Skip to content or view screen version

What Happened To Mayday On Merseyside?

Merseyside anarchists | 15.07.2009 16:54 | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements | Liverpool

Mayday has its roots in a radical workers' day of action. If you feel like you blinked and missed it in 2009, you're not alone.

We're holding an open meeting to propose an alternative Mayday festival for 2010. Our aims are simple:

Platforms for grassroots community and workers’ groups - not VIP guests.

March where we will be seen and heard - not down empty side streets.

Organise together to create a festival for all of us – don’t leave it to the TUC and political leaders to tell us how to celebrate our resistance.

We welcome all individuals and any grassroots workers’, community and activist groups who want to get involved.

Our first meeting is on Monday 20h July at 7:30pm, Next to Nowhere, 96 Bold Street (entrance to the right of News from Nowhere, please ring basement bell)

Merseyside anarchists

Comments

Hide the following comment

Before the Roman Empires conquest of the free lifestyle.

24.07.2009 21:49

Communes organic and tribal controlled ruled at centre of each polity in the larger society. All food was organic and natural. With the Slaveholder Pens as a war machine of the Roman agressors all was ended of the free lifesyle and the matriarchy. Those slaveholder pens are now named Prisons and are still serving the tiny elite rulers to the great disadvantage of the peoples who are still held in an alienated condition of Male Domination as Democracy rather than the 50-50 position of electing woman equally so the natural harmony and joy of the species can return and ecological balance be restored. Would have thought the New Millenium would have been occasion enough to dismantle the prisons and return the matriarchy for species liberation. Seems the intervening Empires past, and present do not want our liberation yet. So watch out, their up to something very shady. I wish the peace sign was available to the typing commputer face so we might show what of our symbolic life nowadays.

ellen