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

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

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

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

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

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

New poster to download
New flyer to download

Details of EF! Winter Moot announced:

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

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

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

Everyone welcome

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

www.earthfirst.org.uk

Reclaim the Earth Centre – conisbrough

There will be a walkabout the Earth Centre at Conisbrough (Doncaster, S. Yorks)on Friday, 23rd October at 1pm.

This meeting is an opportunity to meet each other an discuss plans to reclaim the earth centre for the people.

earth centreearth centre2There will be a walkabout the Earth Centre at Conisbrough (Doncaster, S. Yorks)on Friday, 23rd October at 1pm.

This meeting is an opportunity to meet each other an discuss plans to reclaim the earth centre for the people.

The Earth Centre was a millenium commission funded project, it is a educational centre for sustainable living and after millions of pounds were pumped into it the site has been left derelict and closed to the public for 5 years. Unfortunately now in the hands of the council it is under immediate threat of development.

Imagine an island of low impact living structures, forest gardens, lush allotments, and the technology to be completely self sustainable this is the Earth Centre. Please help us save it!

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

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

What’s in this issue?

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

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

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

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

To download your copy go to this website:

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

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

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

Love and Rage
Your Action Update collective

*Hit the Production of Climate Chaos – get involved* – 13th December call for actions

The climate catastrophe has not happened by random chance and the melting glacier is not its place. Our economic system, the way it produces goods, and the way they are transported and finally consumed is the root of climate change.

The climate catastrophe has not happened by random chance and the melting glacier is not its place. Our economic system, the way it produces goods, and the way they are transported and finally consumed is the root of climate change.

We do not believe that this COP will solve the climate crisis. The delegates, NGOs and company representatives are stuck in an ideology of never ending economic growth and universal market solutions to all human-made problems, such as ecological destruction. Social justice issues are consequently ignored.

On December 13th we call for action on this economic system. We encourage affinity groups to take action on targets in Copenhagen, and abroad. In the Morning of December 13th we will also shut down the harbour of Copenhagen through a mass action blockade. The harbour is a key symbol of the global free-market economy. Here becomes visible what is usually hidden: ecological deterioration, economic and social exploitation, and utter injustice.

Since the dawn of colonialism the global shipping industry has been characterized by violence. What was once gold pillaged from the Incas is these days profit based on cheap resources and cheap labour – usually transported by ships. Today, container shipping is one of the foundations of capitalism. There are hardly any regulations: fuel is not taxed, emissions are not subject to control and borders are seemingly non-existent for container ships. At the same time, the never ending need for more cheap goods is almost limitless. The ‘free’ global flow of goods continues to grow – with benefits for only the few.

But whereas these flows of goods can enter the EU/ rich world freely, humans cannot. As soon as people do not have the right passport or enough money when entering rich countries, they are put in prisons, deported and deprived of the most basic human rights. And the militarisation of the seas is not just happening around the EU borders. It is also used to protect international shipping, like in Somalia where international fishing fleets have robbed Somali fishermen of the fundamental elements of their existence.

Finally, international shipping is more than just a method of transport for the global economy. It is in itself a primary cause of climate change. Approximately 5% of Global Greenhouse Emissions are produced by the shipping industry. Container ship fuel is basically toxic waste left over from petrol production, containing high amounts of sulphur and mercury. And like international flights, nobody is responsible for shipping industry emissions under the Kyoto Protocol.

Climate justice and real social change will not come from above. Effective change has to come from everyone – affected, responsible, and observer. True change has to be organized and realized by people all over the world – all people on the streets and in the fields. We say no to the power of governments, companies and so-called non-government organisations which are only interested in maintaining their power, influence and flows of capital.

We will try to stop this madness for a day. Fighting for climate justice means changing our economic system and this needs to happen here in the rich global north, which reaps the most benefits from the disaster. For the free flow of people and ideas, instead of flows of goods to benefit the few.

Contact htp@riseup.net to get involved with planning the action, or come to one of our next meetings: Berlin October 3-4 & Copenhagen October 18.

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

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

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

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

Workshop programme in a variety of formats

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

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

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

Workshop programme in a variety of formats

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Latest EF! Action Update bursts forth

Car tyres deflate in the night, diggers halted in their tracks, buildings and MPs covered in slime…airports plagued by crazy golf, picnics, city gents and hostage-taking…eco-villages and other autonomous spaces sprout, as others are under threat…tree-sits, banks evicted, fake phone-masts and whaling ships sunk….it must be time for another Earth First! Action Update, bringing you a concentrated quarterly blast of inspiration and contacts to get out there and take direct action against the bastards threatening this planet and its inhabitants.

