Defend the Fertility Control Clinic: Saturday 27 July

The Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group circulates the following message from the Campaign for Women’s Reproductive Rights in the spirit of the united front. The MACG supports the clinic defence actions of CWRR.

Saturday, 27 July, 9.30 am
Defend the Fertility Control Clinic

Help to keep away the Rosary Parade, that medieval appearance of the Helpers of God’s Precious Infants on the 4th Saturday every month. It may look just weird, but its purpose is nasty and serious.

This video about Texas’ recent anti-abortion law reminds us why we have to defend the clinic: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/rachel-maddow-show/52516513#52516553 No one else will!

See you Saturday morning. Then go with us to the rally for refugees (1.00 pm, State Library).

Where: 118 Wellington Parade, East Melbourne (between Simpson & Powlett Sts)

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Public meeting: Big Steps Needed for Equal Pay

The Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group is publishing the message below in the spirit of the united front. We support the objective of the Big Steps campaign, which is to achieve equal pay for workers in child care and early childhood education. We support achieving that objective by class struggle.

Thursday 11 July, 7:00 pm
Coburg Concert Hall, 90 Bell St, Coburg

Venue is wheelchair accessible. Close to Coburg train station, Sydney Road Tram. Lots of free parking.

Come to a public meeting to discuss why equal pay advocates, reproductive rights campaigners and other feminists and unionists are fans of the United Voice Big Steps campaign. This initiative by early childhood educators is organising to win funding to improve pay for these low paid workers. It insists that quality early childhood education is a social responsibility and funding should come from government, not from the pockets working parents. Access to high quality education and care for pre-school aged children is a necessity for working parents and fundamental to women being able to exercise choices. Winning pay rises for the predominantly women workers who educate and care for children is also key to closing the gender based pay gap.

Hear from campaigners, share your experiences and ideas and discuss how together we can achieve big steps forward for both women workers and children.

Speakers

Tamika Hicks: Early childhood educator and National Convener for the Big Steps Campaign

Katerina Check: Pay Justice Action mover and shaker and CPSU workplace delegate

Debbie Brennan: Melbourne Radical Women Organiser, ASU workplace delegate and leader in the reproductive rights movement

Gaye Demanuele: Feminist birth worker and Campaign for Women’s Reproductive Rights activist.

Sally Baker: Early Childhood Educator, proud Big Steps campaigner and union member. Mother of 3 year old twins attending an early childhood centre.

Alison Thorne: Equal pay organiser and CPSU workplace delegate, will chair the public meeting.

Co-hosted by Pay Justice Action, Campaign for Women’s Reproductive Rights and Radical Women

For more information contact Pay Justice Action: pay.justice.action@iinet.net. au
Campaign for Women’s Reproductive Rights: cwrr.justice@hotmail.com
Radical Women: radicalwomen@optusnet.com.au

http://www.bigsteps.org.au

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Defend the Fertility Control Clinic! Sat 22 Jun 2013

This notice is posted in the spirit of the united front. The Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group supports the clinic defence actions of the Campaign for Women’s Reproductive Rights.

Next Clinic Defence
Saturday, 22 June, 9.30 am
Fertility Control Clinic, 118 Wellington Parade, East Melbourne

CWRR is returning to monthly defences on the 4th Saturday, the day of the Rosary Parade. We’ll keep assessing this, and if there’s a need to increase again to weekly, we will. We’ll keep you posted. Looking forward to seeing you on the 22nd. Let’s make it big.

Please get in touch if you need more information.

Yours in solidarity
Campaign for Women’s Reproductive Rights

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Defend the Fertility Control Clinic 11 May 2013

The following message from the Campaign for Women’s Reproductive Rights is posted by the Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group in the spirit of the united front. The MACG supports the clinic defence actions of the CWRR.
———————————————————————————————————————————

Defend the Fertility Control Clinic
Saturday, 11 May, 9.30 am

The Fertility Control Clinic in East Melbourne needs your help this Saturday. As seen on channel 10’s The Project TV show a few weeks ago, the Helpers of God’s Precious Infants will be up to their dirty tricks again. They will be outside the clinic as they are every day of the week to intimidate and harass women exercising their right to choose outside a legal health centre.

Please help us fight the good fight and defend Australia’s first clinic to provide safe and affordable abortions in Australia this Saturday!
Together we can make a difference!

The clinic defence is every Saturday at 9.30 am. Join us any Saturday you can.
118 Wellington Parade, East Melbourne

In solidarity
Campaign for Women’s Reproductive Rights (CWRR)

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May Day 2013

MAY DAY

The First May Day

May Day is International Workers’ Day. This is the day we celebrate the existence and strength of the labour movement and all the issues of the labour movement, big and small, worldwide, can be linked up with each other with the ultimate goal of abolishing capitalism. May Day began in 1886 in the United States, when Anarchist unions in Chicago called a general strike on 1 May to win the 8 hour day. At a protest a few days later, a bomb killed 7 police and 4 others. Eight Anarchist union organisers were arrested and convicted in a farcical trial. Four were executed. The protests for the exoneration of the Haymarket Martyrs spread around the world and a movement was born.

