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this
mayday sees the continuation of what the "fluffies and the spikies"
see as a righteous fight to wrest the world from the crushing grip of
global capitalism.
the objective is large and overbearing, it stretches the david and goliath
scenario to its limits, but this time the little man seems to posses an
elusive air of confidence as he steps up to the oche (who knows, perhaps
the size difference in a way swings things in the protestors' favour,
in the time honoured tradition of giant killing and revolutionary fervour)
the
weapons in the protestors hands are, on occasion, as bizarre as they are
varied. this is something that gives them the edge every time when coming
to planning an action, they hit the authorities with a fresh set of problems
at each confrontation. diversity is the key, a diversity which ironically
the adversaries of this crusade are attempting to wipe out.
drink
coke, eat mac, wear gap.
drink coke, eat mac, wear gap.
drink coke, eat mac, wear gap.
drink coke, eat mac, wear gap.
it's
the new multinational mantra.
from
turning parliament square into a vegetable patch, albeit a soggy one,
to opposing the construction of a mega-dam in turkey. from a handful of
individuals outside a clothes store putting on a little street theatre
to 200 000 people behind a masked man marching into mexico city to demand
rights and decent standards of living for the hundreds of thousands of
indiginous people living in poverty and squallor, the ball keeps on rolling
and just keeps getting bigger.
so this mayday is to see several thousand joyful protesters joining
in on a game of monopoly on a grand scale, autonomous actions are springing
up all over this surreal board that has been draped across the landscape,
the latest of these intends to highlight a concern very close to the
heart of this publication, the thousands of homeless people on the streets
of britain and in turn the millions of homeless in all the dark corners
of the world.
out there on the streets is a ready made army, all that they need is
direction. For one day the road signs are in place, and their direction
is clear: mayfair.
the plan is to construct the world's largest cardboard hotel on some
of the world's most expensive real estate. simple yet effective.
for too long the destitute and homeless have been invisible, not just
as a statistic, but as a basic shortfall in human rights. this action
intends to address that and, for one day at least, make people think
before turning their backs on the down and out in their doorways.
after all, what good can a system of enormous wealth and power be doing
if its subjects have to sleep in the rain, cold and hungry at night?
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