Anonymous hacks FBI

A conference call between the FBI and Scotland Yard discussing their work against a group of internet hackers, was hacked into by Anonymous activists, who posted details of the call on the web.

The cops were discussing their efforts to co-ordinate attempts to prosecute those responsible for the LulzSec attacks which included hacking into Sony’s PlayStation network, and disabling the CIA’s website.

The breach apparently occurred at the US end, the latest in a long list of security lapses.

The attacks come in the wake of the FBI’s offensive against the Megaupload website, shutting it down and issuing arrest warrants for 4 of its owners.

Despite the withdrawal of two internet censorship bills from the US congress, the struggle for freedom of the internet is continuing.

From Bradley Manning, locked up naked in solitary confinement for months, to the persecution of teenage hackers, the security services  are determined to crackdown on hackers and other ‘cyber criminals’.

As domestic attacks on the internet are increasing, so are our government’s undeclared wars against other countries’ internet infrastructure. Iran, China and the US are increasingly caught up in skirmishes, probing each others’ internet  security.

During the August Riots, the Tories called for Twitter to be shut down, and Twitter itself has just announced that it can censor tweets by country.

During the Arab Spring, Mubarak and Gadaffi tried to shut down the internet. In Syria, Asad has used it to gather information on the opposition.

The internet is a powerful weapon for whoever controls it. We oppose censorship and will fight against any attempts to restrict access or information online.

 

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Twitter censorship + ??? = PROFIT

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FBI bursts Kim Dotcom’s bubble

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Stop Sopa: the internet strikes back

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Twitter Censorship + ??? = PROFIT!

In a move calculated to appeal to investors, Twitter has announced it is now able to censor tweets by country of origin. Previously, if a tweet was deleted, it disappeared from worldwide search results. The new technology allows Twitter to selectively target content and remove it from search listings within a particular country.

Twitter said they had made the move in an attempt to accommodate countries with “different ideas about freedom of expression”. Quite.

Looking to expand its global business, Twitter is developing ways in which it can ensure that its information-sharing model doesn’t stand in the way of securing operating rights in countries whose governments exercise tight censorship laws.

Twitter is willing to accept limits on its operations, in return for access to an even wider user-base. Making a principled stand in defence of internet freedom is not part of this equation. Twitter CEO Dick Costolo explicitly made this point when he said that Wikipedia’s 24-hour blackout over the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) was “bad for business”.

The new tools, strongly criticised by Twitter users and Reporters without Borders as ‘opening the floodgates’ to internet censorship, has been justified as a ‘clarification’ of Twitter’s response to legal requirements.

Twitter feels that its brand image was soiled during the Arab Spring, when the media routinely reported the role that Twitter played in helping to organise protests. Rather than protest against repressive regimes, they chose to accept censorship rules.

For all the talk of how revolutionary social media can be, it is gradually integrating itself into the business model of ‘old’ media – compromising with the established power structures if its profit margins are threatened.


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FBI Bursts Kim Dotcom’s Bubble

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Ideas, culture and Media under Capitalism

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Stop SOPA: The internet strikes back

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FBI bursts Kim Dotcom’s bubble

The collapse of the SOPA and PIPA acts in the US congress might appear to be a victory for those who champion internet freedom.

But powerful supporters of the acts see it as a temporary setback, and remain determined not to let it get in the way of forcing online industries to submit to intellectual property rights.

Just as EMI and Universal sunk Napster at the turn of the century, so they are now trying to defend their moribund businesss model by taking court action against those who turn huge profits under cover of the internet’s legal grey-area.

While Google and Wikipedia crowed about the success of their blackout protest, the FBI leaned on the New Zealand government to arrest four founders of the Megaupload website, which allowed people to view copyrighted material free.

Kim Dotcom has been denied bail, and is awaiting extradition to the US on charges of sharing copyrighted material without permission.

