BiKiE mAdNeSs!

The Gypsy Jokers are mad, bad, and dangerous to know. They’ve also lost the legal right to fortify their clubhouse.

Whatever happened to the saying “A Man’s Clubhouse is His Highly-Fortified Castle”?

In a rare instance of positive media coverage, the obituary of US citizen Betty Jane Millan, 83, of Yachats, Oregon reads “Betty raised her family in the Brooklyn neighborhood of SE Portland and taught her children to live life to the fullest. She loved to embroider and crochet and take care of her Chihuahuas, but she was just as happy to ride on the back of a Harley or play gin rummy with her neighbors the Gypsy Jokers. For her 75th birthday she got a tattoo of a hummingbird on her ankle.”

As well as providing rides for old ladies, bikies also provide poles. For dancing.

Pole dancing with pride
John Andersen
Townsville Builletin
July 29, 2008

WHEN the Mount Isa Rebels bikies cruised into Quamby and stopped at the pub they were horrified to discover that the locals were using an old, rusty Acro-prop – the type used to support houses while being raised or removed – as a pole for pole dancing. They told publican Terry Allman that they had a spare pole dancing pole – as you do – back in the Isa clubhouse and would be honoured if he would accept it as a replacement to the Acro-prop. True to their word they came good with the stainless steel pole and now, bolted between ceiling and bar top, it dominates the interior landscape of this rustic bush watering hole. Well lubricated drillers, jillaroos and ringers love to give it a go and the record so far is nine spins of the pole. Terry reckons pole dancing is the go and it’s why everyone around Quamby, about 50 km north of Cloncurry, is so fit and agile.

On the other hand…

Dead lawyer to be honoured over Melbourne shooting
AAP
August 14, 2008

ELEVEN people are being honoured with bravery awards following the fatal inner-city shooting in which Melbourne lawyer Brendan Keilar died. The Royal Humane Society of Australasia will issue the awards with Mr Keilar being honoured with the Posthumous Medal and Dutch backpacker Paul de Waard receiving the Silver Medal. Mr Keilar and Mr de Waard came to the aid of a woman they saw being dragged out of a taxi in central Melbourne and were then fired on by Hells Angel bikie Christopher Wayne Hudson, who has since pleaded guilty to murder. Mr De Waard, then 25, was blasted twice in the chest and stomach in the June 18, 2007, shooting and came close to death. Hudson also turned the gun on his then girlfriend 25-year-old model Kaera Douglas, who also suffered serious gunshot wounds. Mr Keilar, 43, a city lawyer and father of three, died in the street in the bloodbath that left stunned city workers watching in horror at the corner of Flinders Lane and William Street just after 8am. The Society’s honorary secretary Colin Bannister said the shooting was a callous act by a man who had spent the night drinking in nearby nightclubs. Other passers-by, alerted by the screams and gunfire, came to help as the gunman moved on…

Christian bikies in unholy brawl
The Brisbane Times
August 8, 2008

LOS ANGELES: Authorities have arrested eight members of a Christian bikie gang known as the Set Free Soldiers on charges of attempted murder in connection with a bar fight last week with members of the Hells Angels. The arrests were made during raids in southern California, authorities said. Three people are still being sought on arrest warrants. An Anaheim police spokesman, Sergeant Tim Schmidt, said the raids followed a clash between the Set Free Soldiers and Hells Angels at a Newport Beach bar…

Bikies arrested on drugs, weapons charges
Georgina Robinson
The Brisbane Times
July 23, 2008

Police have today arrested 12 outlaw motorcycle gang members on a range of drugs and weapons charges in the second phase of Operation Golf Cyclone. Two women and 10 men were nabbed on a total of 20 charges after police found drugs including cannabis and methylamphetamines, as well as weapons including two batons and a pellet paint gun. The arrests in the Redcliffe, Caboolture, Sunshine Coast, Maryborough, Gympie and Bundaberg districts bring to 24 the total number of gang members charged during the Operation. A police statement said officers from Task Force Hydra targeted places known to the Hells Angels, Rebels, Bandidos, Black Uhlans*, Outcasts and Finks groups…

Man charged over bikie-gang teen rape
Dan Oakes
The Age
July 23, 2008

Police have charged a man over the alleged gang rape of a teenager by motorcycle gang members at a Lakes Entrance motel in February last year. Steven Halamboulis, 43, of Reservoir, has been charged with two counts of rape and one of false imprisonment of the 19-year-old girl, who says she was raped at the motel by members of the Black Uhlans

More violence feared after pipe bombing on bikie in Lane Cove
Kara Lawrence
The Daily Telegraph
July 18, 2008

POLICE fear further violence on Sydney’s streets after an attempt to maim or kill a senior member of a new alleged criminal gang. The Daily Telegraph can reveal a 34-year-old man who helped form the pseudo-bikie gang Notorious was the target of a carbombing on Sydney’s North Shore on Tuesday. The man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, used to be associated with the Nomads outlaw motorcycle gang’s Parramatta chapter, which disbanded early last year. Notorious was then formed by the man and several former Nomads members, but few of its dozens of members ride motorcycles. The gang is believed to have become the unofficial security “muscle” for a Kings Cross identity and its members have been arrested for drugs and linked to assaults… Police sources said there were fears of “trouble brewing”, with concerns that Notorious would clash with rivals the Comancheros, another outlaw motorcycle gang.

PS. ‘Beefy baldy’ quits bomb estate, Daniel Emerson, Sydney Morning Herald, July 21, 2008: “A “beefy, bald-headed” man who was the target of a pipe bomb and gun attack at Sydney’s Lane Cove North estate last week has moved out of the complex, according to his neighbour…”

Now the streets go to Hell, Stephen Gibbs, The Sydney Morning Herald, April 22, 2006 | War feared as bikies defect, Janet Fife-Yeomans, The Daily Telegraph, April 21, 2007

See also : Arthur Veno, The Brotherhoods: Inside the Outlaw Motorcycle Clubs, Allen and Unwin, 2002, reviewed by Lauren Barrow, University of Melbourne | One percenters in our midst, The Adelaide Review, 2004

Posted in !nataS | 1 Comment

Ask eighty more stoopid questions…

Forty stupid questions… (July 4, 2008)

I’d like to super size…
midgets.

