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Full article

Cop On Fire at bookfair after-party

19-08-2010 23:22

Thanx to Kebele sound & friends, and Classics for this one!
After a long hard day at the bookfair, let your hair down at the bookfair after-party fundraiser, just down the road...
Saturday 11 September - 8pm. £4/5 on door
Classics Freeshop, 35 Stokes Croft, Bristol BS1 3PH

Featuring live:
Cop on Fire (rolling ska wizards, Belgium)
Donderhod (dark & dangerous gypsy dance, Belgium)
The Dagger Brothers (live 80's dance but not as you know it, electro Bristol)

plus DJs playing ska, reggae, hip hop and drum n bass.

Full bookfair info at http://www.bristolanarchistbookfair.org
More cool gigs from Kebele sound at http://kebelesound.wordpress.com

FUNdraisers help keep the Bristol anarchist bookfair free to all. Any spare cash afterwards gets spread around local groups & campaigns.

Full article

Direct action bloc @ Tory conference protest

19-08-2010 20:22

Sunday Oct 3rd, central Birmingham
This post is in a personal capacity, but this bloc, and the demo in general looks well worth building -
I am not in any way connected to the 'Direct action bloc' being called for the conservative party conference on Oct 3rd, but I was inspired by the callout and want to provide a bit more info on getting there, as a powerful anarchist/anti-authoritarian presence would really help shake things up! - We should descend on Birmingham in our thousands!!

The group calling the protest is the 'Right to Work' campaign. They are putting on dozens of coaches from all over the country - full info, including complete coach listings and a number to ring with transport questions can be found at www.righttowork.org.uk.

Also, we should think about organising our own transport. Coaches are around £500 and 17 seater minivans are generally around £120 for the day.

We should organize meetings and posters in our local areas to get as many radicals to the demo as possible.

On a different note, there will be the same old lefty suspects there, but this could be the start of a massive campaign to roll back the tory cuts and fight against their agenda, but it will only work if we can all resist infighting for a while. During this campaign, I think we need to think about who the bigger enemy is, rich tory scum, or a few trot paper sellers.

There is a real buzz about this demo - it is shaping up to be big and angry. A mass showing of anarchists (and I know we can do it - 5,000 of us turned up to G20, and 2,000 to last years EDO mayday) could turn the buzz into a bang!

for more on the anarchist mobilization, including the callout, see www.toffsout.wordpress.com

Full article | 1 comment

Climate Camp parks its tanks on RBS's lawn!

19-08-2010 20:13

The camp is in an amazing site, literally an - ahem - stone's throw from RBS' global HQ near Edinburgh Airport: my tent is already closer to this year's target than I actually got to BAA on the 2007 day of action.

Full article | 2 comments

CPC demo - direct action bloc info

19-08-2010 19:43

Info for action - Conservative Party Conference protest - Oct 3rd, 12pm, central Birmingham. I'm posting this in a personal capacity, so sorry if it overlaps any information released by people more involved with the organization of the bloc.

Full article

Gentle swoop as Climate Camp takes root

19-08-2010 17:23

The to-be-dramatic "Swoop" to occupy the site of Climate Camp in Edinburgh wasn't so dramatic. As the site, in RBS's back garden, had been taken the night before, many people were already onsite and much (all?) risk taken out of the swoop process.

read more

Full article

Plumming the depths...

19-08-2010 16:22

Royate Hill and Kebele Allotment
Regular bi-monthly workday
Saturday August 21
11am-4pm (drop in anytime, but we usually start cleaning up at 3:30pm)
No experience required
more info - https://we.riseup.net/kebelepermaculture

map - http://tinyurl.com/ydkwxsk (plot number 20)
we are located near the bike path - take the Clay Bottom exit, go downhill, and
then take the stairs at the start of The Glades

Gardening gloves and tools provided
Bring your own lunch and snacks to share - we'll make the tea
The weather forecast isn't fantastic, but we can take shelter in our fabulous
roundhouse, drink tea and discuss gardening tactics if the rain gets too heavy

We are still harvesting loads of fruit, which everyone will be encouraged to
take home and turn into lovely preserves...though, of course, we'll be eating
plenty of our harvest on the day!

hope to see you there

Full article

Factory Benefit @ Plough w/Usual Suspects

19-08-2010 15:22

Kebele sound proudly presents a right proper punk night for the benefit of The Factory social centre in St. Pauls. F*ck Reading innit.
Music from:

THE USUAL SUSPECTS: anarco-ska-dub-reggae-punx

LOST UNION: street punk

PRIMEVAL SOUP: right-on brighton punksters

with DJs Vagabond and Misfit

@ The Plough, Easton

7:30 til late

£5

http://freefactory.wordpress.com


Full article | 1 comment

Call out for resistance: Stop UK Coal wrecking the Wrekin

19-08-2010 14:03

View of The Wrekin across Site A - soon to be replaced by a big black hole.
Call out for people and equipment - the place is here and the time is now! It's been six months since the Huntington Lane site was occupied and time is ticking away before the eviction. Please read on to find out about the current situation on site and what you can do to help resist UK Coals.