Megaupload claimed 1 billion users, and 4% of internet traffic. The struggle over internet freedom shows how capitalism is acting as a brake on the full development of humanity’s productive and creative forces.

In theory, knowledge, culture and information is tied to private owners, available only to those who can afford it. In reality the internet represents the sharpest challenge to this control, allowing billions of people to access information and ideas previously available only to a privileged minority.

Internet freedom challenges capitalist ideas over intellectual property rights. The growing movement to defend freedom of the internet is a reaction against the monopoly control of broadcast and print media, against the growing interference of government censors under the guise of ‘national security’ ‘official secrets’ and ‘anti-terrorism’ laws.

The power of the capitalist system is that it is based on private property rights, allowing a tiny number of people to own the natural, technological and intellectual wealth of the planet.

Inevitably they exploit the reproduction and distribution of these resources for their own benefit, not the benefit of the people who extract, package and consume them.

We need to support the movement in defence of internet freedom and give it a perspective of challenging the fundamental pillars of the capitalist system – if we are opposed to the 1% profiteering from our entertainment, then we must even more oppose the ‘right’ of these few billionaires to profit from their monopoly control over the planet’s human and natural wealth which rightly belongs to all of us.

We want to put these resources under the democratic control of the majority who rely on them, whose democratic organisation is the only possible means of challenging and replacing capitalist exploitation with a better society.

 

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Stop SOPA: the Internet strikes back 

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Ideas, culture and Media under Capitalism

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Grime Daily shut down – an attack on reality

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Exposed! How big business buys its way into government

It’s emerged that businesses including BP, Shell and Apple have been forking out up to £1800 a time for cosy chats with ministers, MPs and government advisors.

Operating out of a fancy restaurant in Mayfair, a ‘networking business’ called Chemistry Club organises ‘invite only’ events attended by the likes of Danny Alexander, policing minister Nick Herbert and Climate change minister, Lord Taylor.

Senior MPs from backbench committees, senior civil servants and advisors from the Treasury, Home Office, Ministry of Defence, Department of Energy and Climate Change and other key departments have also been implicated in this scandal.

The club charges executives from selected energy companies and technology businesses between £1,300 and £1,800 a head to attend such events.

Although it invites some members of the public to attend, these are carefully selected including none other than Ben Moxham, Cameron’s special advisor on energy and environment… and former BP employee.

This ‘cash for access’ scandal exposes what we all knew anyway: government is in the pocket of big business.

The fees are small change for these individuals, compared with the goldmine of pro-business subsidies, tax-breaks and legislation which are the outcomes of this corrupt arrangement.

What’s in it for the ministers and MPs though? It’s true they don’t get paid (although they do claim expenses) but access to the leading figures of industry is priceless for MPs planning a post-parliamentary career built on companies returning favours granted while in government.

The Cabinet Office obviously got worried about how it looked so issued ‘guidance’ in August 2010 telling civil servants not to attend such events and claimed it wasn’t aware of how much people were paying for the privilege.

Still you can never get the Tory sleaze out of the carpet, and this ‘guidance’ didn’t stop bastions of transparency and accountability like the Met and GCHQ (secret service) from continuing to attend these events.

The cabinet has since overturned its ruling against civil servants attending, following ‘discussions’ with the club.

The Chemistry Club runs two main series of networking events: one, called the Climate Change Forum, focuses on energy and climate change, the other on IT and technology.

The club stresses its evenings “are not social gatherings but ‘work events’” that “represent an exceptionally good use of attendees’ time”.

Evidently it’s a good use of attendees time; they wouldn’t be paying this money if it didn’t benefit them. They fork out to buy influence on the decisions our government is making – and companies like Shell aren’t interested in reducing oil dependence, or banning arms sales to militias in Nigeria.

Although attendees details can now be viewed at the bottom of the Chemistry Club’s website, this simply gives politicians the ability to say that the backroom deals are all legit and above board.

