By luckymonkey, submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 22/06/2005 - 15:47
join the carnival for full enjoyment not full employment, 4th july, west end of princes street (shandwick place/lothian rd) midday
: : Carnival for full enjoyment : :
: : Central Edinburgh 4 July 2005 : :
Flex, temp, casual and contortionist workers, benefit
claimers, full-time wage slaves & work refusers, New
Dealers, pensioners, migrants, students, part-timers,
dreamers, duckers & divers… Bring noise, music and
friends for action against the G8 that expresses our
resistance in work, out of work and wherever we live.
Assert our desires for FULL ENJOYMENT with fun in the
city — let’s begin to make capitalism history!
THE G8
Since the G8 last met in the UK in 1998 (with economic
restructuring high on the agenda), we’ve seen more
social cuts, privatisation and compulsory work schemes
in Europe and beyond. This is part of a continuing
enclosure of resources and means of living — such as
water, land and housing — around the world. Now the G8
leaders meeting in Gleneagles claim to address
concerns about climate chaos and world poverty. But
they really aim to strengthen the system at the root
of these conditions, and to find more efficient ways
of managing, exploiting and enclosing us. We can only
stop it by abolishing a profit-based economy; by
dismantling the states and borders that divide us.
UP OUR STREET
Gleneagles isn’t the only place we can see
international capitalism at work — it’s here on the
high streets. The bailiff knocking on your door is a
not-so-distant cousin of the cartel forcing peasants
off common land in another part of the world. Whole
industries such as banks, loan and insurance companies
thrive on indebtedness as people struggle to make ends
meet. Job centres, private and government agencies
harrass claimants to accept low-paid work or to labour
full-time just for benefits — they even intend to put
pensioners to work under the slogan of ‘active
ageing’! Army recruiters target unemployed youth for
‘economic conscription’ with the help of job centres.
Other companies press workers to accept insecure
contracts, lower benefits, more work and stress; still
others rake it in exploiting refugees who are isolated
from other workers by racism and the border regime. So
much of our work only profits the fat cats or serves
the state. But it is possible to satisfy our social
needs, live more and work a lot less.
Claiming what’s ours
Whether we are waged or unwaged, we are faced with
isolation and a lack of collective power. We can
overcome this by supporting each other in our
workplaces and by reaching beyond them to find new
ways of cooperating, struggling and living. In job
centres, on compulsory work schemes, at work — let’s
share information and reclaim what’s ours on the
streets, in the shops, on public transport.
They say that time is money. Steal some today. Call in
sick, go on strike, take an extra-long lunchbreak!
Meet friends from far away and next door to conspire
and celebrate; to disrupt the daily grind of the
institutions that plunge us into overwork, poverty and
debt. When we claim Job Seekers Allowance, we’re told
to ’actively seek’ work. But we actively seek the end
of this system based on profit, and we work towards a
global community based on freedom and cooperation.
dissentagainstwork@yahoo.co.uk
Related
Re: carnival for full enjoyment