Not My Responsibility’ game on Saturday the 14th March! The game is played with two teams, one representing liberty, and the other representing well-dressed big business and the state. The game is played with pre-provided big balloons, and the idea is to bounce away the responsibility balloons – (Boo! Hiss!) Credit Crunch, Bankruptcy, Unemployment, Surveillance, Competition, Bailiffs – whilst sharing the balloons representing the more anarchic side of life – Freedom, Community, Cooperation, Ethical Living, Fun, Courage… The more people the merrier, so come and join this creative opportunity to share wisdom with the people of Bath, and the odd tourist. Meet at the FreeShop stall outside the Pump Rooms on Stall Street Saturday at 1.30pm, and let the games commence at 2pm. Bring musical instruments, a sense of playfulness, and pom-poms to cheer on your side. Oh, and dress to impress!

Summit For The Weekend

In a few weeks’ time, the leaders of the world’s richest 19 countries, plus delegates from all EU states, will be meeting in London to discuss deepening the global recession. And as it is getting more and more obvious that it is them and their fatcat and banker buddies who have got us into this mess, we’ll be there to meet them! The week of action kicks off with the ‘Put People First’ march on Saturday the 28th. Meeting at 11am at the Embankment, it calls for “jobs, justice and climate” and is shaping up to be pretty huge. The demo will consist of thousands of people who’ve had just enough of ‘business as usual’, as well as the usual suspects: socialists, environmentalists, trade unionists and anarchists. This will be followed up by several midweek events, starting with ‘Storm The Banks’: starting at 11am on Wednesday the 1st of April, four simultaneous protests will make their way into the heart of London’s financial districts, where some will party, some will protest and some will be a little bit naughtier! There’s room enough for all forms of dissent – peaceful protesters, direct action enthusiasts, experienced and inexperienced protestors alike. Towards the end of the event, the Network for Climate Action have called for a camp to be set up in the financial district to oppose the carbon-driven economy that led to this recession – bring a sleeping bag, food, and sense of adventure, ‘cos this one’s not to be missed! The following day will see a series of protests around the venue of the G20 summit (the ExCeL Centre), during which some will attempt to block the delegates out, some will try to get in, and others will hold a rally. The actions are looking to be pretty dynamic, so if you’re feeling pissed of at the state we’re in, then this is the event for you. People will be travelling to all of the events from Bath, so to find someone to travel down with, drop Bath Activist Network an email to the usual address. What will you tell your grandkids when they ask you where you were when the revolution started? (Not up late slaving over two-bit radical news rags, we hope!)

http://www.g-20meltdown.org/
http://www.putpeoplefirst.org.uk/
http://stopwar.org.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1084&Itemid=1

Taking Liberties Back

On Sunday the 22nd of March (a week later than usual, for those who’re paying attention), the latest in the series of ‘Bubbling Under’ film screenings will roll at the Porter Cellar on George Street, from 1pm. This month’s film, presented by Bristol Indymedia, will be ‘The Take’: in the wake of Argentina’s dramatic economic collapse of 2001, Latin America’s most prosperous middle class suddenly found itself wandering a ghost town of abandoned factories and mass unemployment. The Forja auto plant lay dormant too, until its former employees decided to take it back, and refused to leave! Facing off against bosses, bankers and a whole system that sees their beloved factories as nothing more than scrap metal for sale, the workers are part of a daring new grassroots movement of workers who occupy bankrupt businesses and create jobs and viable futures in the ruins of crumbling economies – it remains to be seen whether Bathonians will follow suit! Directed by journalist Avi Lewis and writer Naomi Klein.

http://www.thetake.org/index.cfm?page_name=argentina_hostpry_timeline

EVENTS

Bath Hunt Saboteurs meetings, 2nd and 4th Monday of the month, 8pm, The Bell, Walcot Street

London Road Food Co-op, Wednesdays, 4-7pm, Riverside Community Centre, London Road

Bath Stop The War Coalition vigil, Saturdays, 11.30am-12.30, Bath Abbey Courtyard

Bath FreeShop, Saturday 14th March, 12-3pm, outside Pump Rooms, Stall Street

Broadlands Orchardshare Volunteering Day, Saturday 14 Mar, 12-4pm, Broadlands Orchard, Box Road, Bathford, email broadlandsorchardshare [at] googlemail.com or phone 07532 472 256

Reclaiming Public Space street party, Saturday 14th March, 2-3pm, base of Milsom Street

National Squat Meet 2009, Saturday 14th – Sunday 15th March, somewhere in Bristol!, FTI nearer the time site or call 07790073015

‘Building Bridges in the Summer of Rage,’ Wednesday 18th March, 7.30pm, Kebele, 14 Robertson Road, Bristol: discussion on anarchist identity and public engagement: sharing ideas and tactics for making anarchism more accessible and visible. Free/donation.