Quick! Make up a new name for a country:
Andystan.

What was your favorite childhood toy?
The emotions of my elders.

I am totally paranoid about…
e v e r y t h i n g.

Have you ever had a crush on a teacher?
That. And a bet. Which I won.

In heaven, I bet they’ll have…
no room for me.

Which is worse? Nails on a chalkboard or lemon juice on a cut?
Nail through penis.

What’s the closest you’ve come to death?
Watching TV.

I like to wear…
young ladies to bed.

What would you do if you knew today was your last day to live?
Live and let die.

How many hours of sleep do you need?
Wake me up before you go-go.

My glass is half…
full of shit and puke.

What’s the strangest question you’ve been asked in a job interview?
HOW big?

Use the following words in a sentence: pink, dirigible, luckily, phonics
Pink, dirigible, luckily, phonics.

What’s the fastest you’ve ever driven?
My slaves.

If you owned a restaurant, what would you name it?
SexyLand.

Press Control-V and share the last thing you copied.
No.

If you had your own army of 1000 identical five year olds, what would you have them do?
Sit still.

Where do you go when you want to be alone?
Anywhere there’s a crowd.

Which letter of the alphabet can you totally not stand?
The 27th.

Is there anything you’d like to add before we continue?
Wings.

In 100 years, my generation will be remembered for…
all the wrong reasons.

What was the last text message you received?
The one informing me of my imminent death.

What’s the worst movie you’ve ever seen?
The War on Terror

If you were in a Band, what would you name it?
Proud Scum

What celebrity do people say you look like?
That guy… y’know… that guy?

Thongs are…
mischievous little creatures aren’t they?

What’s your earliest memory?
A good first question

How many days past expiration are you willing to drink milk?
120

What’s your favorite blog?
Mine

I knew I was an adult when…
I had to pay full fare

Quick! Write the first sentence of a novel.
the first sentence of a novel

Skirts, shorts, or skorts?
Shit shit shit

What’s the best picture you’ve ever taken?
Weeping Woman

Bikini, Tankini, or Linguini?
Luigi Galleani

David Bowie, David Hasselhoff, or David Spade?
Bring me their heads and I will tell you

I wish my ex would…
let me publish those photos

What’s your favorite color of Crayola crayon?
Pensive

What’s the worst show on television?
All of them

Men are…
generally indifferent to my fate

What expression do you really hate?
The one grrls give me when I ask them that question

IM or email?
The Fine Arts

Would you make out with the last person who wrote on your wall?
Dunno. S’pose

Paper, plastic, or re-usable?
It makes no difference when you’re dead

What will be your last words?
About that money I owe you

For my first wish, I wish…
I wish I wish

If I lived in the year 2100, my profession would be…
still unknown

What is your favorite word?
Bullshit

What’s your favorite type of cuisine?
Yummy yummy yummy I’ve got love in my tummy. Pizza

Who is the funniest person you know?
Deadly Ernest

My backpack/purse/wallet contains the following surprising things:
An ability to travel back in time, a preference for brunettes, and a small mammal of indeterminate gender named Barry

Fill in the blank: ________ + chocolate = heaven
Advertising

Boxers or briefs?
Both. I am wild and crazy, wacky and zany blah blah blah

I believe in…
the domitability of the human spirit

Pardon my…
friends; they really don’t know any better

God is…
not

My worst part time job was…
also my first and last

Have you ever fallen asleep while driving?
A tank. In the next war

I’m reminded of home whenever…
I leave it

When I call you, my custom ring tone should be…
like a ship without a rudder

What’s your favorite kind of cake frosting?
Pizza

Truth or Dare?
Stubborn belly fat

What’s your favorite charity?
Me

How many kids would you want to have?
About six billion or so. Needless to say, I feel very fulfilled

Do you typically bring da noise, da funk, or da jell-o salad?
da da

Have you ever been on TV?
Yes

The last time you cleaned your room, how many hours did it take?
I began cleaning shortly after I began unpacking almost three years ago

If Barbie is so popular, why do you have to buy her friends?
Because love and amity are commodities like any other. And they look so good together!

Five star hotel or a tent in the woods?
An untidy bedroom in a cheap shared household (slum) in an unfashionable suburb

Why are there so many zombies on Facebook?
Because it’s just like THE REAL WORLD

Fuzzy Wuzzy was a bear. Fuzzy Wuzzy had no…
fucking idea that, being a large mammal, he and his fuzzy wuzzy friends were doomed, just like 90% of other large mammal species (with one obvious exception)

Quick! Write the last sentence of your autobiography.
Now who’s laughing?

G-string, thong, boy shorts, bikini, or traditional?
Is the first time I’ve ever been asked such a question

What would your super hero name be?
Transforming a modern day essential into a gorgeous accessory. Buy online for total confidence. Man.

I always mispronounce…
and I never forgive

Save the cheerleader, save the…
cheerleader for me

What’s one magical thing that happened today?
I woke up

What does the tooth fairy do with all those teeth?
Gives them to me

What kind of pet would you like to have?
Bübi

What’s the weirdest topping you’ve ever had on a pizza?
A unicycle

Posted in Uncategorized | 5 Comments

REAL Magpies triumph once again

COLLINGWOOD 16 10 105
“Power” 10 15 75

SHANE Wakelin did something yesterday that only two other AFL players could have done this year – blow out 34 or more birthday candles. Former St Kilda teammates Robert Harvey and Sydney’s Peter Everitt are the only two older AFL players. But neither have had the chance to celebrate a birthday in the style that Wakelin will this weekend. The durable Magpie defender will play his 250th game against Port Adelaide – the club where he played SANFL 15 years ago – with a host of family and friends, including identical twin Darryl, a retired member of Port’s 2004 premiership side who posted 264 games. The always affable Magpie was happy to savour a week that a couple of years ago looked highly unlikely. “It’s a real honour. If you’d have asked me 18 months ago, this was the last thing on my mind,” Wakelin said.

