475 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
475 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
WORKERS SOLIDARITY
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Paper of the Irish anarchist group,
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Workers Solidarity Movement
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No 43 Autumn 1994 (electronic addition)
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Part 3 (Drugs) 16k
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In this section
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Legalise it
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The heroin menace
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***************************
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LEGALISE IT!
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THE LEGALISATION OF CANNABIS is now being
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debated openly by sections of the European
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ruling class. In localised areas like
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Amsterdam they have been conducting a 20
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year experiment into the effects of
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legalisation. In Switzerland they are
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experimenting with the de-criminalisation of
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small quantities of heroin. According to
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the British Guardian one well-known
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brewery, Carlsberg-Tetley, has been
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investigating the hash cafes of Amsterdam
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with a view to running similar
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establishments in Britain. In Italy a
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referendum in March of 1993 ended the
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obligatory penal sentence for cannabis
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possession and in Germany earlier this year
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the Supreme Court suggested personal
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possession of drugs should not be
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prosecuted.
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Even senior police are getting
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in on the act, Raymond Kendall (head of
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Interpol) and Commander John Grieve of
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Scotland Yard have both recently suggested
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it's time to legalise at least some drugs.
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Best of all perhaps was Keith Hellawell's
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(Chief Constable of West Yorkshire)
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appearance on Panorama when he said "people
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are not being honest about the positive side
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of drugs, that drugs do give people a good
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feeling. A 'buzz' they call it"
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By contrast in the US the administration has
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created a 'War on Drugs' that echos the
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Prohibition (alcohol ban) of the 1920's.
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Instead of moonshine and speakeasy's this
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time it's cocaine and crack houses. The
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jails have been filled with 'drug
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offenders' and repressive laws introduced
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Some US states give longer mandatory
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sentences for the possession of marijuana
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than for rape or even murder. Forfeiture
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laws allow the confiscation of property
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that is in any way related to drugs and last
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year more property was seized by this
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method than was stolen in burglary in the
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whole of the US. Recently a law was being
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introduced that would mean possession of
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huge quantities of marijuana (60,000 Kg)
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would carry the death penalty!
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In the US, the War on Drugs (WoD) plays a
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considerable number of other functions. It
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is used as a pretext for invasions and
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interference in other countries, most
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notably the invasion of Panama. It is used
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to explain away inner city poverty,
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unemployment and homelessness as being the
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fault of those effected.
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It's a mechanism for official racism, such
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laws are enforced disproportionately
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against Blacks. Drugs with a higher ratio
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of Black users receive mandatory sentences
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for far smaller amounts. The Crack/Cocaine
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ratio, for instance, is 1:100. It has seen
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the introduction of some of the most
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draconian police powers and many deaths due
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to police raids, sometimes of 'innocent'
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people in cases of mistaken identity.
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FUN & PLAY
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Drugs are a leisure activity, nothing more
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and nothing less. Some people like
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football, some drinking, some smoking hash
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and many a combination. If a newspaper ran
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an article discussing whether football made
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you a worse person we'd all get a good
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laugh. But it's not funny, huge numbers of
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mostly young, mostly working class people
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are criminalised and even jailed every year
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for engaging in this leisure time activity.
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Many more are harassed by the police on the
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same pretext, drugs are on par with
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'terrorism' when it comes to giving the
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police extra powers to stop, search and
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question you.
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But drugs are bad for you, don't they kill
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people and lead to crime? The accompanying
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table shows Marijuana which is very illegal
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was not credited with causing one death in
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the U.S. in 1990. Of course the fact that
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it is illegal makes it more difficult to
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measure indirect deaths due to cancers than
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for tobacco but most medical research seems
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to indicate that the health effects of hash
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smoking come well behind alcohol or tobacco.
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Hash is the soft end of the argument, other
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drugs do kill people.
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MDMA (Ecstasy) has recently been the source
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of many scare stories. People have died in
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Britain and Ireland from heat exhaustion or
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hypoallergenic responses to MDMA. But
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again let us consider that we are talking
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about a leisure activity. Rock climbing
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which involves far smaller numbers of
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people, thousands rather than millions, has
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killed a comparable amount in the same time
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period.
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Yet as far as I know no-one has called for
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the police to arrest rock climbers and raid
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sporting shops. Indeed the emphasis is on
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making this leisure activity safer, making
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sure people are prepared and improving the
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equipment. One of the major problems with
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MDMA is one of quality control, because
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it's illegal you don't know what exactly you
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are buying. There is a list of similar
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drugs which have led directly or indirectly
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to deaths or other serious medical problems
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including LSD and speed. Our attitude to
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them should be shaped in a similar way.
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DR DEATH
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Finally there are those drugs that at the
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moment are the cause of enormous amounts of
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suffering and deaths. In Ireland heroin is
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the only significant one of these and it is
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dealt with elsewhere in this issue. Heroin
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is different not just because of the
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suffering junkies inflict on themselves but
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also because of the suffering they inflict
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on their local community as they rob and
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mug to obtain money.