‘ Garbage Warrior’ screening, Thursday 19th March, 7.30pm, upstairs at the Cork, Westgate Street, donation entry

Solidarity picket with EDO Decommissioner defendants on remand in prison, Saturday 21st March, 3pm, meet at corner of Cambridge and Gloucester Road, Bristol, bring flyers, placards, banners and noisemakers: http://decommisioners.wordpress.com/2009/03/03/resistin…rime
Send letters of support and solidarity to the 2 political prisoners: Robert Alford VP 7552 HMP Lewes , 1 Brighton Rd, Lewes, Sussex, BN7 1EA; Elija Smith VP 7551 HMP Bristol, 19 Cambridge Rd, Horfield, BS7 8PS;
See here for info on writing to the prisoners:
http://bristolabc.wordpress.com/2009/01/30/things-to-do…mand/

Bubbling Under screening, Sunday 22th March, 1-4pm, Porter Cellar bar, George Street

‘The Age of Stupid’ eco film screenings, Sunday 22nd – Tuesday 24th March, 6pm, 8.30pm & 1pm, Little Theatre, £6.90 entry

Greek Rebellion Info Tour, Friday 27th March, 7.30pm, Kebele, 14 Robertson Rd, Bristol

‘Put People First’ march, Saturday 28th March, 11am, London, http://www.putpeoplefirst.org.uk/

Bristol Anarchist Bookfair 09 punk benefit gig, Sunday 29th March, 7pm, The Junction, Stokes Croft, £5, with Cross-Stitched Eyes, the A-Heads and Jesus Bruiser

‘Green Light’ lecture on wind power, Tuesday 31st March, 7pm, BRLSI, 16-18 Queen Square, £3 waged, £1.50 unwaged

Storm The Banks carnival, Wednesday 1st April, 11am, London, http://www.g-20meltdown.org/

Bath Animal Action meeting, Wednesday 1st April, 7.30-8.30pm, backroom of The Bell, Walcot Street

Anti-G20 protests, Thursday 2nd April, ExCeL centre, London, http://stopwar.org.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1084&Itemid=1

‘Chris Carlsson in Conversation,’ Friday 3rd April, 7.30pm, St Werburghs Community Centre, Horley Road, Bristol, talk by the author of ‘Nowtopia’, a founder of critical mass bike-ins, member of San Francisco radical history group, http://www.nowtopia.org

Bath Friends of the Earth meeting, Monday 6th April, 8pm, Stillpoint, Broad Street Place, Broad Street

Bath Green Drinks, Wednesday 8th April, 8.30pm, the Rummer, Grand Parade

Bath Activist Network meeting, Thursday 9th April, 7.30-9pm, downstairs at The Hobgoblin, St James Parade

Bath FreeShop, Saturday 11th April, 12-3pm, outside Pump Rooms, Stall Street

Bath Greenpeace meeting, Monday 13th April, 7.30-9pm, Stillpoint, Broad Street Place

Transition Open Forum, Tuesday 14th April, 7pm, Widcombe Social Club

‘Can’t Pay, Won’t Pay: From Poll Tax Rebellion to Recession Resistance’ talk and film, Thursday 23rd April, 7.30pm, The Cube cinema, Dove Street South, Bristol

World Day for Lab Animals march, Saturday 25th April, Hyde Park, London, coach leaving Bath £10n waged, £8 unwaged, info@wdail.org to book place

Theory Corner: Safety Or Snobbery? B&NES vs. NFA Round 3

Last week, the Chronicle gave front page to the story of a young woman ASBO’d out of Bath for three years, the third homeless person to be similarly ejected in as many months. Yet how much of a threat is the homeless community to the rest of the city’s population? Are they thieving, anti-social and threatening like the Council, or are they on the receiving end of B&NES sycophantic drive to sweep away anything ‘undesirable’ from the eyes of the wealthy? And before we start with the Daily Mail-esque cries of “it’s their own fault,” statistics show that the vast majority of homeless have been the victims of domestic or sexual abuse at a young age, or have served in the armed forces, spat out without the skills to integrate when they cease being useful killers. In this journalist’s experience, I’ve had next to no trouble with Bath’s homeless, and only ever once have been threatened. There are however groups that I have often been made to feel unsafe by – those people who follow the acceptable conventions of successful society, who get hammered in a bar or club ever weekend before spilling out onto the picturesque Georgian streets to puke, threaten passersby and fight the early hours away. So why is it the homeless who bear the brunt of B&NES’ righteous wrath, rather than the better off, drunken little daddy’s boys?

Well, those who choose to get pissed up in bars and clubs pour their paypackets into Bath’s economy. They’re maybe not visibly different from you and I, and they follow more acceptable outlets for anti-social behaviour than Bath’s street dwellers. So a message to the little fascist gatekeepers in office who think it’s okay to decide who stays and who goes: the homeless aren’t a threat and they’re not vermin. You may not like them, or like seeing them, but that’s your fragile sensibilities being offended rather than your wellbeing. B&NES are not expelling the poor for your safety or mine, they’re pursuing gentrification to impress the tourists and keep this looking like a heritage city, whatever that is. The Council’s ‘out of sight, out of mind’ policy is nothing short of classist discrimination that they get away with because chunks of the population view those poorer than they as some undesirable ‘other’, scared of a stereotype rather than fact. Until we address the fundamental problems at the root of our society, rather than allowing those at the top to bully and victimise those in need of solidarity, things can only get worse.

