The Camp for Climate Action was just the beginning! — next meeting January 13/14th, Leeds

Come and take the next steps for­ward and be part of a new­ly ener­gised move­ment in the fight to avoid cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change.

Drax at sunsetCome and take the next steps for­ward and be part of a new­ly ener­gised move­ment in the fight to avoid cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change.

In August of this year hun­dreds gath­ered near Sel­by to con­front the UK’s biggest CO2 emit­ter: Drax Coal Pow­er Sta­tion. The Camp for Cli­mate Action was an inspir­ing 10 days of learn­ing, sus­tain­able liv­ing and direct action to chal­lenge the caus­es of cli­mate chaos.

There is already much enthu­si­asm for organ­is­ing anoth­er Camp, come and get involved on 13th/14th Jan­u­ary at ‘The Com­mon Place’ in Leeds (see www.thecommonplace.org.uk for direc­tions). Meet­ings will run Sat­ur­day 11am-5pm and Sun­day 10am-6pm.

This project is still at its ear­ly stages and details such as when, where and how to organ­ise the next Camp are to be decid­ed at this meet­ing. Food and crash pad accom­mo­da­tion will be pro­vid­ed. Every­one will be asked for a dona­tion of around £10 to cov­er costs. If you have par­tic­u­lar access or child­care needs, or if would like more infor­ma­tion con­tact leeds@climatecamp.org.uk.

Please spread the news far and wide. You can down­load a rather nice poster here: http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/resources.htm

Some of the neigh­bour­hoods from last year’s camp are meet­ing in the mean­time to gen­er­ate ideas for the next camp and organ­ise local­ly.

Lon­don Neigh­bour­hood Meet­ing
Lon­don Action Resource Cen­tre
Dec 2nd 1.00pm

York­shire Neigh­bour­hood Meet­ing
The Com­mon Place
Dec 6th 7.00–9.00pm

Man­ches­ter Neigh­bour­hood Meeting/Social
The Base­ment 24 Lever St, Man­ches­ter
4th Decem­ber 7:30 ( http://thebasement.clearerchannel.org/ for
direc­tions). Please email: mcragainstclimatechange@lists.riseup.net to con­firm

Local groups

Some of these are specif­i­cal­ly Cli­mate Camp, Ris­ing Tide or Plane Stu­pid groups, some are local groups involved in tak­ing direct action against cli­mate change that don’t nec­es­sar­i­ly see them­selves as belong­ing to a nation­al group.

Not­ting­ham: nottingham[at]climatecamp.org.uk
Oxford: oxford[at]climatecamp.org.uk
Man­ches­ter: manchester[at]climatecamp.org.uk
Lon­don Ris­ing Tide: london[at]risingtide.org.uk
South Penines: potzo8[at] yahoo.com
South West: caromac20032000[at]yahoo.com
Leeds/Bradford: katieplum75[at]yahoo.co.uk
Scot­land and Ire­land: scotland[at]climatecamp.org.uk
Cam­bridge Action Net­work: cambridge[at]lists.riseup.net
Birm­ing­ham: flatline[at]aktivix.org
Read­ing: climatejustice[at]postmaster.co.uk
York Ris­ing Tide: yorks[at]risingtide.org.uk
Scot­land Ris­ing Tide: scotland[at]risingtide.org.uk
Lon­don Plane Stu­pid: london[at]planestupid.com
Man­ches­ter Plane Stu­pid: manchester[at]planestupid.com
Cam­bridge Plane Stu­pid: cambridge[at]planestupid.com
Oxford Plane Stu­pid: oxford[at]planestupid.com
Sheffield Plane Stu­pid: sheffield[at]planestupid.com
Sus­sex Plane Stu­pid: sussex[at]planestupid.com
Read­ing Plane Stu­pid: reading[at]planestupid.com

leeds@climatecamp.org.uk
http://www.climatecamp.org.uk

York Critical Mass — Short report and Images

1 Dec 2006

York Critical Mass December 1
York Critical Mass December 21 Dec 2006

York saw the suc­cess­ful restart to Crit­i­cal Mass­es con­tin­ue for anoth­er First Fri­day of the Month ride. The Decem­ber turn out had plen­ty of tin­sel and ‘Father Christ­mas’ hats around. In amongst over­whelm­ing­ly sup­port­ive motorists — often at first bemused, but then with smiles — the mass made a safe space to ride round York, tak­ing the roads for non-pol­lut­ing traf­fic.

Through the cen­tre of town the motor traf­fic was crawl­ing as slow­ly as ever, hold­ing the mass up. On the way out up Lee­man Road, a dis­tinct­ly cyclist unfriend­ly road, with lots of cen­tral islands and a bit of a motorists speed run, the mass made a com­fort­able pace. Two motorists did their bit to try and pass, one fail­ing ter­ri­bly and sad­ly the dri­ver held up a bus for a minute.

Near the end of the ride it was nice to see Fos­s­gate again tak­en over for non-motor traf­fic.

Call out for Moreen Social Centre, Sheffield

Mooreen needs your sup­port!

Call Out for sup­port at the Moreen Social Cen­tre at the Com­merce Cen­tre, 33, Earl Street. Help need­ed for peo­ple to stay in the buid­ing and also start work for the Wednes­day open­ing. Ring Mooreen 07989874965

Mooreen needs your sup­port!

Call Out for sup­port at the Moreen Social Cen­tre at the Com­merce Cen­tre, 33, Earl Street. Help need­ed for peo­ple to stay in the buid­ing and also start work for the Wednes­day open­ing. Ring Mooreen 07989874965

http://www.mooreen.aktivix.org
you can email here mooreen@aktivix.org if that all fails ring SSSG on 07816572505
Sheffield Squat­ters Sup­port Group
http://www.myspace.com/sheffieldsquatters

Manchester, Bath, Bristol, Redditch, London, York, Birmingham & Oxford (x2) Buy Nothing Day events

Sat­ur­day, 25th Novem­ber 06: Buy Noth­ing Day, a day where you chal­lenge your­self, friends and fam­i­ly to switch off from shop­ping and tune into life. This is how a group of colour­ful hap­py peo­ple cel­e­brat­ed Buy Noth­ing Day in Man­ches­ter UK. Rhythms of Resis­tance Man­ches­ter, Aliens, singers and their love­ly friends took over the city … Con­tin­ue read­ing “Man­ches­ter, Bath, Bris­tol, Red­ditch, Lon­don, York, Birm­ing­ham & Oxford (x2) Buy Noth­ing Day events”

Manc Buy Nothing Day '06 #2
Manc Buy Nothing Day '06 #1
Sat­ur­day, 25th Novem­ber 06: Buy Noth­ing Day, a day where you chal­lenge your­self, friends and fam­i­ly to switch off from shop­ping and tune into life. This is how a group of colour­ful hap­py peo­ple cel­e­brat­ed Buy Noth­ing Day in Man­ches­ter UK.

Rhythms of Resis­tance Man­ches­ter, Aliens, singers and their love­ly friends took over the city in a colour­ful cel­e­bra­tion of Buy Noth­ing Day , that includ­ed:

A FREE MARKET with lots of books, clothes, tapes, dvds and toys. All for peo­ple to take away (free) to pro­mote re-using items rather than bin­ning and re-buy­ing.

FLYERS: Aliens, sam­bis­tas, singers and stu­dents gave out fly­ers with infor­ma­tion on Buy Noth­ing Day and reusing and recy­cling. Aware­ness was also raised regard­ing eth­i­cal shop­ping, ask­ing peo­ple to think about the envi­ron­men­tal dam­ages that prod­ucts may result to.

SAMBA: the sam­ba band, Rhythms of Resis­tance Man­ches­ter, enter­tained hun­dreds of peo­ple with sam­ba encour­ag­ing them to “Stop Buy­ing Start Danc­ingâ€?. The band was joined by singers and poets too! The sam­bis­tas entered the Tri­an­gle Shop­ping Cen­tre, with a ban­ner and fly­ers and full sam­ba swing. The acoustics were great and the band sound­ed excel­lent – the secu­ri­ty guards though pushed the sam­bis­tas out. The sam­bis­tas re-entered through the oth­er door in clown­ing fluffy lov­ing style. The tough secu­ri­ty guards were lib­er­at­ed with sam­ba rhythms, as they smiled to the fun of RORM!

GAMES: games were played in the shop­ping cen­tres, reclaim­ing the space from a mad buy­ing zom­bie area to a space of friend­ships, fun and positivity.The games engaged young peo­ple and shop­pers too!

BANNER FLOAT (the action which was also known in code: “banner drops, they are so last year sweet­ie dar­lingâ€?!): A ban­ner sus­pend­ed by 28 heli­um bal­loons was released next to the Christ­mas tree in the Arn­dale Shop­ping Cen­tre. The ban­ner which sim­ply stat­ed “Buy Noth­ing Dayâ€? was admired by hun­dreds turn­ing the shop­ping cen­tre in a beau­ti­ful space! The ban­ner float was accom­pa­nied by more fly­er­ing.

In sum­ma­ry it was a beau­ti­ful day… and remem­ber kids:

Think …
Only 20% of the world pop­u­la­tion are con­sum­ing over 80% of the earth’s nat­ur­al resources caus­ing a dis­pro­por­tion­ate lev­el of envi­ron­men­tal dam­age and dis­tri­b­u­tion of wealth.
Re-think…
Buy local­ly sourced fresh organ­ic pro­duce
Say No to ani­mal test­ed prod­ucts
Few­er air miles – Stop Cli­mate Change
Buy envi­ron­men­tal­ly and eth­i­cal­ly sound prod­ucts.
Re-use and recy­cling.

============================================

Bath activists took to the streets on fri­day to cel­e­brate ‘buy noth­ing day’

On Fri­day, six mem­bers of Bath Activist Net­work vis­it­ed some of the biggest, badest chain stores in Bath and hid anti-con­sumerist let­ters in books/items of clothing/crappy Xmas tack. The let­ters encour­aged con­sumers to con­sid­er where their prod­ucts were made, who made them and the envi­ron­men­tal impact of mak­ing and trans­port­ing them. Con­sumers were also asked to con­sid­er what we could do with the spare time we would gain if we for­sook recre­ation­al shop­ping and 40 hour work­ing weeks. Sev­er­al hun­dred leaflets were hid­den in Gap, Dis­ney store, water­stones, FCUK and loads of oth­er shops in the town cen­tre. The text of the leaflet should be up on the B.A.N web­site in the next cou­ple of days.

bathactivistnet@yahoo.co.uk
http://www.myspace.com/bathactivistnetwork

============================================

Cru­el Tesco Tar­get­ted for Buy Noth­ing Day

Free­dom for 20 super­mar­ket trol­leys in Bris­tol
————————————————–

Last night a group of activists con­cerned for trol­ley wel­fare cut the fence at Tesco’s bloody super­mar­ket com­plex in East­ville.

Com­bin­ing skin-tight plan­ning with dar­ing elan, the activists gained access to the perime­ter and round­ed up 20 scarred and bat­terd shop­ping trol­leys.

These trol­leys exist in the most appalling of con­di­tions, forced day after day to shoul­der the weight of cap­i­talisms worse excess­es, their backs lit­er­al­ly bro­ken by the wild eyed hoard­ing of crazed con­sumers.

To mark Buy Noth­ing Day, a plan was hatched to lib­er­ate these poor beasts of busi­ness bur­den, and slow down Tesco’s prof­it machine in the process.

As soon as the gag­gle of trol­leys was herd­ed close enough to the edge of the com­pound, a ramp was hasti­ly erect­ed and the trol­leys were herd­ed out, straight into the Riv­er Frome and free­dom!

