upcoming events at the Black Cat occupied community social centre

Lift­ed from the Black Cat cen­tre blog [blackcatcentre.blogspot.com]:

“The Black Cat occu­pied com­mu­ni­ty social cen­tre is cur­rent­ly homed at the
for­mer Porter Butt pub­lic house on Lon­don Road, Bath, oppo­site the E$$o
sta­tion and next door to Mor­risons. We still have a lot of work to do,
clean­ing and set­ting things up — vol­un­teers always appre­ci­at­ed to the lev­el

Lift­ed from the Black Cat cen­tre blog [blackcatcentre.blogspot.com]:

“The Black Cat occu­pied com­mu­ni­ty social cen­tre is cur­rent­ly homed at the
for­mer Porter Butt pub­lic house on Lon­don Road, Bath, oppo­site the E$$o
sta­tion and next door to Mor­risons. We still have a lot of work to do,
clean­ing and set­ting things up — vol­un­teers always appre­ci­at­ed to the lev­el
of mad, over­bear­ing pup­py enthu­si­as­tic ado­ra­tion, slob­ber and all (nap­kins
pro­vid­ed) — but already have a cou­ple of events lined up:

Tues­days, from 6.15–7.30pm, week­ly free yoga class­es are back on, so come
soak up the authen­tic wood floor­ing and chilled late spring sun­light,
spir­i­tu­al one-ness an’ all

Wednes­day 5th May will present ‘Nev­er Mind the Vote, Here’s the Folk’: an
evening of anti-folk, folk-rap & faux folk with ‘The Casu­al Ter­ror­ist’
(anar­cho anti-folk from New­cas­tle), ‘Clay­ton Bliz­zard’ (Briz­zle’s own chub­by
gui­tar-wield­ing, word­smith vir­tu­oso), and ‘Madame Hat­ter’ (the Black Cat’s
own miss-fit, deca­dence plumb­ing, answer to a very sil­ly ques­tion); run­ning
from 7.30pm-11pm, £3 sug­gest­ed dona­tion entry (though no one turned away for
lack of funds), there will also be cheap veg­an food, and a poten­tial free CD
of one sort or anoth­er for every punter

Sat­ur­day the 8th of May will fea­ture the sec­ond incar­na­tion of Madame
Hat­ter’s ‘Scabrous Cabaret’, at 21.03 hours, free entry, a wide open stage
night for what­ev­er per­for­mances peo­ple can bring, with DJish col­lab­o­ra­tion
from DJ Stoney Mon­ster and DJ Beav­is — dub/dancehall/Balkan beats: “Should
you be prud­ish pud­dings, freak frogs, veg­an vul­tures, break­fast brutes and
funky fruits, bang poets or junk poets or even plain poets, blue cab­bages
and pink trum­pets, mer­ry-go-round trav­ellers or mag­ic round­about surfers and
hul­la-hoop singers, stu­dious stu­dents and naughty rodents, squat­ter­pil­lars
or passers-by, fun­ny flap­ping flow­ers or bloom­ing but­ter­flies, par­ty peo­ple
or burst­ing bub­bles, the usu­al crows and so many more if you’re hun­gry for
the encore, you are all invit­ed to the new edi­tion of Madame Hat­ter’s
scabrous cabaret for a night of sweet delir­i­um open to all sorts of
per­form­ers, artists, poets, sto­ry-tellers… She’s slim and slimy and could eas­i­ly break into your pipery, Beware of Madame Hat­ter coz’ of deca­dence she’s the plumber…”

And fol­low­ing on from that friv­o­li­ty, but in no way less­ened by it, will be
the Bris­tol & Bath Ris­ing Tide meet­ing — a cam­paign­ing group mak­ing a name
for itself tak­ing direct action against the root caus­es of cli­mate
injus­tice, from 7pm — all wel­come

Events at this cur­rent loca­tion will prob­a­bly come to a close fol­low­ing this, as we are due in Bath Coun­ty Court defend­ing against Julian Richer’s pos­ses­sion claim on Fri­day the 7th May. C’est la vie

love, rage and kit­ty lit­ty”

heavies sent in to rampart at globe road — join us tomorrow at noon.

A bunch of heav­ies broke into the ram­part social cen­tre’s new loca­tion on 105 Globe Road tonight (fri­day, 23 April) at 10:30 pm. There were about 20 of us here watch­ing films. The goons left, but said they want­ed every­one out of build­ing by 2 pm tomor­row.

A bunch of heav­ies broke into the ram­part social cen­tre’s new loca­tion on 105 Globe Road tonight (fri­day, 23 April) at 10:30 pm. There were about 20 of us here watch­ing films. The goons left, but said they want­ed every­one out of build­ing by 2 pm tomor­row.

We invite every­one, and their cam­eras, to come down and join us to wel­come them. Come down at noon.

A bunch of heav­ies broke into the ram­part social cen­tre’s new loca­tion on 105 Globe Road tonight at 10:30 pm. There were about 20 of us here watch­ing films. The goons left, but said they want­ed every­one out of build­ing by 2 pm tomor­row.

We invite every­one, and their cam­eras, to come down and join us to wel­come them. Come down at noon.

rampart@mutualaid.org

Oxford Action Resource Centre celebrates 5 years of radical organising!

Since 2005, Oxford Action Resource Cen­tre (OARC) has been a part of the local activist land­scape: a social space, meet­ing venue, office and shared library for cam­paign­ers,

OCSET 1OCSET 2 evictionOARC reading roomSince 2005, Oxford Action Resource Cen­tre (OARC) has been a part of the local activist land­scape: a social space, meet­ing venue, office and shared library for cam­paign­ers, activists, agi­ta­tors and com­mu­ni­ty groups.

It was set up fol­low­ing a series of squatted/rented social cen­tres which took place in 2004. (Links to the full his­to­ry below).

Now we are cel­e­brat­ing 5 years of OARC with a week of birth­day events!

—————————————————————————
Sat 24th — 12–4pm
*** Drop-in ses­sion ***
Find out more about OARC, see the space, meet some of the peo­ple involved.

Sun 25th — 4pm-7pm
*** ‘OARC: Where Next?’ dis­cus­sion + meal ***
Learn about OAR­C’s his­to­ry, get involved in shap­ing its future.

Sun 25th — 7:30pm
*** Film: Estrate­gia del Cara­col ***
Sol­i­dar­i­ty, sur­vival and satire in the Colom­bian city of Bogo­ta.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0109747/

Tues 27th — 6:30pm
*** Play!Fight! dis­cus­sion ***
A dis­cus­sion of kinky sex­u­al­i­ty and its inter­ac­tion with rad­i­cal activism.
http://radicalx.ox4.org/playfight

Wed 28th — 7pm
*** Com­mu­ni­ty meal and games ***
Tasty veg­an food, good com­pa­ny, fun games + the ‘activist pub quiz’.

Thurs 29th — 5pm-8pm
*** Drop-in ses­sion ***
Find out more about OARC, see the space, meet some of the peo­ple involved.