News from the front-lines – permanent protest camps old and new, and temporary gatherings in a field near you, all the dates and info you need for a summer of blistering action and torrential outpourings!

Successes here, across the pond and round the very other side of the world.

People stop logging trucksCar tyres deflate in the night, diggers halted in their tracks, buildings and MPs covered in slime…airports plagued by crazy golf, picnics, city gents and hostage-taking…eco-villages and other autonomous spaces sprout, as others are under threat…tree-sits, banks evicted, fake phone-masts and whaling ships sunk….it must be time for another Earth First! Action Update, bringing you a concentrated quarterly blast of inspiration and contacts to get out there and take direct action against the bastards threatening this planet and its inhabitants.

News from the front-lines – permanent protest camps old and new, and temporary gatherings in a field near you, all the dates and info you need for a summer of blistering action and torrential outpourings!

Successes here, across the pond and round the very other side of the world.

A report back from the Coal Caravan, plus info about the communities along its route.

Court news – what happened after protesters planned to shut a coal-fired power plant, and climbed atop a train, plus handy Security Tips for Going on Actions.

Leaving it All in the Ground – news of global fights against the mining of gold, copper, bauxite and aluminium – blockading, torching and night-time pixieing.

A View from the Trees – a story from our eco-centric cousins. And indigenous Peruvians fight on against the wholesale onslaught on our world.

And a round-up of your favourite public order situations – G20, SmashEDO and Athenian rubbish dumps!

Read, download and print it here, subscribe so you get it direct to your door, or look out for it at a climate camp near you.

If you want to be listed or get a bunch of them to distribute, please get in touch.

Share your inspirational news at EF! Action Reports, and it’ll find it’s way into your very own printed EF!AU, in good old black and white print.

The Coal caravan has arrived in West Yorkshire! AND daily blog

29.04.2009
The coal caravan is now in West Yorkshire and has visited Fairburn Ings which is threatened with open casting and Ferrbybridge power station which will burn the coal.

The Coal Caravan reaches Ferrybridge

Coal caravan banner at Shipley open-cast siteCoal caravan somewhere under the rainbow29.04.2009
The coal caravan is now in West Yorkshire and has visited Fairburn Ings which is threatened with open casting and Ferrbybridge power station which will burn the coal.

The Coal Caravan reaches Ferrybridge

The Coal caravan has arrived in West Yorkshire! After a day of cycling 54 miles in the rain the caravan has set up in Pontefract.

Today activists and locals walked from Pontefract to Fairburn Ings, a site which will be devastated by open cast coal mining if HJ banks and the Ledstone Estate are given the go ahead to remove coal. On the way we passed the monstrosity which is Ferrybridge power station and were able to see exactly where the coal from the Fairburn Ings area will be burned. The coal taken from this area will only power the three local power stations for 11 days, yet it is predicted to take 50 years for the area to recover. The affects on global warming will be felt indefinitely if we don’t move away from a coal based power source, to renewable technology fast.

Last night the Caravan had an evening of discussion around the history of coal and the future of coal. The event was booked to take place at Pontefract New College, but the police leant on the college and then told the public the event had been cancelled. Thankfully we were still able to go ahead with the event in the Town Hall instead! The police have been overly present at some aspects of the caravan, but this has simply increased the public’s curiosity with our events and shown how much the police waste their time.

This evening the Caravan will show the Age of Stupid in Pontefract Library.

Tomorrow we cycle North, towards events in Durham and the North East. If you are interested in the caravan there is still time to come along. We have a full timetable over the bank holiday weekend with the local community and extra hands would be welcome. Please check out our website for details of accommodation and ring the caravan on 07729575582 to let us know you are coming.

caravan@climatecamp.org.uk
http://www.coalcaravan.org.uk

Daily blog during journey – http://coalcaravan.wordpress.com/

Bath Bomb #21 Out Now

THE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and distribute!
Issue #21
free/donation
Apr 09

“Keeping our heads in a crisis”

Summit For Nothing

Bath Bomb logoTHE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and distribute!
Issue #21
free/donation
Apr 09

“Keeping our heads in a crisis”

Summit For Nothing

This month, 20 of the world’s most powerful leaders flew in private jets to London to stay in luxury hotels, drink the finest wines, and discuss the collapse of the global economy. Safely tucked away behind the UK’s most expensive police operation in history (£8 million, thank you very much), with their every desire attended to irrespective of cost (hotel expenses topping £50 million), our glorious leaders failed to notice the obvious answer to the UK’s 2-million-strong employment problem.

