ELF sabotage phone booths in Columbia & Mexico

“On the night of Decem­ber 5th activists from the Autonomous and Anar­chist Cell of the FLT (ELF) and FLA (ALF) took to the streets of Bogo­ta to sab­o­tage the tele­phone booths of ETB (Bogo­ta tele­phone com­pa­ny), well known as a major spon­sor of the spe

ELFELF“On the night of Decem­ber 5th activists from the Autonomous and Anar­chist Cell of the FLT (ELF) and FLA (ALF) took to the streets of Bogo­ta to sab­o­tage the tele­phone booths of ETB (Bogo­ta tele­phone com­pa­ny), well known as a major spon­sor of the speciesist slaugh­ter in the bull­ring. Armed with shears, spray paint and stick­ers with anti­civ­i­liza­tion and threat­en­ing mes­sages, we ripped out the mouth­pieces and left the phones unus­able.
This was only the begin­ning, the dis­gust­ing ‘bull­fight­ing sea­son’ is approach­ing and the actions will not stop.

For the lib­er­a­tion of all, wild and green vio­lence!

CAAELF ¿bogo­ta?”

///////////////

“The born-evil own­er of the com­pa­ny Telmex, Calos Slim, knows more than any­one else that he and his great indus­tri­al pow­er in this coun­try are the ones respon­si­ble for the exploita­tion of ani­mals, of the water, of the land, of the mines and oth­er nat­ur­al resources, for that rea­son and because we con­sid­er it one of this plan­et’s exe­cu­tion­ers, we sab­o­taged 12 Telmex phones and popped 4 tires of one of his trucks.

These attacks will not stop, because our rage is infi­nite!

Frente de Lib­eración de la Tier­ra (FLT) — Méx­i­co”

report­ed by http://directaction.info

URGENT Tree Protest Weymouth ‑Aroooga — updated

Update, Mon­day 15th:
anoth­er per­son has climbed up into the same tree; coun­cil want to fin­ish work before Christ­mas; local res­i­dents send­ing hot water bot­tles up tree. Get down there to help — con­tact num­bers below.

—–

Sun­day, 14.12.2008:

Update, Mon­day 15th:
anoth­er per­son has climbed up into the same tree; coun­cil want to fin­ish work before Christ­mas; local res­i­dents send­ing hot water bot­tles up tree. Get down there to help — con­tact num­bers below.

—–

Sun­day, 14.12.2008:
One pro­tes­tor still in trees, with the oth­ers com­ing down on Fri­day and Sat­ur­day — chop­ping down of trees clear­ance work con­tin­u­ing all week­end. “They’re already over half way through cut­ting them and they’re work­ing today and have been work­ing over the week­end.”
—–

11.12.2008
Action in the trees now get there.

Urgent many trees being cut down some over 400 years old. For anoth­er unneed­ed road. There was a camp at the site 12 years ago with some of the Fair­mile posse there. Which won and camp dis­man­tled ..now road­builders , the coun­cil and home­grown Tim­ber com­pa­ny are at it again.
The site is …Two Mile Cop­pice next to the rail­way line Wey­mouth..
3 activists cur­rent­ly in trees with secu­ri­ty around.… any old tree pro­test­ers dust off your har­ness­es and get there. Or any new recruits next gen­er­a­tion wel­come.
On site mobiles ( bat­ter­ies get­ting low) 07792717821 / 07807952822
Just get in da van and get there now.

—–

Ancient tree sit-in against road

12th Decem­ber 2008
Two pro­test­ers are sit­ting in trees in ancient Dorset wood­land to try to stop clear­ance work tak­ing place ahead of the build­ing of a new £84m relief road.

Work to clear part of Two Mile Cop­pice restart­ed on Thurs­day after a legal bid by the Wood­land Trust tem­porar­i­ly sus­pend­ed work on Tues­day.

The Wey­mouth relief road aims to ease traf­fic around Wey­mouth and Port­land, which are host­ing the Olympic sail­ing.

Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil said work would con­tin­ue despite the pro­test­ers.

A spokesman said trees would be cut down around the demon­stra­tors and that the coun­cil hoped to com­plete the work by Christ­mas.

“The coun­cil is now dis­cussing how the pro­test­ers can be safe­ly and legal­ly removed,” he added.

One pro­test­er, 35-year-old Nicky Baines, came down from the trees on Fri­day.

He told the BBC the two remain­ing men, Nick Pep­per, 41, and a man known as Nod­dy, had both lived in Wey­mouth in the past.

He said they did not rep­re­sent any par­tic­u­lar group but the idea was to “stick it out as long as pos­si­ble”.

“We’ve been hav­ing a bit of trou­ble with the amount of equip­ment — food, water and stay­ing warm.

“But at least one per­son has got a lot of stuff they can keep going with.”

Work restart­ed

Trees and oth­er veg­e­ta­tion were being removed from 1.5 acres of wood­land on the west­ern edge of Two Mile Cop­pice, when Tues­day’s legal chal­lenge halt­ed work.

The Wood­land Trust, which owns the land, said the coun­ty coun­cil had failed to pro­vide a Notice to Enter doc­u­ment.

The cop­pice is among land in an Area of Out­stand­ing Nat­ur­al Beau­ty (AONB) that Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil was giv­en per­mis­sion to buy, using com­pul­so­ry pur­chase orders, in Sep­tem­ber.

But until the orders are processed, the land still belongs to the trust. The cor­rect doc­u­men­ta­tion was lat­er pro­vid­ed and work was allowed to restart.

Steve Marsh, of the Wood­land Trust, said the legal chal­lenge was start­ed to make sure the coun­cil was fol­low­ing the cor­rect pro­ce­dures.

“We did­n’t think we’d ever be able to stop the work in the long term,” he said, adding that the trust was against the road.

“This is the last remain­ing ancient wood­land in the Wey­mouth and Port­land area. It’s a very much-used wood and a much-loved wood.

“Once it’s gone, it’s gone for­ev­er, it can’t be recre­at­ed because the cli­mate was dif­fer­ent 400 years ago.

“Ancient wood­land is the rich­est habi­tat we’ve got in Britain — it’s our equiv­a­lent of the rain­for­est.

“We feel the road is a near act of van­dal­ism on the envi­ron­ment, all to help cut peo­ple’s jour­ney times by five min­utes.”

Envi­ron­men­tal groups, includ­ing the Cam­paign to Pro­tect Rur­al Eng­land (CPRE), lost a High Court legal bid to stop the road in 2007.

A pub­lic inquiry fol­lowed, which end­ed in March 2008, but many res­i­dents and busi­ness­es said they sup­port­ed the plan for the road.

Work is due to start in spring 2009, if the Depart­ment for Trans­port (DfT) gives the fund­ing.

Work”>http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/dorset/7772693.stm”>Work restarts back­ground

Just to let those wish­ing to help know that there is a local cam­paign group — Bypass the Bypass and they have a web­site: http://www.bypassthebypass.org/

Also, the Wood­land Trust have been fight­ing this road for years (they own Two Mile Cop­pice) and have held it up for years through var­i­ous means. You can view info on the Wey­mouth Road on their web­site here

Pre­vi­ous protest camp back­ground

Bath Bomb 17 Cordially Yours

THE BATH BOMB
@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!
Issue #17
free/donation

Dec 08 ‘No, he doesn’t exist you whiny lit­tle brat’

Batho­ni­ans Stand Up As The Econ­o­my Falls Down!

Bath Bomb logoTHE BATH BOMB
@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!
Issue #17
free/donation

Dec 08 ‘No, he doesn’t exist you whiny lit­tle brat’

Batho­ni­ans Stand Up As The Econ­o­my Falls Down!

