Neo-Nazis in Fitzroy?

[Update : See also Stateline (ABC TV) transcript of May 4, 2007; ‘Violence at public housing estate calls for State Government to help Sudanese community’.]

According to (a troll called) V on Indymedia, neo-Nazis in Fitzroy have recently been harassing Sudanese folks living in the Fitzroy Housing Commission flats. Apparently “over many consecutive nights there have been confrontations between the neo-Nazis and the Sudanese community there.” As a result, a public gathering is being held @ 7pm tonight @ the flats (Gertrude Street).

Blah blah blah… in reality, somebody’s been trolling the newswire, presumably inspired by the following:

Teen charged over triple stabbing | ABC Online | April 29, 2007

A teenager has been charged over a triple stabbing during an alleged break-in at a Melbourne high-rise.

Police allege up to six people forced their way into the Fitzroy flat around 1.30am AEST today.

It is alleged two teenage boys and a man were stabbed during the confrontation.

A 16-year-old boy is facing 10 charges, including intentionally causing serious injury, false imprisonment and aggravated burglary.

He has been remanded in custody and is expected to appear in a children’s court tomorrow.

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments

Three mines is good; four mines is better

In a stunning turn of events — and despite Midnight Oil‘s ‘fourteen extraordinary albums with combined international record sales of more than 12 million units’ — the ALP has recently decided to abandon its ‘cynical, hypocritical, illogical and failing no-new-mines policy on uranium that was forever undermining Labor’s economic credibility’ for a doubleplusgood policy of expanding the industry beyond BHP Billiton‘s Olympic Dam project in South Australia, Rio Tinto controlled Energy Resources of Australia Ltd‘s Ranger mine in the Northern Territory and US-based General Atomics‘ Beverley mine in South Australia. Since joining his new band, Peter Garrett — current Shadow Minister for Climate Change, Environment, Heritage (& the Yartz) and former warbler for the Oils — has also changed his tune, and is now singing of his new-found love for number 92 on the elemental chart, stating in a powerful speech to Federal Parliament that:

I see the Labor Party as the natural place for me to continue my engagement with the uranium mining industry. Labor has a proud history, a proud record as the primary party of reform and social justice on the Australian political landscape. And I am confident in the party’s capacity for renewal and enriching this landscape with whichever number of new mines market forces will determine will maximise a profitable return to investors. Labor has always mattered for Australia and it matters to me, as does uranium mining. Labor has an abiding commitment to fairness, to insisting that government does have a primary role in protecting the wellbeing of people, to having a foreign policy which espouses an independence of thought and action in international affairs, and to increasing the amount of uranium on the global commodities market. We in Labor are willing to put ideals as well as ideas into the political mix, and we’ll even even add in a little radioactive waste for good measure. All these components of the modern Labor Party are important to me, and I reckon they are important to Australia — and, of course, the Australian stock market.

Endorsing Garrett’s passionate view — and following the ALP’s decision at its annual conference last weekend — support for uranium stocks rose during subsequent trading sessions, particularly stocks which have deposits in South Australia and the Northern Territory, where there is no opposition to new uranium mining at a state level. Stocks to benefit included Deep Yellow Ltd, which has a deposit in the Northern Territory, Nova Energy Ltd, which has uranium interests in South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory and PepinNini Minerals Ltd which has deposits in South Australia. Indeed, according to The Age, Garrett’s rendition of ‘Wind Beneath My Wings’ has been hailed a triumph by the mining sector: “Uranium miner Energy Resources of Australia Ltd added 74 cents, or 3.02 per cent, after the news to close at $25.22. Several explorers also made significant gains, including Nova Energy Ltd, which put on 15 cents to $4.05, PepinNini Minerals gained eight cents to $2.73, Deep Yellow Ltd gained four cents to 67.5 cents and Toro Energy Ltd picked up three cents to $1.28.”

And the company takes what the company wants
And nothing’s as precious
As a hole in the ground

See also : Mike Head, ‘Australian Labor Party conference: a right-wing stampede for office’, wsws.org, May 1, 2007

Posted in State / Politics | Leave a comment

Dr. Cam on Helen Coonan’s fascist flirtation

Crikey! Dr. Cam writes:

“The Jewish and Croatian communities of Australia are, according to a report in today’s [April 26] Australian Jewish News, angry and outraged that Communications Minister Helen Coonan, Liberal Senator Concetta Fierravanti-Wells and NSW Upper House MP David Clarke attended a commemoration of Croatia’s inglorious independence on 10 April:

    The Howard Government has been embarrassed by the appearance of a cabinet minister at a Croatian independence function linked to a murderous neo-Nazi regime.

    Jewish groups are outraged at Communications Minister Helen Coonan’s attendance at the Sydney commemoration earlier this month, which marked Croatia’s independence following the fascist Ustase regime’s rise to power during World War II.

    Liberal Senator Concetta Fierravanti-Wells and NSW Upper House MP David Clarke were also guests at the April 10 event, held at the Croatian Club in Punchbowl.

    NSW Jewish Board of Deputies (NSWJBD) CEO Vic Alhadeff described the celebration as “offensive” to Australians, while it is understood Croatian embassy officials are also angered at the involvement of a senior government minister.