Which was, I sourly reflected at the slightly disappointing block outside the conference centres on Thursday the 2nd, to train them all as journalists. As this journalist pondered his genius, another nervous-looking hippy edged up to me and whispered “Hey, are you a protester?” Of course not, I replied, I’m an undercover media parasite desperately hoping this will suddenly start living up to the awesome front-page-grabbing defiance of yesterday’s ruckus in the city. “Me, too!” he exclaimed, with a junkie-like edge to his voice. “Have you found anyone who isn’t? I need some quotes, man…”

Saturday the 28th of March’s Put People First procession was the exception rather than the rule, with the placid police letting the 40,000 marchers get on with it. But as for the Climate Camp… It was supposed to be beautiful. Sneaking like a weed through broken paving cracks, tangled vines creeping through urban decay, snatching back the stolen space that was swallowed up by the city. Camping under twinkling stars and streetlights in the very heart of capitalism. Singing songs around campfires fuelled by newspaper scraps and debris. Screw the system, we’ve got samosas, cake and a compost loo! It was supposed to be like that, but the Camp For Climate Action, occupying the space surrounding London’s European Carbon Exchange, was evicted after 12 hours on the night of April 1st.

Indeed, overnight, brutal police attacks, raids, false imprisonment and sleep deprivation (officially recognised by the UN as torture) had hit the all the other squats and convergences spaces around the city too, to ensure that there was no repeat of Wednesday’s 15,000-strong marches, no fluffy carnival, or entirely justifiable smashing of RBS. Despite all this provocation, the protesters remained peaceful and proportionate. Despite coppers deliberately assaulting civilians, batonning people in the crotch, and walking up and down the lines shield-smashing the face of each demonstrator in turn, the crowds refused to lower themselves to the pigs’ level. Which, frankly, they should have.

http://www.g-20meltdown.org/
http://www.putpeoplefirst.org.uk/

How The G20 Plan To Help The World’s Poor

So what actually happened at the G20 summit last week? Well, in an attempt to give the global economy a kick up the arse and return to “business as usual”, $1.1 trillion was given to the International Monetary Fund to aid failing industries around the world. $50 billion of this will allegedly go to poor countries, but will it actually reduce poverty?

The IMF typically only lends out funds at a price, controlling poorer countries by means of ironically named ‘Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers’. Loans are granted in exchange for the approval of regulations that help corporations and harm workers, such as cuts to the minimum wage and the banning of unions. The IMF and rich lender countries want to make sure they get their money back, so poor countries are forced to focus their industries on producing exports, rather than food for their own people. They are made to remove trade barriers so that rich foreign corporations can flood their markets with cheap goods and run local traders out of business. Public services such as healthcare, schools and transport are privatised while government spending on health and education is cut – placing the emphasis on profit rather than provision of services. When the Bechtel corporation took over the supply of public water in Bolivia, bills went up by up to 90%, leaving many families unable to afford water. When riots forced them to withdraw, Bechtel (supported by the IMF) demanded $30 million in compensation from the Bolivian Government.

Decisions made by the IMF override national laws. For example, when the State of California banned the gasoline additive MBTE because it pollutes ground water and poses a real threat to public health, the Canadian maker of the additive sued them under IMF and World Trade Organisation laws, because this restricted trade.

Who needs colonialism when you’ve got the IMF? They put the “rights” of corporations ahead of human rights. The G20 mean business as usual and don’t give a shit about the poor if this is their plan for change.

Taking The Visteon

On Tuesday the 31st of March, workers at three factories owned by Visteon, a Ford subsidiary received news that is all too common at the moment – you’re fired! The workers in Belfast, Enfield and Basildon were ordered to leave without any notice, redundancy packages, back pay and other money owed to them by the company. What happened next however, shows what happens when workers stand up to the boss. Refusing to leave, the 70 workers locked themselves inside their factories, refusing to budge despite intimidation from cops and bosses until they got the money and rights that were owed to them. The workers stayed put for 11 days, receiving huge support from locals and activists who set up 24-hour pickets in the factories’ car parks. The occupiers have now left the factories, but the fight is only just beginning: a permanent picket has been established at the London factory, along with other initiatives and the workers and their supporters have vowed not to give up the struggle. The campaign needs your help, and is setting a great example of how organised workers are capable of standing up for their rights in the face of the classist attacks of capitalism and the state. In this recession, the bosses and politicians have made it all too clear that they are looking out for themselves, their rich mates and nobody else. Only by taking a leaf from the book of the Visteon workers, or the Prisme Packaging & Design workers in Dundee, and getting organised to fight back can we build a fair and just society rather than relenting to leaders’ vision of business as usual. Or why not emulate the 2 million French who’ve just enjoyed their second general strike of the year, or the sacked Sony workers of the Landes region who took their chief executive hostage? To find out how you can support the Visteon workers, drop and email to visteon_support [at] haringey.org.uk, or bathactivistnet [at] yahoo.co.uk for info on local support actions.

