Twenty More Questions.

Go ahead.

Make my day.

Again.

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b r e a k

gonna take a short break from blogging
be back next week or something
in the meantime…
read the blog formerly known as anti-german translation
listen to radio punk et libertaire sous pression!
and laff at gary bushell the bear.

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Political Economy for Dummies #QANTAS

Investors cheer Qantas decision
Chris Zappone
The Age
October 31, 2011

Market support

“Clearly this is going to hurt revenue,” said CMC Markets strategist Michael McCarthy. “Overall though I suspect the market generally supports this kind of action.”

“Given the potential for bleeding to death over the next 12 months, it’s better Qantas acts than not.”

Mr McCarthy said the decision by Fair Work Australia to terminate any further strikes “is quite a positive for the company”.

“Qantas has already lost the PR war to some extent so they are already less concerned about (public perceptions of their treatment of the unions).”

Joyce template?

“Within Australia Mr Joyce’s firm stance is seen as a bellwether for emerging industrial disputes in other sectors,” according to analysis by the Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation, released yesterday.

“Internationally in aviation Mr Joyce has usurped the tough stance former British Airways CEO Willie Walsh took against BA’s Unite Union in 2010,” the report said.

“The developing situation at Qantas will be a case study of extreme action airlines could take in the future, but only if they share Mr Joyce’s conviction the company will prevail,” the group, which advises airlines, said.

“AirAsia co-founder and CEO Tony Fernandes backed Mr Joyce’s move, saying on Twitter, ‘You have to salute Alan Joyce for doing what he’s doing. This is not about workers vs management. It’s about survival in the modern world.’”

[NB. Fernandes' tweet would appear to have gone down the memory hole.]

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Treasury Bowen State Edinburgh Gardens Street Library. Gardens. #occupymelb

“The small and peaceful Treasury Gardens sit between Fitzroy Gardens and Spring Street, and are a popular venue for community events and rallies”–but not, obviously, as far as VicPol is concerned and especially not when the event and/or rally has been organised by Occupy Melbourne. So after assembling at the Gardens in the early afternoon on Saturday it was back to the city: first to RMIT and Bowen Street and then, after a contentious meeting, the State Library.

Again.

Well, for some at any rate: another mob decided it would be moar funs to occupy Edinburgh Gardens in North Fitzroy, a property owned and managed by Yarra City Council. Their decision to do so is–apparently–a point of contention, as it contradicts the decision of the (9th) General Assembly to re-locate from RMIT to the State Library.

See : No picnic as occupation settles on RMIT (sic), The Age, October 30, 2011 | Occupy Melbourne: the return, Jeff Sparrow, Overland (blog), October 29, 2011.

In any case, the chief problem confronting occupiers had (and has) both a legal and a political dimension. The dimension populated by law-talking guys–that is, the legal realm–concerns the problem of locating a property within central Melbourne on which it would be lawful to camp. Not surprisingly, such nominally public property is so scarce as to be almost non-existent. The problem is further compounded when such paltry forms as do exist are controlled by hostile institutions such as the Melbourne City Council (under Robert Doyle) and other nominally public institutions such as RMIT (under fellow neo-con Margaret Gardner).

Outside of/in addition to/and if necessary against the law is the political context in which the Occupy movement manifests itself locally. Or, the intersection between what occupiers hope to achieve by their actions and their willingness to risk violent repression in pursuing these goals. It’s at this point that individuals tend to part company, often literally. Occupy Melbourne’s 10th General Assembly will be held at 4pm later today (Sunday) at the State Library.

Oddly enough, another (peace) camp was established at the State Library 10 years ago. It was gonna last ’til the end of the war on terror but didn’t quite make it

Protesters vow to stay put
Jen Kelly
Herald Sun
October 31, 2001

AUTHORITIES claim they are powerless to evict a band of unruly protesters illegally camped on the lawns of the State Library.

A legal loophole means the hands of police are tied unless the State Library formally requests help.

But the library is refusing – insisting it wants to convince the protesters to leave voluntarily.