The Jewish and Croat communities have every reason to be outraged when members of government are breaking bread with anti-Semitic extremists — and so should we all be. Coonan and Fierravanti-Wells’ attendance at an event celebrating one of the most evil moments in Yugoslav history can probably be put down to ignorance. Clarke has no excuse, having been involved with the Ustase since the ’70s, he is surely well aware of their violent tactics. Nor is this the first time he has celebrated the Nazi takeover of Croatia. In 2005, he feigned surprise at being connected to the Ustase … after he was caught out celebrating the exact same event at an Ustasi function. The Liberal Party needs to do to Clarke what it never managed to do to Urbancic — Clarke must be excommunicated from the party and assigned a Brian Burke-esque pariah status, even if the Christian right faction loses a few of its precious numbers.

Bigotry has no place in 21st century Australian politics.

It’s an outrage the roots of which are 66 years in the making. On 10 April, 1941, the royal dictatorship of Croatia was overthrown and replaced by the brutal Nazi-aligned Independent State of Croatia, led by a group called the Ustase. The Ustase quickly got around to the business of murdering hundreds of thousands of Serbs, Jews, Romani, anti-fascists and pretty much anyone that didn’t approve of wholesale murder. Hundreds of thousands of people were also forcibly deported or forcibly converted to Catholicism as the Ustase played their role in the wider Holocaust.

Following the conclusion of World War II a number of these active collaborators resettled in Australia — authorities turning a blind eye to those with murky Nazi pasts as their attentions turned towards fighting the Communist threat — and formed groups dedicated to the reformation of Independent Croatia, through terrorist activity, with the tacit support of the conservative end of Australian politics. In 1963, after the Yugoslav Government formally complained about Australian Ustase captured waging a guerilla war in Yugoslavia, Robert Menzies responded by praising the Ustase insurgents. A few years later [November 30, 1968], as Ustase laid waste to the Yugoslav consulate in Sydney, Billy McMahon (who would soon become Prime Minister and ‘just happened to be there’) described the Ustase as “a good bunch” with “a good cause”.

Throughout the ’60s and ’70s, the Ustase continued an unchecked campaign of terror (assaults, bombings, murders etc) against the local Yugoslav community which only ceased when several bystanders were injured by a bomb in Sydney and public outcry forced Australian intelligence operations to recognise that a violent terrorist network was operating in Australia. But why were the Ustase allowed to operate with free rein for so long? It surely had nothing to do with the fact that a member of the Ustase, Nazi propagandist Ljenko “Little Goebbels” Urbancic, was a senior powerbroker within the Liberal Party. Urbancic remained an influential member of the far-right faction of the Liberals until his death in 2006, alongside his protege … David Clarke. Which brings us to today.

(Those interested in the history of the Ustase in Australia should check out Sanctuary: Nazi Fugitives in Australia by Mark Aarons [Heinemann, Melbourne, 1989] and Radical Melbourne 2 by Jeff & Jill Sparrow [Vulgar Press, Melbourne, 2004])”

See also : Joan Coxsedge, Ken Coldicutt and Gerry Harrant’s Rooted in Secrecy: the clandestine element in Australian politics, esp. ‘One, Two, Three — Ustasha Are We!’, pp.43-59.

Posted in Anti-fascism, History, State / Politics | 5 Comments

Boneheads. Kiwi. Czech. German…

    the blob writes:

“It seems a bit funny that a group of neo-Nazi skinheads in New Zealand should celebrate Hitler’s birthday like the Hammerskins did in Wellington the other weekend. FDB! decided to do a bit of digging to see what Der Fuhrer thought of New Zealand. What we found was, well, rather disappointing. He was obviously not very well informed on geography or ethnography. Take a look at this; it’s excerpts from a speech given by Hitler on July 15, 1925, explaining Nazi racial doctrine. He started by using dogs as an example, declaring that although dogs were indeed dogs, not all dogs were alike and some were better than others. Sheer genius there, but it gets better…

You say ‘a human being is a human being’. No doubt! But between the individual human beings there is after all a certain differentiation. For example: many New Zealanders live in trees and many still climb around on all fours, very different from a European who walks on two legs and does not live in trees but wanders on streets.

Now you might say: ‘That is the effect of climate’. My friend, if all Europeans left the Continent and the New Zealanders slipped in here, you will surely not believe that the climate will make a European out of the New Zealander, however great the influence of climate, that influence will not reach beyond certain characteristics…

It’s almost beyond comprehension that the leader of a political party could be so stupid, but obviously Party officials didn’t think so. In fact, the whole of Hitler’s speech was considered to be significant enough for official publication in pamphlet form by the Nazi Party and widely distributed.

