134 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
134 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
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CONTRAFLOW WINTER 93/94
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"Buy this L reg car and get a free gas mask!'The MII, Motorways and 1990s
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Capitalism and Cultureblah blah blah
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As CF goes to print the M11 link motorway from Redbridge to Hackney in East
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London is 4 months into 4 years of construction. Yet another Motorway, this one
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is costing 1 billion pounds, 350 homes and parts of 2 parks - and all just to
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end up spewing into Hackney's streets. Already it has met stiff opposition from
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local residents, squatters and nomadic green activists. A peak of this
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resistance was on the 7th of December 93 when 200 cops and 150 bailiffs and
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security guards evicted 7 residents from their tree house on George Green,
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Wanstead. Taking ten hours, 3 were hospitalised [a demonstrator and a guard by a
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crane slipping backwards in the mud] and 18 arrests made.
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Other activities include the storming of the green by school kids and a local
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'lollipop' [roadcrossing] worker, guerilla gardening, sabotage of construction
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equipment, and the reclaiming of vandalised houses left empty in the route of
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the M11. The campaign has shown a tendency to advance from a position of
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nonviolence to one of active resistance - from hugging the coppers to an active
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minority being ready and willing to have a ruck - particularly for those who
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were not originally local residents. Eg. actions on the 20/1 saw mass
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occupations of building sites by up to 200 activists as well as a strong push
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towards autonomous organisation. By late January, the entire population of the
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autonomous region of Wanstonia faced with invasion by the freeway were preparing
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for physical resistance to their eviction. This invoved digging anti vehicle
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trenches [vs bulldozers and cherry pickers], blockading doors with old cars, and
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building another tree house.
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Reasons for fighting the motorway aren't hard to find - from saving homes and
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green spaces to spending the money on something more useful like buses. That's
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apart from new studies which suggest that 15 million people living in Britain
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are suffering from additional headaches, runny noses, red eyes and ear
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infections - because of auto Capitalism.
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But the M11 isn't just an example of car Capitalism gone mad - nor just an
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indication of the social strength of the auto industry and the petrol companies
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- ie. the 'road lobby'. Rather, the Motorway boom across Britain is a reflection
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of the specific needs of Capital trying to stabilise itself in the 80s and 90s.
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Capitals' strategy rested on boosting car ownership, homeownership and
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suburbanisation to both buy off and atomise part of the working class. The
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motorways are but the physical infrastructure necessary for this.
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Car ownership rose in the 80's in from about 30% of households to about 60% -
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the policy framework that encouraged this [eg. cheap petrol, homeownership,
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superstores, shit public transport] was no accident. Cars disorganise working
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class communities - from making streets too dangerous for kids to play in,
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reducing kids' Capital free space but to the more profitable sega games - to
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lessening non boss controlled spaces where workers mix [eg. chatting on the
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bus].
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[And while resistance is also sometimes organised with cars - eg. Ram raiding or
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the use of cars during the LA uprising of May 1992 which added fluidity to their
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resistance - the possible saving grace of cars in interlinking families or
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friendship networks doesn't seem to have saved too many old folk from dying in
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the cold this winter.]
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On the other hand, cars assist in organising Capital, ideologically and
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structurally. Not only do they increase the mobility of some workers, they also
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tend to support the ideologies of individualism, imperialism and patriarchy.
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From providing each car owner with [at least psychic] stakes in the Gulf War
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[petrol price panics], to each male driver with a space to to live out macho
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fantasies of power, speed and control [Well OK - maybe not in a traffic jam!].
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And while cars provide each nuclear family with privatised transport - they also
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in het, 1 car couples tend to disempower the non commuter [read woman] and shore
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up male power within the relationship in some instances. At least in the media
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cyber space of car advertisements: cars, patriarchal power and capitalism work
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hand in glove while still reflecting some of the space won by women [eg. the
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Nissan advert]. And while in the real world, connections are more tenuous, the
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overall argument retains force.
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While for British Capitalism, physically organising such a car culture is
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obviously more difficult than in settler states in the US, Australia etc - the
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common language and TV culture in many ways merely reinforces the need for
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Capital to construct such a culture here - bulldozing through East London [to
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Ramsey St?] as they go.
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In this context the resistance against the M11 is fine, but the expressed
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ideology of the resistance - evironmentalism, a critique of the road lobby and
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the defence of Wanstead's 'village like feel' in East London is no match for
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Capitals' hopes for Essex man motoring into town. It remains to be seen if the
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support for the Motorway building from its projected working class users can be
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turned into opposition to the whole project of auto Capitalism.
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[Certainly, the slow but steady level of security guard desertion from the
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project suggets that for these men/workers, they see little in the roadway for
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them - but then security guards aren't high on the list of workers to be
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co-opted.]
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contact direct action against the M11 ph. 081 530 5709
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And while we're talking about transport Below are two more articles about anti
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freeway actions in Wales Cymru and also anti car actions in Holland.
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We'd suggest that the action in North Wales, aimed at companies and part of an
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overall milieu of defence of the welsh speaking part of north Wales which has a
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tradition of militant defence of its community [see previous CF articles on Goch
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Cymru activists framed up on firebombing holiday homes] is more soundly based
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than the Dutch activists' attacks on cars
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To say: "the individual car owner is responsible for their choice of destroying
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our nature" is intensely problematical! Let's face it - a fuck of a lot of
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people need to use their cars to live ... we can only hope the smashed up motors
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were owned by rich bastards.
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Why all these actions are important is because of the new [from 1992] by the
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Euro states in developing TERrors [trans European routes] from Moscow to the UK.
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Roads are now the premier environmental issue in the UK - but they are
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fundamentally being resolved on a class basis. While a few OBE types in
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Buckinghamshire can finally succeed in ending their threatened motorway - making
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this not only the the last Tory controlled county council but also the only
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success so far of the anti motorway movement - meanwhile in East London the
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story is much different. NIMBYism's success as a political strategy clearly
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depends on how big your backyard is
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NO Snowdonia Motorway!
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When over 100 "saving the Environment" protestors met at the ARC Northern quarry
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at Penmaenmawr, Gwynedd, recently [25/10/93], they were happily patronised by
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the attendant police, quarry security and press with a nice picture in the next
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day's Daily Post saying how peaceful the protest had been. There was no mention
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of how this quarry was to benefit from supplying all the rock for the new A5
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highway through Snowdonia. However the next day, the Post carried a small
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outraged report about how the ARC office had been trashed, computers and drawing
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equipment smashed - all up costing <20>40,000.
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2 days later the North Wales MEP told the press that all plans for the Snowdonia
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motorway had been scrapped. The green gremlins, not content with this [as the
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motorway was now being re-routed through the north coast of Wales] re-entered
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the offices in January 94, turned on the computers, hacked away at the
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headoffice mainframes and caused <20>10,000 monetary damage as well as wiping out
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months of work. Police remained puzzled - "nothing was stolen."
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