Full article

Bath Bomb #32 Out Now

19-08-2010 13:22

The latest offering from the dark underbelly of proud, proud Bath
THE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and distribute!
Issue #32
free/donation
August 2010

“Fast, aggressive, and it wants your sandwich!”

Armaggedon Outta Here

An unpalatable modern-day truth is that human life, far from being sacred, is deemed expendable, almost an inconvenience, when the collision of politics, power and economics provokes conflict. Then, the bigger the conflict, the greater the number of lives wasted.

This month marks an especially poignant anniversary. In 1945, U.S. President Harry S. Truman took the decision to drop atomic bombs on Japan: 'Little Boy' was detonated over Hiroshima on August 6th in that year ; on August 9th, 'Fat Man' was exploded over Nagasaki. Both cities were near-obliterated.

The tens of thousands who died instantly were mostly civilians. The 'rationale' for these acts of mass slaughter, if it is even possible to dignify them with that term, was that Hiroshima and Nagasaki had considerable industrial and military significance, and that their annihilation would put an end to Japanese prospects of territorial aggrandisement , terminating their involvement in World War II.

The body-count from both atrocities was a tragic coda to the tally of the total lives squandered in the entire six-year conflict. The American propaganda machine sought to spin what was in effect mass murder into a moral and military 'success', claiming that if the Japanese hadn't surrendered after two of their cities had thus been blown to pieces, then a land invasion would have undoubtedly had to be carried out to achieve the same effect, costing the lives of thousands of U.S. troops.

It shows just what a moral vacuum the U.S. high command were living in when they had to skulk behind a hypothesis to avoid copping the blame for what in anyone else's language would be interpreted as a cold-blooded war crime.

The bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was, and still is, indefensible. You can never 'save' lives by taking them. We all need to be reminded of the horrors which took place in Japan in early August 1945, because the nuclear monster that was unleashed upon the world then is still with us. It lurks off the British coast in the form of the Trident submarine fleet.

To tout the power-plant used by these weapons-in-waiting, as Cameron's government is now doing, as a domestic energy source, shows that politicians continue to bamboozle the public with smokescreens while they harbour fantasies of nuking their way to world domination.

To blow billions on an unnecessary armament upgrade at a time of swingeing public service cuts would be laughable were it not such an obscenity.

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Join The Resistance!

Considering the state's massive attack on ordinary people, with cuts to jobs, services, pensions and benefits, the time has come to fight back. We should not be expected to pay for the crises caused by politicians and bankers. We are not all 'in this together' – the rich politicians in the Cabinet and the bankers with their bonuses are not affected. Members of B.A.N., along with others in the trade unions, are setting up an anti-cuts campaign in Bath, fighting to protect every job and defend pensions, services and benefits from cuts. The campaign is open to all those affected by government policy. We need to organise and fight back together.

The campaign will be organising a big public meeting at the end of September, and hopes to attract support from all affected groups. If you wish to get involved, contact johnbamphylde[at]yahoo.co.uk or phone 07908 355456.

More info is to follow in next month's issue, but here are some important dates for your diary: the next Bath Anti-Cuts Alliance committee meeting is at the Bell, Tuesday 24th August, 8pm; Sunday 3rd October will be a national day of action outside the Tory Party Conference in Birmingham; Wednesday 20th October will be the day of budget announcement; and Saturday 23rd October will be a regional day of action against the planned cuts.

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Fight And Unite!

Some anarchists argue that the main trade unions are bureaucratic, their leaders have sold out and they have little relevance to working class people. They argue that anarchists should form their own unions. However, many young people find unions boring and do not really understand what they are. Others argue back that unions are still workers' organisations, that they could still be the force to take on the capitalist state, and that workers should join and fight within unions to make them more democratic and combative.

At the Bath Socialist Forum meeting on Monday 30th August, at 8pm, we will be discussing the way forward for workers in trades unions, presented by John Bamphylde of Bath Trades Council. The following meeting, on Monday 27th September, will be presented by film-maker Ken Loach. The meetings take place at St James Wine Vaults, and all are welcome.

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Killer Faces Unemployment!

A disciplinary hearing is to be held against P.C. Simon Harwood on the grounds of gross misconduct with regards to an attack on Ian Tomlinson on April 1st 2009. It is considered likely the outcome will be immediate dismissal.

I pose this question, doesn't it seem a bit extreme to take away this man's occupation simply for a light shove? After all, to push from behind is all part and parcel with policing a large-scale protest. Certainly, Tomlinson wasn't dead immediately after the incident, so why then should Mr Harwood be subjected to mix with the doleys and scroungers?