The State Government and the City of Melbourne are also distancing themselves from the protest, now in its 19th day.

Premier Steve Bracks backed the police’s stance that it was the library’s responsibility to ask for police help if it was needed.

And Lord Mayor John So condemned the illegal campsite, but said it was outside the council’s jurisdiction, and refused to comment on whether police should intervene.

The defiant band of anti-war protesters have transformed the formerly glorious Swanston St forecourt into an appalling eyesore.

Graffiti is scrawled on statues, stickers have defaced signs, electrical tape has been used to post flyers and the lawn is covered with huge patches of dead grass.

Giant tarpaulins are strung up alongside smaller tents, with ropes looped around historic and fragile lamp posts more than 100 years old.

Superintendent Mick Williams, in charge of city policing, said his officers could do nothing.

“The library property comes under the State Library Act, and for the police to take any action we would have to be requested by the State Library,” he said.

“Under the trespassing provisions of the Act, we would have to be requested by an authorised person from the library.”

State Library staff have repeatedly told the protesters they are trespassing and breaking library by-laws — but beyond that have opted for negotiating with protesters rather than asking for police help.

“We want a peaceful outcome rather then calling in police, because the library respects the right of people to express a point of view,” State Library head Fran Awcock said.

The library has offered the protesters space for a large information tent by day if they clear out by night, and is hopeful of reaching a resolution at a 10am meeting today.

Furious residents and businesses have demanded authorities take tougher action.

“It’s absolutely appalling,” Residents 3000 secretary Russell Howard said. “It’s a hideous eyesore. What disappoints us is the lack of backbone of any of our elected leaders to fix it.”

Up to 60 protesters share about a dozen tents in the 24-hour peace vigil.

They yesterday vowed to stay until the war against terrorism was over – years if necessary.

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Occupy Melbourne : Back to the Future #occupymelb

Occupy Melbourne–a group of people the Lord Mayor describes as a “self-righteous, narcissistic, self-indulgent rabble”–returns to the Treasury Gardens later today by way of the State Library. A vaguely unsympathetic report by ABC-TV’s 7.30 Report is here, while photographic evidence of the Untermenschen is assembled on tumblr here.

Police have declared that they intend to sabotage any attempt to re-establish a camp at the new site, after they violently evicted the original camp at City Square last Friday, on rather dubious legal grounds. In an interview with Neil Mitchell on 3AW on October 24, Acting Police Commissioner Ken Lay blamed the “anti-Jewish” BDS group and the Socialist Alliance for the police violence.

See also : Activities Local Law 2009 | Summary Offences Act 1966 – SECT 6 : Direction by police to move on | Agencies split over eviction, Jason Dowling and Dewi Cooke, The Age, October 28, 2011. You can also listen to an interview by Dr Cam on 3CR’s The SUWA Show with Tamar Hopkins of Flemington & Kensington Community Legal Centre here regarding some of the legal issues raised by the police riot.

In Oakland on Tuesday, police shot a protester, Scott Olsen, in the head.

NB. Occupy Melbourne Legal Support can be contacted on 0434 126 515 or by email at: OccupyMelbourneLegal[at]gmail[dot]com.

Note that in celebration of the Stolenwealth Games, on March 12, 2006 another camp, Camp Sovereignty, was established in the Kings Domain. Among other things, it served to remind the general public of the reality behind the rhetoric regarding the Commonwealth.

In Queensland, state authorities have generously offered Aboriginal workers whose wages were stolen the sums of $2000 and $4000 in exchange for indemnifying the state against any further legal action.