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/03/423897.html
http://www.visteonoccupation.org

EVENTS

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

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

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

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

Visteon solidarity picket, Friday 24th April, 5.30pm, Allen Ford garage, opposite former Bath Press, Redbridge House, Lower Bristol Road

World Day for Lab Animals march, Saturday 25th April, Hyde Park, London, coach leaving Bristol Temple Meads, 8.45am, info@wdail.org to book place

anti-police brutality solidarity demo, Sunday 26th April, meet 12 midday outside Bath Spa train station

Mayday TU march, Friday 1st May, Clerkenwell Green, London, 12 midday

Anti-Militarist Gathering, Saturday 2nd May – Sunday 3rd May, Cowley Club, Brighton, http://www.antimilitaristnetwork.noflag.org.uk

Mayday everyday gigs, Friday 1st May – Sunday 3rd May, Chesters, Frogmore Street, Bristol

Mayday in Brighton, Monday 4th May, 12 noon, Brighton, http://www.smashedo.org.uk

Bath Friends of the Earth meeting, Monday 4th May, 8pm, Stillpoint, Broad Street Place, Broad Street

Bath Animal Action meeting, Wednesday 6th May, 7.30-8.30pm, backroom of The Bell,

Bath Activist Network meeting, Thursday 7th May, 7.30-9pm, downstairs at The Hobgoblin, St James Parade

Bath FreeShop, Saturday 9th May, 12-3pm, outside Pump Rooms, Stall Street

Broadlands Orchardshare Volunteering Day, Saturday 9th May, 12-4pm, Broadlands Orchard, Box Road, Bathford, email broadlandsorchardshare [at] googlemail.com or phone 07532 472 256

Bath Greenpeace meeting, Monday 11th May, 7.30-9pm, Stillpoint, Broad Street Place

Transition Open Forum, Tuesday 12th May, 7pm, Widcombe Social Club

Bath Green Drinks, Wednesday 13th May, 8.30pm, the Rummer, Grand Parade

Performance: ‘Roots – A Tale Of Love And Vegetables’, Thursday 28th May – Sunday 7th June, BOG Lower Common Allotments

G20 Death – Pigs Might Lie

Amongst the broken windows and smashed banks of the recent G20 protests, a tragedy occurred that is threatening to drag the inhumane and brutal tactics regularly employed by British cops into the public eye. Ian Tomlinson, a 47-year-old paper seller, was walking home from work through the protests, when he suddenly dropped dead of a heart attack. The cops were quick to clarify the matter for us – Ian had become trapped in the crowd before collapsing. Police efforts to rescue and resuscitate the man were hampered by baying mobs of protestors pelting police medics with bricks and bottles. Really? The police clung doggedly to this version of events despite several convincing witness statements to the contrary. Then, some video footage came to light that showed a vastly different story. Ian, on his own, was walking away from a line of riot police with his hands in his pockets. Without warning, an officer beat Tomlinson’s legs with a truncheon before shoving him to the floor with his shield. He remained on the floor for around 10 seconds, receiving no help before being helped up by activists and moving off, “Dazed and stumbling along the road.” A minute later, he was dead. The police have now changed their story to suit the uncovering of their lies, but they deny any inconsistency in their version of events, which has changed from “baying mob stop us helping the injured” to “well, maybe an officer overreacted.” In a further revelation, the police have been criticized for rushing the post-mortem and using an incompetent, and widely discredited pathologist. Meanwhile, Saturday the 11th of April saw nearly 500 people march through central London to protest the death – thankfully, this day wasn’t attacked, unlike the vigil for Ian held on the 2nd.

The cop who murdered Ian has now been suspended pending investigation, but this avoids the most important issue surrounding the incident. This is how police ALWAYS behave during public order situations. ‘Kettling’, the police tactic of confining a group and refusing them access to toilets, medical aid or water is now common place, as is police refusal to wear identification, use of pepper spray, and unprovoked baton charges. Suspending and punishing one cop is a start, but we need to use the tragic death of Ian Tomlinson to challenge the violent and arbitrary manner in which police deal with almost all acts of public protest. Ian’s death was not caused by the actions of one ‘bad apple’, but by a culture of contempt, violence and arrogance that is the rule, rather than the exception in the modern police force. Will we, in Britain, sit by and watch as the police continue to kill and injure us with arrogance and brutality? Or perhaps now is the time to stand up against a system that is happy to viciously strike anyone who dares to stand up and question its waning authority.

