40 New Zealand anarchists still at large; London and Berlin tremble

Activists plot G20 summit mass protests against bankers in City
Richard Edwards, Crime Correspondent
Daily Telegraph
February 27, 2009

Activists are planning a mass protest against bankers in the City to coincide with the G20 summit in London.

Thousands of demonstrators and at least 40 anarchists from New Zealand are plotting a series of protests to exploit the disenchantment with City financiers blamed for dragging the economy into recession.

Scotland Yard is on alert ahead of the protest, planned for April 1 to mark the start of the G20 summit, which gathers the finance ministers and central bankers of 19 of the most important nations in the world, plus the European Union.

Organisers are labelling the event “Financial Fools’ Day”. It may cause mass disruption as demonstrators try to block traffic and buildings by lying in tents and sleeping bags across the road and it could also mar the summit from which Gordon Brown is hoping to gain political ground on an international stage.

Police are hoping to avoid the ugly scenes of the 1999 City Riot, when 46 people were injured and caused up to £2 million damage as fights broke out between police and anarchists, and the wholesale destruction which accompanied the G20 summit in Melbourne in 2006.

Supt David Hartshorn said what gave the anarchists a certain critical mass at the G20 in Melbourne was the presence of considerable numbers of anarchists from overseas. “One of our colleagues from New Zealand said he recognised at least 40 New Zealand anarchists. He knew at least 20 of them by name.”

“There were also a considerable number of anarchists from Europe. We know of people from Sweden, Germany and England. These people are like football hooligans who travel the world looking for violence.”

    Speaking of violence, and er, Germany, in Berlin expensive cars are burning. Local authorities have argued that the left should offer no comfort to these crazies, and instead do whatever it can to isolate them. “They are wreckers. If they grow in Berlin it will simply make it harder to build future developments”, one businessman was quoted as saying.

Arsonists Torch Berlin Porsches, BMWs on Economic Woe
Brett Neely

Feb. 27 (Bloomberg) — When Berlin resident Simone Klostermann returned from vacation and couldn’t find her Mercedes SLK, she thought it had been towed. Police told her the 35,000-euro ($45,000) car had been torched.

“They’d squirted something flammable into the car’s engine block in the gap between the windshield and the hood,” said Klostermann. “The engine was completely destroyed.”

The 34-year-old’s experience isn’t unique in the German capital. At least 29 vehicles were destroyed in arson attacks this year, most of them luxury cars, according to police. The number is already about 30 percent of the total for 2008. The latest to go up in flames was a Porsche, on Feb. 14, two days after a Mercedes was set alight in a public car park.

While youths in Athens protest by throwing Molotov cocktails, in Paris by toppling barricades, and in Budapest by hurling eggs at politicians, protesters in Berlin rage at their economic plight by targeting the most expensive cars — symbols of German wealth and power.

A group calling itself BMW — the initials stand for Movement for Militant Resistance [Bewegung für militanten Widerstand] in German — has claimed responsibility for several attacks in left-wing magazines and Web sites, police spokesman Bernhard Schodrowski said.

One-third of the incidents are classed as “political,” prompting officers to assign a special unit to investigate, Schodrowski said. No arrests have been made. Schodrowski attributed the arson to “a protest against the world economy and rising rents.”

rather precarious

German unemployment began to rise last November after almost three years of declines. Deutsche Bank AG Chief Economist Norbert Walter predicts the German economy, Europe’s biggest, may shrink by more than 5 percent this year.

The worst recession since World War II is fueling anger among youths across Europe who “perceive their future as rather precarious,” said Margit Mayer, a politics professor at Berlin’s Free University.

“Whether you look at the Berlin events or these anarchist groups in other European cities and countries, they are all making reference to the deepening economic crisis and how the various governments are dealing with them,” said Mayer, a specialist in urban social and protest movements.

Some groups are “very quick to attack whoever they can make out as responsible for having robbed them of decent life prospects,” according to Mayer.

The Berlin car burnings have been concentrated in up-and- coming neighborhoods such as Prenzlauer Berg, where Klostermann’s car was destroyed in May.

rich people, don’t move in here

There, new housing and building redevelopments are pushing out the squatter scene that flourished after East and West Berlin were reunited in 1990, said Andrej Holm, a sociologist at Goethe University in Frankfurt who has studied the change.

Rents that were about half the city average 10 years ago are now about 40 percent above the average, and the car attacks are an attempt to drive wealthy newcomers away, Holm said.

“It means: ‘rich people, don’t move in here — your cars will be trashed, we don’t want you here’,” he said.

Representatives from Porsche Automobil Holding SE, Daimler AG, the maker of Mercedes, and Bayerische Motoren Werke AG declined to comment on the attacks. Daimler spokeswoman Ute von Fellberg said the matter was about security in Berlin.

heap of junk that used to be a Porsche

“This is not a matter for the producer, rather it’s a matter for the city of Berlin,” BMW spokesman Alexander Bilgeri said today in a phone interview.

While Prenzlauer Berg and other central neighborhoods such as Friedrichshain and Kreuzberg are thriving, at least in parts, Berlin as a whole remains Germany’s “subsidy capital” almost 20 years after the Berlin Wall fell, said Tobias Just, a real-estate economist with Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt. Unemployment, at 14.1 percent in February, is almost double the national average.