A few individuals are claiming the P.C. to be guilty of manslaughter and hence deserves to lose his livelihood. These people are clearly revenge-bent or deranged as it is well known that there has been a long (and naturally therefore thorough) investigation by the C.P.S., which decided there was no case. Irrefutably trustworthy pathological evidence has shown the man died of natural causes. Further, the video footage doesn't even show the man hitting the ground, let alone gaining injuries. Surely only one conclusion can be reached, that P.C. Simon Harwood is undeniably innocent.

Clearly, it was a highly volatile situation and a police officer cannot be blamed for getting a bit touchy-feely. If people get so het up about this, then with the home office more and more concerned about P.R., in the end we'll have a police force too scared to catch any criminals.

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Agri-Culture Shock

Transition Bath are starting up a new scheme in Bathampton, working with the Hughes family to restore a six acre area of land to organic production, and hope to bring together locals to explore how this can be done. Transition Bath are a local environmentalist group aiming to build a sustainable future using the power of community, in the face of declining natural resources and increasing costs. They hope to make the transition to a low carbon, local economy, whilst creating positive, self-reliant communities. This project should turn out to be the first Community Supported Agriculture (C.S.A.) scheme in the city – a partnership between farmers and the surrounding community, providing mutual benefits for both, and reconnecting people to the land. Whether you would like to grow your own, meet other locals, or get involved in a project to help reduce food bills and food miles, why not come along to the end of Holcombe Lane, near Holcombe Farm, Bathampton, at 1pm, on Sunday the 15th August for a barbecue and fruit pick. All donations to Transition Bath will be much appreciated. For more info, contact Jamie Colston at jamiecolston[at]gmail.com, or ring 01225 851377.

Another example of the link between ethical sustainability, the community and the food we eat, has been going on down at the Riverside Youth Centre on London Road since 2001. The London Road Food Co-op is a volunteer-run, not-for-profit members' co-operative, opening Wednesdays from 4-7pm at the end of the lane behind the former Porter Butt pub. Membership is affordable and paid annually on a sliding voluntary scale between £3 and £10, and members get access to a whole host of organic, fairly traded and vegan-friendly wholefoods and groceries, without the price mark-up you will see in other stores. In the past the co-op has also operated a weekly veg, fruit, egg and bread scheme, which it hopes to revive. In the meantime, though, this is a great little friendly project, and is keen to attract members and volunteers. If you do want to find out more, why not pop along, or give them a call on 07837 784715?

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Food Fayre Thought

Lazily aping our article from last month, in case you didn't catch it, Saturday the 4th September will mark the day of the second annual Bath Vegan Fayre! Running from 12 midday til 4pm downstairs at Manvers Street Baptist Church, free entry, expect hours of free vegan savoury and sweet delights, as well as a sprinkling of talks and conversation, with a (non-dairy) creamy after-taste of nutritional and ethical info. In a delicious dash of déjà vu, there will also be a benefit gig at the Hobgoblin on Friday 27th August, from 8pm, featuring bands and D.J.s, £3 entry. Helpers for both would be much appreciated! E-mail bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk, or ring 07717 130954 for further info. And again, don't forget Bristol's grassroots vegan fayre/fair, taking place on Saturday 30th October in a venue near you.

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GOT A STORY? WANT TO RECEIVE THE BATH BOMB BY EMAIL? HOPING TO SUE? Contact us by e-mailing bathbombpress[at]yahoo.co.uk. Large print e-versions available on request. And for more info on any of our stories, check out http://www.thebathbomb.blogspot.com

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UPCOMING EVENTS

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

Bathampton Community Growers workday, Thursdays, 10am-dusk, Mill Lane, Bathampton, e-mail thelostplot[at]googlemail.com/ tel Chris 07792 444628

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

Bradford-On-Avon peace vigil, Saturdays, 11.30am-12.30, by the peace statue opposite Westbury Gardens by the Town Bridge, Bradford-On-Avon

Recycle Your Sundays, Sundays, 10.30am, starts Abbey Churchyard, the regular series of sociable, easy-paced cycle rides, tel Hazel 01225 469199

Climate Camp Ireland, Thursday 16th to Monday 20th August, Victoria Bridge, County Tyrone,
Quebec Climate Action Camp, Wednesday 18th August to Sunday 22nd August,

Family Fun Day – Outdoor Cooking workshop, Thursday 19th August, 12-3pm, Broadlands Orchard, Box Road, Bathford, £15 per family (suitable for over 7s), booking essential

Camp for Climate Action UK, Thursday 19th August to Tuesday 24th August, Edinburgh

talk: 'The Venus Project', Saturday 21st August, 1-5pm, Victoria Rooms - The Auditorium University of Bristol, Queens Road, Clifton, Bristol, BS8 1SA, £16.02 entry

Climate Camp Germany, Saturday 21st August to Sunday 29th August, Erkelenz- Borschemich

film: 'The War Game', Sunday 22nd August, 2.30pm, the Arnolfini, Bristol

Bath Hunt Saboteurs meeting, Monday 23rd August, 8-9pm, The Bell, tel Justin 07854 062336

