Miffed by Miffy

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



Rabbit under fence

EF! summer gathering 2007 logo



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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Ramona Africa — ON A MOVE tour of UK

Ramona Africa is tour­ing the UK speak­ing about the incred­i­ble sto­ry of MOVE. MOVE are a large­ly black eco-rev­o­lu­tion­ary group based in Philadel­phia. They have cam­paigned on envi­ron­men­tal, ani­mal rights and anti-police repres­sion issues for thir­ty years. They have nev­er backed down in the face of overt racist police repres­sion.

More info: www.onamove2007.org.uk

Ramona Africa is tour­ing the UK speak­ing about the incred­i­ble sto­ry of MOVE. MOVE are a large­ly black eco-rev­o­lu­tion­ary group based in Philadel­phia. They have cam­paigned on envi­ron­men­tal, ani­mal rights and anti-police repres­sion issues for thir­ty years. They have nev­er backed down in the face of overt racist police repres­sion.

More info: www.onamove2007.org.uk


In 1978 nine mem­bers of MOVE were impris­oned for a bla­tant­ly framed mur­der, they are still impris­oned with their first chance of parole in August 2008. In 1985 the city of Philadel­phia sort the ‘final solu­tion’ for the MOVE ‘prob­lem’ by attack­ing their home with 10,000 rounds of ammu­ni­tion, tear gas, water can­nons and final­ly a bomb that burnt 60 homes to the ground. 6 MOVE adults and 5 chil­dren were burned to death. Ramona man­aged to escape with one of the chil­dren.
She was sen­tenced to sev­en years for ‘riot’.

MumiaMumia Abu-Jamal is a MOVE sup­port­er who also has also expe­ri­enced the injus­tice of the sys­tem whilst spend­ing over 26 years on death row for a crime he did not com­mit.

Come and hear about all these events and see the MOVE doc­u­men­tary nar­rat­ed by Howard Zinn.

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June:
Thu 21ST @ 1in12 Brad­ford
Fri 22nd @ The Work­shop Cafe Bar Nor­wich 7pm
Sun 24th @ The Com­mon Place Leeds 6pm
Mon 25th @ The West Indi­an Club Leeds 6.30pm
Wed 27th @ The Cow­ley Club Brighton 7pm
Thu 28th @ The Ram­part Cen­tre Lon­don 7pm
Fri 29th @ Bath Place Leam­ing­ton Spa
Sat 30th @ The Drum Birm­ing­ham 7pm
July:
Sun 1st @ The Star and Shad­ow Cin­e­ma New­cas­tle 7.30pm
Mon 2nd @ The Cube Cin­e­ma Bris­tol 8pm
(Kebele are also turn­ing their reg­u­lar Sun­day Veg­an cafe into a
ben­e­fit for MOVE on Sun­day 1st July)

West London residents halt traffic outside DfT Headquarters

20.06.2007
West Lon­don res­i­dents protest­ing about plans to expand Heathrow dra­mat­i­cal­ly stopped traf­fic this morn­ing out­side the Depart­ment for Trans­port (DfT) offices in Cen­tral Lon­don before attempt­ing an inva­sion of the build­ing.

Heathrow DfT protest 1
Heathrow DfT protest 2Heathrow DfT protest 3Heathrow DfT protest 4Heathrow DfT protest 520.06.2007
West Lon­don res­i­dents protest­ing about plans to expand Heathrow dra­mat­i­cal­ly stopped traf­fic this morn­ing out­side the Depart­ment for Trans­port (DfT) offices in Cen­tral Lon­don before attempt­ing an inva­sion of the build­ing.

The pro­tes­tors car­ried a bed along Mar­sham Street from the flat of BAA Chief Exec­u­tive Stephen Nel­son (1) to the Depart­ment for Trans­port. In the bed were two fig­ures sym­bol­is­ing the close rela­tion­ship between BAA and the DfT under the slo­gan “DfT in bed with BAA”.

As they crossed Mar­sham Street a dozen res­i­dents halt­ed the traf­fic when they paint­ed a run­way on the road. The res­i­dents, assist­ed by the direct action net­work Plane Stu­pid, then left the bed out­side the DfT offices.

The action fol­lows the rev­e­la­tion last week that the Depart­ment for Trans­port had secret­ly passed key infor­ma­tion sup­port­ing expan­sion of Heathrow to BAA six months before it is due to be pub­lished (2).

Ear­li­er in the year, on March 5th, West Lon­don res­i­dents invad­ed Chatham House and dis­rupt­ed a speech by Trans­port Sec­re­tary Dou­glas Alexan­der.

Long-time West Lon­don res­i­dent Dr John Hunt and mem­ber of the Green Par­ty said, “This action is to expose the unhealth­ily close rela­tion­ship there is between BAA Fer­rovial and the Depart­ment for Trans­port. While BAA and the Depart­ment plot and plan the expan­sion of Heathrow, res­i­dents and local author­i­ties are left in the dark”.

Mag­gie Thor­burn, a long-time West Lon­don res­i­dent, said, “Although I live under the flight path and am affect­ed by the noise of the planes, I took part in today’s action not just because of the increased noise lev­els I would expe­ri­ence if expan­sion went ahead, but also because I firm­ly believe that any fur­ther expan­sion at Heathrow should be ruled out on cli­mate change grounds.”

ENDS

Notes for Edi­tors:

(1). BAA owns a flat for its Chief Exec­u­tive (Flat 905, St Johns, Mar­sham St) about 60 yards from the Depart­ment for Trans­port head­quar­ters at 76 Mar­sham St.

(2). Ear­li­er this month (6th June) the Times www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article1890224.ece revealed that “The Depart­ment for Trans­port has secret­ly passed key infor­ma­tion sup­port­ing the expan­sion to the Span­ish-owned com­pa­ny six months before it is due to be pub­lished in a con­sul­ta­tion doc­u­ment. The depart­ment has also allowed senior BAA offi­cials to influ­ence a series of tests designed to show whether the third run­way would breach lim­its on air pol­lu­tion and noise. The Times has learnt that BAA has a team of 34 peo­ple work­ing with civ­il ser­vants, influ­enc­ing the tests so that they find in favour of build­ing the new run­way. The depart­ment has giv­en BAA a full copy of the pre­lim­i­nary results but is refus­ing to allow any oppo­nents of the expan­sion to see them. Mike Forster, BAA’s head of strat­e­gy for Heathrow, admit­ted at a recent con­fer­ence that he had seen the results and that they were “encour­ag­ing”.” The full report is not expect­ed to be made pub­licly avail­able until just before a con­sul­ta­tion into plans to expand Heathrow, expect­ed in the autumn.

Thousands strip off for London’s Naked Bike Ride + Manchester video + Brighton + York

In 2004 there were 58 rid­ers, in 2005 a cred­itable 250 rid­ers, ris­ing to a mas­sive 800 in 2006.

In 2004 there were 58 rid­ers, in 2005 a cred­itable 250 rid­ers, ris­ing to a mas­sive 800 in 2006.

But in a scale that sur­prised even the organ­is­ers, more than five thou­sand peo­ple today took to Lon­don’s streets to protest against oil depen­den­cy, cel­e­brate body free­dom and curb car cul­ture.

Start­ing from Hyde Park, there was a slight devi­a­tion in route as pre­cau­tions were tak­en to avoid a col­li­sion with an Orange march (fea­tur­ing as scary a bunch of appar­ent loons and psy­chopaths as you’d ever not want to meet).

Halt­ed half way down Pic­cadil­ly the scale of the ride became appar­ent, as it still tailed back well into Hyde Park (first pic­ture).

Part of the fun took it straight through the heart of Lon­don’s tourist hell­hole, Covent Gar­den. But the roar of appre­ci­a­tion from the crowds made the cob­bly streets more than tol­er­a­ble.

Why so many? Well many of the rid­ers had been to last mon­th’s Crit­i­cal Mass, swollen to record num­bers as a result of State attempts to con­trol it and make it “ille­gal”. Empow­ered, as many put it, the next stage was to get their clothes off and take it up a lev­el.

“Roll on” as Rik­ki put in his report of that day “the next piece of repres­sive leg­is­la­tion”.

