Upcoming event – 23rd & 30th of April – Workplace Organising Skills 101

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RSVP: http://goo.gl/forms/IIFYBHsqK0

A two-day organiser training workshop, presented by two comrades from the anarcho-syndicalist union the FAU (Berlin section).

When: 11am-5pm on Saturday 23 April and Saturday 30 April. Persons wishing to participate need to be available for both dates.

Where: Activity Rooms 1 & 2, Kathleen Syme Library and Community Centre (251 Faraday St, Carlton).

As many bosses increasingly emphasise flexibility, adaptability and competition between workers as the values founding the modern workplace environment, precarity and abuse of power has become rife. As workers, many of us can easily identify the issues big and small within our workplaces which negatively impact on our received wages, the amount of hours we are expected to spend in our workplaces, our health and safety concerns and our right to be treated with dignity, equality and respect whilst at work. If you are experiencing violations within any of these aspects of your work life (or others) they do not have to be tolerated! There are always steps that can be taken for workers to level the playing field once we are armed with the right skills!

Anarchist Affinity is hosting Organiser Training 101 to help you build these skills. Based on Australian, British (Solidarity Federation), and North American (Industrial Workers of the World) experiences, the Organiser Training is an intensive, hands-on, two day workshop where participants learn basic tools needed to successfully organise and operate their workplaces democratically. OT 101 takes participants through the early development of an organising campaign. Over the weekend you will learn what exactly it means to be organised, why we do it, and techniques to carry out your own campaign.

FAU Berlin Foreigner’s Section comrades Madelaine and Carmen will take you through role plays, group facilitated discussion, and interactive lectures.

Topics include: gathering contact information, approaching co-workers, and building an organising committee relevant to workers who participate in workplace organising.

The training is for free and open to everyone who wishes to participate. We warmly encourage people to attend who have had no prior union experience or organising/activist experience. You don’t have to be working in an industry that is traditionally union-based, as long you have co-workers (in whatever capacity) we can devise a strategy to get you started! In fact if you know other colleagues in your workplace who want to see some change, bring them too. We especially encourage attendance from workers who experience disproportionate exploitation, including people of colour, first nation people, women, LGBTI workers and workers with disability.

Basic snacks and refreshments will be provided on both days, there are a variety of places to get lunch near the training venue.

If you are going to attend please send an RSVP to the Anarchist Affinity before 9 APRIL with the following information:

Name:
Phone #:
Occupation (Industry):
Other notes (i.e. dietary requirements):

But seriously, RSVP because knowing who’s coming helps us plan.

Facebook event here.

Upcoming event – 31st of March – Taking On The State! Social Anarchism, Individualism And Lifestyle Politics

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Our first discussion meeting for the year will be on Social Anarchism, Individualism And Lifestyle Politics

When: 6:30pm, 31st of March
Where: Multipurpose Room 1, Kathleen Syme Library and Community Centre (251 Faraday St, Carlton).

Anarchism is a political philosophy committed to freedom, equality and justice – seeing capitalism, the state and oppressive social relationships as the barriers to the realisation of these goals. With such a simple definition, you’d wonder why anarchism is such a broad church.

In this talk Anarchist Affinity will be looking at the historical development of the two ‘tendencies’ that are often brought together under the umbrella of anarchism: Social Anarchism and Individualism. What are they? What are lifestyle politics? We will talk about how these philosophies have shaped anarchism’s development, and how they manifest in approaches to anarchist politics and action today.

After the talk, a lively discussion and debate!

You can find facebook event page for the event here.

Some Reflections on Reclaim Australia, July 18th

The following is written by a member of Anarchist Affinity and an active Antifascist.

It seems obvious that the main conflict and debate that is raging in the immediate aftermath of the latest round of Reclaim Australia isn’t even about the fascists, but about the police, though the two are linked. Many people are shocked by the level of violence and aggression displayed by the police, and plenty of people are condemning those on the left for physical confrontation as much as they are the fascists. I think both of these views are mistaken.