While nobody should be able to buy access to power, the strength of a class system is that it allows those who monopolise wealth in society to also monopolise the power structures in a society.

The great con of capitalist ‘democracy’ is that it provides the illusion of free choice, while ensuring that the real decisions about the economy, security, foreign policy are kept under the control of an unelected, unrepresentative elite.

We are fighting for an alternative to a world based on the exploitation of one class by another. Our alternative is socialism, the rule of the working class, who alone have the ability to organise society for the benefit of the many, rather than the privilege of the few.


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Corruption and Human Rights abuses

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How Balfour Beatty profits from death

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Barclays sinks millions into education gold-rush

Kettle this!

Kettling , an efficient form of mass arrest, has been declared a perfectly legitimate means of suppressing political dissent in Britain’s healthy democracy.

The Appeals Court overturned last year’s High Court ruling that police acted illegally when they violently broke up the Climate Camp during protests at the G20 in 2009.

Last September the High Court threw out a case claiming that the kettling of thousands of youth for six hours in London during the 24.11.10 walkouts breached their human rights.

A further case relating to kettling during anti-capitalist protests in 2001 is ‘awaiting judgement’ at the European Court of Human Rights.

That every attempt to challenge the legal basis of kettling has failed should not be a surprise. The judiciary are not, after all, independent champions of the downtrodden. They are bribed with positions, peerages and awards; while their wage ensures they mingle within the elite social classes whose business it is to run our lives. This  acts as a constant reminder which side their bread is buttered.

The appearance of impartiality is a charade – our laws are enforced by a wealthy, white, conservative elite for a reason. Such people have absolutely no desire to challenge the status quo which guarantees their privileges.

Judges cannot be elected or held accountable for their decisions; we are told to trust in the infallible judgement of an elite that is capable of doing little more than wallowing in the pitiful self-importance that comes with being an overpaid enforcer for the capitalist state.

The capitalists’ must be able to rely on the judges identifying their relative material privileges with the current system.

But what of the police? The people who get paid to enforce their own monopoly over violence – by whatever means necessary.

Police had been experimenting with ‘kettling’ demonstrators for years, but it only became controversial when Ian Tomlinson died after being attacked by police. During the Student movement of winter 2010 kettling was applied in an arbitrary and chaotic style.

That kettling is a clear breach of someone’s right to freedom of assembly, protest and speech is beyond dispute. Challenging these infringements everywhere we can is clearly important – we must use every channel we can to expose the hypocrisy of a system that delivers freedom abroad via laser-guided bombs, and protects our security at home with lead-weighted batons.

But we must acknowledge that we cannot strangle the system with the very apparatus it has honed over decades to oppress us.

The question over the technical legality of kettling shouldn’t distract us from the fact that the police make the facts on the ground, confident that their superiors will cover-up any fuck-up. If the maintenence of an effective and efficient system of repression means amending, restricting or even discarding rights altogether then the police will lead the way in arguing for this. Just as they did with kettling, detention without trial and youth curfews.

The mainstream media veers between liberal distaste for crude violence, tempered with the knowledge that newspapers have a long tradition of calling on the courts and police to ban strikes and industrial action. The cosy relationship between the police and the media was exposed by the phone-hacking scandal. Several police officers have been arrested, dozens are being investigated, few are likely to be convicted of any crime.

While ‘policing by consent’ requires that police be notionally subject to the same laws they enforce, the unpunished murder of more than 40 people in police custody over the last 10 years shows that, in practice, they are not.

This is why police officers rarely get convicted for any except the most petty offences. Their paymasters need them to feel confident that they can do ‘whatever it takes’ without fear of punishment from a squeamish population who don’t understand why murder, racism and corruption is necessary to defend the  grotesque privilege of a tiny class of exploiters.

Today’s ruling will certainly give police a morale boost, and make them ever more aggressive when they kettle us in future. We should continue to organise against this judgement and support the challenge at the Supreme Court.