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Man­ches­ter 2007 WNBR evening Fri­day 8th:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dEuDP7BOBUc

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Brighton 07 World Naked Bike Ride
On Sat­ur­day, more than 200 naked cyclists rode through Brighton and Hove in East Sus­sex. “Bikes and naked bod­ies harm nobody. Car fumes… are dri­ving us all to cli­mate chaos.”

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York:

G8 climate day of action reports — London, Norwich, New Zealand, Bristol, Germany, USA, Nottingham, Portugal, Brasil

Lon­don: Cli­mate activist ‘super-glued to door’ of lastminute.com

An envi­ron­men­tal activist was so enraged that lastminute.com con­tin­ue to push ‘short haul’ flights whilst know­ing the dam­age they do to the cli­mate, that she super-glued her­self to the front door of the company’s Vic­to­ria HQ.


Lon­don: Cli­mate activist ‘super-glued to door’ of lastminute.com

An envi­ron­men­tal activist was so enraged that lastminute.com con­tin­ue to push ‘short haul’ flights whilst know­ing the dam­age they do to the cli­mate, that she super-glued her­self to the front door of the company’s Vic­to­ria HQ.

At 8am this morn­ing, Pen­ny East­wood – a mem­ber of cli­mate action group, Plane Stu­pid, past­ed super­glue over her hands and glued her­self to the front doors of the build­ing — block­ing staff from enter­ing their offices.

Pen­ny said, “Whilst G8 lead­ers have sim­ply spout­ed more hot air, I’ve showed what one woman alone can do to shut down cli­mate crim­i­nals.”

She added, “Lastminute.com irre­spon­si­bly encour­age peo­ple to binge-fly five times a year. They’re forc­ing the world towards the brink of eco-melt­down and all for a quick buck!”

Pen­ny East­wood is one of those plan­ning to attend this summer’s Camp for Cli­mate Action at Heathrow.

info@planestupid.com
http://www.planestupid.com

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Esso Chelsea 1
Lon­don Ris­ing Tide and Friends descend­ed on Chelsea Trac­tor coun­try on Fri­day night in a protest against the G8’s pathet­ic attempt to “con­sid­er” cli­mate change and to reduce CO2 emis­sions.

The Tigers and Clowns block­ad­ed the E$$O sta­tion at Ful­ham Rd for over to two hours to high­light Exxon Mobil/E$$Os role in bankrolling our future down the pipe. Their sup­port for the Liq­uid Nat­ur­al Gas pipeline com­ing to a city near you is paving the way for new Gas Fired pow­er sta­tions, lock­ing us into anoth­er 30 years with these emis­sion-spout­ing beasts. The emis­sions from these sta­tions are com­pa­ra­ble to the exist­ing Coal Fired ones!

Because the tankers car­ry­ing this gas have to come from Qatar and are so huge, they can­not nav­i­gate the Suez Canal so have to cir­cum­nav­i­gate Africa, freez­ing the gas as they go. In terms of emis­sions this makes the final fig­ures at use almost as high as ener­gy derived from coal. LNG is NOT a clean fuel!

The protest went well with the over­whelm­ing major­i­ty of peo­ple, includ­ing car dri­vers… were pos­i­tive to the mes­sage that we were giv­ing out. The Police arrived after about thir­ty min­utes, but after telling us to stay out of E$$Os fore­court, we remained for anoth­er hour: their threat of “ten min­utes of you’re in the van” being the usu­al brava­do. A good time was had by all, and the Tigers will con­tin­ue to prowl…….

To get in touch:
london@risingtide.org.uk

For more info on ESSO’s pipeline http://www.fightthepipe.co.uk

STOP THE PRESS:
With the pipeline con­verg­ing on two fronts the protest three camp in the Bre­con Bea­cons has just been served with an evic­tion notice and are now on high alert for Mon­day 11th. Activists are now dug-in and locked-on up trees with sup­port from local peo­ple, ready to resist. They need your sup­port. If you can get down there, ring the camp hot­line on 07917383517, or email
bristol@risingtide.org.uk

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Esso West London
At around 7.15 pm on the 8th May, in a non-vio­lent action activists from Lon­don Ris­ing Tide, who are con­cerned about cli­mate change, block­ad­ed an ESSO petrol sta­tion in West Lon­don.

They claim ESSO’s huge eco­nom­ic clout enables the com­pa­ny to influ­ence ener­gy pol­i­cy, and that that a high pres­sure pipeline cur­rent­ly being con­struct­ed to car­ry ESSO nat­ur­al gas to UK pow­er sta­tions is unsafe. They main­tain that the solu­tion to the cli­mate change prob­lem is an over­all reduc­tion in ener­gy use. The con­struc­tion of the pipeline has also led to con­cerns over its dam­age to envi­ron­men­tal­ly sen­si­tive areas.

Fun­ny clowns with red noses sup­port­ed activists who were dressed as ESSO tigers while motorists were leaflet­ed and engaged in debate about their ener­gy use. The police arrived after an hour or so and where gen­er­al­ly well behaved. At one point the police told activists they could only car­ry on their protest for anoth­er 10 min­utes how­ev­er a deal was done allow­ing access to for motorists to the petrol sta­tion, and the action car­ried on for anoth­er 45 min­utes or so.

This action was timed to coin­cide with the end of the G8 in Ger­many.

For more info on ESSO’s pipeline http://www.fightthepipe.co.uk

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Nor­wich petrol sta­tion shut down on DoA Against Cli­mate Change and the G8

Dur­ing this morning’s rush hour twelve activists from Nor­wich Ris­ing Tide braved the East Coast storm warn­ings and shut down their local Jet petrol sta­tion as part of the Inter­na­tion­al Day of Action Against Cli­mate Change and the G8.

Hav­ing met up at sil­ly o’clock in the morn­ing and gath­ered togeth­er ban­ners, rope and ‘Dan­ger, Glob­al Warm­ing’ haz­ard tape, we arrived at the Jet petrol sta­tion on Dere­ham Road only to find 8 of Norfolk’s finest lying in wait. Ignor­ing them, we unpacked our ban­ners and stretched them across the three entrances, pre­vent­ing vehi­cles from fill­ing up. Pass­ing motorists rush­ing to work were treat­ed to the sight of us jump­ing up and down in the rain, wav­ing ban­ners bear­ing the slo­gans ‘Closed for a Total Re-think’; ‘Social Change, Not Cli­mate Change’; and ‘Inter­na­tion­al Day of Action Against Cli­mate Change and the G8.’

We hand­ed out leaflets to dri­vers and pedes­tri­ans, explain­ing that the block­ade was part of a series of events tak­ing place around the world to high­light the role played by the lead­ers of the high-emit­ting G8 nations in caus­ing cli­mate change, and to show up this week’s so-called ‘cli­mate deal’ for the sham that it is.

One of the ban­ner wavers was heard to shout: ‘We will not stand by and watch the plan­et burn as the G8 lead­ers and their cor­po­rate bed­fel­lows triv­i­alise the great­est threat fac­ing human­i­ty with a blind faith in tech­no-fix­es and mar­ket mech­a­nisms such as fraud­u­lent car­bon off­set schemes. If we are going to tru­ly solve this prob­lem, we need a rapid trans­for­ma­tion to a low-ener­gy soci­ety – start­ing with the dis­man­tling of the oil indus­try.’

We chose the less well-known Jet as our tar­get to show that there is no such thing as a good oil com­pa­ny. Jet is owned by Cono­coPhillips, the fifth largest oil refin­er in the world, and the first West­ern oil com­pa­ny to enter Iraq after the start of the war. Jet and Cono­coPhillips have so far escaped the crit­i­cism that has been jus­ti­fi­ably heaped upon indus­try giants like Shell and BP, but they are no dif­fer­ent. Cono­coPhillips, like all oil com­pa­nies, destroys ecosys­tems and com­mu­ni­ties around the world, and is prof­i­teer­ing from oil wars and cli­mate chaos.