A full video of the events leading up to Ian’s death can be viewed at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADd_6ISHLdg

What Housing Crisis?

As repossessions soar by 68%, housing lists double (from 3,000 to 6,000 locally over the last decade), and the market continues to nosedive, B&NES are dealing with things the only way they know how. They’re, um, selling off all council houses. With 1,100 affordable homes ditched already (thanks to retired banker Councillor Malcolm Hanney, who lives in a very unaffordable house in Chew Magna), and more at Manvers Street, Dorchester Street and Broad Street to follow, this can only mean one thing… Less rent to pay!

That’s right. Theses houses aren’t going anywhere, after all. There’s no actual housing shortage – just an excess of scamming landlords leaving buildings empty. And increasing numbers of people across the region are choosing to legally squat these empties rather than choose homelessness or giving every penny they own to the undeserving.

In Bristol, a national squatters’ meeting on the 14th and 15th of March, brought people from across the country to a specially-occupied mansion for a weekend of discussions and workshops – and also helped the economy by providing work for a veritable horde of journos. More locally, the Squatters Communal Association of Bath have finally lost the former Twerton rail station following their fourth illegal eviction, with the tacit approval of Twerton ward Lib Dem Councillor Tim Ball. Bath police turned a blind eye to the theft, criminal damage and burglary committed by publicity-shy bailiffs, who even got away with pouring boiling water over one occupant’s hands. Resident David Clements explains, “Dealing with a landlord who resorts to force first and the courts second is hard, but we stuck at it to teach them a lesson. Fortunately, landlords like that are rare, so we’re looking forwards to having an easier time of things in our new home.”

Interested in squatting or learning more? Contact bathactivistnet [at] yahoo.co.uk. Problems with bailiffs or repossessions? Contact resistbailiffs [at] yahoo.co.uk, or 07794 774938.

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

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

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

Meeting True Veg

Kilter, Bath’s unique outdoor theatre company, premieres their new production ‘Roots – A Tale Of Love And Vegetables,’ during this year’s Fringe Fest, running from Thursday the 28th May to Sunday 7th June, it is to be performed on Bath Organic Group’s Lower Common Allotments, in Victoria Park. Planting the seeds of change with a playful and engaging show, Kilter lead their audience on a gentle journey down the bean-rows to investigate food-security, food history and traditional skills in the approaching post-oil world. Friendly, welcoming characters tinker with their seedlings whilst mulling over the cycles of past and future. The set is made up of entirely found and recycled materials, and you even get to take away a free set of seeds at the end! Kilter, who will be working the allotments during the preceding week, is committed to engaging audiences in issues on the environment, social justice and English heritage, and seeks to deliver low carbon theatre. Tickets are priced at £9 (concessions £7) and are on sale from ICIA’s Box Office at Bath Uni – ring 01225 386777.

http://www.kiltertheatre.org

A Cut Above The Rest

Here at Bath Bomb HQ, we were saddened to hear the news surrounding the death of passionate blood-junkie Trevor Morse. Trevor ended his life attempting to prevent two hunt monitors from taking off in a gyrocopter they were using to monitor fox hunting activities. Running in front of the fast moving aircraft, Trevor was obviously under the impression that the sheer strength of his personality would suffice to halt a speeding aircraft. Wrong. It was not so much the news of his gyrocopter-inflicted near-decapitation that caused our bad moods, but the ridiculous charges that have been pinned on the pilot, Bryan Griffiths, of the gyrocopter, a peaceful man who has been charged with murder. In the last 20 years, three hunt saboteurs have been killed, mostly being run over, by hunters, and the most serious charge brought against a hunter has been reckless driving. But as soon as it is a hunter who dies, it is not a tragic accident, but murder. This charge just highlights the one-sided policing that’s been the norm regarding hunting for decades. A support group has been set up for Bryan, and letters of support can be sent to:

Bryan Griffiths XW8892
HMP Hewell
Hewell Lane
Redditch B97 6QS

Pharma To Get Taste Of Own Medicine?

