Grassroot

28
Okt
2004

Einfluss von Konzernen begrenzen

Pressemitteilung vom 25. Oktober 2004

Über 50 Organisationen aus ganz Europa:

Offener Brief an EU-Kommission: "Einfluss von Konzernen begrenzen"

In einem Offenen Brief an José Manuel Barroso fordern mehr als 50 Organisationen aus ganz Europa, den "exzessiven Einfluss industrieller Lobbygruppen auf die EU-Politik einzuschränken". Die Unterzeichner schlagen vor, alle Wirtschaftsbeziehungen der an den Gesetzgebungsverfahren der EU beteiligten Personen offen zu legen. Für EU-Kommissare, die in die Industrie wechseln wollen, solle eine Sperrfrist gelten. Lobbyorganisationen und PR-Firmen müssen nach US-Vorbild verpflichtet werden, regelmäßig Berichte über ihre Tätigkeit, ihr Budget und ihre Klienten zu veröffentlichen und in öffentlich zugänglichen Datenbanken zugänglich zu machen.

Die Kritiker monieren darüber hinaus die zunehmend industrie-freundliche Ausrichtung der EU-Kommission, wie sie sich unter anderem in dem Ansinnen zeigt, Verbraucherschutz- und Umweltgesetze künftig auf ihre Wirtschaftsverträglichkeit zu prüfen. Schließlich fordern die Organisationen, den priviligierten Zugang von Lobbyorganisationen wie European Roundtable, European Services Forum oder Trans-Atlantic Business Dialogue zur EU-Kommission zu unterbinden.

Philipp Mimkes von der Coordination gegen BAYER-Gefahren, die zu den Unterzeichnern gehört: "Immer öfter setzen sich Partikularinteressen einzelner Industriezweige gegenüber dem Allgemeinwohl durch - dies ist mit demokratischen Prinzipien nicht zu vereinbaren. So wurde auf Druck der deutschen Chemie-Industrie die ursprünglich ambitionierte Reform der EU-Chemikaliengesetzgebung vollkommen verwässert. Die Vorschläge von Umwelt- und Verbraucherschützern hingegen wurden bei der Überarbeitung des Gesetzespakets fast völlig ignoriert."

Allein in Brüssel arbeiten 15.000 Lobbyisten, die zum größten Teil auf der Lohnliste von Unternehmen und Lobbyverbänden stehen. Häufig treten sie als "Experten" oder "Verbraucherschützer" auf, ohne ihre Kontakte zu PR-Firmen, Konzernen oder wirtschaftlichen Interessensgruppen offen zu legen. Verbesserungen der Sozial-, Umwelt- und Verbraucherschutz-Gesetzgebung werden hierdurch regelmäßig geschwächt oder blockiert.

Aktuell steht der Fall des Bromine Science and Environmental Forum (BSEF), das sich vehement gegen eine Regulierung gefährlicher Flammschutzmittel einsetzt, in der Kritik. Erst Recherchen von Umweltgruppen deckten auf, dass sich hinter dem BSEF eine von der Chemie-Industrie finanzierte PR-Firma verbirgt.

ZU DEN UNTERZEICHNERN GEHÖREN: Attac Frankreich, Attac Spanien, BUND, Greenpeace Europe, Friends of the Earth England, Corporate Europe Observatory

Den Offenen Brief im Original finden Sie unter: http://www.corporateeurope.org/barroso.html

Coordination gegen BAYER-Gefahren
CBGnetwork@aol.com
http://www.CBGnetwork.de
Tel: 0211-333 911
Fax 040 – 3603 741835

Beirat
Dr. Sigrid Müller, Pharmakologin, Bremen
Dr. Erika Abczynski, Kinderärztin, Dormagen
Eva Bulling-Schröter, ehem. MdB, Berlin
Prof. Dr. Jürgen Rochlitz, Chemiker, ehem. MdB, Burgwald
Dr. Janis Schmelzer, Historiker, Berlin
Wolfram Esche, Rechtsanwalt, Köln
Dorothee Sölle,Theologin, Hamburg (U 2003)
Prof. Dr. Anton Schneider, Baubiologe, Neubeuern
Prof. Jürgen Junginger, Designer, Krefeld

18
Okt
2004

Peace is Possible

From: "Dept. of Peace Campaign" mariannewilliamson@app.topica.com

Peace is Possible
A Conference on Establishing a U.S. Department of Peace
November 5th, 6th and 7th, 2004 Berkeley, California

Scheduled Keynote Speakers:
Congressman Dennis Kucinich, Marianne Williamson, Marshall Rosenberg
Special musical appearance by Grammy winning Keb' Mo'
and more...

Dear Friends,

Please join us November 5 - 7 in Berkeley, California for our "Peace is Possible" conference. We now have a historic opportunity to establish a U.S. Department of Peace.