Sat­ur­day the 22nd of Novem­ber saw the start of BAN’s lat­est cam­paign, aimed at com­mu­ni­ty self-defence against the effects of the reces­sion. The ‘We Won’t Pay For Their Cri­sis!’ cam­paign has these key demands: fair heat­ing sub­si­dies, bailiffs out of our com­mu­ni­ties, no more house repos­ses­sions, no job or ben­e­fit freezes, con­trol of the banks and no to lay-offs. The demo start­ed off with around 20 activists (although the num­ber lat­er grew to around 35) con­gre­gat­ing at Bath Abbey before tak­ing to the roads and mak­ing a bee­line for Mil­som Street. Out­side the strip of banks, the crowd start­ed a spon­ta­neous road­block, snarling up traf­fic and tak­ing advan­tage of the huge amount of atten­tion to inform the pub­lic what the action was about and shame the banks through BAN’s shiny new mega­phone! Dur­ing the road­block, sev­er­al Xmas shop­pers decid­ed to join the action, and stayed with the march until the end. From there, the demo moved towards Guild­hall, where a brief block­ade was staged (this was only lift­ed to allow a wed­ding par­ty into Guild­hall; the sup­port­ive bride-to-be even posed for pic­cies with pro­test­ers!). After this, march­ing in the oppo­site direc­tion that the (by now slight­ly despair­ing) police pushed the crowd in, the protest moved back up to Nat West, where anoth­er block­ade took place, and dur­ing which the bank was adorned with ‘Where’s our bailout?’ stick­ers. In many ways, the day was a huge suc­cess. Many on the march were first time pro­test­ers, who refused to be intim­i­dat­ed by pushy and threat­en­ing police. The pub­lic were over­whelm­ing­ly in sup­port of the march — with hun­dreds of leaflets being giv­en out, and fre­quent cheers and applause com­ing from the pave­ments. Above all, the march marked the begin­ning of what promis­es to be a strong and effec­tive to defend our com­mu­ni­ties against greedy boss­es, politi­cians and land­lords, who would rather see us freez­ing, job­less and home­less than sac­ri­fice their own moun­tains of wealth.

How To Sur­vive A Reces­sion

With the reces­sion now deep­en­ing, all of us are feel­ing the pinch. Some already can­not afford to turn on their heat­ing, while oth­ers are get­ting laid-off and hav­ing prop­er­ty stolen by bailiffs. We have talked a lot about tak­ing the fight to the greedy sys­tem that caused the reces­sion, and we have giv­en a lot of col­umn inch­es to pro­mot­ing the idea of fight­ing against the sys­tem to pro­tect and improve our stan­dard of life. While this is def­i­nite­ly vital if we are to roll back the effects of this reces­sion, we at the Bath Bomb have not giv­en much time to talk­ing about what we can do in the here and now to make things a bit eas­i­er. All of the ideas we will look at involve the reclaim­ing of your own life — break­ing the umbil­i­cal cord of depen­den­cy on super mar­kets, banks and politi­cians, and it is this dis­as­so­ci­a­tion from the rich’s sys­tem of cap­i­tal­ist greed com­bined with direct attacks upon it that will allow us to live our lives free of their finan­cial cri­sis and social oppres­sion. With the rant behind us, let’s have a look at some bud­get-bust­ing reces­sion sur­vival mea­sures:

1. Grow some veg!: now is the time to be plant­i­ng gar­lic and win­ter peas, and from Jan­u­ary to March, every­thing from run­ner beans, toma­toes, car­rots and pota­toes go in the ground. If you have an unused fence, you can grow run­ners, and even the tini­est bit of gar­den can be turned into a good source of food. If you don’t have any space, start gar­den­ing with friends, or pop down to the Bath Organ­ic Allot­ments on Upper Bris­tol Road, who exchange huge bags of veg in return for vol­un­teer­ing.

2. Start a food co-op: this is a real­ly sim­ple idea. It involves you and your mates chip­ping in, order­ing from a whole­saler and get­ting the goods at cost price, side­step­ping the huge prof­its slapped on by super­mar­kets. You will each have to stick in a bit of mon­ey to get start­ed, then ‘buy’ the food from your­selves to gen­er­ate mon­ey to order in next month’s stock. Trust us — it’s cheap, and more info can be found at http://www.cooperativegrocer.coop/cg_special.html.

3. Five fin­ger dis­counts: a bit con­tro­ver­sial, but hey, super­mar­kets have been steal­ing from us for years. They steal land and resources from impov­er­ished farm­ers here and abroad, then steal our cash by charg­ing tens of times above the cost of trans­port and pro­duc­tion. So go on, rob — don’t feel guilty, you are poor and they are gross­ly rich, and most of their wealth comes from our pock­ets.

4. Jack­ing elec­tric­i­ty: there are loads of good ways to jack elec­tric­i­ty to help beat those win­ter bill blues. One involves locat­ing the cog that turns the meter on your elec­tric­i­ty box, heat­ing up a pin and push­ing it through the cas­ing to stop the tick­er turn­ing. Hey presto, free elec­tric­i­ty! But make sure to take the pin out for a few hours a day so the elec­tric com­pa­ny does­n’t start ask­ing ques­tions.

So there we go, just a few hints and tips to get you start­ed. We will try and bring you month­ly advice on beat­ing those reces­sion dol­drums (by any means nec­es­sary) from now on, and we’d love to hear your ideas. All mes­sages to bathbombpress@yahoo.co.uk

The Lit­tle Big Screen

Sun­day the 30th Novem­ber saw yet anoth­er fine Bub­bling Under offer­ing at the Porter Cel­lar, show­ing ‘Live Nude Girls Unite’ – a doc­u­men­tary chron­i­cling the for­ma­tion of the first exot­ic dancers’ union in the US in the late 90’s. This proved to be both enter­tain­ing and inspir­ing, as it tack­led racial dis­crim­i­na­tion, exploita­tive boss­es, fam­i­ly strug­gles and com­mon stereo­types of the sex indus­try. After all that excite­ment, though, Bub­bling Under is tak­ing a well-earned break this month. How­ev­er, it’s com­ing back thick and fast on Sun­day the 18th of Jan­u­ary from 1–4pm, with both a doc­u­men­tary about the British Poll Tax riots, and GI resis­tance to Viet­nam with ‘Sir No Sir’. More frag­gings and lobbed bricks than you can shake an iron lady at! Get there ear­ly to get a good seat, or bring your own.

Bath Bomb Word­watch: frag­ging (v); the act of killing a supe­ri­or offi­cer with the use of a grenade

http://www.sirnosir.com/

Christ­mas Chrompe­ti­tion

Here at the Bath Bomb we’re often accused of hat­ing the upper class. So we thought to our­selves, what bet­ter time to prove it! So, to win a free exclu­sive one-year sub­scrip­tion to the Bath Bomb, sim­ply send in your sto­ries about how you’ve man­aged to get up a toff’s nose this fes­tive sea­son.