And for Sonya: until we sweep the bureaucrats out of our city, don’t let the bastards grind you down.

South West Women Reclaim The Night

On Friday the 20th of February the streets of Bristol were brought to life when 300 women marched in solidarity to demand safer streets and the right to roam at night without fear. The march was wonderfully colourful and comprised a samba band, belly dancers and females, (and some males) of all ages. The response of onlookers was very positive and was often joined by bystanders. The march lasted for two hours and was followed by speeches, fundraising and awareness-raising stalls and music at the Trinity Centre in Lawrence Hill.
This was organised with the intention of achieving three key goals.

Firstly, improvements in rape conviction rates: alarmingly, the conviction rate of rape cases is in decline, being only 4.2% in Avon and Somerset, highlighting yet another major problem with the judicial system. Secondly, the event sought to obtain volunteers and funding for the Bristol Rape Crisis Centre (email info [at] bristolrapecrisis.org.uk for more information). And thirdly, the event also addressed the fact that, whilst sex education is taught widely in schools, there is still a distinct lack of support and education available to youngsters on respectful relationships and safe, consensual sex. Incentives for such support in schools are advocated by various organisations like Women’s Aid, and the National Children’s Bureau, whose campaign ‘Beyond Biology’ seeks to help young people prepare for the issues they will face as they grow up. If you would like to encourage your local school to take this issue more seriously, a model letter is available through the following link: http://www.bristolfeministnetwork.com/activism.html.

All in all, the event was a great success and will hopefully bring women a step closer to the freedom they continue to fight for.

Bath Activist Network are a local umbrella group campaigning on issues as diverse as development, environmentalism, anti-war, animal rights, workers’ rights and more. Helping to produce The Bath Bomb, we are open to anyone, and our members range from trade unionists to anarchists, liberals to greens, and people who just want to change Bath for the better. For details on meetings, demos, or just to get in touch, email bathactivistnet [at] yahoo.co.uk, or see our website: www.bathactivistnetwork.blogspot.com

GOT A STORY? WANT TO RECEIVE THE BATH BOMB BY EMAIL? HOPING TO SUE? Contact us by e-mailing bathbombpress [at] yahoo.co.uk. Large print e-versions available on request.

Can’t Pay, Shouldn’t Pay

As the recession continues to bite, a group in Bath have had an early tangible success in their effort to stop the working class bearing the brunt of an upper class crisis. A Bath resident approached the group’s regular ‘Can’t Pay, Won’t Pay’ stall in Whiteway as a sudden job cut had left the family struggling and unable to pay Council Tax. Good ol’ B&NES did the decent thing and immediately resorted to court and repossession threats. Fortunately, the campaign’s legal team were able to intervene, stop the court action, and get repayments fixed at a reasonable, humane level. A small start, of course, and it’s going to be a long fight, but the Whiteway group have experienced solicitors, a high level of community support, and a willingness to put bailiffs in their place, wherever that might be. If you know someone having problems with bailiffs, or have any information on the activities, movements or whereabouts of these parasites, you can contact the campaign confidentially on resistbailiffs [at] yahoo.co.uk, or give them a call on 07794 774938.

Bird Abusers Get Cocky

After a slight lull in the local anti-foie gras campaign (at least we had one issue off) – caused by the scum being driven underground by spirited protests – some optimistically-called restaurateurs decided to stick their heads back above the parapet. Apparently disappointed that the recession has yet to finish them off, the masochists at Beaujolais, off Queen Square, have placed the ‘delicacy’ back on the menu. Not content with attracting the inevitable noisy contingent of animal rights activists to a series of demos outside their premises, they’ve also decided to charge enough that most of their customers will probably be joining the demo once they see the bill… If you’re one of the rare minority of locals who haven’t yet been handed a leaflet about foie gras, it’s a pate made from duck or goose liver. But to get the perfect texture, the unfortunate birds spend the last 12 weeks of their lives in battery cages, being force-fed through a tube shoved down their throats, until their diseased livers swell to ten times the natural size. It’s illegal to produce in the UK, but EU laws allow posh-poseur restaurants to acquire the slop, dodgy black market-style, and sell it on at a huge mark-up to the crowds of wealthy aristo-wannabes who throng Bath centre in the evenings. And so, the first in a short series of weekly demos will be happening soon outside a Beaujolais near you. Save the birds! Starve the rich! After all, what else is there to do on a Friday night?

