3. The People’s Protests

Dec-17-2010 | Comments (0)

Bird’s Eye: All across Europe we see increasing protests against governments cutting back support for people (tuition, welfare, retirement) so as to save money that will allow bailed-out banks to pay Christmas bonuses to those who got us into this mess in the first place. We lead with an overview: a cartoon on global capitalism, an amazing political speech by a 15 year-old boy at the London protests (must watch suff!), and a soul-supporting poem on protest by Marge Piercy. Then an Eyewitness photo of the Italian riots, and a Big Picture sequence on the London riots.

* Capitalism (Thanks, Linda)

* British Schoolboy’s Amazing Speech On Social Justice (via boingboing)

In this video, a fifteen-year-old British student (Barnaby Raine, co-convenor of School Students Against the War,) gives and rousing, articulate call-to-arms for social justice, solidarity, and social justice. This young man is one of the best speakers I’ve heard, and I salute his passion and his integrity:

They can’t stop us demonstrating, they can’t stop us fighting back, and how ever much they try to imprison us in the streets of London, those are our streets. We will always be there to demonstrate, we will always be there to fight… We are no longer that generation that doesn’t care, we are no longer that generation to sit back and take whatever they give us. We are now the generation at the heart of the fight back.

* The Low Road Marge Piercy

…It goes on one at a time,
it starts when you care
to act, it starts when you do
it again and they said no,
it starts when you say We
and know you who you mean, and each
day you mean one more.

* Rome, Italy Eyewitness, Guardian News App

* London Tuition Fee Protest The Big Picture



November 19th, 2010 :: Year 7, Issue 39

Nov-19-2010 | Comments (0)

Followups

* The Gulf Between Us (Thanks, Gabe!) From Orion Magazine, a series of powerful stories bring to life the human implications of the collapse of the fisheries in the Gulf after BP. We arrived on the hundredth day of the oil spill and stayed until the “static kill” was complete. We sniffed out stories and followed them. We listened and we engaged. I took notes. Avery took pictures. Bill filmed. The oil is not gone. This story is not over. We smelled it in the air. We felt it in the water. People along the Gulf Coast are getting sick and sicker. Marshes are burned. Oysters are scarce and shrimp are tainted. Jobs are gone and stress is high. What is now hidden will surface over time.

* The People, United, A Big Picture series of shots of people protesting around the world. As always, wonderful photographs.



4. Anti-Capitalist Protest Worldwide (not yet available in the US)

Oct-15-2010 | Comments (0)

Bird’s Eye: Don’t you also find yourself amazed how the financial crash didn’t produce a rise in working-class (and middle-class) anger towards the wiping out of their lives’ savings, particularly given the rise in the gap between the rich and poor? Well, the protests are starting, big time, in Europe. In the US anger has been successfully channelled towards liberals by the Koch-funded Tea partiers, or left to metastasize into depression

* Huge pensions protests in France – Europe Al Jazeera

Mass protests across France against plans to raise the retirement age were even larger than demonstrations held earlier this month, according to figures from both the government and a labour union. The CFDT union said 3.5 million people had joined the demonstrations on Tuesday, while the interior ministry said 1.23 million demonstrators had turned out.

* Global Unemployment To Trigger Further Social Unrest Guardian.Co.Uk

The International Labour Organisation (ILO) has warned of growing social unrest because it fears global employment will not now recover until 2015. This is two years later than its earlier estimate that the labour market would rebound to pre-crisis levels by 2013. About 22 million new jobs are needed – 14 million in rich countries and 8 million in developing nations.

The United Nations work agency today warned of a long “labour market recession” and noted that social unrest related to the crisis had already been reported in at least 25 countries, including some recovering emerging economies.

* Iceland’s Politicians Flee From Demos

Protesters took to the streets of Reykjavik today, forcing MPs to run away from the people they represent as renewed anger about the impact of the financial crisis erupted in Iceland.

The violent protest came amid growing fury at austerity measures being imposed across Europe. Disruption in more than a dozen countries this week included a national strike in Spain and a cement truck driven into the Irish parliament’s gates.

