Blog Archive
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2012
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January
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- Stop the War protests against Iran and Syria inter...
- WHERE NOW FOR EGYPT AND THE MIDDLE EAST?
- We've lost a great friend: a tribute to Gayle O'Do...
- GALLOWAY BEGINS TWO WEEK TOUR OF THE FAR EAST
- HANDS OFF IRAN & SYRIA
- Iran's nuclear scientists are not being assassinat...
- MILIBAND AND BALLS HAVE GOT IT WRONG ON THE ECONOM...
- WHERE NOW FOR EGYPT AND THE MIDDLE EAST?
- George Galloway: "The drumbeats of war are getting...
- Spring confronts Winter
- Sounds like Freedom: Celebrating Protest Music, Ve...
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January
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2011
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November
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- Respect backs pension strikers
- Galloway says support 30th November pension strike...
- Viva Palestina kicks off for Palestine
- 2011: The year of meltdown
- The 1% are the guilty
- Global leaders: Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste,...
- Respect comes 2nd in Sparkbrook by-election
- Don't attack Iran
- Kick Off for Palestine
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October
(9)
- If the Libyan war was about saving lives, it was a...
- Greece: stop bleeding the people for the bankers
- The Hardest Hit - East of England rally
- Is economic Armageddon around the corner?
- George Galloway: Aggression behind the 'restaurant...
- Respect Quarterly #6 - Defending Multiculturalism
- George Galloway: Anti-War Assembly
- George Galloway: Afghanistan - Don't let them get ...
- Remembering Cable Street: 1936-2011
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November
(9)
Thursday, 5 January 2012
Spring confronts Winter
In the recommended article, Mike Davis, author of the acclaimed Planet of Slums looks back at 2011 and forward to the coming year in this editorial for New Left Review
In great upheavals, analogies fly like shrapnel. The electrifying protests of 2011—the on-going Arab spring, the ‘hot’ Iberian and Hellenic summers, the ‘occupied’ fall in the United States—inevitably have been compared to the anni mirabiles of 1848, 1905, 1968 and 1989. Certainly some fundamental things still apply and classic patterns repeat. Tyrants tremble, chains break and palaces are stormed. Streets become magical laboratories where citizens and comrades are created, and radical ideas acquire sudden telluric power. Iskra becomes Facebook. But will this new comet of protest persist in the winter sky or is it just a brief, dazzling meteor shower? As the fates of previous journées révolutionnaires warn us, spring is the shortest of seasons, especially when the communards fight in the name of a ‘different world’ for which they have no real blueprint or even idealized image.
But perhaps that will come later. For the moment, the survival of the new social movements—the occupiers, the indignados, the small European anti-capitalist parties and the Arab new left—demands that they sink deeper roots in mass resistance to the global economic catastrophe, which in turn presupposes—let’s be honest—that the current temper for ‘horizontality’ can eventually accommodate enough disciplined ‘verticality’ to debate and enact organizing strategies. It’s a frighteningly long road just to reach the starting points of earlier attempts to build a new world. But a new generation has at least bravely initiated the journey.
In great upheavals, analogies fly like shrapnel. The electrifying protests of 2011—the on-going Arab spring, the ‘hot’ Iberian and Hellenic summers, the ‘occupied’ fall in the United States—inevitably have been compared to the anni mirabiles of 1848, 1905, 1968 and 1989. Certainly some fundamental things still apply and classic patterns repeat. Tyrants tremble, chains break and palaces are stormed. Streets become magical laboratories where citizens and comrades are created, and radical ideas acquire sudden telluric power. Iskra becomes Facebook. But will this new comet of protest persist in the winter sky or is it just a brief, dazzling meteor shower? As the fates of previous journées révolutionnaires warn us, spring is the shortest of seasons, especially when the communards fight in the name of a ‘different world’ for which they have no real blueprint or even idealized image.
But perhaps that will come later. For the moment, the survival of the new social movements—the occupiers, the indignados, the small European anti-capitalist parties and the Arab new left—demands that they sink deeper roots in mass resistance to the global economic catastrophe, which in turn presupposes—let’s be honest—that the current temper for ‘horizontality’ can eventually accommodate enough disciplined ‘verticality’ to debate and enact organizing strategies. It’s a frighteningly long road just to reach the starting points of earlier attempts to build a new world. But a new generation has at least bravely initiated the journey.