Here’s a photo of some of the Hammerskins:

Cheer up boys, bananas are available all year round in New Zealand now. We hear the Hutt Valley has some pretty fancy trees. Perhaps you could hold the next celebrations for Hitler’s birthday in one?”

    the media reckons:

In Brno, hundreds of boneheaded members of the neo-Nazi National Resistance tried to hold a march on May Day; emboldened, presumably, by the lack of opposition to their goosestepping antics at last year’s May Day, a day on which local police paid their own special tribute to the workers by beating up a woman protesting against the scum. This year, however, the boys in uniform — normally kept busy trying to avert clashes between local anarchists and their pinheaded opposition — received orders to stop the march after permission for it was withdrawn; shortly before the geese started stepping. According to Radio Praha:

Elsewhere in Prague, anarchists clashed with right-wing extremists while the police, out in force for the day, struggled to maintain law and order. Around two hundred anarchists marched along the banks of the Vltava to Strelecky Island where ultra-right supporters were congregating. The two groups came face to face at Legionaries Bridge, separated by two lines of police in riot gear. Isolated skirmishes were quickly brought under control and several dozen people were detained. The situation is reported to have been rather more serious in the Moravian city of Brno where some 500 neo-Nazis clashed with police in the centre of town, throwing stones and bottles. Several people are reported injured, among them two policemen and one journalist.

    buzz or howl under the influence of heat:

And finally, in highly-photogenic scenes that would make some local ‘working class’ punks piss their pants — and their comrades in the bourgeois media jump, yet again, on their overused broomsticks — punks, skins ‘n’ herberts in Berlin have celebrated May Day in fitting fashion, while antifa in Dortmund have expressed their very understandable frustration at not being able to extend very special May Day greetings to members of the NPD and other prancing neo-Nazis (‘Rioters set fire to train tracks, vandalize buses, trams in western Germany’, AP, International Herald Tribune, May 1, 2007):

The riots in Dortmund were among several outbreaks of violence on May Day in Germany. In the eastern town of Erfurt, several protesters were injured during a right-wing demonstration and various counterprotests, police reported. About 1,300 members of the far-right NPD party marched through the city center, and some hurled bottles and cobblestones at police. Left-wing protesters also caused “severe damage of property,” a police spokeswoman said. She would not give details on damage or the number of arrests.

In cities all over Germany, demonstrators marched against right-wing extremism, but most protests remained peaceful…

As, of course, will the neo-Nazis.

Posted in Anti-fascism, State / Politics | Leave a comment

Happy May Day!

At MTV, of all places, it’s noted that “If you happen to be an anarchist, you probably observe May Day, which commemorates a number of historical revolts worldwide and is also known as International Workers’ Day”. So thank your mother for the rabbits, thank you Marta for the sandwiches(!), thank you aketus for hosting slackbastard on anarchobase — for one year now — and happy May Day to all my comrades in Barricade, in Melbourne, Australia, and to those around the world, especially to the comrades in Sofia, Bulgaria, Berlin, Germany and Istanbul, Turkey.

“IF YOU CANNONADE US

we shall dynamite you.” You laugh! Perhaps you think, “You’ll throw no more bombs;” but let me assure you that I die happy on the gallows, so confident am I that the hundreds and thousands to whom I have spoken will remember my words; and when you shall have hanged us, then, mark my words, they will do the bomb-throwing! In this hope do I say to you: “I despise you. I despise your order; your laws; your force-propped authority.” HANG ME FOR IT!

~ Louis Lingg, October 1886

Posted in Anarchism | 4 Comments

“I get so emo, I could die” / Drop the attitude, fucker / In music, nothing happens…

[Update : Jack Sargeant writes about suicide, girls, and the difficulties involved in giving all your love to just one genre in ‘It’s hard to be emo and be respected’, The Australian, May 3, 2007.]

::: I GET SO EMO, I COULD DIE :::

    I know what you’re thinking. “What are the roots of the musical genre known as emo?” Well, to tell you the truth, in all this excitement I kind of lost track myself. But being as this blog is a .44 Magnum, the most powerful handgun in the world, and would metaphorically blow your head clean off, you’ve got to ask yourself a question: Do I feel emotional? Well, do ya, punk?

Some hack called Chris Johnston has a regular column called ‘The Crate’ in EG — the ‘entertainment’ consumption guide published with each Friday’s edition of The Age — in which he writes about ‘classic’ albums (columns which will presumably, one day, be published collectively as the aural equivalent to The Age Good Food Guide). Last Friday (April 27), in his most recent column, Chris wrote about Hüsker Dü‘s Candy Apple Grey album (1986). After noting that the recent joint suicide of two local girls has been linked to the supposed fact that they liked ’emo’, Chris opines that Fugazi and Hüsker Dü were the genre’s true pioneers. Thus according to Chris, music giveth, not taketh away, especially:

…the pained, cathartic wailings — the railing against the world, the wondering why — of the best “emotional hardcore” music, or emo. Emo has now been appropriated by corporations, so it’s kind of the pop version. The same thing happens to every decent underground uprising. But 20 years ago, there was no name for it — it was just the most intense music on the planet. Fugazi and Hüsker Dü, the greatest, who set the most desperate odes to freedom and pain and the sense of being captured within the world to the most hardcore, transcendent guitar music of the era. It took you right out of yourself, as the newest generation still does, despite being corporate. As such, it was, and is, and can be, a saviour, not a killer.

Uh-huh.

A few comments:

1) The notion that Hüsker Dü was somehow an emo pioneer is one that Chris first proposed elsewhere, in a review (March 29) of The Pixies recent tour. There, Chris argues that “Hüsker Dü, the other bookend to a nascent Pixies, were somewhat different. They were the abrasive post-punk trio led by Bob Mould who, with Fugazi, the Minutemen and Black Flag, pioneered the whole American ’80s hardcore scene, which in many ways was the original emo”.

Hmmm.