Fri 30th — 7pm-late
*** Birth­day Par­ty! ***
A cel­e­bra­tion of 5 years of OARC!
—————————————————————————

OARC is upstairs at E. Oxf. Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre, Cow­ley Rd, OX4 1HU.
http://openstreetmap.com/?mlat=51.7483&mlon=-1.2377&zoom=16

All wel­come! See:
http://theoarc.org.uk/cal/
…for more details!

—————————————————————————

A Brief his­to­ry of OCSET / LOG / OARC:

OCSET One (Cow­ley Rd social cen­tre 06/04/04–07/05/04):
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/04/288643.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/04/288540.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/04/288579.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/04/288609.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/04/289225.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/04/289231.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/04/289286.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/04/289535.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/04/289887.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/04/290133.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/05/290808.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/05/290857.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/05/290863.html

OCSET Two (tem­po­rary loca­tion, May 2004):
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/05/291202.html

OCSET Three (St Clements social cen­tre 19/05/04–04/06/04):
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/05/291843.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/05/291870.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/05/291908.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/05/291949.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/05/292139.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/06/292753.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2004/06/292770.html

LOG (rent­ed house — mixed resisidential/social space):
Between Novem­ber 2004 and March 2005 the project got some fund­ing and exper­i­ment­ed with a rent­ed house, which was half used as meeting/social cen­tre and half occu­pied by res­i­dents. There are no arti­cles from this time because we had to keep it fair­ly qui­et that it was being used as any­thing oth­er than a res­i­den­tial house. We decid­ed that it did­n’t work well to mix pri­vate space and social cen­tre space in this way, though the place con­tin­ued as a big com­mu­nal activist house.

OARC opens! (March/April 2005):
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2005/03/307657.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2005/03/307775.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/oxford/2005/04/309551.html

BRISTOL ECO VILLAGE EVICTION UPDATE

The baliffs, hav­ing been served notice that their attempt­ed evic­tion would be ille­gal under com­mon and crim­i­nal law, failed to show. How­ev­er, response to the emer­gency call out was good. It is expect­ed that there will be anoth­er attempt in the not too dis­tant future, which will also, of course, resist­ed.

Thanks to every­one who did respond, and please be ready to respond to future calls.

The baliffs, hav­ing been served notice that their attempt­ed evic­tion would be ille­gal under com­mon and crim­i­nal law, failed to show. How­ev­er, response to the emer­gency call out was good. It is expect­ed that there will be anoth­er attempt in the not too dis­tant future, which will also, of course, resist­ed.

Thanks to every­one who did respond, and please be ready to respond to future calls.

Emergency Callout — Bristol Eco Village Facing ILLEGAL Eviction Tomorrow Morning

20.4.10
There will be an ille­gal evic­tion attempt on the Bris­tol Eco Vil­lage tomor­row morn­ing at about 11, just 5 days after site was set up. This will be resist­ed. We need as many peo­ple as pos­si­ble down there to wit­ness the ille­gal attempt and help resist. For prac­ti­cal rea­sons there must be no vio­lence or even abu­sive behav­iour.

20.4.10
There will be an ille­gal evic­tion attempt on the Bris­tol Eco Vil­lage tomor­row morn­ing at about 11, just 5 days after site was set up. This will be resist­ed. We need as many peo­ple as pos­si­ble down there to wit­ness the ille­gal attempt and help resist. For prac­ti­cal rea­sons there must be no vio­lence or even abu­sive behav­iour.

They’ve screwed it up mas­sive­ly so IT IS ILLEGAL. Because of this there are mas­sive­ly pow­er­ful legal chan­nels to go through — all of which are com­pro­mised con­sid­er­ably if there is any vio­lence or even abu­sive behav­iour (includ­ing yelling at bailiffs). Please please as a spe­cial request from the vil­lagers DO NOT BE VIOLENT OR ABUSIVE as this may com­pro­mise the legal sit­u­a­tion which could well save the vil­lage. Pas­sive resis­tance is warm­ly encour­aged. Please under­stand this is not an ide­o­log­i­cal attack upon vio­lence, this is a prac­ti­cal reac­tion to the sit­u­a­tion we are in.

Evic­tion is sched­uled for 11 but it’s always a good idea to get down there long before the giv­en time. Loca­tion BS2 9SH: http://wtp2.appspot.com/wheresthepath.htm?lat=51.469250…oz=10>=1

Bristol Eco Village Now Open!

17.4.10
After many months of plan­ning and prepa­ra­tion the eco vil­lage was opened today around 12noon. Come down and vis­it if you can. Bring sup­plies as well if you can such as bed­ding cut­lery and tools such as ham­mers, nail, axes and saws.

17.4.10
After many months of plan­ning and prepa­ra­tion the eco vil­lage was opened today around 12noon. Come down and vis­it if you can. Bring sup­plies as well if you can such as bed­ding cut­lery and tools such as ham­mers, nail, axes and saws.

The vil­lage is in St Wer­burghs, 5 min­utes’ walk from Sta­ple­ton Road sta­tion (2 stops from Tem­ple Meads) at Junc­tion 3 of the M32. There’s two entrances — one on Gat­ton Road if you duck the bar­ri­er, and the oth­er on Sax­on Road but for now you have to get through a hole in the fence.

Today a group of a few dozen young eco activists gath­ered at 11am at the city cen­tre out­side the Hip­po­drome under the watch­ful eye of the police and moved in two groups, a cycling group and a walk­ing group to a cho­sen site in Bris­tol to devel­op an eco vil­lage. They arrived at the waste ground between Sax­on Road and Sims scrap yard in St Wer­burghs and entered the site.

The idea was inspired by the Kew Bridge Eco Vil­lage The aim is no less than to build an eco-vil­lage com­mu­ni­ty based entire­ly on sus­tain­able tech­nol­o­gy and con­struc­tion tech­niques. Two of the orga­niz­ers, Tim Har­ris and Leah Richards start­ed plan­ning and net­work­ing at the start of the year lead­ing to todays action. Peo­ple have come from Bris­tol and the local area but also places such as Glas­ton­bury and Lon­don.

The group leaflet­ed local res­i­dences in Sax­on Road and neigh­bour­ing streets to let peo­ple know of their plans for an urban cen­tre for alter­na­tive tech­nol­o­gy. They stat­ed that they chose this site because it has been unused for years and is filled with haz­ardous rub­bish and fre­quent­ed by hard drug users. It is next to Sims Met­al Man­age­men­t’s Bris­tol scrap yard, which has been plagued with arson­ist fires of the scrap cars there.

They have already start­ed to clean up the rub­bish on the site and plan to have it removed by skip. They have set up tents and aim to estab­lish a kitchen ben­der, com­post loos and oth­er struc­tures. The claim they will use per­ma­cul­ture prin­ci­ples to devel­op some of the land for grow­ing, keep the exist­ing wild­space and con­struct on the hard stand­ing.