EVENTS
2nd and 4th Mon­days of the month, Bath Hunt Sabs meet­ing, 8pm, the 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, out­side Bath Abbey
Fri­day 12th Decem­ber, anti-foie gras demo, 7–9pm, meet­ing at the Cir­cus
Fri­day 19th Decem­ber, anti-foie gras demo, 7–9pm, meet­ing at the Cir­cus
Wednes­day 7th Jan­u­ary, Bath Ani­mal Action meet­ing 7.30–8.30pm, back room of the Bell pub, Wal­cot Street
Thurs­day 8th Jan­u­ary, Bath Activist Net­work meet­ing, 7.30–9pm, down­stairs at the Hob­gob­lin
pub, St James Parade
Sat­ur­day the 10th Jan­u­ary, Bath FreeShop, 12–3pm, oppo­site Hol­land & Bar­rett, Stall Street
Tues­day 13th Jan­u­ary, Tran­si­tion Bath Forum, 7.15pm, Wid­combe Social Club
Wednes­day 14th Jan­u­ary, Bath Green Drinks, 8.30pm, upstairs at the Rum­mer pub, Grand Parade
Thurs­day 15th Jan­u­ary, The Pow­er of Com­mu­ni­ty film screen­ing, 7.30pm, the Cork pub, West­gate Street
Sun­day 18th Jan­u­ary, Bub­bling Under film screen­ing, 1–4pm, Porter Cel­lar, George Street
Mon­day 5th Feb­ru­ary, Bath Friends of the Earth AGM, Still­point, Broad Street Place, 8pm

My Big Fas­cist Greek Shoot­ing

Many of us in Eng­land have wit­nessed police bru­tal­i­ty, either first hand or on the news. To those of us who have been on the receiv­ing end of the raised trun­cheon of the law, it will come as no sur­prise that in Greece, the bru­tal­i­ty has reached a peak. On Sat­ur­day the 6th of Novem­ber, a detach­ment of blue-shirt­ed police (hat­ed in Greece, and usu­al­ly reserved for sit­u­a­tions of polit­i­cal tur­moil) provoca­tive­ly cruised through, and parked in a tra­di­tion­al­ly left-wing estate in Athens. Exert­ing their right to be free from unnec­es­sary sur­veil­lance, local anar­chist youths inter­vened to remove the police from their com­mu­ni­ty. The police respond­ed with stun grenades and live ammu­ni­tion, leav­ing 15-year-old anti-cap­i­tal­ist Alexan­dros-Andreas Grig­oropou­los dead on the street. Greece has since erupt­ed into spon­ta­neous riot­ing, described by Greek police as the worst in a gen­er­a­tion with dozens of banks and police sta­tions get­ting burned to the ground. Tens of thou­sands of peo­ple have been demon­strat­ing since Sat­ur­day night, and are already plan­ning for fur­ther unrest. The cities of Thes­sa­loni­ki, Athens, Patras and oth­ers have become bat­tle­grounds in which an angry civil­ian pop­u­la­tion is fight­ing the police and demand­ing an end to indis­crim­i­nate and bru­tal repres­sion. While the sense­less mur­der of a child by arro­gant and vio­lent police is news enough, this sto­ry fits into a big­ger pic­ture. This is not just the sto­ry of a Greek tragedy, but one that res­onates across the world. In coun­tries where police are allowed to kill indis­crim­i­nate­ly (e.g Bur­ma and Indone­sia), they do so. In coun­tries where police are giv­en access to tear gas, pep­per spray and stun grenades (Ger­many, Spain and Italy etc.), they use them with aban­don. As any­one who remem­bers the min­ers’ strike, the Poll Tax riots in Trafal­gar square, the Bean­field, the mur­der of Jean Charles de Menezes, or any oth­er exam­ple of police bru­tal­i­ty in the UK knows, the dif­fer­ence between a cop in this coun­try and the mur­der­ers in Greece has noth­ing to do with com­pas­sion or decen­cy of the British bob­by, but more to do with the fact that the aver­age cop in this coun­try does not have access to lethal weapon­ry… yet.

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. For more infor­ma­tion on any of our sto­ries, check out http://www.mypace.com/bathbomb

Mon­sieur, With Zees Protests You’re Real­ly Spoil­ing Us

Fri­day the 28th of Novem­ber saw a fol­low-up demo in the third ren­di­tion of the cam­paign against foie gras sell­er The Pinch of Margaret’s Build­ings. Long-time read­ers should be well versed in the ins and outs of this excit­ing saga, or maybe sick to death of hear­ing about it – well, so are we! Come on, Christophe, haven’t you had enough yet? After two hours of mega­phones, noisy chant­i­ng, leaflet­ing, spon­ta­neous song and dance rou­tines, heat­ed debates and even the odd fisticuffs (some well-to-do jol­ly old bean’s birth­day meal got ruined), the demo and atten­dant PCSOs moved off. Local opin­ion seems mixed, with some res­i­dents in great sup­port of the cam­paign, whilst oth­er big spenders couldn’t yank the wads of cash out of their wal­lets quick enough as they splut­tered their red-faced way inside the restau­rant – that’ll teach them bloody pro­test­ers!

So now the cam­paign is upping the ante: the demos will now be every Fri­day night, from 7pm. So, if you like your fine din­ing to be sans ear-split­ting dis­rup­tion, it’s best to eat else­where. And if you live local, and you want a bit of peace and qui­et, tell own­er Christophe LeCroix to do the right thing: stop sell­ing foie gras!

The Pinch
11 Margaret’s Build­ings, Bath, BA1 2LP
tel: 01225 421251
e‑mail: info@thepinch.biz

All The Food Of The Fayre

Sat­ur­day the 22nd was also the date of the first Bath Veg­an Fayre, show­ing near­ly 200 pun­ters just how sim­ple eat­ing veg­an can be. Info on nutri­tion and ani­mal rights issues was avail­able, as well as recipe books, but the food proved more appetis­ing: piz­za, soft drinks, pies, cheese­cake, bis­cuits, burg­ers, veg­gie bacon and sausage, soups… This jour­nal­ist is get­ting hun­gry just think­ing about it! Though the sched­uled talk on genet­ic engi­neer­ing was replaced short notice with one on food secu­ri­ty, the event was very much a suc­cess, and hap­py bel­lies were made full. Look out for their next big­ger, bet­ter (don’t quote us on that) instal­ment in ear­ly sum­mer, when the next is planned.

http://www.vegansociety.com

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, ring us on 07949 611912, email bathactivistnet@yahoo.co.uk, or see our web­site: http://www.myspace.com/bathactivistnetwork

Steal Some­thing Day

Sat­ur­day the 29th of Novem­ber has been cel­e­brat­ed as Buy Noth­ing Day for some years now — a day aimed at high­light­ing the human rights and envi­ron­men­tal con­cerns gen­er­at­ed by exces­sive con­sumerism in the run up to Xmas (the sea­son of shod­di­ly made sweat­shop goods, and over­flow­ing rub­bish bins). But this year, anony­mous Batho­ni­ans decid­ed to make a slight­ly dif­fer­ent point. While we can make respon­si­ble deci­sions when buy­ing — it is not our fault that the prod­ucts we buy are made using slave labour in far off sweat­shops, not our fault that most large com­pa­nies show scant regard for the envi­ron­ment and cer­tain­ly not our fault that the com­pa­ny puts a mark-up of sev­er­al hun­dred % on the prod­uct before pass­ing it on to us. While the sweat­shop work­ers who pro­duce the prod­ucts are the biggest vic­tims, we are also vic­tims of cor­po­rate greed emp­ty­ing our pock­ets at every oppor­tu­ni­ty. With this in mind, activists set off on a marathon ‘steal some­thing’ spree. While declin­ing to com­ment whether they them­selves indulged in an orgy of shoplift­ing, the activists did reveal that, over the course of sev­er­al hours, they vis­it­ed some of the biggest, bad­dest chain stores and human rights abusers in town and improved hun­dreds of prod­ucts with invi­ta­tions encour­ag­ing con­sumers to lib­er­ate the prod­uct rather than part with hard-earned cash. The let­ter out­lined the eth­i­cal argu­ment for shoplift­ing, and the uneth­i­cal argu­ment for ram­pant free-mar­ket cap­i­tal­ism. The mes­sage was well and tru­ly spread that ‘buy noth­ing’ can also mean ‘take some­thing back’. If you want to join the cam­paign against sweat­shop con­di­tions, why not con­tact either No Sweat or Labour Behind The Label? After what these com­pa­nies have done to our envi­ron­ment, our high street and our fel­low human beings, the ques­tion begs to be asked — who are the real thieves?

http://www.nosweat.org.uk/
http://www.labourbehindthelabel.org/

Mak­ing A Song And Dance About It

Wel­come to Tesco Town: the hot­ly con­test­ed Tesco Express on Bath­wick Hill final­ly opened on Mon­day the 24th of Novem­ber, though not with­out inci­dent. They’d been drag­ging their heels ever since their pro­ject­ed open­ing in Feb­ru­ary, after being vocal­ly opposed by res­i­dents every step of the way for two years; the tale of toad­y­ing, bribery and trick­ery that final­ly got them their desired store is a leg­end unto itself. They also got away with not installing the traf­fic-calm­ing mea­sures they promised… but what’s a bro­ken promise among neigh­bours? For their so-called ‘grand’ open­ing, singers from local char­i­ty Gold­en Oldies pro­vid­ed the music, and man­ag­er Bren­dan Tuck­er wore his fixed grin. How­ev­er, pro­ceed­ings were dis­rupt­ed by two mod­est-sized protests that day, with four cheeky pirates wav­ing a jol­ly roger dur­ing the open­ing cred­its, and then anoth­er five lat­er on, from 6pm, freez­ing their bits off long into the night.