Posted in Collingwood | Leave a comment

Family fun @ the BNP’s Scumfest

    Update : Disruption expected in Codnor as protestors arrive, Ripley & Heanor News, August 14, 2008 “…Police have invoked special public order laws in an effort to keep the number of anti-BNP prtestors who plan to come to the area on Saturday down to 700. A number of shops in Codnor are expected to close over the weekend. Once police estimate that 700 activists have turned up on Saturday, new arrivals will be asked to disperse and could be arrested if they refuse. They will meet at 9am in Codnor Market Place and will be allowed to march from 11.45am. The A6007 Heanor Road will be closed.”

    Protest at BNP’s racist policies, The Socialist, August 13, 2008 “…The police have invoked sections 14 and 14a of the Public Order Act for what we understand is the duration of the BNP’s event, which gives them enormous extra powers. It is rumoured they have cancelled all police leave in Derbyshire. They identified an ‘official’ protest area about 1.5 miles from the BNP site. Footpaths are being closed and anyone caught ‘trespassing’ will be subject to arrest. To arrange such an exclusion zone is a denial of our democratic rights. The police aim to try to limit and control the anti-BNP protesters, and agreed with Unite Against Fascism (UAF) – who had announced their own separate protest – a march from the ‘official’ protest area to a place nearer the BNP site, though still almost a mile away from it. In the interests of unity, NSBNP will support this march. The police also agreed with UAF that 30 people will be escorted to near the entrance to the site for a token protest and photograph opportunity, whilst the main body of the protest marches back…

“Well, talk about bad taste…”

England

Sheesh. The SWP remains silent on the fact that Unite Against Fascism (UAF) has determined to split the millions hundreds of thousands thousands (hundreds?) of anti-racist and anti-fascist activists expected to protest the upcoming British National party’s Red White & Blue Festival // Scumfest. Instead, Anindya Bhattacharyya writes ‘Unions throw their weight behind protest to stop Nazi BNP rally’; referring, in part, to the efforts of Notts Stop the BNP to liaise with and gain the support of trade unions. Thus the 11am protest called for by UAF, claims Bhattacharyya, “has been called by East Midlands Unite Against Fascism (UAF) and is supported by a variety of trade unions, including Midlands TUC, Midlands CWU, Midlands GMB, Midlands Unite and East Midlands Unison”. The 9am protest, on the other hand, organised primarily by and through “the Stop the Red, White and Blue campaign, a politically independent network of anti-fascists”, is merely supported by local unions including FBU, UCU, Unison and the NUT… Derby Unite Against Fascism, other local anti-fascist groups and a multitude of trade union organisations. East Midlands Unison, East Midlands TUC and the rail union RMT…”.

Anyway:

The true nature of the event is also revealed by the “guest speakers” that the BNP has invited along. These include Marc Abramsson, leader of the National Democrats, a Swedish Nazi party. Abramsson has campaigned for “racially pure kindergartens” in Sweden that would exclude all non-white children. His party has also organised BONEHEAD gangs to physically attack gay pride marches in Sweden. Also speaking at the BNP’s hate-fest is Petra Edelmannova, chair of the Czech National Party, a fascist organisation that has led a vicious racist campaign against Romany Gypsies in the Czech Republic. Last month Edelmannova co-authored a booklet called “The Final Solution to the Gypsy Issue in the Czech Lands” that advocates “relocating” Czech Romanies to India.

Also joining the British Nationalists in their alcohol-free partying will be a colonial or two. Or as the BNP puts it: “This is your chance to meet in person some of the activists who are making things happen in the Czech Republic along with friends from Sweden (in the form of the National Democrats) and from the Protectionist Party of Australia, who are closely modelling themselves on the BNP”. The Australian speaking at the event is Mark Wilson. Mark is a former comrade of Dr James Saleam who has since jumped ship for arch-rivals the APP. Mark reckons Whitey oughta jump up and down more on Australia Day, ANZAC Day, May Day and Eureka Day (December 3). “Tragically, these Days have been tailored to the agendas of multiculturalist, gender-bending, globalist ideology.” (Mark is also sure that he hasn’t done anything to the Aborigines to apologise for, is a recent migrant from Britain, and wishes the Aborigines no harm… but would rather not live next door to them.) Other speakers include the New Right/national anarchist ideologue Jonathan Bowden, veteran neo-Nazi Martin Wingfield, and Griffin sidekick Simon Darby.

Oh yeah: Unite and fight fascism! At 11am. (But not 9am.)

As for antifa, no doubt they’ll be the joker in the pack…

See also : One man’s war against his demons, “When Matthew Collins became sickened by his far-right BNP comrades, he betrayed them. He tells Rosie Boycott his story”, The Observer, March 10, 2002

Germany

“A youth camp run by a neo-Nazi organization is broken up by police near Rostock in northern Germany. Authorities said the children were being instilled with Nazi propaganda under the guise of a sleep-away camp” (German Police Raids Nazi Youth Camp, Deutsche Welle, August 11, 2008). Which sounds worryingly akin to local Schutzstaffel Untersturmführer Welf Herfurth’s efforts to recruit Australia’s Patriotik Yoof into the nationalist anarchist camp. Whitey is frustrated in Germany too:

Neo-Nazis turning increasingly violent

The head of Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA), Joerg Ziercke, told the German daily Tagesspiegel neo-Nazis were adopting increasingly violent tactics. Ziercke said neo-Nazis were attacking left-wingers and police officers with an aggression that can be seen as a change in strategy. “Before, neo-Nazis largely avoided violence for tactical reasons, but this no longer appears to be the case,” he added. Ziercke said the riots on May 1 in Hamburg were an example of the new strategy. Clashes erupted in Hamburg when 6,000 people took to the streets to protest against a march involving some 1,500 supporters of the far-right NPD party. Twenty police officers were hurt and some 60 people were arrested. Arson attacks by right-wing groups were also on the rise, according to Ziercke. There were some 15 incidents reported in the first five months of 2008 – five times as many as in the same period last year.