www.banfoiegras.org.uk

Off The Map, But Still Squatting The Lot

In a follow-up to last month, two days after the illegal eviction of a squatted property in Twerton, members of the Squatters Community Association of Bath retook their home. Despite the first legal hash-job, and Network Rail’s ineptitude in securing the building or indeed the occupiers’ possessions within, the SCABs report that they are currently safe and sound back in from the winter rain, wind, snow (and whatever else the confused climate is passing off as weather), and work has re-commenced eradicating damp and dry rot from the interior of the historic building, replacing damaged beams, rendering the sabotaged power supply safe, and clearing debris. Indeed, whilst Network Rail is more interested in pissing money away on bailiffs and illicit property empire expansion than actually seeing to the work of maintaining its substandard and overpriced rail network, the occupants are getting down to the duty of cleaning away the tangled foliage on the outside of the building, that nearby residents had been demanding for years. In the meantime, further threats of police raids were made on the 18th of last month, but a sixteen-strong resistance demo and communications from the Advisory Service for Squatters persuaded bullyish British Transport Police to no-show.

http://www.squatter.org.uk/

The Daily New Tesco Express

They breed like flies, don’t they? No sooner than the monopolising spoilt brats wheedle their new store onto Bathwick Street, but there’s due to be another one taking over the existing Somerfield in Weston. And they’ve also been upsetting residents by applying for a 6am to 11pm liquor license that the spineless Council will no doubt grant. Must be déjà vu.

http://www.thisisbath.co.uk/news/Concern-Tesco-drinks-licence-bid/article-744662-detail/article.html

BNP Can’t Do That There Here

What’s in a name? Nick Griffin, leader of far right nationalist BNP, would have posed the exact same question on Sunday the 8th of March, when he was due to talk at a fundraising charity do for the party’s Euro elections. The BNP are so respectable that they were forced to book the function room of the Park Hotel in Gloucestershire under a false name, as usual. However, as antifascists organised to gatecrash, the hotel itself was tipped off as to nature of their hatemongering guests and cancelled, as did their back-up venue. So, instead they all went home, tails between legs. Despite the party’s new drive towards legitimacy – “we’re not racist, but” – the ongoing free ‘Soho Road to the Punjab’ exhibition in Bristol, celebrating 50 years of Bhangra music & culture in the UK (situated in Central Library off College Green), has recently been attacked by racists who stole exhibition materials and left behind a BNP calling card. Equally compromising the party’s be-suited facade is the fact that many high-up members of the group, such as former chief lieutenant Tony Lecomber, dabble in assault, explosives, arson, assault and even the odd attempted contract killing. Fun for all the family, eh?

http://lancasteruaf.blogspot.com/2009/03/anger-as-bnp-l….html
http://www.hopenothate.org.uk/the-real-bnp/BNP terroris…s.php

Erosion Of Civil Liberties: Case #324

Since the 16th of last month, the Terrorism Act 2000 was amended by section 76 of the Counter-Terrorism Act 2008, now making it illegal to take photos, or indeed to “elicit information” about police intelligence services, or the military, which might be “useful to a person… preparing an act of terrorism.” Which seems okay, if you lived in a parallel world where the definition of terror doesn’t get stretched to the point of ridiculousness where leafleters, CND Quakers or letter-writers are considered terrorist: the pen may be mightier than the sword, but it’s hardly on the scale of nailbombs. Previous to this, the presence of cameras has often been a useful tool for keeping police within the law, or at least aiding in prosecutions against them… So remember, gentle tourists, don’t accidentally catch a copper in your holiday snaps, or you might be one of them foreign terrorists, and go down for 10 years.

http://www.bjp-online.com/public/showPage.html?page=839141

And now, to the disclaimer: As anyone is free to contribute, the opinions expressed in each article are not necessarily reflective of each contributor. Naturally, any right-wing or corporate bullshit will be binned and spat on. Needless to say, the opinions of the author of this disclaimer does not necessarily represent the views of any other contributor…

For further info on any of our stories see www.thebathbomb.blogspot.com

Work Stopped at Shipley Open Cast Coal Mine Site

26th Feb 2009
This morning a group of four ex-local residents, not affiliated with any particular group went digger diving at the Shipley Open Cast Coal Mine.

Shipley soul bannerShipley soul security26th Feb 2009
This morning a group of four ex-local residents, not affiliated with any particular group went digger diving at the Shipley Open Cast Coal Mine.

Work was stopped for one hour and a half. The protestors left when the police turned up.

The police entered into discussion with UK Coal about creating a more permenant space for people to protest at, the police suggested some kind of shelter. UK Coal declined, stating that they were worried the protestors would turn the shelter into a “concrete lock-on”.

No arrests were made.

Same banner; different protest.

A week of free workshops, discussions & skill-sharing in London

The planning for the London FreeSchool week is going well with confirmed workshops and the such like starting to appear on the website. Bowl Court Social Centre, the original location for the weeks event, was sadly evicted a couple of weeks ago.

The planning for the London FreeSchool week is going well with confirmed workshops and the such like starting to appear on the website. Bowl Court Social Centre, the original location for the weeks event, was sadly evicted a couple of weeks ago. However, the event lives on and has moved to the rampART ( http://www.rampart.co.nr) and LARC ( http://www.londonarc.org.) After all a free school should not be limited and contained by concrete walls!