The response from dri­vers and passers-by was pre­dictably mixed, and although the ear­ly arrival of the police forced us to change our plans slight­ly, the action still served its pur­pose: to high­light the inabil­i­ty of G8 lead­ers to tru­ly tack­le cli­mate change, and to take action in sol­i­dar­i­ty with those dis­rupt­ing the sum­mit in Ger­many and those already suf­fer­ing from the effects of cli­mate change around the world.



norwich@risingtide.org.uk
http://www.risingtide.org.uk

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TOUR OF EEEEVIL IN WHANGANUI-A-TARA, NEW ZEALAND — ACTION REPORT

The num­ber of pro­test­ers had been few, the atten­tion by our friends in blue aston­ish­ing­ly intense — 2 cop cars and one pad­dy-wag­on were fol­low­ing the small group close­ly.

the Tour of EEEEEvil start­ed in Mid­land Park with a phat boom-box hail­ing out loud. first they cycled towards the US embassy. crayons were used to beau­ti­fy the pave­ment, being under heavy scruti­ny by secu­ri­ty guards and police.

a cat’s leap lat­er, the pro­test­ers rang the door-bell of the Ger­man embassy to tell them they are all scum­my pol­luters of the envi­ron­ment. next sta­tion was the British High Com­mis­sion where a ban­ner was unfold­ed to make cap­i­tal­ism his­to­ry.

final­ly, the group was not keen on vis­it­ing the oth­er embassies of the G8 and cycled through the CBD and dis­persed around Vic­to­ria St, receiv­ing smiles and applause from some peo­ple on the streets.

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Bristol CM deaths banner
BRISTOL CRITICAL MASS — ACTION REPORT

This morn­ing saw a good natured crit­i­cal mass reclaim the streets of Bris­tol from car-cul­ture. A crowd of 40 to 50 rid­ers gath­ered in sol­i­dar­i­ty with protests against the G8 and to draw atten­tion to the chaos of cli­mate change.

This morn­ing saw a good natured and fun crit­i­cal mass reclaim the streets of Bris­tol from car-cul­ture! A good crowd of 40 to 50 rid­ers gath­ered in the cen­tre ready to move off in a car­ni­val of cycling in sol­i­dar­i­ty with protests against the G8 and to draw atten­tion to the chaos of cli­mate change.

This morn­ing saw a good natured and fun crit­i­cal mass reclaim the streets of Bris­tol from car-cul­ture! A good crowd of 40 to 50 rid­ers gath­ered in the cen­tre ready to move off in a car­ni­val of cycling in sol­i­dar­i­ty with protests against the G8 and to draw atten­tion to the chaos of cli­mate change. It was inter­est­ing to note there was lots of media here this time – nor­mal­ly at a crit­i­cal mass these is no media, but (being cyn­i­cal) I won­der if the media arrived this time because there was a lit­tle agro at the last one? Shame that the media go for sen­sa­tion­al­ist news and not real news!

Any­way, the crowd moved off towards Tem­ple Quay, the new finan­cial heart of bris­tol (?) down Bald­win Street, over the bridge and down towards the round­about that con­nects to Bris­tol Tem­ple Meads, then over into tem­ple quay where we found a mur­al on the floor ‘We Have the Pow­er’ – very apt! Then on towards Broad­mead and onto the bot­tom of the M32 and round back to the foun­tains. A good morn­ings work!

The recep­tion was almost total­ly pos­i­tive, fly­ers were hand­ed out to pedes­tri­ans and fel­low cyclists and dri­vers explain­ing what this was all about. Lots of peo­ple waved, cheers and beeped as we passed. There were bemused faces in cor­po­rate Bris­tol as the be-suit­ed Tem­ple Quay was invad­ed by ped­al-pow­er!

This event just going to show how peo­ple can reclaim a pub­lic space from the relent­less grind of the rat-race and build some com­mu­ni­ty. Unlike the G8, we care about cli­mate change and got off our ass to do some­thing! See you at the next one!

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G8 German Shell 1
G8 German Shell 2
Ger­many: 60 — 70 peo­ple are blockad­ing a Shell-Sta­tion in Ever­sha­gen. Nine police emer­gency vehi­cles are at the loca­tion, how­ev­er hold­ing back.

20070608_Shell — video/x‑ms-wmv 7.6M
20070608_Shell — video/x‑ms-wmv 7.6M

On Fri­day sam­ba bands and pro­tes­tors shut down the Shell garage in Ever­sha­gen, Ros­tock

Police, unsur­pris­ing­ly, arrived in sec­onds, and the riot squads sur­round­ed the garage.

But, despite this, the Shell sta­tion was blocked for an hour.

In Ger­many fuel sta­tions are not kept in stock by tanker trucks. They run huge fuel pipelines from one to the oth­er, link­ing them across the city. And in every fuel sta­tion is an emer­gency shut-off but­ton.

And, low and behold, some­one hit the but­ton, shut­ting off the fuel sup­ply to some if not all the Shell garages across Ros­tock, caus­ing a slight headache for the multi­na­tion­al oil and gas com­pa­ny’s prof­its that day in the love­ly north-west Ger­man city.

More pho­tos at http://indymedia.ie/article/82971
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Port­land, Ore­gon, USA

ACTION #1: Anti-Bor­ders Action

The Lead­ers of the 8 most pow­er­ful coun­tries, who main­tain glob­al inequal­i­ty, war, and star­va­tion will meet behind closed doors to plot our future for us at a lux­u­ri­ous health resort in Ger­many June 6th thru 8th. There has been a call out for inter­na­tion­al days of action across the globe to coin­cide with the mobi­liza­tion against the G8. Hun­dred of thou­sands of peo­ple from around the world are con­verg­ing on Ger­many, even some of our neigh­bors in Port­land.

We hear that call and come togeth­er in Port­land as decen­tral­ized and autonomous groups to say No to the G8, No to there Lies, and No More Tricks. They are eight, we are six billion…lets start act­ing like it and reject their chaot­ic sys­tem of exploita­tion and con­trol.

We meet at the INS Office to say No to the Bor­der fence being built, ICE Raids, and to reject the idea that mul­ti-nation­al cor­po­ra­tions can freely cross bor­ders to exploit peo­ple and steal land. While the peo­ple are being con­tained by bor­ders, forced off lands and con­trolled by mil­i­ta­riza­tion.

Fri­day, June 8th at 5:30pm
INS Office
NW Broad­way

Sup­port­ed by: Cas­ca­dia Ris­ing Tide, Port­land Sin Fron­teras, Food not bombs, and Stu­dents for Uni­ty.

ACTION #2: Anti-Dam Action

On Fri­day, Stop La Paro­ta PDX launched its cam­paign to pres­sure com­pa­nies with ties to the financ­ing of La Paro­ta Dam to sev­er all con­nec­tions to the destruc­tive project.

Activists held a col­or­ful demon­stra­tion in front of the Lloyd Cen­ter Sears to demand the Sears Hold­ing Cor­po­ra­tion cut all ties to Grupo Car­so. Grupo Car­so is the finan­cial umbrel­la of Mex­i­can bil­lion­aire, Car­los Slim Helú, who has pub­licly declared that Grupo Car­so sub­sidiaries will be involved in every aspect of La Paro­ta.

La Paro­ta, a 765-megawatt hydro­elec­tric dam slat­ed for the Papa­gayo Riv­er in Guer­rero, Mex­i­co, is a clas­sic infra­struc­ture expan­sion project result­ing from trade agree­ments like NAFTA and the FTAA in the worst of ways. The dam would sub­merge 43,000 acres of for­est and farm­land along the river’s banks, dis­plac­ing at least 25,000 most­ly indige­nous campesinos (sub­sis­tence farm­ers) from the Com­mu­nal Lands of Cac­ahu­ate­pec. Already, indige­nous resis­tance to the dam has been met with impris­on­ment and mur­der.

Far from being a renew­able ener­gy source, sed­i­ment accu­mu­la­tion lim­its the elec­tric­i­ty gen­er­at­ing capac­i­ty of dams to 50–100 years. Mean­while, large dams are sig­nif­i­cant con­trib­u­tors to glob­al warm­ing. As the tremen­dous bio­mass of a trop­i­cal for­est decays beneath a reser­voir, it gives off green­house gas­es. Dams in trop­i­cal regions have been shown to pro­duce any­where from two to 40 times as much car­bon diox­ide as an equiv­a­lent coal-fired plant.