See also : Neo-Nazi ‘national anarchists’ in Germany in the headlines (June 4, 2008)

Russia

Oops.

Youths Convicted in Arkhangelsk for Attack on Purported Neo-Nazi
UCSJ
August 11, 2008

Two youths affiliated with the anti-fascist punk movement were convicted in an Arkhangelsk, Russia court for attacking a student they identified as a neo-Nazi, according to an August 5, 2008 report by the Regnum news agency. The youths, who were students at a local college, reportedly heard that another student was a neo-Nazi and burst into his classroom wearing masks and armed with martial arts weapons and a metal pipe. They then beat the student, along with another youth who tried to stop the violence, before fleeing the scene. One of the defendants got off with a suspended sentence because he was underaged at the time of the attack; the second defendant was sentenced to a year and a half in prison.

See also : [For Dion] Shadowboxing (Petersburg Antifa) | chtodelat news (August 5, 2008)

Posted in Anti-fascism | 15 Comments

What did you do for your race this week? Australia First launches its election campaign!

Cool!

Following close on the heels of arch-rivals the Australian Protectionist Party (APP), the Australia First Party (AF) has officially declared its losing candidates for the upcoming NSW council elections. In Sutherland — where Darrin Hodges is pitting himself against the Mayor — AF has wisely decided to steer clear of a two-way fight with the APP, and is instead fielding three candidates in Ward A: John Newton (ex-Australians Against Further Immigration candidate for the state seat of Mount Druitt in 2007 — he came last), Karl Glas (ex-National Action and AAFI) and Marleen Rapp.

To vote 1 White Australia in Blacktown (Fifth Ward), your candidates are Tony Pettitt (ex-One Nation Party), Terry Cooksley (ex-NA, ex-AAFI, ex-ONP), and George Atkinson. Tony previously contested the seat of Greenway for ONP in 2004, gaining 1,040 votes or 1.37% and coming sixth out of a field of 14 candidates. He also stood for the seat of Mitchell in 1996 for AAFI, where he obtained 2,688 votes, easily overpowering both ‘Reclaim Australia’ and ‘Natural Law’. Previously, Terry stood for a seat in Chifley in 2004 — he didn’t win. He also asked the voters of Lindsay to elect him, and AAFI, in 1996, and had the satisfaction of being more popular than both Call to Australia and the Independent candidate, Stephen Davidson… But not quite as popular as HoWARd’s mate Jackie Kelly, who won the seat for the Tories in 1996, 1998, 2001 and 2004; and who lost it for them in 2007.

Further afield, in Coffs Harbour, you can put Australia First — and the deracinators of the New World Order liberal-globalist-capitalist conspiracy last — by voting for class clown Darrell Wallbridge (ex-NA and Confederate Action Party), Alex Parker, Greg Bailey, Richard Hedditch (ex-NA, ex-CAP) and Kevin Baldwin. In Newcastle (Second Ward), word on the street is that AF’s campaign is being spearheaded by the Jew-hating real estate agent Nathan Clarke. (Actually, AF claims Les is taking his place, but the NSW Electoral Commission begs to differ.) Joining Les (or possibly nafe) will be Ian McBryde and the geriatric Jim Smith. Somewhat bizarrely, Tony Pettitt is also trying it on in Hawkesbury

Voters, sharpen your pencils!

Posted in !nataS, Anti-fascism, State / Politics | 8 Comments

“revolutionaries into secret agents and secret agents into revolutionaries”

[In the UK] Rowena Macdonald went to Climate Camp fearing “woolly-minded hippydom” but found a serious and committed group of people – give or take the vegan farmers…

Silly vegans! (Woolly minded hippies?, New Statesman, August 8, 2008. See also : Camp for Climate Action Australia.)

Another hack, Stephen Armstrong, writes that among the woolly-minded hippies and silly, frivolous vegan farmers, “According to the private espionage industry itself, roughly one in four of your comrades is on a multinational’s payroll”. In fact, “Like the state security services, which ended up running Class War in the 1990s after a hugely successful penetration, these spies work to become reliable members of any protest movement” (The new spies, New Statesman, August 7, 2008. Class War has issued a statement — republished below — denying these allegations.) Armstrong goes on to reference a number of spooks and spooky goings-on, including:

1) The Plane Stupid ‘Ken Tobias’ (Toby Kendall);
2) Cara Schaffer of the (US) Student/Farmworker Alliance and;
3) Hakluyt & Co., a spooky oufit:

founded in 1995 by former British MI6 officers, with a reputation for discreet and effective investigations. The company butler, a former gurkha, greets visitors to its London HQ, a town house off Park Lane. In winter, meetings can be conducted beside the fire. Computers are rarely in sight. Hakluyt’s advisory board has become an exit chamber for captains of industry and former government officials. Members have included Sir Rod Eddington, a former BA CEO [good mates with KRudd, currently the inaugural chair of Infrastructure Australia, a Rhodes Scholar and the technocrat responsible for recommending more roads for Melbourne] and Sir Christopher Gent, former chief executive of Vodafone…

Hakluyt is obviously a comfortable residence for wealthy Tories, but it’s reputation for discreetness may possibly be exaggerated. In any case, after outlining these and other spooky projects, Armstrong concludes:

Unlike the security services, however, these [private] services don’t bother with penetrating the far left or anti-fascist groups. Their clients are only interested in the protest movements that threaten corporations. And as that is the nature of much protest in these times, it is a wide field, but with a particular impact on environmental groups.

At any of this summer’s green protests the corporate spies will be there, out-of-work MI5 agents tapping green activists’ mobile phones to sell the information on to interested companies.

Russell Corn knows of incidents where a spook at a meeting has suggested a high-street bank as a target, then left the meeting to phone the officers of said bank, telling them that he has penetrated an activist camp planning an attack and offering to sell the details. Corn has no time for such behaviour, however.