For a start let’s deal with the police. It’s important that our media explains that the cops aren’t on our side-  but let’s not pretend to be surprised either. Many people see the police through the traditional liberal lens- that they exist to protect society from crime.  For the many people who copped pepper spray, saw the police pepper spray medics, took random punches to the face and received cursory “fuck offs” from the police yesterday, that notion is not going to gell particularly well with their feelings at the moment. Marxist or Anarchist theory will point out to you that the police exist to protect private property and the state, and little else.

Yesterday was one of the more open ‘iron fist under the velvet glove’ moments we’ve had in Australia in a while. Certainly the most since I’ve been an activist. Believing that cops exist to protect you probably means that you’re from a somewhat privileged background whereby the police are more friendly/less violent towards you. Try asking some of the blackfellas from Redfern why they don’t like cops; or the Grocon workers who have had their pickets smashed by riot cops because they went on strike to defend safe workplace conditions. The police are the armed protection of a stratified class society, and when they defend and facilitate fascist rallies based on the liberal ‘free speech laws’, what they’re doing is defending movements (i.e the racist fascists) who’s growth will smash working class and civil rights. There are numerous reports of racism within the Australian police force, and countless black deaths in custody that no one has ever been charged for; the Australian police are not in any way exceptional, their acts of oppression and racism are similar to that of the police forces in other nations.  Control and oppression just come with the role. The psychology of police can be debated by other people, I don’t doubt that there are police who genuinely take the job thinking of the ‘positive’ social roles, but that’s not inherently what the role of the police force is. That is why people use slogans like ACAB (All Cops Are Bastards). Not because they’re so ignorant to think every individual police person is necessarily an absolute bastard. Part of building a revolutionary movement will mean, at some stage, confronting and dismantling the police institution and replacing it with something that’s actually democratic. With something that responds to working class needs whilst maintaining the few positive social roles they do have and destroying the rest.

So, the police pulling pepper spray was ‘in response to violence from the left’, apparently. Maybe this is true, I certainly saw some of it. But I sure as hell will not condemn anyone for it*, especially when known nazi squads deliberately wandered into our crowd provoking a fight. Violence should never be a first resort or even an ideology, and by the same token neither should non-violence.  They are simply strategies employed for political purposes. We are not living in a fantasy world, where everyone is going to ‘respect’ everyone else and just stand around in the streets and have a big debate over cupcakes or tea or something. I had friends there yesterday whose rage I think was/is entirely justified; whose family members have been racially abused and attacked for years. Of course they were going to be really fucking angry. Yesterday they wanted to defend their themselves and their communities, and what they faced was an active racist and fascist movement on the streets, with the police backing them up. You can only take so much abuse before you fight back.

Some reading of the history of fascism will point out to you that fascist politics is entirely about physical domination of the streets and their opponents. Hitlers ‘Blackshirts’, Mussolinis ‘Brownshirts’, the National Front etc. We are dealing with much more than our local fundamentalist anti-abortion Catholics here. Reclaim, the United Patriots Front and their fellows on the far-right aim to use their cries of ‘free speech’ and  their ‘politically acceptable’ rallies to start building political space and a movement that will grow to allow them to dominate. At times the first call of response has been violent confrontation – we know the anarchists and communists of 1930s Germany had to employ street fighting as a tactic, and maybe if our liberal friends had supported them Hitler may not have won. The Battle of Cable Street is another classic example. Red Action in the 80’s UK forced the Nationalist movements to retreat in ways that were extremely successful.

“Only one thing could have broken our movement – if the adversary had understood its principle and from the first day had smashed with extreme brutality the nucleus of our new movement.” – Adolf Hitler, 1933 Nuremberg Nazi Party rally.

*I was pepper sprayed twice yesterday, the first time was because I was attempting to pull away a fascist who had a) punched a friend in the face and b) attempted to choke another. At that stage, he hadn’t been attacked by the left. Then the cops attempted to arrest me. It was quite clear to me and everyone else yesterday that we weren’t the ones, and never were going to be the ones to be protected. Thanks again to the comrades who pulled me out of that situation.