The rea­son for this bla­tant exploita­tion and eco­cide? Elec­tric­i­ty gen­er­at­ed from La Paro­ta would be incor­po­rat­ed into an inter­na­tion­al ener­gy grid and used to pow­er fac­to­ry-cen­ters, maquilado­ras (export-ori­ent­ed sweat­shop cor­ri­dors). The phe­nom­e­non of seiz­ing indige­nous lands and then forc­ing inhab­i­tants into work­ing for sub­op­ti­mal wages is not ‘eco­nom­ic devel­op­ment,’ but a mod­ern ver­sion of colo­nial­ism.

The CFE made no attempt to include the campesinos in the deci­sion-mak­ing process regard­ing La Paro­ta. In July 2003, with­out giv­ing notice or seek­ing per­mis­sion, the com­mis­sion sim­ply sent in machin­ery to build two tun­nels to divert the flow of the Papa­gayo. Farm­ers from sur­round­ing com­mu­ni­ties respond­ed with road block­ades and encamp­ments to keep CFE equip­ment out of the area. The ongo­ing road­blocks have been large­ly suc­cess­ful, and the CFE has been forced to pull out most of its equip­ment In Chilpancin­go, the state cap­i­tal, the pro­test­ers were 30,000 strong. Their mes­sage was clear: “We are ready to die for the land.”

The demon­stra­tion was held both in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the resist­ing campesinos as well as the resis­tance in Ger­many to the G8. La Paro­ta is a man­i­fes­ta­tion of the glob­al sys­tem of oppres­sion cre­at­ed by orga­ni­za­tions like the G8 to fur­ther the inter­ests of transna­tion­al cor­po­ra­tions at the cost of peo­ple and envi­ron­men­tal integri­ty.

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Asheville Critical Mass
Bank of America climate action 1Bank of America climate action 2
For Imme­di­ate Release
June 8, 2007
www.risingtidenorthamerica.org

Asheville Crit­i­cal Mass Con­fronts Bank of Amer­i­ca for Invest­ments in Coal Indus­try

Today dozens of cyclists paid a sur­prise vis­it to Bank of Amer­i­ca to protest their finan­cial back­ing of coal com­pa­nies as a part of the Inter­na­tion­al Day of Action Against Cli­mate Change and G8. After tying up down­town traf­fic, the 30-strong bike ride descend­ed on the down­town Asheville head­quar­ters of Bank of Amer­i­ca. Once there, a num­ber of peo­ple dumped coal in front of the main entrance, while anoth­er per­son spon­ta­neous­ly sac­ri­ficed their bike lock and locked the front doors shut.

With police still not in sight, the bike ride con­tin­ued on to anoth­er Bank of Amer­i­ca branch, where par­tic­i­pants plas­tered the bank in stick­ers, hand­ed out fly­ers to cus­tomers, and held ban­ners read­ing, “Stop Bank­ing on Cli­mate Change” and “Cli­mate Chaos: Brought to you by Bank of Amer­i­ca.”

The protest was held in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the mas­sive anti-G8 protests in Ger­many, where lead­ers of the 8 rich­est coun­tries con­tin­ue to drag their feet on mak­ing any mean­ing­ful reduc­tions in green­house gas emis­sions. The bike ride was orga­nized by Asheville Ris­ing Tide, a group ded­i­cat­ed to con­fronting the root caus­es of cli­mate change.

Bank of Amer­i­ca plays a major role in per­pet­u­at­ing cli­mate change by its mas­sive invest­ments in the coal indus­try. Pound for pound, burn­ing coal releas­es more C02 emis­sions then any oth­er fos­sil fuel. Bank of Amer­i­ca has facil­i­tat­ed near­ly $1 bil­lion in loans to Massey Ener­gy and Arch Coal, two of the largest com­pa­nies involved in the envi­ron­men­tal­ly dev­as­tat­ing process of moun­tain­top removal coal min­ing. Moun­tain­top removal min­ing has already reduced 500 square miles of moun­tains to rub­ble and buried over 1,200 miles of streams in South­ern Appalachia.

Bank of Amer­i­ca has also made loans and facil­i­tat­ed stock offer­ings for Peabody Ener­gy to the tune of sev­er­al bil­lion dol­lars. Peabody is infa­mous for its human rights vio­la­tions against Native Amer­i­cans. Since 1975, over 14,000 indige­nous peo­ple, most­ly Dine’, have been forcibly relo­cat­ed off of their ances­tral lands to make way for Peabody’s Black Mesa strip mine in north­east­ern Ari­zona. This strip mine, the largest in the US, has dev­as­tat­ed thou­sands of acres of indige­nous land and drained local aquifers that are essen­tial for sus­tain­ing life in this desert cli­mate. In addi­tion to these abus­es, Peabody Ener­gy, along with a num­ber of oth­er com­pa­nies fund­ed by Bank of Amer­i­ca, are pur­su­ing the con­struc­tion of a new wave of dirty coal plants.

“By tar­get­ing coal indus­try investors, we can under­mine their finan­cial sup­port which they depend on to con­tin­ue oper­a­tion. The less mon­ey they have, the less coal they can extract and burn. In the face of cat­a­clysmic cli­mate change, we do not have time to wait for gov­ern­ment reg­u­la­tions. We must direct­ly inter­vene now!” said Jen­nifer Clayson, who par­tic­i­pat­ed in the ride.

This week’s G8 meet­ings failed to even begin to address cli­mate change. While some Euro­pean coun­tries pushed for 50% emis­sions cuts by 2050, the US man­aged to derail even this goal, which falls far short of the reduc­tions that are nec­es­sary. In the end, the G8 coun­tries agreed to “con­sid­er” cut­ting green­house gas emis­sions. “In the face of mas­sive species extinc­tion, drought, and ris­ing sea lev­els, the best these world lead­ers can come up with is to ‘con­sid­er’ doing some­thing? Until there is real change, we, along with peo­ple around the world, will con­tin­ue to take direct action
against those respon­si­ble for cli­mate change,” said Liam Jef­fer­son. Accord­ing to sci­en­tists, green­house gas emis­sions need to be slashed by at least 80% by 2050 to avoid the worst impacts of cli­mate change.

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San Francisco G8 Critical Mass
San Fran­cis­co Bike ride against G8

On Fri­day June 8, 2007, there was a crit­i­cal mass-style bicy­cle ride with an anti-G8 theme which ini­tial­ly gath­ered at Justin Her­man plaza, and then pro­ceed­ed along the Embar­cadero, Colum­bus Avenue, Mar­ket Street, Valen­cia St., and then end­ed at Dolores Park. Every­thing pro­ceed­ed peace­ful­ly, and the size of the group was good for being able to be aware of every­one’s loca­tion. There was a large police pres­ence the entire time. This might have stemmed from a fias­co of police response to the 2005 G8 protest which result­ed in com­man­ders get­ting reas­signed, inven­tive charges against par­tic­i­pants and FBI vis­its to jour­nal­ists.

Most peo­ple on the side­walks appeared hap­py to see us, or at least had no neg­a­tive reac­tion. Some­times call-in radio shows and rant­i­ng sec­tions on youtube and news­pa­per web­sites give the feel­ing that the pub­lic has a lot of antibi­cy­cle fanat­ics, but we did­n’t see any.

Appear­ances were made by both Gabe Myers, who was basi­cal­ly arrest­ed dur­ing the 2005 protest as a ‘suck­er’ and charged (and lat­er let go) with felony lynch­ing after drop­ping a foam sign in the road as a police car drove at high speed towards him, and also Josh Wolf, who spent a record amount of time in jail for refus­ing to speak to a grand jury formed to probe the bat­tery of the oth­er offi­cer who was dri­ving the vehi­cle. Grand juries gath­er­ing evi­dence and issu­ing indict­ments are allowed unre­strict­ed ques­tion­ing of wit­ness­es, unlike reg­u­lar court­room prac­tice, and a wit­ness is not allowed to have a lawyer present. In sit­u­a­tions where a polit­i­cal group is involved (such as the Red Scare of the 1950s), these juries are capa­ble of vast­ly over­reach­ing and gath­er­ing long lists of names of peo­ple unin­volved in crimes, who could be brand­ed as sus­pects. Press reports cre­at­ed a con­fus­ing pic­ture, but Wolf was not con­sid­ered in con­tempt of court for refus­ing to tes­ti­fy about the injury of the offi­cer, or to show his video tape, but rather he did­n’t agree to unre­strict­ed ques­tions about par­tic­i­pants who he had a con­fi­den­tial jour­nal­is­tic rela­tion­ship with.