I am sure that their free­dom wil be short­lived, and they will be soon returned to their cap­tors, but for a few hours we were able to show them what life would be like if they no longer had to strain as the work­hors­es of an all-destroy­ing prof­it machine!

DOWN WITH THE PROFIT MACHINE!

WE ARE ALL SHOPPING TROLLEYS NOW!

============================================

Anoth­er five bite the (saw) dust

More bill­boards lib­er­at­ed across Bris­tol in hon­our of Buy Noth­ing Day

In the last few days, more bill­boards have been lib­er­at­ed across Bris­tol.

At least five have been torn down, from Eas­t­on to Bed­min­ster. Many more have been altered or tam­pered with, rotat­ing bill­boards have been dis­abled and lights have been well and tru­ly put out.

In the run up to the con­sumer mad­ness that is Chist­mas, our sky­line is lit­tered with thou­sands of these mon­strosi­ties.

Adverts play on our hopes, fears and inse­cu­ri­ties to serve just one pur­pose — to sell us prod­ucts regard­less of how much we real­ly need them. In the run-up to Christ­mas they are all vying for a share of our hard-earned cash.

Kids have to have the shini­est, newest gad­gets, the most up-to-date rip-off com­put­er games, while teenagers are sold the lat­est line of sweat­shop-made design­er gear.

The admen realise that if we feel inad­e­quate we’ll buy prod­ucts to make us feel and look bet­ter. They use images of air­brushed mod­els to rein­force gen­der stereo­types; to the adman you‘re only a woman if you’re stick-thin, have a big chest (if not you’ll need to buy a won­der­bra), a pink mobile phone and cov­ered in design­er make­up. Like­wise you are only a man if you are toned, tanned, wear Calvin Klein after­shave and Dolce & Gab­bana and dri­ve a big­ger, faster car than oth­er men.

One of the lib­er­a­tors said; “We are Bris­tol res­i­dents, sick of adver­tis­ing hoard­ings mak­ing a mess of our streets, clut­ter­ing our sky­lines and block­ing our views. Bris­tol res­i­dents have com­plained for years about these bill­boards, erect­ed against our wish­es but the Coun­cil won’t lis­ten. We are tak­ing non-vio­lent direct action to tear down and remove unwant­ed bill­boards from our com­mu­ni­ties.”

“Walk through the streets of Eas­t­on, St Paul’s, Bed­min­ster and St Wer­burghs and you find hun­dreds of these mon­strosi­ties on every main road, sell­ing us cars, beau­ty prod­ucts, cred­it cards and soft drinks. But how many bill­boards do you see in Clifton where the ad execs live? They are hap­py to lit­ter our com­mu­ni­ties with their vul­gar images but they won’t have them in their own back­yard.”

As the Coun­cil con­tin­ues to allow com­pa­nies to erect bill­boards it con­tin­ues to clamp down on “anti-social van­dal­sâ€? who spray “graffitiâ€?. How­ev­er often graf­fi­ti is the only option, the only way alien­at­ed indi­vid­u­als can express them­selves in our soci­ety. What is com­mon­ly called “artâ€? is in real­i­ty elit­ist, con­fined to ster­ile gal­leries which only dis­play work from “artistsâ€? priv­i­leged enough to go through art school, only to be viewed by those who can afford it. The real van­dals are the adver­tis­ers who erect­ed these bill­boards with­out our per­mis­sion, often with­out even plan­ning per­mis­sion.

The lib­er­a­tors urge every­one to take action to reclaim our visu­al space; “Wouldn’t it be bet­ter if instead of these ugly bill­boards our pub­lic space was used for art, for peo­ple to be able to express them­selves with beau­ti­ful and chal­leng­ing images, words and sculp­tures rather than for images aimed only at mak­ing more prof­its for fat cat share­hold­ers? .…”

============================================
Redditch Buy Nothing Day '06
Buy Noth­ing Day in Red­ditch

As part of Inter­na­tion­al Buy Noth­ing Day, mem­bers of Red­ditch Friends of the Earth held a ‘free shop‘ & leaflet stall in Red­ditch Town Cen­tre on Sat­ur­day, the aim being to high­light the envi­ron­men­tal & eth­i­cal con­se­quences of con­sumerism, and also to encour­age peo­ple to live more and work/spend less!!

5 mem­bers of Red­ditch FOE held a 3 hour stall where we gave away over 100 items(incl videos, toys, books, house­hold stuff etc) to the gen­er­al public(one item each per­son). We also hand­ed out over 400 leaflets(see above) about BND, plus many more about Freecy­cle etc and copies of Red­ditch FOE‘s lat­est newslet­ter.

We felt the day was a great suc­cess and 2 local papers print­ed great arti­cles about the forth­com­ing event, in last weeks edi­tions. This is the first time that a BND event has been staged in Red­ditch, but it won‘t be the last!

Red­ditch FOE are part of the recent­ly formed Red­ditch Alliance of Greens, set up to boost co-oper­a­tion and sup­port between local ‘green‘ goups, and to cre­ate more aware­ness of the good work we‘re all involved in.

For more info see the fol­low­ing web­sites:
Buy Noth­ing Day http://www.buynothingday.co.uk/
Enough http://www.enough.org.uk/index.html
Freecy­cle http://freecycle.org/
Red­ditch Alliance of Greens http://www.redditch-ag.info/

============================================
London Buy Nothing Day '06 half price inside
London Buy Nothing Day '06 half price outside

Every­thing instore half price today!!!

For this year’s Buy Noth­ing Day, the Hijack­ers decid­ed to resurect one of our favourite projects. The Half Price Sale.

The plan is sim­plic­i­ty itself. Print up a bun­dle of “EVERYTHING INSTORE HALF PRICE TODAY” t‑shirts, then wan­der into shops, tidy things up and watch chaos ensue.

A dozen Hijack­er secret agents came along for the action, and vis­it­ed Nike Town, Top Shop, HMV, Sel­f­ridges and oth­ers on the day. Nike as always were the least impressed with our antics, with a pack of over eager secu­ri­ty guards ush­er­ing us out of the store with­in about 5 mins. Top Shop were far to vast to catch us, and total­ly con­fused by our actions.

assis­tant with clip board: what are you doing here.
Hijack­er: just here to help
acb: where are you from.
Hijack­er: I’m from Lon­don.
acb: no one told me you where coming(pause) why are you here
Hijack­er: just here to help
acb: but your are not on the plan(leaves con­fused)
HMV were clear win­ners with a secu­ri­ty guard exclaim­ing:
“You have to stop tidy­ing things up, you’re being ille­gal, you have to leave!”

to see more please vis­it:
http://www.spacehijackers.org

============================================
York Buy Nothing Day '06 #1York Buy Nothing Day '06 #2
York Buy Noth­ing Day — report & pic­tures

Inter­na­tion­al Buy Noth­ing Day came to York today. As only four peo­ple turned up our plans had to be scaled back a bit, so we did­n’t quite man­age to over­throw the cor­rupt cap­i­tal­ist sys­tem (mebbe next year, eh?!).

Instead, we set up a free fair-trade cof­fee stall out­side Star­bucks on Coney Street, and made life a lit­tle bit eas­i­er for their cor­po­rate accoun­tants.

In an hour and a half, over 150 cups of tea and cof­fee were dished out to slight­ly bemused passers by. Some want­ed to know what the catch was, some asked if we were con­nect­ed with the church (“def­i­nite­ly not!” was the resound­ing reply), and one per­son even tried to give us a dona­tion (“def­i­nite­ly not!” was the resound­ing reply!).

A fair few peo­ple stopped and talked at length, and some promised not to buy any­thing for the rest of the day.

A gang of enthu­si­as­tic teenage girls kind­ly held our ‘Buy Noth­ing Day’ ban­ner and adver­tised our wares for 45 min­utes.

Two friend­ly cop­pers walked past, but unfor­tu­nate­ly could­n’t be tempt­ed to free drinks, and just as we were wind­ing up, some­one from the coun­cil came along to tell us ‘the rules’ about stalls in town. He told us that we need­ed per­mis­sion to hold a stall, and gave us a form to be com­plet­ed for next time. He was very pleas­ant about it and was hap­py for us to car­ry on for anoth­er 15 min­utes (we’d run out of every­thing by then any­way, so we agreed), but we couldn’t per­suade him to take a free cof­fee. In all the excite­ment, the form appears to have been lost, so it looks like our next event will have to be ‘unau­tho­rised’ as well.… . .

After the cof­fee stall had been wound-up, a cou­ple of activists had some “funâ€? on the esca­la­tors in Marks and Spencers — until they were asked to leave by secu­ri­ty.

So, that’s it for this year. We did­n’t change the world, or stop much shop­ping, but we divert­ed a small amount of cash from Star­bucks’ cof­fers, had a lot of fun giv­ing stuff away and put smiles on peo­ples’ faces!

============================================
Birmingham Buy Nothing Day '06 #1Birmingham Buy Nothing Day '06 #2
Birm­ing­ham’s Con­tri­bu­tion to Buy Noth­ing Day 2006

A great suc­cess with protest San­tas, FreeShop, repet­i­tive beats, Guan­tanamo Bay Cam­paign, and Food Not Bombs com­ing togeth­er attract­ing and cre­at­ing a vibrant street event.

Buy Noth­ing Day has been cel­e­brat­ed in Birm­ing­ham for a few years now, ini­tial­ly by Birm­ing­ham Friends of the Earth­’s anti-con­sumer info-stalls and San­ta Claus demon­stra­tions. Last year, in addi­tion, autonomous events were staged: in-store pranks and games, Food Not Bombs, and a Free Shop.

This year the anti-con­sumerist protest San­tas were back, as were Food Not Bombs, who serve free food in town fort­night­ly. The Guan­tanamo Bay cam­paign was present rais­ing aware­ness, a fan­tas­tic portable sound sys­tem turned up, and the Free Shop returned. All these groups came togeth­er to make the event what it was, attract­ing a strong crowd and cre­at­ing a busy, vibrant street par­ty.

Why Free Shops?
It has long been recog­nised that cap­i­tal­ism is over-pro­duc­tive of goods, and that our con­sumer cul­ture pro­duces a very waste­ful soci­ety.

A free shop is a shop where we exchange goods with­out a pric­ing sys­tem: unwant­ed items are donat­ed and want­ed items tak­en away.

‘Junk belongs to us, the peo­ple. It does not belong to coun­cils, shires, gov­ern­ments or con­trac­tors’. Freeshops pro­mote direct recy­cling and re-use of goods, local­ly, and in a way that answers imme­di­ate need.

Freeshops ‘have their roots in the anar­chist move­ment’ and are well estab­lished in North­ern Europe and in the USA. There are always tem­po­rary freeshops too, and a month­ly freeshop has been run­ning in Nor­wich since 2004. Inter­net freeshops have giv­en new life to the move­ment through the online ‘FreeCy­cle’ com­mu­ni­ty [see http://groups.yahoo.com/group/birmingham_freecycle].

Occa­sion­al­ly, FreeShops can be stolen. This hap­pened to a freeshop in Whitechapel in 2002. Such inci­dents for­tu­nate­ly are rare; because no mon­ey changes hands and no one makes an unfair prof­it, freeshops don’t encour­age crim­i­nal activ­i­ty, unlike those oth­er kinds of shops.

Any of us can start a freeshop. This reporter would like to see it become a reg­u­lar event, with peo­ple swap­ping goods in town as a more sus­tain­able chal­lenge to the con­sumer cul­ture of Birm­ing­ham City Cen­tre.

