Blog posts

    24 Jan 2011

    Milan Rai

    Milan Rai reports from the WRI Triennial in India

    One of the most poignant moments of the conference so far was Samarendra Das’s cry to the audience: “We do not want your research! It is not useful to us. We have simple questions, such as: what should the price of bauxite be?”

    The interesting things here are “useful research” and “we – you”. What is that polarity?

    Before talking about that, I should explain about the pricing question.

    Bauxite is often found on mountain tops; it’s the raw material for aluminium. In India…

    24 Jan 2011

    Virginia Moffatt

    Virginia Moffatt reflects on having a partner imprisoned

    To all intents and purposes, last Wednesday was a normal day. I dropped my husband, Chris Cole, in Headington and watched him walk away in the darkness to the London bus, as I often do. Then I  headed back home for the usual morning routine of breakfast, sandwich making, and the school run.

    But last Wednesday was different in one respect. For the second time in four years, Chris was returning to Westminster Magistrates to “wilfully refuse” to pay a fine he’d incurred during  an …

    23 Jan 2011

    Sareena Rai

    Rai Ko Ris, A punk band from Nepal, toured Europe last autumn. Frontwoman Sareena Rai describes how the anarchist scene surprised her.

    “To exist as a band without the corporate music industry is in itself a political feat” – sticker stuck on a wall at a venue in North Germany

    Sitting in a village on the edge of Kathmandu happily listening to the Subhumans, I had this yearning to go to Europe.

    A good friend of ours from Holland calls the West “the fortress”; he said the people, the culture, and the way the whole place works is like a fortress, sealed and intimidating. I agreed with him and so…

    22 Jan 2011

    Jill Gibbon

    Jill Gibbon draws spooks and arms dealers in B'ham

    This month’s drawings come from a graduate recruitment fair, held at the NEC, Birmingham at the end of October. The impact of the recession was clear – the show barely filled one of the twenty exhibition halls, and it was dominated by defence. Exhibitors included BAE Systems, EADs, Rolls Royce, Selex, the army, air force, GCHQ and M15. In spite of this, defence was curiously absent from the list of careers in the show guide.

    BAE Systems appeared, instead, under almost every other…

    25 Oct 2010

    Michael Albert, Sam McCann

    Climate change and capitalism: Six points of view

    PN: In your view, can we halt runaway climate change without overthrowing capitalism? If not, why not? Or, if we can, why do you think that is possible?

    MA: In theory, yes – capitalism has a built in drive to accumulate – and a structural incapacity to count effects on the environment into market valuations. So left to its own, with regulation, etc., it is not just incredibly harmful and destructive of human potentials, productive of poverty, and so…

    25 Oct 2010

    Ewa Jasiewicz, Sam McCann

    Climate change and capitalism: Six points of view

    PN: Can we halt runaway climate change without overthrowing capitalism?

    EJ: It’s interesting that you talk about overthrowing capitalism because I think there’s a commonly used expression—overthrowing or dismantling or smashing—and I think that can sometimes be a little bit inaccurate about the nature of capitalism, which is a social relationship, an economic relationship that we are all participating in and reproducing on a daily basis. So I liked…

    25 Oct 2010

    Sam McCann, Phil Thornhill

    Climate change and capitalism: Six points of view

    PN: In your view, can we halt runaway climate change without overthrowing capitalism as well?

    PT: I think you’d have to take the first question, which is a quite valid one, which is: ‘can we halt runaway climate change.’ There are serious reasons to think that we won’t be able to and that we’re too late already…. It could be a more complex question in that, if we ever get into a situation in which something that dire is happening, we’ll be doing all…

    25 Oct 2010

    Barry Cager, Sam McCann

    Climate change and capitalism: Six points of view

    PN: Can we halt runaway climate change without overthrowing capitalism?

    BC: No, it’s impossible. Short answer. Well, I really don’t believe it’s possible at all, because, for a start, the way capitalism is set up is based on growth, and it would basically disintegrate without growing. And so, a planet is finite, and all the resources that capitalism depends on are finite, so it’s not going to last, it’s not sustainable. But before it’s actually…

    25 Oct 2010

    Gabriel Carlyle, Sam McCann

    Climate change and capitalism: Six points of view

    PN: In your view, can we halt runaway climate change without overthrowing capitalism?

    GC: I hope so – because if we can’t then it looks like we’re well and truly stuffed.

    PN: Why?

    GC: I think the burden of proof is on those who say that we can’t – not least because if they’re right then this severely limits the range of strategies that it’s sensible to pursue.

    Some activists simply assert that it’…

    25 Oct 2010

    Cornerstone Cath, Sam McCann

    Climate change and capitalism: Six points of view

    PN: How do you see the relationship between capitalism and climate change?

    CC: I think they’re inherently linked because capitalism can only exist with continual growth based on turning natural resources, i.e. bits of planet, into money. And the way it does that is by chopping it up, excavating it, turning it into product, burning it, disposing of it. Basically whatever it takes, we’ll degrade, and that leads to climate change.

    PN: Can…

    22 Oct 2010

    Dariush Sokolov

    Dariush Sokolov reports from No Borders' camp

    25 June 2010, Steenokkerzeel by the airport outside Brussels, 60 people occupy the building site of the new 127 tris immigration detention centre, shutting down work for a day, taking direct action against the construction site, and upping the ante in a campaign of resistance against the border regime in Belgium.

    Over the past year: successful blockades of most of the six existing detention centres, including the simultaneous blockade of Bruges and Vottem by over 150 people last…

    25 Jan 2010

    Milan Rai

    Milan Rai reports from the WRI Triennial in India

    On the second morning (the third day) of the Triennial, we had our first “reflectors” session. The reflectors were five people who had been chosen to give their reaction to the conference so far. There were four women (all English-speaking, one African, one Australasian, one European, one North American) and one man (Spanish-speaking, Latin American).

    Incidentally, this reminds me of something Jai Sen said about the book he co-edited: World Social Forum: Challenging Empires. They set…

    24 Jan 2010

    Milan Rai

    Milan Rai reports from the WRI Triennial in India

    What was the “breaking news” I promised at the beginning of the last posting? Well, yesterday I sat in on a discussion group that decided to put forward a major proposal to the council of War Resisters International, suggesting an investigation of the feasibility and desirability of WRI addressing the extent to which climate change, and in particular the threat of runaway climate change, affects the anti-militarist and social justice struggles it is currently involved in, or supporting.…

    24 Jan 2010

    Milan Rai

    Milan Rai reports from the WRI Triennial in India

    The breaking news just doesn’t stop.

    After lunch yesterday (23 January) we broke up for workshops. For some reason we had two workshop slots of differing lengths, and there was also the option for many of them of continuing the workshop after the break. The first slot (2 hours) I went to hear Bela Bhatia talking about the conflict in the state of Chhattisgarh, where police and Maoists are fighting a vicious war in a tribal area. (Tribal people are known as “adivasis” or “earliest/…

    24 Jan 2010

    Milan Rai

    Milan Rai reports from the WRI Triennial in India

    Can international conferences like this be justified? Lots of my friends think not. I have breaking news from Peace News on this score – the survey they dared not print. Well, no one has not dared to print it, actually, but it dramatises the story.

    Earlier today, in the morning plenary session, we had a searing moment which really made the whole thing worthwhile. We had two plenary speakers. One was Samarendra Das, who has been working for 16 years with poor communities facing…