 

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Event – Invasion Day: Australia’s Colonial Past and Present

6:30pm, January 22, New International Bookshop (Victorian Trades Hall, 54 Victoria St, Carlton)

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Australia has a long history of colonialism, racism, and genocide. It’s a history that is whitewashed and denied in favour of the narrative we’re presented with each year on ‘Australia Day’, or what should be more accurately titled Invasion Day.

Join Anarchist Affinity on Thursday 22nd at the New International Bookshop to hear from two speakers on the real history behind Invasion Day and what it means today.

The two speakers will be followed by a Q and A session.

Speakers:

Vivian Malo – Vivian Malo is a Gooniyandi woman and co-founder of First Nations Liberation, a resistance movement and Black Power revival.

Tony Birch – Indigenous academic, novelist and historian

Check out the facebook event page here.

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Anarchist Affinity holds monthly discussion meetings on various topics. We hope to encourage greater discussion amongst anarchists and others interested in social justice and anti-capitalist ideas about strategy, tactics and political ideas.

No Borders. No Bosses. No Racist Tossers.

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Check out the text of a leaflet we distributed at the ‘Stop Abbott’s attacks on Muslims’ rally in October.

No justice on stolen land

Any notion of ‘justice’ in a nation founded on the genocide and continuing dispossession of Australia’s First Nations is a joke. Let’s not pretend that this Team Australia bullshit is new, it’s just the latest in a long line of ruling class mythologies that seek to create a loyal ‘us’ and a subhuman ‘them’. From Terra Nullius and the White Australia Policy to ‘children overboard’ and the Northern Territory intervention, the logic has not changed. Australia is a settler colonial state. It has been a white supremacist regime since 1788, and continues to be to this day. Continue reading No Borders. No Bosses. No Racist Tossers.

Melbourne Anarchist Bookfair on this weekend!

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The 4th Melbourne Anarchist Bookfair is on this Saturday the 9th of August!

The Anarchist Bookfair has become the biggest anarchist event in Melbourne, bringing together anarchists and other social and environmental justice activists to share ideas and strategies each year.

It is held at the Abbotsford Convent (1 St Heliers St, Abbotsford) from 10-6pm.

There will be over 40 anarchist and other activist stalls at the Bookfair this year. Anarchist Affinity will be having a stall. Come along and say hello, browse our zines and books, and find out about future events and actions!

There will also be 14 workshops on different topics throughout the day. You can see the schedule here.

Anarchist Affinity members will be speaking at workshops on:
‘Workers Power and Radical Labour Struggles’
‘Reclaiming Education from Neoliberalism’
‘Welfare Cuts and Collective Resistance’

Some of the other workshops worth checking out include:
‘Intersectional Feminism’
‘Fighting Operation Sovereign Borders’
‘First Nations Liberation. Decolonising NOW!’
‘What is Anarchism?’
‘Consent workshop with Undercurrent Victoria’
‘Anarchist Parenting’
‘Rise of Fascism in Europe and Australia’

For more info on the Bookfair, check out….

The Melbourne Anarchist Bookfair website

The facebook event page

The event’s safer spaces policy

Anarchist Discussion Meeting: The Necessity of Organised Anarchism

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6-7:30pm
30th July
The New International Bookshop
54 Victoria St, Carlton

Anarchism has always been a minority current in Australia. Over the last 50 years there’s been plenty of anarchist involvement in political activism, but not much understanding (in the general public, and even within the scene) as to what we’ve really been doing. Anarchist actions for too long have proved ephemeral, doing worthwhile things without building a movement.

Come along for a discussion of how and why anarchists should organise.

Check out the facebook event page here.

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Anarchist Affinity holds monthly discussion meetings on various topics. We hope to encourage greater discussion amongst anarchists and others interested in social justice and anti-capitalist ideas about strategy, tactics and political ideas.