Oliver Kappelle, who moved with his wife and two children to Friedrichshain, is unfazed by the perceived threat.

One night last month, Kappelle came across a “heap of junk that used to be a Porsche the night before,” he said. “I was just relieved that he didn’t park in the empty space behind me.”

a place where I enjoy living

Berlin has a history of political protest, with anarchist demonstrators regularly clashing with police on the streets of Kreuzberg during May 1 marches. Kreuzberg, which abutted the Berlin Wall, is represented in parliament by the Green Party’s Hans-Christian Stroebele, a former lawyer who defended members of the Baader-Meinhof gang in court.

Likewise, arson attacks on cars are not new: a Web site, “Burning Cars,” was set up to track the incidents in May 2007, one month before a summit in the northern German resort of Heiligendamm of the Group of Eight industrialized nations. There have been 290 attacks on cars since then, among them 55 Mercedes and 29 BMWs damaged or destroyed by fire, the site records.

“I wouldn’t advise someone to park their Porsche on the street” in Kreuzberg, Berlin police commissioner Dieter Glietsch told the Taz newspaper in June last year.

As the frequency of attacks increases, Klostermann, a company manager who has lived in Prenzlauer Berg for 12 years, remains unbowed.

“I would never want to be regarded as someone who can be driven out of a place where I enjoy living,” she said.

Posted in Anarchism | Leave a comment

Defend Sue Morphet!

Sue Morphet is a highly-successful businesswoman. Currently, she is CEO of Pacific Brands — an extremely demanding role. Despite this, Sue also plays an important role in the worlds of fashion and feminism, being on the Board of Directors of the L’Oréal Melbourne Fashion Festival, and helping to nurture the fruits of the women’s movement in her capacity as a member of Chief Executive Women.

Given these and myriad other responsibilities, Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan’s recent comments on executive salaries are both unfair and untenable. According to Swan — himself on a rather generous salary — “I think Australians want to see a fair system for all and I think they are rightly sickened when they see some executives walk away with large payments and many workers walk away with virtually nothing” (Swan slams ‘sickening’ executive salaries, The Age, February 27, 2009).

His comments came two days after Pacific Brands announced it was axing 1800 jobs, even though the company’s executive received pay rises.

Pacific Brands chief executive Sue Morphet was paid $1.86 million last year, her first year in the job, compared to $685,775 in 2007 when she was the company’s group general manager of underwear and hosiery.

Her predecessor as chief executive, Peter Moore, received a $3.4 million retirement payment that took his total package for 2008 to $5.8 million.

Overall, the 13 executives of 2008 received $15.4 million between them, including Mr Moore’s payout.

In 2007, 10 executives received a total of $7 million.

And so they should.

Whether the outsourcing decision was right or wrong, we’ll probably never know, but it’s safe to assume the CEO and her board agonised about scrapping so much local manufacturing and making 1800 people redundant. Certainly, multi-millionaire model Sarah Murdoch — while enjoying champagne and lobster canapes on the Queen Mary 2 in Sydney Harbour yesterday — expressed very similar sentiments.

In any case, capitalism is a risky business, and steering enterprises on a safe course through the stormy waters of the free market is seldom easy. Those who do manage to accomplish this task obviously deserve to be rewarded, and well.

Finally, it’s untrue to imply that the business class is inconsiderate or uncaring. In fact, 2009 L’Oréal Melbourne Fashion Festival Director Karen Webster’s thoughts on this year’s Festival are a clarion call: “Times are tough, there is a sense of anxiety and fear that pervades business including fashion retail. When times get tough — the tough get creative. In times of adversity it is only more important to rise above the clutter of mediocrity. So, for 2009 L’Oréal Melbourne Fashion Festival bans the bland!”

Sacked workers would do well to take note of Karen’s call, stop their complaints, demonstrate some grit, and get creative.

Posted in State / Politics | 8 Comments

Ciecmate & Newsense : ‘They’re Watching’

Ciecmate & Newsense, Broken Tooth Entertainment thru Shogun Distribution

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Cousins starts well but Good Old Collingwood wins

Cousins starts well but Magpies win
Sam Lienert
The Age
February 26, 2009

A successful AFL comeback by Ben Cousins could not prevent Collingwood streaming to a 46-point win over Richmond in the NAB Cup match at Telstra Dome on Thursday night. The Magpies outscored Richmond by 37 points in a dominant final term to win 1.13.10 (97) to 2.3.15 (51) in front of a big crowd of 37,121 to move into a pre-season semi-final…

A fairly poor first half by the Magpies and a ridiculous number of free kicks to Richmond (22 vs. 6) failed to prevent Collingwood from rolling over Richmond in the second: Cousins had little real effect on the game.

Posted in Collingwood | 2 Comments

Driving future strength, growth, profitability and sustainability

PACIFIC BRANDS

Pat Rafter has a lot to answer for. A Proud Australian, Pat relocated to Bermuda, a US tax haven, for eight years and slashed his tax bill. (Australia’s then richest man, the late Kerry Packer, famously declared “If anyone in this country doesn’t minimise their tax they want their head read.”) Following in his footsteps, Pacific Brands have decided to relocate to China.

