Dalkeith
Country Park facing the axe
22 November. At the end of October
protesters set up a tree-sit to stop the construction of the A68 Bypass, which would
destroy Dalkeith’s 850 acre country park. An eviction order has been served on
the protestors and trees have already begun to fall. The activists have vowed
to remain in the trees until the bypass is defeated, but need support to keep
the protest going. To contact Dalkeith Protest site phone 07783904369 or http://www.save-dalkeith-park.org.uk/
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Jordan Flaherty writes: A couple months before
New Orleans flooded, I remember walking through my neighborhood on a beautiful
weekend afternoon and hearing music.
I
followed the sound a couple blocks, to where about thirty people, all of them
Black, followed a few musicians through the streets. They were mourning the death of a loved one,
New Orleans-style. Most folks were wearing custom t-shirts with a picture of
the deceased. Next to the photo were the
words “sunrise” along with the date of his birth, and “sunset,” above the date
of his (recent) death - he was 20. Also
on the shirt were the words, “No More Drama.”
Continue reading "Community and Resistance in New Orleans" »
Corporate
Europe Observatory in association with LobbyControl, Spinwatch and Friends of
the Earth Europe invites you to vote for this year’s most offensive case of
corporate lobbying in the EU capital Brussels.
This
is your opportunity to decide which of the ten nominated cases of dubious
lobbying deserves to be remembered as the most ruthless influence peddler, the
fastest spinner of spin, the grand master of disguise, in short who will become
the EU Worst Lobby Award 2005 champion! Go to: http://www.corporateeurope.org/worstlobby/
Continue reading "Select your winner in Europe’s debut ‘Worst EU Lobbying’ awards 2005!" »
The following statement is from
various trade unions, left political parties and civil liberties groups in
France.
Joint
Communiqué, Paris, November 8th, 2005. Confronted by a revolt born from
the accumulation of inequalities and discrimination in the “banlieues” (suburbs
of Paris) and the poor areas, the French government has just passed a new and
extremely serious threshold in the escalation of security measures. Even in May
1968, when the situation was a lot more dramatic, the public authorities did
not use the extreme measure of declaring a state of emergency. The proclamation
of the state of emergency is the answer to a revolt whose causes are profound
and well known even at the level of state repression.
Continue reading "No to the state of exception" »