The ride was pret­ty nice. It was very sun­ny, and most of the route had long stretch­es unin­ter­rupt­ed by short cycle lights. The nature of the large police response was inter­est­ing in that only a small group of friend­ly bicy­cle offi­cers, plus some Harley and motor­bike rid­ing police offi­cers were mixed togeth­er in the crowd. We had no trou­ble split­ting the road and tun­nel with cars, and things felt much safer than dur­ing ordi­nary times when you inevitably split the right lane with bus­es and right-turn­ing cabs. In a few cas­es, there was mixed body lan­guage when some offi­cers object­ed to the tail-end of the group con­tin­u­ing to move on a red light, so peo­ple became wor­ried and stopped. Yet oth­er offi­cers appeared to be hur­ry­ing the group through on the red by stop­ping traf­fic. In any case, every so often one could squint two blocks down and make out police vans, Chevy Suburban/Tahoes, and cars mov­ing by, some­times briefly sound­ing a horn as though they were try­ing to get around traf­fic. Occa­sion­al­ly the ride would come across a new group of police parked well away from the start, such as Colum­bus avenue. Then at the end where peo­ple lis­tened to music, while a small­er group stood across the street, it seemed like more vans with police emblem kept turn­ing the cor­ner to dri­ve by.
Rea­sons behind the neg­a­tive response by thou­sands of peo­ple (from the left, right, and cen­ter) to the G8 are dif­fi­cult to sum­ma­rize briefly. On the sur­face, a meet­ing of world lead­ers might appear to be a pos­i­tive thing, akin to the cre­ation of the UN. In addi­tion, it isn’t clear how much could real­ly get dis­cussed dur­ing 2–3 days of talks, or how any­thing so omi­nous could arise out of this.

The eas­i­est way to explain it is that the era of colo­nial­ism nev­er end­ed. Gov­ern­ments (span­ning mul­ti­ple pres­i­dents) have spent the last few decades work­ing close­ly with large com­pa­nies and are con­trol­ling the economies and gov­ern­ments of most of the third world against the inter­ests of their pop­u­la­tions. It is easy to let your eyes glaze over and think “yes, we just need to invest in Africa” and not real­ize that the areas of Africa with the most for­eign ‘invest­ment’ are the most impov­er­ished, for instance the hor­ri­ble resource wars in the Con­go (where the Unit­ed States helped assas­si­nate their demo­c­ra­t­ic leader in the 60s, and installed a dic­ta­tor), or Shell Oil destroy­ing the land base in the Niger­ian Delta while shar­ing none of its prof­its.

Much of the deci­sions and con­tent of these meet­ings is worked out before­hand. Insti­tu­tions such as the World Bank are where the details of public/private plans are worked out by small com­mit­tees. One of the most com­mon mech­a­nisms for cre­at­ing third world pover­ty is the forc­ing of coun­tries to take loans for large infra­struc­ture projects such as dams, water­works and pow­er grids which aren’t used by work­ing class, are car­ried out by first world cor­po­ra­tions (such as Bech­tel in Bolivia) and end up indebt­ing the pop­u­la­tion for decades.

Final­ly, while it seems like indi­vid­u­als have lit­tle chance of influ­enc­ing such pow­er­ful insti­tu­tions, it is impor­tant to remem­ber that the WTO has had to make major con­ces­sions to embold­ened latin amer­i­can, african, and SE asian con­tin­gents after the major turn­ing point after the 1999 protests. The sign­ing of Merkel’s Cli­mate state­ment was regard­ed as a big suc­cess dur­ing this meet­ing, although the lack of con­crete actions promised in this agree­ment makes it seem like the pub­lic was just suc­cess­ful in mak­ing the lead­ers want to seem respon­sive. You as an indi­vid­ual might not be able to change it all by your­self, but it is com­ing about as an emer­gent prop­er­ty of a move­ment of less than 10% of the pop­u­la­tion who become activists.

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FLORIDA: CRITICAL MASS
Pick­et signs blew in the wind as three bik­ers rode slow­ly but sure­ly down Dix­ie High­way. Unit­ing with activists world­wide in protest of the Group of Eight sum­mit in Heili­gen­damm, Ger­many, Lake Worth con­tributed a total of six. But the issues they brought hit close to home.

Their des­ti­na­tion was the Palm Beach Gar­dens home of FPL Group Inc. Chief Exec­u­tive Lewis Hay III.
Their com­plaint: FPL’s deci­sion to build the West Coun­ty Ener­gy Cen­ter, a nat­ur­al gas plant, about 1,000 feet from a wildlife pre­serve, accord­ing to the group’s fli­er. “You can’t smoke 1,000 feet from a school, but you can put a pow­er plant 1,000 feet from an ani­mal pre­serve?” asked sup­port­er Rachel Kijew­s­ki, 22.

The group rode a large part of the four-hour trek in front of their veg­gie truck. The beat-up blue solu­tion to glob­al warm­ing fights petrol with veg­etable oil. “Its exhaust smells like tem­pu­ra,” said bike rid­er Pana­gi­oti Tsolkas.

Most dri­vers’ reac­tions to the trio were pos­i­tive, giv­ing them thumbs-up. Their jour­ney, how­ev­er, was not with­out chal­lenges. Moth­er Nature poured down rain all Fri­day after­noon. Aver­ag­ing 7 to 10 mph on the high­way, the group pressed on, stop­ping traf­fic the entire way until they were stopped out­side the gate lead­ing to Hay’s home inside Old Marsh Coun­try Club.

As the G‑8 sum­mit’s gath­er­ing of the eight indus­tri­al pow­er­hous­es comes to a close, Lynne Purvis said she feels their fight is just begin­ning.
“It’s hard you know,” Purvis said.
“We’re all pret­ty low bud­get. These rich exec­u­tives have all this secu­ri­ty and mon­ey and to sup­ply these things and we use card­board signs and pub­lic tran­sit.” Laugh­ing in spite of their small num­bers, the pro­tes­tors remained opti­mistic.
“We’d love if he decid­ed not to build an ener­gy cen­ter,” she said. “As easy as it is for him to keep this in his nine-to-five life, it affects us too.”

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Not­ting­ham: Activists pick­et A453 exhi­bi­tion

The High­ways Agency held a fan­cy exhi­bi­tion in Clifton today, to pro­mote their planned widen­ing of the A453. So cli­mate-change activists pick­et­ed it.

With thoughts of the G8 and the inter­na­tion­al day of action on cli­mate change in our heads, we came to the road­builder’s PR show to put the oth­er side of the argu­ment. Our dis­play was a lot less flash than that of the H.A. but we got our mes­sage across, and many vis­i­tors to the exhi­bi­tion were very sup­port­ive.

We want­ed to point out the links between the pro­posed A453 scheme and the pro­posed M1 widen­ing and EMids Air­port expansion…a com­bined recipe for more traf­fic growth, more pol­lu­tion, more C02 pumped into our dying atmos­phere. Strange­ly the H.A. exhi­bi­tion made no men­tion of cli­mate change, although they were tack­ling pol­lu­tion by giv­ing away free in-car air fresh­en­ers!