Bath Anti-Cuts Alliance committee meeting, Tuesday 24th August, 8pm, The Bell, Walcot Street

Bath Stop the War meeting, Wednesday 25th August, 7.30pm, Friends Meeting House, York Street, Bath, BA1 1NG

Family Fun Day – Build Your Own Pond workshop, Thursday 26th August, 12-3pm, Broadlands Orchard, Box Road, Bathford, £15 per family (suitable for over 7s), booking essential

Bath Vegan Fayre benefit gig, Friday 27th August, 8-11pm, Hobgoblin, St James Parade; more details tbc

Bath Stop The War Coalition vigil: vote with your money against Trident, Saturday 28th August, 11.30am-12.30, Bath Abbey Courtyard, other Bath human rights/trade & development/ justice/trades union organisations are invited to support Critical Mass Bike Ride, Saturday 28th August, 1pm, Kingsmead Square

Climate Justice Action meeting at the Netherlands Earth First! Gathering, Saturday 28th August to Sunday 29th August, Utrecht

Bath Animal Action info stall, Sunday 29th August, 2-4pm, Stall Street, e-mail bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk

Transition Bath Social, Monday 30th August, 7.15pm, the Love Lounge/ back room of the Bell, Walcot Street; bring food to share

Bath Socialist Forum meeting, Monday 30th August, 8pm, upstairs St James Wine Vaults, presented by John Bamphylde/Bath Trades Council

one year part-time 'Practical Sustainability' course, starts September 2010, Bristol; exploring permaculture design, organic horticulture, woodland management, green building, ecological interactions, energy, group dynamics, re-localisation, creating change, community engagement and more

Bath Activist Network meeting, Thursday 2nd September, 7.30-9pm, downstairs at The Hobgoblin, St James Parade

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Thursday 2nd to Friday 3rd September, St Werburgh's City Farm, Boiling Wells, Bristol, BS2 9YJ, 7.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Bath Vegan Fayre, Saturday 4th September, 12-4pm, Manvers Street Baptist Church, free entry

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Saturday 4th September, St Werburgh's City Farm, Boiling Wells, Bristol, BS2 9YJ, 2.30pm & 7.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Sunday 5th September, St Werburgh's City Farm, Boiling Wells, Bristol, BS2 9YJ, 2.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Bath Green Drinks, Wednesday 8th September, 8.30pm, the Rising Sun, Grove Street

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Thursday 9th to Friday 10th September, Hampton Row Allotments, Bathwick, 7.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Bristol Anarchist Bookfair, Saturday 11th September, 10.30-6pm, Hamilton House, 80 Stokes Croft, Bristol; e-mail bristolanarchistbookfair[at]riseup.net

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Saturday 11th September, Hampton Row Allotments, Bathwick, 2.30pm & 7.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Sunday 12th September, Hampton Row Allotments, Bathwick, 2.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Bath Animal Action meeting, Monday 13th September, 8-9pm, The Bell, Walcot Street, e-mail bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Thursday 16th to Friday 17th September, Peasedown St John Community Farm, Dunkerton Hill, BA2 8PJ, 7.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Saturday 18th September, Peasedown St John Community Farm, Dunkerton Hill, BA2 8PJ, 2.30pm & 7.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Bristol Free Vegan Food Fair benefit gig, Saturday 18th September, 7.30pm, the Black Swan pub, 438 Stapleton Road, Bristol, feat Daddy Long Bones, Budd, Molly Samson, Ren, D.J. Dub Simian & The Long Dead Beat, £3/£4 entry

Regional South West Animal Rights Coalition meeting, Sunday 19th September, 12-5pm, The Factory, Cave Street, central Bristol

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Sunday 19th September, Peasedown St John Community Farm, Dunkerton Hill, BA2 8PJ, 2.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Thursday 23rd to Friday 24th September, Bloomfield Allotments, Bear Flat, 7.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Saturday 25th September, Bloomfield Allotments, Bear Flat, 2.30pm & 7.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Kilter theatre: 'Roots: Replanted' (performance about food security issues), Sunday 26th September, Bloomfield Allotments, Bear Flat, 2.30pm, £9 (£7 concessions), tel 01225 386777 to book

Bath Socialist Forum meeting, Monday 27th September, 8pm, upstairs St James Wine Vaults, presented by Ken Loach

No Borders Camp Belgium, Wednesday 29th September to Sunday 3rd October, Brussels

National March for Farmed Animals, Saturday 2nd October, 12pm start, Cavendish Square, London

anti-Tory demonstration, Sunday 3rd October, Tory Party Conference, Birmingham more details tbc

Legal fees benefit punk gig: 'SUBVERT 2010 - A Festival Of Resistance', Friday 8th to Sunday 10th October, Bristol, feat Hellkrusher, Ruidosa Immunidicia, War All The Time, Ignosy, The Wankys, The Extinguishers & Bulletridden, as well as vegan cafés/ stalls/ films/ workshops & picnic; more details tbc

Regional day of action against the cuts, Saturday 23rd October

Bristol Free Vegan Food Fair, Saturday 30th October, 12-5pm, Broadmead Baptist Church, Union Street, Bristol, BS1 3HY

Coalition of the Resistance Conference, Saturday 27th November, London, more details tbc

Camp for Climate Action Australia, Wednesday 1st to Sunday 5th December, Bayswater Power Station

Climate Camp Aotearoa, Thursday 16th to Tuesday 21st December, Wellington New Zealand

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The Only Good Boss Is A Dead Boss?