People not only wear our brands, they sleep on our brands and accessorise their homes with our brands.
They play sport, go to work, dress their children and relax in our brands.
Every day.
Every week.
Every year.

Announcing the loss of 1,850 jobs, Chief Executive Officer, Executive Director, Sue Morphet, noted “The reduction in complexity will deliver the future strength, growth, profitability and sustainability of the business – for our shareholders and employees.”

    Sue was appointed CEO in January 2008 and prior to this was Group General Manager of Underwear & Hosiery at Pacific Brands, the largest operating group within the business.

    Sue joined Pacific Brands in 1996 as General Manager of Tontine, following which she became the General Manager of Bonds in 1999. Under her leadership, the Bonds team relaunched the iconic brand, more than doubling sales and taking the brand to women for the first time. Prior to joining Pacific Brands, Sue held senior marketing roles with Sheridan and Herbert Adams.

    Sue is a director of the L’Oréal Melbourne Fashion Festival and is a member of Chief Executive Women together with various other philanthropic interests.

“When Sue Morphet took over from Paul Moore just over a year ago, the company’s equity value was closer to $1.2 billion than yesterday’s $176 million” (Pacific’s Morphett needs debt extension, Martin Collins and John Durie, The Australian, February 25, 2009).

PB owns Berlei, Bonds, Clarks (children’s), Dunlop, Everlast, Grosby, Holeproof, Hush Puppies, King Gee, Mooks, Mossimo, Sheridan, Slazenger, Sleepmaker, Tontine and Yakka.

DRIVETRAIN SYSTEMS INTERNATIONAL

Three hundred and thirty eight workers at Drivetrain Systems in Lavington (Albury) have been sacked without pay or entitlements as management proceeds to strip the factory of an estimated $17 million in assets.

Workers are camped at the gates of the Kaitlers Road factory demanding the $5 million dollars in entitlements owed to the workforce. In December management and the AMWU assured employees that their entitlements were safe at the troubled business. On Friday workers were sacked without pay, and informed that there was simply no money.

“Between now and December they’ve been spent our entitlements” said one worker “we don’t know what on”.

Whilst all workers were sacked without pay, management and executive staff were retained on full wages. Management still occupies the factory.

Workers say that there are still $17 million dollars worth of gear boxes still at the Kaitlers Road factory, but they fear they won’t see a cent. The administrator has announced that the payment of financial creditors comes before giving workers their due entitlements.

The Kaitlers Road factory used to employ 1024 workers; this is not the first time that mass sackings have occurred. The factory is the only manufacturer of gear boxes in Australia, and was until the recent sackings the largest AMWU shop in the state.

Management has embarked on a deliberate campaign to split workers at the Kaitlers Road factory. Management has said they will re-employ a third of the workforce for a period of eight weeks, but have not stated which third of the workforce will be re-employed.

Action by workers has been hamstrung by this move. Desperate workers struggling to support families have said they cannot afford to jeopardize the possibility of eight weeks pay. If workers refuse the eight weeks work, they jeopardize future claims to Centrelink payments. Workers find out who will be re-employed on Wednesday, and will vote on whether to return to work on Wednesday morning.

Support the picket line on Kaitlers Road, workers appreciate all supporters who drop in. In you’re not in Albury-Wodonga, you can join the Facebook group, contact media outlets, and raise this issue with your local member.

Why will workers entitlements only be paid after debts owed to banks and suppliers? Surely the families of workers must have a higher priority than the profits of foreign banks, when a business like Drivetrain International collapses?

This report from the picket by:

Dave Fregon – 0434000234
Kieran Bennett – 0430509913

If you need information or contacts for the workers, please contact us.

    ‘Tent town’ resident may lose his home
    Border Mail
    February 24, 2009

    SIMON Parkinson, 28, is one of the younger members of the 338-strong workforce at Drivetrain Systems International.

    He has spent the past four nights camped out at the 24-hour “tent town” outside the Kaitlers Road property and is now wondering whether he might have to sell his home in Wodonga.

    Mr Parkinson is one of hundreds of apprentices produced by the Lavington factory since it opened in 1971.

    “Most of them have stayed here as it’s been a good place to work and the wages are above the award,” he said.

    As an engineering technician, he is well aware of the slim chance of getting similar work in Albury-Wodonga, and says he doesn’t want to move from the Border…

See also : AMWU renews calls for entitlements protection scheme as Drivetrain enters receivership, AMWU, February 17, 2009 | 400 stood down at car parts factory, Howard Jones, The Age, February 17, 2009 | Drivetrain Workers Picket, The Border Journal, February 23, 2009.

Posted in State / Politics | 5 Comments

The Jesuits: animated by a deep personal love of Jesus Christ.

    Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not money, I am become as a sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not money, I am nothing. And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, and have not money, it profiteth me nothing. Money suffereth long, and is kind; money envieth not; money vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up, doth not behave unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil; rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth; beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things. . . . And now abideth faith, hope, money, these three; but the greatest of these is money.

    ~ I Corinthians xiii (adapted)

    REPORTER: But the victims’ report card for the Melbourne and Jesuit procedures suggests there’s little of value to learn. Both have lawyers as gatekeepers, and if anything are more hard-nosed than Towards Healing. No-one from the Archdiocese or the Jesuits would speak with us. A disturbing example of how many in the church still respond to allegations of sexual abuse occurred in a recent Brisbane court case in which a priest was charged with raping a teenage girl. In sentencing him, the judge lashed out at the Catholic Church and in particular one of its bishops. The judge accused them of blinding hypocrisy and corruption.