* Nearly One In 10 In US Depressed, Employment A Factor

Nearly one in 10 Americans is depressed, and one in 30 meets the criteria for major depression, with the rate higher among the unemployed or those who can’t work, a study said Thursday. Nine percent of more than 235,000 adults polled from 2006-2008 in 45 US states, the capital Washington, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands, met the criteria for depression, and 3.4 percent for “major” depression, according to the study by US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).



3. The G20: Protest

Jul-02-2010 | Comments (0)

Bird’s-Eye: Like the blind men and the elephant, experiences at the G20 protest varied hugely. But certain elements are common to all reports: the protest was overwhelmingly peaceful, the violence was tolerated at best (instigated at worst) by the police, and the media distorted the facts in traditional “If it bleeds, it leads” fashion. Here are three visions: your editor’s, Judy Rebick’s, and Propaghandi’s.

* Report from the G20 Demo Peter Marmorek, Tikkun Daily Blog

Saturday June 26th, the anti-G20 demonstration in Toronto was planned to start at 1 pm. I had been uncertain as to whether to go; originally a group of Tikkun Toronto veterans had planned an alternative demonstration, focussed around the slogan, “Open your heart to what matters more.” But the unexpected death of the brother of one core member, and difficulties around getting permission, and the predictions of violence and anarchy that the media had been purveying had reduced our enthusiasm below the critical mass we needed to make it happen. Perhaps, I thought, I don’t need to go. But the MSM descriptions of protesters against the G20 as “thugs and anarchists”, the spending of $1.2 billion on the summit, the revelation of new powers to arrest and detain that the police had been secretly given all made me feel that my right to peacefully gather with my peers was worth coming out to defend. As governments try to balance their budgets on the backs of the poor, lowering taxes on corporations and offering billions to financial institutions that have become too big to fail, surely someone should speak up. And if not me, then who?

* Toronto is burning! Or is it? Judy Rebick , Transforming Power  (Thanks, Diana!)

People were shocked last night by a city out of control but the Toronto police–without all the huge expenditures, extra police from across the country and sophisticated new toys– have kept the peace in riots with a lot more people and in hundreds of demonstrations much larger and often angry.  I disagree with torching police cars and breaking windows and I have been debating these tactics for decades with people who think they accomplish something.  But the bigger question here is why the police let it happen and make no mistake the police did let it happen.   Why did the police let the city get out of control?  And they did let it get out of control.  The police knew exactly what would happen and how.

* Cop Car Burned! All Criticisms of Global Capitalism Rendered Moot! Propagandhi

i don’t endorse violence. i don’t think it’s the ideal way forward to a better society. i think all sane people would agree. heck, i don’t even endorse vandalism in the “service” of social change. i’m conservative that way. but the disproportionate reaction (to the disproportionate mainstream media coverage) to the image of a burning car and some broken windows at the G20 summit in toronto needs to be put into perspective.

i won’t bother with the obvious comparative study of the isolated “violence” of a handful of protestors versus the overwhelming violence practiced day in and day out at the expense of millions upon millions of human lives by national states the world over in order to secure their geopolitical interests. too easy. too obvious. too fundamental.

i will however, point out that unless you’ve been in the situation of being a direct, physical and psychological target of overwhelming and belligerent street-level force FUNDED BY YOUR OWN TAX DOLLARS, it can be hard to understand the frustration and rage that can build over the course of an afternoon let alone over the course of a lifetime…. that frustration and rage is exacerbated when you’re pitted face to face against a wall of riot cops who are alternately corralling and intentionally provoking your otherwise peaceful demonstration into a corner, firing rubber bullets at you, detaining and searching you with no cause, hitting you with batons, singling out and abducting organizers, impersonating protesters, firing gas canisters intentionally at head level, exploding sound grenades by your ears, permanently damaging your body with exposure to chemical bombs (all based on personal experience by the way) and then having it all portrayed in the media as if it were YOU that needs to be restrained and punished rather than the megalomaniacs on the other side of the fence that continue to plunder and pillage the planet at these obnoxious publicly-funded private-parties of the global elite.







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