B&NES Council has managed to well and truly shit on its workers once again through its recent advertisement of a new job role to fill. After cutting loose 70 staff in the last couple months, and planning at least another 300 job losses in the near future, the creation of the new Head of Property post, with its wage packet of between £71,166 and £76,638 per year, tells those former employees exactly what the council thinks of them. The creation of this managerial role could only happen once the rank and file, who actually do the work rather than just fanny around sacking people, had been let go. Set to manage (i.e. leave them all boarded up for years then flog) the council's portfolio of 1,000 buildings, many in retail, worth more than £500 million, this has left union officials furious with the council chiefs. But here at the Bath Bomb, considering the calibre of inhuman slitherings and evolutionary dead-ends infesting the rest of B&NES's Property Services department, we wonder what sort of two-faced reptilian abomination they'll dredge up to fill that role, and which carnival freak show will soon be missing its star attraction?

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

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Gull War Syndrome

There's an epidemic going on! You may or may not have heard about the killer seagulls roaming the streets of bath. Or, EVEN WORSE the murderous foxes patrolling EVERY CITY IN THE UK!!! looking for pets and children to eat. The national press have bravely soldiered on to warn the general public of these menaces, one Bath photographer took his life in his hands to get a picture of the gull menace close up.

Bath landlords are feeling the need to join brave vigilante groups to oil the eggs and stop the demon spawn escaping. Unfortunately these brave souls have neglected to think about why wild animals would chose to move into urban areas.

The only reason that wildlife can survive in cities is our attitude to waste. Pigeons, gulls and foxes all survive on the disgusting amount of food waste scattered all over. 'Gull prevention measures' in one part of Bath simply move the problem to the next street. If homeowners, landlords and the council made a concerted effort to get rid of the birds they could do so easily. All it takes is to clean up our waste.

The disposable culture we live in means that a huge amount is thrown out, a lack of adequate recycling facilities (along with pure laziness on many peoples part) means that waste is left on our streets for days before being collected. Along with animals being able to survive on all of this, it also poses risks to them. The fact that food waste, when not composted, is mixed in with other rubbish means that animals are at risk of choking, poisoning, and numerous other horrible deaths - leading to the sight of rotting corpses on our streets. Surely not good for the tourists?

In order to ensure humans are kept away from this dangerous wildlife entirely, we need to make our cities uninhabitable to these menaces. Cleaning up after yourself – rather than tossing the blame at any old scapegoat – should do it.

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From Our Unclothed Correspondent

“On Sunday 13th June, I took part in the first proper 'Bristol World Naked Bike Ride', to protest against oil dependency, in favour of curbing car culture and to have car- free Sundays in the city and a celebration of body freedom. By riding nude, protesters demonstrate the vulnerability of cyclists on the busy streets. It also feels good and liberating.

We met at the Full Moon pub, Stokes Croft, Bristol at 12 noon, and it was a lovely hot sunny day so people started stripping off beforehand in the beer garden, as you had to stay dressed inside the pub.

The ride headed off about 1pm, most of the cyclists were naked including myself, some were body-painted, others had small costumes on, it's a clothes-optional protest, but the more that are nude the better. There was no police presence.

Spectators lined some of the route cheering and enjoying the event which went through Broadmead, Castle Green, the Centre, Baldwin St, Old Market and College Green, where we stopped for a photo call before heading back to the Full Moon where many remained naked outside until leaving late afternoon.

The protest was a great success, with good photos on Bristol Indymedia, and the local press. The World Naked Bike Ride is an international event and this year there were rides in London, Brighton, Southampton, York, Sheffield and Manchester, it's growing. It's also showing that there is nothing wrong with the human body and being a free spirit.”

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Hitting The Books

Continuing with the current plugging craze, the Bristol Anarchist Bookfair follows hot on the Bath Vegan Fayre's heels, on Saturday 11th September. There is a definite growth of anarchist and alternative bookfairs happening through the U.K. and abroad, which shows both increased co-operation between different anarchist trends, and a growing interest in finding an alternative to the failures of capital – not too surprising, considering the state our economy and planet is in! The event will feature two floors of stalls, workshops, books, zines, merchandise, and talks, plus a radical history zone, film room, creche and vegan café. Taking place at Hamilton House, 80 Stokes Croft in Bristol, from 10.30am to 6pm, the fair (they obviously didn't quite have the gumption to go with 'fayre') is free and accessible to all, and is guaranteed to open both eyes and wallets.