Don’t ask me why, but it seems that in the intervening weeks, Chris has decided that maybe the Minutemen and Black Flag weren’t so emo after all. This may have something to do with the fact that the whole American ’80s hardcore scene, in many ways, had bugger-all to do with ’emo’. Certainly Black Flag and the Minutemen never did… although I do recall many years ago a mate describing Henry Rollins as a hardcore Morrissey. And like, Morrissey has been known to express his emotions on occasion…

So yeah, good point Chris.

2) Candy Apple Grey was Hüsker Dü’s fifth studio album, and the first to be released on a major label. It therefore makes very little sense to refer to the ‘corporate appropriation’ of emo by way of an album actually produced and distributed by one of the six corporations that dominated the industry 20 years ago, and even less in reference to a band whose signing was much-remarked upon at the time as being evidence of a renewed corporate interest in ‘punk’ and ‘alternative’ music.

3) The term itself is kinda stoopid — as its current, dominant use as a marketing device by the marketing departments of the handful of corporations that continue to dominate the music industry might otherwise suggest. And if the term once held any relevance, it was really only as a means to distinguish the musical subject matter, lyrical content and general attitude, approach and feel of certain US hardcore bands of the mid-80s from that of others. (Elsewhere, two other hacks, Ben Cubby and Larissa Dubecki, helpfully add that “With roots in the goth movement, emo is short for “emotional” and is known for its angst-ridden music and moody introspection”.) In this context, ’emotional hardcore’ was to be distinguished not merely from ‘political’ hardcore, but the macho bullshit bands — precisely like Black Flag — tended to perpetuate (and which a number of punk poseurs continue to perpetuate under the false notion that selfish indifference to others is somehow a quintessentially ‘working class’ — not middle class — attitude).

4) In any case, Embrace and Rites of Spring — not Fugazi and Hüsker Dü — are usually considered to be the first ’emo’ bands. Not that it matters much:

Mark Prindle : Okay so, whether you like it or not, you’re basically considered to be the creator of “emo.” And I was just wondering – why have you always thrown yourself so emotionally into your music?

Guy Picciotto : Well, first of all, I don’t recognize that attribution. I’ve never recognized “emo” as a genre of music. I always thought it was the most retarded term ever. I know there is this generic commonplace that every band that gets labeled with that term hates it. They feel scandalized by it. But honestly, I just thought that all the bands I played in were punk rock bands. The reason I think it’s so stupid is that – what, like the Bad Brains weren’t emotional? What – they were robots or something? It just doesn’t make any sense to me.

But anyway, when I was young, I was always over the top because I was so fucked up. Not “fucked up” as in “wasted” but more mentally “fucked up”. And I was really jacked up. So it came out of that. I mean, before I was in Rites of Spring, I was in a band called Insurrection with Brendan, the Fugazi drummer who I’ve played with in every band I’ve been in. And our music was like Motörhead and Discharge and Venom – shit like that. That was what the band sounded like. And we weren’t very good! But nobody was calling THAT “emo”. Then when we started Rites of Spring, I guess we got more serious about what we were trying to do. But I didn’t actually sing in Insurrection. In Rites of Spring, I decided to sing and that’s what came out. Because when I was young, I was nuts.

5) I hate myself & I want to dye my hair : I don’t know shit about the two girls who killed themselves, but if anything, the music which Chris purports can ‘take you right out of yourself’ in this case, sadly, only managed to take them out of this world; and probably because, rather than despite, its being ‘corporate’. But until such time as rates of youth suicide begin to seriously imperil the continued reproduction of labour, it’s unlikely to be treated seriously by state authorities.

6) As an aside, the supposed link between music and suicide has been made before, only 20 years ago it was the !cinataS influence of heavy metal over impressionable young minds that had particular groups worried, Christians in the US in particular. Thus:

During the late 1980s, a pair of well-publicized cases involved claims filed by the parents of children who had injured or killed themselves after listening to heavy metal music.

In 1988, John McCollum, a 19-year old, shot himself in his bedroom after listening to songs of John “Ozzy” Osbourne, from Blizzard of Oz, and Diary of a Madman. The plaintiffs claimed that one of the songs, ‘Suicide Solution’, preached that suicide is the only way to solve one’s problems. They also alleged negligence and incitement to suicide.

Once again, the court said no.

In its ruling, the court noted that entertainment, like political and ideological speech, is subject to First Amendment protection…

A 1989 case, Vance v. Judas Priest, dealt with the issue of actions that the plaintiffs claimed were the result of subliminal messages contained on the group’s Stained Class album.

Raymond Belknap, 18, and James Vance, 20, had barricaded themselves in Vance’s bedroom, where they sat for five hours, drinking beer, smoking pot and listening to the group’s music. When Vance’s mother knocked on the bedroom door, the boys jumped out the window and went to a nearby church playground, where they shot themselves.

Belknap died immediately, but Vance survived after blowing most of his face off. A wrongful death action followed.

