July 2009

The Neurotypical Privilege Checklist – absolutely essential reading

This list compiled by Bev of Asperger Square 8 is not only incredible, it’s something that i absolutely cannot believe hasn’t been done before – and yet, Googling for “neurotypical privilege”, the only thing i can find that isn’t a link to Bev’s post i…

Continue reading at Biodiverse Resistance …

Author Speaks Sense

"Society is, always has been and always will be a structure for the exploitation and oppression of the majority through systems of political force dictated by an élite, enforced by thugs, uniformed or not, and upheld by a willful ignorance and stupidity on the part of the very majority whom the system oppresses." ~ Richard Morgan


(Thanks to Jim B for sending me the quote)
Categories: Anarchism, Political

Governmental Infallibility

"La, la, la, not listening..."

Democracy is all about listening to other people's opinions, right? Respecting them even if we disagree and all that, ye? Getting a vote and a say in things.

If the above is true then democratic governments need to be open to criticism if nothing else. Not necessarily my kind of criticism agreed, but you would at least expect them to be able to take some pointers from a guy who ran a government watchdog for ten years? Wouldn't you?

Apparently not.

Sir Jonathon Porritt gave the government a well-deserved kicking as he left office. He ran the Sustainable Development Commission so has, I suspect, a pretty good idea of parliament machinations and departmental in-fighting.

The main thrust of his attack was, unsurprisingly, that this government has put consumer-driven economic growth before all else and has utterly failed to meet many of it's own targets, particularly on child poverty and fuel poverty, while wasting billions in Iraq and Afghanistan. While none of this is breaking news the fact that this guy said it is. It required a response.

And what did it get?

The usual blah, blah, blah quoting percentages and targets and figures from some Energy Department flunky. It is always the same: deflect the criticism with statistics. Divert attention away from the 'bad things' by quoting some chart which shows some 'good things' (the old adage about "lies, damned lies and stastistics" notwithstanding).

And here's my point.

Time and again various government 'watchdogs' (sheesh) advise them on policy and time and again the government steamrollers them with numbers or just plain ignores them. Surely when a government ceases to listen even to it's own appointed critics, never mind the voting populace, then it can hardly be called a 'democracy'?
Categories: Anarchism, Political

All Quiet On The Vestas Front

It was an oddly relaxed mid-afternoon on the seventh day of the Vestas wind turbine factory occupation yesterday, as demonstrators in the roundabout solidarity camp listened to a couple of musicians in the Isle of Wight sunshine.With Vestas going to court on Wednesday in an attempt to get legal backing for an eviction, it was very much a case of the calm before the storm. In the meantime there

FACTORY UNDER OCCUPATION: Save 600 jobs at Vestas!

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Vestas Blades UK on the Isle of Wight is due to close on 31st July. 600 jobs will be lost immediately, many more jobs that depend on Vestas will follow. This makes no sense from a green or a labour perspective!

The government has just announced a major expansion of renewable energy including wind power. We are calling on Vestas to keep the factories open, saving jobs and offering those who want to leave a better redundancy deal. We are calling on the government to intervene to save jobs at Vestas – through nationalisation if that is what it takes – to show that it is serious about saving the planet.

For further formation and to support the workers, please visit: http://savevestas.wordpress.com/

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Vestas wind turbine pickets mount 21st century-style protest

Huddled around a smoking brazier early today , the fluorescent-vested union officials looked perfectly at home.

But surrounding them on the traffic island at the far end of Newport’s St Cross industrial estate, on the Isle of Wight, was a scene that looked a little different from the usual picket line. Battered army surplus boots stuck out of the handful of colourful tents, a half-drunk bottle of South African chardonnay lay on the grass, and the gazebo hastily bought from the local B&Q contained the expected tea, coffee and biscuits, but also two cartons of soya milk.

On a grass mound outside the HQ of wind turbine maker Vestas Wind Systems, which is set to shut down with the loss of up to 600 jobs, a new kind of industrial dispute has taken shape. About 25 workers have occupied the plant in an attempt to prevent the closure, scheduled for 31 July, supported by a unique “red and green” coalition.

This is a protest significant not just for the way in which it has seen environmental campaigners, socialist activists and trade unionists join forces, but also for the way in which members of a previously non-unionised workforce in the largely conservative island community have been mobilised in a way they never dreamed of.