Above all though, we should take this at face-value; a warning to the hundreds of thousands of people, from all backgrounds, who have taken to the streets against the devastaing austerity which is wrecking lives and communities.

Organised self-defence of our marches, meetings and organisations against police repression is vital in the face of a state gearing up for a decisive confrontation.  Talk of water cannon and rubber bullets is not idle bluster.

The bosses and their governments fully intend to win the battle over who pays for the economic crisis. The August Riots, Fortnum & Mason’s, and today’s decision leave no doubt that they will set their murdering enforcers loose on all who oppose them, using whatever violence it takes to set a sufficiently cowering example.

We have only our numbers, our traditions of resistance and the fact that we are an international class, with everything to gain from uniting across borders to bring down the elites who guard their privileges behind them.

For those who feel today gives them a free hand to ramp up the violence against protesters; we say you can’t watercannon our ideas, and you can’t kettle all of us.

See you on the barricades.



 

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The police: only doing their job?

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Police threaten students with rubber bullets

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Stephen Lawrence: racism, lies and reluctant justice

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The Encyclopedia Strikes Back

Wikipedia has taken its english-language page offline in a protest against a proposed anti-piracy law being debated by the United States’ Congress.

It is opposed to the Stop Online Piracy (Sopa) and Protect Intellectual Property (Pipa) Acts which are designed to block access to websites hosting unauthorised copyrighted material.

The encyclopedia giant has been joined by Reddit and Google, in the largest protest of its kind by some of the biggest players in the internet industry.

Wikipedia’s homepage was blacked out and features this message: ”For over a decade, we have spent millions of hours building the largest encyclopaedia in human history. Right now, the US Congress is considering legislation that could fatally damage the free and open internet. For 24 hours, to raise awareness, we are blacking out Wikipedia.”

Google has blacked out its logo, and links to a petition against SOPA.

If passed the law would give content owners and the government the power to seek court orders forcing search engines to block content associated with ‘piracy’.

However critics claim that the bills are so vague, and broad, that they present a real danger to freedom of the internet. While the US criticises China on a regular basis for its extensive internet censorship, it is currently debating laws which would remove any foreign websites infringing US copyright law.

Predictably, the bills have their supporters. Supporters like Rupert Murdoch and his fellow media barons with their legions of lobbyists.

Other sites, including Twitter, refused to join the protest. Twitter boss Dick Costolo tweeted ”Closing a global business in reaction to single-issue national politics is foolish.”

Blunt, but perhaps more honest than Google’s hypocrisy – the search engine involved in today’s ‘blackout’ has been criticised for co-operating with the Chinese government’s efforts to censor online search results.

This just about sums up the protest. Certainly the SOPA and PIPA laws are yet another infringement on the rights to freedom of speech, but equally they do no more than extend the already existing copyright laws to the online realm.

Information is always by someone, for someone. The monopoly control of the majority of the worlds’ information outlets is one of the single most important factors in shaping our ideas about the world we live in.

This isn’t a clear-cut case of new, pro-freedom businesses against the old establishment. The case of Google, and Twitter’s ‘business as usual’ demonstrates that they are businesses like any other. As such we must not see them as reliable allies in the struggle to extend freedom of speech and information.

We should oppose any further power for these interests in the physical or online information industries. But equally we should not fall into the trap of uncritically supporting those for whom economic convenience means they temporarily find themselves defending free access to information.

We support today’s protest against the SOPA and PIPA bills, but they are not democratic. We would not support shipyards closing if governments raised the minimum wage, so we must stay vigilant and remember that companies like Google have a huge influence over our lives, with virtually zero accountability to the millions who rely on it.

 

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Ideas, culture and media under capitalism

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Grime Daily shut down – an attack on reality

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No one is illegal!

Four children imprisoned in a UK detention centre for over a year have won a landmark victory against the British government for unlawful detention. The government tried to limit exposure by settling out of court. This case has once again exposed the horrific – and profitable – nature of the detention and deportation industry.