The char­i­ty above was set up to com­bat alien­ation, com­mu­ni­ty break­down and lone­li­ness amongst the elder­ly. The great irony is, though, that when local inde­pen­dents like Bath­wick Stores are worn away, then that is itself yet anoth­er exam­ple of com­mu­ni­ty ero­sion: what sort of famil­iar­i­ty or com­mu­nal bonds can you con­struct with a revolv­ing door pol­i­cy of bored check­out staff? The cash that Tesco injects into these groups is a drop in the ocean com­pared to the PR pay­back they reap through such asso­ci­a­tions. Not that you should be tak­en in by their friend­ly face, any­way – not when they’re spon­sor­ing sweat­shop con­di­tions in ‘fair-trade’ banana pack­ing hous­es in Luton, respon­si­ble for the deaths of cock­le-pick­ers in More­cambe Bay, or engag­ing in such oth­er human­i­tar­i­an ven­tures as help­ing kill off local food vari­eties, indus­tri­al farm­ing health scares, pol­lu­tion and ani­mal abuse, or build­ing up retail monop­o­lies. And they’ll prob­a­bly lock up their skips, too. In terms of pos­i­tive solu­tions, iron­ic leaflets and sub­ver­tis­ing notwith­stand­ing, local food co-oper­a­tives are a much bet­ter way to go – such as the Lon­don Road Food Co-op, the South­side Food Co-op or, if you can afford it, Har­vest on Wal­cot Street. But the ques­tion still stands with these food giants (and Tesco aren’t the only cul­prit) – what to do about them?

http://www.impacttlimited.com/2007/05/23/abuse-of-workers-packing-fair-trade-bananas-in-the-uk-on-today-programme-this-morning‑2/
http://www.tescopoly.org/
http://www.golden-oldies.org.uk
South­side Food Co-op: http://www.twerton.con/twerton-articles/southside-food-co-op-a22.html
Lon­don Road Food Co-op, River­side Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre, York Place, Lon­don Road, Bath, BA1 6AE, tel: 07837 784715

Your Name’s Down, You’re Not Com­ing In

Antifas­cists across the land last month were cel­e­brat­ing Christ­mas ear­ly, as the entire BNP mem­ber­ship list was leaked on Novem­ber 18th. Whilst threats of legal action, arrests and the hyp­o­crit­i­cal invo­ca­tion of the Human Rights Act (which the BNP active­ly oppose) has been bandied about the net, it’s all a bit futile as the list has beamed far and wide. In Bath we alleged­ly have a measly nine proud bull­dogs to dis­own, and Frome has four, whilst Bris­tol seems to have a 100-strong infes­ta­tion to clean up. For a par­ty that is all about appar­ent­ly res­cu­ing the endan­gered great white work­ing class, it’s curi­ous that the major­i­ty in Bath are from mid­dle class areas; how dis­ap­point­ing. If any­one has any more infor­ma­tion on the fas­cist scene to impart, such as shoe size, IQ, favourite chat-up lines or places of work, send in to the usu­al address.

http://blogs.journalism.co.uk/editors/2008/11/19/bnp-members-list-leak-gathers-pace-online-to-link-or-not-to-link/

I Think We’re Alone Now…

You know you’re in trou­ble when the band you book for the end of your protest stand around mak­ing snide remarks at your expense. “Of course, we could all go and occu­py par­lia­ment,” sug­gest­ed that nice chap from Seize the Day, to sheep­ish laugh­ter and ner­vous foot-shuf­fling from the crowd of hip­pies in Par­lia­ment Square. We were in Lon­don for the annu­al Cli­mate March, expect­ing to join 15,000 marchers and a healthy anti-cap­i­tal­ist bloc, using our sheer force of num­bers to make the gov­ern­ment lis­ten.

Sad­ly, on the day only around 5,000 turned up, and our antic­i­pat­ed bloc did­n’t quite break dou­ble fig­ures. We marched a wind­ing route from the emp­ty-look­ing US embassy to the def­i­nite­ly emp­ty Par­lia­ment, demand­ing CO2 cuts, no to air­port expan­sions, and green jobs. Feel­ing increas­ing­ly mar­gin­al­ized, sur­round­ed by a sea of ‘Car­bon Cap, Not Hip­py Crap’ plac­ards, and in con­stant dan­ger of being run down by an encroach­ing sam­ba band, our mer­ry group clung togeth­er behind our ‘Cap­i­tal­ism Isn’t Work­ing’ ban­ner for half the march, then prompt­ly dis­in­te­grat­ed.

Two of us, red and black flags in hands, end­ed up at the very head of the march for almost a minute before being quick­ly removed by the stew­ards. Walk behind the green­house, they told us. It’s the sym­bol of the cam­paign. Go on; get back in your box. Every­one else is doing it.

And that’s the issue. The cam­paign­ers turn up once a year to demand some­body else fix their prob­lems, then they go home. The only way this march will help at this point is if it becomes an annu­al get-togeth­er to unite the move­ment and give us a chance to brag about all the suc­cess­ful direct actions of the past year. Oth­er­wise, the reduc­tion in marchers from 30,000 to 5,000 in a hand­ful of years will be reflect­ed in the move­ment as a whole. With­out sol­id actions and sol­id accom­plish­ments, we’re all fucked.

Now hand over those bolt­crop­pers – I’ve got stuff to do tonight.

Spe­cial Yule­tide Dis­claimer: Like you, we prob­a­bly dis­agree with every­thing every con­trib­u­tor has writ­ten. We’re just in it for the scene points. We espe­cial­ly wouldn’t encour­age any­one to do any­thing that might get them­selves in trou­ble with the law… Play safe kids!

Climate Rush at Heathrow 12th January

On Mon­day 12th Jan­u­ary 2009 at 7pm the Cli­mate Rush will hit Heathrow. We will arrive in Edwar­dian dress (under a big coat!) with ham­pers of food to have our ‘Din­ner at Domes­tic Depar­tures’. This will be an action against the con­struc­tion of the third run­way and the unsus­tain­able use of short-haul, nation­al flights.

Climate Rush at HeathrowOn Mon­day 12th Jan­u­ary 2009 at 7pm the Cli­mate Rush will hit Heathrow. We will arrive in Edwar­dian dress (under a big coat!) with ham­pers of food to have our ‘Din­ner at Domes­tic Depar­tures’. This will be an action against the con­struc­tion of the third run­way and the unsus­tain­able use of short-haul, nation­al flights. It will take place on the day that the MPs return from their win­ter hol­i­day.

When the string quar­tet plays its first note we will reveal our dress and share our food. Ours will be the first peace­ful sit-in of the envi­ron­men­tal move­ment. Hun­dreds will join us and togeth­er we will make his­to­ry. We have wait­ed too long and been mis­led too many times. It is time for us to take con­trol and to lead social change.

After a huge­ly suc­cess­ful storm­ing of Par­lia­ment, The Cli­mate Rush is back in town!