“The thing about a really good private spy,” he tells me, “is that you’ll never know he’s around and he’ll never get caught.

“The fact you can’t see them . . . it means nothing at all.”

Tricksy!

I’m not convinced private security agencies simply ignore “the far left or anti-fascist groups”, both because there are examples of them infiltrating such milieus, but also because it simply makes sense for them to do so (as and when required). There is, after all, often some degree of overlap between the ‘far left’ and ‘anti-fascist’ organisations, on the one hand, and, on the other hand, protest movements which target particular corporations and — most obviously and conspicuously — a number of campaigns, movements and projects which embrace activists (and others) from a wide range of groups with diverse concerns; often related to the corporate sector as a whole and capitalism in general. There’s certainly no shortage of literature on the subject of anti-globalisation/anti-corporate/anti-capitalist movements of the recent past, and one of the more obvious complaints of the hack media regarding these movements is what is observed as being the bewildering array of causes that rally together under some such banner: ‘No issue is single’, and all that.

In addition to the emergence of an ‘anti-capitalist’ (protest) movement in the West in the last decade, it’s worth noting two further developments. First, the War on Terror™; secondly, the energy and minerals boom. The first has provided states with a rationale to massively expand their repressive capacities; the second massively expanded the market for private security agencies to monitor, infiltrate and disrupt groups and movements in opposition to the ecocidal practices associated with resource exploitation. There’s also the question of the extensive links between the government and private sector, as revealed in the case of Scott Parkin, and the manner in which each reinforces the efforts of the other to silence criticism and quash dissent.

Speaking of analysis, it’s worth recalling that the WEF happily employed PR firm Hill & Knowlton to conduct some media spin on its behalf regarding the S11 protests in 2000, the company producing a background briefing for media flacks (PDF). Oddly, inre to the more recent protests at the G20, the academic expert consulted by the ABC repeated the same, notorious mistake of H&K, referring to the protests in Seattle, like H&R, as being concerned with a meeting of the WEF (not WTO):

    LUKE HOWIE: It’s most likely that this group has come out of student clubs and societies at universities as violent groups often do, as they did during the Cronulla riots.

    They often unify along some collective ideology, which on this occasion seems to be anti-globalisation.

    What they tend to do is tag themselves on to the edge of non-violent protests and they have the safety of the crowd then.

    And indeed, I heard Arterial Bloc were shedding their uniforms at any appropriate opportunity and disappearing into the crowd, which is a very effective tactic.

    JOSIE TAYLOR: Do you believe that this group had international links, or were they copying movements overseas?

    LUKE HOWIE: They probably most resembled the Seattle riots, what’s now called the Battle of Seattle, from 1998, with the World Economic Forum riots there, where anarchists from Oregon had come to Seattle dressed in blue anoraks and gas masks so they couldn’t be identified.

Er… right. That’s actually on a par with Mick Armstrong’s denunciatory rhetoric — although in fairness to Luke, unlike Mick, it’s unlikely he needed to wipe the spittle from his mouth after having pronounced on the subject.

More later… maybe.

* Class War statement in response to Stephen Armstrong:

As a member of Class War since 1992, I was staggered to read a line in Stephen Armstrong’s article (the New Statesman 7 August 2008) on “The New Spies”. Your reporter writes:

“Like the state security services, which ended up running Class War in the 1990s after a hugely successful penetration…”

Can you back that claim up with facts, or is any old rubbish acceptable when it comes to Anarchist organisations?

We do hope you have not been taken in by 9/11 ‘truth’ activists (and ex-MI5 officers) Annie Machon and David Shayler, who have both come out with conflicting claims about attempted state inflitration of Class War in the early 1990s.

Shayler withdrew his (contradictory) claims about Class War at a public debate with Notes From the Borderland magazine at Conway Hall in 2005. He now makes a living claiming to be the messiah. As for his former partner Annie Machon (freely quoted in your piece) the New Statesman should treat with caution a woman who has pushed red baiting pieces about Tony Benn, Jack Jones and the KGB in the Mail on Sunday, and who has worked alongside some extremely dubious characters in the nuttier fringes of the 9/11 ‘truth’ movement.

As a revolutionary organisation, Class War is bound to be targeted – on occasion – by the police and security services. Such is life – especially in a society with seemingly never ending funds for public order policing and the secret state.

That situation will not be improved as long as we have ‘experts’ with the limited or biased knowledge of Stephen Armstrong, Annie Machon and David Shayler. It will certainly continue until we have the sort of radical change this society needs.

Posted in Anarchism, History, State / Politics | 7 Comments

Happy Collingwood Birthday Victory Mash-up!

(HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!)
GOOD OLD COLLINGWOOD FOREVER!
(HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!)
THEY KNOW HOW TO PLAY THE GAME!

Drama has galvanised team: Malthouse
The Age
August 8, 2008

Collingwood’s drama-filled week and a special celebration on Saturday has unified the AFL club on the eve of Saturday’s important clash with St Kilda, according to coach Mick Malthouse. The suspension of Alan Didak and Heath Shaw for lying to the club about their involvement in an alcohol-fuelled car crash had the Magpies in frantic damage-control on Monday and Tuesday. But Malthouse insists the incident will not affect the players’ performance and believes it has strengthened their resolve. “I don’t think there’s much doubt about the fact that they’ve been galvanised,” Malthouse said. “Collingwood supporters are generally very galvanised in regard to the way they’re perceived anyway – you love Collingwood or you hate Collingwood.” Malthouse added: “@ndy Slackbastard loves Collingwood, it’s his birthday on Saturday, and he’s one of our most vocal anarchist supporters, so the boys will have added motivation to secure a revolutionary, state-smashing win.”

Magpies bounce back to down Saints
ABC
August 10, 2008

Collingwood put a tumultuous week behind them with a emotion-charged 14-point win over top eight rivals St Kilda at the MCG on the night of @ndy Slackbastard’s birthday. Following a week of off-field controversy the Magpies snapped a three-game losing streak to reaffirm their chances of September football and global social revolution with a 14.13 (97) to 12.11 (83) triumph…

COLLINGWOOD 14.13 (97)
ST. KILDA 12.11 (83)

Posted in Collingwood, History | 2 Comments

Happy Birthday!

