Community Assembly @ Preston Motors

Community Assembly
8-11am
Thursday, March 22

@

Preston Motors
1551 Sydney Rd
Campbellfield
[Melways: F7, map 7]
Tel: (03) 9358 3100
Fax: (03) 9359 5627

    “please contact us for any enquiries or comments you have and we will be happy to discuss them with you.”

Urgent update, March 19 : Management at Preston Motors has threatened to sue striking NUW (National Union of Workers) members. Union Solidarity will not put up with this sort of intimation of ordinary rank and file members. We urge all of our supporters to attend future community assemblies.

Over 30 workers working in the spare parts/stores section of Preston Motors began a strike on Tuesday, March 13, over the company’s continued refusal to negotiate a fair wage increase.

Further information : NUW Press Release | Preston Motors workers strike, Tony Iltis, Green Left Weekly, #703, March 21, 2007

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

G20: Another account

Below is the account of a person arrested in Sydney last week. I stole it from arushandapush, and I’m re-publishing it here ‘cos I think it deserves a wider audience, and maybe it will receive one by my doing so. The author states that it represents their opinion and their opinion only, and that it was written without the advice or assistance of any other person.

See also : Obituary | Tanya Reinhart (1944–2007) | “A versatile Israeli academic, she spoke out against the conflict with Palestine” | Victoria Brittain, The Guardian, March 21, 2007 ::: In Memoriam: Tanya Reinhart | “Tanya’s was a vital and rare Israeli voice that never wavered when it came to criticizing Israel’s systematic violations of Palestinians’ rights, including making a professional sacrifice by contributing to the discourse over the academic boycott of Israel” | The Electronic Intifada, March 19, 2007

Dear friends, family, colleagues and comrades,

On Wednesday the 14th of March, 2007, I was woken at 6am by 8 armed men and women who had demanded entry to my family home. These men and women identified themselves as police officers from a range of police organisations: NSW Police, Victoria Police, Federal Police and counter-terrorism agents. 2 other officers in dark clothing and gloves came around the back of the house — I assume to cover any attempted escape — and 1 officer filmed everything on a digital camera.

The police explained that they were raiding my house in relation to protests that I had attended in Melbourne last November. These protests had occurred in relation to the G20 economic forum that was held in Melbourne at that time. After seizing clothing and my university backpack, I was officially arrested and taken to Surrey Hills Police Station.

Similar arrests have occurred to some 48 other students and activists around Australia over the past 4 months. (I have heard of cases where the process of arrest has led to serious personal injuries, significant property damage, loss of jobs and in one case an individual was locked up for a month without bail.)

This arrest is the second time that I have experienced the force of Victorian counter terrorism agents in relation to this protest. On the night of the protests in Melbourne (18/11/06) I was snatched by roughly 8 unidentifiable men and forced into an unmarked white van as I attempted to walk with friends away from the protests.

Without identifying themselves the men in the van tied my hands behind my back, forced me to lie face down on the floor of the van and proceeded to interrogate me, punching me repeatedly in the face if I didn’t answer their questions quickly enough and once for accidentally calling one of them ‘mate’.

[See also : Drasko Boljevic]

This is the first time I have talked about this publicly, apart from with close friends, family, my lawyer and an officer who photographed my injuries and bruising at the police station. I have been too afraid of antagonising the police further and having this happen again…

…now it has happened again.

There is one point I would beg you to consider after hearing about what has happened.

This is not just a story about me, or a story about Melbourne.

The arrests that have resulted from the Melbourne protests are not an isolated example of new policing techniques. This is not simply a case of protesters taking things too far and police having to hunt down and arrest the criminal thugs responsible. This is not an occasion when things went ‘wrong’ in isolation.

Riot police and counter-terrorism snatch squads present in Melbourne in November, have also been deployed at the ‘Free David Hicks’ rallies around Australia, anti-VSU (Voluntary Student Union) rallies in Sydney, anti-war demonstrations, global warming awareness campaigns and marches against industrial relations changes. Police surveillance and undercover “snatches” are occurring on university campuses with alarming support from university administration and security forces. Without counting the G20 arrestees, over the last year and a half at least three dozen students at Sydney University alone have been arrested and charged in court for protesting, some multiple times. Less than a handful of these cases were for any activity more serious than refusing to move away from the protest, and the large majority didn’t even resist arrest.

And yet they spend sometimes over a year going through the court processes, and face the possibility of criminal records.

This policing also occurs at the same time as media organisations are increasingly controlled by fewer and fewer powerful parties, and the public broadcasters such as ABC and SBS are attacked for posing political questions. Academic and scientific communities are frequently raising alarm about government policing and censuring of their findings. Military and intelligence leaders are personally attacked for speaking about military tactics or concerns that do not match those of the government.

