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CALL OUT: for a radical anti-capitalist presence on October 20th.

anon | 04.10.2012 14:07 | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements

Cut the crap! The Problem is Capitalism

#Oct20. Cut the crap. The problem is Capitalism.

CALL OUT: for a radical anti-capitalist presence on October 20th.

The TUC (Trades Union Congress) is organising a mass demonstration in London
against spending cuts and austerity. Up to a million workers may take to the streets.

We know an afternoon spent marching through the streets of London will not force the Government to back down. This Government – like any government – has no answers, or solutions. We need to face the real enemy:
capitalism.

Capitalism exploits and oppresses the many, for the interests of the few. It is the source of countless hardships. It is the driver for climate change, as natural resources are plundered for profit. Capitalism dictates poverty and austerity.

Over the past 100 years, workers the world over have struggled against capitalism, winning – with greater or lesser degrees of success - a range of “concessions”. In the UK and Europe, for example, workers have won improved wages and working conditions, pensions and the welfare state. Now the elites are trying to claw back these hard-won gains, using the excuse of the financial crisis they caused. But people are resisting: in work places, within communities, on the streets.

The crisis of Capitalism is global. While we are divided and alienated by borders, capitalism moves freely, inflicting its misery world-wide. People across the continents of Africa, Asia, and South America have long lived at
the coal face of this destructive system. Cuts and privatisations are imposed upon workers in the Global South to service crippling
international debt repayments mis-sold as “poverty alleviation”. Our resistance to capitalism must also be global, linking up strikes, revolts, and solidarity across the world.

The time to join this resistance is now. Hence the call out for a radical presence on the streets of London 20th October. To organise for the day, there will be open meetings held from around 5 October on at the CUTS CAFE.

The Cuts Cafe is an occupied meeting space in central London opening two weeks prior to 20th October to build resistance to the cuts, and to explore real alternatives to austerity. For times and places, stay tuned to:
 http://cutscafelondon.wordpress.com/.

For further info contact:
 stopg8@riseup.net.

WE ARE MANY, THEY ARE FEW, AND WE ARE EVERYWHERE.

signed:

StopG8 - StopG8 formed to prepare a massive anti-capitalist response to the G8 summit being hosted in the Uk in 2013 and help spawn a movement. We hope you’ll join us, starting October 20th.

Sussex IWW a local branch of the Industrial Workers of the World. IWW is a grass roots anti-capitalist union with no paid officials, fighting for workers rights, and ultimately a world in which wage slavery is abolished.

Smash EDO - is a direct action campaign aimed at closing down the EDO arms factory in Brighton - www.smashedo.org.uk

Fitwatch - Resisting and monitoring Forward Intelligence Policing -  http://www.fitwatch.org.uk/

Disarm DSEi - Direct action campaign against the DSEi arms fair

Legal Defence and Monitoring Group -  http://ldmg.org.uk/

Freedom -  http://www.freedompress.org.uk/news/

London ABC - prisoner support group  https://network23.org/londonabc/

Autonomous Nottingham - a flexible collective of individuals who aim to exist within non-hierarchical, stateless society that is free of all forms of all domination -  https://network23.org/autonomousnottingham/

ALARM -- All London Anarchist Revolutionary Mob

Frack Off - Extreme energy action network  http://frack-off.org.uk/

anon

Comments

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Internationalising the radical ghetto doesn't mean it's not a radical ghetto

04.10.2012 23:22

There are a bunch of YouTube videos embedded in the ALARM website, and judging by the number of hits they're getting, the "we are many" claim in optimistic to put it politely. Most importantly, the linking up to "strikes, revolts, and solidarity across the world" routine is EASY - you're preaching to the converted here in the UK, so why not preach to like-minded people, who are already involved in political campaigning overseas as well? What's really hard, and most necessary of all, is effectively making common-cause with the tens of millions of people who actively reject radical politics in our own communities. Internationalising the radical ghetto doesn't mean it's not still a radical ghetto. Constructive criticism is however rarely welcome on Indymedia, where near-monosyllabic insults and censorship often substitute for intelligent discussion of strategy.

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