An organ­is­er com­ment­ed on last Sat­ur­day’s event

“Today has been a huge suc­cess. Almost all of the stock from the shop has been tak­en away by the shop­pers of Birm­ing­ham. Along with this they’ve hope­ful­ly tak­en away a new way of look­ing at con­sumer habits in this coun­try. Peo­ple vis­it­ing the stall have been very enthu­si­as­tic about what we’re doing; some indi­vid­u­als were very enthu­si­as­tic about get­ting involved them­selves so there may be more than one Free Shop at the next Buy Noth­ing Day. Every­thing which we gave away today has been saved from being sent to the local incin­er­a­tor and all of the stock was hauled into the city cen­tre in a small bicy­cle con­voy. Hav­ing music at the event real­ly got peo­ple inter­est­ed and made the after­noon feel like an event worth ele­brat­ing”.

Food Not Bombs returned after a 2 month break to serve reclaimed food to the hun­gry and cam­paign against pover­ty, rub­bish food, home­less­ness and mil­i­tarism. The group strength­ened it’s com­m­mit­ment to using non-alu­mini­um cook­ware, fea­tured inno­v­a­tive new recipes, an improved infor­ma­tion shop, and was great­ly ener­gised by new peo­ple. Three Food Not Bombs first-timers took part, with one com­ment­ing that FNB was the ‘one of the most pos­i­tive polit­i­cal expe­ri­ences’ she had had in years of cam­paign­ing expe­ri­ence. ‘The group’s abil­i­ty to com­mu­ni­cate and organ­ise made for a great team expe­ri­ence,’ she said. ‘We all were so pos­i­tive and sup­port­ed each oth­er. It felt like a prop­er team effort which was fan­tas­tic and I want peo­ple to know about that’. As usu­al the food was enthu­si­as­ti­cal­ly con­sumed and infor­ma­tion on local and glob­al issues dis­trib­uted. The col­lec­tive end­ed the day with a social and met again the fol­low­ing Tues­day for a review meet­ing and to plan future actions.

Food Not Bombs will be back Sat­ur­day 9th and Sun­day 10th Decem­ber (as part of the vig­il for Human Rights Day), and there is a meet­ing to plan this on Tues­day 5th; social events are also in the works. Email brum_fnb@riseup.net for more infor­ma­tion.

For more on the freeshop move­ment check http://colorado.indymedia.org/newswire/display/12028/index.php
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_store

All in all it was an excit­ing event that brought a vibrant and polit­i­cal street cul­ture to Birm­ing­ham, and showed how dif­fer­ent groups can col­lab­o­rate to strength­en the move­men­t’s range and appeal — here’s to many more of these kinds of events.

============================================

Oxford Buy Nothing Day '06 #2
Oxford Buy Nothing Day '06 #1
Oxford Shop­pers Left Bemused By Con­sumer Cult

The Rev. E. Lit­tle­helps, Lord High Pur­chas­er of the Cult of Con­sumerism, explains in his own words what hap­pened when a group of activists pre­tend­ing to be cor­po­ra­tion-wor­ship­pers descend­ed on Oxford City Cen­tre for Inter­na­tion­al Buy Noth­ing Day.

Thought For The (Buy Noth­ing) Day
By Rev. E. Lit­tle­helps

It was half past ten in the morn­ing, on Sat­ur­day Novem­ber 25th. The skies over Oxford City Cen­tre were grey as I wait­ed out­side the Tem­ple of St. Claren­don (known to the unini­ti­at­ed sim­ply as “The Claren­don Cen­treâ€?), pulling my robes tight­ly around me. The morn­ing was chill, but I was filled with a fiery pur­pose. Today was “Buy Noth­ing Dayâ€?, a false fes­ti­val cre­at­ed by infi­dels in an attempt to dis­cred­it the holy cor­po­rate brands; it was our sacred mis­sion to counter their foul sac­ri­lege by preach­ing the Good Word of The Holy Multi­na­tion­als to all who would lis­ten. Glo­ri­ous work, my chil­dren. Glo­ri­ous work.

Some loose-mouthed folk call us the Cult of Con­sumerism; we know our­selves as the iPos­tles, and work for the greater good of our won­drous cor­po­rate pan­theon and all of their noble prof­its.

As my broth­ers and sis­ters assem­bled around me, my heart soared in antic­i­pa­tion of the great work before us. All five of the Inner Cir­cle were there: Sis­ter Bucks, Preach­er Bright, Padre Sta­tion, Sis­ter Swoosh and Apos­tle Mac­in­tosh. We began our first incan­ta­tion (“Shop, Shop, Till You Dropâ€?), to cleanse our­selves of any impure, non-con­sumer thoughts, and strode bold­ly out onto the con­se­crat­ed ground of the Corn­mar­ket pedes­tri­anised shop­ping precinct.

So many brands, all around us, already glow­ing neon in the weak morn­ing light! So many small but per­fect chapels to con­sumerism, where even at this hour wor­ship­pers were flock­ing to make their offer­ings! The rap­ture was soon upon us, and we began to pros­trate our­selves before each gleam­ing altar, cry­ing our prais­es to the skies.

Sing praise to McDon­alds! We wor­ship you, St Ronald, and your won­drous pow­er, the pow­er to trans­form rain­forests into obese chil­dren. All hail Star­bucks, and the Sacred Busi­ness Mod­el – we mar­vel at your abil­i­ty to pay cof­fee grow­ers 40p for a pound of cof­fee, keep­ing them pover­ty-strick­en and ful­ly in your thrall, whilst sell­ing lattes for £4 a cup! All hail Voda­fone – we thank you for sell­ing us a new phone every six months when the old one still works, and thus strip­ping away the planet’s resources and fuelling wars over rare min­er­als, all in your glo­ry! All hail!

Tru­ly, as Apos­tle Mac­in­tosh observed, the prof­its were speak­ing through us. And o, most won­drous thing, in front of The Dis­ney Store (all praise the spark­ly cor­po­rate plas­tic tat, made by chil­dren for chil­dren), that same good broth­er was sud­den­ly filled with the spir­it of Mick­ey Mouse, and began to speak in high-pitched tongues, to our utter delight and won­der!

At West­gate Cathe­dral we beheld façade upon glo­ri­ous façade, beg­ging us to con­sume the whole plan­et piece by shrink-wrapped piece. We had bare­ly begun our wor­ship out­side the Church of Sony (“all hail stand-by mode!â€?), when one of the guardians of the tem­ple, jeal­ous of any favour we might be win­ning from our shared cor­po­rate deities, escort­ed us firm­ly from the premis­es – but we were unde­terred, and showed our defi­ance with a spon­ta­neous chant­i­ng and rap­ping med­ley out­side the tem­ple gates. Mal­lelu­jah!
We threw our­selves as hum­ble sup­pli­cants before Gap, singing praise to the enor­mous gap between the wages of the sweat­shop work­ers and their high street prices. We wept tears of grat­i­tude before the sign of the holy Vir­gin, thank­ing St Bran­son for solv­ing cli­mate change by telling us all to fly more. Out­side Argos, we invoked the words of the great the­olo­gian Sir William of Bai­ley, and gave praise to the Lam­i­nat­ed Book of Dreams, sheathed in sacred plas­tic to catch the tears of joy from those who stand in awe before it. Help us, Argos! We need a pink Play­boy liq­uid lamp! A plas­tic flamin­go to sit beside our Golf­ing Gnomes! My toast­er is the wrong colour, Argos – sure­ly you hold the key to my sal­va­tion with­in the Mys­te­ri­ous Dun­geon of Plen­ty?

As the day pro­gressed, many crowds of onlook­ers gath­ered around us, drawn by the truth of our words. Many of them seemed strange­ly gripped by fits of laugh­ter, doubt­less over­come by joy at the thought of the blessed cor­po­ra­tions per­vad­ing every aspect of our lives; oth­ers fol­lowed us, shout­ing out sug­ges­tions for where we should wor­ship next. Great mul­ti­tudes beheld our cer­e­monies, and many hun­dreds of pam­phlets were hand­ed out to the curi­ous con­gre­ga­tion. It was only after the event that we realised that a ter­ri­ble error had occurred, and we had some­how been dis­trib­ut­ing a blas­phe­mous Buy Noth­ing Day “Anti-Catalogueâ€?, which warned peo­ple of the sup­posed dan­gers of exces­sive con­sump­tion, and encour­aged them to shop less and live more, even going so far as to sug­gest a num­ber of “funâ€? and “freeâ€? things that peo­ple could do instead of con­sum­ing.

Despite this dread­ful over­sight, as dusk fell over the city we decid­ed that our work had been well done, and returned to our indi­vid­ual home­life con­sump­tion mod­ules with a sense of deep and blessed sat­is­fac­tion.
Rest assured, peo­ple of Oxford, we shall return in good time to deliv­er more sacred shop­ping ser­mons. Unless, of course, those accursed Cor­po­rate Plun­der Pirates get there first and steal our thun­der.

WTO-approved bless­ings to you all,
The Rev. E Lit­tle­helps

“And behold the splen­dour of KFC, and the mirac­u­lous buck­ets of greasy fried gunk. Yea, for the rain­forests are an abom­i­na­tion unto the Most Right­eous Colonel Saint Sanders, and must be torn down to make way for the boun­teous fields of chick­en feed, to fat­ten the birds in the Holy Cages of Won­der. Thus we may all share the glo­ri­ous boun­ty of the Fam­i­ly Spe­cial Offer Bone­less Box. Rejoice!”

For an elec­tron­ic copy of the Anti-Cat­a­logue, email dan­ny­chivers [at] wildmail.com.

============================================
Buy Nothing Day '06 stickers 1
Buy Nothing Day '06 stickers 2
Buy Nothing Day '06 stickers 3

“Put me down! I won’t bring you hap­pi­ness” More Buy Noth­ing Day Pix­ie-ing

A mer­ry band of Oxford pix­ies full of the joys of the sea­son vis­it­ed many, many shops — includ­ing Miss Sel­f­ridges, Top­shop, Gap, HMV and Dixons — plac­ing thought-pro­vok­ing stick­ers in dress­ing rooms and on prod­ucts.

Why did these pesky pix­ies make life dif­fi­cult for the staff who then had to peel the labels off? Well, read on and dis­cov­er why some the afore­men­tioned places were tar­get­ed.

***About Arca­dia Group (owns Top­shop, Top­man, Dorothy Perkins, Miss Sel­f­ridge, Wal­lis, Evans, Out­fit)***

Arca­dia Group is owned by bil­lion­aire Philip Green. In 2005, Arca­di­a’s prof­its “rose to £326 mil­lion in the 52 weeks to 27th August 2005…As a reward, Arca­dia shelled out a £1.3bn div­i­dend to its share­hold­ers, £1.2bn of which went to Green, already the UK’s fifth rich­est person.”[1] How­ev­er whilst this was already well and good for Green and Arca­dia share­hold­ers it was a dif­fer­ent sto­ry for the work­ers who pro­duced the tacky t‑shirts for Top­shop and their ilk. In a fac­to­ry in Cam­bo­dia in 2004, after over 1000 work­ers went on strike to protest against poor pay, “19 union lead­ers and 120 union work­ers were fired”[2].

In con­clu­sion: not Green by nature at all.

***About Dixons (sis­ter groups: Cur­rys Dig­i­tal, PC World)***

In 2003, Dixons, who main­ly stock elec­tri­cal equip­ment (hi-fis, vac­u­um clean­ers, iPods etc) announced a part­ner­ship with ‘sup­port ser­vices firm’ Capi­ta to man­age one of Dixons’ call cen­tres. Uh oh — bad move — as Capi­ta is prob­a­bly best know for its mis­man­age­ment of the Crim­i­nal Records Bureau: after fail­ing to check teach­ers’ records on time the com­pa­ny was even­tu­al­ly fined £2 mil­lion; small change real­ly from the £400 mil­lion bud­get it received from the gov­ern­ment for the contract[3].
After the part­ner­ship deal was clinched, Capi­ta went on to sack staff at the Sheffield based call centre[4].