In spite of the Government’s sustained attack on animal rights advocates, World Day for Lab Animals will be marked this year in London with a national march on the 25th April. Meeting in Hyde Park at 12 midday, the demo will proceed to through the centre to a rally at Parliament. Whilst Neo-Labour still refuse to carry out their much-promised Royal Commission into the medical relevance of animal testing, 18,000 people a year die from dodgy drug side effects in the UK alone: in fact, relying on animal testing results for our medicines is Britain’s fourth biggest killer. But instead of worrying about helping research into modern non-animal testing, such as the work carried out by the Dr Hadwen Trust or Europeans for Medical Progress, instead they bail out companies like Huntingdon Life Sciences, who carry out contracts for animal abuse and have once again recently been exposed for cruelty. To join this fight for both human and non-human animals’ health and dignity, a coach will be leaving Bristol Temple Meads train station just before 9am that morning, £4 waged return or £2 unwaged return: get in touch with bathanimalaction [at] yahoo.co.uk, or ring 07595 745441 to book your place.

http://www.shac.net
http://www.curedisease.net “ “`
http://www.drhadwentrust.org.uk
http://www.wdail.org

The Big Chalk-In

Members of BAN attended a big ‘chalk-in’ outside Bristol Magistrates’ Court on Thursday 9th April. This demo was called because Paul Saville, a UWE student, had chalked on a pavement in Bristol: ‘Liberty – the right to question it, the right to ask are we free?’ Obviously not, because he was promptly arrested and charged with criminal damage. He was to appear at court the morning of the 9th, but the Crown Prosecution Service dropped the charges at the last moment. The chalk-in was called as a protest against the latest would-be attack on our right to freedom of speech and dissent. People on the demo took turns to scrawl slogans, and were joined by other young people who’d been in court that morning already. Paul, however, had problems in taking part, as his wrist had been broken by the police at the recent G20 protests! This time, the thin black and blue line kept a low profile, probably due to their own current public order problems. The day proved that the best way of defending one’s rights when attacked is mass defiance.

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

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

Coal caravan coming very soon – route info & how to book if you are coming – & phone number

COAL CARAVAN
24 April-4 May 2009

Hello !

**Now we’re enroute, contact us by phone if you are planning to join us and want to get in touch then please call 07729575582**

Coal caravan headerCOAL CARAVAN
24 April-4 May 2009

Hello !

**Now we’re enroute, contact us by phone if you are planning to join us and want to get in touch then please call 07729575582**

Here is the latest route plan and event diary for the coal caravan as well as the nearest train stations for people who wish to join us along the way.

Remember you need to tell us where you are joining/leaving the caravan!
http://sounddevastation.co.uk/coalcaravan/booking.html

There is alot of cycling involved! We will be cycling up to 45 miles per day (though usually less) and it will not be flat. We will however have different paced parties to accommodate the fastest and the slowest, but this is a great excuse to do some training at get fit!

You will need a working bike (see the Bicycology website for advice on on basic maintenance www.bicycology.org.uk/guide_pages.htm).

You will also need to be able to carry all your belongings on your bike (see www.bicycology.org.uk/guide_pages.htm) as there will be no support vehicle.

If you plan to join us after the Friday night, please make sure you arrive before 8.30am or after 6pm.

You can view a Google map of the route here, though be aware it is subject to change. http://tinyurl.com/coalcaravanroute

There will be some people travelling the route by bus, email for more information.

Fri 24th April
Meet at the Sumac Centre in Nottingham at around 3pm, for a bicycle fix-up workshop, Critical Mass, and a great vegan meal, before a send-off party in co-operation with the Demo ethical nightclub project.
Nearest train station – Nottingham

Sat 25th
Cycle to Shipley, Derbyshire, where we will be holding an activity afternoon and an evening event.
Nearest train station – Nottingham (morning) Langley Mill (evening)

Sun 26th
A walk with local activists around the Shipley open cast site. This will include talks on the natural history and wildlife of the area.
Nearest train station – Langley Mill (all day)

Mon 27th
Cycle to Doncaster
Nearest train station – Langley Mill (morning) Doncaster (evening)

Tues 28th
A press call outside Ed Milliband’s constituency office at 10am, then cycle to Pontefract doing outreach and visiting sites along the way. The evening event is “the History of Coal; the future of coal”, at The Main Hall, Pontefract College. Curry supper from 6pm., with discussion from 7.
Nearest train station – Doncaster (morning) Pontefract (evening)

Wed 29th
A walk to Ferrybridge power station, and from there to the site of the proposed open-cast near Fairbairn Ings/Ledstone, then in the evening to Pontefract library for a bicycle powered screening of the Age of Stupid.
Nearest train station – Pontefract (all day)

Thurs 30th
Cycling north, visiting sites and talking to people all the way.
Nearest train station – Pontefract (morning) Ripon(evening)