Any day now the gov­ern­ment will announce its plans to expand Heathrow and no amount of march­ing or let­ter-writ­ing will make them stop. Sip­son Vil­lage will be demol­ished. Mil­lions of Lon­don­ers will find them­selves under new flight-paths. The UK will con­tin­ue to lag behind the rest of Europe and the world as it miss­es cli­mate tar­get after cli­mate tar­get.

It is time to take our future into our own hands. It is time to take action.

You and all of your friends, net­works and neigh­bours are cor­dial­ly invit­ed to our ‘Din­ner at Domes­tic Depar­tures’, 7pm on Mon­day 12th Jan­u­ary at Heathrow Air­port Ter­mi­nal One. Join ‘The Cli­mate Rush’, ‘Cli­mate Action Now’, ‘The Wom­en’s Envi­ron­men­tal Net­work’ and Car­o­line Lucas MEP as we cel­e­brate the UK pub­lic’s com­mit­ment to beat­ing cli­mate change.

www.climaterush.co.uk

Plane Stupid protest shuts Stansted Airport

8.12.2008
Over fifty young pro­test­ers from the cli­mate action group Plane Stu­pid have this morn­ing shut down Stanst­ed Air­port by camp­ing on the run­way and sur­round­ing them­selves with for­ti­fied secu­ri­ty fenc­ing.

Stansted runway protest8.12.2008
Over fifty young pro­test­ers from the cli­mate action group Plane Stu­pid have this morn­ing shut down Stanst­ed Air­port by camp­ing on the run­way and sur­round­ing them­selves with for­ti­fied secu­ri­ty fenc­ing.

The peace­ful protest began at 3.15am this morn­ing (Mon­day) whilst the run­way was tem­porar­i­ly closed for main­te­nance work. Plane Stu­pid aims to pre­vent the sched­uled reopen­ing of the run­way at 5am. The group intends to main­tain its block­ade for as long as pos­si­ble, pre­vent­ing the release of thou­sands of tonnes of green­house gas emis­sions into the atmos­phere.

10:20am update: The Press Asso­ci­a­tion reports that 57 peo­ple have been arrest­ed, and 56 Ryanair flights can­celled.

8:10am update: At least 39 peo­ple have been arrest­ed and the run­way
re-opened. BAA are claim­ing that 21 flights have been can­celled. Every
minute the air­port emits around 4 tonnes of CO2.

6:00am update: BAA have con­firmed that the first flights out of the air­port have been delayed. The aver­age flight out of Stanst­ed has a cli­mate impact equiv­a­lent to 41.58 tonnes of CO2.

One young woman, Lily, aged 21 said:

“We’re here because our par­ents’ gen­er­a­tion has failed us and its now down to young peo­ple to stop cli­mate change by what­ev­er peace­ful means we have left. We’re afraid of what the police might do to us, we’re afraid of going to jail but noth­ing scares us as much as the threat of run­away cli­mate change. We’ve thought through the con­se­quences of what we’re doing here but we’re deter­mined to stop as many tonnes of CO2 as we can.”

The young cam­paign­ers have raised a ban­ner read­ing ‘CLIMATE EMERGENCY’. Wear­ing high vis­i­bil­i­ty vests which have the mes­sage “Please DO some­thing” print­ed on them, they chose this day for the peace­ful tres­pass as they knew the run­way was closed for main­te­nance works and no flights were due to take off or land for two hours after they arrived.

Tilly, 21, said:

“We all grew up lis­ten­ing to Blair and Brown talk­ing about the urgent need to slash emis­sions, but noth­ing ever hap­pened. Even now politi­cians from our par­ents’ gen­er­a­tion are in Poland hold­ing talks about talks, but still nobody’s actu­al­ly doing any­thing. The sci­en­tists tell us we’ve got about sev­en years to make emis­sions peak then drop, and if we fail it will be the peo­ple on this run­way, and our chil­dren, who’ll live with the con­se­quences. That’s why I’m doing this.”

The cam­paign­ers chose to close Stanst­ed after the gov­ern­ment approved the expan­sion of capac­i­ty at the air­port by ten mil­lion pas­sen­gers a year. Avi­a­tion is Britain’s fastest grow­ing source of emis­sions, already amount­ing to at least 13% of our coun­try’s cli­mate impact. With plans for new run­ways across the UK, includ­ing at Heathrow and Stanst­ed, experts from the Tyn­dall Cen­tre for cli­mate research say Labour’s avi­a­tion pol­i­cy alone will scup­per any chance the UK has of hit­ting its cli­mate tar­gets.

Daniel, 24, said:

“We ful­ly appre­ci­ate the scale of what we’ve done here today and we know many peo­ple will strug­gle to under­stand why we’ve done it, but the Arc­tic ice cap is dis­ap­pear­ing, the seas are ris­ing and our last chance to save our future is van­ish­ing. With peo­ple tak­ing more flights in Britain than any­where else on earth, we have a unique respon­si­bil­i­ty to tack­le emis­sions from fly­ing.”

Intruder enters E.ON power station and switches off 2% of UK supplies

Police have begun an inves­ti­ga­tion after pro­test­ers broke into one of Britain’s biggest pow­er sta­tions last week [28th Novem­ber 2008] and cut almost 2 per cent of the country’s elec­tric­i­ty sup­plies.

Police have begun an inves­ti­ga­tion after pro­test­ers broke into one of Britain’s biggest pow­er sta­tions last week [28th Novem­ber 2008] and cut almost 2 per cent of the country’s elec­tric­i­ty sup­plies.

Up to 500 megawatts of gen­er­at­ing capac­i­ty was lost from the nation­al net­work for about four hours after the inci­dent at Kingsnorth coal and oil-fired pow­er sta­tion in Kent, The Times has learnt. An intrud­er scaled an elec­tric fence, entered a secure area and switched off one of four tur­bines sup­ply­ing Lon­don and the South East.

E.ON, the Ger­man pow­er group that oper­ates the plant, is under­stood to sus­pect that some of its own staff or con­tract­ed employ­ees were involved in the inci­dent last Fri­day night.

Accord­ing to fig­ures from Nation­al Grid, total UK elec­tric­i­ty demand at the time was about 33,000 megawatts – mean­ing that 500 megawatts rep­re­sent­ed more than 1.5 per cent of the total, enough to pow­er a city the size of Bris­tol.

The pro­test­ers, who have not been caught despite much of the episode being caught on CCTV, climbed an elec­tric secu­ri­ty fence that was not work­ing at the time. Hav­ing switched off Unit Two, they left through an entrance that only employ­ees would have been famil­iar with. They also man­aged to go through a com­plex pro­ce­dure at a con­trol pan­el inside one of the tur­bine halls to turn the machin­ery off.

Kent police are involved in the inves­ti­ga­tion. E.ON has ordered an inter­nal inves­ti­ga­tion, and is exam­in­ing its own secu­ri­ty pro­ce­dures.

E.ON has become a key tar­get for cli­mate change pro­test­ers because Kingsnorth has been ear­marked for con­struc­tion of Britain’s first new coal-fired pow­er sta­tion in decades. The plant, which has a total gen­er­at­ing capac­i­ty of 1,960 megawatts, mak­ing it one of Britain’s biggest pow­er sta­tions, is to be retired from ser­vice soon and E.ON wants to build a £2 bil­lion coal replace­ment, which envi­ron­men­tal­ists say would lock in the emis­sion of many mil­lions of tonnes of green­house gas­es for decades to come.

Protest mes­sages were also left strewn across the tur­bine hall dur­ing the inci­dent.

An E.ON spokesman con­firmed that an inci­dent had tak­en place in which the site was entered ille­gal­ly and equip­ment was tam­pered with. “While we are respect­ful of people’s right to peace­ful and law­ful protest, this was clear­ly nei­ther of those and could have had very seri­ous impli­ca­tions, not least because of the poten­tial for seri­ous injury or worse. Thank­ful­ly, our site team respond­ed very quick­ly and pro­fes­sion­al­ly to ensure that the sit­u­a­tion was brought under con­trol.