The deadline for workshops is soon approaching so if you are up for facilitating something over the week drop us a line ( deschooling_society@lists.riseup.net) with a brief description of the event, how long you will need, your availability between the 1st and 7th September and if you have any special requirements (e.g. Tools / equipment). If you do this by monday then we can include it in the timetable.

If you want to know what is happening over the week and when, you are unfortunately going to have to wait until the full timetable has been released next Wednesday. But here’s a little taster…

MONDAY 1st SEPTEMBER 12:30pm – 1:30pm
Welcome to London FreeSchool!
Come along, have some lunch, meet each other and find out about the week ahead.

GENDER & AUTONOMOUS SPACES
Autonomous spaces are not immune from the kind of casual sexism that is still common in the wider culture but the problem is rarely discussed. One solution has been to set up women only spaces but many people feel that these avoid the problem rather than addressing it. This workshop will be about exploring how people feel about questions of gender and sexuality in the context of radical activism and how we can find ways to address the issues.

SAFER SPACES
Its about acknowledging that oppressive behaviours and ideas are still with in our ‘radical’ activist communities, no matter how ‘radical’ we think we are. The point of the workshop is to get people to think and talk about this, find ways to deal with this in their communities and work to stop their own oppressive behaviours.

GETTING RID OF EDUCATION: COMMUNITIES FOR LEARNING
No ones needs to be educated. We all learn all the time. What people need are resourses and support to help them get where they want to go. What does this sort of an organisation look like and how can you start one? Come and find out!
Leslie Barson (Safran) home educated her two children and founded and runs The Otherwise Club, a community centre for families choosing not to send their children to school, in NW London since 1993.

SCHOOL PRIVATISATION
A discussion on school privatisation in the UK and the Wembley Tent City Occupation ( http://www.tentcityoccupation.co.uk/) with Hank Roberts.

A PRACTICAL INTRODUCTION TO FOOD BUYING GROUPS
Have you ever thought of getting together with a group of people to buy food in bulk? Come and meet other folks who’d like to do the same, to find out more and start planning your food-buying group. Cheaper food, autonomous organising, stronger links within our communities, and no more
supermarkets: let’s make the best of the recession!
Please bring pens and paper, especially markers and flipchart-like paper, to share if you have any

FOOD NOT BOMBS…
is a network of independent direct action groups. They all use food that is being thrown away, cook delicious vegan meals and serve it for free to any hungry person! Come with us for a bit of skipping (getting food from the bins!), vegan cooking, serving and cleaning! It’s political, fun and empowering!

BASICS OF GENETICS
what’s a cell? what’s a chromosome? what’s the DNA? what’s a gene? what’s a genome? what’s a genetically modified organism? what’s cloning? etc.
Have you ever asked yourself these questions?
We’ll try to talk about all that together!

INTERNET ARCHITECTURE / PHILOSOPHY
The idea for the discussion is to look at the way the technical aspects of the internet have political and philosophical implications. Some of these are well known, others not so well known. Starting
from a few technical points I hope the group can discuss general ideas around the hacker culture that has shaped the internet, as it applies to social networks and political engagement. Some sample principles from internet engineering culture:
“Be conservative in what you do; be liberal in what you accept from others.” (Jon Postel)
“We reject: kings, presidents and voting. We believe in: rough consensus and running code.” (David D. Clarke)

deschooling_society@lists.riseup.net
http://londonfreeschool.wordpress.com

Bath Bomb #13 Out Now

Live from the fields…

The Bath Bomb

It’s Our Birthday – Make Us (Vegan) Cake!

@nti-copyright: copy and distribute!
Issue #13
free/donation
Aug 08

Birthday Bumps

Live from the fields…

The Bath Bomb

It’s Our Birthday – Make Us (Vegan) Cake!

@nti-copyright: copy and distribute!
Issue #13
free/donation
Aug 08

Birthday Bumps

To celebrate our first anniversary, the Bath Bomb has teamed up for an exclusive partnership with the Bristol Evening Post, who are now offering a free Bath Bomb with every issue! Money-grubbing egghead MD Kevin Beatty, of media monopoly Associated Newspapers (proud pro-fascist owners of the Daily Mail, as well as Northcliffe Media – who have been busily buying out every local media outlet they can over the last 5 years and reducing them to the same generic mould) had this to say about the happy union: “…venture capitalism… caviar…tax loopholes…fourth holiday home in the Bahamas…co-opting anything radical and real….” Happy first birthday us! Now, we look eagerly forward to the next year of blandly censoring all opinion, cost cutting, and sacking surplus journos!

http://www.dmgt.co.uk/corporatestructure/associatednewspapers/

Life At Climate Camp

Twelve activists from Bath Activist Network attended this summer’s Camp for Climate Action, held from the 3rd-11th August, near Kingsnorth Power Station, in the Hoo Peninsula of Kent. The Camp was not only held in defiance of E-On’s plans to build the UK’s first coal-fired power station for 33 years, but also to suggest alternatives to the lifestyle options provided by state capitalism that damage the earth and its poorest people. The Camp had no leaders; decisions were made collectively and everyone volunteered for jobs that needed doing. Vegan food was prepared using local organic ingredients and eaten communally. It provided its own physical and mental health care, security, independent media (with internet access) and conflict mediation. Grey water filtration systems were used to irrigate the fields, rubbish was recycled and composted and the waste from compost loos will be used by local farmers. The site was powered by wind and solar energy. The technical potential for global wind and solar power exceeds current energy use. Plus, in general, weather that is unfavourable for wind power production is favourable for solar energy and vice versa.