Recent books such as Silencing Dissent [Clive Hamilton & Sarah Maddison, Allen & Unwin, 2007] and Do Not Disturb [Robert Manne, editor, Black Inc, 2005] are essential reading and provide countless statements and examples that even public service officials are fearful of speaking truthfully about the current political situation in Australia, and the world.

Protesters are not the only people who worry about the state of the world.

YES – the protests in Melbourne made striking front-page photographs.

YES – there was a lot of passion, anger, verbal and physical expressions of dissent.

YES – normally this dissent is not expressed in such a public manner.

But NO – this was not an example of random violence or thuggish behaviour.

I went to the G20 protests to have my dissenting voice heard. The response has been extreme repression, inter-state anti-terror raids, media stigmatisation, public ridicule and jail sentences.

We are concerned citizens, concerned students, concerned human beings… A world without people who speak up is not a safer world for anybody to live in.

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

G20: Sydney four in Melbourne court

The four men arrested as a result of terrorism squad raids in Sydney last week appeared before the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court yesterday. All four were bailed to re-appear on May 11. One, Daniel Jones, was “ordered to submit to forensic photography of his mouth, which detectives said was required for identification purposes” (‘Accused G20 rioters appear in Vic court’, [AAP], The Age, March 20, 2007).

Why?

According to a report in the Herald Sun (Elissa Hunt, ‘Mind gap, riot court told’, March 20, 2007), “Sen-Det Paul Topham gave evidence that Mr Jones had distinctive front teeth with a large gap and had been identified from footage of the riots, where he allegedly threw a street pole and yelled abuse”.

Pretty bizarre stuff, but not quite as bizarre — or as funny — as another Herald Sun journalists’ account of the protest rally held outside of the court in solidarity with the accused. After remarking upon the otherwise unremarkable appearance of the four (they were dressed neatly for court), Terry Brown (‘G20 sideshow must go on’, March 21, 2007) uses his hands and feet to recount the following:

But outside, other G20 co-accused and well-wishers put on a different fashion show. With piercings enough to send a metal detector into meltdown, about 20 dressed to impress. One had 14 metal pieces protruding from his head, and possibly others behind big, dark shades. Another, with purple Sideshow Bob hair, had 10, including a screw-in cup hook. Green hair, safety pins, hard-core lesbian badges [oo-er!], leather stud belts, dreadlocks, hand-painted red skulls — a bit of everything.

Call me crazy, but it reads like Brown’s true passion lies in fashion.

On a more serious note, one sung by Patrick O’Connor (SEP candidate for Marrickville, NSW; ‘Anti-terror police raid homes of Sydney University students’, WSWS, March 20, 2007):

Last week’s highly provocative raids by anti-terrorism police on a number of University of Sydney students underscore the real political agenda behind the so-called war on terror. The bolstering of the state apparatus through a series of draconian “anti-terror” laws has been centrally aimed not at protecting ordinary people from the threat of terrorist attack, but rather at suppressing political dissent and intimidating anyone considering challenging the government or the state…

The manner in which the five arrested Sydney residents were traced by the anti-terrorist police raises further serious questions. Following the raids, the University of Sydney’s Student Representative Council (SRC) submitted an official request to the university council asking whether it cooperates with ASIO, state or federal police requests for information on students.

SRC President Angus McFarland told the World Socialist Web Site that he had received information from a journalist that ASIO has a number of agents and informants targetting protest groups and political organisations on the campus. McFarland was also told that it was possible his phone and email conversations were being monitored. Surveillance has reportedly been stepped up ahead of the APEC summit due to be held in Sydney in September.

There is no doubt, however, that ASIO’s campus activities are driven by much broader concerns than just the APEC meeting. Ever since the agency was founded in 1949 to help contain post-war political unrest, ASIO has been notorious for its harassment, dirty tricks, and frame ups of government opponents and political dissidents, particularly those identified with the socialist movement. Amid escalating opposition to the war in Iraq and mounting disaffection and hostility towards the entire political establishment, the political police are anticipating and preparing for the radicalisation of broad layers of student youth. Last week’s raids in Sydney will no doubt be followed by further provocative police actions aimed at intimidating young people…

On a further note, the number of people arrested and charged by police in relation to the G20 protests appears to be fluctuating quite a lot if one follows reports. Thus the Herald Sun now claims 27 have been charged and AAP 29; while on January 22, AAP reported a total of 28 arrests… and there have been at least five more arrests in Sydney since then.

Oh, and while Josh Wolf, “a San Francisco freelance journalist who has been held in federal prison since August 2006 for refusing to turn over video he shot of a demonstration in San Francisco, will be honored with the Herbert Block Freedom Award” and $5,000 by The (American) Newspaper Guild according to Editor & Publisher (March 20, 2007), Australian hacks continue to completely ignore his case. See also : Jeffrey Dvorkin, Executive Director, Committee of Concerned Journalists, ‘Is Josh Wolf Defending Journalism?’, March 12, 2007.