“We have launched an inves­ti­ga­tion and are work­ing close­ly with the police on their inquiries. Kingsnorth pow­er sta­tion remains oper­a­tional.”

E.ON has defend­ed its plans for a coal-fired plant at Kingsnorth by say­ing that it would be fit­ted with equip­ment designed to strip out car­bon diox­ide for safe stor­age.

So-called car­bon cap­ture and stor­age (CCS) remains an exper­i­men­tal tech­nol­o­gy that has not yet been demon­strat­ed on a com­mer­cial scale any­where in the world.

– from The Times news­pa­per.

– or the below from BBC News; pick & mix the facts you pre­fer:

Intrud­er shuts down pow­er tur­bine

A tur­bine at a pow­er sta­tion in Kent where cli­mate change cam­paign­ers have been hold­ing a series of protests was shut down by an intrud­er.

Ener­gy com­pa­ny E.On said it believed who­ev­er shut down the tur­bine must have had spe­cial­ist knowl­edge to car­ry out the “poten­tial­ly dead­ly” sab­o­tage.

The shut-down hap­pened on the night of 28 Novem­ber dur­ing two days of action by the Camp for Cli­mate Action group.

How­ev­er, no organ­i­sa­tion or indi­vid­ual has claimed it turned off the tur­bine.

“We don’t know whether it was a pro­test­er or not,” said E.On spokesman Jonathan Smith.

“But they gained access to the site, tam­pered with a pret­ty spe­cif­ic board and man­aged to turn off unit two.

“It is com­plete­ly unac­cept­able. If you ignore the fact they have bro­ken into our site, what they were doing was poten­tial­ly dan­ger­ous, poten­tial­ly dead­ly even.”

Tar­get­ed offices

He said engi­neers locat­ed the prob­lem quick­ly and turned the tur­bine back on.

Cus­tomers were not affect­ed by the shut­down because the short­fall was made up by oth­er sup­pli­ers to the Nation­al Grid.

Dur­ing the two days of action, Camp for Cli­mate Action pro­test­ers tar­get­ed E.ON offices in Lon­don and across Eng­land.

It fol­lowed a week-long Cli­mate Camp near Kingsnorth pow­er sta­tion on the Hoo penin­su­lar in August.

The cur­rent Kingsnorth pow­er sta­tion is due to close in 2015 and E.ON wants to replace it with two new coal units, which it claims will be 20% clean­er.

Mr Smith said police were inves­ti­gat­ing the shut­down.

He said Kingsnorth was prob­a­bly the most secure coal-fired pow­er sta­tion in the UK.

“Secu­ri­ty at Kingsnorth is extreme­ly high,” he said.

“We are look­ing at secu­ri­ty and work­ing with police to make sure this can’t hap­pen again.”

– from The Guardian news­pa­per:

“It was extreme­ly odd indeed, quite creepy. We have nev­er known any­thing like this at all, but it shows that if peo­ple want to do some­thing bad­ly enough they will find a way,” said Emi­ly High­more, a spokes­woman for E.On.

Yes­ter­day the full sto­ry emerged of what hap­pened. “It was about 10pm, very dark indeed,” said High­more. “It looks from the CCTV like he came in via a very remote part of the site by the sea wall and got over the dou­ble lay­er of fences.”

The intrud­er then crossed a car park and walked to an unlocked door. But instead of going to the pow­er sta­tion’s main con­trol room, where about eight peo­ple would have been work­ing, he head­ed for its main tur­bine hall, where no one would have been work­ing at that time.

With­in min­utes, says E.On, “he had tam­pered with some equip­ment” — believed to be a com­put­er at a con­trol pan­el — “and tripped unit 2, one of the sta­tion’s giant 500MW tur­bines”.

“This caused the unit to go offline,” she added. “It was run­ning at full 500MW load and the noise it would have made as it shut itself down is just incred­i­ble. CCTV shows that he then just walked out, and went back over the fence.

“It could be that no one has tak­en respon­si­bil­i­ty because they were so fright­ened by the noise it would have made. It’s prob­a­bly tak­en them a week just to get over the shock.”

“He left a ban­ner but it was a real DIY job. It was real­ly scrap­py. This was an old bed­sheet with writ­ing done out of gaffer tape. It was very crude,” said High­more

“Peo­ple at the sta­tion are gob­s­macked,” she added. “This is a dif­fer­ent league to pro­test­ers chain­ing them­selves to equip­ment. It’s some­one treat­ing a pow­er sta­tion as an adven­ture play­ground. You have to be trained to work here. Peo­ple do not just wan­der about on their own. He could have killed him­self. We do not have a prob­lem with pub­lic protest but this was reck­less. Who­ev­er it was has crossed a line they should not have gone over. Pow­er sta­tions are dan­ger­ous places.”

(full arti­cle)

McTrial Cambridge – This Monday!

An all day tri­al so get some McDon­alds Burg­ers in!

When : 8th Dec 08, 10 a.m.

Where: Cam­bridge Mag­is­trates Court
12 St. Andrews Street,
Cam­bridge

What: Back in June an activist was arrest­ed on a walk in protest at McDon­alds. The activist is charged under Sec­tion 5 of the Pub­lic Order Act.

An all day tri­al so get some McDon­alds Burg­ers in!

McDonalds World Food Day protest CambridgeWhen : 8th Dec 08, 10 a.m.

Where: Cam­bridge Mag­is­trates Court
12 St. Andrews Street,
Cam­bridge

What: Back in June an activist was arrest­ed on a walk in protest at McDon­alds. The activist is charged under Sec­tion 5 of the Pub­lic Order Act.

See http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/cambridge/2008/06/401637.html

Why: You may very well ask that?

Any sup­port appre­ci­at­ed!

Tyres of luxury cars ventilated

Decem­ber 5th 2008
This night the action Air gone! start­ed to flat­ten the tyres of lux­u­ry cars as a con­tri­bu­tion to the cli­mate action day to paral­yse cli­mate killers.

German CO2 exhaust imageDecem­ber 5th 2008
This night the action Air gone! start­ed to flat­ten the tyres of lux­u­ry cars as a con­tri­bu­tion to the cli­mate action day to paral­yse cli­mate killers.

While the cli­mate alliance calls for pro­mo­tion par­o­dies against the green­wash­ing of the com­pa­nies, rad­i­cal cli­mate activists went a bit fur­ther that night.

In dif­fer­ent cities the tyres of expen­sive jeeps and sports cars were ven­ti­lat­ed. Aim of the action is not only car­bon expul­sion, but also to put on the agen­da the social and glob­al injus­tices con­nect­ed to cli­mate change, the group call­ing for the action explained. The biggest amount of emis­sions are caused by the indus­tri­al states — and, as it is made more than

clear by the exam­ple of lux­u­ry cars, it is main­ly the rich here as well — while the coun­tries in the South are most affect­ed already by the effects of cli­mate change.

Fly­ers were left at the cars explain­ing the actiond and demand­ing from the own­ers to immidi­ate­ly shut them down per­ma­nent­ly.

Sim­i­lar actions hap­pened a year ago in Berlin and aroused a lot of pub­lic atten­tion. This year the news­pa­per taz report­ed about the call to the action.

Mean­while the world cli­mate sum­mit dis­cussed about a fol­low-up of the Kyoto Pro­to­col in Poz­nan (Con­fer­ence of the par­tied COP 14), pro­duc­ing noth­ing but hot air, as a lot of cli­mate activists think. Back­ground info and state­ments from a semi-crit­i­cal NGO per­spec­tive on wir-klimaretter.de. For the fol­low­ing sum­mit in Decem­ber 2009 an inter­na­tion­al mobi­liza­tion was already start­ed by the rad­i­cal leftb from Den­mark (Ung­domshuset-Scene) as well as b y sozial move­ments from the glob­al south like Via Campesina

http://luftraus.wordpress.com

Students roll out red carpet for RBS greenwash award show

Stu­dents from Man­ches­ter Peo­ple and Plan­et groups host­ed an awards cer­e­mo­ny and award­ed the Roy­al Bank of Scot­land with the pres­ti­gious “2008 Green­wash Award”.