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In Love With Terror, Or: The Danger of Working with Rank Amateurs

The Amateurs

(Andreas) Baader — (Ulrike) Meinhof. Kommune 1 / K1 / Tupamaros West Berlin / the Blues. Rote Armee Fraktion (Red Army Faction) / RAF. Sozialistisches Patientenkollektiv (Socialist Patients’ Collective) / SPK. June 2nd Movement / J2M. Revolutionary Cells / RZ. Rote Zora…

And in 2002, a mediocre BBC documentary featuring lotsa footage of pigs being slaughtered. Baader-Meinhof: In Love With Terror, Ben Lewis, BBC (2002).

See also : Anti-Nazi Schmazi (August 2, 2008)

Kevin Curran thinks Jeff ‘The Snowman’ Monson is one of the ‘Most Intimidating Fighters of All Time’. Which may be true. One thing he certainly isn’t is a neo-Nazi, but that — in addition to being a self proclaimed anarchist, crazy, a roid boy, and insane — is how Curran describes him.

The Professionals

In Israel:

Police arrest Anarchists at protest outside home of Army Commander
Saed Bannoura
IMEMC & Agencies
August 5, 2008

Israeli police attacked dozens of peace activists, members of the Anarchist movement in Israel, who were staging a protest in front of the home of Israeli Army Colonel, Aviv Reshef, in charge of Ni’lin area in the West Bank on Tuesday afternoon. 25 protesters were arrested.

The police claimed that the protesters clashed with policemen who arrived at the scene.

The anarchists were protesting the killing of an 11-year old Palestinian child who was shot and killed by army fire last week.

Reshef had, just a few days before the killing, been merely “reprimanded” for an incident in which a soldier under his command shot and wounded a bound Palestinian youth in Bil’in village. Reshef stated in a hearing that he did not order the soldier to shoot the bound youth.

The youth, who was already wounded, was shot at close range by a rubber coated bullet while he was bound and blindfolded. The Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories B’Tselem released video footage of the incident.

The footage was filmed by a young Palestinian girl from the village. Soldiers later arrested her father as an act of revenge.

During the funeral of the child on Monday, Israeli soldiers fired stun grenades, rubber coated bullets, tear gas and rounds of live ammunition at the residents. An Israeli military commander claimed that the Palestinian blocked a main road and that the army “used all riot dispersal means”.

Tuesday’s protest in Israel was carried out around 6 in the evening when nearly forty protesters arrived in front of the home of Reshef. The police arrived at the scene and ordered them to leave.

Israeli police sources claimed that the protesters refused to leave and attempted to move closer to the officers’ house. The police arrested nearly 25 peace activists and took them to a police station for questioning.

The police force issued a statement in which it did not deny aggressive behavior carried out by the police but stated that they acted due to an order from the Attorney General which strictly bars any protests in front of homes that belong to Israeli Army officers.

The history of the United States, chief sponsor of the Israeli state, is recounted in Zinn, Konopacki and Buhle’s A People’s History of American Empire, which Sarah Johnson reviews for the Harvard Political Review.

Redrawing American History
Zinn explores the darker side of the American past
Sarah Johnson

A People’s History of American Empire
By Howard Zinn, Mike Konopacki, and Paul Buhle
Metropolitan Books, 2008 – 288 pgs.

“Instead of creating a new way of thinking, our government used 9/11 as an excuse for another rampage of empire!”

From the beginning of A People’s History of American Empire, Howard Zinn stakes out his position on war and American imperialism. Employing a cartoon illustration of himself speaking at an anti-war rally, Zinn travels back through time to demonstrate how “our military has been used not for moral purposes but to expand economic, political, and military power.”

Shock horror et cetera. Speaking of peace-making, the US Army has fashioned a computer game where YOU get to kick terrorist ass!

The Virtual Army Experience (VAE) provides participants with a virtual test drive of the United States Army. The core of the 19,500-square-foot VAE is the America’s Army computer game, rendered with state-of-the-art Army training simulation technology to create a life-size, networked virtual world. The VAE highlights key Soldier occupations, Army technologies, operating environments and missions, within a fast-paced, actionpacked, information-rich experience that immerses visitors in the world of Soldiering. Participants employ teamwork, rules of engagement, leadership and high-tech equipment as they take part in a virtual U.S. Army mission.

Awesome!

    And what is war, what is needed for success in war, what are the morals of the military world? The object of warfare is murder; the means employed in warfare — spying, treachery, and the encouragement of it, the ruin of a country, the plunders of its inhabitants… trickery and lying, which are called military strategy; the morals of the military class — absence of all independence, that is, discipline, idleness, ignorance, cruelty, debauchery, and drunkenness.

    ~ Leo Tolstoy, War and Peace, 1872

Finally, AFP has picked up on the story inre Maurice Sinet’s allegedly anti-Semitic jibe at French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s son Jean:

Satirist sparks uproar with Sarkozy son Jewish jibe

PARIS (AFP) — A French newspaper satirist has sparked a feverish tug-of-war over free speech and anti-Semitism with a biting column on the engagement of President Nicolas Sarkozy’s son to a Jewish heiress. Published on July 2 in the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo, the piece cost the 79-year-old Sine, a veteran cartoonist and anarchist writer whose real name is Maurice Sinet, his job after he refused to apologise…

Sousan Hammad comments on the case in ‘The Antisemitism Incitement Craze’ (Counterpunch, August 5, 2008).