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

Anti-fascism in Melbourne: 1990s

Introduction

In Melbourne, during the early- to mid-1990s, a number of campaigns in opposition to the establishment of a fascist presence in the city were conducted, largely in response to attempts by one, now-defunct group called National Action (NA). NA was formed in 1982, under the leadership of a man of Lebanese descent named James — later Doctor — Saleam. Following his imprisonment in May 1991 for organising a shotgun assault upon the home of Eddie Funde (then the ANC representative to Australasia) on January 27, 1989 — “[NA] members Jason Frost and Michael White… both implicated Saleam, telling the court he had given them a balaclava, gloves, a shotgun and eight dollars each for a drink to steady their nerves” — leadership of the group was assumed by a neo-Nazi from Adelaide called Michael (De) Brander, the son of Spanish fascist migrants.

    “Saleam was born [on September 18, 1955] in Maryborough, Queensland, of Lebanese migrant parents. He joined the Nazi Party (the National Socialist Party of Australia) in 1970. Two years later, aged 17, he was found guilty of fire-bombing a Maoist bookshop [East Wind] in Brisbane and put on a four-year good behaviour bond. He moved to Sydney and enrolled at university where he helped form National Resistance in 1977. That became National Alliance in 1978, attracting some old Nazis.

    In 1981, National Alliance merged with the Immigration Control Association to form the Progressive Nationalist Party. After that collapsed, Saleam and others formed [NA] in 1982 [and which was officially launched on Anzac Day, April 25]. In August 1984, Saleam was found guilty of insurance fraud; an appeal is pending [1989]. He was given a good behaviour bond for three years in 1985 as well as a $5,000 bond for possession of a prohibited article, namely a large nail-studded club.” ~ Lyndall Crisp, ‘Harvest of Hate’, The Bulletin, April 4, 1989

Northcote

One of the first public expressions of opposition to NA took place in Northcote in November 1993. Following a number of racist and homophobic assaults in the area, on November 20 a rally marching under the banner ‘Action Against Fascism’ took place. The demonstrators, who numbered about 130, met at the corner of Arthurton Road and High Street in order to scrub out racist graffiti in the area. A group of 6 boneheads heckled the crowd, but were then forced to flee when a segment decided to speak more directly with the boneheads regarding their political and racial anxieties. After a long chase, and a number of full and frank discussions, police eventually managed to secure their escape through Northcote Plaza (Jim Simmonds, ‘[Boneheads] row with marchers’, Herald Sun, November 22, 1993; ‘Protesters clash with neo-Nazis’, Northcote Leader, November 24, 1993).

Brunswick

Several months later, on March 5, 1994 — Brunswick Community Day — NA, with the support of AAFI, decided to hold a public rally at Brunswick Town Hall. NA spokesperson John Ruger claimed that the rally was intended to “oppose all efforts (including race-hate laws) to limit the rights of Australian nationalists” (Scott Whiffin, ‘High noon looms in Nazi showdown’, Brunswick Sentinel, February 7, 1994). Interestingly, Senior Sargeant Colin Barnes stated that the ISO was to blame for “bringing the National Front [sic] into Brunswick”; a reference to the previous action in November (which he also erroneously describes as having taken place in December; Rosemary West, ‘Forget the violence: family day plea to rivals’, The Age, March 5, 1994).

In reality, the background to the rally was a number of incidents of verbal abuse by boneheads of local community members (Muslim schoolgirls, Turkish women and others, including public transport workers); violent assaults (upon a Vietnamese man, a Somali man, a group of teenaged Asian schoolgirls and others, including a group assault upon a Maori man outside of a Brunswick pub); and a campaign of racist graffiti and vandalism (largely directed at local churches, businesses and the cars and residences of ‘known’ or suspected anti-racist and anti-fascist activists).

As it happens, on the day of the NA rally — which managed to attract just 30 or so boneheads, and which was again addressed, unsuccessfully, by Brander — almost 1,000 rallied in opposition. After coming under a barrage of rotten eggs and horse dung (one egg landed, quite spectacularly, in Brander’s mouth, footage of which featured as Goal of the Week on that week’s edition of The Footy Show), the neo-Nazis were soon forced to flee the site, under police escort, to a specially-commandeered city-bound train. And while Brunswick Mayor Glenyys Romanes expressed a desire for the media “to play it all down”, Peter Murray replied “…that’s all very well if you’re a white Anglo councillor, but it’s not very good for the Somali woman who, a few weeks back, had her arm broken by these thugs in Northcote” (Fran Cusworth, ‘Anti-Nazi rally voices its anger’, Brunswick Sentinel, March 21, 1994).

Note that during this period, the Sarah Sands Hotel on Sydney Road, Brunswick, acted as a venue for the neo-Nazis; a role which is now being fulfilled — with the support of a small number of local punks (notably Bulldog Spirit and Charter 77) — by the Birmingham Hotel in Fitzroy.