The exhi­bi­tion is at Clifton Leisure Cen­tre, Southchurch Dri­ve all day tomor­row (sat 9th). Why not email your com­ments on road­build­ing and cli­mate to A453Widening@highways.gsi.gov.uk as well.

climateactionnow@hotmail.co.uk

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Portugal G8 climate
In Por­tu­gal, the G8 Net­work has made accions in city of Lis­bon and Por­to at 8 of June, Inter­na­tion­al Day of Direct Accion for Cli­mate Accion. You can see fotos and videos in the blog www.geoito2007.blogspot.com

In Lis­bon we made, in Down Town (Augus­ta Street), a batlle for cli­mate jus­tice (“World isn´t a tar­get, from CO2 has to be saved”), in wich the peo­ple of the street tried to stop the 8 lead­ers of G8 to fill the world, speacil­ly south hem­is­fere, with pol­lu­tion: the world against the pol­i­tics of G8! In a world map the G8 throw black balls (the CO2) to the poor­est coun­tries while peo­ple throw green balls (“the good actions for cli­mate”) to pre­vent cli­mate dis­as­ter and social injus­tice: mean­ing that G8 are his­tor­i­cal respon­s­ables for cli­mate change and their pol­i­tics will not pre­vent seri­ous dis­as­ters that affect pri­mar­i­ly the poor­er, because they will con­tin­ue to polute the world mak­ing busi­ness of pol­lu­tion and explor­ing the poor­est coun­tries. We made also some games in the street, invit­ing peo­ple to step pol­lu­tion and save cli­mate (the G8 stepped the actions to save cli­mate and not pol­lu­tion…), and put ban­ners in one of the most pol­lut­ed avenues in city due to auto­mo­bile traf­fic say­ing: “400 thou­sand cars for day…is to much”, “less car, more pub­lic trans­ports, less polu­tion”, “free­dom to move, city to the peo­ple”.

In Por­to we sim­u­late, in Down Town (San­ta Cata­ri­na Street), a emis­sions trad­ing mar­ket. The G8 leader trad­ed emis­sions between them (black bal­lons) and then offered pol­lu­tion to the peo­ple on the street.

Con­grat­u­la­tions to all!

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Sao Paulo G8 critical mass
A bad smell sur­round­ed Bicy­clist’s Square last fri­day morn­ing, Glob­al Direct Action Day against G8 and Cli­mate Change. All around the world, peo­ple rel­caimed the streets to say no to the letarghy of the 8 lead­ers that met in Ger­many behind fences and armys.

In Sao Paulo, Brasil, 25 human beings joined to cel­e­brate life, sus­tain­abil­i­ty and the act of liv­ing togheter in a Crit­i­cal Mass ride for life. In Ger­many, there’re only 8 human beings decid­ing to keep war and preada­to­ry waste of resources that destroys the plan­et and kills lifes all around the globe.

A tree was plant­ed on Bicy­clist’s Square. It was in hon­or of a home­less man that was sleep­ing below the Square and was killed by a car on may 25th, a few hours before may Crit­i­cal Mass take the streets to cel­e­brate life.

First stop: Ital­ian Con­sulate. Fiats, Fer­raris, Masser­atis, Lam­borgh­i­nis and Berlus­co­nis kills thou­sands of human beings every year.

Sec­ond stop: Petro­brás build­ing, the brazil­ian fuel com­pa­ny. The plan to make Brazil become a huge cane brake is no ener­getic or eco­log­i­cal solu­tion, but only a way to fuel an obses­sion and keep the state of war, envi­ro­men­tal destruc­tion and irra­tional mobil­i­ty stan­darts.

Off the bikes on the cross­walk, going to the third stop: Japan Con­sulate. Hon­das, Toy­otas and Mit­subishis kills thou­sands of peo­ple every year all around the world.

Fourth stop: French Con­sulate. Renaults and Peu­geots pol­lute as much as the oth­ers. In Sao Paulo, air pol­lu­tion kills about 8 peo­ple a day. More than a half of the air pol­lu­tion comes from pri­vate cars.

Still We Ride

Fifth stop: Ger­man Con­sulate. Mer­cedes, BMWs and Aud­is spread indi­vid­u­al­ism and agres­siv­i­ty, con­tribut­ing to the plan­e­tary state of war.

Who makes prof­it on that?

In front of British Con­sulate, Earth on Dan­ger on the hands of war poo­dle Tony Blair.

They’re respon­si­ble for recy­cling in São Paulo.

Love against war.

Ethanol is a lie.

Mr. Puttin was’t there.

We’re traf­fic.

Crit­i­cal Mass at Daslu, the store where the rich­est peo­ple in Brazil shops. Our “G8-peo­ple” shop there and seems to feel nau­sea about their own land: eng­lish writ­ten phras­es, employ­ees dress­ing french but­ler clothes, just beside the pol­lut­ed Pin­heiros riv­er and sur­round­ed by third world fave­las.

Cana­di­an con­sulate on World Trade Cen­ter Sao Paulo: Earth in dan­ger (and it’s not because of Bin Laden).

U.S. Con­sulate. Out­side, it looks like Guan­tanamo.

Note to Mr. Bush: “Brazil isn’t a cane brake / G8: State Ter­ror”

66 years old, 22 years rid­ing.

A gift from Crit­i­cal Mass: one less car!

Critical Mass reports — London, Manchester, Glasgow, Bristol, Edinburgh, York

Lon­don:
The cycle police were pret­ty laid back and vast­ly out­num­bered, though they did still try to man­age the ride by block­ing the front so that the back could catch up. What does it mat­ter if a 1,000 rid­ers get split into two or more though? Towards the end of the ride the police seemed to give up doing any­thing, they did­n’t even try to stop a cou­ple of cars going the wrong way down a one way street, and they just blend­ed in and became a part of the Mass.

Lon­don:
London May 07 Critical Mass 3The cycle police were pret­ty laid back and vast­ly out­num­bered, though they did still try to man­age the ride by block­ing the front so that the back could catch up. What does it mat­ter if a 1,000 rid­ers get split into two or more though? Towards the end of the ride the police seemed to give up doing any­thing, they did­n’t even try to stop a cou­ple of cars going the wrong way down a one way street, and they just blend­ed in and became a part of the Mass.

The police inter­vened with an inci­dent with a young rid­er at King’s Cross. I could­n’t make out whether the rid­er had been involved in acci­dent and the police were just tak­ing par­tic­u­lars or if the rid­er was being rep­ri­mand­ed. Any­way this led to some boo­ing from the Mass.

Par­tic­i­pants did quite a lot of blockad­ing traf­fic and even a small sit
down in Par­lia­ment Square, though this was prob­a­bly cel­e­bra­to­ry and
defi­ant. Noth­ing was done to stop the sound sys­tems play­ing in the SOCPA zone this time. The impres­sion I got from oth­er rid­ers was that this was a very good Mass. I went expect­ing the worst and got almost the best.

http://criticalmasslondon.org.uk

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the inci­dent at kings cross involved a rid­er being caught steal­ing a light from the back of a cops bike. the police got pissed and tried to arrest her but a few oth­er rid­ers, and unfor­tu­nate­ly i mean a few, inter­vened and let it be known that it would be very dif­fi­cult for the police to arrest her — which they decid­ed would there­fore not be worth it. i per­son­al­ly think that those on the CM should not allow fel­low rid­ers to be arrest­ed — an easy thing to acheive when we vast­ly out­num­ber the cops.
respect to the few that helped out.

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The atmos­phere on the ride was real­ly friend­ly with a few small sound sys­tems and a vari­ety of pret­ty mad bikes and trail­ers adding to the mag­ic. There were loads of new faces and peo­ple of every age and back­ground.

There were also plen­ty of cops. They had talked to a few peo­ple as the ride met up at Water­loo Bridge and were seen hand­ing some kind of paper­work to the own­er of one of the sound sys­tems, but no sign of any sig­nif­i­cant attempt to cur­tail the ride. Far from being oppres­sive, they kept them­selves to them­selves on the whole.

I per­son­al­ly got a quite pissed off a few times by seem­ing­ly incon­sid­er­ate behav­ior from the ride itself — for exam­ple, not let­ting pedes­tri­ans cross the road. In anoth­er exam­ple, a bus com­ing in the oppo­site direc­tion was blocked by cyclists on the wrong side of the road and held up for at least ten min­utes as a result.
The cops did grab a few idiots and give them some stern words on sev­er­al occa­sions through­out the ride for cycling on the wrong side of the road into oncom­ing traf­fic.

The police made fools of them­selves at Par­lia­ment Square when they tried to block the rides third or forth rota­tion around the square and end­ed up stalling the ride there for a good half hour. The ride would have moved off much quick­er if left to it’s own devices as the ride likes to move and becomes impa­tient when peo­ple stop.

