Summer of Plebian Protest: Left Must Take Note !
G W F H | 12.09.2000 16:32
Whilst the left have been concerned with Mayday and Prague, certain people who are not at all concerned with the world, outside their own little doorstep ,have been mobilizing
First it was a mob of army wives in Portsmouth howling about perverts, but now with farmers and truckers organizing the fuel blockade, it becomes a serious, economic & social issue.
Farmers and truckers have actually been hopping mad for most of the decade, but they've now found an international tactic via the recent protests in France (an interesting detail worth an article in itself).
A couple of years ago, I went to observe a march by farmers and 'country folk', expecting to see a howling mob of foxhunters; they were there, but also I met some honest enough people on the edge of bankrupcy.. what they lacked was a perspective on their plight: too ready to lay blame on foregin imports or 'townies' (inc myself !) they were not easily persuaded that the problem lay with their own landowners, the aristocratic class, incidentally of whom Charles "Prince" Windsor is one of the worst culprits for charging high rents. In short, the people organizing the demo were in fact the ones causing the trouble, ultimately.
Returning to the fuel blockade, WE should be a little wary when the New Labour government is being attacked from the right wing: to them, Blair is a little Oxford leftie with all kinds of subversive deeds in his past: nonsense ? Sure, but this is the problem. Now he talks of sending troops in to break the blockade, (in a gross parody of when Labour broke the firemen's strike in 1977). Surely, it is up to us to formulate an approach whereby we can address the genuine needs of small farmers and farm workers (and also the truckers, who are often self employed, like shopkeepers) without endorsing the big conglomerates and established interests they still identify with.
Farmers and truckers have actually been hopping mad for most of the decade, but they've now found an international tactic via the recent protests in France (an interesting detail worth an article in itself).
A couple of years ago, I went to observe a march by farmers and 'country folk', expecting to see a howling mob of foxhunters; they were there, but also I met some honest enough people on the edge of bankrupcy.. what they lacked was a perspective on their plight: too ready to lay blame on foregin imports or 'townies' (inc myself !) they were not easily persuaded that the problem lay with their own landowners, the aristocratic class, incidentally of whom Charles "Prince" Windsor is one of the worst culprits for charging high rents. In short, the people organizing the demo were in fact the ones causing the trouble, ultimately.
Returning to the fuel blockade, WE should be a little wary when the New Labour government is being attacked from the right wing: to them, Blair is a little Oxford leftie with all kinds of subversive deeds in his past: nonsense ? Sure, but this is the problem. Now he talks of sending troops in to break the blockade, (in a gross parody of when Labour broke the firemen's strike in 1977). Surely, it is up to us to formulate an approach whereby we can address the genuine needs of small farmers and farm workers (and also the truckers, who are often self employed, like shopkeepers) without endorsing the big conglomerates and established interests they still identify with.
G W F H
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Independent MEDIA centre
12.09.2000 17:17
Shawn
e-mail: S_Paske@hotmail.com
Protests, not protests?
12.09.2000 23:48
Yes its true that we haven't heard much about these supposed popular protests in indymedia.
This is what i heard today, see if it rings true like it does for me...
Don't know about the go-slow on the roads, but it seems that the refinary and fuel storage blockades are minimal. There were 8 to 15 people only at at least 2 sites. Blair can;t send the cops or the troops in to solve the problem cos this is not the problem. The "blockades" could be moved easily and the fuel could come out the back doors its just that the OIL COMPANIES DON:T WANT TO MOVE THEM. The oil companies are trying to get the government to backdown on taxation so they can make a minimal cut to the fuel price, which ill look like a big one, and they will sell more. the oil companies are holding the govenment to ransom and the government are allowing them to do it.
Since when, anyway, did "protestors" also panic-buy the same product they are protesting about?
I know! lets all buy nike trainers for S26, after all, we'll have to run away fast from the euro-cops!
discontented