    Adelaide : In March 1994, NA also engaged in an infamous anti-Asian pogrom in Rundle Street Mall, when approximately 20 or so NA members, boneheads and their allies, shouting Nazi slogans and dressed in Nazi paraphernalia, assaulted 15 people. The injured were treated for broken bones, severe bruising and facial injuries, and one (Asian) man “was kicked more than 30 times about the head and body” (‘Neo-Nazi street rampage’, Herald Sun, March 28, 1994). Brander subsequently denied NA involvement, defended the racist mob’s actions, and was quoted as stating that “I don’t see neo-Nazis as being detrimental to our group” (Shane Maguire, ‘SA Gangs At Flashpoint’, Sunday Mail, April 3, 1994). A subsequent rally held on the steps of the Prospect Town Hall was addressed by Brander, accompanied by about 50 or so NA members and sympathisers, and Nazi marching songs. A crowd of several hundred, including a number of WWII veterans, assembled in opposition to the neo-Nazi rally.

Fawkner

The next few years were slightly quieter for NA in Melbourne, although both Barricade (which opened in February 1995) and a number of other groups and individuals were targeted for reprisals. This included an assault by Brander against a counter-protester at another NA rally outside Parliament House on March 18, 1995. (Brander was convicted in September.) Aside from internal disputes, their main stumbling-block was to be the emergence of The Wicked Witch of Ipswich, Pauline Hanson, who continues to dance her way around Federal and State politics, TV, and women’s magazines.

In January 1997, NA tried to establish a firmer presence in Melbourne by opening a bunker in Tyson Street, Fawkner. Several months later, on March 15, a demonstration protesting its appearance was organised by local Trotskyists (among others), many of whom had previously been involved in the protests in Brunswick.

As NA described it, the protest consisted of “communists, homosexuals and fringe malcontents”. NA, on the other hand, forewarned and forearmed (as Saleam might say), assembled on the roof of the bunker dressed in clown suits and — to the sound of circus music — threw lollies to (and shit on) the malcontents gathered below. The neo-Nazis also shared the rooftop with members of the Force Response Unit (FRU), armed with video cameras and a pathological aversion to the troublemakers below.

On the ground, police were also very much present: one antifa was arrested for allegedly assaulting a cameraperson who had refused his request not to be filmed. This arrest triggered a minor fracas in which another two antifa were arrested while attempting to prevent the police van in which the first had been placed from leaving the area. Having succeeded, police offered to release the first person apprehended if protesters agreed to piss off to a local park. The self-styled leadership agreed to this proposal, but — after having been pressured to by others present — the proposition was put to a vote. The overwhelming majority of protesters voted to remain until the antifa was released — and he was immediately thereafter. (To the best of my knowledge, the other two antifa arrested by police subsequently went to court and received fines for their misbehaviour).

The coalition Campaign Against the Nazis (CAN), which drew the support, among others, of local Labor MPs — including the ALP member for Wills, Kelvin Thompson, as well as Carlo Carli, ALP member for Coburg, Tony Sheehan, ALP member for Northcote and Doug Walpole, MLC for Melbourne West — organised further protests on April 19, May 31, July 12 and August 9, 1997; each one smaller than the last.

das Ende der Geschichte?

Tired of the protests, subjected to attacks from other, rival neo-Nazi groups, and unable to pay their rent, NA finally gave up and took their bat and ball home to Adelaide in April 1998; barely 15 months after they began. As for Brander, he enrolled at LaTrobe University and, having completed his MA in history, has since been welcomed with open arms by the ‘neo-conservative’ / reactionary Quadrant magazine, which re-published his MA thesis on ‘Alexander Solzhenitsyn and the West’ in the March 2005 edition. Brander also addressed a post-graduate conference organised by the University of Sydney in July 2005, and is currently alleged to be publishing a zine called Australian Resurgence. Interestingly, veteran racist Colin Wuttke stood for the SA seat of Ramsay in 2006 as an ‘Independent’ sponsored by ‘Australian Resurgence’; a long time between drinks for Wuttke, who last contested a seat in 1980.

Saleam, on the other hand, after his release from jail, attached himself to the white supremacist Australia First Party; and to this day remains their Fuehrer.

Heil!

Posted in Anti-fascism, History | 16 Comments

Against Me! // Banksy // Dropkick Murphys

“They think it’s funny / Turning rebellion into money” sang some dead bloke called Joe Strummer. If that’s the case, then Against Me! and Banksy must be in hysterics.

Against Me!

The guitarist, vocalist and lyricist for Against Me!, Tom Gabel — who once declared that (unlike all those awfully “spineless liberals”) Baby, I’m An Anarchist — now innocently claims that adverse reactions to the band’s signing with a major label (Sire/Warner Bros.) — still considered a cardinal sin among some — is because he doesn’t “necessarily want to be limited to just being [in] a punk band” and “[m]aybe people get upset about that — I don’t know.” Which makes about as much sense as claiming that the “endless accessibility of MP3s is helping turn music into more of a product that is being consumed and less of an art to be appreciated by fans” (‘Some punks are against Against Me!: Success mistaken for sellout’, Kevin W. Smith, The Arizona Daily Star, March 15, 2007).

