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Filed under activism

‘Sexism in Activism’ Meeting Held in Liverpool

Yesterday afternoon, a group of about a dozen activists met in the Liverpool Social Centre to talk about the problem of sexism in activism. The event was organised by Angry Women Of Liverpool (AWOL), following a recent discussion of the everyday difficulties women face in groups across the left. But over the past few weeks, the issue has been pushed very much to the forefront locally, due to a

Categories: activism

Occupy Everything – Reflections On Why It’s Kicking Off Everywhere

Just over twelve months ago, in the wake of the anti-fees student uprising, and in the midst of what would soon become known as the 'Arab Spring', Newsnight economics editor Paul Mason posted a blog entitled 'Twenty reasons why it's kicking off everywhere'. The article went viral within seconds, and set off debates within the new, young, hyper-linked activist circles which were starting to form.

Categories: activism
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Adventures in jury duty

Today I had jury duty--or, as I prefer to call it, jury conscription. I was selected to sit for voir dire for a civil case. Before getting around to hardship questions (which was my chief practical concern, seeing as how I'm a stay-at-home-dad unable to find alternative childcare for an entire week), the plaintiff's attorney asked if anyone had any "strong feelings" about our civil justice system.

My hand shot up.

He looked a bit surprised, as if it was the kind of question he asks as a matter of course but is accustomed to receiving only the chirping of crickets in response. He asked me to explain. I raised my voice to ensure even the spectators in the back row could hear me and told him that I was absolutely opposed to the entire concept of forced jury duty and that I believed that qualified as "strong feelings." His mild surprise became something more like disbelief, and the judge gave me the arched eyebrow. Murmurs went through the court room, and I heard a couple of jurors in the box with me give quiet exclamations of "Yeah!"

The attorney said, "But yet here you are. You still came today."

To this I replied (while gesturing toward the judge and bailiff), "Yes, because they have the guns and can force me." Louder murmurs from the crowd and jury box, and quite a bit of laughter this time, too.

The attorney nodded at me, conceding the point. He then informed me that jury duty is just something you do as a citizen, like paying your taxes--"You pay taxes, right?" I said, "Yes, I do, because I'm on the receiving end of the threat of force." He then looked around to the entire jury box and said, "Do you all understand that jury duty is a requirement, a part of being a citizen? You understand that, right?" A few nods, a few stony stares.

He gave up trying to convince me of the morality of forced labor and simply asked if my feelings would prevent me from deciding on the case fairly and impartially. I admitted that, since it was a civil case, my objection to the government's actions would have no bearing on my decisions regarding the case.

Interestingly, after this exchange, another juror spoke up and said that he agreed--that he was only there because of the government's ability to compel him (okay, he wasn't that eloquent). Then juror after juror (some of whom had had a chance to speak earlier) started coming up with what appeared to be rather contrived reasons they couldn't serve. It seemed I had emboldened some of them to refuse to just go along.

Eventually, the attorney got around to asking about hardships and asked me about my situation as a stay-at-home-dad. I said that I would not be able to arrange childcare for them beyond today. The judge, looking a bit exasperated, said that that fact, combined with my "earlier statements" meant I would be excused from jury duty.

However, as I stood up to leave the court room, the judge said, "Hang on a second." My spider-sense told me he was about to make a critical mistake. I was right. "What do you suggest we do if jury duty isn't compulsory? Just ask for volunteers!?"

Yep, that's right--he actually gave me a platform to discuss the issue in front of the entire court room (there were 50-60 people in there).

"Yes! Ask for volunteers, that's fine. Just don't use force against innocent people."

He goes on, "So what should we do if a bunch of people with an interest in having the case decided a certain way come along and volunteer to be on the jury? Should we just have some government official make the decision instead of a jury?"

I replied that I was in fact opposed to the entire idea of a government monopoly on dispute resolution and that private individuals and firms should handle such things on a voluntary basis. He asked if I meant things like arbitration firms. I said that, yes, that was a great example of what I was talking about and things like that could well take the place of a monopoly court system. I said that the most important thing was not to force innocent people to do things against their will. The court room was dead silent, some people looking confused, but many aiming huge smiles my way. The judge just shook his head and said, "Okay...good luck to you" (though he said it in that way you'd talk to your idiot friend who was about to do something fantastically stupid and dangerous and wouldn't be talked out of it).