Their plan is to oper­ate an ambi­tious no drink no drugs pol­i­cy on the site, with vans and ampli­fied music also being exclud­ed. Their aim is to demon­strate sus­tain­able liv­ing. Their web­site is here and face­book site here. Local film mak­er Ben Edwards pro­duced a short film relat­ed to this here

They are invit­ing peo­ple to come down and get involved and hope to run work­shops in the future.

This derelict site already has been giv­en full plan­ning per­mis­sion by Chancery­gate (Gat­ton Rd Ltd) on 25th Feb­ru­ary 2009 to put up a devel­op­ment of 12 indus­tri­al units with car park­ing, land­scap­ing and access. See here . This per­mis­sion would expire on 25th Feb­ru­ary 2012 if not act­ed upon. There has been a cer­tain amount of oppo­si­tion from local res­i­dents regard­ing this plan with one of the con­cerns being the traf­fic gen­er­at­ed by the devel­op­ment of indus­tri­al units and con­cerns for the wildlife areas of the site.

Upcoming action dates & activist gatherings, 2010 — updated

scroll down for lat­est dates…

8–10 Octo­ber 2010
Earth First! tree plant­i­ng week­end — Treespon­si­bil­i­ty

10 Octo­ber 2010
Glas­gow air­port shut-down action

12 Octo­ber 2010

scroll down for lat­est dates…

8–10 Octo­ber 2010
Earth First! tree plant­i­ng week­end — Treespon­si­bil­i­ty

10 Octo­ber 2010
Glas­gow air­port shut-down action

12 Octo­ber 2010
Glob­al Min­ga for Moth­er Earth

12–16 Octo­ber 2010
Direct Action for Cli­mate Jus­tice, CJA call-out

13 Octo­ber 2010
It’s Ham­mer­time! — Smash EDO

16 Octo­ber 2010
Crude Awak­en­ing — big oil day of action in Lon­don City

23–24 Octo­ber 2010
Stop Nuclear Pow­er Net­work UK Gath­er­ing, Bris­tol

10–12 Decem­ber 2010
Earth First! tree plant­i­ng week­end — Treespon­si­bil­i­ty

=========

Old dates from this cal­en­dar:

2010

15–17 Jan­u­ary 2010
Peace News Win­ter Gath­er­ing, Not­ting­ham

23–26 Jan­u­ary 2010
Main­shill Pre-Evic­tion Gath­er­ing

5–7 Feb­ru­ary 2010
EF! Win­ter Moot, North East Eng­land

12–14 Feb­ru­ary 2010
UK Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Gath­er­ing, Not­ting­ham

19–21 Feb­ru­ary 2010
Camp for Cli­mate Action nation­al ‘where next?’ gath­er­ing, Bris­tol — region­al ones hap­pen­ing over Jan­u­ary & Feb­ru­ary (details here)

26–28 Feb­ru­ary 2010
No Bor­ders Win­ter Gath­er­ing, Not­ting­ham

14 March 2010
UK Tar Sands Cam­paign Gath­er­ing, York

11am till 6pm (Veg­an lunch by dona­tion)
With BP’s AGM just 1 month away, and 2 weeks of actions planned for 1st to 15th April, come and con­nect with oth­er UK-based Tar Sands cam­paign­ers, share ideas and cre­ate actions. We’ll be look­ing at strate­gies and actions for tar­get­ing Shell, BP and the Roy­al Bank of Scot­land — Britain’s Dirty Three­some on Tar Sands invest­ment.

We’re meet­ing in Der­went Col­lege, York Uni­ver­si­ty, room D/056 — from the sta­tion or city cen­tre, take bus num­ber 4 to the very last stop, walk back about 50 meters, and the road entrance to the col­lege is signed on the left. D/056 is accessed from the out­side, beyond the din­ing hall and ponds.

1 April 2010
Fos­sil Fools Day

1–4 April 2010
The Hunt­ing­ton Lane Fos­sil Fools week­end con­ver­gence

1–15 April 2010
BP Fort­night of Shame
includ­ing Lon­don Mass Action

17–18 April 2010
Social Cen­tres in a Time of Cri­sis, Leeds
A week­end of work­shops, dis­cus­sions and social­is­ing for every­one with an inter­est in rad­i­cal autonomous social cen­tres

22–23 April 2010
anti-avi­a­tion 48 hours of stick­er-whack­ing, sub­ver­tis­ing, adbust­ing pan­de­mo­ni­um

23–26 April 2010
Anti-nuclear Camp, Suf­folk — see lat­est EF!AU for details

6–10 May 2010
Activist Tat train­ing week: putting up mar­quees, erect­ing and mend­ing flat pack toi­lets, as well as tech­ni­cal and the­o­ret­i­cal (pow­er, plumb­ing etc) skill­shar­ing

15 May 2010
Par­ty at the Pumps 2

21 May‑5 June 2010
Merthyr to Ross­port sol­i­dar­i­ty bike ride — Cli­mate Chains

5–8 June 2010
Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp Gath­er­ing, Ire­land

11–19 June 2010
World Naked Bike Ride — 11 June: Man­ches­ter, Southamp­ton; 12 June, Cardiff, Edin­burgh, Lon­don; 13 June: Brighton, Bris­tol; 19 June, Sheffield, York

18–21 June 2010
Out­door Skill­share, Scot­land

19 June 2010
Nation­al Gath­er­ing of the Stop Nuclear Pow­er Net­work, Lon­don

25 June-31 August 2010
Eco­topia Bike­tour, from Crit­i­cal Mass, Towards Car Free Cities Con­fer­ence, to the French & Ger­man cli­mate camps and much in between.

6–12 July 2010
Anti-Indus­tri­al Land Defence Action Camp, Cat­alo­nia
Go only if you can speak Cata­lan or Span­ish — http://acampadaderesistencies.blogspot.com

14–22 July 2010
Nordic cli­mate action camp, South­ern Swe­den

22 July‑1 August 2010
French Camp Action Cli­mat, near Le Havre

22 July‑2 August 2010
Swiss cli­mate camp Fr / De

23–27 July 2010
Peace News Sum­mer Camp, Oxford­shire

29 July‑4 August 2010
Bel­gian Cli­mate Camp, near Liege

4–9 August 2010
EF! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing, Der­byshire

12–16 August 2010
Irish Cli­mate Camp, Coun­ty Tyrone

13–17 August 2010
Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru

21–24 August 2010
Cli­mate Camp tar­gets RBS in Edin­burgh: Action Days

21–29 August 2010
Ger­man Kli­macamp, near Erke­lenz

27–30 August 2010
Nation­al Ani­mal Rights Gath­er­ing, near Northamp­ton

27–29 August 2010
Dutch Earth First! Gath­er­ing and CJA meet­ing — Groen Front!

Activist Tat training week

There will be a free AT Co-op train­ing week in Not­ting­ham, from Thurs­day 6th of May to Mon­day 10th of May 2010.

There will be a free AT Co-op train­ing week in Not­ting­ham, from Thurs­day 6th of May to Mon­day 10th of May 2010.