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Don't Think We're Alone Now

For our Bristol readers, 'The Autonomist', Bristol's new radical news sheet and directory, is out now: get it online at http://www.bristolautonomist.blogspot.com!

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I Would Have Got Away With It Too, If It Wasn't For You Heddlu Kids

The long-awaited Welsh Climate Camp/Climate Camp Cymru went into action on Friday 13th of this month, focusing once more on the polluting evils of the coal extraction industry, and set up near the Selar and Nant-Helen (due for expansion) opencast coal mines, in Glyn-Neath in South Wales. Both mines are owned by Celtic Energy. The Selar mine itself destroyed a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) back in the 1990s, for added ecocide – trashing vital marsh thistles, and failing to rehome the colony of rare marsh fritillary butterflies. For the camp itself, as with previous camps, a positive agenda of decentralised, renewable power systems, communal living, eco-action planning and skillshare workshops were all on the cards.

However, the Welsh police put paid to all that the next day, prematurely evicting the site and 30 or so activists present, drawing on a massive outlay of mounted police and at least 15 riot vans full. Maybe Friday the 13th wasn't such a good day after all?

On related news, the 13 remaining defendants of April's Ffos-y-fran coal train blockade were conditionally discharged at Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court on the Friday; the other five had their charges dropped in July. A lifelong restraining order barring them from the vicinity of Aberthaw Power Station and the Ffos-y-fran mine hangs round their necks. They were greeted outside court by more mounted police, two riot vans and the flashes of BBC and ITV photographers. Ahh, the price of fame.

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Building Bridges On The Canal

The community of travelling boaters on the Kennet and Avon believe that British Waterways (B.W.) is attempting to harness the prejudices of certain parts of the settled community against them in order to implement its latest unjust and unlawful proposals.

Liveaboard boaters are part of the character of the canal - we attract visitors to canal-side businesses, and the presence of lived-in boats provides all-year round security and assistance on the towpath, benefitting cyclists, joggers, walkers, fishermen and other boaters. Our presence deters crime and anti-social behaviour. Boaters contribute to the community in many other ways. Some work in childcare, teaching or nursing, others in local businesses. Some are artists, musicians and craftspeople, painters or welders, helping to keep the traditional crafts and heritage of the canals alive.

Boats without moorings cruise from place to place as they are entitled to do by law. According to the 1995 British Waterways Act, they can moor on the towpath side of the canal for 14 days in one place, except where there are short-term visitor moorings. They may stay longer if it is reasonable in the circumstances, for example illness or engine breakdown. However, B.W. has a long history of attempting to get rid of us, going back to the 1980s, when Parliament rejected their original draft bill which would have rendered between 5,000 and 10,000 boat dwellers homeless. There have been five consultations since 1995, aimed primarily at forcing law-abiding boaters without moorings off the canal or into permanent moorings which we don't want. Recent developments are of great concern to us.

First, B.W. is threatening to terminate the licences of boaters by attempting to enforce the 'Mooring Guidance for Continuous Cruisers' (which clearly states that it does not have the force of law) on the grounds that failure to make a “progressive journey” around the canal system amounts to a breach of the law – though boaters are not required to cruise any minimum distance. Termination of your licence can lead to B.W. seizing and destroying your boat, and so losing your home. The National Association of Boat Owners (N.A.B.O.) has obtained a Legal Opinion from senior barristers stating that B.W. does not have the power to set any particular cruising pattern or minimum distance.

Second, BW is going ahead with a local mooring strategy for the western end of the Kennet and Avon, restricting the availability of 14-day mooring spaces and making it difficult for travelling boaties to maintain access to their children's school, to their work or to health services.

The proposed mooring restrictions, which directly affect boaters, will be decided by a steering group in which boating representatives will be outnumbered by others such as local residents, hire boat companies, local authorities and parish councils, whose lives will not be directly affected by the mooring restrictions or who have little to do with boating. Despite B.W.'s earlier promises, individual boaters will not be allowed to join the steering group. B.W. also unlawfully intends the local mooring strategy to decide how far a boat without a mooring must travel in order to comply with the Mooring Guidance.

Despite the two-to-one opposition from the public consultation, B.W. is going ahead with the plan anyway. We have also discovered that B.W. plans to introduce a new type of mooring permit, similar to its 2008 roving mooring proposal. This will cost more than the average leisure mooring, will include a winter mooring and will “allow” the boater to remain in a specific geographic area for a certain time. However, apart from the winter mooring, boats without moorings are already entitled to do what this new mooring permit would allow; yet another attempt to pressurise boaters into paying for permanent moorings which we do not need or want.

B.W. already has powers to regulate mooring, but rather than consistently enforcing the 14-day rule, they prefer instead to threaten boaters who do obey the 14-day rule. B.W. claims there is a problem in the lack of mooring space, but many boaters think that B.W.'s failure to carry out its duty to maintain the canal is the problem. If the canal was properly dredged and maintained, this would free up a huge amount of extra mooring space, currently unusable as boats cannot get close enough to tie up.