Fri 1st May
Cycling north.
Nearest train station – Ripon (morning) Newton Aycliffe (evening)

Sat 2nd
Cycle to Dipton, Stanley, Co. Durham, where there will be a welcome event about the Coal Caravan 7pm.
Nearest train station – Newton Aycliffe (morning) Durham (evening)

Sun 3rd
10.30am meet at Dipton Community Centre for a site walk in the beautiful area around Bradley. We will have a local historian on the walk which will be 4-5 miles, off road and unsuitable for buggies. The evening event will be “The History of Coal; The Future of Coal” at 7.30pm, Dipton Community Centre.
Nearest train station – Durham (all day)

Mon 4th
Workshops about campaign strategies and action training in the Church Hut at Cambois, North of Blyth. 10- 6pm. There will be children’s workshops and games from 11.30am please bring bikes. 7.30pm Cambois Miner’s Institute, a bicycle powered screening of the Age of Stupid.
Nearest train station – Durham (morning) Cramlington (evening)

Tues 5th
Relax then head home by train in the afternoon. You will need to book your train!
Nearest train station – Cramlington (all day)

Email: caravan@climatecamp.org.uk
Post: Coal Caravan, c/o 245 Gladstone St, Nottingham, NG7 6HX
www.coalcaravan.org.uk

Why climate camping & other protest? Ecological debt day for your city…coming soon!

Ecological debt: no way back from bankrupt

3 planetsEcological debt: no way back from bankrupt

While most governments’ eyes are on the banking crisis, a much bigger issue – the environmental crisis – is passing them by, says Andrew Simms. In the Green Room this week, he argues that failure to organise a bailout for ecological debt will have dire consequences for humanity.

“Nature Doesn’t Do Bailouts!” said the banner strung across Bishopsgate in the City of London.

Civilisation’s biggest problem was outlined in five words over the entrance to the small, parallel reality of the peaceful climate camp. Their tents bloomed on the morning of 1 April faster than daisies in spring, and faster than the police could stop them.

Across the city, where the world’s most powerful people met simultaneously at the G20 summit, the same problem was almost completely ignored, meriting only a single, afterthought mention in a long communique.

World leaders dropped everything to tackle the financial debt crisis that spilled from collapsing banks.

Gripped by a panic so complete, there was no policy dogma too deeply engrained to be dug out and instantly discarded. We went from triumphant, finance-driven free market capitalism, to bank nationalisation and moving the decimal point on industry bailouts quicker than you can say sub-prime mortgage.

But the ecological debt crisis, which threatens much more than pension funds and car manufacturers, is left to languish.

It is like having a Commission on Household Renovation agonise over which expensive designer wallpaper to use for papering over plaster cracks whilst ignoring the fact that the walls themselves are collapsing on subsiding foundations.

Beyond our means

Each year, humanity’s ecological overdraft gets larger, and the day that the world as a whole goes into ecological debt – consuming more resources and producing more waste than the biosphere can provide and absorb – moves ever earlier in the year.

The same picture emerges for individual countries like the UK – which now starts living beyond its own environmental means in mid-April.

Because the global economy is still overwhelmingly fossil-fuel dependent, the accumulation of greenhouse gases and the prognosis for global warming remain our best indicators of “overshoot”.

World famous French free-climber Alain Robert, known as Spiderman, climbed the Lloyds of London building for the OneHundredMonths.org campaign as the G20 met, to demonstrate how time is slipping away.

Using thresholds for risk identified by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), on current trends, in only 92 months – less than eight years – we will move into a new, more perilous phase of warming.

It will then no longer be “likely” that we can prevent some aspects of runaway climate change. We will begin to lose the climatic conditions which, as Nasa scientist James Hansen points out, were those under which civilisation developed.

Small dividend

As “nature doesn’t do bailouts”, how have our politicians fared who ripped open the nation’s wallet to save the banks?

Not good.

According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the UK spent a staggering 20% of its GDP in support of the financial sector.

Yet the amount of money that was new and additional, announced in the “green stimulus” package of the Treasury’s Pre-Budget Report, added-up to a vanishingly small 0.0083% of GDP.

Globally, the green shade of economic stimulus measures has varied enormously. For example, the shares of spending considered in research by the bank HSBC to be environmental were:

* the US – 12%
* Germany – 13%
* South Korea – 80%

The international average was around 15%. HSBC found the UK planned to invest less than 7% of its stimulus package (different from the bank bailout) in green measures.

Comparing the IMF and HSBC figures actually reveals an inverse relationship – proportionately, those who spent more on support for finance had weaker green spending.