This will include putting up mar­quees, erect­ing and mend­ing the flat pack toi­lets and paint­ing them for beau­ty and dura­bil­i­ty, as well as all the tech­ni­cal and the­o­ret­i­cal (pow­er, plumb­ing etc) skill­shar­ing that launched the site crews of the No Bor­ders Camp in Calais, and the Camp for Cli­mate Action in Black­heath in 2009.

We would like to see 50 new peo­ple there. We can cope with 70 if they are
con­sid­er­ate and co-oper­a­tive.

You can come for the whole week or just a cou­ple of days. We’ll share the cost of excel­lent veg­an food, and bring sleep­ing bags for the friend­liest floors in For­est Fields, Not­ting­ham. E‑mail jed2f4[at]yahoo.co.uk if you’re com­ing.

======

Do you have equip­ment? Spaces activist groups can use? Skills you would like to share with oth­ers? ATC are cur­rent­ly doing an audit of grass­roots move­ments to see what mate­ri­als we have and what we have to offer each oth­er. Please take part in our ques­tion­naire, and help us cre­ate a strong net­work where we share skills and mate­ri­als.

The AT Coop­er­a­tive (com­mon­ly known as ‘activist tat col­lec­tive’) is a group of peo­ple who have come togeth­er to pro­vide equip­ment, trans­port and train­ing for grass­roots move­ments. The aims of the group are as fol­lows:

1. To source and pro­vide equip­ment for events to grass­roots cam­paigns at below com­mer­cial rates, by using exist­ing resources and pur­chas­ing new mate­ri­als.

2. To train peo­ple up in essen­tial skills for putting on out­door events.

3. To be a point of con­tact for indi­vid­u­als and groups seek­ing who are hap­py for oth­ers to use their equip­ment or who want to pass on their skills.

In all this, ATC aims to be as pro­fes­sion­al as pos­si­ble, main­tain­ing and stor­ing equip­ment respon­si­bly and ensur­ing that it is returned or replaced. This will reduce waste and free up valu­able time for actu­al cam­paign­ing!

There is a lot more infor­ma­tion on our web­site, so please read on.

http://www.atcoop.org.uk

Bath Bomb 29 Out Now

THE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!
Issue #29
free/donation
Apr ’10

“An unstop­pable jug­ger­naut of jour­nal­is­tic intent”

Hard Pressed To Avoid ‘Em

As men­tioned back in the appar­ent­ly nigh-orac­u­lar Bath Bomb #11, Tesco have final­ly admit­ted their schemes for the old Bath Press site on Low­er

THE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!
Issue #29
free/donation
Apr ’10

“An unstop­pable jug­ger­naut of jour­nal­is­tic intent”

Hard Pressed To Avoid ‘Em

As men­tioned back in the appar­ent­ly nigh-orac­u­lar Bath Bomb #11, Tesco have final­ly admit­ted their schemes for the old Bath Press site on Low­er

Bris­tol Road. The five-acre site was bought by Tesco’s Lon­don-based front group St James’s Invest­ments in 2008, though Tesco always straight-

faced­ly main­tained the devel­op­ers were noth­ing to do with them. After sniff­ing round the city for decades, they’ve now final­ly sub­mit­ted an

appli­ca­tion for a super­store in Bath, and spokesman Quentin Web­ster claims that a series of pub­lic con­sul­ta­tions are on the cards for lat­er in the

year; although they pre­sum­ably won’t take “fuck off” for an answer.

Var­i­ous stud­ies spell out super­mar­ket encroach­ment as bad news for jobs and small retail­ers, as well as the envi­ron­ment: when large super­mar­kets

are built on the edges of city cen­tres, oth­er gro­cers lose between 13% and 50% of their trade – yet more shop clo­sures – and, accord­ing to the

Nation­al Retail Plan­ning Forum in ’98, each new super­store accounts for the loss on aver­age of 276 full-time posi­tions in an area. Mean­while,

whilst the city hous­es only 80,000 or so, the super­mar­ket plague is due an out­break soon: Sains­burys, Tesco and a Lidl all in one long row on

Low­er Bris­tol, two Sains­bury Express­es in the cen­tre, Sainsbury’s Local on Moor­land Road, a Tesco Express on Bath­wick Hill and anoth­er in West­on,

a Mor­risons on the Lon­don Road and yet anoth­er Sains­burys in Odd Down!

The hot­ly con­test­ed Tesco Express at Bath­wick Hill quick­ly closed down neigh­bour­ing indie Bath­wick Stores, as feared, but only time will tell for

the future of the unique, bustling vil­lage high street vibe of Moor­land Road; hope­ful­ly, there’s fight left in them yet.

Put Out For The Night

Anoth­er month, anoth­er move at the Black Cat, Bath’s increas­ing­ly itin­er­ant social cen­tre. Attempts to nego­ti­ate with the Coun­cil to arrange a

lease failed ear­ly in the month, with Coun­cil offi­cials dis­miss­ing the pro­pos­als out of hand – and throw­ing in some per­son­al insults to boot – and

tak­ing the cen­tre straight to court. The first evic­tion attempt, on Fri­day 26th March, was eas­i­ly seen off by a large pub­lic demo out­side. The

show of sup­port was suf­fi­cient that the bailiffs did­n’t even get out of their car before dri­ving off.

After a week­end of bar­ri­cad­ing (with help from the recent­ly evict­ed Tesco occu­pa­tion in Stoke’s Croft) and an excel­lent cel­e­bra­to­ry dub night,

bailiffs returned in force ear­ly on Mon­day morn­ing. With full police sup­port, a cher­ry pick­er and a pair of bolt crop­pers alleged­ly cost­ing £450,

it took them over two and a half hours to clear the build­ing – their biggest obsta­cle being a bleary-eyed but deter­mined rooftop occu­pa­tion by a

man in a dress­ing gown.

Although sad­dened, the Black Cat Col­lec­tive suf­fered no arrests and only minor injuries (sus­tained when bailiffs removed a vital escape lad­der

from the roof), and have tak­en a much-need­ed week out. They’re now back again with a new build­ing at 100 Wal­cot St, open 12–7pm every day from

12.04.10.

The pub­lic reac­tion has been vocal and strong, with many peo­ple crit­i­cis­ing the cost of the evic­tion – an alleged £30,000 – when the Cen­tre had

repeat­ed­ly offered to pay a small amount of rent. The Col­lec­tive have vowed to keep up pres­sure on the Coun­cil to pro­vide com­mu­ni­ty-con­trolled

social spaces. If that sounds like some­thing you sup­port, there’s a peti­tion online at www.petitionspot.com/petitions/
black­cat­bath, or drop by the cen­tre to find out how you can help out.

Prop­er Tea Is Theft?

Ethos Café of Wal­cot Street is yet anoth­er vic­tim of B&NES Prop­er­ty and Legal Ser­vices’ stitch-ups, of which the Black Cat also recent­ly fell

foul.