Banksy

As for The Controversial Artist Banksy™, I didn’t know, and I’m not even sure I care all that much (you gotta pay the rent somehow), but his art is now selling for lots and lots of money to people like Angelina Jolie. She bought some of his stuff what she saw at a Barely Legal & Yet Extremely Lucrative exhibition of his in LA in September, 2006 for US$360,000. (Fecal Face has pictures.) Hello! Magazine reports that in October 2006 there was “frenzied bidding” for a series of Banksy’s portraits of Kate Moss, which sold for £50,400; while his “stencil of a green Mona Lisa with paint dripping from her eyes sold for £57,600”.

At Sotheby’s.

Christina Aguilera has also invested her money in a Banksy; three actually. But probably the best news for investors is the fact that in February 2007 some more of his stuff sold for lots more money:

Record price for Banksy bomb art
BBC
February 8, 2007

A picture of pensioners bowling with bombs by graffiti artist Banksy has sold in London for £102,000, breaking a record for his work. Bombing Middle England, which is made from acrylic and spray-paint on canvas, reached double its highest estimated price of £50,000 at Sotheby’s. The artist’s Balloon Girl also sold for £37,200, while another piece called Bomb Hugger fetched £31,200…

The previous highest price paid for one of the artist’s distinctive spray paintings was £62,400 in October 2006, when the image of a couple embracing clad in deep sea diving gear – which was used for the cover of Blur‘s Think Tank album – went for 10 times its estimated value at Bonhams. “It’s a sensational result,” said Elli Varnavides, head of the impressionist, modern and contemporary art department at Sotheby’s Olympia branch. “It’s a record for any Banksy sold at international auction.”

And while some dead Frenchmen may have postulated that:

The relation between authors and spectators is only a transposition of the fundamental relation between directors and executants… The spectacle-spectator relation is in itself a staunch bearer of the capitalist order. The ambiguity of all “revolutionary art” lies in the fact that the revolutionary aspect of any particular spectacle is always contradicted and offset by the reactionary element present in all spectacles.

The bottom line doesn’t lie… does it?

Dropkick Murphys

Finally, the “working class punk” band Dropkick Murphys will be playing at The Palace on Tuesday, March 27.

    How do you define working-class? What does it mean to be a working-class rock band?

    [Ken Casey, August 2003] I don’t know, it’s just how I was raised. I don’t offer a fancy definition of working class. But it’s something you’re born into. I have friends who have gone on to college and got great white collar jobs, but they’ll always be working class kids. By the same token, there are kids from rich families who move to a new city where nobody knows them, shave their head, get a job at a factory and go around talking about working class this and that; but they’ll never be. As far as we go as a band, working class rock band just signifies that we came from nothing.

The working class rock band that came from nothing (to be precise: Boston) will be sharing the stage with one of my (er) favourite local bands, Bulldog Spirit. What’s a little bit odd about this arrangement (made by Sydney-based touring company Blue Murder) is that the Dropkicks are not only “working class” but Irish-American working class and… well… while I’m conscious of legal threats, fact is, according to Doug’s ‘Bulldog Spirit Melbourne Tour Diary’ for Saturday, April 27, 2002: “When we played Dirty Ol’ Town, Adam says, in the height of good humour, ‘this o­ne’s for Ulster’ as I’m doing the harmonica intro…”.

Apparently, some bloke then asked Doug what Adam meant by dedicating a song to Ulster, to which Doug — not Adam — replied: “I told him there was nothing to it”; we are obviously expected to believe that dedicating a song — a song written by Shane McGowan of The Pogues — to Ulster, was a remark made at complete random.

    [Al Barr, February, 2001] If Barr looks at his band mates with a little respect, it’s nothing compared to the regard he gives former Pogues front man Shane MacGowan. With the spot of respect the Pogues hold as icons of Irish rock in the Dropkick Murphys’ collective heart, it’s not surprising the band would dream of collaborating with MacGowan. The dream was finally realized on the band’s latest album Sing Loud, Sing Proud (2001, Epitaph), where [McGowan] stepped in to do guest vocals for one track, “Good Rats”.

Angry and upset, presumably (and with good reason), this same bloke, according to Doug, then asked ‘Why do you have to be such a fucking girl?’:

I asked him ‘Did you just call me a girl?’ He said ‘yes’, so I responded accordingly with a quick headbutt to the nose… The sad thing about it is, someone said that the Ulster bloke’s mate was the guitarist from Vicious Circle. Along with Depression and Civil Dissident, they are o­ne of my favourite Aussie bands and I was looking forward to playing with them at the picnic. No hard feelings there I hope.