Entertainment was provided in the form of live music, pedal powered sound systems, a cinema, barn dance, vegan cake baking sessions, pirate radio, karaoke and beer! Workshops ranged from education on environmental science to recycled bike part jewellery making and practical feminist self-defence. All in all, a great nine days and well worth getting muddy for.

www.climatecamp.org.uk

Hoo Grrrs Wins

B. da Fucha continues our exclusive report: “Not only was the Camp a near-perfect experiment in sustainable living, but was also a launch pad for uncompromising action against the climate criminals. What with the agrofuels industry being responsible for 75% of recent global food price hikes, on Thursday the 7th August, activists blockaded the Vopak biofuels depot in nearby Thurrock, which supplies so-called ‘green’ companies like Greenergy and Tesco. Elsewhere, during the Camp, there were more banner drops and lock-ons than you can shake an extendable baton at, but here follow just a few:

Actions took place the same day at Gatwick Airport against short-haul flights (139 flights from London to Edinburgh, but only 22 trains); an oil-spattered ‘die-in’ at RBS’ HQ (‘The Oil and Gas Bank’, who provides $20 million to polluting coal projects such as Arch Coal’s Bond villain-esque ‘Mountain Top Removal’ schemes); and – proving that size isn’t everything – in Legoland in Windsor, Lego campaigners scaled and hung a banner from E-On’s mini replica power station!

Meanwhile, on Saturday the 9th, to the tune of 60 or so arrests, activists laid siege to Kingsnorth with a three-pronged attack: over water, land, and, apparently, air. 1,000 made their way over roads in a peaceful and family-friendly parade, though restricting crowd control barriers vanished one by one (to onlooking plod’s dismay), and there were some minor scuffles due to police brutality. Meanwhile, over the fields, a 200-strong brigade of Green Guerrillas clambered, crawled, waded and leapt their way to Kingsnorth, eventually breaching three rings of fencing (luckily, wily saboteurs had secretly shut the electricity beforehand), facing riot cops, Alsatians and horses. And along the Medway, with ‘The Great Rebel Raft Regatta’, a motley flotilla of 28 homemade pirate vessels braved the currents, with one craft getting through.

Elsewhere, protesters clambered atop pylons, and occupied Selfridges in London, chained to a banner reading ‘Our consumption will fuck us all.’ And the next day, shenanigans continued, with the Smithfield’s meat market waking to the sight of rooftop messages: ‘Fight Climate Change – Go Vegan,’ and a squadron of imitation planes educating USAF Mildenhall about the links between climate disaster and military ventures.

At the end of the day, 4 people got into Kingsnorth and disrupted operations, despite the £17 million security/policing budget, and the day was won – and, if they do make the mistake of commencing building work, we will be back, and we will shut them down!”

http://www.indymedia.org.uk
www.thegrrr.net/

FACT BOX

If E-On is given the go-ahead:

– It will undermine the Government’s commitment to meet European targets for producing 20% of energy from renewables by 2020
– The UK’s chances of meeting the necessary 80% emissions reductions by 2050 will be blown
– The inefficient, centralised energy generation system that’s responsible for 2/3s of all the energy within fossil fuels being wasted will be propped up, potentially for another 50 years
– It will emit as much carbon dioxide as the world’s 24 lowest emitting countries combined

FFI, check out these two new publications:

Smith, Kevin – Cashing In On Coal; RBS, UK Banks and the Global Coal Industry; available from http://www.carbonweb.org
Fauset, Claire – Techno-Fixes: a critical guide to climate change technologies; available from http://www.corporatewatch.org

QUOTE OF THE MONTH: “I’m not here to fuck about – I’m not here to feed the police hobnobs!”

Policing The Climate Camp

While up to 3,000 people at Climate Camp worked hard to create a peaceful, eco-friendly, educational space, another group in the area were working equally hard to make sure that none of this came to fruition. Normally, it is advisable to ignore the police, view them as a petty distraction and move on, but the (mis)behaviour of the boys in blue at this year’s Camp warrants a closer look.