The Ay family were Kurds seeking asylum in the UK to escape violent persecution in Turkey. Mrs Ay had been imprisoned and raped by Turkish militia, and her family’s lives were in danger. With her husband and four children, she escaped and settled in Kent, where the children attended school and began to learn English.

Mr Ay was quickly deported to Germany and from there back to Turkey where he vanished.

In 2002 Mrs Ay and her four young children were dragged out of their home by immigration officers and taken to Dungavel detention centre in South Lanarkshire, Scotland.

She remained in the private, American-run detention centre with her four children between the ages of 7 and 13 in one small room for 13 months. They were only allowed outside for two hours a day and received low levels of education. This destroyed the children’s hopes of becoming a lawyer and a doctor.

The children, all but one now adults are still suffering the consequences of their incarceration. While detained both daughters suffered hair loss, developed eating and sleeping disorders, while the sons started to display emotional problems.

David Blunkett, then Home Secretary, was determined that the family should be sent to Germany, where they had first claimed asylum. However, the family were fearful that when they arrived there, they’d just be sent back to Turkey, as their father had been.

The fact that Mr Ay had been murdered on his return to Turkey, did not enter into Blunkett’s considerations.

He disregarded various conventions on human rights requirements about not imprisoning children, claiming the only alternative was splitting the parent from the children and placing them in care.

Through the media the children documented the damaging effect that being locked up was having on them. “The government and the police in the UK broke our hearts,” said one of the girls.

The Ay Family lost their appeal against deportation and were deported to Germany where they were granted asylum. This was on the grounds that they were so psychologically damaged by there time spent in a detention centre that they needed specialist medical treatment which was not available in Turkey.

The treatment of Asylum seekers and other immigrants reveals the ugly face of the most liberal capitalist states. While the US and UK go to war to ensure their companies can move into foreign markets, they spend the profits on elaborate systems of racist repression against desperate people fleeing violence and poverty.

REVOLUTION fights for the eradication of all national borders and barriers to movement of the world’s people, because these are the tools which allow a rich elite minority to maintain reserves of cheap labour, reinforce racist divisions and protect the interests of national capitalist classes.

 

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Racism & Capitalism

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Racism: not just a bad idea

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The state and its role

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Police threaten students with baton rounds

Statements released at a Police Press Conference today show that Scotland Yard have authorised the use of baton rounds at the National Demonstration on Wednesday.

This was not discussed with the coordinators of the demonstration, which was called by NCAFC and other student organisations.

This is an attempt by the police to ramp up the fear of violence before the demonstration, to discourage people from attending the demo.

That said, there’s no way to be sure that it is just empty threats from the police either.

Tactics such as kettling and police horses were used during the student protests last November and December; they inhumane, as protesters were kettled on Parliament Bridge for – on at least one occasion – for over 9 hours on a freezing cold evening.

Young people in Britain are angry, we’ve had our EMA removed, our tuition fees fees raised, chance of employment slashed and not much of a bright future to look forward too. Yet when we seek to exercise our basic democratic rights, the Tories, and their racist thugs in the police force try to stop us from doing so.

We encourage all to attend the march and not to let the brutal police tactics intimidate us from fighting for what is right.

But ultimately, we need to start developing the kind of organisation, defence tactics, and the right equipment to keep our demonstrations safe.

Read more:

#Occupy protests resist police brutality

The police: only doing their job?

The Tory dream of lock-down Britain

The Tory dream of lock-down Britain

Victimised student Edd Bauer

We are quite used to seeing pictures of protesters in Burma, Syria or China holding up a banner or placard only to be bundled away by police almost immediately. We need to count ourselves lucky, say politicians, that we in Britain have the right to freedom of expression.

But that most basic freedom didn’t apply to student activist Edd Bauer when he displayed an anti-fees and cuts banner at the Lib Dem conference in September. Arrested for a road traffic offence, Edd was refused bail and spent two weeks in prison for his “crime.”

