|
[L-I] Call to Action for the G8 Summit: msg#00014politics.leninism.international
Call to Action for the G8 Summit. Macdonald Stainsby, External Relations, Douglas College Students Union (private opinion) The upcoming meetings in Kananaskis, Alberta Canada -- meetings of the leaders of the G8 countries on June 26 and 27-- will prove to be something akin to a watershed moment in our young and advancing movement. Since the July 20, 2001 actions against the G8 meeting in Genoa, Italy that culminated in the murder of our fellow activist Carlo Guliani, the preparations by both local and international activist forces have been underway. The main organisers were and are stationed in Alberta: Calgary and Edmonton (with co-ordinating being done in and around Red Deer quite often). It should, of course, come as no major surprise that upon discussions with the activists in these cities I discovered that there was a steep drop off of participation immediately following the attacks of September 11 on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon. What has followed in the terms of activism in general -- never even mind the "anti-globalisation" movement -- has been an unprecedented attack on civil liberties here in nice, peacekeeping Canada. Security Bills -- to ostensibly "fight terror"-- have been put through the legislature and now allow the government the latitude to label almost any dissenting actions as a form of terrorism. This, in concert with the new tack being used by the rulers of the world in how they deal with the "anti-globalisation" movement paint a radically different picture about how the upcoming demonstrations are to possibly pan out. Our global rulers have adopted a new approach to how they wish to stifle the rising awareness and opposition to their plunderous rule. While before the attacks of 9-11 the attempt was to mock, ridicule and occasionally insult the motives of our new activist consciousness, today the unwritten rule is to omit our very existence. The choice to simply not report on our activities more than necessary has been so consistent it would be a tremendous leap-of-faith for us to believe that it wasn't a conscious decision. A decision such as this does not come from rank and file journalists; to achieve this form of consensus it must come from higher up editorial orders, something that can be obtained only now that the daily independent national press has shrunk from hundreds of outlets to four in the last thirty years. This must be noted for us to be clear as to what is happening. Unconvinced? I only make one reference for you -- March 16, 2002 saw a meeting of the EU in Barcelona, Spain that saw the opposition of five hundred thousand protesters. Let me use blunt numerals here: 500 000 people converged on the Spanish city and consciously linked their demonstration to the larger, first world resistance movement. It was not an action against the Spanish government but was pronouncedly "anti-globalisation" (and even anti-imperialist war). This was the single greatest victory our young movement has seen so far. Despite the Italian Carabinieri murder of Carlo, despite the scare tactics of the war on terror -- and despite the about face of the "popular" media in regards to our concerns for the environmental and social issues put at risk by the acronyms of death -- we had our largest convergence yet. It is a cause for great joy, pride and ever more optimism about our current situation, and our growing understanding of "connecting the dots" between war, globalisation and imperialism itself as a construct rather than a policy. However, the main lesson we can draw over here on the Pacific coast is simple: THE MEDIA MADE ALMOST NO MENTION OF THIS GREAT DAY. Surely this action was a major media story, but we heard not a peep more than what trickled through. Myself, I didn't know about this until an email was sent my way regarding the issue. So what are we left with? Well, it is almost a year on from when we saw a white man in the First World get shot through the head for opposing the G8 in Genoa. It is now almost nine months since the world situation entered a period of deep right wing reaction where war has become "fashionable" and movies that come out of Hollywood regularly celebrate militarism and whitewash the true nature of imperialist wars in the still-colonised in all but name Third World. The silver lining in many parts of the First World is simply that these brutal realities have made great lessons that books could not. A lack of innocence now permeates our activities. In other words, the gift from the ugliness of reality is an understanding of just how ugly imperialism actually is. We now know a lot better, as a result of the tragedies in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania, how the rest of the world suffers. We are still here -- and in greater numbers in many cases-- despite the attacks on our rights, our movement in general and our right to speak our minds. We didn't run and hide because the governments imposing corporate take-overs allowed their police forces to kill one of our own. We remained despite the fact we were called "anti-American", people who thought the American people "deserved it", people who want a throw back to the days of Stalin, people who are "terrorists" and "terrorist lovers", etc. We heard the names and have remained convinced of the justice of our cause. Now here's the real catch. As we begin not to look for the carnival atmosphere any longer, but instead are trying to build a long term movement which can gain steam through community organising, building sustainable roots among the masses of the people -- we have begun to learn that activism does not take place only at these meetings of misleaders but on a day to day basis, in our neighbourhoods, our cafes and even our !gasp! shopping centres. The problem we face right now, in contradiction, is the immediate threat being posed to our movements via the wholly undemocratic (nay, anti-democratic) moves of the Canadian government at the upcoming G8 summit next month. We need to pay very close attention to how this is being played out, because it is now my contention that we need to organise -- more than ever before-- to get our people involved directly through further "summit hopping", despite the overall weakness and increasing isolationism of such as a tactic. It is often noted, and quite rightly, that the movement is talking about eliminating poverty and squalor both at home and abroad. This is in direct contradiction to the evolution of going from one city to the next, not being a direct part of society and being fortunate enough to be able to afford such ventures, be it in time or