When the case went to trial, the judge ruled in favor of Judas Priest, noting that the plaintiffs failed to prove that the group had intentionally placed subliminal messages on the album or that the messages were indeed the cause of the suicide and attempted suicide. The judge did rule, however, that while song lyrics are protected by the First Amendment, subliminal messages are not…

~ Jerry Rhodes, Professor examines issues of free speech rights, media accountability, UDaily (University of Delaware), November 15, 2002

::: DROP THE ATTITUDE, FUCKER :::

On Saturday, SBS screened Don Letts‘ documentary Punk : Attitude, a film which was voted the most popular documentary @ the 2005 Melbourne Film Festival, and which I naturally missed seeing. But that was then and this is now, and now I’ve seen it. I’ve also read Letts’ synopsis, which is odd, and his filmography, which is exciting: — at least, exciting in the sense that I’ve also now discovered that he’s made a film about one of my favourite artists, Gil Scott-Heron: The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (2003). But as for Punk : Attitude, I thought it was a reasonably entertaining and informative film, heavily weighted in favour of the UK and US, but slightly more expansive in terms of its list of interview subjects than might otherwise be expected. Thus Roger Miret (Agnostic Front) makes a brief appearance, and Henry Rollins refers to Fugazi — both useful, if for no other reason than their ability to remind audiences that, whether or not punk was born in the mid-’70s in London or New York, its legacy and its tradition transcended these times and places. Blah blah blah. Letts: “With hindsight we are able to recognise [punk] as part of an ongoing movement of counterculture. It is in that spirit that I made this film. Not as a nostalgic look back but rather a way to move forward. After all, if it happened before it can happen again.” In reality, it’s history, and history is what’s happening. But according to some…

::: IN MUSIC, NOTHING HAPPENS :::

ACMI is screening a series of films which focus on punk in a coupla weeks (May 11 — May 20):

In the midst of a current punk revival [sic] criticised for being more ‘mall core’ than hard core, rediscover the real thing at ACMI. Curated by Jack Sargeant… inspired by No Focus: Punk on Film edited by Chris Barter and Jack Sargeant. Incidentally, this book’s available from the ACMI Shop. Some of us have got to live as well, you know. Who do you think pays for all this rubbish? They’ll never make their money back, you know. I told him. I said to him, “Punk”, I said, “They’ll never make their money back”.

Unfortunately, in this case, the operative meaning of ‘punk’ is musical events occurring in the vicinity of London in the late ’70s (Jubilee / Punk and the Pistols / The Great Rock ‘n’ Roll Swindle) and the United States in the early ’80s, loosely documented in the shape of Penelope Spheeris‘ first film Suburbia — which is fucking awfulLadies and Gentlemen, the Fabulous Stains and Repo Man. (Another film included for its Camp Quality is Desperate Living by John Waters.) The other films included in the series are a documentary on The Gun Club, Alan Clarke‘s Made in Britain (starring Tim Roth as a bonehead in Fatcher’s Britain) and various shorts by Billy Childish and a bunch of wankers from New York… So basically, punk as a cultural phenomenon, born in England and the United States in the late ’70s, and dying there in the early ’80s.

The same old story, in other words, and one that goes on like a broken record…

    recuperation : consolidated : 1994

    the grunge industrial and tekno folk genres have been recuperated colonized sanitized if the jazz music of the sixties was the refuge of a violence without a political outlet it was followed by an implacable ideological and technical recuperation bob dylan is replaced by kurt cobain neil young is replaced by dinosaur jr. nina simone by queen latifah lightning rod by bushwick bill the most rudimentary meaningless themes pass for successes if they are linked to the mundane preoccupations of the consumer the rhythms of exceptional banality are often not that different from miltary rhythms in music nothing happens and in forty years it has seen only marginal or cyclical movement change occurs through minor modifications of a precedent each series repeated with slight changes enabling it to parade as an innovation the singers of the seventies [eighties] are back in fashion in the nineties [noughties] and today’s kids enjoy their parent’s music at times however the quality improves song becomes critical and heralds a new subversion by musicians cramped by censorship who stand alone

Posted in Film, Music, Television | 4 Comments

First Ungdomshuset, now Blitz

Following unruly protests and approximately 250 arrests at a NATO Summit in Oslo, Norwegian authorities have raided Blitz, the squatted social centre. According to one account (The Norway Post), on Thursday evening (April 26):

…activists tore down barriers and fences and fought their way to the square in front of the Oslo City Hall, where the so-called delegates to the so-called NATO summit were gathered. The so-called Blitz activists had left a peaceful demonstration protesting against NATO’s presence in Afghanistan. The so-called police used horses, dogs and finally [teargas] to stop the so-called demonstrators who threw rocks, planks and bottles [at] the police. During the night the so-called police raided the so-called Blitz House in downtown Oslo, and confiscated large firecrackers and crates filled with rocks.

Apart from anything else then, and leaving aside the question of the accuracy of the above account, the NATO Summit is obviously providing Norwegian authorities with an excellent opportunity to smash Blitz, the autonomous counter-cultural centre in central Oslo which for over 20 years has been ‘fighting oppression, government control, cultural commodification and social pacification’; much to the annoyance of local authorities. (The protests themselves also allegedly caused at least one local Marxist pipsqueak — Oslo’s Mick Armstrong, one presumes — to denounce Blitz and all its works.)