Posted in !nataS, History, Television, War on Terror | 6 Comments

“What’s a Stormfront?” Darrin Hodges in The Canberra Times

Darrin Hodges is a Protectionist: he wants to protect (White) Australia from Asians, Muslims, Communism, Multiculturalism, teh Gays, Muslims, and Asians. (And Muslims.) Once an admirer of Hitler, a Jew-hater, a member of Don Black‘s Stormfront website and Dr James Saleam’s Australia First Party, Hodges has since been expelled from/renounced his membership of the Party (denounced as the ‘Australian Faggot Party’), denied his membership of Stormfront, made his peace with ZOG, and, presumably, learnt that public expressions of support for Mr Hitler are unlikely to endear him to the electorate. What kind of expressions?

“I’m more interested in the purer form of fascism… and while I don’t subscribe to the whole ‘worship Hitler’ thing, his comments on multiculturalism and politics in general are still just as relevant today as they were 70-odd years ago” he once wrote. On June 20, 2005, he added that “i cant say im into the whole national socialist thing – as far as im concerned, National Socialism died with it’s [sic] creator, not that i do not have any regard for his writings, indeed, they still have much relevance today – he laid a foundation that we should build on”. And just for good measure, a week later (June 26) Darrin further noted that “i have some good colour footage (no sound) of Adolf Hitler at The Berghoff. PM me if you want a copy of the footage”. (‘darrinh’ joined the world’s premiere White supremacist website in June 2005.)

Currently, Darrin is preparing to contest the upcoming local council elections in NSW on behalf of the recently-formed Australian Protectionist Party, and is hoping to win one of three seats in Ward D of the Sutherland Shire Council, whose current occupiers include the Mayor, David Redmond (a Tory). Last September, however, wearing his ‘revolutionary’ hat, Darrin was a ‘national anarchist’, one of about twenty who formed a ‘black bloc’ at the APEC protest. (The same mob has now declared itself to be composed not of Australian patriots but oppressed Tibetans.)

Darrin is nothing if not persistent. Either that, or a very slow learner. Having initially been exposed to the public following his enthusiastic embrace of the White ‘civil uprising’ in Cronulla in December 2005, as already indicated, Darrin reacted by renouncing his membership of both the Australia First Party and Stormfront. It was only a little while later, however, that he re-joined both. Later still, he left Stormfront and — together with letters to the editor and commentary on other websites — reverted to using one of several blogs to publicise his views. Darrin also established a group he called the ‘Anglo Australian National Community Council’ (the existence of which he announced in November 2006). As the only known member, in this capacity he also organised a number of film screenings and public meetings.

Darrin’s disillusionment with Saleam’s ‘Australian Faggot Party’, and eventual membership of the APP, really began following the less-than-successful NSW state election in March 2007, in which the Party fielded one candidate, John Moffat, in — where else? — the seat of Cronulla. Three months later, in June, Darrin was expelled. (At about this time, Darrin’s blog featured in an episode of Media Watch.) And three months after his expulsion, the APP was formed.

Interestingly, AF — Saleam having successfully wrestled control of the organisation from Diane Teasdale, and registered it in NSW as ‘The Australia First ‘Council Elections’ Party’ — is also standing candidates at the upcoming election (Blacktown, Coffs Harbour, Newcastle and Sutherland Shire), using the stirring slogans “Reclaim New South Wales! Reclaim Australia! Voting For Anything Other Than Australia First Is Largely A Waste Of Time”. And while Darrin and the APP are looking to Nick Griffin and the British Nationalist Party (BNP) for inspiration, AF has recently stitched up an agreement with the kooks in the New Zealand Nationalist Alliance.

    On the BNP, see The BNP Uncovered (PDF), 2005.

Anyway, here’s Philip:

Tough times suit a right lurch
Philip Dorling
The Canberra Times
August 2, 2008

Pauline Hanson is gone. After achieving a 3.8 per cent vote in the Queensland Senate election last November she has finally, probably, disappeared from national political life.

Earlier this year the media highlighted the fact that Hanson received $213,000, $2.10 a vote, in public funds from the Australian Electoral Commission following her unsuccessful campaign.

On her website she protests that she hasn’t pocketed the money, rather that it was deposited into a Pauline’s United Australia Party account, but no one has really been listening. The caravan has moved on.

Hanson’s autobiography, Untamed and Unashamed, has been on sale on Kmart discount book tables for a knock-down 75c.

For the major political parties, all that remains of the phenomenon that was “Hansonism” are amendments to the Commonwealth Electoral Act to ensure their candidates are only reimbursed for actual campaign expenditure.

Speaking earlier this week following the merger of the Queensland Nationals and Liberals, senior members of the new Liberal National Party said it was unlikely any far-right party would be able to repeat the brief success of the One Nation Party, which secured 22 per cent of the primary vote in the 1998 Queensland state-election and won 11 seats in the state Parliament.

Senator Ron Boswell, who was in the forefront of the National Party’s fight with One Nation, dismissed suggestions by independent federal Member of Parliament Bob Katter, who said that the Liberal-National merger was the perfect opportunity for a new right-wing party to poach conservative support in the bush.

“There is always a danger for [new] parties [to] rise”, Boswell said. “It happened before because people weren’t being heard in the bush. [But] people in the country are pragmatic, they will see a stronger party in a better position to win and we will have to deliver for them.”

Boswell may well be right, but it would be wrong to think that what Tony Abbott once called the “feral right” will remain permanently consigned to the political fringes.

Unnoticed by the national media, a new Australian far-right political party has emerged over the last year. The Australian Protectionist Party has its origins in the fracturing of the Australia First Party that was founded by former federal Labor Member of Parliament Graham Campbell.

Campbell himself split from Australia First to briefly join Hanson’s One Nation Party and Australia First has now split into two, with one faction led by one-time National Action member and right-wing ideologue Dr Jim Saleam, and the other led by the nominal president of the party, Diane Teasdale. The Protectionist Party is the product of a further split and represents an attempt by expelled Australia First members to repackage right-wing nationalism to appeal to a wider audience than far-right activists.

As is often the case with the minor parties of the right, the Australian Protectionist Party is a bit shy about its origins, with its website saying somewhat cryptically that it was “formed by a gathering of people who have been politically active in several other nationalist and patriotic movements, who intend to develop a new social movement in Australia, to tackle the ideological strangle-hold our opponents have upon political discourse in this country, and to take back the moral high ground”.