Florence Luff was not even 14 when she was sent out to work as a housemaid and nanny, the government ‘banking’ half her weekly wage of 15 shillings (about $45 today). She continued working full-time with her husband, paid mostly in clothing and food, always fearful that without any money they would be locked up as vagrants. She never saw a bank passbook, had no idea how much she earned or where the money went. If she and her husband had been paid their wages, she said, perhaps they might have been able to buy a little house. She planned to use the $4000 to put a headstone on her husband’s grave. Fred Edwards worked for 25 years as a stockman on stations around the Gulf of Carpentaria, mostly unpaid except for ‘tucker’. He remembered the humiliation of being refused permission to withdraw even small amounts from his compulsory savings. He estimated he was owed around $400 000 and without it he would have to ‘go on slaving’. He was unsure if he could afford to refuse the $4000. Percy Bedourie was contracted out to work when he was 12 and paid mainly in rations, tobacco and an occasional pair of boots. He never saw his pay which went direct to the protector. The $4000 offer equated to $181 per year for each of the 22 years he worked under the system. He said that if he didn’t accept it he’d get nothing.

~ Ros Kidd, Trustees on Trial: Recovering the stolen wages, Aboriginal Studies Press, 2006, pp.9–10.

Speaking of Occupy(ed) Land…

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“Mooners, bongo-drummers, green salvationists, and under-appreciated arts graduates of the world unite and take over!” #occupymelb

“Mooners, bongo-drummers, green salvationists, and under-appreciated arts graduates of the world unite and take over!” Or: moar blah about Occupy Melbourne.

“For Democracy and Discipline: A Plea to Occupy Melbourne”, James Pollard, abstractblack, October 25, 2011: This is an article on the eviction of the occupation. In it, I try to show how certain assumptions and ways of action, crystalised in the chants we raised on the day of eviction, defined and limited what the occupation was. Throughout the week, a clique of liberal-pacifist activists attempted to impose these ideas upon the entire assembly, and to take control of the general assembly. In the wake of the eviction, their coup over the assembly has come to pass, leaving us in circumstances that demand reflection, re-organisation, and preparation before future action can be carried out with confidence. In the same spirit, the Rooftop Collective has published some Notes on Occupy Melbourne. What it might mean. Where we might take it., October 25, 2011. Liberal commentary @ The Occupy movement and the Importance of Civil Protest, Sarah Joseph, Castan Centre for Human Rights Law blog, October 26, 2011.

Norwegian Blues. Or: On Utoya: Anders Breivik, right terror, racism and Europe edited by Elizabeth Humphrys, Guy Rundle and Tad Tietze, available now on Amazon Kindle and other platforms. Or visit www.onutoya.com.

Other. Or: might as well dump some interestink/useful links here eh. Contra Info // Interface: a journal for and about social movements // Retort Mailing List.

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But here steps in Satan… #occupymelb

But here steps in Satan, the eternal rebel, the first freethinker and the emancipator of worlds. He makes man ashamed of his bestial ignorance and obedience; he emancipates him, stamps upon his brow the seal of liberty and humanity, in urging him to disobey and eat of the fruit of knowledge…

Finally, brethren, be strengthened in the Lord and in the might of his power. 11 Put you on the armour of God, that you may be able to stand against the deceits of the devil. 12 For our wrestling is not against flesh and blood; but against principalities and powers, against the rulers of the world of this darkness, against the spirits of wickedness in the high places.

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Why occupy? #occupymelb #occupyX

Why not?

This video of Friday morning’s eviction of Occupy Melbourne is neat.

Inspired by Dr_Tad, Mark Bahnisch @ Larvatus Proedo has some blah on Occupy Australia and the Antipodean “bubble” (October 22, 2011), talkin’ ’bout a revolution Australian exceptionalism. Why is Australia a “bubble”, seemingly insulated from the winds of change blowing throughout the world? queries Mark.

Something to do with history, apparently. That, and the fact that Australia isn’t NotAustralia (where things are different).

Speaking of bubbles, Living on a Knife’s Edge (PDF), a report released last (“Anti-Poverty”) week by United Voice, cites the following statistics with regards social inequality in Australia:

• Close to 20% of Australian workers are categorised as low-paid, an increase from 14.5% three decades ago.
• A study of working poverty found that in 2005-2006, 10% of Australians lived in poverty, or approximately 1.16 million households. Of these 1.16 million households 18% had someone in paid employment.
• The wealthiest 20% of households in 2009–10, accounted for 62% of total household net worth; an average net worth of $2.2 million per household. The poorest 20% of households, accounted for 1% of total household net worth; an average net worth of $32,000 per household.
• Low to moderate income households are resorting to increasing their levels of debt to keep up with the cost of living. RBA statistics show that in March 2011 the ratio of household debt to disposable income was 155.1%, compared to 33.7% in March 1977.