As I left, the bailiff whispered something to me while grinning quite genuinely. I couldn't make it out clearly, but the message seemed to be one of support and admiration. Then, as I passed the last row of spectators, an old man rather reminiscent of Morgan Freeman grabbed my hand and shook it, smiling ear to ear.

There you have it. I consider today a minor victory in the long struggle to shift social consciousness away from legitimization of the state.
[Author's note: while the dialogue here is not how things went down verbatim, it's awfully damn close.]

[Housekeeping note: I apologize for the state of my blog; I upgraded it and promptly lost my blogroll and all my categories. I'm rather incompetent in these matters and have no idea how to fix it yet.]

Categories: activism
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And We Are Not Yet Saved

Wangari Maathai (1 April 1940 – 25 September 2011) Derrick Bell (November 6, 1930 – October 5, 2011) Marti Kheel (August 25, 1948 – November 19, 2011) Legal scholar Derrick Bell called his 1987 book on the persistence of racial inequality “And We Are Not Saved,” prefacing the text with this Old Testament quotation: “The [...]

Categories: activism

Michelle Obama, Terrorist?

Michelle Obama is a terrorist. That’s the only conclusion possible after a close reading of the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act, which deems as “terrorism” any coordinated action, including speech acts, that in any way injures any “animal enterprise.” Let’s break it down: As has been widely reported, Michelle Obama is currently the figurehead of a [...]

Categories: Politics, activism
Tagged with: , ,

Molly’sBlog 2011-10-28 17:54:00



PERSONAL

WHAT I LIKE ABOUT THE OCCUPY MOVEMENT (PART 2):


The first part of this series was published over at my Facebook page a little while ago. Yet a movement such as the 'Occupy' protests deserves far more than one comment. There is little doubt that this has become the most extensive political movement of the last century even if the number of participants says that it is not as intensive as many others. Yet, without plan, direction or control a worldwide movement has arisen that directly challenges class society worldwide. While anarchists, especially in Spain, have been at the forefront of this movement and while anarchist methods of organizing have become the accepted standard of the protesters it would be utterly false to say that this is solely an "anarchist movement". The central themes of the movement have been those that anarchism shares with a broad left consensus. The only "point of pride" is that anarchists have shown the way to a much broader constituency that actually extends far beyond the traditional left. This is "propaganda of the deed" at its best, without self-destructive violent acts, without the illusion of provoking an immediate uprising and without the arrogant supposition that the so-called "revolutionary vanguard" (cough, cough) are the posessors of all truth. In other words the Occupy movement is amazingly morally clean for a protest movement.


But one thing I would like to point out now is how what seems to external observers as a fault is actually a virtue. I am hardly the first to point this out, and I would like to refer the reader to the Bureau of Public Secrets website for a much more thorough discussion. What I refer to is a very frequent so-called "criticism" of the Occupy movement as to its lack of "specific demands" and it seeming to be a collection point for a wide spectrum of grievances. All that I can say to this criticism is that it is "true" but it misses the point entirely. The Occupy movement has arisen as a broad protest against the inequalities and injustices of our present class societies. OF COURSE every interest group and demand will attach themselves to such a broad based movement. Perhaps even some of their activists will recognize the fact that their grievances cannot generally be solved under the present socioeconomic system.


Thus they attach themselves to a movement that (metaphorically) goes for the jugular because of the insufficiencies of their single interest group/issue groups. Make no mistake about it, the Occupy movement has "gone for the jugular". What it presents in a world diluted manner is the challenge to the representative "democracy" that revolutionary movements have laid out for almost 150 years (since the Paris Commune) ie the challenge of "direct democracy". This goes far beyond any simple reforms. It is not the question of whether the billionaires will pay their fair share of taxes. It is a question of how ordinary citizens can have enough influence to prevent any such perversions of law occuring.


The Occupy movement merely seems incoherant because its goals are far removed from what is usually considered "politics" in our societies. Its basic message is not this or that reform but rather a totally new way of "doing politics". The Movement Is The Message.

