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Last Hours publish (anti-)election poster

Last Hours | 10.04.2010 10:19 | Other Press | Social Struggles | World

As we head towards what is likely to be one of the most overly hyped general elections in recent history (voter confidence is down don't you know!) we felt the need to express a different opinion. An opinion that we have had enough of this sham democracy (in fact some of us have little faith in democracy altogether), that not only do these politicians not represent us but that any system of government is incapable representing us.

We have put together an (anti)election poster. We hope that whilst we have put this out in the lead up to the 2010 general elections it remains relevant until we have rid our lives of this filthy charade.

You can download the poster or order some from us for £1 per 10 posters or £5 solidarity price (the solidarity price will help us put out more of this sort of thing in the future). All orders from our shop will include a copy. Order from  http://www.lasthours.org.uk/products-page/?category=13. Download a hi-res version from  http://www.lasthours.org.uk/articles/the-politics-of-life/

We hope to see these posters up in workplaces, homes, social centres etc in the coming weeks.

See below for poster text and images




The ballot box cannot contain our desires.
Government is not the limit of our imagination.

but believe us, we don’t want your vote either…


While our rulers claim to embrace democracy with a dangerous fervour, it’s probably fair to say that many of us have rather less enthusiasm for the elections that come around with such regularity.

Most people have few hopes or fears for what a change of government can bring, and the common attitude towards politicians and politics in general is one of cynicism. Perhaps at most you might think one party might be slightly less bad than the others? The best of a bad bunch? After all, if you’re actually involved in one of the parties, you’d be one of a tiny minority, and if you even bothered to vote in some recent elections you’d have been in a minority too. Has it always been this way?

Perhaps people used to be more passionate about elections. The end of 18 years of Conservative rule in 1997 provoked at least a whiff of enthusiasm before the inevitable reality of business as usual set in – the business of inequality, exploitation and war under “New” Labour. But who has illusions of great things coming from the contenders for our votes now? What will come from the captains of industry who talk of a green economy, the war-mongers who talk of fairness, or from the petty racists of the ‘far right’ and bickering chieftains of the ‘far left’ who pose as the radical opposition? Most of us know the answer to that all too well, and it shows in our apathy to the whole charade.

Is this grey, cynical weighing up of the least bad all that political activity can be? We think not, and believe us, we don’t want your vote either. Politics has become a dirty word through the grubby pretence our rulers go through every few years of allowing us to choose between Pepsi or Coke flavoured government for the next half a decade. But everyday life is political too, whether we call it that or not. Every day that we go to work through financial necessity, unable to control what we produce, that is political. Every day our taxes are collected and used to wage war is a political issue. Every piece of sexist or racist abuse shouted on a street is political, no less than the advertisements we’re surrounded by, the contents of newspapers, of TV programs, of websites. So much, from the large scale to the small, is pervaded with ideas of power, of control, of exploitation. This is very much political, and so is what we do or don’t do about it. But if everyday life is political, then everyday life is also where politics must be discussed, worked out and sometimes fought over, not separated off into a specialisation, a profession, or an institution.

Limiting politics to the separate realm of elections and institutions serves to turn us into passive consumers of politics rather than active participants, much as we’re supposed to be in the rest of our lives. Under capitalism and democracy we’re seen as individuals with the freedom to choose, whether we’re choosing which car to buy, or which party to vote for in an election, or even whether to go on strike according to the allowed legal procedure. But how much power and influence do we have as individual-freely-choosing citizens in our supermarket society of ‘choices’? If nothing else, the fact that joining campaign groups and charities is popular shows that we mostly know the answer to that question. But if isolated individuals have no power over their own lives, no power to make changes, then the kind of coming together of isolated individuals you get in most campaign groups isn’t much better. Join the group, receive the newsletter, maybe elect the leaders if you’re lucky, and most importantly, don’t forget to pay your dues. Sound familiar? Perhaps its time to remember that we can’t change things for the better with a weak imitation of the structures that are busy making things worse.

We only stop being isolated individuals, stop being powerless, when we come together face to face to make decisions and act together. Whether its at work, in our communities, or maybe out on the streets to protest, we reinvent politics when we come together as equals and take action over the things that matter to us, and then see who else will come along with us. Instead of waiting for 51% of people to agree to our theoretical plans, we can start by doing.

Creating inspiring examples has a momentum all of its own: blocking a residential street used as a high speed short cut, occupying and running a nursery closed through council cuts, demanding better pay or just more respect at work and then going slow or walking out to get it, setting up a community garden where a supermarket wants to set up, stopping those who try and divide us with race. These are just a few examples around us right now of the kind of politics that can build confidence and collective power, getting results where delegating our power away gets us nothing, a multitude of starting points with the potential to grow and link up. And who knows where that could lead?

If you still feel the need to vote for the least bad option then go ahead. Who knows, maybe it really will be slightly less bad. Just remember that real politics lies elsewhere…

Last Hours
- e-mail: lasthourssw@mail.com
- Homepage: http://www.lasthours.org.uk

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

no voice

12.04.2010 08:11

So what your saying is that we should give up our right to vote, our right to being an individual, give up our oppotunity to choose who we appoint to the administration of the country?

Anyone can stand for election, if you have support you can run the country. The system needs tuneing not destroying.
People have struggled over many years for the right to vote and you would squander it so quickly for some utopian dream where everyone is forced to live the way YOU want.
If you dont vote, whoever for then you only display your disire to opt out of responsibility. You have no right to open your mouth about the government as you did nothing to stop it.

So all those who put some tiresome slogan of the ballot or whinge about there not being anyone to vote for please remember that it is your lack of immagination and your ideas lack of support that keeps you from the decision making not some shadowy businessmen.

With human rights comes human responsibilities, take them or get out of the way.

anon


Anon's missing the point

15.04.2010 14:34

The article is actually pointing out we should act more as individuals, rather than as a series of 'Xs' that we mark on a ballot paper. It's true, anyone can stand for election, but I'm not sure why you think that means they'd then be running the country (or why you'd want to 'run' it). The final paragraph points out that there's nothing wrong with voting, "Just remember that real politics lies elsewhere". Politics isn't just decided in parliament, and it's certainly not decided by most people voting on May 6th (after all the winning party will probably only have had around 23% of the population vote for them if 2005 is anything to go by), it's decided in our interactions everyday, and in decisions that organisations (be they corporations, businesses, councils etc.) make. Actually people need to take more responsibility for these interactions rather than every few years choosing a representative for you and 50,000 others. Not voting - or recognising that voting in elections as currently constituted is a bit of a waste of time - doesn't display any desire to opt out of 'responsibility', it's what you do between, and during, elections that displays that!

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