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

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

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