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Videos from Lon­don:

Quick­time video — video/mp4 9.3M
Win­dows video — video/x‑ms-wmv 13M

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Man­ches­ter video rough-cut

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Glasgow CM May '07 blessing
BIG BIKE BLESSING — Anoth­er great Crit­i­cal Mass bike ride in Glas­gow

About 80 cyclists came out to the Big Bike Bless­ing on this sun­ny evening in Glas­gow. The priest from the church of the Hol­ly Bikes were sent by St Cycle to help cyclists real­ize that by rid­ding their bikes they are actu­al­ly sav­ing the city dwellers and the plan­et at the same time. Every cyclists was praised as a hero, a sav­ior for they are the only ones that can help this oil dri­ven econ­o­my. They are the only ones that can bring fresh air to the con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed city. They are the ones tak­ing action on a dai­ly bases no mat­ter where they are from, what their reli­gion might be, or what their pro­fes­sion is. The bike will save us. AMEN!

Hol­ly oil was used to bless about 20 bikes and every cyclist was thanked for their incred­i­ble achieve­ment, their hero­ic act of using their self pro­pelled vehi­cles. They were told that the Great St Cycles is look­ing over all of us and that we will be looked after dur­ing our ride around the city as long as we stick togeth­er.

The cer­e­mo­ni­ous aspect of this gath­er­ing actu­al­ly cre­at­ed some great inter­ac­tions and made peo­ple curi­ous to the point of want­i­ng to know more. There were some very inter­est­ing dis­cus­sion about our reli­gious belief in bikes (which chal­lenged peo­ple in their own beliefs). This also brought all the cyclists togeth­er.

As for cul­tur­al diver­si­ty, and just to show that it’s not about the reli­gion but about bikes, there were a few peo­ple send­ing bless­ings dressed in a more Hin­du style as well. There was even some strange rep­tile that decid­ed to join the cer­e­monies of the day.

The Weird Bike Show brought out the ZEM (Zero Emis­sions Machine) once again, with it’s hop­ping sound sys­tem and pro­vid­ed the broth­ers and sis­ters from the church of the Hol­ly Bikes a bril­liant ride.

The promised Divine Inter­ven­tion did occur around Tron­gate where a pair of shoes belong­ing to no oth­er than St Cycles were care­ful­ly left on top of an elec­tric box before he him­self was tak­en to the sky.

As for the police charg­ing cyclists of block­ing traf­fic last month, there was a com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent vibe this month. There were two police offi­cers on bikes that came along to the ride. They were very mel­low and there­for were giv­en quite a few bless­ings.

We also have some excel­lent footage that shows how fast bikes can get out of the way to let things like fire trucks and the police through. The only thing hold­ing these emer­gency vehi­cles up were the motors … not bikes.

The mass fin­ished in George Sq where every­one left was stamped with a ‘Bike Route’ Stamp ensur­ing a spe­cial dis­count to the gig at the Art School with Jum­ble Sales Sound Sys­tem and Bed­lam Boudoir fan­cy bur­lesque night.

For those that claimed Crit­i­cal Mass was dead … I’m pleased to inform you that our num­bers are still grow­ing and we’re lov­ing it.

Bless you Bike!!

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Bristol CM May 07 wheel trashed
Bristol CM May 07 arrestBristol CM May 07 arrest 2
Bris­tol: Crit­i­cal Mass yes­ter­day was phe­nom­e­nal. I think we had over 100 par­tic­i­pants and it was flow­ing beau­ti­ful­ly for about 40 min­utes… Then of course some dri­vers, three I think, all got a bit impa­tient all at once and a cou­ple of cyclists were knocked over, 14 police cars an ambu­lance and a riot van, two arrests lat­er, tail backs from the Foun­tains right up past Stokes Croft… all got a bit nasty. It will be inter­est­ing to see if the press have any­thing to say and what the police pres­ence is next time…

Just to be clear though, whilst there was quite a lot going on as far as I am aware at least one of those arrest­ed got stuck in to the fra­cas after the police arrived and had noth­ing to do with the ride itself, and nei­ther of the cyclists who were hit behaved inap­pro­pri­ate­ly at any point. No motorists were arrest­ed and the police let one hit and run dri­ver leave the scene with­out for­mal­ly record­ing an acci­dent, despite him hav­ing delib­er­ate­ly rammed a cyclist and ruined his bicy­cle.

So, peo­ple, I under­stand there will be anoth­er ride on the 29th of May. Meet 5.30pm at the Foun­tains, leave at 6pm. Those of you who aren’t at Glas­ton­bury that is. The more rea­son­able cyclists that attend the bet­ter we can cre­ate a good organ­ic flow and have a safe and effec­tive ride to cel­e­brate cycling.

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I was at the Edin­burgh Crit­i­cal Mass yes­ter­day, with about 15 or 20 of us there. It went along fair­ly peace­ful­ly, with the excep­tion of the police in the mid­dle of the mead­ows. The ban­ner that some­one had, had to be tak­en down, but apart from that there was no issue, apart from some tail­backs.

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York’s May Crit­i­cal Mass a suc­cess

Some­where between 35 and 40 rid­ers took part in this months ride includ­ing a num­ber of new faces. Flags dis­play­ing state­ments such as “One Less Car” and “I [bike] YRK” were attached to peo­ple’s bikes as they assem­bled at the Min­ster. The large amounts of flier­ing in the pre­vi­ous week seemed to have had a won­der­ful effect, though the weath­er could have been bet­ter. We met some inter­est­ing respons­es along the way. When we reached the sug­gest­ed end point of St Samp­sons Square, the ride end­ed up con­tin­u­ing to cir­cle the square for some time before final­ly stop­ping. It def­i­nite­ly looks like, hav­ing slipped to just 20 a month, the ride is head­ing back to high­er num­bers, and could make 100 by the end of the year.
At 6:05 the ride left, head­ing for Hol­gate Road and Pop­ple­ton Road. After cross­ing Clifton Bridge, the ride head­ed down Water End into Clifton, and after a messy turn, pro­ceed­ed along Kingsway North to the round­about, where the cus­tom­ary 2.5 rota­tions was achieved. The ride then fol­lowed Crighton Avenue to Bur­ton Stone Lane, where the away team coach for the evening’s City match was found com­ing in the oppo­site direc­tion. The ride turned towards town, in along Bootham, through Gilly­gate, through Lord May­ors walk and out along Monkgate, where the round­about pro­vid­ed yet more fun. Back in, through Bootham Bar, and round the Min­ster, then over to the Assem­bly Rooms and Dav­ey Gate. At this point, the ride approached the agreed fin­ish­ing point in St Samp­sons Square. Due to the cycle racks and phones, the ride went round the first side, where upon, instead of turn­ing into the square, it con­tin­ued onwards around and around. So imma­ture, but so much fun!

World Naked Bike Ride comes to Southampton! Other UK locations — York, Manchester, London, Brighton

In the fourth year of this imag­i­na­tive and spec­tac­u­lar envi­ron­men­tal protest, The World Naked Bike Ride is to see its first event in Southamp­ton on Fri­day 8 June.

World Naked Bikeride 'stop raping the planet'In the fourth year of this imag­i­na­tive and spec­tac­u­lar envi­ron­men­tal protest, The World Naked Bike Ride is to see its first event in Southamp­ton on Fri­day 8 June.

On the week­end of 8–10 June 2007, in over 40 cities world­wide, peo­ple will be rid­ing bikes naked to cel­e­brate cycling and the human body. In the UK, the World Naked Bike Ride (WNBR, www.worldnakedbikeride.org) is bar­ing all in Lon­don and Brighton on Sat­ur­day 9 June; and Southamp­ton, Man­ches­ter and York the day before, on Fri­day 8 June. The ride demon­strates the vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty of cyclists on the road and is a protest against oil depen­den­cy. Cyclists and skaters are encour­aged to “be there, as bare as you dare”.

Prob­a­bly the biggest world­wide naked protest in his­to­ry, WNBR dif­fers from oth­er mass cycle events because of its aston­ish­ing naked ele­ment. Accord­ing to the organ­is­ers, most bystanders expe­ri­ence a com­bined feel­ing of “amuse­ment, shock and dis­be­lief”.

Southampton’s ride will take place on Fri­day evening, to allow par­tic­i­pants to also ride in Brighton and Lon­don on the fol­low­ing day should they wish.