Dunno. But you’d reckon Blue Murder would be more careful regarding which bands Dropkick Murphys want to associate themselves with; especially a band like Bulldog Spirit, that flirts with right-wing elements and supports neo-Nazi venues. “Ironically enough, [Dropkick Murphys] has done tours to benefit the Anti-Racist Action group and participated in the Unity Festival to promote racial harmony.”

NB. ARA emerged in 1988 as a result of the efforts of skinheads in Minneapolis — in particular a group known as The Baldies — to combat the presence of boneheads in that city and in the neighbouring city of St. Paul in 1986. The first SHARP — Skin Heads Against Racial Prejudice — group formed in New York a year later, in 1987. And the rest, as they say, is history…

Posted in Anarchism, Art, Music | 2 Comments

Television, Drug of the Nation

Last week, almost two years after its completion, the ABC finally played Peter Vaughan’s doco The Last Valley, on the struggle to save the last remnants of old growth forests in East Gippsland (the kind my paternal grandfather logged further west). And in response, while Jim Schembri further confirms his reputation as an execrable reviewer in The Age (Vaughan “allows himself to get so entangled in the proceedings he ends up in the back of a police van”), a much more useful account of how the Victorian Government tried to sabotage the making of the film is available at Barista.

On Tuesday night, Foreign Correspondent has a feature by Emma Griffiths on fascism in St. Petersburg: ‘Russia – Hate Crimes’:

St. Petersburg is known as one of the most beautiful cities in the world — but there’s also a dark side. In recent years the significant community of international students from Africa, Asia and former Soviet Republics [and anarchists], has become the target of vicious attacks by neo-Nazis and extremist groups. More than 120 people have been murdered over the past three years and hundreds more injured, in racially [and politically] motivated violence. However, despite the increasing brutality, Moscow-based correspondent Emma Griffiths reveals an apparent reluctance [sic] of some authorities to bring the perpetrators to justice.

For more information on East Gippsland’s old growth, see Goongerah Environment Centre (GECO): “GECO is an independent grassroots environment organisation based in East Gippsland. We are dedicated to protecting the remaining old growth forests of the region.” For more information on Government-approved racist and fascist terrorism in St. Petersburg and other parts of Russia, see FSU Monitor: “The site for daily news, opinion, and advocacy on Jews and human rights in the former Soviet Union — a project of UCSJ: Union of Councils for Jews in the Former Soviet Union.”

Posted in Anti-fascism, State / Politics, Television | 2 Comments

G20: Chris Tinkler and News Corporation contribute $10 to a drink-and-drug-fuelled all-ages protester orgy!

The two journalists at the G20 benefit gig / drug-fuelled orgy on Friday — the gum-chewing Chris Tinkler and his photographic assistant — have managed to scribble the following account as a special (possibly even EXCLUSIVE!) contribution to the corporate media’s ongoing campaign to demonise G20 protesters. As it happens, the two hacks in question stuck out like sore thumbs, but I don’t know if they were confronted at any point. Judging by the below, it seems not.

At first I thought the pair may have been ‘undercover’ police, but I suppose I should’ve guessed that, given Tinkler’s diminutive stature, it was more likely that they were simply hacks. Which is not to suggest that police and other agencies don’t routinely monitor ‘anti-capitalist’ protests, events and organising projects: they do. Thus the suspicions of ‘student leaders’ in Sydney are very well-founded, as a garbled report in today’s SMH indicates (‘Fears of uni spies after five charged over G20 violence’, John Kidman, Sydney Morning Herald, March 18, 2007).

Anyway, here’s Tinkler’s Walkley Award winning effort:

‘Out of control’
Chris Tinkler
Sunday Herald Sun
March 18, 2007

DRUG use and under-age drinking have been exposed at a wild [wild!] “all-ages” benefit gig for rioters charged over Melbourne’s G20 protests.

Children as young as 10 slugged beer in front of their dazed parents, a mother smoked cannabis beside a pram containing her baby and youths openly snorted powder off a table at Friday night’s event.

[Huh?]

The Sunday Herald Sun also found traces of drugs including cocaine, amphetamines and cannabis in all of the [two] toilet cubicles. The tests were conducted with Securetec DrugWipe kits, used by customs officers and police.

The $5-a-head event was run to raise funds for protesters arrested over the riots during the summit of the world’s financial leaders in November.

Police were [allegedly] bitten, vehicles [sic] smashed and barricades and other objects thrown at officers as demonstrations degenerated into chaos.

About 300 people attended the G20 Arrestee Legal Solidarity Benefit Gig, which raged [raged!] until the early hours yesterday in a former lingerie [oo-er!] factory in Brunswick.

But anti-capitalist chanting and police-baiting that characterised the G20 riot were absent — replaced by drunken and drug-fuelled debauchery.

The landlord of the Pitt St venue, rented by a collective, said he had not been told of the gig, which featured punk rockers Pisschrist.

