Dura Represión en Paris. Indignadxs heridos y detenidos

París: dura represión policial contra manifestantes e integrantes de la Marcha a Bruselas. Personas heridas y detenidas
2 heridxs graves, uno inconsciente, tras la brutal represión de la policía francesa a la marcha indignada hacia Bruselas. Siguen las detenciones.
Kaos. Internacional | 19-9-2011 a las 22:46 | 4252 lecturas | 38 comentarios
www.kaosenlared.net/noticia/paris-dura-represion-policial-contra-manifestantes-integrantes-marcha-

Bajo la excusa de que se trataba de una “manifestación ilegal” y que iban  a proceder a realizar detenciones, la policía francesa rodeó la marcha y cargó contra mas de un centenar de personas que se encontraban en la Plza y marchando en el  Bd St Germain

Según las peronas que se encontraban allí y que iban relatando como se desarrollaba la situación, la policía estaba muy agresiva  y atacaba con porras,  gas pimienta y gases lacrimógenos.
Se llevaron a cabo detenciones y hay personas heridas una en grave estado…
take the streets

(Actualización) MARCHA A BRUSELAS ¡¡¡URGENTE, ÚLTIMA HORA!!!lista de detenidxs: Marion lebec, edi alan robain (cerdeña) Frank Muler (Alemania), Javi Rodríguez (Valladolid), Janis (Bayona, Fr.), Enrique (Valencia), Juan Antonio (Castellón), Clara Manchado Rodríguez (Madrid), Baptiste (Paris), Miguel Ángel (Bcn), Manolo García “Nolo” (Santiago DC), Eva María Fernández González (Langreo), Víctor Martínez (Valencia), Óscar Martínez (Logroño), Gladis (Valencia), Álex (Colombia, acampada Donosti), Dani Bermejo (Santander)

http://www.facebook.com/notes/isinha-itza/liste-embarqu%C3%A9s/1015029211003791

(Actualización) Desde  el Facebook del 15M Marcha Bruselas informan lo siguiente:

“Acabamos de hablar con gente que está dentro del “autobús” de la policía, dicen que siguen llenando el autobús con más gente que de momento no saben donde les llevan (hace 5 min.) que hay heridos como ya se ha publicado, que no saben donde les van a llevar y que Paris les está apoyando intentando bloquear la salida del bus y con pancartas de LIBERTEE!!!!”

Además hacen el siguiente resumen de la situación:

Detenidos en distintos bloques por lo que parece, algunos ya les han llevado a comisaría, otros siguen en el autobús de la policía y siguen entrando a gente en el bus, no saben donde les llevan, otros en comisarias en grupos de 3 o 4 y por lo que parece un grupo de 25 han sido liberados en la comisaria 11 de París. Todabía tenemos un gran número de compañeros retenidos/detenidos en Paris y por lo que parece algunos van a pasar la noche en los calabozos de alguna comisaría francesa… seguiremos informando. 15M: Marcha Bruselas

Imágenes:

https://twitter.com/#!/Acampadaparis/media/slideshow?url=http%3A%2F%2Ftwitpic.com%2F6nhljc

http://marchestobrussels.takethesquare.net/2011/09/20/imagenes-de-la-represion-policial-en-paris/

SE CONVOCA A UNA CONCENTRACION:

RT @luba_7: @Acampadaparis Concentración frente al Consulado de Francia en Madrid C/ Marques de la Ensenada

La mayoría de los detenidos son o serán liberados sin cargos. Un pequeño grupo tendrá cargos por daños al autobus.#marcheparis #parisnofear

Por otra parte se informa que la compañera herida se encuentra en el Hospital  Cochin, Paris.

(Actualización) En el hospital hay 3 personas, dos aquejados de dislocaciones en el hombro, y la compañera que informamos anteriormente que ingresó incosnciente pero ya está estabilizada.


Day 4..Wall St. Camp grows despite Repression

Stop Capitalist Criminals plundering the Planet

#OCCUPYWALLSTREET started last Saturday, when 5,000 people descended on to the financial district of Lower Manhattan,
 held a people’s assembly and set up an encampment in Zuccotti Park on Liberty Street, a stone’s throw from Wall Street
and a block from the Federal Reserve Bank of NewThree hundred spent the night, several hundred reinforcements arrived the next day and dug in for a
long-term stay. Call in sick, invite your friends, hop on a bus or plane to New York City … join us! We’re now in DAY 4.