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We are not going to call for the de-
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criminalisation of heroin dealing any more
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than other anti-social crimes like arson or
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rape. But don't think the police are the
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answer, their main role is controlling
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rather than protecting ordinary people and
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in Dublin, at least, they have worked with
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big dealers in the past. There was almost
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no police response to the heroin epidemic
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of the early 1980's until the formation of
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Concerned Parents Against Drugs. This
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despite the fact that the main dealers, the
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Dunnes, were referred to in the evening
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papers. When CPAD evicted one of the big
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dealers, 'Ma Baker' it was claimed that they
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found an address book with home phone
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numbers of Drug Squad detectives in it.
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On top of this, even when the police are
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(selectively) serious it has disastrous
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consequences. In the U.S. the attempt by
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the state to ban all drugs has pushed
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profits up for criminals to the point where
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vicious wars are being fought over
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controlling the supply. In Washington which
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has the highest murder rate it's estimated
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that 80% of murders are related to drugs.
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Possession of small amounts of all drugs
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should be de-criminalised. Anti- social
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drugs like heroin should be available on
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prescription from doctors at low cost to
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prevent junkies turning to crime to finance
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their habit. What is needed is a real
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debate on the control of the other drugs.
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It seems reasonable to say that the maximum
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of restrictions should be similar to those
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applying in relation to drink or tobacco and
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this should be medically based and enforced
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rather than state controlled.
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We need to wake up to the fact that the
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current state ban on certain drugs in
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unacceptable. Even in relation to truly
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dangerous drugs it is counter- productive.
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There is no room for moralism on this as the
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drug bans are serious attacks on people and
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destroy many lives, either directly through
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criminalisation or indirectly through drug
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ban related crime. The future society we
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are seeking to create will, I hope, have a
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bit more to offer than an evangelical
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heaven of socialist hymn singing and hard
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work.
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Joe Black
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U.S. SURGEON GENERAL'S ACTUARIAL INFORMATION
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This is a list of deaths by substance for
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1990
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Tobacco................360,000 [legal]
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Alcohol................130,000 [legal]
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Prescribed drugs......18,675 [legal]
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Caffeine.................5,800 [legal]
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Cocaine..................2,390 [illegal]
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Heroin...................2,147 [illegal]
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Aspirin....................986 [legal]
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Marijuana..................0 [illegal]
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THE HEROIN MENACE
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DUBLIN is currently experiencing a heroin
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epidemic similar to the one that hit the
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north and south inner-city in the late
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1970s. That epidemic left hundreds of
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young people hooked on heroin and dozens of
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them have since died of AIDS and AIDS
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related diseases. Some big criminals made
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fortunes out of it.
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The Dunnes managed to stay at large long
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enough to cause devastation in the tightly
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knit working class communities of the north
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and south inner city. People in these
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areas were already devastated by high rates
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of unemployment, bad housing rampant crime
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and a decaying environment. = Less than
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half a mile from the fancy hotels and shops
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of the city centre, people lived and still
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live in poverty and often in despair.
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The massive working class bias of heroin
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worldwide makes it stand apart from all
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other drugs whatever about its addictive
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quality. The lives of a whole generation
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of inner city youth was blighted by the
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heroin epidemic of the late 70s and early
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1980s. Today young people are dying with
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frightening regularity in these communities,
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sometimes leaving young kids to be reared
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by their grandparents. This is the ultimate
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in capitalist logic - young kids turning to
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a killer drug in their hundreds to lessen
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the despair of their hopeless futures in
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this society.
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In the early 80s, the official response to
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the heroin crisis was muddled and
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ineffective. After all it was only the
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communities of the inner city that were
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effected and we all know that no-one
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important lives there. The community
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response however was much more decisive.
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Concerned Parents Against Drugs (CPAD) was
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set up and quickly gained support in both
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the north and south inner city and Ballymun
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where some of the pushers had moved.
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CPAD marched on the houses of known pushers
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and sometimes forcibly evicted them.
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Pushers were denounced at public meetings
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and ordered to leave the community. From
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the beginning there was hassle between the
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CPAD and the cops. This culminated in the
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arrest of John Whacker Humphreys and others
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who were tried in the Special Criminal Court
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where there is no jury and he was sentenced
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to prison and taken to Portlaoise. This
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hassle was partly because Sinn Fein was
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closely associated with the CPAD in some
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areas but also because they were
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challenging the authority of the cops and
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therefore the state in enforcing the law by
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doing what the cops wouldn't or couldn't do.
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However, there were problems with CPAD in
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some areas. One example was in Crumlin
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where they de-generated quickly into
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vigilantes who took to hassling anyone in
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the community who was different or lived any
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kind of an alternative life-style. There
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was also the problem that often all they
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were doing was moving the pushers from on
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area to another.
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The biggest problem was that, in the
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beginning anyway, they did not
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differentiate between pushers and addicts.