    REPORTER: In September, Judge Warren Howell sentenced 83-year-old Father Reg Durham to jail for raping a 14-year-old girl at the Neerkol Orphanage in 1966. The judge condemned the church’s response to the woman’s complaint when it finally emerged three years ago.

    JUDGE’S COMMENTS READ: The reprehensible attitude of the church to date in trying to squash the complaint and to cover it up, does not bode well for an honest, compassionate and meaningful approach by the church in the future to go some way to compensating her.

    ~ Bad Habits: Sex and the Catholic Church, Sunday, November 21, 1999 (Reporter: Paul Ransley)

In response to scores of claims by abused children formerly in their care, Jesuits in the northwestern United States have filed for bankruptcy (see below). The province of the Roman Catholic order listed assets of less than $5 million and liabilities of almost $62 million; an attorney representing Native American victims said he believes the Oregon Jesuit province has assets of “more than a billion dollars.”

In Chicago:

Man files abuse suit against Chicago Jesuits
February 23, 2009

A 32-year-old California man claimed he was yet another victim of sexual abuse by defrocked priest Donald McGuire in a lawsuit filed today against the Chicago Order of Jesuits.

The suit, filed in Cook County Circuit Court under the name “John Doe 130,” says that McGuire repeatedly abused the plaintiff in the early 1990s, when the man was as young as 14. The abuse took place in Evanston, California and other locations on retreats organized by McGuire.

The plaintiff was unaware of Jesuit efforts to hide McGuire’s prior abuse of children until recently, the suit said. McGuire has been convicted on sex charges in Wisconsin and Illinois, and he was sentenced to 25 years in prison by a federal judge in Chicago earlier this month.

In a recent address — to the Caritas Parliamentary Luncheon at Parliament House, Sydney on February 23 — Frank Brennan (‘The Meddling Priest’) stated: “We are most truly Australian, most truly Christian, and most truly Catholic when we reach out across borders of nation states and churches, opening our hands and reaching out, deep, giving of ourselves whatever we are able” (People of hope, not hate, Eureka Street, February 24, 2009).

According to the blog justice4luke, in Melbourne, Jesuit Social Services last year sacked one of its youth workers, a union and prize-winning OH&S delegate, allegedly as a result of his activism. Despite being a public voice of opposition to HoWARd’s WorkChoices legislation, JSS happily employed this same legislation against both the sacked worker and a number of its other workers — the first time such legislation had been used in the ‘social and community sector’. (Such action presumably in keeping with their as-yet unreleased policy document ‘Towards a more business friendly Victoria’.)

Next month, on Saturday March 28, JSS is holding its annual fundraising dinner (tickets $150 per head), at which numerous local Catholic worthies will be in attendance. The featured speaker is Waleed Aly. In May 2007, Aly wrote with passion and humility:

…that language can be manipulated to prevent us from thinking outside orthodoxy [“was the very premise of Orwell’s Newspeak“.] Words are politics. The Federal Government called its industrial relations laws “Work Choices”. Such choices as it provides are, of course, far from universally available. For this reason it is unpopular, and the term has acquired a negative electoral meaning. Now staff at the relevant department refer not to “Work Choices” but more blandly to “workplace relations”. The latter phrase simply washes over us, leaving minimal residue. These are words that convey nothing, and numb us into acquiescence. Rudyard Kipling was indeed correct to describe words as “the most powerful drug used by mankind”. But not all drugs entrance us. Some are sedatives. They are designed to render us dead to reality. ~ Writing with passion and humility, The Age, May 26, 2007

Of course, Orwell’s own writing was motivated by his confrontations with the reality of the poor, The Condition of the Working Class in England, France, and later Spain, where his passion for socialism was confirmed.

Northwest Jesuits file for bankruptcy protection
Steven Dubois
AP
February 8, 2009

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Confronted by scores of lawsuits alleging sex abuse by priests, the Jesuits of the Oregon Province have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

The petition was filed Tuesday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Portland. The province of the Roman Catholic order listed assets of less than $5 million and liabilities of almost $62 million.

“Our decision to file Chapter 11 was not an easy one, but with approximately 200 additional claims pending or threatened, it is the only way we believe that all claimants can be offered a fair financial settlement within the limited resources of the Province,” The Rev. Patrick J. Lee, the current provincial, said in a statement late Tuesday.

The religious order — officially The Society of Jesus — has 10 provinces in the United States. The Oregon Province covers Oregon, Washington, Alaska, Idaho and Montana.

Many of the lawsuits involve Alaska Natives who say they were sexually abused as children while living in remote villages.

Ken Roosa, an Anchorage-based attorney who has filed claims on behalf of more than 60 Alaska Natives, said Tuesday night the Oregon Province is vastly underestimating its assets. Roosa said he believes the Oregon Jesuit province has assets of “more than a billion dollars.”

The Portland-based province contends it has worked “diligently” to resolve claims of misconduct, saying it has settled more than 200 claims and paid more than $25 million to victims since 2001. That amount does not include payments made by insurers.