In the con­tin­u­ing greed-inspired trans­for­ma­tion of Wal­cot Street from its ‘arti­sans quar­ter’ char­ter ori­gins to Bland Iden­tik­it Shop­ping Strip

#43712, the Coun­cil have forced out Ethos in the same way as they did the Hat & Feath­er, Dool­lallys, Wal­cot Rec, Crock A Doo­dle Doo, Speak­ing

Tree, Wal­cot­mart, and indeed, even the much-loved Wal­cot Nation Day fes­ti­val. Rent for the petite, indie caff had shot up from £11K to £12K per

annum, with strings attached to an inflex­i­ble 12-year lease, kick­ing the charm­ing fair-trade Wal­cot reg­u­lar to the streets – even though its

high­er-turnover neigh­bours face only £10K each.

Com­plete­ly lack­ing in co-oper­a­tion and account­abil­i­ty as ever, unelect­ed Prop­er­ty Ser­vices’ Sarah ‘Iron Lady’ Marsh­man toed the Coun­cil line of

refus­ing to meet their clients even halfway; not only do they “not nego­ti­ate with squat­ters”, they appar­ent­ly don’t nego­ti­ate with what they view

as legit­i­mate busi­ness, either – unless they’re super­mar­kets. Nev­er mind the fact they’re refus­ing to reim­burse Ethos for the cen­tral heat­ing they

installed, or any of a host of oth­er improve­ments. But then again, they equal­ly mugged the own­ers of Glas­stone Records for the roof­ing, win­dows

and dis­abled toi­let they had to put in at River­side Busi­ness Park. The phrase ‘rob­ber barons’ comes to mind.

But with B&NES’ appar­ent going-out-of-busi­ness-as-usu­al plans for Bath’s small­er and less social­ly-destruc­tive com­pa­nies, and board­ing going up on

vacant units up and down Lon­don Road, Wal­cot Street and through­out the rest of the city, we won­der to our­selves: who’s next?

And now, to the dis­claimer: As any­one is free to con­tribute, the opin­ions expressed in each arti­cle are not nec­es­sar­il­ly reflec­tive of each

con­trib­u­tor. Nat­u­ral­ly, any right-wing or cor­po­rate bull­shit will be binned and spat upon. Need­less to say, the opin­ions of the author of this

dis­claimer do not nec­es­sar­il­ly rep­re­sent the views of any oth­er con­trib­u­tor.

Maybe May­day Melee?

Ah, spring. A time of flow­ers, warmth, swal­low migra­tions and frol­ick­ing bun­nies. A time to look back and realise the class war is as alive as

ever, and the boss­es still screw us. Since before the Chica­go Hay­mar­ket Riot of 1886 when mar­tyred anar­chists and work­ers won the eight-hour cap

on the work­ing day, May­day has long been asso­ci­at­ed with work­place strug­gle. And today, with PCS civ­il ser­vants, Unite/BA cab­in crew, UCE uni and

col­lege lec­tur­ers (plus stu­dent sup­port), NASUWT and NUT teach­ing staff up and down the coun­try on strike or close (be it over low pay, insult­ing

redundancy/pension mea­sures, or edu­ca­tion cuts), things are no dif­fer­ent. Indeed, con­niv­ing man­age­ment at Net­work Rail struck below the belt at

the RMT and TSSA recent­ly, whin­ing to the High Court about the legit­i­mate strike votes being invalid; it just goes to show that whilst the rail­way

sig­nal work­ers and main­te­nance staff want a safe and effi­cient ser­vice, the boss­es just want prof­its — no mat­ter the cost, to work­ers’ rights or

even cus­tomers’ lives.

In light of all this, Bath Trades Coun­cil and friends plan a May­day cel­e­bra­tion/aware­ness-rais­ing day of protest on Sat­ur­day May the 1st. Meet­ing

at 12.30 out­side the Abbey, the event is still very much in the plan­ning stage, so please get in touch to help make it some­thing pow­er­ful:

bathactivistnet[at]yahoo.co.uk. Musi­cians are espe­cial­ly in demand! We may not be danc­ing round a Beltane may­pole, or danc­ing on the ruins of

multi­na­tion­al cor­po­ra­tions, but you got­ta start some­where.

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

avail­able on request. And for more info on any of our sto­ries, check out http://www.thebathbomb.blogspot.com

Bor­der­ing On Insan­i­ty

An agency of crazy white peo­ple in the UK pledges to kid­nap and deport brown peo­ple, unless they either have the one cor­rect piece of paper they

require, or they’re actu­al­ly Euro­peans: in which case it’s fine.
The Rajpoot cur­ry house in Argyle Street was raid­ed by these mob­sters on the 24th of March, with two peo­ple kid­napped and ques­tioned by white

nation­al­ists in a build­ing called a ‘police sta­tion,’ even though most things done there are ille­gal.

Thanks to some cun­ning inves­tiga­tive jour­nal­ism, the Bath Bomb can now reveal that the cra­zies appear to work for an orga­ni­za­tion called the ‘UK

Bor­der Agency,’ a col­lec­tive of fanat­i­cal sta­tists who think their per­mis­sion is required in order to enter UK ter­ri­to­ry.

Although the Agency has not yet pro­duced evi­dence that it owns the 94,060 square miles of land stand­ing for the British ter­ri­to­ry, it still

behaves as if it was so. Region­al crazy white per­son Jane Far­leigh warns in the Chron­i­cle: ‘If peo­ple choose to flout the law, we will find them

and look to remove them from the coun­try.’

Appar­ent­ly unaware that the British ter­ri­to­ry is an open-field nat­ur­al resource and not the Bor­der Agen­cy’s pri­vate prop­er­ty, Ms Far­leigh wants

all of you to help her track down peo­ple who think lib­er­ty is a right, so she can then deport them, and the laws of Nazi Ger­many be final­ly

obeyed. But in Britain.

You can help that orga­ni­za­tion of cra­zies fail by feed­ing them false infor­ma­tion, at 01275 841500.

Beneath The Paving… The Beach?

A bizarre-Bath style crime­wave is strik­ing fear deep into the heart of Batho­ni­ans, alleged­ly. As report­ed in the Chron, a ring of illic­it,

pseu­do-Sit­u­a­tion­ist, pave­ment-thieves have struck the city, caus­ing rifts in the city’s crim­i­nal under­world. With 10m stretch­es of gran­ite

pave­ment slabs being prised up in Lans­down, Sion Hill, and through­out the city, is noth­ing sacred? Police, fear­ful of poten­tial bricks to the

skull, are urg­ing res­i­dents to report any sus­pi­cious work­men activ­i­ty or deliv­ery trucks capa­ble of shift­ing heavy loads in the area. What­ev­er

next – elder­ly women’s grand piano rob­beries? The tak­ing of lib­er­ties? The tak­ing of piss?

Come Shell Or High Water

As a fol­low-on from the nation­al ‘Fos­sil Fools Day’ of envi­ron­men­tal action against pol­lut­ing big busi­ness, mem­bers of Bris­tol & Bath Ris­ing Tide

vis­it­ed the Shell garage on Muller Road, East­ville, on the morn­ing of Sat­ur­day 3rd April, lay­ing tem­po­rary pipelines and hold­ing plac­ards. They

went there to high­light the repres­sion expe­ri­enced by com­mu­ni­ties in Ire­land, cur­rent­ly com­bat­ing Shell’s attempts to build an onshore

exper­i­men­tal high pres­sure pipeline and gas refin­ery.