Aftenposten, another Norwegian paper, gamely tries to make the most of the police raid, headlining its article ‘Explosives found in Blitz raid’: “Police say radical youth organization Blitz intended to use explosives in connection with the ongoing NATO meeting in Oslo”, police also confiscating 70 crates full of rocks and fireworks (for the benefit of waiting media). Of course, one fact not mentioned in this account is that Blitz doesn’t just fight visiting war criminals, but local fascists too, and the 70 crates of bricks and rocks were kept primarily in the event that local boneheads wanted to practice their heading. Which prospect would no doubt perplex a number of local Melbourne punks, who think that neo-Nazis should in fact be welcomed into our communities, and their venues actively supported — not boycotted — and defended — not torn apart…

See also : Norway police use tear gas at Nato meeting protest, Reuters, April 27, 2007; Photos

Posted in Anarchism, State / Politics | 3 Comments

This is Blood & Honour

Last week, Blood & Honour New Zealand and the New Zealand Hammerskins stuck Douglas ‘Small Man, Big Mouth’ Schott and his band Blood Red Eagle on a longboat to Wellington, whereupon the mighty warriors played a gig at the clubhouse of Satan’s Slaves: to a very small crowd of fellow boneheads, a handful of bikies, and somebody’s dog that happened to wander in off the street. In response to news of the gig, Race Relations Commissioner Joris de Bres said “Mercifully, there aren’t many people in New Zealand happy to celebrate Hitler’s birthday. I don’t think it’s going to be a very big party”. Wellington police said they were aware of the event, but were not expecting any trouble.

I wonder if Alfred Williams and Richard Arsenau were expecting trouble?

Hate group member named in killings
Michael A. Mohammed
St. Petersburg Times
April 27, 2007

TAMPA – A second man accused of beating two homeless Tampa men to death in 1998 as part of an initiation rite has entered a plea agreement with federal authorities.

Kenneth Hoover, 34 and formerly of Tampa, was arrested and pleaded guilty Jan. 31 to charges of second-degree murder and racketeering. Until Thursday his identity had not been disclosed because of an ongoing investigation, said Steve Cole, spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Tampa.

Another man, Charles Marovskis, 29, of Pennsylvania, was arrested on identical charges Jan. 31. His name was released soon after the arrest.

According to a Justice Department report, Hoover and Marovskis belonged to Tampa Blood and Honour, a [bonehead] hate group “whose members espoused the belief that white persons of Aryan descent were the superior race.”

Group members agree to participate in a “race war,” own guns and train in infantry tactics, and to “demonstrate their loyalty and dedication … by engaging in acts of violence,” the report said.

Authorities say Hoover and Marovskis were among a group of Tampa Blood and Honour members who beat Alfred Williams to death with a tire iron on Sept. 31, 1998.

Then, authorities said, the group used an ax to murder Richard Arsenau in a wooded lot at 320 E Fletcher Ave.

The killers considered Arsenau and Williams inferior because they were homeless, according to prosecutors.

According to his plea agreement, Hoover “agrees to cooperate fully with the United States in the investigation and prosecution of other persons” who helped kill the men.

In exchange, the State Attorney’s Office will recommend a reduction in Hoover’s sentence. Both Hoover and Marovskis face death or life in prison and [a] $250,000 fine.

“We will not be seeking the death penalty for Hoover because of his cooperation,” Cole said. “As far as the other defendant, that’s still up in the air.”

However his sentencing judge can reject the recommendation. If this occurs, Hoover cannot change his plea to not guilty.

Cole said prosecutors plan to bring charges against others involved in the killings.

“This investigation’s still open,” he said. “We continue to identify other individuals responsible.”

Pride. Strength. Honour. It’s a way of life.

Posted in Anti-fascism | 3 Comments

Stylish Greek anarchists still in fashion

Stories about the antics of stylish Greek anarchists are proving to be increasingly popular in English-language corporate/state media, especially in the US. Previously on Slack Bastard Blues, Greek students are revolting, Greek anarchists are crazy, inspiring, interesting, baffling, running Monkey marathons and being extremely stylish while battling US imperialism. And now:

Suspected anarchists throw petrol bombs at cars outside Athens police station
AP
International Herald Tribune
April 26, 2007

ATHENS, Greece: Suspected anarchist youths threw petrol bombs at cars parked outside an Athens police station early Friday, in the third attack of the kind within a few hours, officials said.

Police said one car was burnt during the pre-dawn attack in the eastern suburb of Zographou. There were no injuries or arrests.

Anarchists, who frequently clash with police and attack symbols of authority, have ratcheted up the level of confrontation with arson strikes outside police stations in the country’s two main cities.

Late Thursday, masked youths threw petrol bombs into two patrol cars outside a police station in the northern city of Thessaloniki, after smashing the windscreens. The fires caused extensive damage.

Earlier, 12 vehicles, including patrol cars, unmarked police cars and a police motorcycle, were burnt by a group of up to 40 youths outside a central Athens police station.

The youths escaped on foot after the attack in the capital’s Exarcheia district, a traditional anarchist stronghold.

Anarchists have stepped up arson attacks to show solidarity with widespread protests by inmates in Greek penitentiaries, after prison guards allegedly beat an anarchist bank robbery suspect.

Order was restored in all prisons Thursday, after four days of protests.

versus

Anarchists burn Athens police vehicles
AP
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
April 26, 2007

ATHENS, Greece — Suspected anarchists threw gasoline bombs at cars parked outside a central Athens police station on Thursday, destroying 12 vehicles in the latest in a series of arson attacks, authorities said.

Police said two patrol cars, four unmarked police cars and a police motorcycle were among the burned vehicles. There were no injuries or arrests.

The attack reportedly was carried out by a group of 30 to 40 masked youths in the capital’s Exarcheia district, a traditional stronghold for anarchists. The youths escaped on foot.