“Our hope is that by filing Chapter 11, we can begin to bring this sad chapter in our Province’s history to an end,” Lee said. “We continue to pray for all those who have been hurt by the actions of a few men, so that they can receive the healing and reconciliation that they deserve.”

Here are some more facts.

Each year, the Catholic Church turns over more than $15 billion. If it was a corporation it would rank in Australia’s top 10.

The church is not required to file income tax returns, nor pay tax on commercial businesses, nor pay capital gains tax on the sale of assets, nor pay land tax, nor local government rates on school property.

The church owns an insurance company, a mortgage broking business, a multi-storey car park in Melbourne’s CBD, a vineyard and also controls more than $4 billion in superannuation funds.

The church holds in excess of $100 billion in property and other assets…

The church law clearly states that when transferring or selling church property to someone else, “The church’s social mission must be taken into account … so that it furthers the work of charity within society”.

Recently, in some countries, the church has found it necessary to sell off property to settle a string of claims that priests sexually abused children. Is this a charitable function? For that matter, is acting as a property developer a charitable function?

Posted in !nataS, State / Politics | 10 Comments

P.J. O’Rourke vs. Pierre Bourdieu

Riding along on my pushbike on the the Information Superhighway I stumbled upon the following comment:

O’Rourke’s “Seoul Brothers” from around 1986 is one of my favourite pieces of writing of any form: funny, moral, and as substantive an account of political practice as you might find in Pierre Bourdieu.

I see.

Oddly enough, P.J. appears in relation to Pure Poison, a new blog @ Crikey, the use value of which is subject to some debate: Tim Blair and Andrew Bolt vs. Crikey: Upscaling the blog wars or big yawn? (Larvatus Prodeo); Blog Wars Redux (skepticlawyer).

Anyways, here’s a few quotes from P.J. on Korea, Australia, and France:

“They don’t like anyone who isn’t Korean, and they don’t like each other all that much, either. They’re hardheaded, hard-drinking, tough little bastards, ‘the Irish of Asia’.”

“The Australian language is easier to learn than boat talk. It has a vocabulary of about six words.”

“The French are a smallish, monkey-looking bunch and not dressed any better, on average, than the citizens of Baltimore. True, you can sit outside in Paris and drink little cups of coffee, but why this is more stylish than sitting inside and drinking large glasses of whiskey I don’t know.”

~ P.J. O’Rourke, Holidays in Hell, Picador, London, 1989, pp.54, 154, 199

And some more P.J., on Korea and kimchi:

“Seoul Brothers” — It’s 1987 and Koreans want democracy and one of various presidential candidates all called Kim. P.J. gets caught up in tear gas and rioting.

“I was . . . overwhelmed by the amazing stink of kimchi, the garlic and hot-pepper sauerkraut that’s breakfast, lunch and dinner in Korea. Its odor rises from this nation of 40 million in a miasma of eyeglass-fogging kimchi breath, throat-searing kimchi burps and terrible, pants-splitting kimchi farts. . . .The Koreans are . . perfectly capable of a three-hour lunch, and so are Giannini and I. We ordered dozens of bowls of pickles, garlics, red peppers and hot sauces and dozens of plates of spiced fish and vegetables and great big bottles of OB beer and mixed it all with kimchi so strong it would have sent a Mexican screaming from the room with tongue in flames. By the time we drove, weaving, back to Seoul, you could have used our breath to clean your oven.”

As intended, “Seoul Brothers” (originally published in Rolling Stone, February 11, 1988) caused some small controversy at the time: ‘In 1988, hip Rolling Stone magazine featured an [article] titled “Seoul Brothers,” about South Korean presidential elections. The article said that Koreans “all look alike — the same Blackglama hair, the same high-boned pie-plate face, the same tea-stain complexion, the same sharp-focused look in 1 million identical anthracite eyes”.’ In fact:

March 18, 1988

“‘Rolling Stone’ Concedes to Three Korean Demands”

Protests from a coalition of 41 Korean American organizations and individuals against a derogatory article titled “Seoul Brothers” pressured Rolling Stone magazine into dedicating part of its future publications in redress.

“The magazine agreed to publish an article each about Koreans and Korean Americans, print a full page of critical letters with an editorial apology, and hire Asian American interns.”

O’Rourke’s Bourdieu-like powers of analysis and observation are noted by idiot blogger Aaron McKenzie in Border Collies Wanted (August 20, 2005) and Chalhaesso (August 23, 2005).

George Katsiaficas is another well-known travel writer — an aspiring P.J., if you will — whose semi-hilarious attempts to reach the heights from which both PJ and Pierre write is a feature of his reflections on the antics of those steenky kimchi Koreans, all with the same Blackglama hair, the same high-boned pie-plate face, the same tea-stain complexion, the same sharp-focused look in 1 million identical anthracite eyes:

The Gwangju people’s uprising of 1980 [see Comparing the Paris Commune and the Kwangju People’s Uprising: A Preliminary Assessment, PDF] was the fixed point around which dictatorship was transformed into democracy in South Korea. Years afterwards, its energy continues to resonate strongly across the world. Its history provides both a glimpse of free societies of the future and a realistic example for others whose dreams of parliamentary democracy remain unfulfilled. The most important dimensions of the Gwangju uprising are its affirmation of human dignity and prefiguration of substantive democracy. Gwangju has a meaning in Korean history that can only be compared to that of the Paris Commune in French history and of the battleship Potemkin in Russian history. Like the Paris Commune, the people of Gwangju spontaneously rose up and governed themselves until they were brutally suppressed by indigenous military forces abetted by an outside power. And like the battleship Potemkin, the people of Gwangju have repeatedly signaled the advent of revolution in Korea—in recent times from the 1894 Tonghak rebellion and the 1929 student revolt to the 1980 uprising…

Protests continued to intensify, and the glorious victory of the Minjung movement in 1987 centered around a massive outpouring of popular protest that began on June 10, 1987. For nineteen days, hundreds of thousands of people mobilized in the streets demanding direct presidential elections. When Gwangju native Lee Han-yol was killed in a student protest near Yonsei University, more than one million people gathered to bury him. As in the Philippines a year earlier, massive occupation of public space compelled the military to relent—in this case by agreeing to hold direct elections for president. In July and August, thousands of strikes involving millions of workers broke out. Although the government granted major concessions, the struggle continued.

The Autonomous Wave of Workers’ Struggle

Few countries have witnessed the kind of massive outpouring of grievances witnessed by Korea in 1987. The June Uprising successfully won civil liberties and elections, but the daily lives of workers were still miserably dictated by poverty and drudgery. Encouraged by the success of the democracy movement, grass-roots actions in the country’s large factories emerged at a dizzying pace and intensity. In July and August, more than three million workers in over 3000 workplaces erupted in unison, demanding substantial wage increases, improved working conditions and independent unions. Within two weeks of the government’s announcement of direct elections, labor unrest erupted like a volcano and spread throughout the country. With no central organization, wildcat strikes, work stoppages, street actions, plant closures and marches were spontaneously organized. The capacity of Korean workers for self-organization and action in this period is a major indication of the capacity of ordinary people to take control of their lives and articulate their needs and to act upon them…

~ George Katsiaficas, ‘From Gwangju to Tiananmen: East Asian Autonomous Movements Remembered’, October 2006

As for Pierre…

The figure of the intellectual treads a precarious path between celebrity and marginality. Few knew this as much as France’s leading sociologist of the modern era, Pierre Bourdieu. On his death in January 2002, the French newspaper Libération declared Bourdieu “les champs du partisan”, a “sociologue de combat” and “militant scientifique”.

A leading figure in the radical movements that swept France in the late 1990s, Bourdieu had become synonymous with critical opposition to the vagaries of an increasingly naturalised neoliberal agenda. He would no doubt have balked at the perverse (but predictable) decision to place eulogies from Lionel Jospin and Jacques Chirac alongside pictures of the megaphoned sociologist demonstrating before his occupation of the Ecole Normale Supérieure in 1998. He was no fan of the media, famously dedicating a whole book, On Television, to an analysis of the unconditional submission of television and journalism to unfettered market pressures. He was, in any case, much more than his public effigy permitted, not least — along with P.J. O’Rourke — one of the most formidable thinkers of the condition of modernity, its institutions, ideas and experiences…

~ Pithy, polemical and paradoxical, Nick Prior (“finds plenty to think about in a new translation of one of Pierre Bourdieu’s last works”), Times Higher Education, May 8, 2008

An uncanny resemblance, for sure.

Among other things, P.J. currently serves as ‘H.L. Mencken Research Fellow’ @ the Cato Institute. Cato’s 2007 revenues were over $24 million, and it has approximately 105 full-time employees, 75 adjunct scholars, and 23 fellows, plus interns. It is a conservative institute, for conservative people. Thus P.J. on ‘liberals’: “Liberals consider people to be nuisances. People are always needing more government resources to feed, house, and clothe them and to pick up the trash around their FEMA trailers and to make sure their self-esteem is high enough to join community organizers lobbying for more government resources” (We Blew It, Weekly Standard, November 17, 2008). Note that “Cato’s Social Security work is a perfect example of fulfilling our pioneering mission: to identify vital public policy problems and provide unique solutions.”

And unique thinking:

American political methodology is an ontological construct. No, I don’t know what I’m talking about, but it’s true anyway. Political “science”–like that puppy from the same litter, the dismal science of economics–is not science; it’s a branch of moral philosophy. Yet try talking moral philosophy with a politician. Politicians will talk strategy and tactics and policies and programs until they’re blue in the face, or you strangle them and they turn blue.

The problem on the left is, now that Karl Marx has forsaken them, they have no philosophy. Thank goodness. Think what evil creeps liberals would be if their plans to enfeeble the individual, exhaust the economy, impede the rule of law, and cripple national defense were guided by a coherent ideology instead of smug ignorance. As for our side, conservatism is a gut reaction for most of us, and a done deal for the rest. The moral philosophy of American politics can be explained briefly and clearly, and, the Constitution being written, it has been…

~ P.J. O’Rourke, Mr. Sununu Goes to Washington: The political philosophy of an actual politician, The Weekly Standard, June 16, 2008 (Vol.13, No.38)

“Whether you agree with [P.J.] or not…he writes a helluva piece.” ~ Richard Nixon

“Taste is first and foremost distaste — disgust and visceral intolerance of the taste of others.” ~ Pierre Bourdieu

Posted in State / Politics | 3 Comments

Overcoming Joel Kovel

Samir Amin, Director of the Third World Forum, reckons Joel Kovel’s new(est) book Overcoming Zionism “is absolutely fundamental for those who reject the unfortunate confusion between Jews, Judaism, Zionism and the State of Israel — a confusion which is the basis for systematic manipulation by the imperialist power system. It convincingly argues in favour of a single secular state for Israelis and Palestinians as the only democratic solution for the region.” According to Joel, the book’s publication has served as a trigger for his dimissal from his post as Alger Hiss Chair of Social Studies at Bard College.