At previous events, the vast majority of police harassment has been focused (entirely unsuccessfully) around preventing direct action and effective protest. This year however, the aim of the police seemed to be to stop the Camp from happening at all. On the first day of setting up, with only 70 protestors present, hundreds of police descended on the site, causing criminal damage, making arbitrary arrests and beatings. They then proceeded to confiscate hundreds of items including water drainage systems, disabled toilets, childrens’ crayons, guy ropes, cooking equipment, solar panels and wind turbines. Activists put up a brave and protracted fight that prevented the police from stealing much more. This set the tone for the policing, with tactics ranging from repetitive illegal and intrusive stop and searches, the arresting of innocents (and release straight after Camp without charge; just to clear away protestors), the confiscation of articles ranging from bikes to tents; also, hundreds of riot police routinely attempted to storm the site, using batons, shields and the threat of police dogs, causing numerous injuries (including head injuries to a grandmother and teenage girl, sat at the gate during an attack) almost every morning between 2 and 6am, as well as constant low-level flying over the Camp during the small hours (in violation of Article 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights relating to sleep deprivation and mental torture). During one attack, the local MP who was present witnessed such a brutal attack that he lodged several complaints with police high-ups and later declared support for the Camp – he even received a dose of pepper spray to the face from one overzealous copper! It is worth noting that due to determined resistance from campers, the police were successfully kept off site all week, except for that first raid. While refusing to be victims of police brutality, many hardened activists were shocked by the intensity, frequency and sheer unprovoked brutality of police aggression towards the Camp and its inhabitants.

So why were the police so desperate to prevent the campaigners’ message being spread, and why was the emphasis of their operation on disruption of workshops and the general smooth running of the Camp? Two reasons spring to mind. Firstly, the environmental direct action movement, with Climate Camp at its core, has swollen in size and effectiveness over the past few years, and threatens to become a movement capable of making real, radical and lasting change – something the state will never be willing to let happen without a fight. Secondly, climate change is becoming very real to the people of this country. Floods, drastic hikes in the price of fuel and food are all products of government-driven climate change. As such, Climate Camp is gaining a strong social relevance – its criticisms of capitalism increasingly valid and its solutions increasingly tangible. As water levels and recession rise, and discontent and anger start to grow in more and more people, the government (as in New Orleans) respond with greater authoritarianism and social control. They will also defend their crumbling ideology and attempt to violently repress those who show another way.

Despite the police operation being a bungled yet brutal failure, it does set a worrying precedent for political policing, the first signs of a government who, lacking credibility, respect, or answers, turns to violence to protect its increasingly isolated and unpopular agenda.

As well as radicalising the less militant activists present, the police activity also radicalised nearby residents, with one local poll showing 50% of villagers now supporting the Camp.

For a copy of the National Extremism Tactical Co-ordination Unit (NETCU)’s advice for police on how to deal with protesters, see here:
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/08/405393.html
and here:
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/08/405409.html
Police assaults during a search: http://www.medwaymessenger.co.uk/news/default.asp?article_id=46009
police stealing bikes: http://blip.tv/file/1149491/
Lawsuits against the police made easy!: http://217.12.8.115/uk.f271.mail.yahoo.com/ya/securedownload?clean=0&fid=Inbox&mid=1_59089_ACW2ktkAAGe7SKP16g3MGjdp7HQ&pid=2&tnef=&prefFilename=suingthepolice.htm&cred=Liy1IXXCscVFc0JQh0o9r3FJcEo3Cltuasu_YRgi8gS1sxTCSf89fxmLQ5lXFFBax1bXeuLBv7NytQfoli4g9qGZzKgDw8pKj9hIjxGArb36Jkkhbg–&ts=1218709236&partner=ymail&sig=JSHCW3uQSwpEnGdyw35J5A–

Unnatural Disasters

Much discussion and debate in Kent focused on the very real issue of how the lives of people in the third world are being affected by climate change and how this will be escalated in the future. Whilst for some of us, climate change seems a relatively abstract notion, for much of the majority world it is a daily reality. For many women and girls, their role is primarily that of carer. A speaker during one action at this year’s Camp drew listeners’ attention to the current situation in India, where progress, which has offered girls opportunities in education, is being counteracted by erratic rainfall, drawing girls away from education and back to domestic roles. As well as this, India’s poorest women and girls are often involved in what the UN brands ‘climate sensitive’ activities, such as paddy cultivation and fishing, meaning that flooding and other catastrophes will put their lives and livelihood on the line.

Despite these setbacks, women are on the front lines in the fight against climate change. For instance, in parts of Bangladesh where farmers face catastrophic flooding which has been increased by climate change, women have adapted their farming methods to cope, including creating floating hyacinth beds and rearing ducks.

http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/2804

GREEN CAMPAIGNERS SAID:

– “If it is serious about tackling climate change, the government must throw out this proposal and promote investment in clean and green alternatives” – Robin Webster, Friends of the Earth.
– Caroline Lucas of the Green Party said the move was a “massive step backwards.” She said “ultimately it’s utterly unnecessary, there are other ways of generating energy…it’s not difficult to be slightly more efficient than the old power stations…”
– “In the same amount of time and for less money, we could implement an energy system that will do far more to stop climate change and ensure energy security than nuclear or coal-fired power: a combination of renewables, efficiency, and combined heat and power” – Greenpeace

http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/blog/climate/the-convenient-solution-20070718
http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/climate/the-case-against-coal-frequently-asked-questions
http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/blog/climate/greenpeace-shuts-down-coal-fired-power-station-20071008

…but that’s enough about so-called ‘experts’ – what do YOU say?