Dixons deal­ing with the Con­ser­v­a­tives, envi­ron­men­tal report­ing and tax avoid­ance has also been crit­i­cised by many in the past. In a report in 2001, Friends of the Earth found that Dixons was a busi­ness backer of the Con­ser­v­a­tive Par­ty; it also short-list­ed the store as “as [a] pos­si­ble tar­gets for a major con­sumer cam­paign over ‘dodgy’ chemicals.”[5] FOE also found that the com­pa­ny had no for­mal poli­cies on con­duct on over­seas labour stan­dards. Dixons has also been accused of using their sub­sidiary, Dixons Insrance Ser­vices ltd reg­is­tered in the Isle of Man as a tax haven[6].

Final­ly, at the begin­ning of this year, Which? mag­a­zine had found Dixons to be one of the worst retail­ers in Britain.[7]

All this is before we even go into the envi­ron­men­tal dev­as­ta­tion involved in pro­duc­ing some of the mer­chan­dise that Dixons sells!
****
Most of the above infor­ma­tion was from Labour Behind the Label, the cam­paign that sup­ports gar­ment work­ers’ efforts world­wide to improve their work­ing con­di­tions. http://www.labourbehindthelabel.org
***
Be warned. The Pix­ies may strike again…

Ref­er­ences:
[1] ‘Arca­dia: the high street of exploita­tion — Novem­ber 2005 Update’, Labour behinid the Label, http://www.labourbehindthelabel.org/content/view/17/53 viewed 30/11/06

[2] Ibid

[3] Sean O’Neill & Stew­art Tendler, ‘Blun­der on crim­i­nal records was revealed a year ago’, The Times, 22/05/06

[4] Tim Richard­son, (29/04/04) ‘Ex-Dixons staff ’ ”kicked in the teeth“ ‘, The Reg­is­ter, http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/04/29/dixons_capita_redundancies viewed 30/11/06

[5] ‘UK Democ­ra­cy Plc How the cor­po­rate jug­ger­naut is crush­ing our democ­ra­cy’, Friends of the Earth brief­ing, Decem­ber 2001, http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/briefings/uk_democracy_plc.pdf viewed 30/11/06

[6] From ‘UK Democ­ra­cy Plc How the cor­po­rate jug­ger­naut is crush­ing our democ­ra­cy’
and ‘Com­pa­ny infor­ma­tion: Dixons’, Ethis­core, http://www.ethiscore.org/company.aspx?id=33640 viewed 30/11/06

[7] ‘Shop­pers snub Dixons and Pow­er­house’, Which? 31/01/06, http://www.which.co.uk/reports_and_campaigns/audio_visual/reports/audio/Shoppers_snub_Dixons_and_Powerhouse_news_article_557_59378.jsp viewed 30/11/06

http://adbusters.org/metas/eco/bnd/

eco-prisoners — Spirit of Freedom November 2006

Spir­it of Free­dom
(Novem­ber 2006)
Pro­duced by
EARTH LIBERATION PRISONERS SUPPORT NETWORK

“I thank you all dear­ly for writ­ing”

Prisoner Solidarity 12Spir­it of Free­dom
(Novem­ber 2006)
Pro­duced by
EARTH LIBERATION PRISONERS SUPPORT NETWORK

“I thank you all dear­ly for writ­ing”
(Jon Able­white, Ani­mal Rights Pris­on­er)

Wel­come to the Novem­ber 2006 edi­tion of Spir­it of Free­dom. First off I’d like to appol­o­gise for this edi­tion of the newslet­ter being late. As peo­ple may be aware the USA-SHAC 7 where all due to start their prison sen­tences this month and we were await­ing to hear where they were before we went to print. Sad­ly all of the USA-SHAC 7 defen­dants are now in jail so we urge every­one to please write to them. They have been jailed for mere­ly report­ing the news, so please do sup­port them. How­ev­er, whilst sup­port­ing the USA-SHAC 7, please don’t for­get the oth­er pris­on­ers. They also need our sup­port. So please, no mat­ter where you are in the world, please sup­port the eco-pris­on­ers and no com­pro­mise in defence of Moth­er Earth!

COURT REPORTS & LEGAL UPDATES

OREGON UPDATE
In ear­ly Novem­ber 2006, it was announced that four Amer­i­cans, Jonathan Paul, Daniel McGowan, Nathan Fraz­er Block and Joy­an­na Zach­er, who are all defen­dants in the Ore­gon Case, had entered Guilty pleas to var­i­ous charges against them.

When enter­ing their Guilty Pleas these four remained true to their prin­ci­ples and although admit­ting their own guilt refused to name any
oth­ers. It is unclear what length of sen­tences the four will receive but it is clear they no longer face the pos­si­ble ‘Life impris­on­ment with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole’, which they were fac­ing if they’d gone to tri­al. All four are due to be sen­tenced in mid-Decem­ber 06.

Also in ear­ly Novem­ber, Grand Jury pris­on­er, Jeff Hogg, was released from prison. Jeff had always refused to tes­ti­fy against any­one in the Ore­gon case and was serv­ing an indef­i­nite prison sen­tence as a result. ELP cel­e­brates Jef­f’s release and praise him for his moral stance.

With oth­er news in this inves­ti­ga­tion, in ear­ly Octo­ber 2006, two of the police infor­mants in the Uni­ver­si­ty of Wash­ing­ton arson case, Lacey Phill­abaum and Jen­nifer Lynn Kolar (also known as Jen), plead­ed guilty to their roles in the arson which occured in 2001. Kolar also admit­ted to an arson against a gun club. Fol­low­ing their guilty pleas Kolar is expect­ed to receive a sen­tence of between 5–7years impris­on­ment, whilst Phul­labaum is expect­ed to received 3–5 years impris­on­ment.

As soon as any of the sen­tences, of any of the defen­dants in this case, are known ELP will bring you the news. How­ev­er we would like to remind every­one that we do not sup­port police infor­mants and there­fore, although report­ing their sen­tences, we will not be list­ing the prison details of any of the police infor­mants in this case. We do offer our total sup­port to those who have plead­ed guilty to their per­son­al charges but not coop­er­at­ed with the author­i­ties whilst doing so.

Also, despite the var­i­ous guilty pleas ELP would like to remind every­one that this case is not over. There are still at least three defen­dants in this case who loca­tions are unknown to the FBI. And also, Bri­ana Waters has for­mal­ly plead­ed not guilty to the Uni­ver­si­ty of Wash­ing­ton fire and is sched­uled for tri­al in May 2007. ELP will keep you informed as to all the devel­op­ments in Bri­ana’s tri­al.

NADIA WINSTEAD
In mid-Octo­ber 2006, Amer­i­can ani­mal rights activist, Nadia Win­stead, was found Guilty of con­tempt of court after she refused to tes­ti­fy before a Grand Jury which is inves­ti­gat­ing a series of Ani­mal and Earth Lib­er­a­tion actions. Nadia was grant­ed leave to appeal her con­vic­tion and that appeal hear­ing is due lat­er on this month. ELP will bring you more news just as soon as we have it.

IL SILVESTRE UPDATE
In ear­ly Novem­ber 2006, Giuseppe Bonam­i­ci, was released from prison under house arrest. Giuseppe is one of ten Il Sil­vestre mem­bers, arrest­ed in May 2006, who has been charged with using explo­sives to destroy an elec­tric­i­ty pylon in protest against nuclear pow­er. Fol­low­ing Giuseppe’s release this means that six of the ten defen­dants are now under house arrest, but four remain impris­oned.

The remain­ing four are all said to be doing well and remain­ing strong. One of the four Benedet­ta Galante, ini­tial­ly after her impris­on­ment found her­self sub­ject to strict mail cen­sor­ship and only received a few let­ters with­in the first four months of her impris­on­ment. How­ev­er, her mail now does appear to be reach­ing her and is described as “flood­ing in”, so much so that the prison does­n’t have enough mail cen­sors to keep up with her post!!!

Besides the four Il Sil­vestre pris­on­ers await­ing tri­al fol­low­ing the May 06 arrests, ELP would like to remind every­one that a fifth Il Sil­vestre activist is also cur­rent­ly impris­oned. Francesco Gioia is serv­ing 5 years and 2 months for pro­mot­ing & par­tic­i­pat­ing in COR direct action. He is also await­ing tri­al for escap­ing from house arrest.

JOE HARRIS
On 20/09/06 British Ani­mal Rights activist, Joe Har­ris, was sen­tenced to 3 years impris­on­ment for tak­ing direct action against Hunt­ing­don Life Sci­ences tar­gets. His tac­tics includ­ed glu­ing locks and slash­ing car tyres.

MADELINE BUCKLER
On 22/09/06 British Ani­mal Rights activist, Made­line Buck­ler, was sen­tenced to 2 years impris­on­ment for send­ing hate mail to the Hall fam­i­ly, who use to sup­ply guinea pigs to the vivi­sec­tion indus­try.

ECO-DEFENCE PRISONERS

Fadal­la Idris Ala­jaimy (address unknown). Sudan anti-dam pro­test­er on remand accused of Wag­ing War against the State for protest­ing against the con­struc­tion of a dam. The sen­tence for this crime is Death.

Mohamed Ahmed Ala­jaimy (address unknown). Sudan anti-dam pro­test­er on remand accused of Wag­ing War against the State for protest­ing against the con­struc­tion of a dam. The sen­tence for this crime is Death.

Tre Arrow, CS# 05850722, Van­cou­ver Island Region­al Cor­rec­tion Cen­ter, 4216 Wilkin­son Rd., Vic­to­ria, BC, V8Z 5B2, Cana­da. On remand accused of involve­ment with an arson on log­ging trucks and an arson on vehi­cles owned by a sand & grav­el com­pa­ny. Both arsons occurred in the USA. Tre is fight­ing his extra­di­tion to the USA.

Nathan Block, #1663667, Lane Coun­ty Jail, 101 W 5th Ave., Eugene, OR 97401, USA. On remand accused of involve­ment in an arson against a Poplar Tree Farm and an arson against an SUV deal­er­ship. Also charged with involve­ment in a con­spir­a­cy to car­ry out direct action in Ore­gon.

Fed­eri­co Bonam­i­ci, Casa di Reclu­sione, ia Nuo­va Pog­gio­re­ale 177, 80143 Napo­lo Pog­gio­re­ale (NA), Italy. Il Sil­vestre mem­ber on remand accused of using explo­sives to dam­age an elec­tric­i­ty pylon. Also accused of plan­ning to over­throw the State.

Mar­co Camenisch, Post­fach 3143, CH-8105 Regens­dorf, Switzer­land. Serv­ing 27 years. 1) Ten years for using explo­sives to destroy elec­tric­i­ty pylons lead­ing from nuclear pow­er sta­tions. 2) Sev­en­teen years for the mur­der of a Swiss Board­er Guard whilst on the run. In ’02 Mar­co com­plet­ed a 12-year sen­tence in Italy for destroy­ing elec­tric­i­ty pylons in Italy.

Ibai Eder­ra, Car­cel de Pam­plona, C/San Roque. Apdo. 250, 31080 — Iruñez — Pam­plona, Navar­ra (España), Spain. Serv­ing just under 5 years for sab­o­tag­ing machin­ery at the con­tro­ver­sial Itoiz dam con­struc­tion site.

Rod­ney Coro­n­a­do #03895–000, FCI Tuc­son, 8901 South Wilmot Rd, Tuc­son, AZ 85705, USA. Serv­ing 8 months for his role in an Earth First! hunt sab­o­tage against a moun­tain lion hunt. Rod is also fac­ing addi­tion­al charges relat­ing to a speech he made at an ani­mal rights gath­er­ing in 2003.

