ANTI-ABORTION BIGOTS DEFEATED ON STREETS OF MELBOURNE

Today, a counter-mobilisation by an alliance of women’s and Left groups defeated the “March for the Babies”, the annual anti-abortion rally organised in Melbourne by a coalition of Catholic and Protestant zealots and Right wing politicians.

The “March for the Babies” was first held in 2009, a reaction against the decriminalisation of abortion the previous year. At its height, it drew a crowd of 10,000 or more, but counter-mobilisations in the last few years have helped its decline. The anti-abortionists marched to Parliament House and rallied on the steps, using a massive sound system to drown out opposition from the Left counter-mobilisation.

This year, the counter-mobilisation did something different. There were about 300 of us, about 50% up from last year. Most were young and most were women. The coppers set up some water barriers to keep about ten metres between us and the other mob. On the far side, the podium was waiting, complete with its massive sound system. We did the usual chants and speakers while we were waiting for the anti-abortionists to arrive and listened to a couple of impressive speeches from some very angry women until the podium crew of the anti-abortionists put some music on – very loud. We were not amused and the feeling was obviously mutual.

At this point, the pro-choice counter-mobilisation marched away from Parliament House. Our scouts, as this author later learned, had reported that their numbers were well down on last year, which had in turn been a big drop on 2011. It was a very fast march indeed, because we were racing to intercept the other side. After a brief sit-down at the corner of Collins & Exhibition Streets, we turned right into Collins, then left into Swanston and finally left again into Flinders St, where we came face to face with the anti-abortionists outside the National Gallery of Victoria. To the surprise of most of us, but also to our great pleasure, we saw there were only about 500 of them.

In the front row of the “March for the Babies” was Bernie Finn, the Liberal member of the Victorian Upper House, who has been the strongest Parliamentary ally of this campaign. One fellow on our side had a placard with a picture of Bernie, pointing out how he says he’s “pro-life” but quoting him in supporting the death penalty. Bulls-eye. The average age of the anti-abortionists was well above ours, while about half of them were men.

So we stood there, in their way – and stopped them. After a short while, a thin blue line of coppers interposed itself between the two groups, facing us. It was clear who they were protecting and from whom. For the next hour we chanted, and arguments raged between the people in the respective front rows. A few times some anti-abortionists were allowed by the cops to walk among us, preaching about the evils of abortion. Nobody thumped them, but we gave them plenty of curry and there was one six-foot plus fellow to whom this author gave a piece of his mind. After a couple of anti-abortionists lost their placards, they gave up that tactic.

Eventually, the “March for the Babies” threw in the towel. Their numbers were dwindling, their sound truck had left and, although the coppers were determined to protect them from us, they weren’t inclined to break us up to let them through. The remaining, much diminished, anti-abortionists turned around and marched away. A steward told me they were going back to Treasury Gardens, where they’d assembled, but somebody else said they were going to Parliament by a shorter, but less public route. While a score or so protestors argued vehemently with the one or two anti-abortionists who couldn’t drag themselves away from the scene, the MACG contingent left, satisfied with a good day’s work.

The MACG considers today a victory. We stood up to the foot soldiers of reaction and they blinked. With an anti-abortion Prime Minister newly installed, the religious Right will have the wind in their sails and be discussing what he can do for them. On this front, though, they have been defeated. They tried to march in Melbourne, where abortion has been decriminalised, and they couldn’t.

Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group
12 October 2013

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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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