Other Routes Of Change

Climate Camp’s all over now, but the ‘Roots of Change’ day Bath Activist Network put on back in July to promote it, yielded more than just that. We set up, er, camp in the Green Park Market, with stalls to let people know what BAN do and what Camp was all about. We were also joined by Transition Town Bath, Viva! and London Road Food Co-op. There was a beautiful photo-display from last year’s Climate Camp and Bath’s FreeShop, with loads of people stopping to look and browse. The day really put the message across that there was something for everyone and encouraged people to go at their own pace, changing as much or as little as they liked. Whether plunging in at the deep end with ten days of communal living and non violent direct action at Climate Camp, or paddling in the shallow, but no less important end, by making smaller tweaks to everyday life, embracing ideas such as shopping at a food co op or trying a vegetarian or vegan diet. These changes often lead to more, after all, and too often people get put off making any changes due to a feeling of pressure and lack of support. The other main point is that these changes don’t have to be all doom and gloom – changing something and putting something enjoyable in its place is much better than giving something up – enriching our lives rather than diminishing them. I’ve recently been finding it a very comforting thought that there is an active community of people, often behind the scenes, who are working on green energy alternatives for an uncertain future. There are still improvements to make, but I am constantly impressed by the amazingly dedicated, ambitious and creative people involved in these projects and the improvements they are able to make to anything they lay their hands on, from vegan food to practicalities such as compost toilets. When the shit comes down, we’ll be using it as fertilizer.

http://www.transitionbath.org.uk/
http://www.envolve.co.uk/projects/food_coop.html
http://www.viva.org.uk/

If I Can’t Dance…

On the 5th September at the Porter Butt in Bath, all are cordially invited to a gig fundraiser, benefiting the upcoming Bristol Anarchist Bookfair – more info to follow! Speaking of which, the bookfair takes place on Saturday the 13th September, from 10am til 5pm, at St Werburghs Community Centre, on Horley Road in Bristol. Entry is free, and all are welcome. Oh, and there’ll be a vegan caff, too! If anyone wants to help distribute flyers and posters, get in touch: bathactivistnet@yahoo.co.uk.

www.bristolanarchistbookfair.org

EVENTS

Monday nights – Bath Hunt Sabs Meeting, 8pm, Bell, Walcot Street
Wednesdays – London Road Food Co-op, 4-7pm, Riverside Community Centre, London Road
Saturdays – Bath Stop The War Vigil, 11.30am-12.30, Abbey Courtyard
Weds 27th Aug-1st Sept – EarthFirst! Summer Gathering, Norfolk, see www.earthfirstgathering.org.uk
Weds 3rd Sept – Bath Animal Action meeting, 7.30-8.30pm, back room of Bell, Walcot Street
Thursday 4th Sept – Bath Activist Network meeting, 7.30-9pm, downstairs of Hobgoblin, St James Parade
Fri 5th Sept – punk benefit gig for Bristol Anarchist Bookfair, 8-11pm, Porter Butt, London Road
Sat 6th Sept – Carnival Against Vivisection march, 12pm, meet opposite Ledbury train station
Tues 9th Sept – Transition Town Bath Open Forum, 7-8pm , Widcombe Social Club, Widcombe Hill
Sat 13th Sept – Bristol Anarchist Bookfair, 10-5, St Werburghs Centre
Sat 13th Sept – Bath FreeShop, 12-3, outside Pump Rooms, Stall Street
Tues 15th Sept – screening of ’11th Hour’ film, 7.30pm, upstairs The Rummer
Saturday 27th Sept – National Anti Fur march and rally, 12pm, Belgrave square, London, see http://www.caft.org.uk/furmarch/2008.htm

How Many Cops Does It Take To Change A Lightbulb?

In answer to this age-old question, let’s consider the cop-installed generator, turned off in mysterious circumstances the night following the police invasion of the Camp for Climate Action. Our benevolent state security guards seemed to have a little trouble switching the light back on. It took half an hour and six cops to find the light switch, but hey, I’m sure the country is safe in their hands.

For further info on any of our stories see www.myspace.com/bathbomb

Q: Who Are Bath Activist Network? A: A local umbrella group campaigning on issues as diverse as development, environmentalism, anti-war, animal rights, workers’ rights and more. Helping to produce The Bath Bomb, we are open to anyone, and our members range from trade unionists to anarchists, liberals to greens, and people who just want to change Bath for the better. For details on meetings, demos, or just to get in touch, ring us on 07949 611912, email bathactivistnet@yahoo.co.uk, or see our website: www.myspace.com/bathactivistnetwork

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And now, to the disclaimer: As anyone is free to contribute, the opinions expressed in each article are not necessarily reflective of each contributor. Naturally, any right-wing or corporate bullshit will be binned and spat on. Needless to say, the opinions of the author of this disclaimer does not necessarily represent the views of any other contributor…

B B Jenkins