According to N.A.B.O.'s 2009 survey, 84% of boaters reported difficulty finding a place to moor due to inadequate dredging. One of the reasons that certain places are popular is that B.W. has actually done its job and dredged the canal properly.

Another reason for the perceived pressure on mooring space is the rapid increase in hire boat numbers between Devizes and Bath, from 36 in 2003 to 78 in 2009, with up to 14 more added in 2010. Hirers usually wish to moor on purpose-built visitor moorings at popular places, and are not expert enough at boat-handling to moor elsewhere. It is hardly surprising, given the rapid increase in hire boats, that they cannot always stop at the visitor mooring of their choice.

A common misconception about boaters is that we do not pay Council Tax and are getting services for free. But British Waterways pays the Government a composite levy in respect of Council Tax and Business Rates, which contributes to Government payments to local authorities through the Rate Support Grant. Anyone who pays a licence fee contributes to this. B.W. also pays for the sewage disposal, rubbish disposal and water which it provides to boat licence holders. Paying Council Tax is not a legal pre-requisite for using local authority services, and a recent estimate showed that travelling boaters either do not need, or cannot use, over 80% of local authority services.

Alongside this attitude is the opinion that boaters without moorings are getting something for nothing. That is plain ridiculous! If you have a mooring, you are getting benefits that boat owners without moorings do not get, such as the right to leave your boat in the same spot all year round.

Rather than all these disputes, we would much rather see the K&A acting as a model for a good relationship between settled communities, boaters with moorings and travelling boat dwellers, which could be replicated in other parts of the canal network.

For further info, e-mail: info@boatingcommunity.org.uk

*

And now, to the disclaimer: as anyone is free to contribute, the opinions expressed in each article are not necessarily reflective of all contributors. Naturally, any right-wing or corporate bullshit will be binned and spat upon. Needless to say, the opinions of the author of this disclaimer do not necessarily reflect the opinions of any other contributor.

Full article | 6 comments

The EDL: Street fighting for the establishment

19-08-2010 12:27

Interesting article that seems to make a better stab than most at what the EDL are all about. Originally posted in Ceasefire:  http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/2010/08/diary-of-a-domestic-extremist-the-edl-street-fighting-for-the-establishment/

Full article | 6 comments

press tv - decommissioners

19-08-2010 11:14

the big story

Full article | 1 comment

19th August 1953 - Anglo-American military coup in Iran: "Operation Ajax"

19-08-2010 10:05

Originally published in December 2009, the significance of this article is all the more relevant on the 57th anniversary of the Anglo-American military coup in Iran.

Full article

Consider how the Mainstream Media functions

19-08-2010 09:22

A short video as an intro to what Indymedia is, and why it is needed in this corporate age. Intended to try to encourage people to come along to the next IMC Northern England open collective meeting at the Common Place, Leeds on Sunday 5th September 2010, 12pm til 4pm.

Indymedia is a participatory project, it needs people like you to write as well as read the news in order to survive. Coming along to a meeting gives you a direct say in how we provide this resource, and the direction in which we go. Don't hate the media, BE THE MEDIA.

Full article

Local lad James Bruce just walked 3000 miles from Portsmouth to Jerusalem

19-08-2010 09:22

in two pairs of shoes he got from a charity shop
Dialect Radio is a Bristol (UK) podcast produced by volunteers. Our main activity is our weekly current affairs and arts magazine programme Dialect, which is recorded at our Queen's Square studios and posted for download every week on Friday morning. Want to volunteer? Volunteering Bristol, Royal Oak House, Royal Oak Avenue, Bristol. BS1 4GB Tel: 0117 989 7733. Listen on air: 93.2 FM (BCFM), Sundays at 12 noon. Or listen live on the internet at http://www.bcfm.org.uk/
listen
http://www.radio4all.net/index.php/program/45055

download
http://www.radio4all.net/files/tony@cultureshop.org.uk/2149-1-20100822_Dialect.mp3

TIMINGS ON THE MP3 FILE
00:00 - Introduction
01:00 - Plucky local lad James Bruce has just returned from walking 3000 miles to Jerusalem
http://www.marysmeals.org/
12:00 - Eddie Clarke Agit Propaganda Street Theatre in support of Humanitarian Aid in the Middle East
17:00 - Julian Lea-Jones author of Bristol Curiosities talks about the Knights Templar that give their name to Temple Church and Temple Meads and some major finds which started Temple Local History Group
http://www.history4u.info
25:00 - Philip Horton has just published the first of two volumes about local rail line closures called The Beeching Legacy
32:00 - Mary McDonnell Hammill at the Edinburgh Fringe
41:30 - Secrets and Lies by David Southwell - More Lies More Statistics read by Malcolm Grieves
50:30 - Trevor Carter the Bard of Windmill Hill
54:00 - Michaela Dennis pretends to be Jeff Sparks
59:00 - Credits

CREDITS
Presenters: John Peters-Coleman and Michaela Dennis
Reporters: Anthea Page and Tony Gosling
Studio Engineer: Lee Duffield
Producer: Anthea Page

Rail campaigners challenged to reconsider Dr Beeching's legacy
Western Daily Press, Aug 4, 2010 - by TINA ROWE

To some he is a Frankenstein-like figure of horror - but without his savage cuts to the rail network, the West Country might not now be enjoying the sights and sounds of steam heritage railways.