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People did not know as much about heroin
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addiction then and certainly not as much
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about AIDS, and there were practically no
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treatment programmes in existence for
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addicts. CPAD sometimes did not distinguish
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between hard and soft drugs either. People
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were harassed for smoking dope in some
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areas. However, despite its very real
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faults, CPAD was a progressive response to
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the heroin epidemic at that time.
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The present situation is very different.
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AIDS and H.I.V. are the main reasons that
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it is so different. So many families in the
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inner city have had someone either die of
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AIDS or become H.I.V. positive that it is
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now part of the community. In this
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situation people are reluctant to go for
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the tactics of the CPAD again because it is
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their own brothers and sisters and sons and
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daughters that would be targeted.
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A revival of CPAD-type organisation seems to
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be happening in the south inner city at the
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moment where there was a recent march to
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"keep our communities free from drugs".
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People do need to organise to defend their
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communities from heroin, AIDS and drugs
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wars. However this time around there needs
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to a clear distinction made between pushers
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and addicts.
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The recent survey of H.I.V. positive people
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in Dublin [Building Positively published by
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the Round Tower Housing Association,
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February 1994] shows that a very high
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proportion of them are either homeless or
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in very bad privately rented flats, and that
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the biggest single reason why they are in
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that state was that they had been harassed
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out of their homes by vigilantes because of
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their drug use and because they were H.I.V
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positive.
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The Corporation now will not house people
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defined as anti-social and a lot of drug
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users get defined in this way. People who
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are often very sick and dying in some cases
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are being harassed out of their homes
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because they are addicted to heroin. There
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is no easy solution because addicts
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sometimes push drugs and sometimes are into
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theft to pay for their addiction and they
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can make terrible neighbours. But simply
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throwing them out of their homes and
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communities and not calling for treatment
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programmes, and that means needle exchanges
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and methadone maintenance centres in the
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area where they live, is not acceptable to
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anarchists.
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Heroin addicts are victims of capitalism
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and should not be made scapegoats. People
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need to focus on the lousy conditions that
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create heroin addiction and to fight and
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organise around them. Anarchists believe
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that heroin should be decriminalised and
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available to addicts on prescription.
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Heroin is different to most other drugs
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because it is used intravenously and has
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led, though sharing needles, to users
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becoming HIV+.
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The distinction between "hard" and "soft"
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drugs changes all the time with the arrival
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of new kinds of drugs. As anarchists the
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distinction we make is between drugs that
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have a bad effect on users and the wider
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community, and those that don't. Heroin
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addiction leads to crime and violence, and
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it is working class communities who have to
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bear the brunt of it. It also leads to HIV
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infection and AIDS. It kills people. This
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makes it an anti-social drug.
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We are not in favour of more punitive
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legislation as a response. That has
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changed nothing. One only has to look at
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the number of junkies who go into Mountjoy
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jail and come out still addicted. Indeed
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many young prisoners have gone in never
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having used heroin but come out addicted.
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The state has been more concerned with
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appearing to do something rather than
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actually doing it. It has been a case of
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scapegoats rather than solutions.
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Anarchists are fighting for the sort of
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world where nobody will 'need' to escape
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from reality through self-destructive
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addiction. Until this is achieved we will
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support communities who want to defend
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themselves from heroin pushers and anti-
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social behaviour.
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Patricia McCarthy
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Part 1 (Intro & Shorts)
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Socialism & freedom
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10 years of the WSM
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Thats Capitalism
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World Unemployment
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Revolutionaries
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letter from Serbia
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Part 2 (Ireland & Imperialism)
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It was always time to go..Troops out now!
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When British army chiefs refused to obey orders
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Nationalism...No Thanks
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When the Falls & the Shankill fought together
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Part 4 (Campaigns & Struggle in Ireland)
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TEAM workers told not to expect a decent job
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Lets get together
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Anti-Water charges campaign gets off ground
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Reasons to bin the bill
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Part 5 (A rotten world)
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Interview with Italian anarchist
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Ireland..The land of a 1000 welcomes?
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Hicksons chemical spill
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37% illegally underpaid
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***********************
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Workers Solidarity currently comes out four
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times a year. For subscription details write
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to WSM, PO Box 1528, Dublin 8, Ireland.
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Also appearing in the near future will be a
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theoretical magazine called Red and Black
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Revolution.
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*****************
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+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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The Workers Solidarity Movement can be contacted at
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PO Box 1528, Dublin 8, Ireland
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or by anonymous e-mail to an64739@anon.penet.fi
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Some of our material is available via the Spunk press electronic archive
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by FTP to etext.archive.umich.edu or 141.211.164.18
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or by gopher ("gopher etext.archive.umich.edu")
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or WWW at http://www.cwi.nl/cwi/people/Jack.Jansen/spunk/Spunk_Home.html
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in the directory /pub/Politics/Spunk/texts/groups/WSM
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