The Crisis that Won’t Go Away

The Global Financial Crisis lingers in many places and, in Europe, continues to intensify. Highly indebted governments in Ireland and Southern Europe have used drastic austerity measures, to no avail. Instead of improving public finances, austerity has undermined them further by depressing economic activity and thus the governments’ tax base. Britain and France are now joining in with austerity measures, which will only aggravate problems. Meanwhile, public debt in both the US and Japan continues to grow unsustainably. And here in Australia, austerity is being practiced by many State governments and threatened post-election at the Federal level.

Fighting Back Worldwide

In Europe, there have been massive mobilisations of the working class against austerity. Spain, Portugal, Italy and especially Greece have seen massive general strikes and demonstrations. There was a partially successful general strike across Southern Europe on 14 November last year. Meanwhile, the working class of Asia is on the march. Workers in China are breaking new records in strike statistics every year and the so-called “Communist” Party there has given up trying to suppress them all. In Indonesia, workers have been staging massive strikes since late last year and winning big gains, including a 40% rise in the minimum wage. And in India, workers have staged general strikes in February and September 2012 and February 2013. This is an unprecedented level of struggle.

World Revolution

As long as capitalism endures, the world will be wracked by economic crisis and war, but there is a solution. We can unite across national borders with a global movement against capitalism and all its ills. We can build our movement with federalism and direct democracy rather than authoritarianism and hierarchy. And we can make a revolution, forging a classless global society of libertarian communism, where a free federation of workplaces and communities replaces capitalism and the State. We can establish, at last, a world of liberty, equality and solidarity and it will be done by practicing the values of the society we wish to create.

WORKERS OF THE WORLD, UNITE!

Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group
1 May 2013
PO Box 2120 Lygon St North
East Brunswick 3057
macg1984 (at) yahoo (dot) com (dot) au

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The ANZAC Myth

A myth is born

Australian, British and other imperialist troops land on the beach at Gallipoli. It is 25 April, 1915. It is a side-show during World War I, a vain attempt to score a knock-out blow against the Ottoman Empire and deprive Germany of an ally. The war is a clash of two great imperial alliances, attempting to re-divide the world in a struggle for markets, colonies and resources. Gallipoli is a huge waste of human life, within the gargantuan waste of life that was WWI. Official and unofficial reports to home, however, seek to glorify the ANZACs so as to promote recruitment. Events are embroidered and sometimes outright invented, with Simpson and his donkey projected as displaying a supposed heroism and nobility unique to the Australian character.

The myth continues

In subsequent wars, the myth of the nobility of the ANZACs has been used and, if possible, developed. WWII gave us the Rats of Tobruk, while even the Vietnam War is being rehabilitated through stories of the Battle of Long Tan. There, as well as in wars from Korea to Afghanistan, Australian soldiers are portrayed as heroic, benevolent, egalitarian, chivalrous and whatever other adjectives the military command think will impress public opinion. Supporting facts, while desirable, are optional, while contrary facts are suppressed whenever possible.

The uses of myth

The idolisation of the Australian soldier is promoted for two reasons. Firstly, it serves the cause of recruitment. Young men and, increasingly, women won’t volunteer to be put in harm’s way for a grubby cause like oil or an ignoble one like suppressing a national liberation movement. So attention is focused instead on the nobility of courage and the esteem of society. Secondly, the idolisation undercuts peace sentiment once a war starts. On the eve of the Iraq War, hundreds of thousands marched the streets of cities and towns across Australia, but once the troops landed, it was a different matter. It is easy to oppose a lying politician, but to continue when one will be accused of betraying “our troops” requires political courage of a higher order altogether.

Facing the truth

In war, soldiers do ugly things. They kill – and civilians are often the victims. Australian soldiers are no higher breed than those of other nations and if crimes like My Lai and Abu Ghraib are not attached to them, it is only because of the lesser scale of Australian imperialism and the reluctance of the capitalist media to penetrate the propaganda and expose the myth. Ugly things need to be done and lies need to be told because the Australian military are enforcers for imperialism, maintaining an unjust world order where the United States dominates and Australian capitalism has the South Pacific franchise.

In reality, the working class has no country. In whatever country we are, our enemies are our own capitalists. We can unite together and make a revolution, one which will abolish capitalism and end war forever.

