Posts Tagged liberty

V for Vendetta

This weekend I watched an amazing film. V for Vendetta. Finally, a film about England that is, yes mainstream, but more importantly, inspirational, challenging, revolutionary and every so slightly anarchistic. When I say anarchistic, I mean that blowing up the houses of parliament is may not be the correct way to get things changed, but my god, those fireworks looked awesome in the finishing scene.

V for Vendetta is, without exaggeration, one of the best films I have ever seen. Walking along the streets, I keep hoping that I’ll see a large ‘V’ carved or sprayed onto propaganda in my city, sprayed on billboards and buildings. I want it to be everywhere. I keep hoping to see, along with a myriad of ‘V’ symbols, people in V masks, V cloaks. I want a revolution, dammit!

I was surprised, and ecstatic to discover that around 100 people protested outside the White House, all dressed as ‘V’. Click here to read the article.

I hope that this film has made people wake up to the serious issues, the real problems that we face in the UK; the way our liberties are being stripped away in the name of terror; how are privacy is being removed in the name of fighting crime – the issues in V for Vendetta are real. And, more shockingly, if you look around, you can see it happening now.

Despite the film being shunned by many anarchists (e.g. ‘A for Anarchy’) due to the removal of important anarchist scenes, it is still a great film, that I’m sure will have a large impact on the public in the UK, and hopefully, in dictatorships acrross the world.

This is an important film for the UK, and one that should be seen by anyone shocked or angry about what is happening before our very eyes. While the film is not a call for terrorism on the scale of destroying the houses of parliament like Guy Fawkes attempted in the 16th century, it is more a call to arms, a call for unity, revolt and transcendence.

Remember, remember the fifth of November. Because it should never be forgot. Guy Fawkes attempted to destroy parliament because of religious reasons, but our vendetta is different. This is a social, and political vendetta. We want our rights back. And, we most certainly are going to get them.

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SOCPA Section 132 – 138: Destroying the right to protest

I am writing to demand democracy in England. To get back our right to protest, which has been mindlessly, tyrannically stripped away under section 132-138 of the Serious Organized Crimes and Police Act of 2005 (socpa).

Section 132-138 effectively remove the right to spontaneous protest. These sections silence dissent and opposition, and are a disgrace to what we once called a democracy.

These sections of Socpa (or ’so-crap’ as it is often called) make spontaneous protest within a kilometer of parliament square illegal – meaning Downing Street (home of the Prime Minister), Whitehall, Westminster Abbey, Scotland Yard, the Middlesex guildhall, and the home office. But most outrageously, this area covers Trafalgar Square – the area where protesters have got their views across for years and fought fiercely for their rights there. But now, it is illegal to protest in these areas. It is illegal to protest without permission of the police, rendering democracy useless. Having to get permission to protest is an insult.

The horrible thing is, not only does this silence dissent, but if one chooses to protest without ‘permission’ within a kilometer of parliament square, then you can be arrested and imprisoned for 51 weeks.

I am sickened by this act. It is dictatorial and goes against everything the UK once stood for. An explicit attack on our civil liberties, under the common pretext of ‘fighting terrorism’. The freedom to protest has never provoked terrorism. Before the act, terrorism was not a large problem in the UK, and the government know it. But they are adamant on controlling us and repressing the public.

Socpa needs to be re-written with section 132-138 completely removed. And we need to fight, even if it protesting is illegal and punishable, for it’s removal. It is a sorry state of affairs when permission is needed to be able to demonstrate near parliament.

I hope that you will join me and others in opposing this authoritarian piece of legislation.

Watch this video for more information: http://www.indymedia.org.uk/media/2008/01//389116.mp4

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Liberty for ALL

Fire rages in the fields of unity

Sparked by the fuel of prejudice and hate

The fuel of humanity multiplies the inferno

Until nothing is left of solidarity and peace.

 

Building walls of Jericho around their city

Guarding their segregationist fortresses.

They fight harmony with vicious war

And the armies, they eradicate their enemies.

 

Torturing compassion, with whips and with knives

 

We fight to bring down the walls of racism

And to join together as one

 

We fight to let our voices resound,

In unison, we sing songs of freedom and pride

 

We hold the hands of others

Who’s skin may be different,

Who may be of another religion or race

But we love each other, not because of

outward appearance

But because we’re all equal

And because we all face the same problems

But we will get through them together.

Because we’re all humans, we hold the responsibility

To care. To trust. To live. To love.

 

Because we all have our battles.

But we will fight them together.

 

We let our song resound through the mountains

Not clash in discord: but come together and offer a sweet melody

 

We see the swords of menacing discrimination,

And the vile words of false preconception.

 

But we join, and we charge, to knock down the walls of this partisanship

 

Liberty for all.

 

When the bombs come raining down, we do not cry in defeat,

But stand together and protect our friends.

 

Liberty, for all.

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In loco parentis

Loco parentis.

What a farse.

Schools act ‘in loco parentis’

Parents should act as parents

And this should be left to parents alone. Not a school.

Schools acting in place of a parent – an excuse to perform civil liberty violations. An excuse to batter freedom of speech and freedom of will.

Stupidity!

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Some of my favourite quotes on freedom

Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.

Benjamin Franklin, Historical Review of Pennsylvania, 1759[
US author, diplomat, inventor, physicist, politician, & printer (1706 – 1790)

While the State exists, there can be no freedom. When there is freedom there will be no State.

Lenin, “State and Revolution”, 1919

A lie told often enough becomes the truth.

Lenin

Patterning your life around other’s opinions is nothing more than slavery.

Lawana Blackwell, The Dowry of Miss Lydia Clark, 1999

You can’t separate peace from freedom because no one can be at peace unless he has his freedom.

Malcolm X (1925 – 1965), Malcolm X Speaks, 1965

The love of liberty is the love of others; the love of power is the love of ourselves.

William Hazlitt (1778 – 1830)

Go on, get out. Last words are for fools who haven’t said enough.

Karl Marx

When liberty is taken away by force it can be restored by force. When it is relinquished voluntarily by default it can never be recovered.

Dorothy Thompson

When the Nazis came for the communists,
I remained silent;
I was not a communist.

When they locked up the social democrats,
I remained silent;
I was not a social democrat.

When they came for the trade unionists,
I did not speak out;
I was not a trade unionist.

When they came for the Jews,
I remained silent;
I wasn’t a Jew.

When they came for me,
there was no one left to speak out.

Pastor Martin Niemöller (1892–1984)

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