The com­mu­ni­ty in Erris, Coun­ty Mayo, has seen con­tin­ued harass­ment and intim­i­da­tion by the Gar­dai police and Shell secu­ri­ty for over a decade. In

Feb­ru­ary, fish­er­man Pat O’Don­nell was sen­tenced to sev­en months for ‘breach of the peace’ and ‘obstruct­ing a Gar­da’, after his boat was board­ed

and sunk by masked men. Hys­ter­i­cal­ly, as Shell’s pipe-lying ship ‘the Soli­taire’ oper­at­ed off the coast, Irish Navy gun­boats and Air Force spot­ter

planes joined police and pri­vate secu­ri­ty to con­trol the 100-strong demo ashore. But the tales of dodgy shit just keep on com­ing: Shell secu­ri­ty

staff have been dis­cov­ered recent­ly in Boli­vian ter­ror­ist groups, try­ing to desta­bilise the region and kick-start civ­il war.

Con­struc­tion of the gas refin­ery has already result­ed in the pol­lu­tion of local drink­ing water, with untreat­ed waste chem­i­cals like lead,

mer­cury, arsenic and radon being pumped into Broad­haven Bay, despite its ‘Spe­cial Area of Con­ser­va­tion’ sta­tus. Yet despite the scale of state

repres­sion there, the cam­paign just won’t pipe down, hav­ing already set the pipeline’s com­ple­tion date back from 2003 to 2013.

http://www.shelltosea.com/node/21

http://risingtide.org.uk/node/336
www.indymedia.ie/article/96167

EVENTS

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

Debt advice drop-in, Tues­days, 4–7pm, Black Cat Cen­tre, http://www.blackcatcentre.blogspot.com

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

The Lost Plot work­day, Thurs­days, 10am-dusk, Bathamp­ton

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

Recy­cle Your Sun­days, Sun­days, 10.30am, starts Abbey Church­yard, the reg­u­lar series of socia­ble, easy-paced cycle rides,

http://www.bathrys.org.uk/ tel Hazel 01225 469199

Black Cat Cen­tre gen­er­al meet­ing, Sun­days, 1–3pm, Black Cat Cen­tre, http://www.blackcatcentre.blogspot.com

‘Fort­night of Shame’: two weeks of action against BP’s invest­ment in tar sands extrac­tion, now to15th April, con­tact bristol[at]risingtide.org.uk

FFI

Horse Rac­ing Aware­ness week demo, Fri­day 9th April, West­gate Street, con­tact bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk FFI

Bris­tol Indus­tri­al Work­ers of the World meet­ing, Fri­day 9th April, starts 7pm (8.30–10pm open to non-mem­bers), GWRSA, out­side Bris­tol Tem­ple Meads

train sta­tion, e‑mail bristoliww[at]riseup.net FFI

Bris­tol Eco-Vil­lage pub­lic meet­ing, Fri­day 9th April, 7.30pm, Hamil­ton House, 80 Stokes Croft, Bris­tol

Bath FreeShop, Sat­ur­day 10th April, 12–3pm, out­side Pump Rooms, Stall Street

Broad­lands Orchard­share Vol­un­teer­ing Day, Sat­ur­day 10th April, 12–4pm, Broad­lands Orchard, Box Road, Bath­ford,

http://www.bathford.net/broadlands.php

talk: ‘The Chartists and Their Lega­cy’, Sat­ur­day 10th April, 2pm, New Room (Wes­ley Chapel), 36 The Horse­fair, Bris­tol, BS1 3JE

‘Defend our Pub­lic Ser­vices’ march and ral­ly, Sat­ur­day 10th April, Lon­don, tick­ets for coach avail­able, http://www.10410demo.co.uk

Bath Ani­mal Action meet­ing, Mon­day 12th April, 8–9pm, The Bell, Wal­cot Street

talk: (Steve) Mills & (Ian) Bone, Mon­day 12th April, 7.30pm, The Stag & Hounds, 74 Old Mar­ket Street, Bris­tol

AstraZeneca anti-vivi­sec­tion demo, Tues­day 13th April, 3.30–6pm, AstraZeneca Avlon Works, Sev­ern Road, Hallen, Bris­tol, BS10 7ZE; if you need

trans­port or fur­ther info, e‑mail barc[at]hotmail.co.uk

skill­share: ‘Freeskilling — Con­scious Com­mu­ni­ca­tion (Non-vio­lent Com­mu­ni­ca­tion)’, Tues­day 13th April, 7pm, Bet­ter Food Co. Cafe, St Wer­burghs,

Bris­tol

talk: ‘Thomas Spence — the For­got­ten Rev­o­lu­tion­ary’, Wednes­day 14th April, 7.30pm, The Scout Hut (Ben­jamin Per­ry Boat House), Red­cliffe Wharf,

Bris­tol

Bath Green Drinks, Wednes­day 14th April, 8.30pm, the Ris­ing Sun, Grove Street

Rad­i­cal Debate Club: ‘Migrants and Bor­ders’, Thurs­day 15th April, 7pm, Black Cat Cen­tre, Wal­cot Street

ben­e­fit gig against home­less­ness in Taunton, Thurs­day 15th April, 7–11pm, the Road­house, Taunton, free, feat Clay­ton Bliz­zard, 51st State, Rat

Ban­dits and Two Minute Hour; http://www.anonpromo.co.uk

talk: ‘Vote, Protest And Riot’, Thurs­day 15th April, 7.30pm, GWRSA, out­side Bris­tol Tem­ple Meads train sta­tion

course; ‘Design & Build a Com­post Loo’, Fri­day 16th to Sun­day 18th April and Fri­day 23rd to Sun­day 25th April, Monk­ton Wyld Court, nr Char­mouth,

Brid­port, Dorset, DT6 6DQ, phone 01297 560342 or e‑mail info[at]monktonwyldcourt.org

Bris­tol Eco-Vil­lage BIG SWOOP!, Sat­ur­day 17th April, loca­tion tbc, e‑mail bitsofwood[at]riseup.net to get involved

Update and dis­cus­sion on the plan­ning process, Sun­day 18th April, 11–3.30pm, £5 ada­vanced book­ing essen­tial by 5th April, e‑mail afrelmira[at]

googlemail.com

Bris­tol Con­ven­tion of the Left plan­ning meet­ing, Mon­day 19th April, 6.30–8.30pm, Hamil­ton House, 80 Stokes Croft, Bris­tol

Green Light lec­tures: ‘Ener­gy Futures and Glob­al Cool­ing’, Mon­day 19th April, doors open 7pm, BRLSI, 16–18 Queen Square, £3 entry/£1.50

con­ces­sions

talk: ‘Votes for Ladies: The Suf­fragette Move­ment 1903–1914’, Mon­day 19th April, 7.00pm, Hamil­ton House, 80 Stokes Croft, Bris­tol