Statement of Joel Kovel Regarding His Termination by Bard College:

On February 7 I received a letter from Michèle Dominy, Dean of the College, informing me that my contract would not be renewed this July 1 and that I would be moved to emeritus status as of that day. She wrote that this decision was made by President Botstein, Executive Vice-President Papadimitriou and herself, in consultation with members of the Faculty Senate.

This document argues that this termination of service is prejudicial and motivated neither by intellectual nor pedagogic considerations, but by political values, principally stemming from differences between myself and the Bard administration on the issue of Zionism. There is of course much more to my years at Bard than this, including another controversial subject, my work on ecosocialism (The Enemy of Nature). However, the evidence shows a pattern of conflict over Zionism only too reminiscent of innumerable instances in this country in which critics of Israel have been made to pay, often with their careers, for speaking out. In this instance the process culminated in a deeply flawed evaluation process which was used to justify my termination from the faculty…

Joel’s dismissal has been welcomed by some: Ron Radosh of Pajamas Media writes ‘The Dismissal of Joel Kovel: Sanity in Academia’. “The dismissal of Joel Kovel… is a victory for sanity in academia. It has been a long time coming. At last Bard’s students will not have to suffer the shibboleths Kovel offered as part of a supposedly solid academic curriculum.” Others are less excited: see Academic Freedom News: Ward Churchill, Joel Kovel (Maximilian Forte, Open Anthropology).

    Pajamas Media was established in 2005 by scriptwriter Roger L. Simon and Charles ‘Little Green Footballs’ Johnson; they’re the mob that in January hired Joe the Unlicensed Plumber to be their Johnny-On-the-Spot in Israel. Its attempts to turn right-wing bloggery into $ ends at the end of March. See also : Time to Hang Up the Pajamas, Daniel Lyons, Newsweek, February 7, 2009.

See also : Campus Watch (December 18, 2006) | “Are you now or have you ever been a member of the Communist Party of Australia?”, Or; Campus Watch comes to Australia (October 22, 2008) | The Enemy of Nature, Book Review by Alison Smith, January 2008 | Nature’s Coming Revolution: A Review of Joel Kovel’s The Enemy of Nature, Ted Dace, Counterpunch, June 14, 2003 | Capitalism Nature Socialism

Posted in State / Politics, Student movement | Leave a comment

God Hates Australia! Bushfire victims are fags! Etc.!

Awesome!

Recently, Pastor Danny Nalliah of ‘Catch the Fire Ministries’ claimed that God had come to him in a dream, and proclaimed that the people of Victoria would be punished for allowing abortion to be de-criminalised: “…the following words came to me in a flash from the Spirit of God, ‘My wrath is about to be released upon Australia, in particular Victoria, for approving the slaughter of the innocent children in the womb. Now, call on My people to repent and pray!’” This revelation proved to be slightly embarrassing to at least some of his supporters: Federal MPs Steve Fielding of Family First and former Tory party Treasurer Peter Costello.

Tomorrow morning, survivors of the catastrophic Black Saturday fires and community leaders, religious and secular, will gather at Rod Laver Arena to mark the national day of mourning for victims of the fires. The ceremony, “Together for Victoria”, will not be a funeral. For the many families who are unable to farewell their loved ones because coronial inquiries have not been completed, however, this public rite will be especially important. As anyone who has lost someone close to them knows, grieving does not cease when the funeral is over. But it has its rhythms and its pattern, like all that is human, and there comes a time in that pattern when a public outpouring of grief helps the process of healing.

Joining the survivors — “these insincere, violent, feces-eating brutes” — will be supporters of the Westboro Baptist Church.

I wonder if Danny or Steve or Peter will be there too?

02/22/2009 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM | Melbourne, AU | Rod Laver Arena – God does not hear the prayers of Australia Swan St. & Batman Ave.

One of your local major media outlets sent us an email which reads: “Australia Hates You”. YAY! We are in good company because Australia made it clear, decades ago, that they hate God. So, now that all is clear, to wit: God Hates Australia and Australia Hates God, let us speak to the fact that God is causing fires in one part of Australia killing hundreds. Then in another part of Australia God is sending floods. That is called MOCKING people. Then these insincere, violent, feces-eating brutes call themselves having a “Australia National Day of Mourning”. Here’s the only thing you freaks from “down under” bringing to pass these words: Ezekiel 7:27 The king shall mourn, and the prince shall be clothed with desolation, and the hands of the people of the land shall be troubled: I will do unto them after their way, and according to their deserts will I judge them; and they shall know that I am the LORD. Matthew 24:30 And then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven: and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. The Lord God will be coming shortly, so Prepare to Meet Thy God Australia. AMEN!