That is one of the points made by author Philip Horton in the first of a series of books analysing The Beeching Legacy.

The closure of hundreds of stations and many branch lines across the country, in the ten years following Dr Richard Beeching's report of 1963, still arouses anger in the communities affected.

But others may not now remember how close they came to losing a vital transport link. All the intermediate stations between Castle Cary and Dorchester on the Bristol-Weymouth line were recommended for closure by Beeching - including Yeovil Pen Mill and Dorchester West itself.

Mr Horton also points out the report questioned the need to maintain separate main line services to Exeter via both southern and western route s. The Waterloo to Exeter line was eventually downgraded.

He also asks how many motorists who use gently curving Cartgate link, taking them from out of Yeovil to the A303, realise they are travelling along the track of the old Yeovil-Taunton railway.

The line had been the first to reach the town in 1853 and in its first years there were stations at Athelney, Langport, Martock and Montacute.

At the start of 1964, Mr Horton says, four up and five down trains ran over the 26-mile route between Taunton and Yeovil Pen Mill, with a further train in each direction on Saturdays.

But with fewer than 5,000 passengers a week - the minimum that Beeching deemed economical - the line was doomed. It closed, despite much opposition, with the last train running on June 13.

The Taunton to Minehead line carried up to 10,000 passengers a week, and both Minehead and Watchet had passenger receipts of more than Pounds 5,000 per year - again above the Beeching-designated minimum.

Nonetheless, in 1968 it was proposed for closure, and shut on January 3, 1971.

As Mr Horton says, there was a happy ending. Just four months later the West Somerset Railway Co Ltd was born and today the heritage line runs steam and other trains.

Mr Horton, who lived in Bath and in Wellington before moving to the Midlands, notes many old trackbeds have reverted to farmland, adding: "Some have become footpaths, cycleways and nature reserves, and four of the five standard gauge heritage rail lines in the West are on lines closed by the cuts."

The Beeching Legacy is published by Silver Link Publishing at £20.00.

Full article | 7 comments

Three arrests as activists take site for Edinburgh Camp for Climate Action

19-08-2010 06:31

Three climate activists were arrested by Scottish police as they took the site for the Camp for Climate Action in Edinburgh which set up very close to the Royal Bank of Scotland Headquarters at Gogarburn Gardens off Gogar Station Road just after 9pm yesterday evening.
It is understood that the three who were arrested have all been released without charge.

Full article | 4 comments

Camberley Job Centre refusing to issue New Deal travel cards

19-08-2010 03:16

Why is Camberley Job Centre refusing to issue New Deal travel cards?

Full article

Joanne Baker: Britain's radioactive ammunition Depleted Uranium

18-08-2010 23:22

plus an investigation into why the Northern Ireland Parades Commission has failed to stop provocative parades
Drivetime - 5pm - 7pm Friday. Friday Drivetime - Bristol’s weekly current affairs round-up. Discussing the big stories in Bristol. Britain and around the world live with Martin Summers and Marina Morris - at 6pm straight talking and investigative reports
This week we hear from local author and campaigner Joanne Baker who has uncovered the horrible truth behind the British Army's use of radioactive Depleted Uranium ammunition. Joanne has discovered the devestating after-effects can effectively renedr areas where the weapon had been used permenantly uninhabitable and induce the most horrible birth defects in the population around these areas. Like many scientists and others across the world she believes this weapon should never be used.
Joanne's book is here
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Uranium-Iraq-Poisonous-Legacy-W...20788
Before we hear from Joanne though former soldier in the Parachute Regiment who served in Northern Ireland Bryn Richard Cowley takes a look at the Orange Order and the tradition of provocative parades in the province. He asks why the peace process has failed to re-route parades despite the sectarian violence they cause.

Full article

Climate Camp Have Occupied Gogarburn RBS HQ

18-08-2010 22:23

Message from climate camp @10:00pm:

At 9.15PM tonight Climate Camp took the site on RBS HQ. Get on site as fast as you can! Defence help urgently needed. Come to RBS Gogarburn Gardens, off Gogar Station Rd. More info later. x

Full article

An analysis on the forthcoming struggle on energy in Greece

18-08-2010 22:16

#349 | “Will the Public Power Corporation’s syndicalists win or lose?” – some thoughts on the upcoming struggle over electricity in Greeece
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