The mainstream media in Britain are still licking their lips at the prospect of violence as the G20 meeting on 2 April approaches. Together with the Metropolitan Police, they should really declare a vested interest in goading it on, thereby stopping more people from joining the Climate Camp <http://climatecamp.org.uk/?q=node/468> in the City of London on Financial Fool's Day, 1 April (next Wednesday). With any luck, yesterday will encourage more people - as it should - to think otherwise.

   From THE NEW INTERNATIONALIST
   <http://blog.newint.org/editors/2009/03/29/put-people-first/>


   Put People First - a good day on the streets of London

Posted by David Ransom on Sunday, March 29, 2009 Comment on this post <http://blog.newint.org/editors/2009/03/29/put-people-first/#comments>

So it came off just fine.

No-one knew quite what to expect, but a crowd of at least 30,000 of us gathered along the Thames Embankment, with only occasional glimpses of sunshine - and enough hints of cold and impending rain to deter all but the hardiest of outdoor activists.

I've been to a fair few of these things before, and I can't off-hand think of one that was quite so relaxed and friendly, diverse and big - including even the Stop the War demonstrations when they began. We pitched the NI banner (and innovation, this) between the National Union of Journalists and the giant purple balloons (another innovation, quite handy for lifting you up as you tramp along) of Unison, the pubic-sector union.

There was an impressive turn-out by trade unions from across the country, including Northern Ireland and Scotland. The NGOs and faith groups were less obviously in evidence, at least from the banners - but then they've never tooled-up for exactly this sort of thing before and instead provided flags that fluttered everywhere: Put People First - Jobs, Justice, Climate.

A good deal of flapping happened in the bitter wind, especially around the notorious wind tunnels made by Big Ben, Whitehall, Trafalgar Square and Piccadilly - the NI banner had to be hastily lowered from time to time, lacking as it does any wind holes.

This is what I like best about demonstrations. For once, people inhabit streets that otherwise are a choking tangle of traffic. Come to think of it, joining demonstrations should really become a big tourist attraction in London, since you get a much superior view. I came across two young women from France and Poland who had seen the special NI supplement in The Big Issue and felt 'inspired' to come along.

The march marked the start of what I fully expect will eventually change many people from mere spectators of the meltdown into active participants in creating something a good deal better.

What is this likely to be? Well, we had some difficulty with slogans. 'What do we want?' We're thinking about it. 'When do we want it?' As soon as possible, if you don't mind.

In fact, as the current issue of the NI suggests, there's a pretty convincing 'manifesto' long in the making. My colleague Vanessa Baird and I are currently putting together a book - due for publication in a few months - that will spell it out in a little more detail.

But, on this wonderful day, the question was not so much who has the best manifesto as how it will be possible to make a change for the better. That means 'politics'; for example, replacing the notion of 'regulation' as a technical fix with that of 'democratic control', which is what 'regulation' really means. And that, in turn, means less of the competitive splitting of hairs, more of the participatory contest of ideas.

Anyway, after tramping through the heart of London for three hours we arrived too late in Hyde Park to hear much of what were doubtless very stirring platform performances.

And then the rain - or rather, the ice - came down. My daughter and I headed for a Turkish snack-house just off Oxford Street. Noticing the 'Put People First Flag' we still carried, they asked how the demonstration had gone. Business permitting, they promise to be there next time.

Back in Bristol, this morning I went to the local BBC to share six-and-a-half minutes of sub-prime live TV time on 'alternatives' with an accountant and a very sharp young executive from the 'ethical' Triodos Bank. The bank is, it seems, prospering as never before - even lending money, to sustainable and fair-trade projects. Not least, the executive pointed out, he still has a job.

I tried, in a trice, to present the case for a major investment in green and sustainable activities, making useful rather than useless and dangerous things. An evidently underwhelmed presenter retorted: 'But that doesn't make money.'

He had warned us beforehand that the audience tended to be 'elderly' (not unlike myself) and we should therefore avoid using jargon. This precluded me from discussing the meaning of money, or of making money from money without making anything else at all.

'Put People First' in Bristol may be gathering again soon, and I'll have to ask them what they would have said. It's too late now, I'm afraid, at least for the BBC, but how about you?

The mainstream media in Britain are still licking their lips at the prospect of violence as the G20 meeting on 2 April approaches. Together with the Metropolitan Police, they should really declare a vested interest in goading it on, thereby stopping more people from joining the Climate Camp <http://climatecamp.org.uk/?q=node/468> in the City of London on Financial Fool's Day, 1 April (next Wednesday).

With any luck, yesterday will encourage more people - as it should - to think otherwise. The next jamboree is, after all, the Copenhagen climate conference that begins on 30 November...


*URGENT INSTRUCTIONS(suggestions!) <http://www.ecotort.gn.apc.org>
IN THE UNLIKELY EVENT <http://www.ecotort.gn.apc.org>
OF ANY VIOLENCE OCCURRING <http://www.ecotort.gn.apc.org>
AT THE G20 DEMOS <http://www.ecotort.gn.apc.org>*

*1) everyone who wants to fight,
remain STANDING

2) everyone who wants a PEACEFUL DEMONSTRATION
SIT DOWN IMMEDIATELY
AND REMAIN SITTING DOWN
UNTIL THE DISTURBANCE IS OVER...

there are vastly more people
who want a PEACEFUL
and EFFECTIVE DEMONSTRATION,
than there are who want to FIGHT
and get arrested,

is it not true?
*
:-)

and once we are all sat down,
we might as well have a sandwich.....
BRING PLENTY OF SANDWICHES,
and eat them slowly,
we don't want anyone getting indigestion....!




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:-)


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