Showing posts with label Tahrir Square. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tahrir Square. Show all posts

Tuesday, 11 October 2011

GLASGOW - CAMCORDER GUERILLAS.


CAMCORDER GUERILLAS : AUTUMN NEWSLETTER
1. GUERILLAS AT DOCUMENT HUMAN RIGHTS FILM FESTIVAL.

           "Disabled people are facing the biggest attack on their human rights since the 1930s"

ANTI CUTS SPECIAL. Capitalism's casino - gambling with human rights
Sunday 23rd October, 12 midday
Film and panel discussion.

           Join us for a screening of our latest film THE BROADEST SHOULDERS find out about Guerillas current film project, highlighting the devastating impact of cuts and privatisation on disabled people talk to people directly affected by the cuts take part in the discussion and discover how you can join us in campaigning against cuts to benefits and services

Feedback from disabled activists after our fringe screening/meeting at the STUC rally against the cuts on 1st October
"inspiring"
"helped put the fire back in our bellies"
"you don't know how much the support from Camcorder Guerillas means to us"

Full Document Programme.

2. NEW GUERILLA WEBSITE GOES LIVE.            Last year our website fell victim to cyberhacking, but we are now back with a bigger and better website. You can watch over 20 of our films online and keep up to date with events, screening and guerilla happenings at www.camcorderguerillas.net You can also follow us on TWITTER @CamGuerillas

3. TRAINING COURSE :
             GUERILLAS OFFER FILM-MAKING COURSE FOR ACTIVISTS.
           We have developed a new training course that enables people to make their own short campaign films, edit and distribute them via social media. All this done in one day, with no specialist equipment or prior knowledge needed. Fees are negotiable, depending on size of
organisation; and training can be adapted to your own needs. Get in touch via info@camcorderguerillas.net to find out more.

4. SPECIAL EVENT TOMORROW.
Internationalism From Below - from John Maclean to Tahrir Square?

7pm-10:00pm, Wednesday 12th October 2011
Kinning Park Complex, 43 Cornwall Street, Glasgow, G41 1BA
FREE Film and discussion event, including screening of Visit Dungavel,
Monster of the Glen.
Full programme.


CAMCORDER GUERILLAS - GET IN TOUCH

EMAIL info@camcorderguerillas.net
TEL 0141 332 9775
FOLLOW US ON TWITTER@CamGuerillas

WATCH OUR FILMS ONLINE
www.camcorderguerillas.net

CAMCORDER GUERILLAS
CCA, Centre for Contemporary Arts,
350 Sauchiehall Street. Glasgow, G2 3JD

ann arky's home.

Sunday, 22 May 2011

MADRID ECHOES THE SPIRIT OF TAHRIR SQUARE.

The following was taken from A World to Win site. Where is the rest of Europe in this "awakening"?

Madrid echoes the spirit of Tahrir Square


     The Real Democracy Now movement that has sprung up across Spain, with a main square in Madrid under occupation since Sunday, is a key moment in the developing global struggle against the failure of the political and economic status quo.    
 Drawing their inspiration from Tahrir Square in Cairo – where the Egyptian revolution began – thousands have organised themselves into a people’s assembly in Puerta del Sol to discuss a way forward. The movement, which is independent of political parties and the trade unions, used social networking sites to mobilise for the occupation.

SOLIDARITY.

      A pamphlet distributed by organisers said they "do not represent any political party” and that "we want a new society that prioritises life over economic and political interests. We advocate a change in society and social consciousness." Fabio Gándara, the spokesman for Democracia Real Ya, a 26-year-old unemployed lawyer who is studying to be a civil servant, said: "What we're denouncing is the lack of real democracy and the tendency toward a two-party system where corruption at all levels is simply scandalous.”
     
       With tents, mattresses, a kitchen, a workshop and even a pharmacy, protesters have refused to budge, defying the decision of regional election officials that they should leave the square. They have also organised their own security teams to keep order in the square. There are at least 57 so-called "Sol campsites" that have popped up across the country in solidarity. Spaniards living abroad have also set up camps outside Spain 's embassies in Berlin and London , and in Amsterdam 's Dam Square . 
       In Spain – just as it was in Tunisia and Egypt , where the Arab spring began at the start of the year – the movement is driven by the “lost generation” of educated but unemployed young people. An estimated 45% of them are without work while average unemployment at over 20% is the highest in Europe .
      They are the victims of a global capitalist recession which has devastated Spain ’s economy which floundered when a gigantic property bubble burst in 2008. And they are casualties of the post-Franco dictatorship politics too.
      
       The fascist regime was replaced by los señores Tweedledum and Tweedledee – aka the Socialist Party (PSOE) and the right-wing People’s Party (PP). Only fewer and fewer Spaniards can tell the difference between them. Both parties are endemically corrupt and have shared the role of integrating Spain into the global market-driven capitalist economy.
        One result is that Spain is close to following Ireland , Portugal and Greece in seeking a bail-out from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund. That would spell not only the collapse of the eurozone but trigger a new global financial collapse.
      That is why Real Democracy Now is saying “Don’t vote for them” – the PSOE and PP – in Sunday’s regional and local elections because neither represents the interests of ordinary people. This is an astonishing indictment of a parliamentary democracy that was only established in 1977 after Franco’s death two years earlier.

      This, naturally, poses the question of if not this “democracy”, then what type of political system should replace it? The protests in Madrid , Barcelona , Seville and other cities, popularly known as M-15 as they began on May 15, have started that debate. In Sol Square there is a “democracy wall” where people have stuck hundreds of notes with their thoughts on them, declarations and statements.
     In Egypt , the dictatorship was overthrown but power remains out of reach, resting in the hands of an army that owns a large chunk of the economy. In Spain , a 35-year-old parliamentary democracy leaves real power in the hands of the corporations and banks who use politicians as a front.
      For a “real” democracy to work, it must involve the transfer of economic and financial resources into the hands of ordinary working people, alongside the replacing of the capitalist state by forms of popular power. Many took up the fight against Franco’s fascists in the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s with that aim in mind. The revolution was cruelly betrayed by Stalinism and then defeated. Puerta del Sol signals a chance to put history back on course.

Paul Feldman
Communications editor
20 May 2011

Corinna Lotz
Secretary

A World to Win  07871 745258