So here we are, faced with the loss of an environment conducive to human civilisation, and we find governments prostrate before barely repentant banks, with their backs to a far worse ecological crisis.

Extreme markets

On top of low and inconsistent funding for renewable energy, the shift to a low carbon economy is being further frustrated by another market failure in the trade for carbon seen, for example, in the EU’s Emissions Trading Scheme.

Bad market design, feeble carbon reduction targets and the recession have all conspired to drive down the cost of carbon emission permits, wrecking economic incentives to grow renewable energy.

Worse still, the difficulty of accounting to ensure that permits represent real emissions has led both energy companies and environmentalists to warn of an emerging “sub-prime carbon market”.

Relying on market mechanisms is attractive to governments because it means they have less to do themselves. But they will fail if carbon markets are just hot air.

There seems to be a hard-wired link between memory failure and market failure.

As the historian E J Hobsbawm observed in The Age of Extremes: “Those of us who lived through the years of the Great Slump still find it almost impossible to understand how the orthodoxies of the pure free market, then so obviously discredited, once again came to preside over a global period of depression in the late 1980s and 1990s”.

Perhaps the greatest failure is one of imagination.

Some people alive today lived through those past recessions and depressions. They know they can be nasty and need averting.

But the last time the Earth’s climate really flipped was at the end of the last Ice Age, more than 10,000 years ago. No one can remember what that felt like.

Lessons of history

Looking forward, the IPCC’s worst case scenario warns of a maximum 6C rise over the next century.

Looking back, however, indicates that an unstable climate system holds worse horrors.

Work by the scientist Richard Alley on abrupt climate change indicates the planet has previously experienced a 10C temperature shift in only a decade, and possibly “as quickly as in a single year”.

And, around the turn of the last Ice Age, there were “local warmings as large as 16C”.

Imagine that every day of your life you have taken a walk in the woods and the worse thing to happen was an acorn or twig falling on your head.

Then, one day, you stroll out, look up and there is a threat approaching so large, unexpected and outside your experience that can’t quite believe it, like a massive gothic cathedral falling from the sky.

In tackling climate change we need urgently to recalibrate our responses, just as governments had to when they rescued the reckless finance sector.

Then officials had to ask themselves “is what we are doing right, and is it enough?”

They must ask themselves the same questions on the ecological debt crisis and climate change.

The difference is, that if they fail this time, not even a long-term business cycle will come to our rescue. If the climate shifts to a hotter state not convivial to human society, it could be tens of thousands of years, or never, before it shifts back.

Remember; nature doesn’t do bailouts.

Andrew Simms is policy director of the New Economics Foundation (nef), and author of Ecological Debt: Global Warming and the Wealth of Nations

——

One Planet Living http://www.oneplanetliving.org

Your city’s Ecological Debt Day:

Using the latest data available WWF has calculated when residents of British cities will have consumed their fair share of natural resources for 2008 – or when their ecological debt day is.

City Ecological debt day

Winchester 10 April
St Albans 13 April
Chichester 14 April
Brighton & Hove 14 April
Canterbury 17 April
Oxford 17 April
Southampton 21 April
Durham 22 April
Cambridge 23 April
Portsmouth 23 April
Edinburgh 23 April
Chester 24 April
Aberdeen 24 April
Ely (East Cambs) 26 April
Hereford (County of Herefordshire) 28 April
Stirling 28 April
London 29 April
Lichfield 29 April
Lancaster 30 April
Newcastle upon Tyne 30 April
Wells (Bath and NE Somerset) 1 May
Bath (Bath and North East Somerset) 1 May
Ripon (Harrogate) 2 May
Manchester 2 May
Inverness (Highland) 2 May
Preston 2 May
Norwich 2 May
Peterborough 2 May
Dundee City 3 May
Leeds 3 May
York 3 May
Sheffield 3 May
Derby 4 May
Carlisle 4 May
Leicester 4 May
Worcester 4 May
Bangor (Gwynedd) 4 May
St Davids (Pembrokeshire)4 May
Nottingham 4 May
Liverpool 4 May
Bristol 5 May
Birmingham 5 May
Lincoln 5 May
Bradford 5 May
Glasgow 6 May
Cardiff 6 May
Exeter 6 May
Coventry 7 May
Swansea 8 May
Salford 8 May
Wolverhampton 8 May
Truro (Carrick) 8 May
Sunderland 8 May
Wakefield 9 May
Gloucester 9 May
Stoke on Trent 10 May
Kingston upon Hull 10 May
Salisbury 10 May
Plymouth 11 May
Newport 11 May