‘An Agen­da for Human­i­ty: Peace, Jus­tice and Envi­ron­ment’ meet­ing with elec­tion can­di­dates in Bath, Wednes­day 21st April, 7.30pm, Friends Meet­ing

House, York Street, e‑mail postmaster[at]bathstopwar.org.uk FFI

talk: ‘Every Cook Can Gov­ern: From Athens To West­min­ster?’, Wednes­day 21st April, 7.30pm, CWRSA, out­side Bris­tol Tem­ple Meads train sta­tion

‘Get Your Stick­er On’ Plane Stu­pid sub­ver­tise chal­lenge, Thurs­day 22nd to Fri­day 23rd April, loca­tion tbc, e‑mail info[at]planestupid.com

gig: ‘The Lib­er­ty Tree’, Fri­day 23rd April, 7.30pm, The Thun­der­bolt, The Olde Turnpike,124 Bath Road, Tot­ter­down, BS4 3ED, £7 door, feat Leon

Rossel­son and Robb John­son

Camp Against Nuclear New Build, Fri­day 23rd to Mon­day 26th April, Sizewell, Suf­folk, http://stopnuclearpoweruk.net

‘STOP The Cuts’ com­mu­ni­ty day and march, Sat­ur­day 24th April, 12 noon start, meet at Bar­ton Hill Set­tle­ment or Bea­con Cen­tre, Bris­tol

Bris­tol Rad­i­cal His­to­ry Walk, Sat­ur­day 24th April, start 7.30pm, Cen­tral Fer­ry Land­ing, next to the water­fall in-between Anchor Road and Broad

Quay, Bris­tol

World Day for Lab Ani­mals march in Lon­don, Sat­ur­day 24th April, coach 8.30am, leav­ing Bris­tol Tem­ple Meads train sta­tion, £10 tick­et

Mock Elec­tion bon­fire night and music, Sun­day 25th April, 7.30pm, Boil­ing Wells Project, St. Wer­burghs City Farm, Boil­ing Wells Lane, St.

Wer­burghs, Bris­tol, BS2 9YJ; feat The Blue Sequoias, Who’s Afear’d and the Surfin’ Turnips; bring and burn an effi­gy of your most despised pub­lic

fig­ure!

Bath Social­ist Forum, Mon­day 26th April, 8pm, upstairs at St James Wine Vaults

Ken­net and Avon Users Forum, Thurs­day 29th April, 7pm, Ken­net and Avon Canal Trust, Canal Cen­tre, Devizes Wharf, Couch Lane, Devizes, SN10 1EB

May­day demo, Sat­ur­day 1s May, 12.30 out­side Bath Abbey

Bath Activist Net­work meet­ing, Thurs­day 6th May, 7.30–9pm, down­stairs at The Hob­gob­lin, St James Parade,

http://www.bathactivistnetwork.blogspot.com

Intro­duc­to­ry Per­ma­cul­ture Week­end, Sat­ur­day 8th to Sun­day 9th May, £50, for book­ings e‑mail afrelmira[at]googlemail.com

Bris­tol Eco Veg­gie Fayre, Sat­ur­day 29th to Sun­day 30th May, the Amp­ithe­atre, Water­front Square, Bris­tol Har­bour­side,

http://bristol.ecoveggiefayre.co.uk/

‘Adapt­ing to Cli­mate Change’ week, 7th-11th June, see http://www.oursouthwest.com/climate FFI

Earth First! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing, Wednes­day 4th to Mon­day 9th August, Der­byshire, £20–30; five days of work­shops, skill shar­ing and plan­ning action,

plus low-impact liv­ing with­out lead­ers; e‑mail summergathering[at]earthfirst.org.uk FFI

Sheikh, Rat­tle And Roll

In sol­i­dar­i­ty with the Pales­tin­ian neigh­bour­hood Sheikh Jar­rah, cur­rent­ly being bull­dozed and fac­ing oth­er repres­sion, actions took place up and

down the coun­try on the 17th March; and Bath was no dif­fer­ent. From 12 til 2.30pm, a typ­i­cal­ly-Bathon­ian size demo (six peo­ple!) took place

out­side Bar­clays Bank on Mil­som Street. With Bar­clays being the UK’s largest investor in the arms trade, with hold­ings of over £7.3bn, they are

also man­u­fac­tur­ers of clus­ter bombs and deplet­ed ura­ni­um muni­tions, and invest in mur­der­ous out­fits like Thales and Raytheon, who arm the Israeli

Defence Force. To go on, they also pro­vide ‘mar­ket-mak­er’ ser­vices to everyone’s favourite ITT/EDO, home of the ‘Pave­way’ mis­sile laser-guid­ance

sys­tem that has so dev­as­tat­ed Pales­tine and Iraq. On the day, con­cerned folks from Bath Activist Net­work and oth­ers dis­trib­uted leaflets, with two

scal­ing a lad­der to the low­er roof to unveil a ban­ner claim­ing ‘Bar­clays: Glob­al Deal­ers in Death’, in the face of burly but con­fused secu­ri­ty

guards. Most of the pass­ing pub­lic received the demo well, with only a cou­ple of idiots advo­cat­ing war as a way of solv­ing argu­ments and as being

vital for human evo­lu­tion.

Bath Bomb Dic­tio­nary Cor­ner: mar­ket-mak­er (n) a cor­po­rate mid­dle-man, pur­chas­ing shares from a sell­er and hold­ing them until such a time as a

buy­er becomes avail­able

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 and 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

The­o­ry Cor­ner: On Law­ful Rebel­lion And Resis­tance

There’s been a lot of talk recent­ly about pro­duc­ing a claim of right and declar­ing our inde­pen­dence as indi­vid­u­als, which we can do under arti­cle

61 of the Magna Car­ta. This is an approach to resis­tance that was cho­sen, among oth­ers, by mar­ket anar­chist Mike Gogul­s­ki, who, after hav­ing fled

from fas­cist Amer­i­ca, decid­ed to send a form of cit­i­zen­ship renun­ci­a­tion. Oth­er renun­ciants include mem­bers of the nation­al­ist UK Inde­pen­dence

Par­ty.

While escap­ing the state’s grasp­ing hands is cer­tain­ly legit­i­mate, anar­cho-syn­di­cal­ist Michael Bind­ner has argued that this was far from enough in

the long term. One is free, an entire class remains in sub­jec­tion. Also at issue is the abil­i­ty of a per­son to renounce cit­i­zen­ship. Hence whether

arti­cle 61 is mean­ing­ful, for instance, for the poor who actu­al­ly need ben­e­fits to sur­vive?

This author is also annoyed at the pos­i­tivism of the whole affair. That is, one is allowed to be left alone, not because he has a right to, but

because it was writ­ten down cen­turies ago. What if it had­n’t been includ­ed in the Magna Car­ta? Too bad, let’s go get tea now?