money spent. I am writing to make a call in precisely the opposite direction to our evolving strategy (however loose that is). Kananaskis will not be seeing the Solidarity Village originally conceived as a site for protesters to converge near the conference. The province of Alberta and the Federal Government have harassed, intimidated and outright bribed the owners and keepers of the lands near the conference site that would have been able to accommodate a campground for protest. Thus, that village has begun attempting to put together the conceived protest site inside the City of Calgary itself. The City of Calgary is trying its best to make it impossible for any action in the city to place as well: There is no public right to demonstrate in the City of Calgary. The parks have been denied, even to the Alberta Federation of Labour -- hardly the face of militant, violent activists -- as "political use of the parks". The terror bills I previously mentioned have given the state of Canada the self-appointed right to arrest anyone on charges of terrorism -- loosely defined though such a label is-- without charge, without a lawyer and without a phone call. It is more than obvious that these new abilities will be warmed up and used for the first time in Alberta. This coincides with the military presence -- over 5000 troops, nearly three times the total deployment in Afghanistan since the start of the campaign in that beleaguered nation-- who have been given the right to shoot to kill. It is highly unlikely (beyond highly, in point of fact) that this will be used in the Calgary area (it is designed for the mountain fortress of the so-called K Country), but the gauntlet to our collective rights has been dropped. In the myriad of attacks by the different levels of government to all the activist organisers throughout Alberta, a state of psychological terror has been employed against the population as much as it has the activists. The media of Calgary is constantly issuing thinly veiled threats to the public, most notably the small businesses-- the mom and pop operations that often vacillate their support between government and protester in such situations. Statements about how there will be no Federal bailout (ala Quebec City over a year ago) for damages done "as a result of riots", but that you'd better go and get insurance. Activists who are trying to have small planning sessions are being chased out of cafeterias. I can say that I've never walked into a city more than a month before a planned action and found people acting nervous and suspicious when you ask questions about the radical organising community. Our great strengths have been to operate openly, honestly and non-hierarchically -- and that approach has most certainly been the main one used for over the last year in Alberta, without question-- but people are feeling the warm hand and boot of the capitalist state interfering with their work at every single level possible. Without proper co-ordination and communications being used in the Calgary area after the labour rally of the 23rd, there could be massive chaos. Another problem facing the situation is the amount of "diversity of tactics" spouters -- the people in our movement who use the phrase as a talisman to toss rocks and engage the police (now, the military) regardless of the majority of the demonstrators wishes or even the safety of all concerned. This demonstration is NOT QUEBEC CITY. There is not the safety, the ability to declare "red, yellow and green zones", nor is there going to be even a clearly defined space for protest of any sort-- much less for the adventurous of spirit but short of intellect. With all of the above reasons, I hesitate but spit out the uncomfortable: activists who can do so, the job that needs to be done is to A) get more people available to the major demonstrations the "family day" on the 23rd, but more importantly the events afterwards on the start of the summit itself. What needs to be done among the capable and experienced activists is serious co-ordination, boundary setting and over-all communications, otherwise what will take place could be a massive police action, attack a disorganised crowd and sparking "resistance" among the crowd itself, which can (and usually does) lead to scraps, fights and chaos within the ranks of the very demonstrators themselves. Considering, as it was explained to me by a Calgarian organiser herself, "thousands of people are coming, and the city can't stop it", it is also of great import that people who can travel- even as a simple attendee at the events as they unfold -- come out to protect our rights to simple protest, for as the saying goes, your rights are only as valuable and as effective as your ability to use them. Such actions from all levels of governance against simply the right to assemble politically are only countered by people assembling politically. This demonstration will hopefully end the chapter in our movement where we think revolutionary tourism can win the day. We need to rethink and re-orient radically, with losing our initiative or our pro-activity. However, what needs to be done now is to help our committed activist brothers and sisters from Alberta avert a massive morale crushing defeat in the oil province. The federal government wants to crush our rights to continue to denounce and present alternatives to the corporate globalisation agenda. We need to answer their challenge first, before forsaking the game (as it is currently played) entirely. Come to Calgary, stand up for your rights while we have them. ------------------------------------------- Macdonald Stainsby http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/rad-green http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international -- In the contradiction lies the hope. --Bertholt Brecht _______________________________________________ Leninist-International mailing list Leninist-International@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To change your options or unsubscribe go to: http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international |
|
| <Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread> |
|---|---|---|
| Previous by Date: | [L-I] (Spa) Arg: Desocupación supera 25% / Unemployment above 25%: 00014, Nestor Gorojovsky |
|---|---|
| Next by Date: | [L-I] KCNA: U.S. commits air espionage against DPRK: 00014, Macdonald Stainsby |
| Previous by Thread: | [L-I] (Spa) Arg: Desocupación supera 25% / Unemployment above 25%i: 00014, Nestor Gorojovsky |
| Next by Thread: | [L-I] KCNA: U.S. commits air espionage against DPRK: 00014, Macdonald Stainsby |
| Indexes: | [Date] [Thread] [Top] [All Lists] |
| News | FAQ | advertise |