    Tinkler obviously had troubling understanding Pisschrist lyrics. Here’s a sample (‘Tofu Terror’, Distort Melbourne Demo Tape, July 2004):

    YI ER SAN SI

    THOUGHT OF MEAT MAKES ME SICK
    GOTTA GET MY TOFU FIX

    TOFU TERROR

    CHUCK A SLAB ON THE PIT
    FIRE IT UP READY TO EAT
    DEVOUR IT UP WANT SOME MORE

    TOFU TERROR

    THOUGHT OF MEAT MAKES ME SICK
    GOTTA GET MY TOFU FIX

The party was advertised through message boards on activists’ websites, with charged Monash student Akin Sari helping to promote it.

[And?]

More than 30 protesters, including a private school boy [a private school boy!], have been charged over the G20 violence.

Police are bracing for more violence [ie, YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED! — and police have a ready excuse for any violent assaults they commit] on Tuesday, with protests [sic] planned outside Melbourne Magistrates[‘] Court where four alleged G20 rioters, who were arrested in Sydney dawn raids last Wednesday, are due to appear.

The Sunday Herald Sun revealed this month the Bracks Government had agreed to a secret $700,000 [sic] payout to [47] protesters [of which $600,000 went to the struggling law firm Slater & Gordon] who clashed with [ie, were assaulted by] police in the S11 [police] riots outside the World Economic Forum in 2000.

The Sunday Herald Sun‘s editorial, meanwhile, after making some limp criticisms of this year’s Big Dick — the twelfth year in a row Melbourne has been forced to suffer a corporate-fuelled yuppie invasion — opines the following regarding ‘Protesters’ hypocrisy’: “WIDESPREAD drug use at a party to raise funds to pay legal fees for G20 protesters makes a mockery of their claims to the high moral ground. They laugh at the law and the community they pretend to represent.” Apart from not making any sense, it’s a public secret that Big Dick brings not only a fabulous boost in clientele for local brothels, but (gasp!) the drug trade too. But of course, the chances of the Herald Sun engaging in an investigative report regarding the manner in which rich folks and yuppies celebrate the occasion — perhaps by attending one of Ron Walker‘s parties — is about as likely as “Jamie” being a real person instead of a figment of some PR hack’s imagination.

    See also : ‘Hill & Knowlton Confidential Report On S11’, Scoop.nz, September 5, 2000. Interestingly, Hill & Knowlton‘s embarrassingly misleading and simple-minded attempt to drum up business claims that prior to S11 the WEF’s last meeting took place in Seattle in 1999; an error still being compounded six years later by a local ‘expert’, Luke Howie. Note that Hill & Knowlton — established in 1927 by a former hack, John W. Hill, in conjunction with a banker, Donald Knowlton — is reportedly one of the world’s leading PR firms (corporate / state propaganda machines), is notorious for selling the first Gulf War, and has been a subsidiary of the ‘communications’ conglomerate WPP since 1987.
Posted in !nataS, Anarchism, Media, Music, State / Politics | 4 Comments

G20: Solidarity Action

Tonight’s benefit gig went off like cheese.

Sweet.

This coming Tuesday, March 20, the four people arrested in Sydney will be appearing at the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court. A solidarity demonstration has been called for, at 9am. The Court is located at 233 Williams Street. Oh, and in late April / early May, Barricade will be screening a new (2006) documentary film by Roy Wallace (Toxic Waste) on anarcho-punk, called The Day The Country Died. It’s really really… good. Stay tuned for more details.

The story of the anarcho-punk movement is told by some of the most influential performers, including: Penny Rimbaud (Crass), Colin Jerwood (Conflict), Colin & Kevin (Flux of Pink Indians), Dick Lucas (Subhumans), Zillah Minx (Rubella Ballet), Gary Buckley (Dirt), Steve Lake (Zounds), Mark Wallis (Liberty), Gee Vaucher (Crass), Dave Hyndman (Hit Parade), Rob Miller (Amebix), Rodney Relax (Alternative), Stringy & Snout (Erratics) and Gerard Evans (Flowers in the Dustbin). The interview footage is laced with both audio and visual music performance from the main performers on the scene including Crass, Conflict, Subhumans, Liberty, Toxic Waste, Chumbawamba, Sacrilege & many more. A classic mix of exclusive new interviews and ultra-rare archive footage goes a great way to telling at least some of the history…

Dewey Finn: Give up, just quit, because in this life, you can’t win. Yeah, you can try, but in the end you’re just gonna lose, big time, because the world is run by the Man. The Man, oh, you don’t know the Man. He’s everywhere. In the White House… down the hall… Ms. Mullins, she’s the Man. And the Man ruined the ozone, he’s burning down the Amazon, and he kidnapped Shamu and put her in a chlorine tank! And there used to be a way to stick it to the Man. It was called rock ‘n’ roll, but guess what, oh no, the Man ruined that, too, with a little thing called MTV! So don’t waste your time trying to make anything cool or pure or awesome ’cause the Man is just gonna call you a fat washed up loser and crush your soul. So do yourselves a favor and just give up!