William Fre­di­ani (cur­rent­ly under house arrest). Il Sil­vestre activist sen­tenced to 6 years impris­on­ment for pro­mot­ing & par­tic­i­pat­ing in COR direct action.

Benedet­ta Galante, Casa Cir­con­dar­i­ale, Con­tra­da Capo di Monte, 82100 — Ben­even­to (BN), Italy. Il Sil­vestre activist sen­tenced to 3 years 6 months for pro­mot­ing & par­tic­i­pat­ing in COR direct action. Also await­ing tri­al accused of using explo­sives to dam­age an elec­tric­i­ty pylon in protest at nuclear ener­gy.

Francesco Gioia, Via Maiano, 10, 06049 Spo­le­to, Italy. Il Sil­vestre activist sen­tenced to 5 years 2 months for pro­mot­ing & par­tic­i­pat­ing in COR direct action. Also await­ing tri­al for escap­ing from house arrest.

Sil­via Gueri­ni, Carcere “La Doz­za”, Via Del Gomi­to 2, 40127 Bologna, Italy.
Il Sil­vestre mem­ber on remand accused of using explo­sives to dam­age an elec­tric­i­ty pylon.

Leonar­do Lan­di (cur­rent­ly under house arrest). Il Sil­vestre activist sen­tenced to 3 years 6 months impris­on­ment for pro­mot­ing & par­tic­i­pat­ing in COR direct action.

Jef­frey Luers, #13797671, OSP, 2605 State St. Salem, OR 97310, USA. Serv­ing 22 years & 8 months for arson on a SUV deal­er­ship & the attempt­ed arson of an oil truck.

Ali Mohamed Alhas­sen Mas­sad (address unknown). Sudan anti-dam pro­test­er on remand accused of Wag­ing War against the State for protest­ing against the con­struc­tion of a dam. The sen­tence for this crime is Death.

Eric McDavid X‑2972521 4E 231A, Sacra­men­to Coun­ty Main Jail, 651 “I” Street, Sacra­men­to, CA 95814, USA. On Remand accused of plan­ning to destroy the prop­er­ty of the U.S. Forestry Ser­vice, mobile phone masts and pow­er plants.

Christo­pher McIn­tosh 30512–013, USP Hazel­ton, US Pen­i­ten­tiary, PO Box 2000, Bruce­ton Mills, WV 26525, USA. Serv­ing 8 years for a joint ELF/ALF arson attack on a McDon­alds restau­rant.

Alessio Per­on­di (cur­rent­ly under house arrest). Il Sil­vestre activist sen­tenced to 3 years 8 months impris­on­ment for pro­mot­ing & par­tic­i­pat­ing in COR direct action.

Costan­ti­no Ragusa, Casa Cir­con­dar­i­ale, Via Prati Nuovi 7, 27058 Voghera (PV), Italy. Il Sil­vestre activist sen­tenced to 5 years for pro­mot­ing & par­tic­i­pat­ing in COR direct action. Also await­ing tri­al accused of using explo­sives to dam­age an elec­tric­i­ty pylon in protest at nuclear ener­gy.

John Wade #38548–083, FCI Peters­burg Low, Satel­lite Camp, PO Box 90027, Peters­burg, VA 23804, USA. Serv­ing 37 months for a series of ELF actions against a num­ber of tar­gets includ­ing McDon­alds & Burg­er King; urban sprawl; the con­struc­tion indus­try; and an SUV deal­er­ship.

Joy­an­na Zach­er #1662550, Lane Coun­ty Jail, 101 W 5th Ave, Eugene, OR 97401, USA. On remand accused of involve­ment in an arson against a Poplar Tree Farm and an SUV deal­er­ship. Also charged with involve­ment in a con­spir­a­cy to car­ry out direct action in Ore­gon.

ANIMAL LIBERATION PRISONERS

Jon Able­white TB4885, HMP Lowd­ham Grange, Lowd­ham, Not­ting­ham, NG14 7DA, Eng­land. Serv­ing 12 years for attempt­ing to black­mail a farmer who sup­plied guinea pigs for vivi­sec­tion.

Natasha Avery NR8987, HMP Bronze­field, Woodthor­pe Road, Ash­ford, Mid­dle­sex, TW15 3JZ, Eng­land. Serv­ing 16 months for a pub­lic order offence after telling a fox hunt­ing mur­der what she thought of them.

Dave Blenk­in­sop EM7899, HMP Rye Hill, Onley, War­wick­shire, CV23 8AN, Eng­land. Serv­ing 10 years. 1) Three years for a stave attack on the Man­ag­ing Direc­tor of HLS. 2) 18 months for res­cu­ing 600 guinea pigs from a lab sup­pli­er. 3) 51â?„2 years for plant­i­ng incen­di­ary devices under an abat­toirs vehi­cles.

Made­line Buck­ler PR7492, HMP Mor­ton Hall, Swinder­by, Lin­coln, LN6 9PT, Eng­land. Serv­ing 2 years for send­ing hate mail to a fam­i­ly who sup­plied guinea pigs for vivi­sec­tion.

Jacob Con­roy #93501–011, FCI Vic­torville Medi­um I Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, P.O. Box 5300, Ade­lan­to, CA 92301, USA. Serv­ing 48 months impris­on­ment for help­ing organ­ise the SHAC-USA cam­paign.

Rod­ney Coro­n­a­do. Serv­ing 8 months for his role in an Earth First! hunt sab­o­tage against a moun­tain lion hunt. See his details in the Eco-Defence Pris­on­ers list.

Don­ald Cur­rie TN 4593, HMP Wood­hill, Tat­ten­hoe Street, Mil­ton Keynes, MK4 4DA, Eng­land. On remand accused of arson against a couri­er com­pa­ny with links to the vivi­sec­tion indus­try includ­ing HLS.

Josh Dem­mitt 12314–081, FCI Saf­ford, Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, P.O. Box 9000, Saf­ford, AZ 85548, USA. Serv­ing 30 months for an ALF arson on a Uni­ver­si­ty ani­mal test­ing facil­i­ty.

Dar­ius Fullmer #26397–050, FCI Fort Dix Satel­lite Camp, P.O. Box 1000, Fort Dix, NJ 08640 USA. Serv­ing 12 months for help­ing organ­ise the SHAC-USA cam­paign.

Garfield Mar­cus Gab­bard TB 4271, HMP Moor­land (Closed), Bawtry Road, Hat­field Wood­house, Don­cast­er, South York­shire, DN7 6BW, Eng­land. Serv­ing 36 months for Affray dur­ing an ani­mal rights demo where he jumped onto a car and kicked a secu­ri­ty guard who pulled him off the car.

Lau­ren Gaz­zo­la #93497–011, FCI Dan­bury Route #37, 33 1/2 Pem­broke Road, Dan­bury, CT 06811 USA. Serv­ing 54 months impris­on­ment for help­ing organ­ise the SHAC-USA cam­paign.

Sarah Gis­borne, LT5393, HMP Cookham Wood, Rochester, Kent, ME1 3LU, Eng­land.
Serv­ing 51â?„2 years for con­spir­a­cy to cause crim­i­nal dam­age fol­low­ing the dam­ag­ing of 8 vehi­cles owned by peo­ple linked to Hunt­ing­don Life Sci­ence.

Joshua Harp­er #29429–086, FCI Sheri­dan Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, P.O. Box 5000, Sheri­dan, OR 97378 USA. Serv­ing 36 months impris­on­ment for help­ing organ­ise the SHAC-USA cam­paign.

Joseph Har­ris, TN5728, HMP Lewes, Brighton Road, East Sus­sex, BN7 1EA, Eng­land. Serv­ing 3 years for dam­ag­ing the prop­er­ty of peo­ple asso­ci­at­ed with Hunt­ing­don Life Sci­ences.

Kevin Kjon­aas #93502–011, FCI Sand­stone, PO Box 1000, Sand­stone, MN 55072 USA. Serv­ing 72 months impris­on­ment for help­ing organ­ise the SHAC-USA cam­paign.

Chris McIn­tosh. Serv­ing 8 years for a joint ALF/ELF arson on a McDon­alds.
See his details in the Eco-Defence Pris­on­ers list.

Josephine Mayo PR6508, HMP Drake Hall, Eccle­shall, Stafford­shire, ST21 6LQ, Eng­land. Serv­ing 4 years for attempt­ing to black­mail a farmer who sup­plied guinea pigs for vivi­sec­tion.

John Smith TB4887, HMP Lowd­ham Grange, Lowd­ham, Not­ting­ham, NG14 7DA, Eng­land. Serv­ing 12 years for attempt­ing to black­mail a farmer who sup­plied guinea pigs for vivi­sec­tion.

Andrew Stepan­ian #26399–050, FCI But­ner Medi­um II Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, PO Box 1500, But­ner, NC 27509 USA. Serv­ing 36 months for help­ing organ­ise the SHAC-USA cam­paign.

Daniel Wad­ham TF5524, HMP Rochester, Kent. ME1 3QS, Eng­land. Serv­ing 12 months for a pub­lic order offence after telling a fox hunt­ing mur­der what he thought of them.

Ker­ry Whit­burn TB4886, HMP Lowd­ham Grange, Lowd­ham, Not­ting­ham, NG14 7DA, Eng­land. Serv­ing 12 years for attempt­ing to black­mail a farmer who sup­plied guinea pigs for vivi­sec­tion.

Peter Daniel Young, #10269–111, FCI Vitorvill Medi­um II, Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, PO Box 5700, Ade­lan­to, CA 92301, USA. Serv­ing two years for releas­ing mink and fox­es from six dif­fer­ent fur farms. Also await­ing tri­al for his alleged involve­ment in a raid on a fur farm in South Dako­ta.

PLOUGHSHARES PRISONERS

Helen Wood­son, 03231–045, FMC Car­swell — Admin. Max. Unit, POB 27137, Ft. Worth, TX 76127, USA. Serv­ing 8 years 10 months for actions that focused on the inter­re­la­tion­ship of war & the destruc­tion of the nat­ur­al world. The actions includ­ed pour­ing red paint over the secu­ri­ty desk of a fed­er­al court and mak­ing threat­en­ing com­mu­ni­ca­tions. Pre­vi­ous­ly Helen had served 201â?„2 years for: 1) Using a ham­mer to dis­arm a nuclear mis­sile silo. 2) Burn­ing $25,000 on the floor of a bank whilst denounc­ing war, envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion & eco­nom­ic injus­tice. 3) Mail­ing warn­ing let­ters with bul­lets attached to Gov­ern­ment & cor­po­rate offi­cials.

OTHER ANTI-WAR PRISONERS

Bren­dan Walsh, 12473–052, FCI Allen­wood Low, PO Box 1000, White Deer, PA 17887, USA. Serv­ing 5 years for an arson on an army recruit­ment office in protest at the War on Iraq.

THE LECCE FIVE
The Lec­ce Five have been charged with “sub­ver­sive asso­ci­a­tion” accused of dam­ag­ing Esso petrol pumps to oppose the War on Iraq; sab­o­tag­ing the cash machines of a bank which funds an immi­gra­tion cen­tre; and tar­get­ing the multi­na­tion­al com­pa­ny Benet­ton in sup­port of Mapuche land rights activists in Chile. All of the defen­dants are cur­rent­ly under house arrest.

ANTIFA PRISONERS

Lasan­dra Bur­well W063658, Ohio Refor­ma­to­ry for Women, 1479 Collins Ave. Marysville, OH 43040, USA. Serv­ing 5 years for tak­ing part in an
anti-fas­cist demon­stra­tion which turned into a riot.

Igor Kisielewicz, syn Alek­san­dra, A.S. Bia­lystok, Koperni­ka 21, 15–377 Bia­lystok, Poland. Serv­ing 3 months for fail­ing to do his com­mu­ni­ty ser­vice imposed for antifa activ­i­ty.