Day 4: At least five arrested, one may be in critical condition

Published 2011-09-20 05:01:04 UTC by OccupyWallSt

Early this morning at least five protesters were arrested by NYPD.

The first arrest was a protester who objected to the police removing a tarp that was protecting our media equipment from the rain. The police said that the tarp constituted a tent, in spite of it not being a habitat in any way. Police continued pressuring protesters with extralegal tactics, saying that a protester on a bullhorn was breaking a law. The protester refused to cease exercising his first amendment rights and was also arrested. Then the police began to indiscriminately attempt to arrest protesters, many of them unsheathed their batons, in spite of the fact that the protest remained peaceful.

The new residents of Liberty Square continued to serve as shining examples of law abiding behavior in spite of police harassment and the loose interpretation and selective enforcement of New York’s laws by the NYPD.

Third Communiqué: A Message From Occupied Wall Street

Published 2011-09-20 12:50:30 UTC by OccupyWallSt

We’re still here. We intend to stay until we see movements toward real change in our country and the world. This is the third communiqué from the 99 percent.

Today, we occupied Wall Street from the heart of the Financial District. Starting at 8:00 AM, we began a march through the Wall Street area, rolling through the blocks around the New York Stock Exchange. At 9:30 AM, we rang our own “morning bell” to start a “people’s exchange,” which we brought back to Liberty Plaza. Two more marches occurred during the day around the Wall Street district, each drawing more supporters to us.

Hundreds of us have been occupying One Liberty Plaza, a park in the heart of the Wall Street district, since Saturday afternoon. We have marched on the Financial District, held a candlelight vigil to honor the fallen victims of Wall Street, and filled the plaza with song, dance, and spontaneous acts of liberation.

Food has been donated to the plaza from supporters all over the world. Online donations for pizza, falafels, and other food are coming in from supporters in Omaha, Madrid, Montreal, and other cities, and have exceeded $8,660 [admin: now $10,000]. (Link to donate: www.wepay.com/donate/99275)

On Saturday we held a general assembly, two thousand strong, based on a consensus-driven decision-making process. Decisions were made for the group to occupy Liberty Plaza in the Wall Street corridor, bedding down in sleeping bags and donated blankets. By 8:00 PM on Monday we still held the plaza, despite constant police presence.

https://occupywallst.org/

Just die quickly please..85% of us to get zero pension.

The IMF and World Bank blackmail countries into privatizing Pension Schemes, to create juicy short term profits in the Stock Market CASINO.

World Bank admits 85 percent of world’s population has no retirement income

..''sorry no more pensions. Just die okay''
By Jean Shaoul..Less than 15 percent of the world’s population over 65 years of age now receive any income in retirement, according to New Ideas about Old Age Security, a book published by the World Bank. The worldwide assault on social insurance and publicly funded pension systems has left millions of working people without any prospect of receiving support when they retire.

The worst affected countries are in Latin America and the former Soviet Union. But the impact is also beginning to be felt in the advanced countries. It has created a social catastrophe for elderly people, who face appalling poverty and isolation in the last years of their life.

Just under 20 percent of the population aged 65 years and older and just under 30 percent in the 15-64 year old age bracket would have some formal pension coverage, and the figure is FALLING.
The authors also acknowledge that the so-called pensions revolution has failed to deliver even the World Bank’s own economic and financial objectives of increasing individual savings. The much-vaunted efficiency of the market has proved to be a chimera. The cost of administering private pension schemes ranged from 6 percent of total contributions in the case of Bolivia, to a massive 23 percent in the case of Argentina, and contrasted starkly with the lower running costs of public schemes.

No Pension? Just die quickly please.

In the UK, the selling of completely inappropriate private pension products and the inability of the regulators to prevent scams and swindles has also brought the private pension industry into disrepute. There is widespread recognition that it would require governments making some element of private pensions mandatory if they were to supplant public pensions. But the authors go on to insist that this is a short-term phenomenon that should not deflect anyone.

Following proposals by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 1985 and the Organisation for Economic Development (OECD) in 1988, the two organisations insisted any loans made were conditional upon pension reform. By this the World Bank meant the type of “reforms” pioneered by Chile in 1981 under Pinochet. International finance capital was determined to get its hands on the social security funds that formed the basis of retirement income in industrialised and some East Asian countries, and channel it into the capital markets.