The WNBR dress code is “as bare as you dare” — par­tic­i­pants are encour­aged to wear “as lit­tle as they feel con­fi­dent with”. Join­ing the ful­ly nude con­tin­gent, some rid­ers in Lon­don and Brighton last year wore shorts, bras, swimwear, body paint, wigs, sun­glass­es etc. Most wear footwear and bring bags to car­ry clothes. Body paint­ing and adorn­ment, cus­tomised bikes and oth­er cre­ative expres­sion are all strong­ly encour­aged.

WNBR cel­e­brates the indi­vid­u­al­i­ty of peo­ple’s bod­ies. Rid­ers of all ages, sizes, builds and appear­ances are there­fore wel­come to par­tic­i­pate with dig­ni­ty and respect. “Most rid­ers find the expe­ri­ence exhil­a­rat­ing, lib­er­at­ing, empow­er­ing. I’ve yet to find any­one who didn’t enjoy it” says Southamp­ton res­i­dent Nat Rav­elle, who has par­tic­i­pat­ed in the Lon­don and Brighton rides in pre­vi­ous years. “At the same time, it makes a great state­ment about the most vital issue of our times: curb­ing our exces­sive use of oil to ensure the future of the plan­et.”

WNBR Southamp­ton will take place on the evening of Fri­day 8 June. Rid­ers will meet at 6pm on Southamp­ton Com­mon – off High­field Road, oppo­site the junc­tion with Omder­man Road. The route will pro­ceed along Portswood Road and onwards through the city cen­tre, and return­ing up the mag­nif­i­cent Avenue to the start loca­tion.

More details of the Southamp­ton ride can be found at http://www.worldnakedbikeride.org/uk/southampton

For fur­ther infor­ma­tion, con­tact Rob, southampton@bikenaked.org

Activist Mediation Network — open for business

The Activist Medi­a­tion Net­work is now up and run­ning. If you know of any activist group or activist indi­vid­ual who has a con­flict which is affect­ing their abil­i­ty to change our world for the bet­ter, then get in touch and we may be able to help sort it out.

The Activist Medi­a­tion Net­work is now up and run­ning. If you know of any activist group or activist indi­vid­ual who has a con­flict which is affect­ing their abil­i­ty to change our world for the bet­ter, then get in touch and we may be able to help sort it out.

activistmediation@aktivix.org
www.activistmediation.org.uk

We are con­tin­u­ing to run train­ing days for peo­ple want­i­ng to learn con­flict res­o­lu­tion and medi­a­tion skills.

Upcom­ing dates
Mon­day June 18th in Nor­wich. Day 1 — How we deal with con­flict, Con­flict res­o­lu­tion tools, Basic medi­a­tion prac­tice. Lim­it­ed places avail­able.
Book asap by email­ing us.

We are prob­a­bly going to do a 2 day course at the Earth First gath­er­ing in Nor­folk, 18–22nd July. This is espe­cial­ly for those going to Cli­mate Camp. It will go like this:

Fri­day July 20th — Day 1 — How we deal with con­flict, Con­flict res­o­lu­tion tools, Basic medi­a­tion prac­tice.

Sat­ur­day July 21st — Day 2 — Prac­tis­ing medi­a­tion skills. Only avail­able to peo­ple who have com­plet­ed a Day 1 with us.

These days will only run if there is enough demand. There will be lim­ites places and we may decide peo­ple need to com­mit in advance. Get in touch if you are inter­est­ed.

Apolo­gies that all these dates are in Nor­folk. If you think there is a demand for a train­ing day in your area, do get in touch.

Climate Camp To Target Heathrow (& new videos: Another End of the World is Possible)

Last sum­mer, over 600 peo­ple con­verged out­side Drax coal-fired pow­er sta­tion for 10 days of sus­tain­able liv­ing and col­lec­tive edu­ca­tion, cul­mi­nat­ing in a day of mass action against Drax. This year, the Camp for Cli­mate Action will pitch its tents near Heathrow air­port.

climate camp '07 sand posterLast sum­mer, over 600 peo­ple con­verged out­side Drax coal-fired pow­er sta­tion for 10 days of sus­tain­able liv­ing and col­lec­tive edu­ca­tion, cul­mi­nat­ing in a day of mass action against Drax. This year, the Camp for Cli­mate Action will pitch its tents near Heathrow air­port.

There will be a day of mass direct action aim­ing to dis­rupt the activ­i­ties of the air­port and the avi­a­tion indus­try, but in the inter­ests of pub­lic safe­ty there will be no attempt to block­ade run­ways.

Although the loca­tion is dif­fer­ent, the phi­los­o­phy of the camp remains the same: to be a place for the bur­geon­ing net­work of peo­ple tak­ing rad­i­cal action on cli­mate change around the coun­try to come togeth­er for a week of low-impact liv­ing, edu­ca­tion, debate, net­work­ing, strate­gis­ing, cel­e­bra­tion, and direct action. The camp will fea­ture over 100 work­shops cov­er­ing top­ics such as cli­mate change impacts, car­bon off­set­ting, bio­fu­els, peak oil, per­ma­cul­ture, prac­ti­cal renew­ables, cam­paign strat­e­gy, skills for direct action, and much more. Run with­out lead­ers by every­one who comes along, it will be a work­ing eco­log­i­cal vil­lage using renew­able ener­gy, com­post­ing waste and sourc­ing food local­ly.

Avi­a­tion is the fastest grow­ing source of green­house gas emis­sions in the UK, and all our efforts to tack­le cli­mate change in oth­er sec­tors are undone by the mas­sive growth in air trav­el. Hold­ing the camp at Heathrow aims to high­light the luna­cy of the gov­ern­men­t’s air­port expan­sion plans, tar­get indus­try giants prof­i­teer­ing from the cli­mate cri­sis, and raise aware­ness of the need to fly less. The camp will also sup­port local res­i­dents in their long-term strug­gle against the build­ing of a third run­way and the destruc­tion of their com­mu­ni­ties.

It all comes down to us, now. We are the last gen­er­a­tion that can do any­thing about cli­mate change. In 20 or 30 years time, should we not change our ways, we’ll be com­mit­ted to emis­sions increas­es that will see forests burn, soils decay, oceans rise, and mil­lions of peo­ple die. If we don’t get this issue right, so much else is lost too.

We still have time, but not for long. Make it count.

Camp for Cli­mate Action, 14th — 21st August 2007.
http://www.climatecamp.org.uk


To cel­e­brate the announce­ment of the loca­tion for this sum­mer’s CAMP
FOR CLIMATE ACTION — Heathrow Air­port, we present:

ANOTHER END OF THE WORLD IS POSSIBLE
7 Video por­traits of rad­i­cal cli­mate activists

“Apoc­a­lypse is always eas­i­er to imag­ine than the strange and cir­cuitous routes to what actu­al­ly comes next.”
Rebec­ca Sol­nit, Hope in the Dark: The Untold His­to­ry of Peo­ple Pow­er, Can­non­gate 2005.

Anoth­er End of the World is Pos­si­ble is a series of cap­ti­vat­ing video por­traits of peo­ple tak­ing rad­i­cal action against the root caus­es of cli­mate change. Rang­ing from an activist who occu­pied an airport’s
taxi way, to a teacher work­ing with kids on a deprived hous­ing estate, the por­traits demon­strate the won­der­ful diver­si­ty of those who will be tak­ing part in this years Camp for Cli­mate Action in the UK : 14th –21st August. see the all at www.climatecamp.org.uk

The 7 — 5 minute long por­traits are also post­ed on numer­ous video plat­forms includ­ing youtube,archive.org, dai­ly motion,v‑social — Quick­time copies can be down­loaded from http://www.guidedurenard.org/bm/library/7 . If you want a dvd copy con­tact john@labofii.net

Inter­vie­wees are: Cather­ine — Cli­mate Camp; Dun­can Law — Tran­si­tion Town Brix­ton; Pauline — Rite2No; John Stew­art- Air­port Watch, Julie — Grow­ing Com­mu­ni­ties; Leo — Plane Stu­pid; Kevin Smith — Car­bon Trade
Watch.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

HARINGEY CRITICAL MASS BIKE RIDE 2007

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

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

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

FOR CLEAN AIR AND A GREEN G8

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

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

WHAT’S THE G8 GOT TO DO WITH THIS?

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

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

COME AND JOIN US!

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