Tomasz Wiloszews­ki, Zak­lad Karny, Orze­chowa 5, 98–200 Sier­adz, Poland.
Serv­ing 15 years for acci­den­tal­ly killing a neo-nazi whilst defend­ing him­self.

PARTY & PROTEST
Around the world there have been sev­er­al mas­sive protests against glob­al cap­i­tal­ism and its envi­ron­men­tal impact. The fol­low­ing have all been jailed in con­nec­tion with the protests.

Jonathan Philip Robert, Crisp Coun­ty Deten­tion Cen­ter, 197 Ga. Hwy. 300 South, Cordele, GA 31015, USA (12 months)

OTHER PRISONERS

Ted Kaczyn­s­ki (04475–046), US Pen — admin Max Facil­i­ty, PO Box 8500, Flo­rence Col­orado 81226, USA. Serv­ing mul­ti­ple life sen­tences for the infa­mous ‘Unabomber’ anti-tech­nol­o­gy bomb­ing & mur­der cam­paign.

Olga Alek­san­drov­na Nevskaya, UU163/5, 7 Otryad, pos. Dzerzhin­skiy, Mozhaysk 140090 Moskovskaya oblast, Rus­sia. Eco-activist serv­ing 6 years for arson, crim­i­nal dam­age and caus­ing explo­sions in protest at the war in Chech­nya. Due for release in 2009.

Fran Thomp­son, #1090915 HU 1C, WERDCC, PO Box 300, Van­dalia, MO 63382, USA.
Serv­ing Life for killing, in self-defence, a stalk­er who had bro­ken into her home. Before her impris­on­ment Fran was an eco, ani­mal & anti-nuke cam­paign­er.

MOVE
MOVE is an eco-rev­o­lu­tion­ary group who car­ried out protests in defence of all life. There are cur­rent­ly eight MOVE activists in prison each serv­ing 100 years after been framed for the mur­der of a cop in 1979. 9th defen­dant, Mer­le Africa, died in prison in 1998.

Deb­bie Simms Africa (006307), Janet Hol­loway Africa (006308) and Janine Philips Africa (006309) all at: SCI Cam­bridge Springs, 451 Fuller­ton Ave, Cam­bridge Springs, PA 16403–1238, USA.

Michael Davis Africa (AM4973) and Charles Simms Africa (AM4975) both at SCI Grate­ford, PO Box 244, Grate­ford, PA 19426–0244, USA.

Edward Good­man Africa (AM4974), 301 Morea Rd, Frackville, PA 17932, USA.

William Philips Africa (AM4984) and Del­bert Orr Africa (AM4985) both at SCI Dal­las Draw­er K, Dal­las, PA 18612, USA.

Mumia Abu Jamal, (AM8335), SCI Greene, 175 Progress Dri­ve, Way­nes­burg PA 15370, USA. In 1981 Mumia, for­mer Black Pan­ther and vocal sup­port­er of MOVE, was framed for the mur­der of a cop. He was orig­i­nal­ly sen­tenced to death but is cur­rent­ly await­ing re-sen­tenc­ing fol­low­ing a court hear­ing in 2001.

MAPUCHE PRISONERS & OTHER LAND RIGHTS PRISONERS
Due to space lim­i­ta­tion we can­not pub­lish the names & address­es of the Mapuche & Land Rights pris­on­ers in this edi­tion of Spir­it of Free­dom, how­ev­er if you would like a list please con­tact Spir­it of Free­dom.

STATEMENT ON VIOLENCE
Some peo­ple list­ed in this newslet­ter have car­ried out vio­lent actions.
‘Spir­it of Free­dom’ does not con­done vio­lence. But we are also against cen­sor­ship & believe peo­ple can decide for them­selves who they wish to sup­port.

ABOUT E.L.P. SUPPORT NETWORK
ELP is an inter­na­tion­al eco-pris­on­er sup­port net­work found­ed, in Britain, in 1993 to sup­port jailed eco-activists. We sup­port the pris­on­ers by pro­duc­ing var­i­ous reg­u­lar pris­on­er lists:

Spir­it of Free­dom is ELP’s inter­na­tion­al bimonth­ly pub­li­ca­tion (avail­able via e‑mail or in a paper ver­sion). If you would like to receive a copy con­tact Spir­it of Free­dom, BM Box 2407, Lon­don, WC1N 3XX, Eng­land. Or e‑mail ELP4321@hotmail.com

Urgent ELP! Bul­letin is an e‑mail ser­vice that dis­trib­utes the names of any new eco-pris­on­er as soon as ELP gets their details. For more info e‑mail ELP4321@hotmail.com

On-Line Newslet­ters — ELP has a num­ber of web­sites that pro­vide news, pris­on­er lists and addi­tion­al info about ELP & the pris­on­ers.

Eng­lish lan­guage ELP Web­site
www.spiritoffreedom.org.uk

North Amer­i­can ELP Web­site
www.ecoprisoners.org

Turk­ish lan­guage ELP Web­site
www.geocities.com/yesilanarsi/elp.htm

ELP Extra is an e‑mail group that cir­cu­lates the details of polit­i­cal pris­on­ers, ELP learns about, who do not fall with­in the remit for sup­port by ELP. To sub­scribe to the list e‑mail ELP4321@Hotmail.com

Bel­gium ELP.SN is our Bel­gium con­tact. For more info e‑mail elp_bel@hotmail.com

Ger­man ELP.SN is a pris­on­er led ini­tia­tive run by eco-pris­on­er Mar­co Camenisch. For more info con­tact Mar­co Camenisch, Post­fach 3143, CH-8105 Regens­dorf, Switzer­land.

North Amer­i­can ELP is our North Amer­i­can con­tact. For more infor­ma­tion e‑mail naelpsn@mutualaid.org

Turkey ELP.SN is our Turk­ish con­tact. For more info e‑mail yesilanarsi@yahoo.com

North Amer­i­can ELP Pris­on­er Fund. The North Amer­i­can ELP group has set up a fund where peo­ple can pay mon­ey, for North Amer­i­can Eco-Defence and Ani­mal Rights pris­on­ers, which will then be dis­trib­uted to the North Amer­i­can pris­on­ers. For infor­ma­tion about the Fund and how to make a dona­tion please con­tact naelpsn@mutualaid.org

DEDICATION
ELP feels it its impor­tant to remem­ber those who have died defend­ing Moth­er Earth. We use Samhain (a tra­di­tion­al time to remem­ber the dead) as our oppor­tu­ni­ty to hon­our all our fall­en friends who have died over the years.

Due to space lim­i­ta­tion we can only list EF! & ELF style fall­en friends.
But for a full list of all Ani­mal & Earth Lib­er­a­tion activists who’ve died in defence of the plan­et check out our full memo­r­i­al list on our web­site
www.spiritoffreedom.org.uk

This edi­tion of Spir­it of Free­dom is joint­ly ded­i­cat­ed to Amer­i­can David “Gyp­sy” Chain, who was crushed to death in Sep­tem­ber 1998 when a tree was felled on top of him whilst he defend­ed the forests; Ital­ian activists Maria Rosas & Edoar­do Mas­sari who died in cus­tody, in 1999, whilst await­ing tri­al for their alleged involve­ment in the sab­o­tag­ing of a high speed rail line con­struc­tion site in the North­ern Ital­ian Alps; Brazil­ian Jose Mar­lu­cio da Sil­va who was shot dead by police in July 2000 whilst attempt­ing to storm & occu­py a bank dur­ing an anti-GM protest; British activist ‘Jo’ whose body was found in her burnt out hut at the Nine Ladies anti-quar­ry protest camp
in March 2002; Amer­i­can Beth O’Brien, who died in April 2002 after falling from a tree she was sit­ting in whilst try­ing to defend the forests; Brazil­ian Bar­tolomeu Morais da Sil­va (aka “Brasil­ia”) who led the strug­gle against ille­gal log­ging, land fraud and destruc­tive large-scale infra­struc­ture projects was found mur­dered in July 2002 from shot gun wounds and his legs bro­ken; Amer­i­can Robert “Naya” Bryan, died Octo­ber 2002 after falling from a tree he was sit­ting in whilst try­ing to defend the forests; French activist Sébastian B., who, in Novem­ber 2004, was run by a train car­ry­ing nuclear waste after Sébastian had tied him­self to the tracks; Amer­i­can William “Bill” Rodgers who end­ed his own life in Decem­ber 2005 fol­low­ing his arrest for a series of ELF & ALF actions.

If you know of some­one who should be on this list, but isn’t, please let ELP know.
“ELP Sup­port Net­work”

Steal Something Day, a shameless 24-hour stealing spree!

The 24 hour mora­to­ri­um on spend­ing, ‘Buy Noth­ing Day’ is this Sat­ur­day 26th Novem­ber in the UK. 6 years ago some Cana­di­an anar­chists came up with a cri­tique of ‘Buy Noth­ing Day’ and called for a new ini­tia­tive, ‘Steal Some­thing Day’.

Steal Something DayThe 24 hour mora­to­ri­um on spend­ing, ‘Buy Noth­ing Day’ is this Sat­ur­day 26th Novem­ber in the UK. 6 years ago some Cana­di­an anar­chists came up with a cri­tique of ‘Buy Noth­ing Day’ and called for a new ini­tia­tive, ‘Steal Some­thing Day’.

As their orig­i­nal arti­cle seems to have vir­tu­al­ly dis­ap­peared into the unre­cov­er­able bow­els of the dig­i­tal archive of the inter­net, I thought I’d repro­duce their cri­tique along with it’s graph­ic and help doc­u­ment it. Hope­ful­ly it’ll help main­tain their ini­tia­tive for this ‘Buy Noth­ing Day’ and help peo­ple reflect on some of Adbuster’s prob­lem­at­ic claims.

Novem­ber 26, 1999 — Par­tic­i­pate by par­tic­i­pat­ing!
(Press release from http://tao.ca/~lombrenoire)

For the past eight years, a few self-described “cul­ture jam­mers” from Adbusters Mag­a­zine have dubbed the last Fri­day in Novem­ber “Buy Noth­ing Day.”

From their styl­ish home base in Van­cou­ver’s upscale sub­urb of Kit­si­lano, the Adbusters’ brain trust has encour­aged con­sci­en­tious cit­i­zens world­wide to “rel­ish [their] pow­er as a con­sumer to change the eco­nom­ic envi­ron­ment.” In their words, Buy Noth­ing Day “proves how empow­er­ing it is to step out of the con­sump­tion stream for even a day.”

The genius­es at Adbusters have man­aged to cre­ate the per­fect feel-good, lib­er­al, mid­dle-class activist non-hap­pen­ing. A day when the more mon­ey you make, the more influ­ence you have (like every oth­er day). A day which, by def­i­n­i­tion, is insult­ing to the mil­lions of peo­ple world­wide who are too poor or mar­gin­al­ized to be con­sid­ered “con­sumers.”

It’s sup­posed to be a 24-hour mora­to­ri­um on spend­ing, but ends up being a moral­is­tic false-debate about whether or not you should real­ly buy that loaf of bread today or … wait for it … tomor­row!

Well, this year, while the Adbusters cult enjoys yet anoth­er Buy Noth­ing Day, accom­pa­nied by their fan­cy posters, stick­ers, TV and radio adver­tise­ments and slick web­pages, a few self-described anar­cho-sit­u­a­tion­ists from Mon­tre­al’s East End are inau­gu­rat­ing Steal Some­thing Day.