Anarchists have stepped up arson attacks to show solidarity with inmate protests in Greek penitentiaries that began after guards allegedly beat an anarchist bank robbery suspect.

Police said order was restored in all prisons Thursday when about 200 inmates at Malandrinos prison in central Greece – where the alleged beating took place – returned to their cells after four days of protests.

Greek anarchists are taking action to increase the costs to the Greek state of imprisoning and torturing their comrades. According to one Greek English-language source (Unrest hits central Athens: Anarchists strike in Exarchia in solidarity with disgruntled prison inmates, ekathimerini.com, April 26, 2007): “A group of some 80 suspected anarchists went on the rampage through central Athens yesterday and attacked cars, shops and ministers’ offices while chanting slogans in solidarity with protesting prison inmates…”. The protest, triggered by the beating of an anarchist prisoner, and the generally shitful conditions inside Greek jails — “some 460 people are being held in Malandrino, which only has a capacity of 280 inmates” — was successfully crushed by authorities after four days:

Greece prison protest ends
Al Jazeera English News
April 26, 2007

A four-day rooftop protest by inmates at a Greek maximum security prison against the alleged beating of an inmate by guards has ended.

Trouble in Greece’s prison system spread throughout the country after an inmate in Malandrino prison, about 200km northwest of Athens, was allegedly beaten by guards on Monday.

Hundreds of inmates joined mass protests in another 10 prisons that prompted a nationwide crackdown on Tuesday.

Inmates have also demanded that authorities reduce prison overcrowding and reform Greece’s parole system.

On Wednesday, riot police entered Malandrino, cutting off access to the roof.

The authorities asked the inmates, who spent a cold and rainy night on the roof, to return to their cells.

Tear gas

Protests had died down in prisons in Athens, on the Ionian island of Corfu, the Aegean island of Crete, the central towns of Larissa and Trikala, the western city of Patras, the northern city of Salonika and the northeastern town of Komotini by the end of Tuesday.

Three inmates were injured in a police operation in the high security prison of Korydallos in Athens.

Police use of tear gas led to complaints from the local authorities as the prison lies in in a densely populated area of the city.

Four Korydallos prison guards were hospitalised with breathing problems.

Firebombs

Prisoners in Malandrino have also made a series of demands for reduced sentences and longer leave but this was rejected by the Greek justice ministry.

The alleged beating of the inmate, a [stylish] anarchist [named Yiannis Dimitrakis], was followed by a series of incidents in Athens believed to be staged in his support.

On Wednesday, a group of suspected anarchists threw stones and firebombs at the private offices of the Anastassis Papaligouras, the justice minister and George Voulgarakis the culture minister, formerly minister of public order.

Earlier on Thursday, another group threw firebombs at the headquarters of the Athens riot police department near the city centre.

Posted in Anarchism, State / Politics | Leave a comment

Lest We Forget

A scumbag on the Melbourne Punx Forum writes:

It’s a well known fact that Bulldog Spirit‘s drummer Joel is a [neo-Nazi]. He was in that shit band GGF and a [neo-Nazi] band called Ravenous [which also] played with [the neo-Nazi] Fortress many times… Oh, and when Marching Orders were first starting out, they had a guitarist called Mick who was also in [neo-Nazi] band Bail Up!

Shocking and stunning news. Vicious, completely unconfirmed rumour. (And Joel has never played drums in Death’s Head neither.)

I’ve already documented Bulldog Spirit’s various (other) flirtations with fascism, as well as the antics of the heavily tattooed and baby-faced Damien Ovchynik‘s Bail Up!; they, together with Marching Orders, constitute part of the galaxy of stars that regularly play local neo-Nazi venue The Birmy. As for Fortress…

Fortress (circa 1991–1999), was Australia’s most significant and well-known contribution to the pin-headed genre known as RAC (‘Rock Against Communism’), and the success of its peculiar brand of B-grade metal was largely a result of the efforts of one person: Scott McGuinness. Despite being based in Melbourne, it played very few gigs here during its lifetime (for obvious reasons), and attracted its largest audiences among all them foreigners (for equally obvious reasons). Not that playing with themselves unmolested was the band’s only problem; so too was selling their racist garbage. So, while in terms of music distribution the advent of the Internet means that now just about any Tom, Dick & Adolph can relax to the soothing sounds of Fortress, prior to its widespread adoption by neo-Nazis, CDs — vinyl even — were generally only available at gigs, through the post, or under the counter. For fans of RAC and other neo-Nazi muzak, in Melbourne, such tripe was available @ now-defunct shops such as Modern Invasion (nee Pipe Imported), a still-existent label run — typically — by a little rich kid, Daniel Janecka. Modern Invasion is also the current, slightly shabby home of the Brisbane-based White supremacist Abyssic Hate, and the former home of Melbourne band Deströyer 666.

Deströyer 666 released their CD Unleash the Poodles in 1997 through Modern Invasion, and on the inner sleeve the band thanks members of Fortress, Squadron and Ken McLellan from Brutal Attack. Brutal Attack is, in turn, a long-running English bonehead group — formerly known as Dead Paki In The Gutter — which toured Australia in 1996. During this tour, members of Brutal Attack, Deströyer 666, Fortress and Squadron recorded a mini-CD together entitled “Garrison”, which was released through Nordland Records (Nordland Records later mutated into Resistance Records: a cashcow for the National Alliance).