Vice-President of the Birmingham Guild of students, Edd was shocked to return from his spell inside to find that he’d been summarily sacked from his elected position as a student representative. Hundreds of students have been protesting at the university for Edd’s reinstatement.

Edd is by no means the only victim of the government crackdown on the right to protest. The police and the courts are coming down hard on scores of people involved in direct action and demonstrations in the last few months. Alfie Meadows, who suffered bleeding to the brain and almost died as a result of police violence, was charged with violent disorder. Charlie Gilmour, who famously swung off the cenotaph near Parliament Square was given a 16 month sentence – a punishment so severe that it would be normally handed out to perpetrators of serious organised crime.

Clampdown – a Tory project

Not content with allowing rich judges to victimise protesters, the Tories want to go miles further – and they’ve already started. Home Secretary Theresa May banned demonstrations in six London boroughs in September, an unprecedented attack on the right to protest.

The truth is that the Tories know how much they are hated by millions of people across Britain, and the longer they stay in power, the longer that hatred will grow. Just like the bully at high school, they don’t have a problem with that – so long as they can use brute force and repression to keep themselves on top. That’s why whenever we hear of the Tories taking away our civil liberties, victimising activists, and locking us down we need to unite to stop them. And dust off one of the highest principles of the trade union and workers’ movement around the world. An injury to one is an injury to all!

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Cuts and criminalisation

The police: only doing their job?

Police violence rocks Occupy Oakland

Jafe from Revo USA reports…

On Tuesday, October 25th, those who claimed that the police were “on our side” and part of the 99% learned how wrong they were the hard way, as Oakland police, unprovoked, brutally attacked protesters gathered at Oscar Grant Plaza. After firing volleys of tear gas and flash bang and concussion grenades, police stormed the rally and shot defenseless protesters with rubber bullets as they ravaged the campsite.

Violent chaos ensued as police continued to beat, drag away, and arrest everyone they could grab.

Protesters were forced to flee the area for safety from the malicious attack.

But later that night protesters regrouped to take back their ground from the police, only to be met by another storm of bullets and projectiles in which Scott Olsen, a two-tour Iraq War veteran, was shot in the head, left critically wounded with potential brain damage. Occupy protesters gathered around Olsen to protect him, but were dispersed by more smoke and tear gas grenades lobbed by police.

The actions of the police were “justified”, as city and police department officials later said, “because protesters are responsible for the deterioration of health and sanitation in public areas, committing vandalism, and interrupting economic activity.” And since the clash, numerous police accounts have attempted to “express apology” to protesters for “excessive violence used in the midst of confusion and uncertainty.” Yet, the deeds of the police have drowned out their petty excuses.

Now all over the nation cries of “Solidarity with Scott Olsen” and “I am Scott Olsen – I am the 99%” are heard at every protest, and Occupy Oakland protesters have set the correct example of how to fight back with adamant resiliency in their mass demonstrations and call for a general strike.

It is an undeniable reality that police repression of the Occupy Movement has been in existence since the very beginning, and that the tragedy at Occupy Oakland was just another cruel reminder.  Yet, this tragedy has opened the doors for positive development in the Occupy Movement by bringing attention to the socio-political position of the police, a burning question that has surfaced again and again in the movement, and by inspiring further, more mature steps to be taken in the fight against the ruthless 1%.  We know now that the 1% have no problem violently repressing our right to assembly, and thus the more they work to stop us, the harder we must fight back. Everywhere we must deploy organized resistance against the police in their attempts to disperse and harm us, and take our struggle to the next level wherever they take theirs, by upping the ante to mass demonstrations and strikes where we can hit the bosses right at the heart of their system: the workplace.

Organize to defend our demonstrations- the police of the 1% aren’t here to protect us!

Solidarity with Olsen and Oakland!

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Occupy Lahore! movement spreads to Pakistan

The police: only doing their job?

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