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No New Nuclear: planning to win

No New Nuclear | 02.10.2009 20:40

Time to get organised and stop the new generation of nuclear power stations.

Saturday 21st and Sunday 22nd November 2009

London

The weekend will be a space for grassroots campaigners to network, share
ideas and information and make plans to win.

Whatever your campaigning tools are, wherever you are from, if you are in a
group or an individual, this weekend is for us all. The more of us who can
make it the better plans we can make.

By developing skills and confidence in creating and implementing campaign
and action plans we can identify when and where our interventions can be most
successful.

Seeds for Change is an activist training network that will facilitate the
weekend and share skills for winning through campaign and action planning.
Come along and take away ideas and tools for winning to share with your
community and networks at home.
 http://seedsforchange.org.uk/free/winning

Cost: Costs will be kept as low as possible. You will be asked to contribute
towards the venue and food, but don't let being skint stop you from
coming :).

To book your place, help organise or get more details contact:
 nonewnuclear@aktivix.org
or ring 01524 383012 and leave a message.
www.nonewnuclear.wordpress.com

No New Nuclear
- e-mail: nonewnuclear@aktivix.org.uk
- Homepage: http://www.gmdcnd.org.uk

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

no to nulcear

02.10.2009 21:39

probably a good time to protest against Iran's nuclear plans too because if one of those babies goes wrong we're all screwed

jeffro


to jeffro

03.10.2009 16:09

Every time is a good time to protest against anybody planning to get nukes. But we also need to remember who actually has nukes - as far as I'm aware, Iran doesn't. The UK, France, China, Russia, the US, India, Pakistan and Israel (and others) actually do. At the moment, as a person living in the UK, I'm more at threat from the fact that the UK has nukes than the possibility that Iran might develop them. We went to war with Iraq because our politicians said they had weapons of mass destruction - and yet my UK government is determined to carry on producing WMD at home, and driving them right past my front door. That a nuke might go off just down the road from me is, to me, a lot scarier that the possibility that one might go off many many hundreds of miles away.

 http://www.nukewatch.org.uk/

No Nukes