Unlike Buy Noth­ing Day, when peo­ple are asked to “par­tic­i­pate by not par­tic­i­pat­ing,” Steal Some­thing Day demands that we “par­tic­i­pate by par­tic­i­pat­ing.” Instead of down­play­ing or ignor­ing the cap­i­tal­ists, CEOs, land­lords, small busi­ness tyrants, boss­es, PR hacks, yup­pies, media lap­dogs, cor­po­rate bureau­crats, politi­cians and cops who are pri­mar­i­ly respon­si­ble for mis­ery and exploita­tion in this world, Steal Some­thing Day demands that we steal from them, with­out dis­crim­i­na­tion.

The Adbusters’ intel­le­gentsia tell us that they’re nei­ther “left nor right,” and have pro­claimed a non-ide­o­log­i­cal cru­sade against over­con­sump­tion. Steal Some­thing Day, on the oth­er hand, iden­ti­fies with the his­toric and con­tem­po­rary resis­tance against the caus­es of cap­i­tal­ist exploita­tion, not its symp­toms. If you think over­con­sump­tion is scary, wait until you hear about cap­i­tal­ism and impe­ri­al­ism.

Unlike the mis­placed Buy Noth­ing Day notion of con­sumer empow­er­ment, Steal Some­thing Day pro­motes empow­er­ment by urg­ing us to col­lec­tive­ly iden­ti­fy the greedy bas­tards who are actu­al­ly respon­si­ble for pro­mot­ing mis­ery and bore­dom in this world. Instead of ignor­ing them, Steal Some­thing Day encour­ages us to make their lives as uncom­fort­able as pos­si­ble.

As we like to say in Mon­tre­al: diranger les rich­es dans leurs nich­es!

And remem­ber, we’re talk­ing about steal­ing, not theft. Steal­ing is just. Theft is exploita­tive. Steal­ing is when you take a yup­pie’s BMW for a joyride, and crash into a parked Mer­cedes just for the hell of it. Theft is when you take can­dy from a baby’s mouth.

Steal­ing is the re-dis­tri­b­u­tion of wealth from rich to poor Theft is mak­ing prof­its at the expense of the dis­ad­van­taged and the nat­ur­al envi­ron­ment. Steal­ing is an unwrit­ten a tax on the rich. Theft is tax­ing the poor to sub­si­dize the rich. Steal­ing is noth­ing more than a tax on the rich. There is sol­i­dar­i­ty in steal­ing, but prop­er­ty is noth­ing but theft.

So, don’t pay for that cor­po­rate news­pa­per, but steal all of them from the box. Get some friends togeth­er and go on a “shoplift­ing “spree at the local chain super­mar­ket or upscale mall. With an even larg­er mob, get togeth­er and steal from the local chain book or record store. Pil­fer purs­es and wal­lets from eas­i­ly iden­ti­fied yup­pies and busi­ness per­sons. Skip out on rent. Get a cred­it card under a fake name and don’t pay. Keep what you can use, and give away every­thing else in the spir­it of mutu­al aid that is the hall­mark of Steal Some­thing Day.

Down­load our detourned poster http://tao.ca/~lombrenoire, make copies and stick it up wher­ev­er you can. And don’t for­get, send your scam­ming and steal­ing tips to us at lombrenoire@tao.ca.

See you next Steal Some­thing Day which, unlike Buy Noth­ing, hap­pens every day of the year.

Critical Mass Cyclists Arrested (Leeds)

24.11.2006

Leeds Crit­i­cal Mass ends with two cyclists being assault­ed by police and dri­ven away to sta­tion.

The month­ly gath­er­ing of cyclist keen to fos­ter some free­dom on the road and gain some space on the con­gest­ed Fri­day evening streets of Leeds city cen­tre set off just before 6pm tonight, after the usu­al 20 min­utes of nat­ter­ing and this month the added joy of watch­ing the Ger­man Christ­mas mar­ket com­ing to life. The turn-out of 20 was in high spir­its, with a cho­rus of tin­kling bells, tri­umphant horns and cheer­ful whoop­ing, and was soon joined by some enthu­si­as­tic late com­ers on Mer­rion Street adding a fur­ther feel­ing of sol­i­dar­i­ty to the group. The horn beep­ing and engine revving from the queue of cars behind start­ed lat­er than usu­al as the car­a­van turned west past Leeds bus sta­tion on the first loop, but as usu­al the seren­i­ty of cycling freely and unthreat­ened around the inner city loop drowned that out, the cars were reduced to a pow­er­less crawl; con­ver­sa­tions between cycling strangers became the order of the hour. The seren­i­ty was marred slight­ly as an incom­pe­tent, impa­tient, learn­er plat­ed motor­cy­clist clum­si­ly barged through the clus­ter and swerved into one cyclist. But the jour­ney con­tin­ued onwards onto the sec­ond loop. As the rain became heav­ier the con­sen­sus of the group was to con­tin­ue round as far as the Com­mon Place for a warm­ing cup­pa and chat, pre­sum­ably about how fun cycling and crit­i­cal mass specif­i­cal­ly is.

24.11.2006

Leeds Crit­i­cal Mass ends with two cyclists being assault­ed by police and dri­ven away to sta­tion.

The month­ly gath­er­ing of cyclist keen to fos­ter some free­dom on the road and gain some space on the con­gest­ed Fri­day evening streets of Leeds city cen­tre set off just before 6pm tonight, after the usu­al 20 min­utes of nat­ter­ing and this month the added joy of watch­ing the Ger­man Christ­mas mar­ket com­ing to life. The turn-out of 20 was in high spir­its, with a cho­rus of tin­kling bells, tri­umphant horns and cheer­ful whoop­ing, and was soon joined by some enthu­si­as­tic late com­ers on Mer­rion Street adding a fur­ther feel­ing of sol­i­dar­i­ty to the group. The horn beep­ing and engine revving from the queue of cars behind start­ed lat­er than usu­al as the car­a­van turned west past Leeds bus sta­tion on the first loop, but as usu­al the seren­i­ty of cycling freely and unthreat­ened around the inner city loop drowned that out, the cars were reduced to a pow­er­less crawl; con­ver­sa­tions between cycling strangers became the order of the hour. The seren­i­ty was marred slight­ly as an incom­pe­tent, impa­tient, learn­er plat­ed motor­cy­clist clum­si­ly barged through the clus­ter and swerved into one cyclist. But the jour­ney con­tin­ued onwards onto the sec­ond loop. As the rain became heav­ier the con­sen­sus of the group was to con­tin­ue round as far as the Com­mon Place for a warm­ing cup­pa and chat, pre­sum­ably about how fun cycling and crit­i­cal mass specif­i­cal­ly is.

After pass­ing under the rail­way by the Leeds Col­lege of Music, the lights turned red and the pro­ces­sion slowed to its halt and allowed the group to con­dense. But as the bikes came to a slow halt the sound of sirens from behind grew loud­er. Sight­ing a blue light­ed van shaped vehi­cle approach­ing and pre­sum­ing an ambu­lance, bikes were moved to the side of the road to allow it to pass. But as the lights got near­er it became obvi­ous it was in fact a police van, fol­lowed close­ly by a car. The van screeched to a halt a in an instant an aggres­sive man­nered police­man marched out of the van and with­out hes­i­ta­tion hurled one cyclist and bike to the floor, he was then man­han­dled and thrown into the back of the police van which had been opened by his col­league, arrest­ed appar­ent­ly for obstruc­tion of the high­way. The two offi­cers were soon joined by two oth­ers from the car which pulled up fur­ther down the road. Threats to near­by cyclists were blared out and at least one oth­er per­son was dragged into the back of the van. “You’ve go no light­sâ€? came the accu­sa­tion. “Your next unless you get out of hereâ€?, from anoth­er police­man. “We’ve got you on CCTVâ€?. At this point the aggres­sion of the first offi­cer had evolved into an obvi­ous seething anger and he came at the main group of cyclist bark­ing fur­ther threats but was soon pulled away and con­vinced “that we can’t do any­moreâ€?.
“I appre­ci­ate the point you’re try­ing to make,â€? stat­ed his calm­ing col­league. “but you’re obstruct­ing the high­way. Get off the road and get out of here.â€? And they left, with three of the group in the back of their van. Bemused, angered and riled the remain­ing cyclists trouped back to The Com­mon Place and then made their way to the Kirk­gate police sta­tion.

After a long wait we were told that the offi­cer about whom the com­plaint of bru­tal­i­ty was to be made was the per­son who was on duty to han­dle com­plaints on that shift, and it was there­fore not pos­si­ble to make a com­plaint. Also it was revealed that those arrest­ed were in the process of being released. The charge of obstruc­tion clear­ly did not hold any strength and the aggres­sion and con­tempt that the vio­lence show by the police was com­plete­ly inex­plic­a­ble.

Maybe it was an attempt to rat­tle fear into those of us try­ing to make a pro-cycling state­ment on cycle unfriend­ly streets, an attempt pos­si­bly to flex the mus­cles from a force who want to elim­i­nate the voice of dis­sent and sub­due peo­ple through a dis­play of aggres­sion and fear instill­ing. Maybe it was just that the offi­cers who made the call were hav­ing a shit day and want­ed to take it out on some­one, the adren­a­lin from the con­fronta­tion and the posi­tion of pow­er going to their heads and pre­vent­ing ratio­nal and calm behav­iour?

What­ev­er it was, it was out­ra­geous and dis­grace­ful, although in many ways sad­ly not unex­pect­ed. And despite this shock­ing police dis­play, Crit­i­cal Mass will con­tin­ue to be held in Leeds on the last Fri­day of each month. Bring your best horn, a loud bell, and your lights, and come and help reclaim the streets for cyclists.

Bradford Priest Arrested at Nuclear Blockade

16.11.2006

Over 50 Anti Nuclear pro­tes­tors from Leeds and Brad­ford took part in a mass block­ade of the Faslane Nuclear Naval Base in Scot­land this morn­ing. Twen­ty sev­en of the pro­tes­tors, includ­ing the Revd Chris How­son from Brad­ford were arrest­ed for their role in the block­ade, which includ­ed ‘lock­ing on’ to a giant CND sym­bol out­side the main gates of the base.

Faslane 365 Leeds & Bradford16.11.2006

Over 50 Anti Nuclear pro­tes­tors from Leeds and Brad­ford took part in a mass block­ade of the Faslane Nuclear Naval Base in Scot­land this morn­ing. Twen­ty sev­en of the pro­tes­tors, includ­ing the Revd Chris How­son from Brad­ford were arrest­ed for their role in the block­ade, which includ­ed ‘lock­ing on’ to a giant CND sym­bol out­side the main gates of the base.

A group of women were also arrest­ed after suc­ces­ful­ly block­ing the sec­ond gate of the base. They were dressed as lol­lipop ladies and car­ried ‘Stop Tri­dent’ signs.

Pro­tes­tors man­aged to cause dis­rup­tion to traf­fic try­ing to enter the base for almost an hour whilst police removed pro­tes­tors lying in the road and used cut­ting equip­ment to remove the ‘lock ons’.

The block­ade was part of ‘Faslane 365’, a year-long cam­paign set up to oppose the exis­tence of Tri­dent, the British nuclear sub­ma­rine pro­gramme and to oppose the intro­duc­tion of any replace­ment to Tri­dent.

The Rev Chris How­son said, “I came to Faslane to show sup­port to those who had planned to take part in the block­ade. I was arrest­ed by the police whilst stand­ing on the pave­ment out­side the base for rea­sons they would not explain to me, despite my repeat­ed requests. “It is clear to me that the Gov­ern­men­t’s inter­ests are not with the major­i­ty who are opposed to Tri­dent replace­ment and would rather see the bil­lions wast­ed on the nuclear weapons pro­gramme spent on health, edu­ca­tion or cli­mate change, but with George Bush and his col­leagues who want us to live in a world of threat, fear and nuclear hypocrisy.”