It’s not all bad news, however. While Spotless cleaners moan and groan, QANTAS CEO Alan Joyce is enjoying a 71 per cent rise, taking his annual pay package to $5 million.

More blah on why some people are angry and upset @ Occupy movement will go on as long as the people are feeling aggrieved (Mike Steketee, The Australian, October 22, 2011); Joseph Stiglitz expresses concern over bikies bankers in Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1% (Vanity Fair, May 2011). A slightly odd reflection on why (not) Occupy Melbourne here; Raili Simojoki recalls her experience here.

See also : Gramsci and Left Managerialism : Kees van der Pijl | Confronting Neoliberal Regimes: The Post-Marxist Embrace of Populism and Realpolitik (Boris Frankel) | “Crisis”.

Utopia or bust

Never in history has there been such a glaring contrast between what could be and what actually exists.

It’s hardly necessary to go into all the problems in the world today — most of them are widely known, and to dwell on them usually does little more than dull us to their reality. But even if we are “stoic enough to endure the misfortunes of others,” the present social deterioration ultimately impinges on us all. Those who don’t face direct physical repression still have to face the mental repressions imposed by an increasingly mean, stressful, ignorant and ugly world. Those who escape economic poverty cannot escape the general impoverishment of life.

And even life at this pitiful level cannot continue for long. The ravaging of the planet by the global development of capitalism has brought us to the point where humanity may become extinct within a few decades.

Yet this same development has made it possible to abolish the system of hierarchy and exploitation that was previously based on material scarcity and to inaugurate a new, genuinely liberated form of society.

Plunging from one disaster to another on its way to mass insanity and ecological apocalypse, this system has developed a momentum that is out of control, even by its supposed masters. As we approach a world in which we won’t be able to leave our fortified ghettoes without armed guards, or even go outdoors without applying sunscreen lest we get skin cancer, it’s hard to take seriously those who advise us to beg for a few reforms.

What is needed, I believe, is a worldwide participatory-democracy revolution that would abolish both capitalism and the state. This is admittedly a big order, but I’m afraid that nothing less can get to the root of our problems. It may seem absurd to talk about revolution; but all the alternatives assume the continuation of the present system, which is even more absurd…

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Robert Doyle : F*cking magnets, how do they work? #occupymelb

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Robert Doyle : “Selfish rabble got what it deserved.” ORLLY? #occupymelb

Oh yeah. Tricksy police in Sydney smashed #occupysydney at approximately 5am this morning. Maybe 40 or so arrests, camp destroyed. Video seized along with arrested. Pride. Integrity. Guts.

I’m beginning to believe that Robert Doyle may not be the sharpest tool in the shed.

Either that, or he assumes his audience are fools.

In an opinion piece in the Sunday Herald Sun (‘Selfish rabble got what it deserved’, October 23, 2011), the Lord Mayor makes numerous assertions regarding the nature of the occupation, its aims and composition.

These claims are supplemented by straight-forward abuse.

According to the Lord Mayor, those who occupied the City Square were a “self-righteous, narcissistic, self-indulgent rabble”; lying, violent, thugs, both comically-amateurish malcontents and–simultaneously–professionally-trained vandals, acting under the influence of sinister forces of strange and exotic origin.

A brief survey of the contribution to public discourse by the numerous trolls populating Facebook, Twitter and other social media platforms reveals that the sentiments expressed by the Lord Mayor find their echo in the quasi-demented outpourings of this unpaid army. To cite just one of many possible examples: local yuppie Cameron Voss (“Website Producer at Australian Football League”) tweeted that he wished more than 20 occupiers had been injured by police on Friday. (Then again, he is a Hawthorn supporter.) As Andrew O’Hagan wrote in the October 6 edition of the London Review of Books: “Twitter is marvellous in the way a school playground is marvellous: full of life, full of information, and heaving with bullies.”