Categories: Anarchism, activism

Suggested additions to the Occupy Wall Street program

a: repudiate the national debt. enact a balanced budget amendment.

b: end the statutory “limited liability” privilege for all corporate forms. retroactively impose full liability on all corporate tortfeasors (BP, Exxon, Union Carbide, WR Grace, and others).

c: forgive all student loan debt.

d: end “qualified immunity” and other immunities for public officials at every level.

e: prosecute the war criminals and financial criminals of the past decade (at least), plus Kissinger.

f: withdraw from IMF, World Bank, OECD and similar planet-dominating financial cabals.

g: end the drug war. abolish the DEA. release all inmates imprisoned for drug-only offenses.

h: eliminate all law restricting the movement and settlement of homeless people on public lands and abandoned property. strengthen the rights of homesteaders and squatters.

i: cut the defense budget by 2/3 for 2012. close all foreign bases, recall all troops. unilaterally dismantle the nuclear weapons stockpile. merge the Navy into the Coast Guard. scrap every weapons system and program with a range greater than the continental US. defund all weapons development.

j: abolish TSA, DHS, NSA, NRO, FinCen, and replace them with nothing.

k: abolish the Federal Reserve.

l: repeal USA-PATRIOT, the Military Commissions Act and all similar “post-9/11 world” reactionary nonsense.

m: amend the Constitution to require a 75% majority of -all- members to pass new legislation, but only a 50% majority of members present to repeal legislation. ban riders and earmarks.

n: abolish federal block grants to states.

o: ban government pensions for elected officials. limit all other government pensions to $100k/yr.

p: eliminate the income cap on social security contributions.

q: implement means testing for social security retirement payments.

r: simplify the Internal Revenue Code to 50 pages or less. tax dividends and capital gains the same as income.

s: reduce patent and copyright terms to 10 years.

t: repeal all legislation restricting workers from organizing as they see fit.

u: eliminate all foreign aid. cut the State Department budget by 80%. ban diplomats from acting as corporate salesmen.

v: abolish all business subsidies and regulations which benefit big companies to the detriment of small businesses and sole traders, while doing nothing to protect the public.

w: ban all military equipment sales to foreign entities (rifles okay, tanks and gunships not).

x: abolish all law favoring big banks to the detriment of credit unions, local lending mutuals, etc.

y: statehood for DC. statehood or independence for Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa and all other disenfranchised US possessions.

z: roll back official secrecy. limit classification periods to 15 years. declassify everything up to 1996 immediately. strengthen FOIA and whistleblower protections. free Bradley Manning.

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Categories: activism

Grassroots Versus Astroturf Activism

Marches provide no challenge to the capitalist system, or its state This weekend I got some hardcore abuse from supporters of the Socialist Party for my article on their 2011 Jarrow March. Most dismissed my constructive critique as "sectarianism", but one 'Russellcooky' told me to "Fuck Off You Fascist Bastard" (even though I hadn't advocated business-and-government control of the market place,

Categories: activism
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Agora I/O For Sale

Agora I/O Laozi went well last weekend, with 1400 unique viewers across the 3 days and a steady 20-60 concurrent viewers on the video stream. We had a steady stream of folks chatting and asking questions of the speakers as well. Although I didn’t invest as much work into this Agora I/O as I did with the first, it still went off well and provided value to the community.

That said, I am selling Agora I/O. The domain, the website and social media presences are included. Make me an offer via email to me@georgedonnelly.com.

Why am I selling? Because I’m refocusing what I spend my time on. I’ve decided that I need to focus on career, my son’s unschooling and my writing. In order to do that, I’m cutting my activism profile radically.

Shield Mutual is also for sale. You get a website that’s ready to go with a nice design and logo. The concept is spelled out nicely and it’s a good domain name.

Categories: activism

Nonviolent Resistance Efforts Need your Attention

In this short video, Brazilian filmmaker Julia Bacha argues that violent resistance gets more attention than nonviolent resistance and that this helps perpetuate the cycle of violence. Nonviolent resistance is happening around us all the time. In order for it to be viewed as a viable alternative to violence, we need to give it attention. We need to focus a spotlight on nonviolent resistance efforts.

This is very insightful. We’re constantly bombarded with news of the problems that are wars, atrocities, police abuse and random violence. We don’t hear as much about the solutions. By planning and participating in nonviolent resistance, by learning about others’ nonviolent resistance and by sharing, blogging and talking about stories and videos of nonviolent resistance, we can be a part of the solution. We can show the doubters that nonviolence is the solution to violence.

By the way, here is the trailer for the Budrus (2009) documentary mentioned in the above video. It looks great!