Pro­fes­sor Dave Webb from Leeds and Con­venor of York­shire CND said, “Today’s turnout has been fan­tas­tic. We have had a great mix of peo­ple blockad­ing today, young and old. It just goes to show that peo­ple are pre­pared to take action for the world we live in. The Gov­ern­ment must lis­ten to us all and allow a full pub­lic and Par­lia­men­tay debate on Tri­dent replace­ment, and dis­ar­ma­ment must be an option.”

http://www.faslane365.org/leeds_and_bradford

Mooreen — Sheffield Social Centre

Com­ing to Sheffield Soon Nov 29 – Dec 13

: laugh­ing : singing : danc­ing : learn­ing : sup­port­ing : agi­tat­ing : : hack­ing : resist­ing : eat­ing : drink­ing : lov­ing : liv­ing :
Mooreen will be a tem­po­rary, autonomous, not for prof­it social cen­tre locat­ed in the heart of Sheffield in reclaimed space which owing to city cen­tre regen­er­a­tion had been left emp­ty, unused and unloved … until now.

Com­ing to Sheffield Soon Nov 29 – Dec 13

: laugh­ing : singing : danc­ing : learn­ing : sup­port­ing : agi­tat­ing : : hack­ing : resist­ing : eat­ing : drink­ing : lov­ing : liv­ing :
Mooreen will be a tem­po­rary, autonomous, not for prof­it social cen­tre locat­ed in the heart of Sheffield in reclaimed space which owing to city cen­tre regen­er­a­tion had been left emp­ty, unused and unloved … until now.

For two weeks we aim to fill the space with life, love and cre­ativ­i­ty.

This grass­roots project will be self-organ­ised space, run by col­lec­tive deci­sion mak­ing, mutu­al aid and co-oper­a­tion, and free from dis­crim­i­na­tion against any indi­vid­ual on the grounds of gen­der, race, age, sex­u­al­i­ty, or dis­abil­i­ty. Mooreen will be a place where we can social­ize, express our cre­ativ­i­ty, learn from each oth­er and share ideas and expe­ri­ences.

So this is your chance to put on that gig, show that film, run that work­shop, stop that war, pre­vent that eco­log­i­cal dis­as­ter, under­mine that oppres­sive eco­nom­ic sys­tem or just to cre­ate the world you’d like to see.

If you would like to join in or pro­pose an event, come to a meet­ing:
next one: Rut­land Arms, Wed Nov 22 (upstairs)

info line: 07989874965
Email mooreen-discuss@lists.aktivix.org
http://www.mooreen.aktivix.org

Wellbeing@Climate Camp

The WELLBEING SPACE @ the Cli­mate Camp
— Analy­sis and Expe­ri­ences -
By Activist Trau­ma Sup­port and the Well­be­ing Group at the Cli­mate Camp

climate camp wellbeing tentThe WELLBEING SPACE @ the Cli­mate Camp
— Analy­sis and Expe­ri­ences -
By Activist Trau­ma Sup­port and the Well­be­ing Group at the Cli­mate Camp

While Well­be­ing in the main­stream soci­ety is most­ly con­nect­ed with saunas and mud­packs, we tried to give it a dif­fer­ent con­no­ta­tion in activist cir­cles. Per­son­al well­be­ing (while the word may sound quite fluffy to some, and while we were at first unsure about it, by the end of the Cli­mate Camp it was obvi­ous that it worked well) is about us. It’s about how we deal with the stress of organ­is­ing and a lot of respon­si­bil­i­ty, it is about our phys­i­cal well­be­ing, about tak­ing breaks, not becom­ing sleep deprived, it is about avoid­ing burnout and devel­op­ing sus­tain­able activism. It involves deal­ing with the fear and trau­ma caused by police con­fronta­tions, it involves learn­ing to stay calm when there’s a lot of pres­sure on, and most impor­tant­ly know­ing your own lim­its and treat­ing your­self well. Tak­ing care of each oth­er and tak­ing care of ourselves….so that we can con­tin­ue our resis­tances.

The well­be­ing space at the Camp for Cli­mate Action near Leeds in Sep­tem­ber 2006 was a tak­en on by a group in order to pro­vide resources for the well­be­ing of activists. In 2005 at the Camp in Stir­ling against the G8, Activist Trau­ma Sup­port had run a Recov­ery Dome for peo­ple who had been trau­ma­tised or who felt they need­ed sup­port. A lot of peo­ple used the space and we felt that it was suc­cess­ful and need­ed. How­ev­er there was also the issue that it quick­ly came to be called the ‘Trau­ma Ten­t’. This made it hard for peo­ple to approach, it being some­what unclear what was avail­able inside, and pos­si­bly some peo­ple feel­ing that maybe they only had the right to come in if they were trau­ma­tised.

We took these points on board. Also we had already start­ed work­ing more on burnout and sus­tain­able activism, since it is a com­mon prob­lem amongst activists and has been near­ly entire­ly neglect­ed as a top­ic, despite the fact that it can have dev­as­tat­ing effects. (See burnout fly­er on our web­page).

The Well­be­ing space

We adjust­ed our con­cept and cre­at­ed a well­be­ing tent at the camp. The idea was to pro­vide a calm space, away from the Camp cen­tre, but one not too iso­lat­ed. A big sign at the entrance said: ‘Come in – to have a break, de-stress, relax, have a cup of tea, talk to some­body, recov­er, book a mas­sage or book a coun­selor.’ Our inten­tion was to take the stig­ma and fear away and make it eas­i­er for peo­ple to come in. Inside we had three areas – a recep­tion with infor­ma­tion mate­r­i­al about trau­ma, burnout and how to deal with the police, tea mak­ing facil­i­ties and places to sit, a recov­ery area where peo­ple could have a lie-down, two more pri­vate spaces for body work and talk­ing.

Fur­ther­more we had a sec­ond small­er tent in the back, for more intense talk­ing ses­sions and body­work. The space was open from 11 to 24h, but staffed at all times for emer­gen­cies. We organ­ised our­selves in shifts of 3 hours with 2 peo­ple for each shift, every­body tak­ing on one shift per day. Alto­geth­er 15 peo­ple were involved in run­ning the space, a core group and some satel­lites. We held dai­ly group meet­ings of around 60–90 min­utes, which made sure that there was a mech­a­nism for debrief­ing, as well as a place for dis­cus­sion, group bond­ing, updates and organ­is­ing.

We also ran two work­shops – one on burnout and sus­tain­able activism and anoth­er one on activist trau­ma and recov­ery (to book one of these work­shops for your affin­i­ty group, con­tact us by email)

Group debrief­in­gs

After the main day of action, some par­ents from the kids block approached us for a facil­i­tat­ed group debrief­ing and after­wards anoth­er debrief­ing, espe­cial­ly adapt­ed, was held for the kids who had been on the kids block, – maybe the first kids debrief­ing after a kids block action ever… It was very suc­cess­ful and we realised how impor­tant it is to approach groups and to offer a debrief­ing after an action or to give them guide­lines on how to run one. Typ­i­cal­ly this is done in go-rounds, going into the roles peo­ple had and what they expe­ri­enced, so that every­body gets a com­plete pic­ture of what was actu­al­ly going on. Then going into what peo­ple thought and felt, so there is a gen­er­al aware­ness of each oth­ers emo­tion­al state and so that the brain can process the expe­ri­ence by talk­ing about it. We decid­ed that we need to be more proac­tive in approach­ing affin­i­ty groups and neigh­bor­hood meet­ings to offer this.

Avoid­ing Burnout

By also offer­ing a space that key organ­is­ers felt com­fort­able using, while gen­er­al­ly open­ing up the top­ic and mak­ing it eas­i­er for peo­ple to talk about burnout, there seemed to be a big change in the gen­er­al atmos­phere of the camp. A lot of the time peo­ple can work far beyond their bound­aries and then they are out of the game for months after­wards. In this man­ner atmos­pheres can be cre­at­ed where tak­ing a break is regard­ed as a betray­al. This atmos­phere was ques­tioned and start­ed to change. Peo­ple with a lot on came in, lay down for a while, got a mas­sage, or just took time for them­selves. This is hard­er than it sounds if you have a lot of respon­si­bil­i­ty and work and peo­ple come con­stant­ly run­ning to you. It is hard to take a break and feel con­fi­dent that things will also hap­pen­ing with­out you, maybe dif­fer­ent­ly, but the world will keep turn­ing. Giv­ing impor­tance to your own well­be­ing enables you work to work more pro­duc­tive­ly. You can enjoy more and you won’t be total­ly shat­tered for ages after­wards. Offer­ing mas­sages can be very help­ful in this respect. This time we did not have enough peo­ple to cov­er demand ade­quate­ly, and in truth we did not organ­ise this area well enough, but at the same time a lot of mas­sages were giv­en to relieve the emo­tion­al stress and phys­i­cal pains of hard work.

Activist Trau­ma and Recov­ery

Since there was not a huge amount of police bru­tal­i­ty, not as much trau­ma sup­port was need­ed; but it was used by peo­ple who had been attacked by the police and also by peo­ple who felt stressed by the expe­ri­ences of the day. That this is nor­mal and not some­thing to be ashamed of is part of the par­a­digm shift we are work­ing towards. Talk­ing about it, with some­body from well­be­ing, or a friend, is an impor­tant step.

“Mental healthâ€? mat­ters

For­tu­nate­ly peo­ple with so called ‘men­tal health issues’ also feel that it is safe for them to come to an action camp. In this sense the space and the sup­port was used by peo­ple who had dif­fi­cul­ty cop­ing, or who had just stopped their med­ica­tion. It was an advan­tage to us that our team was so diverse, in this way we could help with var­i­ous dif­fer­ent issues. Our age range is from 20 to 50 and includes psy­chol­o­gists, coun­selors, activists who have been trained in emo­tion­al sup­port, body work­ers and social work­ers. We hope for a more inte­gra­tive approach towards dif­fer­ent states of mind inside activists’ com­mu­ni­ties.

Con­clu­sion

Although the peo­ple work­ing on well­be­ing and Activist Trau­ma Sup­port come from all over the UK, and some from main­land Europe, over the course of Cli­mate Camp our group has become much more sol­id, with more peo­ple want­i­ng to get involved and work on this. To build upon this we have decid­ed to hold week­end meet­ings, 3 times a year, from now on, in order to give space for more in-depth work; rather than just work­ing at camps and con­ver­gence cen­ters.

Alto­geth­er the expe­ri­ence has been very pos­i­tive. We got a lot of good feed­back. Espe­cial­ly inter­est­ing was the point about the changes you can’t see and mea­sure – how peo­ple think and talk dif­fer­ent­ly, how it feels dif­fer­ent to be at a place with a well­be­ing space rather than at one with none. Some peo­ple said it was reas­sur­ing in its own way, like hav­ing a medic around, even if you might not need her this time. We are aware that there are prob­a­bly var­i­ous things we could have done bet­ter or dif­fer­ent­ly. Please let us know if you have any feed­back. BTW, we as indi­vid­u­als inside this group also keep learn­ing what we preach, still strug­gling at times…This is a learn­ing process for all of us, the more peo­ple involved the more effec­tive it will be. At this stage in that process, it felt real­ly good to be part of the gen­er­al polit­i­cal suc­cess of the Cli­mate Camp, espe­cial­ly in the sense of fight­ing repres­sion in ways that make our move­ments stronger and more ver­sa­tile.

Con­tact:
If you have any feed­back, crit­i­cism or ideas about our work and our pres­ence at the camp or want to get involved please con­tact us.  activist_trauma@riseup.net, Phone: 07962 406940
www.activist-trauma.net (with a data­base of peo­ple who offer sup­port and trained coun­selors and psy­chol­o­gists (write to us to sign up if you want to offer your skills))
 trauma_info-subscribe@lists.riseup.net (send blank email to receive irreg­u­lar info (low traf­fic))