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bristol / anti-cuts Monday April 08, 2013 16:15 by anticuts

So let's see the evil Tory off in style - callout on social media announces Street Party - Mon 8 April - 8pm - Chelsea Rd, Easton, Bristol BS5. Between the 2 pubs - The Chelsea & The Plough. Calls made on social media for soundsystems to come down.

Make it the first of many Bristol street parties. May she never ever RIP

Click on full story to read Ten Reasons to Hate Thatcher.

bristol / protests Friday April 05, 2013 17:47 by Bristol Radical History Group
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Date : Sunday 7th April 2013
Time: 2.00pm-4.30pm
Meet: Gardiner Haskins Car Park (near Old Market), New Thomas Street, BS2 0JP
Price: Donation

As a belated launch for three new pamphlets released by BRHG in 2012-13 (The Bristol Strike Wave of 1889-1890 Socialists, New Unionists and New Women – Part 1: Days of Hope, Part 2: Days of Doubt and The Origins and an Account of Black Friday – 23rd December 1892) authors Mike Richardson and Roger Ball will navigate us through one of the most intense periods of class struggle in Bristol in the late 19th Century.

In 1889, the emergence of 'new unionism' (Gas Workers, Dockers, Seamen) representing unskilled and semi-skilled labourers, women and men, was an expression of independent organisation for workers’ collective voice. And it was the first time that Bristol women workers were able to join a general union on an equal footing to men. The victorious strikes of 1889-90 led to a reaction by employers and the state in 1892-3, culminating in the use of military and police by the local state to break up a pre-Christmas lantern parade organised to collect money for strikers and their families. This event, which popularly became known as ‘Black Friday’, is an iconic moment in Bristol’s history exposing the relations of force between ‘owners’ and ‘workers’.

So join us to hear about the rebellious women of the Barton Hill Cotton Works, feisty Dockers, French revolutionaries and striking 'Sweet Girls'.

The walk is split into three parts:

2.00-3.00pm The Strike Wave of 1889-90 (Gardiner-Haskins - Barton Hill - Lawrence Hill - Old Market - Hydra Bookshop)
3.00-3.30pm Coffee, cake and discussion at the Hydra Bookshop (34 Old Market St, Bristol , BS2 0EZ)
3.30-4.30pm Black Friday 1892-3 (Old Market - Welsh Back - Castle park - Haymarket/Horsefair - Hydra Bookshop)

Note: The Gardiner Haskins Car Park is open until 4.30pm on Sunday. There are other alternatives for free parking in surrounding streets.

bristol / anti-cuts Thursday April 04, 2013 09:03 by BABC

The Bristol anarchist bookfair collective is pleased to announce that the full programme for the 2013 Bookfair is now available online in pdf format, on this website page.

Printed copies will be available on the day of the Bookfair at The Trinity centre, and a small number will be available from10 April from Kebele social centre and Hydra Bookshop. It wont be anything fancy, just simple, functional B&W A3 folded.

We are also producing pdf's for the programme in each individual meeting space, as well as running that info as website posts. You can find this more detailed info via this website page, along with a simple, title only, pdf timetable of meetings.
For a full list of stallholders please see this website page.
And for a constantly evolving list of anarchist and related other events then see this webite page. Please note that two of our After-Party bands have had to drop out due to illness & injury, details of replacements will be available shortly
We have also provided a host of info about public transport, parking, and maps on this website page.
Lastly, we have a page of publicity materials available, that we hope you might use to spread the word about the Bookfair, see this website page, and this crackbook event http://www.facebook.com/events/437820852938597/

With the public mood growing angrier by the day in response to the Coalition Govt's ideologically-based class hatred of anyone who is not either rich or a docile wage slave, there couldnt be a better time to have a Bookfair that can bring together all those seeking discussions & debates about genuine alternatives to the unsustainable and unequal capitalist system, and its brutal enforcer the state. We hope to see you all on the day!

BABC xxx

bristol / protests Friday March 29, 2013 18:44 by Michele Di Piedi

Whatever your ideological opposition to the British political system, not using the tools that everyone else is using is a bit like trying to organise a demonstration without using 'corporate' social media. Self defeating.

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I'm not saying that mass anarchists and insurrectionary anarchists should start standing for parliament. I am saying that we should vote, encourage others to vote, and join a party. In that party, our ideas will also be talked about, tested, amended and adopted by others in a mass working class movement. This alone should be reason enough for any anarchist serious about making revolutionary change.

A Left Unity party is already being set up. In London. By middle class intellectuals, defeated unions, and 'Old Left' political groups. And the Labour Party. At some point a Bristol branch will appear. It will be immediately dominated by old men from the Old Left who will expect the young bucks to do street theatre and get arrested at demos while they write the rules, impose the order, and make the same strategic mistakes they have been making for the last 40 years.

It doesn't have to be this way. Occupy, anti-fascism, direct actions, demonstrations, uprisings, football tournaments, bookfairs, bookshops, social centres, squats – pound for pound, per capita, Bristol anarchists have shown they have nothing to learn from London, or the Old Left, when it comes to organising in the interests of the 99%.

Full Article

Libcom: Why we should reject Left Unity

Ian Bone: Why I support Left Unity

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