In response to the budget

budgethockeyThere is no budget emergency. This budget is a gross assault on the conditions of the working classes, smuggled in under contrived hysteria about debt. Meanwhile, Australia’s debt to GDP rate is the third lowest in the OECD. The 2014 budget is simply concerned with enhancing the profitability of corporate Australia and the power of the state on the backs of working people. The poorest people in our society will be the most affected – this means people of colour, Aboriginal people, women, young people and people with disabilities.

Attacks on the dole are attacks on your wages. Government and business have no interest in full employment, liveable wages or good conditions. They want a pool of unemployed people large enough to drive down wages and readily replace troublesome workers. Forcing pensioners, the young, people with disabilities and single parents into work will expand this pool, and they will be forced to accept lower wages and retrograde conditions. This will affect wages and conditions in all workplaces. Attacks on the dole and pensions only serve to enhance the bargaining position of the bosses – the harder it is to be unemployed, the easier it is to crush struggles for fair conditions.

The GP tax is a corporate subsidy. Australians already pay out of pocket for 17% of all medical expenditure, though healthcare still remains elusive in rural and low income communities. The poorest are the sickest, and those of us who have the least already struggle to access basic services when the choice is between rent, food and medical expenses. The $7 GP tax will be poured into a market fund to subsidise research expenses for already massively profitable pharmaceutical corporations. The budget papers make clear that this research will be directed towards profitability and not human need.

Degrees for the rich. Slashing university funding and deregulating fees has put us on the path to $100,000 degrees and lifetime student debt. For the children of the rich it is no issue, free to buy their way in irrespective of merit, whilst working class students are increasingly excluded. Vice Chancellors will be rubbing their hands with glee, free to charge at will, there will be no limit to their multi-million dollar salaries. Meanwhile, university educators are increasingly casualised, with contract staff paid for few of the hours they are required to work.

Tony Abbott has great friends in the ALP. Liberal attacks now and in the past would be meaningless if the ALP followed through on repeated promises to repeal once re-elected. But Labor does not repeal Liberal policy; it modifies it, and builds on it. There is a clear continuity between the actions of Labor and Liberal governments. Joe Hockey wants to slash pensions, but it was Julia Gillard who forced tens of thousands of single parents onto the dole. Christopher Pyne will chain graduates with debt, but this is only possible because Hawke and Labor abolished free education. The Liberal’s budget will cut thousands of support programs for Aboriginal people, while Labor chose to continue the racist NT Intervention. Bill Shorten and the ALP want to funnel anger at Abbott’s attacks into their re-election campaign. If they are successful, the anger that Abbott has roused will be demobilised, and Abbott’s attacks will be here to stay.

Victory does not mean merely constraining the worst excesses of this budget. Even if the Abbott government was thrown out tomorrow it would not stem the tide of ruling class attacks on our hard won rights. We need to build a social movement in response to these attacks, and the system that generates them, which includes the ALP alongside the Liberals. Looking at these attacks in isolation will be fatal. We need workers to act in solidarity with the unemployed, the healthy with the sick, the citizen with the migrant. Our movement to oppose these changes will only be as strong and effective as the support we show for one another, encompassing both practical support for those most affected, and by recognising the struggles of others as our own. An injury to one is an injury to all.

www.anarchistaffinity.org

Global Fire – An evening with Michael Schmidt

Update: Statement on Michael Schmidt.

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Discussion group: class, feminism and intersectionality

Join members of Anarchist Affinity for a discussion group on the relationship between capitalism, sexism and other oppressive systems.

“Feminism doesn’t mean female corporate power or a woman President; it means no corporate power and no Presidents… Challenging sexism means challenging all hierarchy — economic, political, and personal. And that means an anarcha-feminist revolution” – Peggy Kornegger.

Thursday August 29, 7pm. New International Bookshop, basement of Trades Hall..

Suggested readings:

1. “Insurrections at the intersections: feminism, intersectionality and anarchism,” by Abbey Volcano and J Rogue.

2. “Class Struggle and Intersectionality: Isn’t Class Special?”

3. Caliban and the Witch, by Silvia Federici. Pages 7-17.