RBS Greenwash awardsStu­dents from Man­ches­ter Peo­ple and Plan­et groups host­ed an awards cer­e­mo­ny and award­ed the Roy­al Bank of Scot­land with the pres­ti­gious “2008 Green­wash Award”.

On Wednes­day 3rd Decem­ber stu­dents of Man­ches­ter host­ed an elab­o­rate awards cer­e­mo­ny out­side the Roy­al Bank of Scot­land offices. At 2pm, around 50 stu­dents wear­ing evening suits and ball gowns, rolled out a red car­pet and set up a podi­um. The pre­sen­ter bound­ed up onto the stage to begin the pro­ceed­ings.

After Oscars style nom­i­na­tions in which E.On, BP, Shell and BAA were announced as run­ners up, RBS was declared the win­ner of the 2008 Green­wash Award show.[1] A mock rep­re­sen­ta­tive from RBS’ Cor­po­rate Social Respon­si­bil­i­ty sec­tor call­ing him­self ‘Gra­ham Wascha’ then gave a very enter­tain­ing yet poignant speech about RBS’ green­wash. He was reward­ed with a gold­en stat­ue and a large cheque con­grat­u­lat­ing their mas­sive invest­ments in indus­tries that accel­er­ate cli­mate change.[2]

RBS-NatWest have fund­ed almost $16billion for coal com­pa­nies and explo­ration projects from May 2006 to April 2008[3], yet their green­wash claims that they are financ­ing a tran­si­tion to a low car­bon econ­o­my. [4][5]

This award show was part of a series of actions by stu­dents from the cam­paign­ing group Peo­ple and Plan­et against RBS and oth­er big dri­vers of cli­mate change. It fol­lows a recent action by Man­ches­ter stu­dents against RBS and E.On which saw over 50 stu­dents demon­strat­ing at a busi­ness recruit­ment fair. [6][7]

Quotes:

Abi­gail Dil­li­way, 21, pri­ma­ry edu­ca­tion stu­dent at Man­ches­ter Met­ro­pol­i­tan Uni­ver­si­ty says “I have cho­sen to take part in this action because I believe that RBS have com­mit­ted a green­wash atroc­i­ty. They have cho­sen to only cel­e­brate their invest­ment in renew­ables whilst fail­ing to com­pre­hend their invest­ment in fos­sil fuels and thus the dev­as­tat­ing envi­ron­men­tal impli­ca­tions of their actions.”

Alex Foun­tain, 20, busi­ness stud­ies stu­dent at Man­ches­ter Met­ro­pol­i­tan Uni­ver­si­ty says, “RBS claims to be com­mit­ted to a long-term tran­si­tion to a low car­bon econ­o­my yet con­tin­ues to mas­sive­ly fund fos­sil fuel infra­struc­tures. This will lock us into high emis­sions for many decades to come and jeop­ar­dise any attempts to stop run­away cli­mate change.”

ENDS

Notes to the edi­tor:

1. Green­wash – “Green­wash (a port­man­teau of green and white­wash) is a term used to describe the per­cep­tion of con­sumers that they are being mis­led by a com­pa­ny regard­ing the envi­ron­men­tal prac­tices of the com­pa­ny or the envi­ron­men­tal ben­e­fits of a prod­uct or ser­vice. It is a decep­tive use of green PR or green mar­ket­ing.”

Wikipedia — http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenwash

2. Cli­mate change is the biggest threat to a secure future cur­rent­ly fac­ing human­i­ty. If cur­rent trends con­tin­ue, aver­age glob­al tem­per­a­tures could rise by 6.4˚C by the end of the cen­tu­ry with dev­as­tat­ing and per­ma­nent results for the plan­et. — “Sum­ma­ry for Pol­i­cy­mak­ers”, Inter­gov­ern­men­tal Pan­el on Cli­mate Change, 2007

3. RBS is respon­si­ble for $15.93 bil­lion worth of loans from May 2006 to April 2008 to com­pa­nies engaged in loans to com­pa­nies engaged in the extrac­tion and/or com­bus­tion of coal. — http://www.oyalbankofscotland.com/cioc/pdf/cashinginoncoal.pdf

4. In 2007 RBS’ embed­ded emis­sions (emis­sion due to its invest­ments) was over 43 mil­lion tonnes, more than Scot­land — PLATFORM, ‘The Oil and Gas Bank – RBS & the financ­ing of cli­mate change’, http://www.carbonweb.org/documents/Oil_&_Gas_Bank.pdf

5. RBS claim that they only lend to projects that con­form to the high­est envi­ron­men­tal and social stan­dards yet finances some of the dirt­i­est and most dan­ger­ous oil & gas projects, includ­ing the Baku-Tbil­isi-Cey­han pipeline from Azer­bai­jan to Turkey crit­i­cised by the WWF and Friends of the Earth for its human rights and pol­lu­tion impacts.

Videos: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qPLW2H88q7g
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Xm0q9_CfRw

London Critical Mass report (& recent legal ruling), & Exeter CM announcement

In the week of the law lords’ final rul­ing on the legal sta­tus of crit­i­cal mass, fri­day night saw around 200 cyclists brave the damp and cold to take part in the “com­mon­ly or cus­tom­ar­i­ly held pro­ces­sion” — for the third month in a

London Critical Mass penny farthingsIn the week of the law lords’ final rul­ing on the legal sta­tus of crit­i­cal mass, fri­day night saw around 200 cyclists brave the damp and cold to take part in the “com­mon­ly or cus­tom­ar­i­ly held pro­ces­sion” — for the third month in a row, no police direct­ly accom­pa­nied the ride. the ride itself was most­ly fun and smooth-going, but there was a col­li­sion at mar­ble arch that marred an oth­er­wise suc­ces­ful evening.

the mass went over water­loo bridge and then along the strand to white­hall and par­lia­ment square. after a few cir­cles there, the next stop was out­side new scot­land yard, where a very loud cycle sound sys­tem noti­fied their pres­ence to the police (along with chants of “one-nil, one-nil”). mov­ing on past buck­ing­ham palace and round the back streets of pic­cadil­ly, there was a brief stop at pic­cadil­ly cir­cus.

this is the third month with­out direct police accom­pa­ni­ment, and it seems each time the mass is get­ting bet­ter at con­trol­ling itself and oth­er road traf­fic for the safe­ty and ben­e­fit of all. it seemed that almost every­one was empow­ered to have a go at ‘cork­ing’ (block­ing incom­ing side roads at junc­tions to stop motor vehi­cles from min­gling with the mass). if done firm­ly and polite­ly, the road is kept clear for the whole mass to pass, and then the incon­ve­nience to oth­er motorists is min­imised and the cyclists keep mov­ing safe­ly and freely. also, the front rid­ers stopped every now and then to allow the mass to regroup. mean­while pedes­tri­ans were often catered for and let through at cross­ings etc.

there were an array of dif­fer­ent bikes too, with a cou­ple of mod­ern pen­ny far­things, a very tall ‘dou­ble deck­er’ bike (whose rid­er was heard now and then shout­ing for peo­ple to keep mov­ing — it was a long way down!!), there was a rick­shaw, and at least two sound sys­tems.

after a damp start, the rain held off, things were going smooth­ly until at mar­ble arch, a bicy­cle was hit by an irate motorist who had been briefly held up by a ‘cork’ at the top of park lane and then decid­ed to dri­ve like a lunatic. as sev­er­al cyclists went to aid, the dri­ver at first tried to dri­ve from the scene of the acci­dent, then scraped his own car door by push­ing it hard open against a near­by bicy­cle, and then assault­ed the cyclist by pok­ing him in the eye.

sev­er­al rid­ers kept the car sur­round­ed until police arrived. the first cops were from char­ing cross, and they seemed to be very much on the side of the motorist, even sug­gest­ing that they’d arrest the cyclist who was assault­ed! after a while some padding­ton offi­cers turned up, and act­ed more pro­fes­sion­al­ly, tak­ing details of the var­i­ous wit­ness­es, and even­tu­al­ly arrest­ing and hand­cuff­ing the crazy dri­ver.

a shout out to the cyclists that stuck around to help. next mass on box­ing day — meet (as cus­tom­ar­i­ly!) under water­loo bridge on the south bank at 6–6.30pm (last fri­day of every month)

Since 1994, Lon­don cyclists have been gath­er­ing every sin­gle month to cycle, par­ty and assert their right to the road — the famous Crit­i­cal Mass. 