Law­ful rebel­lion is a good tool if you already are a most­ly inde­pen­dent indi­vid­ual, like cap­i­tal­ist Gogul­s­ki above; but it is not found­ed in law

because gov­ern­ing with­out con­sent is not law­ful any­way. There­fore, the process is here stood on its head: where­as your con­sent should be required

before you get cit­i­zen­ship, you have to go to the length of renounc­ing it. Since liv­ing under the gov­ern­ment was nev­er val­i­dat­ed by any process

where refusal was pos­si­ble and mean­ing­ful, it fol­lows that no one is tru­ly a cit­i­zen, yet.

There­fore, renounc­ing cit­i­zen­ship is a recog­ni­tion that one was actu­al­ly a cit­i­zen – I’m a hostage; also, that the Magna Car­ta cre­ates our rights

– my rights are nat­ur­al and do not depend on an old piece of paper; final­ly, that the gov­ern­ment respects our rights – when what it does is

writ­ing down what we will have and what we won’t.

For those rea­sons, I find law­ful rebel­lion dis­turb­ing to say the least, and enjoin every­one to build up free com­mu­ni­ties instead; the very act of

which will make an actu­al cit­i­zen out of you, rather than a hostage pas­sive­ly pay­ing bills and insert­ing a piece of paper in a box every few

years.

Lap­pers­fort Gets Evict­ed — Who Threw The First Bank Note?

On the 4th of March, the Bel­gian author­i­ties evict­ed the occu­piers of the Lap­pers­fort for­est, in the name of the prop­er­ty rights of Fab­ri­com, the

‘own­er’ of that for­est. The for­est has been occu­pied since 2001. It was a strong­hold of activist resis­tance, and a won­der for all those who

cher­ish nature and self-suf­fi­cien­cy.

Beyond the pain and the rage, I would be inter­est­ed to know who Fab­ri­com ‘bought’ the for­est from? And how was it ‘their’ for­est? How do you even

sell a for­est? How do you own it? I wish we were back in the day when com­mon sense had a chance in this world.

Today, in the case of the Black Cat, we see the same fol­ly in the form of the pub­licly-owned Newark Works. I believe you will find this phras­ing

is incor­rect. The pub­lic stands in the same rela­tion to this build­ing as Fab­ri­com did to the Lap­pers­fort for­est: they are out­siders. They have

nev­er touched the Works and they prob­a­bly nev­er will, not in the col­lec­tive fash­ion that is entailed by the word ‘pub­lic’. Use and home­steading

being the basis of own­er­ship in land, it fol­lows occu­piers and squat­ters were more the own­ers than their remote (but wealthy) oppo­nents.

It is also wrong to assume that the pub­lic chose to buy this build­ing; the Coun­cil did. A minor­i­ty of indi­vid­u­als pre­tend­ing to rep­re­sent the

pub­lic, against the very plain fact that an indi­vid­ual is a world unto them­self, and there­fore unable to be ful­ly and accu­rate­ly rep­re­sent­ed by

any­one.

How did the Coun­cil get their hands on the two and half mil­lion pounds for the pur­chase? Well, they seem to have a sys­tem in place where­by they

sim­ply state the amount of mon­ey they need, and take it, with­out leav­ing the tax­pay­ers free to refuse, with only vague promis­es of change every

few years.

This act of theft obvi­ous­ly can­not be con­sid­ered legit­i­mate; there­fore, the Coun­cil does not own the mon­ey that was used to acquire the Newark

Works, even on the flawed rep­re­sen­ta­tive sys­tem terms. So let’s give a toast to the wealthy thieves who believe throw­ing bank notes at peo­ple

gives them a title in land.

And Now A Word From Our Spon­sors…

Anti-avi­a­tion cam­paign­ing group Plane Stu­pid have issued a ‘Get Your Stick­er On!’ 48-hour sub­ver­tis­ing com­pe­ti­tion to take place in towns up and

down the land from Thurs­day the 22nd to Fri­day 23rd of April. As cur­rent­ly con­test­ed over the pro­posed expan­sion of Bris­tol Air­port, the indus­try

loves to pre­tend that they are just respond­ing to the pub­lic’s desires by offer­ing ever more flights, ever more noise and ever more emis­sions.

But, like tobac­co adver­tis­ing, fly­ing pro­mo­tion needs to become a thing of the past. Until then, let’s sub­ver­tise! For the begin­ners amongst you,

you can down­load designs from Plane Stu­pid­’s Flickr site to stick over exist­ing adverts – or of course DIY­our­self. They then advise to take some

pics, set up a tem­po­rary anony­mous address at an inter­net cafe, and e‑mail your hand­i­work to info[at]planestupid.com. The group who stick­ers the

most images in 48 hours wins prizes!

And words from the wise: “Use your head, and remem­ber to dress well for the occa­sion – caps and scarfs are just the thing for sub­ver­tis­ing sea­son.

Some offi­cers of the law may be con­vinced that sub­ver­tis­ing is bor­der­line ille­gal, so take a friend as look­out, keep an eye open for CCTV and

don’t get caught.”

http://www.nobristolairportexpansion.co.uk/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/planestupid
https://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/manchester/2007/12/388098.html?c=on
http://www.bugaup.org/

http://www.graphicattack.org.uk/

Faslane Free Cafe ‑Zombies at the base!!

Zom­bies at the base!!
Still liv­ing die in, nam­ing the dead.
Work­shops “What you real­ly should know about deplet­ed ura­ni­um ”
Paint a stone…make a cairn

Meet at peace camp Sat­ur­day, 01 May 2010 at 17:00

On the Sun­day fol­low­ing the free cafe will be film show­ings.
Those wish­ing to stay overnight are more than wel­come. Car­a­van spaces are avail­able.

Zom­bies at the base!!
Still liv­ing die in, nam­ing the dead.
Work­shops “What you real­ly should know about deplet­ed ura­ni­um ”
Paint a stone…make a cairn

Meet at peace camp Sat­ur­day, 01 May 2010 at 17:00

On the Sun­day fol­low­ing the free cafe will be film show­ings.
Those wish­ing to stay overnight are more than wel­come. Car­a­van spaces are avail­able.
For more info or to book yer bed call us..

Direc­tions -

The camp is sit­u­at­ed 6 miles North of Helens­burgh. Helens­burgh can be reached from Glas­gow by train, for £5 return, trains leave every half hour from Glas­gow Queens Street (Low lev­el station).Or the 216 from Jamaica St — Helens­burgh.
You can catch the 316 bus from Helens­burgh Cen­tral train sta­tion (for Coul­port or Gare­loc­head, stops out­side the camp) it only costs £1:50, and you can ask to be dropped off at the peace camp.

-F.P.C. is on the east verge of the A814 road, which leads to HMNB Clyde and beyond. The Camp is there­fore vis­i­ble to all traf­fic com­ing towards the base from the direc­tion of Helens­burgh.

We are about 30 miles west of Glas­gow, by the Gare­loch, a riv­er Clyde estu­ary sea loch. Faslane Naval Base is on the Gare­loch.
CAMP PHONE 01436820901

faslaniapeacecamp@yahoo.co.uk
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