The World Bank also believes people must also be encouraged to extend their working life. To meet the cost of pensions and medical care for the elderly, estimated at $64 trillion worldwide, “industrial countries need to create an institutional framework that minimises the threat of inadequate savings by ensuring that social security schemes are fully funded and by discouraging early retirement”, it said. (In official terminology, pension schemes where the benefits paid to retirees are met from the contributions made by the existing workforce are misleadingly known as “unfunded schemes,” and those based on the dividends invested on the stock market, whether public or private, are known as “funded” schemes.)

The World Bank demanded a shift away from publicly funded pensions based on general taxation and/or contributory social insurance levied from both workers and employers, to private pension schemes invested on the stock market. Where pensions remained public, they were to be converted to “defined contribution” schemes whereby entitlement to retirement income depends upon the level of contributions made by the individual.

Pensions are abolished. Just die, okay!

Its goal was a two-tier mandatory scheme with declining levels of pension provision by the state and an increasing component funded directly through individual contributions to either a private or publicly administered scheme. In effect, everyone would have his or her own individual “retirement account”, which could then be collectively invested on the stock exchange.

Many countries such as the US, Germany and Britain have embraced some aspects of the World Bank’s policies. Pensions are often the state’s largest single item of budgetary expenditure. According to the most recent World Bank Indicators report, publicly funded pensions paid for by workforce and employer contributions in Austria, Poland and Italy account for 15 percent of GDP, although the average in the West is about 10 percent. In the countries that made up the former Soviet Union, they account for only 5 percent of GDP, and in many of the world’s poorer nations pension provision is non-existent, apart from a wealthy elite and a few top government officials.

In Latin America and the former Soviet Union, the World Bank has expressly linked the provision of credit under its Public Sector Adjustment Loan scheme to implementing the privatisation of public enterprises and pension reforms.

we invested your pension and, er, um...

The lack of a decent pension means that when workers retire, they will have to supplement their meagre pension by taking what work they can. Thus the pension “reforms” create an additional pool of cheap and experienced labour. The OECD’s book Maintaining Prosperity in an Ageing Society, states openly, “An important part of the strategy for maintaining prosperity will involve encouraging people to work longer by making it financially more attractive for them to do so.”

Private pensions also offer a vast new source of profiteering for big business and the financial institutions, as the OECD acknowledges: “Consequently financial market infrastructures will need to be strengthened to cope with large increases in private pension fund assets”. The huge scale of the transfer of funds to the stock market has added to its volatility and served to intensify speculation. More than 50 percent of corporate shares are held by pension funds and insurance companies in the UK. Whereas in the mid 1960s, UK pension funds held such shares for 23 years on average, now they only hold them for 18 months, in their search for ever higher returns.

Thus not only does the turn to private pensions make the income of retired workers dependent upon the uncertainties of the stock market, as Chilean and Malaysian pensioners found to their cost when the economies of these countries crashed in 1997; it is also leading to a huge increase in the rate of exploitation of the workforce.

PART 2  The Great Pension Revolt..Coming Soon on this Blog

 

Wall Street occupiers Blocked

Attempts to Occupy Wall Street have so far been blocked by a heavy police presence.

Details of arrests or injuries are still lacking

Protesters blocked in bid to ‘occupy’ Wall Street

Hundreds of people marched Saturday near Wall Street in New York in an attempt to occupy the heart of global finance to protest greed, corruption and budget cuts. Plans by protesters to turn Lower Manhattan into an “American Tahrir Square” was thwarted when police blocked all the streets near the New York Stock Exchange and Federal Hall in Lower Manhattan. The demonstrators had planned to stake out Wall Street until their anger over a financial system they say favors the rich and powerful was heard.

“The one thing we all have in common is that We Are The 99 Percent that will no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the one percent,” said a statement on the website Occupy Wall Street.

By noon, about 700 people, many carrying backpacks and sleeping bags, had gathered near Wall Street to search for a place to camp amid a heavy police presence. The protesters who did arrive were full of zeal and righteous indignation.

“This is a protest against corporate greed and we come to Wall Street because Wall Street is the Ground Zero for corporate greed,” said Julia River Hitt, a 22-year-old philosophy student.

“We are here just to say we are fed up, we are not gonna take it anymore.”