Tonight, about 300 people marched from the town centre to the plant for a rally to show their support for the action. Inside, the men, who since their arrival on Monday have been sleeping shifts on office floors, take it in turns to go out on a balcony to wave at supporters or pass the time with a keyboard discovered under a desk. “People have been putting on headphones, playing prerecorded tracks and pretending to be DJs,” said Ian Terry, 23, one of the occupiers.

A game invented to kill time involves throwing and catching balls while seated on increasingly far apart office chairs in the corridor.

Since Thursday morning, Vestas’ management has been providing them with two meals a day, so far centred on cheese sandwiches but the men said they were still hungry. Tobacco has been provided by their workmates outside, who throw tennis balls stuffed with goodies.

Those that land short are scooped up using a pole of joined-together broom handles, with a sticky ball of tape attached.

Spirits are high, according to Terry. “The atmosphere is brilliant,” he said. “I think it’s amazing what people have done. We know there are different groups with different opinions on certain things but they’re all singing from the same hymn sheet and support is just snowballing.”

Outside Sean McDonagh, 32, a team leader at the plant, marvelled at the cultural shift of the last week. “For so long, management kept us down; they’ve broken us and bullied us,” he said. “To move up the ladder you had to do anything the management wanted. If you didn’t want to do that they didn’t want to know. People were too scared to stand up for themselves, because they were worried they’d lose their jobs. It’s good money, and that’s really what the management has worked on.”

All that has changed after the arrival, last month, of a handful of socialist environmental campaigners from the group Workers’ Climate Action.

By night, they camped at a farm near Cowes and by day set about hanging around the gates of Vestas’ two plants at shift-change times, handing out leaflets. Initially, they were met with scepticism, but gradually a small number of workers began to be convinced that action could make a difference.

Last week an occupation committee formed and by Monday evening the men had taken their places inside the plant.

Vestas, the world’s biggest wind turbine maker, claimed tonight that “outsiders” were involved in the occupation of the closure-threatened factory but the real blame lay with “faceless nimbys” who opposed wind schemes in Britain, leading to them having to close the factory.

The Denmark-based company, which will go to court on Wednesday seeking a possession order to stop the occupation, also said that green activists should support the switch of manufacturing from the UK to America which was its main market, explaining that having to send the blades by ship across the Atlantic raised the carbon footprint of Vestas.

Peter Kruse, a spokesman for Vestas at its head office in Copenhagen, said the company had been surprised by the occupation and would do all it could to bring it to a peaceful end. He refused to say whether the company would change its mind but said that even with some government aid it “can’t make ends meet”.

Campaigners rejected the claims that anyone other than Vestas staff were involved in the sit-in and blamed the company for changing its mind, from an expansion of the plant to closure.

But Kruse said the company could not sustain a business at Newport because of the credit crunch, a weakening of the pound and a lack of political action. Later, the Vestas man said he recognised the government was doing “a lot for us”.

Back on the traffic island, Jonathan Neale, of the Campaign Against Climate Change, said the coalition gathered there was like nothing he had ever seen in Britain.

“I grew up in the southern US and I remember when the civil rights movement started. This feels like 1960.”

Rachel Williams, Guardian, Friday 24 July 2009


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Size Of An iPod 2

Workers’ Fightback: Update 12

On Monday evening, twenty-five workers at the UK's only wind turbine factory began an occupation, taking direct action against their imminent redundancy.As reported in Update 11, the government intends to let Vestas on the Isle of Wight close, despite the fact that Energy and Climate Change Secretary Ed Milliband wants to invest £100 billion in renewable energy over the next decade. However, he

Voices Of Sanity

It is always disappointing, as a Blogger, when some anonymous or other leaves a comment clearly in disagreement with my own point of view, receives a lengthy response and then fails to follow it up.In this case I gave 'anon' two responses and the choice of responding to either or both - I clearly hadn't considered the option of a complete lack of response which was a bit remiss. One was rude in a

Categories: Political

Hot Air

Surely one of the most irritating facets of modern life is the overwhelming preponderance of "business speak" creeping into every corner. It's the underlying, with the emphasis on lying, ethos of the market made flesh. This carefully constructed language mirrors the (capitalist) system that gave birth to it and is filled accordingly with empty promises and delusional contradictions.It's your

Categories: Political
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Workers’ Fightback: Update 11

How bitter the irony must have been for workers at the UK’s only wind turbine factory last Wednesday.That day, Energy and Climate Change Secretary Ed Miliband announced that the government intends to invest more than £100 billion over the next decade, increasing the proportion of energy obtained from renewable sources from by 13%. Most scientists and many campaigners say we need much faster