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Cops. Tranny Cops.

When US Vice-President Dick Cheney popped into Sydney last month, he was greeted by protesters. Among them were two Tranny Cops. Not known for having a particularly good sense of humour, terrified NSW police promptly arrested them. The two “were each charged with impersonating a police officer and for not being a police officer and wearing a police uniform”. Normally, this would be cause for congratulations — you’ve passed! — but it appears that police are actually serious, and according to AAP in today’s edition of The Age (‘The Tranny Cops’ duo face Sydney court, March 16, 2007):

Two Sydney women who satirise police as part of a street theatre act have appeared in court charged with impersonating a police officer.

Sarah Michelle Harrison, 27, of Balmain East, and Anika Vinson, 24, of Marrickville, were arrested at a rally against the Sydney visit of US Vice-President Dick Cheney on February 23.

The pair, who were wearing fake moustaches and police-style blue overalls, are part of a street theatre act known as The Tranny Cops, rally organisers The Stop the War Coalition said.

The women faced Downing Centre Local Court charged with impersonating a police officer, exercising powers and wearing a police uniform while not being a police officer.

The Stop The War Coalition, who organised a small protest outside the court calling for charges to be dropped against the women, said the performance was a protest stunt.

“They satirise the continued presence of riot police at peaceful protest actions,” coalition spokesman Paddy Gibson said outside court.

“They might run around behind them (police) for the crowd, to lighten the mood of the crowd, which increasingly feels intimidated (by police).”

Mr Gibson said the women had been intimidated by the charges and had not performed since their arrest.

The matter was adjourned to the same court on April 5.

Their charges bring to mind a similarly ridiculous police stunt against another transgressive performer, Starpower, who got arrested by police in 1998 (I think?) for carrying a toy gun home from a rave. The police searched their records to find that the said gun was unregistered and that Starpower had no license to carry it: he was fined $50 (but a conviction was not recorded).

Remember folks: the police are all that stands between us and sheer anarchy.

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CK, FDB! & LKJ

As Beavis might say: Christian you dumbass.

Linton Kwesi Johnson
Elizabeth DiNovella
The Progressive
February 2007

Lyricist Linton Kwesi Johnson was born in Jamaica but has [along with Benjamin Zephaniah, perhaps] become Britain’s most celebrated black poet. He immigrated to England as a child, part of the succeeding waves of West Indians who arrived in the UK in the last several decades. “My generation is the second generation,” he says. “I call us the Rebel Generation.” This generation would not put up with the racial abuse its parents did. “Through our rebellion, we helped change Britain,” he says.

As a teenager in 1970, he joined the British Black Panthers and by the 1980s was a journalist and editor of the journal Race Today. He’s also reported for BBC and Channel 4.

As a young man growing up in south London, Johnson saw many people his age criminalized under what was known in the neighborhood as “sus law.” The police had resurrected a Victorian era law against vagrancy that had languished on the books. “Sus being short for suspicion,” Johnson explains, noting that the common charge was “attempt to steal from persons unknown.” His poem “Sonny’s Lettah (anti-sus poem)” is about a young man writing to his mother from Brixton prison, telling her his little brother got arrested, as did he…

1981 is perhaps most significant of black experience in Britain,” says LKJ, alluding to the New Cross Fire where thirteen blacks died. No one was ever convicted, but racial tensions in the neighborhood led many blacks to believe it was a firebombing. LKJ wrote “New Crass Massakah” as a protest.

wi did know seh it coulda happn
yu know—anytime, anywhe
. . .
it coulda be mi
it couda be yu
. . .
who fell victim to di terrah by nite

In April that same year, police began “Operation Swamp 81,” and harassed the black community. “It was the last straw,” says LKJ. “There was a riot, and it spread.” He wrote “Di Great Insohreckshan” about it.

LKJ has released a dozen albums. He married verse and reggae music into a new form known as dub. He recorded several albums on the Island label, including Forces of Victory, Bass Culture, LKJ in Dub, and Making History. In the mid-1980s, he established his own music label [LKJ Records].

In 2002, Johnson became the first black poet to have his work published in England by Penguin Classics. He has authored four collections of poetry. Mi Revalueshanary Fren, Penguin’s compilation of selected poems from the 1970s-1990s, was just published in the United States… [More]

di innocent an di fool could paas fi twin
but haas a haas
an mule a mule
mawgah mean mawgah
it noh mean slim
yet di two a dem in common share someting
dem is awftin confused an get used
dem is awftin criticised an campramised
dem is awftin villified an reviled
dem is awftin foun guilty widout being tried
wan ting set di two a dem far apawt dow
di innocent wi habah dout
check tings out
an maybe fine out
but di fool…… cho!

— ‘Sense Outa Nansense’, Tings An’ Times, Shanachie Records, 1991

Posted in Anti-fascism, History, Music, Poetry, State / Politics | 2 Comments