So much for the bullies.

Well, not quite.

Robert asks:

And what of the promises of Occupy Melbourne spokespeople during the week in the media – that they would vacate City Square peacefully once requested to do so?

What of their specific requests to police that they be given some notice so they could leave peacefully?

Good questions. What promises? Made by whom? And with what authority?

On Thursday, October 20, Occupy Melbourne released a media statement regarding the fact that Inspector Bernie Jackson of the Melbourne East police station met with protesters to discuss a potential eviction scenario. It declared that his statement would be discussed at the General Assembly that evening. A further media release on the morning of the eviction (Friday, October 21) stated that Occupy Melbourne intended to remain at the Square.

And the rest, as they say, is history.

Again, look at the video footage. Peaceful? Hardly. And how do these protesters explain the knives, hammers, bricks, bottles and flammable liquids that we found in their illegal tent city? What were they for?

Obviously believing himself to have scored a coup, Robert repeats himself:

THE protest was infiltrated by professionals: what were those knives, hammers, bottles, bricks and fuel for?

Why, what possible use could anybody have for knives, hammers, bottles, bricks or fuel? Possibly, to cut things, hammer things, store liquids, anchor ropes and to keep things warm. If the Lord Mayor believes such mundane items pose a threat to public safety, he could ban carpenters, cooks, builders and other ‘professionals’ from entering the CBD.

You know it makes sense.

And the final irony?

“We are the 99 per cent,” they chanted.

But they are not the 99 per cent.

Literally-speaking, Robert is of course correct: 3,960,000-plus people simply won’t fit into the City Square. As a former English teacher, however, he should be familiar with the use of metaphor. Further, as a literate politician, Robert should also be familiar–even if only roughly–with the field of economics, and the use of such rhetoric is derived from the Nobel-prize winning economist Joseph E. Stiglitz.

In the May issue of Vanity Fair, Stiglitz wrote an article titled ‘Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1%’, in which he claimed that the top 1 percent of the US population control 40 percent of the national wealth, and proceeded to elaborate why this fact, and others like it, spells trouble.

He concludes his brief analysis as follows:

The top 1 percent have the best houses, the best educations, the best doctors, and the best lifestyles, but there is one thing that money doesn’t seem to have bought: an understanding that their fate is bound up with how the other 99 percent live. Throughout history, this is something that the top 1 percent eventually do learn. Too late.

Aside from having a poor command of rhetoric and economics, Robert would also appear to have a slippery grasp of fundamental legal principles. Thus:

NO ONE gets arrested for protesting: you have to escalate it, break the law, get violent. And there were more than 50 arrests.

In reality, people get arrested because the police decide to arrest them. They are then sometimes charged. Sometimes they’re not.

On Friday, many more than 50 people were detained by police. Not all of them, however, were charged with a criminal offence. Some were released. Those charged are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a properly-constituted court of law.

In short: Robert Doyle is a fucking cunt (Geoff Lemon, Heathen Scripture, October 22, 2011).

See also : Doyle defiant as protesters plan legal action, Peter Munro, Deborah Gough and Mark Russell, The Age, October 23, 2011.

Bonus Gnome!

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What’s a Tiananmen? #occupymelb

If as a nation we support those declaring their aspirations in Cairo’s Tahrir Square or before that in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square and Berlin’s Potsdamer Platz, then we surely are bound to defend the rights of the “occupy” movement.

Actually, Melbourne Lord Mayor Robert Doyle is only bound by political expediency–and bad advice, presumably emanating from government and police authorities. Otherwise, the defence of civil rights has a very definite legal dimension, while Dr_Tad has some interesting disco on the protest’s political dimension here. Nicola Paris is presumably one of several photographers to have documented the removal of police ID prior to police action: a practice disavowed by police command but now standard practice for at least a decade and adopted so as to limit police liability in civil cases.

I wonder if this policeman will escape caution?

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