A veteran racist, McLellan was last week denied entry to the US. This particular English Invasion was actually a response to an invitation from the kinky, !cinataS, Hollywood Nazis of the National Socialist Movement (‘America’s Nazi Party’) for the old bigot to prance about on a stage in South Carolina to — what else? — celebrate Hitler’s birthday; mourn Wild Bill‘s long-overdue death; and ‘Rock Against Illegal Immigration’.

Arf arf.

McLellan’s non-performance was preceeded by another on the streets of Columbia, where Dozens of neo-Nazis marched against illegal immigration, outnumbered by protesters (AP, International Herald Tribune, April 21).

NSM For Beginners:

[In 2006 the] Minnesota-based National Socialist Movement (NSM), with 81 chapters in 36 states, remained the largest group on the neo-Nazi scene last year and was highly active for the first half of that period. But in July, scandal hit the group in the form of reports that Chairman Cliff Herrington’s wife was a practicing Satanist. Before it was over, both Herringtons had left the group, as had its energetic spokesman, Bill White of Roanoke, Va. White took several NSM members and officials with him to form the American National Socialist Workers Party. Although that group has begun to publish a magazine, thus far it has done little else.

NSM has been pushing immigration heavily, and planned to follow a rally held in Texas last fall with a “Rock Against Illegal Immigration” concert and “mass rally” scheduled for Laurens, S.C., this April. NSM leader Jeff Schoep has led several such rallies, attacking Latino immigrants for “stealing jobs” and more…

Like McLellan, Scott McGuinness has remained a very busy little neo-Nazi bee, being involved both during and after his Fortress fell back into the swamp with numerous other, largely studio-based recording projects, including Axis, Dissident, Exxtrem (with the German band Noie Werte / ‘New Values’), Garrison and Raven’s Wing. And not content with simply exporting shit to the rest of the world, McGuinness — in a possibly desperate attempt to provide himself with an audience — was also involved in the importation of tools to Australia; in 1993, opening up a local Hammerskins franchise. Since then, the Southern Cross Hammerskins have worked closely with Blood & Honour Australia, although of late most activity has been confined to organising yearly road-safety events in memory of Skrewydrivers. Thus the 2003 Ian Stuart Donaldson is Dead Celebration starred Bail Up!, Blood Red Eagle, Death’s Head, Fortress and Ravenous. The gig was recorded live on September 20 @ The Birmy, and released as a tribute to the dead bonehead and founder — along with another good fascist, Nicky Crane — of Piss & Wind.

Interestingly, the only band not to make the cut was Gospel of the Horns: the band which recently had an album launch @ The Tote — just up the road from The neo-Nazi Birmy. (NB. Tote management claims to not like racist, sexist, homophobic, neo-Nazi fucking scum.) Notwithstanding their exclusion from the album in question, GotH paid minor tribute to one of their ideological mentors, Ian ‘Stop sign? What Stop sign?’ Stuart, by including a photo of themselves playing at an earlier B&H gig in the booklet accompanying the The Eve of the Conqueror EP (2000). And in an interview with some schmuck from the German metal zine Voices from the Darkside, lead singer Howitzer opines that “One of the highlights [of his trip to Europe] was going to Nuremberg, to see where the NSDAP had their annual rallies…”. Note also that Howitzer played on Unleash the Poodles; the 1997 Deströyer 666 release in which the band thanks Fortress for inspiration. Oh, and he also recorded albums with the neo-Nazi Garrison and Raven’s Wing.

Gospel of the Horns: “bonehead rock”, neo-Nazi music… or both?

    Appendix

One band what’s been removed from the online Encyclopaedia Metallum is Raven’s Wing:

    Genre : Traditional Metal
    Lyrical theme(s) : National-Europeism*
    Origin : Australia
    Last label : Resistance [Through the Looking Glass (2000)]

    Last known line-up :

    Julie – vocals
    Scott McGuinness – vocals (Fortress (Aus), Axis (Aus), Dissident (Aus), Garrison)
    KK Warslut – guitar (Deströyer 666, ex-Bestial Warlust, ex-Corpse Molestation)
    Aussie Nigel Brown – bass (Retaliator (Aus), Broadsword, White Lightning (Aus), No Remorse (UK), Fortress (Aus), Celtic Warrior)
    Coz – drums (Deströyer 666, Gospel of the Horns, Garrison)

    Submitted by einvolk on September 18th, 2005
    Last modified by Napero on June 29th, 2006

    *Winner, 2004 Award for Best Fascist Euphemism

Another is Dissident :

    Genre : Traditional Heavy Metal
    Lyrical theme(s) : Nationalism, Heritage**
    Origin : Melbourne, Australia
    Formed : 2000
    Label : Old Guard [A Cog in the Wheel (2000) / II Unity Drum (2006)]

    Current line-up :

    Scott McGuinness – vocals (Fortress (Aus), Garrison, Axis (Aus), Raven’s Wing)
    Billy – guitars (Retaliator (Aus), Celtic Warrior)
    Paul – drums (Fortress (Aus))

    Submitted by Cantusbestiae on September 10th, 2005
    Last modified by GraveWish on September 5th, 2006

    **Runner-Up, 2006 Award for Best Fascist Euphemism

Posted in Anti-fascism, History, Music | 22 Comments