The party claims to be the “new expression on an Australian Nationalist perspective”.

“Protectionism is deeply rooted in Australian political history,” the party’s website says. “Our first two Prime Ministers were Protectionists and our first federal government was a Protectionist government. Sir Edmund Barton and Sir Alfred Deakin were largely responsible for creating some of our most important institutions.”

Barton and Deakin would probably be spinning in their graves if they thought they had been roped in to provide philosophical cover for a party whose roots are to be found in the various fascist and neo-Nazi factions that have dwelt on the edges of Australian political life over the past 50 years.

Interviewed by The Canberra Times this week, the Protectionist Party’s New South Wales chairman and its first local government candidate, Darrin Hodges declined to identify any members of the party’s national executive apart from himself and the national president, former South Australian Pauline Hanson’s One Nation candidate Andrew Phillips. Both Phillips and Hodges are former Australia First Party members who, having failed to displace that party’s leadership, in particular Saleam, moved to establish their own party.

The Protectionist Party claims membership in New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria, Western Australia and the ACT; however, details of the last-mentioned branch are sketchy, indeed no more than a Woden post office box number previously linked to the Australia First Party.

Hodges, who is running for election to the council of Sutherland Shire – home of the Cronulla riots – certainly has a talent for publicity, campaigning against the development proposal to establish an Islamic school at Camden, including a brief appearance on the ABC’s Q&A.

It has been alleged that Hodges has contributed to the neo-nazi “white survivalist” discussion forum, Stormfront, though he denies this.

Hodges is keen to spruik his credentials as a local resident concerned about the quality of life in the Sutherland Shire.

His website declares: “My campaign will be centered around environmental and development issues, principally in relation to the ‘unit boom’ around the shire.” His main focus is what he sees as the link between local development decisions and broader national issues of race and identity.

“Given the tensions certain development proposals have caused in areas such as Bass Hill and Camden, I would vigorously oppose any similar developments that would threaten the peace and harmony of the Shire,” his website says. “We most certainly do not want a repeat of the scenes we saw in Cronulla a few years ago.”

The issue of mosques and Islamic school has provided a useful focus for Protectionist Party activists, with the party’s main website providing templates for local leafleting efforts, but the so-called “Asianisation of Australia” is their primary focus.

“Islam is a problem but people can change their religion, but if you’re an Asian, you are an Asian,” Hodges told The Canberra Times.

In this the election of the Rudd Labor Government has undoubtedly given the new party and far-right groups more generally a new focus and sense of purpose.

The Protectionist Party’s discussion forum is full of references to creeping Asianisation and the need to defend “White Australia” from a resurgence of multiculturalism. Kevin Rudd is commonly referred to as a “Sinophile” whose ambitions for greater Asia-Pacific economic and political integration are viewed as a conspiracy to betray Australia.

The Government’s apology to the Stolen Generations, a feared arrival of Asian guest workers in regional Australia, the end of mandatory detention and a recommitment to multiculturalism by the Federal Government are cited as evidence of a growing national crisis.

“The great danger of people like Rudd is dragging Australia further in the direction of Asianisation”, says Hodges. “This is the most dangerous government since Whitlam.”

It would be easy to simply dismiss Hodges as just another far-right loon, but this would be a mistake. In the interview this week, he was articulate and keen to differentiate himself from what he called the “rabid behaviour” of other far-right activists, notably Saleam, who he says has led Australia First into “an ideological cul-de-sac”.

Still the Protectionist Party is not without direct connections to the more openly extremist elements of far-right and neo-Nazi activity with members being sought through the Stormfront website.

Hodges’ focus on development and environmental issues, while not hiding his anti-Asian agenda, is relatively sophisticated and is clearly closely modeled on British National Party strategies which have enjoyed some success in British local government elections.

Hodges candidly admits to close and growing links between the two far-right groups.

“The BNP is a successful nationalist party,” he says, adding that he has corresponded with the BNP’s leader.

“[Nick] Griffin rescued the BNP from the murky depths of of right-wing extremism,” Hodges says, and he hopes the Protectionist Party will emulate that success in Australia.

The new party’s membership includes a number of former BNP activists and members are travelling to the United Kingdom to attend the BNP’s annual “Red, White and Blue” conference later this month.

Whether Hodges will succeed, or at least achieve a presentable level of support, in the New South Wales local government elections on September 13 remains to be seen.

Labor and Liberal sources in the Sutherland Shire are adamant the odds are stacked against him, but, as one Labor branch stalwart observed, “He’s got quite a lot of publicity and some of it strikes a chord with the locals here.”

Associate Professor in Political Science at Flinders University Dr Haydon Manning said that time would tell whether the Protectionist Party would prosper.

“That will really depend on how far the present economic downturn goes and whether they have the leadership and organisational ability to expand beyond a small core of activists. Possibly the model of the British National Party is a more viable starting point than the precedents provided by earlier Australian far-right parties.

“Right-wing extremist movements have tended to be energised in periods of economic difficulty, and during the life of Labor governments, both federal and state. It’s also true that the seeds of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party were sown in the latter years of the Hawke and Keating Labor governments.

“It’s in periods of economic stress that significant numbers of voters have tended to become … fearful of external pressures on their living conditions. In these circumstances references to stopping “Asianisation” and calls to wind back multiculturalism have had and may again have some appeal. The combination of anti-Islamic rhetoric post-9/11 with long-standing advocacy of a White Australia should also not be discounted.”

By and large the media ignore the far right on the grounds that they are racist and objectionable and that they shouldn’t be given the oxygen of publicity. But it’s always worth keeping an eye on the fringes of political life, because what lurks there may, given the right circumstances, step unexpectedly on the centre stage.

After all, Pauline Hanson’s spectacular rise caught most seasoned political observers by surprise. Darrin Hodges and the Australian Protectionist Party may yet amount to nothing much, but one never quite knows what is around the corner.

True that.

More later…

Posted in Anti-fascism, State / Politics | 10 Comments