Amidst oth­er police tac­tics aim­ing to break the d.i.y spir­it of the event, the Police attempt­ed to ban the ride in Sep­tem­ber 2005. The court case and oblig­a­tory appeals that ensued last­ed for 3 years until the 26th of Novem­ber 2008 when the Law Lords ruled in favour of Lon­don Crit­i­cal Mass. A vic­to­ry for Lon­don — but an unclear result for oth­er Crit­i­cal Mass­es around the coun­try.

The Crit­i­cal Mass bicy­cle ride has been going on in Lon­don since 1994 — a month­ly gath­er­ing of cyclist who cycle togeth­er through Lon­don with no planned route and no defined lead­ers or organ­is­ers.

In Sep­tem­ber 1995, the police effec­tive­ly tried to ban Crit­i­cal Mass by claim­ing it was an ille­gal pro­ces­sion, and that the organ­is­ers had to inform the police of the route ahead of the event. This is an exerpt from the leaflet they dis­trib­uted on that occa­sion :

“…Police can impose con­di­tions on pro­ces­sions, demon­stra­tions and oth­er assem­blies, and par­tic­i­pants ren­der them­selves liable to arrest if they fail to com­ply with those con­di­tions. These cycle protests are not law­ful because no organ­is­er has pro­vid­ed police the with the nec­es­sary noti­fi­ca­tion. Your par­tic­i­pa­tion in this event could ren­der you liable to pros­e­cu­tion. Police pol­i­cy in facil­i­tat­ing these events is cur­rent­ly under review…”

It may be dif­fi­cult for the police to accept it, but it is a well known fact that Crit­i­cal Mass has no set organ­is­ers. While some may print leaflets and oth­ers host a web­site, it’s a spon­ta­neous event ; peo­ple just show up on the last Fri­day of the month and ride togeth­er, any­one can go at the front and sug­gest ite­nar­ies. Claim­ing that Crit­i­cal Mass is organ­ised is like claim­ing that traf­fic jams are organ­ised. By their let­ter, the police refused cyclist the sta­tus of ‘traf­fic’ — one of Crit­i­cal Mass’ aim being to show that cyclists are traf­fic and should be allowed to use the road as much as cars.

The Octo­ber 2005 mass saw one of the biggest turnout ever in Lon­don — show­ing how many peo­ple care about Crit­i­cal Mass, and that peo­ple would not let the police stop it. Soon after, Des Key and Friends of the Earth start­ed a court case against the police.

The court case took sev­er­al years and went up to the House of Lords before fin­ish­ing, on the 26th of Novem­ber 2008, rul­ing in favour of crit­i­cal mass. The rul­ing stat­ed that Crit­i­cal Mass was cus­tom­ary, and there­fore did not need to apply for per­mis­sion, or to inform the police.

The rul­ing how­ev­er sug­gests that Crit­i­cal Mass is a pro­ces­sion — refus­ing the idea that cyclist are traf­fic. As such it is not clear how the rul­ing may be used in the future for peo­ple set­ting up new Crit­i­cal Mass­es around the UK who will not be able to claim these are cus­tom­ary events.

Police has been a reg­u­lar fea­ture at Crit­i­cal Mass for the past 3 or 4 years — occa­sion­aly pro­tect­ing cyclists from angry dri­vers, but always try­ing to man­age the ride, shout­ing at peo­ple who tried to do it them­selves and gen­er­al­ly being intim­i­dat­ing towards peo­ple who showed any form of ini­tia­tive. The police were try­ing to trans­form Crit­i­cal Mass into some­thing they could under­stand : an event where par­tic­i­pants are sheep­ish and sim­ply do as the organ­is­ers tell them to do.

It is unclear whether it is relat­ed to this judg­ment, the leav­ing of Ian Blair or oth­er inter­nal police mat­ters, but the police has not been at Crit­i­cal Mass for the past two months. Now that the judge­ment has ruled  in favor of Crit­i­cal Mass, they have even less of a rea­son for show­ing up — and we are going to have to re-learn how to man­age this event our­selves prop­er­ly.

Exeter Crit­i­cal Mass — meet 12.00 on Cathe­dral Green on Sat­ur­day Decem­ber 6th. To get in the mood come along to a screen­ing of “We are traf­fic” at Exeter Phoenix on Thurs­day Decem­ber 4th at 19.00

Thurs­day Decem­ber 4th@ 7.00 — We are Traf­fic Screen­ing -
Exeter Phoenix , Brad­ninch Place, Gandy St, Exeter,

We Are Traf­fic! chron­i­cles the his­to­ry and devel­op­ment of the “Crit­i­cal Mass” bicy­cle move­ment– one of the most spir­it­ed and dynam­ic social/political move­ments of the apa­thet­ic 90’s. In over 200 cities in 14 dif­fer­ent coun­tries, Crit­i­cal Mass has now become a month­ly rit­u­al.

With traf­fic con­ges­tion, pol­lu­tion, and road rage on the rise, grow­ing num­bers around the world are advo­cat­ing for trans­porta­tion alter­na­tives, and Crit­i­cal Mass is at the cut­ting edge of this mind­set.

Show­ing in the Black Box Film, every­one wel­come to stay after to talk about future events/critical mass­es etc and maybe for a drink at North­bridge Inn

Snacks pro­vid­ed — feel free to bring more snacks though!

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Exeter Crit­i­cal Mass — Sat­ur­day 6th Decem­ber @ 12.00 Cathe­dral Green, Exeter -

Xmas Theme option­al — dec­o­rate your bikes!

WHAT’S IS ALL ABOUT?
Crit­i­cal Mass is often described as an ‘unor­gan­ised coin­ci­dence’. It hap­pens when a lot of cyclists hap­pen to be in the same place at the same time and decide to cycle the same way togeth­er for a while

WHAT’S THE PURPOSE?
“Every­day, all over the world, peo­ple are resist­ing the prob­lem cul­ture of the car by get­ting on their bikes and rid­ing, instead of dri­ving.

Crit­i­cal Mass is a cel­e­bra­tion of the alter­na­tives to cars, pol­lu­tion, acci­dents and the loss of pub­lic spaces and free­doms.

Not an organ­i­sa­tion or group, but an idea or tac­tic, Crit­i­cal Mass allows peo­ple to reclaim cities with their bikes, just by get­ting togeth­er and out-num­ber­ing the cars on the road”

WHAT HAPPENS ON A CRITICAL MASS?
Each one is dif­fer­ent and they fol­low no set route, with the direc­tion being spon­ta­neous­ly cho­sen as peo­ple cycle along. Any­one is free to join or leave the ride as it ped­als along.

The ride lasts no more than a cou­ple of hours (depend­ing on the weath­er!) and usu­al­ly ends in a con­ve­nient­ly placed pub for more drinks.

Most all, they are peace­ful, safe and fun!

DO I NEED A BIKE?
Nope! Crit­i­cal Mass is not just for bikes — skate­boards, roller blades, wheel­chairs, pogo sticks — in fact any form of non-motorised, non-pol­lut­ing are all very wel­come!