Posted in !nataS | 10 Comments

10,000 Jackboots Makin’ Whoopee in Dresden

Charlie and His Orchestra:

German nutzis held one of their biggest annual rallies last week (February 14) in Dresden, with somewhere between 5–6,000 jackbooting around the city (under the protection of 4,000 police). Approximately 10,000 counter-demonstrated, 6,500 of whom attended a rally, while several thousand militants attempted to blockade the route of the nutzi march (but were prevented by police).

Saturday’s demonstration by around 6,000 neo-Nazis in Dresden to mark the anniversary of the destruction of the city by Allied warplanes in February 1945 was a “dramatic sign” of the growing strength of the far right in Germany, a leading member of the country’s Jewish community said.

There were almost twice [?] as many far-right demonstrators as last year and police said they were surprised the far right had managed to mobilize so many supporters this time to mark the 64th anniversary of the air raids that devastated the city on Feb. 13 and 14, 1945. It was one of the biggest far-right demonstrations in Germany since the war.

~ Strong Neo-Nazi Showing in Dresden Heightens Concerns, Spiegel, February 16, 2009

Spiegel : Photo Gallery: Neo-Nazis Stage Big Protest in Dresden.

Later that day, a small group of ‘autonomous nationalists’ (‘national anarchists’) attacked a busload of leftist trade unionists.

Attack sparks fear of rising neo-Nazi violence, The Local, February 17, 2009:

“A vicious attack at a motorway rest stop after a huge neo-Nazi march in Dresden last weekend has sparked alarm across Germany. As David Wroe reports, some believe the country’s far-right scene is undergoing a dangerous transformation…”

Trade unionist Holger Kindler has been to at least 20 rallies to protest neo-Nazi gatherings in various German cities and towns. But he says he’s never seen anything like what happened last Saturday.

Kindler was among the 80 unionists and leftists who were having a break at a motorway rest stop in the eastern German state of Thuringia on Saturday when a busload of 41 far-right extremists pulled in. He and his colleagues had just joined some 10,000 people demonstrating a major neo-Nazi march in Dresden.

”One of my colleagues who was in the car park called me on my cell phone and told me they had arrived and were aggressive,” he said. ”I just went into shock. It was a Nazi crew that was very political, not just sub-cultural. They weren’t satisfied with walking through Dresden.”

Five anti-fascist demonstrators were left injured, including one with serious skull fractures. The neo-Nazis weren’t bumbling skinheads, Kindler said. They were autonome Nationalisten or free nationalists – a radical, political segment of the far-right scene in Germany who are growing in number and, experts fear, poised to create a new wave of neo-Nazi violence…

The violent antics of the autonome Nationalisten reflect both their poltical ideology and their political marginalisation from the formal party structures of the NPD.

Well, kinda.

In reality, it makes sense to have a division of labour within the fascist movement, and while the NPD pursues a political road to power, the broader, extra-parliamentary movement attempts to control the streets; working together, the two can establish bases of operation in small towns, villages and neighbourhoods. It also makes good sense for the far right to appropriate anarchist and leftist imagery, organisation, and tactics. (After all, since the early decades of the twentieth century, fascist movements, being essentially parasitical phenomena, have made regular and eclectic use of such raw political material.) This is especially so in Germany, where the de-Nazified state has instituted various legal measures intended to outlaw public displays of loyalty to the Nazi regime and its doctrines.

The chief proponent of this strategy in Australia is ex-NPD member Welf Herfurth, who has established the ‘New Right Australia (and er, New Zealand?)’, via which he has managed to gather about him a few teenage refugees from Stormfront and a hadful of other fascist lurkers. More recently, after having been given the cold shoulder by boneheads belonging to Blood & Honour and the Southern Cross Hammerskins, Welf has attempted to branch out into The Wonderful World of Bonehead by establishing a rival sect, Volksfront Australia. In this endeavour he is being aided by the lead shouter in nutzi/Viking Power Reich ‘n’ Roll band Blood Red Eagle, Novocastrian Doug Schmitt, whose former allegiances were to B&H and the SCHS.

Nutzis have been marching on Dresden every year for the last 10, and along with the Salem march in Sweden, the Dresden rally is the largest such gathering in Western Europe. This year’s rally was one of the largest nutzi rallies since the collapse of Nazi Germany in 1945, exceeding by nearly a thousand last year’s rally. On the numbers game (‘Counter-Marches Don’t Impress the Nazis a Bit’, Spiegel Online, February 16, 2009):

The left-leaning Berliner Zeitung writes:

“The example of Dresden shows how institutionalized anti-right wing protests have become. One constantly sees the same reflexes: If there is a neo-Nazi demonstration or attack, political parties and labor unions speak out. They demand that the (right-extremist political party) NPD be banned and a counter-demonstration is organized at which rock bands play and politicians speak. The vast majority of residents remain at home and take part via the media.”

“In Dresden, one can see where this is leading. Now that huge neo-Nazi gatherings have been banned (elsewhere), the right-wing has adopted the capital of Saxony as its premiere march location. The citizens of Dresden must take action and can no longer leave it to their politicians to save their city’s reputation.”

Posted in Anti-fascism, History | 3 Comments