The protesters gathered in Trinity Place, some some 1,000 feet (300 meters) from Wall Street, which they hope to turn into the US version of the famous square in Cairo that became the focal point of protests that led to the ouster of Egyptian strongman Hosni Mubarak in February. “No more corruption,” read one sign a demonstrator brandished. “Wall St Greed, New Yorkers Say Enough,” read another. “I will sleep here. A lot of us we will sleep here,” said Steven Taylor, 24 a protester who arrived equipped with a backpack and a sleeping bag.

Youths shared food and discussed the economic crisis in groups of 15 and 20. Others marched around the square.

Among the group was Javier Dorado, a law professor from Spain who compared the protesters with the mass “indignant” demonstrations in his country against high unemployment, welfare cuts and corruption. “This is a global phenomenon that is taking place in Europe and many countries,” Dorado said.

The protest came as the United States struggles to overcome an economic crisis marked by a huge budget deficit that has triggered cuts in the public service sector while unemployment hovers stubbornly above nine percent. “There’s a war in Libya, there’s a war in Afghanistan, there’s a war in Iraq and we have cuts in education, social programs,” said a masked protester who declined to be identified.

“We know where the money is going! Revolution in America!

AGENCE FRANCE PRESS

 

twitter #OccupyWallStreet ..NOW

twitter #OccupyWallStreet ..NOW

Occupy Wall Street’ protest

NOW
Live updates
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More and more people keep showing up around the bull. #occupywallstreet http://t.co/JfAgrvsJ

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“We the people, not we the banks!” #OCCUPYWALLSTREET http://t.co/pWCaN2cG

Protesters prepare to ‘Occupy Wall Street’; Reports of police barricades near NY Stock Exchange, bull. Photos:

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“This is what democracy looks like.” #takewallstreet #occupywallstreet #sep17 http://t.co/OIP1lFeL

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wall street bull protected by barricades and police. #occupywallstreet protesters parading around it http://t.co/6ercmypz

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NYPD checking IDs to get within 2 blocks of the NYSE on Wall. http://t.co/xaZpkjJp

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entrance 2 new york stock exchange blocked off. nypd officer confirmed to me its bc of planned demonstration” http://t.co/oh6w7MAw

read ‘The Free’..free download Occupy the Planet..

love and rage: life after the collapse of capitalism

Greetings to all, especially you FoFees  (friend of the Free)  hope you’re enjoying the book

Set in the Collapse of Capitalism our heroes escape their School and Family and fall in with the squatters, anarchists and gays, who are busy getting ready for the final confrontation and the Dawn of a co-op Money Free world.. It’s a thriller as well..

Just to say it is selling well..Not a surprise as it’s FREE  (lol). It also makes a very economical present.

It now has 1322 Friends of The Free on FARCEbook (FoFoFs), and I havent a clue who’s who.  http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001284179241

Plus its Blog has had 36.218 page views in 7 months. Seems like a lot.

Of course most people just  passed by the blog looking at other stories. https://thefreeonline.wordpress.com/

Here’s a few more of the hundreds of reviews the book has had on the ‘Authonomy’ website  http://www.authonomy.com/books/4458/the-free/

Abuse of power being consistent in our culture, where fear colludes with the bully, it is cheering to see victims organising and supporting each other . This will appeal to a great many young people.
You give us moments of delight:… rolling her big eyes back to us girls … such scandal would zoom round and round the area – like a bee in a jar … Then her daffodil moment of glory: dancing and swirling, waving the flowers at the grey building … the golden snow. I’ve never heard of ‘testerical laughter’, but it kind of hits the mood of the moment.I really like your book and back it with pleasure.  Pia (Course of Mirrors)

Wow; I can’t stop reading! I’ve just finished chapter 8, and I’m only stopping because it’s 1AM! It seems to remind me a little of ‘A Clockwork Orange’, combined with ‘A Child Called It’. I cannot wait to read on. I’m still not entirely sure about a lot of things (such as the political situation) but everything I’ve read so far has been wonderful. If I get the chance, I will buy this book.