END AUSTRALIAN IMPERIALISM

Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group

PO Box 2120 Lygon St North
macg1984@yahoo.com.au
East Brunswick 3057
25 April 2013

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Camp Anarchy 2013

CampAnarchy

 

Camp Anarchy 2013 – A few thoughts

A few disjointed thoughts on Camp Anarchy 2013.

Melbourne’s second Camp Anarchy was held at Camp Eureka over the recent Labour Day weekend here in Victoria.

Reviewing a conference is easy, right? You pick a broad theme and evaluate what you observed in at the event in terms of that theme, bang it out to 750 words and hit publish. Right?!

That doesn’t work so well for Camp Anarchy. There remains no coherent anarchist political current in Australia. The Camp did contain a strand of firm class politics, but it was by no means in the majority. Perhaps the best thing that could be said for the politics of Camp Anarchy is that it brings the eclectic mess together and gives it a good old stir. Political coherence takes time, effort and a hell of a lot of debate.

In this sense, the worst sessions were the best. Take “Building for Revolution” for example. The economic analysis presented by the host, and the conclusions drawn from it, were utterly erroneous.

Apparently some cascading series of bank runs is imminent and we should all sell our houses, hide gold under our mattresses and invest in permaculture. The session host argued the role of anarchists was to show through things like permaculture and mutual credit that another life is possible, and thus when the collapse occurs the mass of society will join us.

How this is “building for revolution”, I do not know.

The sessions “Building for Revolution” and “Climate Action: Social Revolution not Lifestyle Change” probably facilitated the most obvious clash between lifestylist and class struggle ideas.

On the surface all present rejected the idea that either capitalism through the market or the state through “direct intervention” offered any kind of solution to the environmental crisis. That said, the individualist and lifestylist positions advanced by some contained an oddly capitalist logic. There were plenty who seemed to think it was both possible and somehow politically useful to withdraw from the market.

These are the kinds of ideas people are advancing and calling “anarchism”, and what we must be prepared to contend with if the politics of the broad anarchist tradition is ever to be reclaimed.

In that vein, another session that was both interesting and oddly mistaken was “Real Democracy Now!”. That anarchists reject what passes for democracy in Australia is a no-brainer. It was also good to see that no one (at least who attended this session) is seriously advancing a Stirnerite individualist conception of anarchism that utterly rejects democracy as “majority rule”.

There was, however, something oddly reformist about the project proposed by “Real Democracy Now!”.

The group of anarchist comrades who hosted the session intend to establish a group to argue for directly democratic measures in Australia. They were particularly enamoured with ideas of participatory budgeting and the model pioneered by America Speaks.

That our practice should be directly democratic is central to class struggle anarchism. Federalism, recallable delegates and assemblies are both the methods of our organisations and our vision for political organisation after capitalism. But to establish a project that argues for this method without explicit anti-capitalist politics risks reformism. To argue for public participation in governance as a goal in itself, without embedded economic and social demands, does nothing to undermine either the state or capitalism. Quite the contrary.

I shall watch what comes out of Real Democracy Now! with cautious interest.

I attended two other sessions. I co-hosted “Platformism” with other comrades from Anarchist Affinity. I would be interested to know what attendees thought of it.

Also hosted by an Anarchist Affinity comrade was “Anti-mining: The struggle of farmers and workers in Indonesia”:

Unfortunately few came to the session, in which the comrade discussed the development of a grassroots network of farming communities across Java resisting Australian mining development.

***

It was a stinking hot weekend.

Politics aside, the Rec Hut at Camp Eureka was the absolute highlight. It makes me want to head out and build something in bush timber!

There are a couple of other things outside the formal sessions worth commenting on.

Kids. It was absolutely brilliant to see a political event that makes a serious effort to both provide a space for children, and to make it possible for children and parents to participate in the political program.

This wouldn’t have been possible without a serious safer spaces policy. It was good to see that at least on that question, there was amply political agreement.

***

Update: I don’t want to under-emphasize the anti-capitalist politics that were present. I only attended a narrow segment of the camp, and I missed all of Monday. Check out the programme here.

I seriously regret missing Sunday morning’s session on the state of the Union movement, but I have had a chance to catch up with the comrades who ran that session.

I would love to hear more from people who attended “Watermelons are Weapons”, “Islamaphobia” the sessions with Marjorie Thorpe and Clare Land and the session on Latin America.

I’d also like to point out that that for all I disagreed with the politics of a number of sessions I attended, there was never any sense of unpleasantness. I don’t doubt the integrity and sincerity of those who’s politics I might describe as “utterly erroneous”, and I certainly appreciate that we could have a passionate political disagreement with warmth and good humour.

I look forward to Camp Anarchy 2014.

*Re-publishing from http://www.kieransreview.com/2013/03/23/camp-anarchy-2013-review/

 

 

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