Karen Eisenbrey I read three chapters and the glossary. I like your ideas for remaking society, especially the mix of practical, earnest things with more whimsical ideas of fashion etc. I especially like how in the first chapters, it’s not obvious that the story takes place in (I would guess) the near future in a shifting, alternative society. But there are little clues all over the place that things are falling apart and changing, present but not taking over the story. We start with Linda, a real, relatable character. You’ve nailed the voice here. She’s articulate and smart, but not at all formal; young, angry, scared, beaten down but ready to stand up. Good luck with The Free!…Karen Eisenbrey

Aaron Pattis wrote After three chapters, nothing will stop me from reading the rest of this book! Who couldn’t pull for a kid like this and wonder where she’s going to end up? There are some terms that I have difficulty with sometimes, like “lekky” and such, but soon enough figure it out. But I wouldn’t change that voice for this story because it adds to the richness realism in the characters. Great job and backed with pleasure..Aaron,”80 Grit”

Lmfrenchwrote   Wow, what can I say? I love how you capture Linda’s voice. It wasn’t too long ago that I was a fifteen year old girl and…well…wow. I read some of this the other day and wasn’t too

Occupy The Planet. Abolish Debt. For a Co-Op world.

impressed, but I re-read it and trudged on to see what happened beyond the first page and I must say, I am very glad I did. I found myself giggling a bit and read on with a smile. It is a fun story. I am not normally a fan of 1st person POV but you seem to be able to still bring your characters to life. Very nice.

Funny and wonderful. Loved it. J.
CamilleS wrote
What a uniquely funny read.  Really cracked me up!  Camille…Curse of the Golden Fly/The Hobble Knobble Gobble Tree
 Great opening. Fast-paced and spirited way of writing. I like the talk about men drooling over Janice (lol); very typical. It’s real! and the “like a pack of randy dogs snifting after her”…This is what happens most of the time, in real life. Good job Mike. This work is so rich and moving, good humored. I can’t stop reading it.GOOD LUCK!!    Emma Philips…The Dark Intruder
Well Mikey…a huge HUGE contemporary tale. Brutal and brave..comical and painful.  Your style is enviably quirky. The language stripped yet so incredibly weighted. Congratulations, I wish you every success with THE FREE. .    Dawn:ARK
 What a crazy romp this is! I like it!

“¡Peligro Papa/ Watch out Pope” art competition

favourite from 50 competition entries

Finaliza el concurso gráfico de la CNT Madrileña.

Anti Pope Art Competition concludes

Por fin se fue su ridícula santidad, y con él las hordas de devotos, pijos, fascistas y demás ralea que inundó Madrid durante la Jornada Mundial de la Juventud (y de la represión policial). La CNT madrileña da, por razones evidentes, por concluida su campaña que, por desgracia, se ha quedado corta: ni los 1500 carteles, ni los 4000 comunicados, ni las 5000 pegatinas editadas para la ocasión han sido suficientes para satisfacer a los muchos simpatizantes de esta campaña que se han acercado a nuestros locales en la última semana para llevarse unos pocos y se han encontrado que ya se habían gastado.

another entry in the CNT anti pope competition

ver todas aquí  ..See all entries HERE

http://peligroquevieneelpapa.wordpress.com/2011/08/04/participa-en-la-eleccion-del-concurso-de-disenos-ateos/

En otro orden de cosas, no nos cansamos de felicitar a todos los participantes en el concurso de diseños ateos que nos han enviado cerca de 50, y que han conseguido la simpatía de miles de visitantes a nuestro blog. A todos ellos/as trasladamos la invitación de Tinta Negra anARTchist blog a unirse a este proyecto. De las propuestas enviadas, habéis mostrado vuestras preferencias por el diseño “Noconmisimpuestos” enviado por Ángel desde Murcia, al quele llegará ese obsequio pobre en lo material pero rico en lo espiritual que le tenemos reservado.
Desde aquí debemos dar las gracias a los participantes y colaboradores en esta campaña que han contribuido a difundir carteles, pegatinas, comunicados, el blog, proponer iniciativas o que han acudido a la Semana de Cine Ateo, etc. y que han hecho posible que tome forma un mensaje humanista integral, la de aquellos que no queremos que nos gobierne ni un Dios, ni un viejo disfrazado, ni nadie, porque queremos gobernar todos los ámbitos de nuestra vida en sus vertientes tanto individuales como colectivas, y no nos cansamos de repetir:
“La religión dejará de ser necesaria cuando el hombre sea lo suficientemente inteligente como para gobernarse a sí mismo”.
Francisco Ferrer Guardia