The timing of this peace conference is significant - it is the weekend immediately after our national election. Regardless of what happens, this is a critical time to create a powerful grassroots citizen's peace campaign. Sessions will be held at the Martin Luther King Auditorium.

We aim to work collectively to help pass HR1673, the Department of Peace legislation pending in the U.S. House of Representatives. The purpose of this Cabinet-level department would be to research, facilitate and articulate nonviolent solutions to domestic and international conflicts.

The Department would provide the American President with a much needed compliment to a problem solving approach that focuses primarily with symptomatic rather than casual issues. By understanding and addressing the root causes of violence, we can predict and help nullify the myriad of hostilities threatening our stability; we can improve national security, help protect human rights and help de-escalate armed international conflict.

Not only will the Department of Peace represent strong governmental policy, but it will save the American taxpayer billions of dollars spent needlessly on war and unrest. The Department is an idea whose time has come, yet the idea will not become a legislative reality unless each of us does our part to show up and make it happen.

Be part of the solution, join us in Berkeley on Nov. 5th.

To learn more about this legislation and how to get involved, visit our website at http://www.DoPcampaign.org.

Click here for more information and to Register Now!
Join friends throughout the nation by visiting
http://www.dopcampaign.org/events/novconf.htm

Sign up to attend the whole conference, or for specific days. Including tickets for Friday night with Kucinich, Williamson and Keb' Mo'

At the Conference:

Re-engage in the democratic process
Hear amazing keynotes and diverse panel discussions
Participate in the dialogue and Q&A
Meet and connect with citizens from around the country working for peace in effective and focused ways.

WAGE A PRE-EMPTIVE PEACE:

- Discover how 2 percent of the annual defense budget can go toward proactive policies that dismantle the sources of domestic and international violence.

- Establish a U.S. Peace Academy as sophisticated and effective as the U.S. Military Academy.

- Learn how we can approach gang violence, racial and hate crimes, and even international conflicts with psychological and emotional powers as effective, and in many cases more so, than the application of brute force.

- Help move the American political dialogue to a higher level conversation regarding the realities of both war and peace.


We hope to see you there!

Register Now!
http://www.dopcampaign.org/events/novconf.htm

It isn't enough to talk about peace.
One must believe in it.
And it isn't enough to believe in it.
One must work at it.
~Eleanor Roosevelt

Department of Peace Campaign
PO Box 3259 - Center Line, Michigan 48015 USA
(586) 754-8105
http://www.DoPcampaign.org -- info@DoPcampaign.org

London: ESF endet mit Großdemonstration

http://www.de.indymedia.org/2004/10/96236.shtml

13
Okt
2004

Posters for Million Worker March

MAKE NO MISTAKE

http://www.know-our-enemy.net/make-no-mistake/

Anti-Bush, anti-war posters ready to be printed out, posted up, and taken to the streets for the Million Worker March.

Bush's empty policy slogans clash with harsh images of their tragic results.

Reload the MAKE NO MISTAKE page for 62 (and growing) possible combinations of slogans and images:

http://www.know-our-enemy.net/make-no-mistake/

Print out on standard 8.5 x 11 paper.

Post it in your community, then take it to the streets.

Please forward this announcement to like-minded people, organizations, email lists and websites.


From the creator of the MAKE YOUR CHOICE poster series
http://www.know-our-enemy.net/make-your-choice/

17
Aug
2004

Welcome to NYC

PLEASE FORWARD WIDELY

It takes a second to wreck it, it takes time to build.
-The Beastie Boys

DEAR MASS MOBILIZATION ACTIVISTS:

Welcome to New York City and the Republican National Convention protests. This letter comes out of organizing efforts in NYC to make opposition to the Republican National Convention (RNC) a lasting success. In planning your protests we think it’s important that you have a general lay of the land. We tried to address issues of repression, police, prisons, and the media, as well as some ideas about the way New York is set up geographically.

We hope you find this useful for planning your protests of the RNC.

I Location
If you’re coming in from out of town, you’ll probably be staying somewhere outside of the Madison Square Garden area. You’ll notice that the area around the RNC is different from the rest of the city. Less than 20,000 people live in the area surrounding the Garden and the vast majority of them are white. Compare this with most of the neighborhoods uptown and in Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx, where 40,000 to 60,000 people live in a comparably sized area, and most of them are Black, Latina/o and Asian. Many studies show incredible gaps between rich and poor in this city: 5% of New Yorkers have incomes 10 times higher than the poverty line, while about 30% of New Yorkers live below the poverty line. That’s about twice the national average. Thousands of homeless people who usually find refuge in the area of Madison Square Garden have been displaced by the increased security.

II Background of NYC
New Yorkers have been planning protests against the RNC for over a year. Various groups organizing protests have tried to emulate successes and address mistakes of the past. There will be people with a range of experience at protests against the RNC, from the newly active to the extremely experienced. This could be a moment to help unify radicals nationally, but especially in NYC.

There have been intentional efforts to build relationships, coalitions, and collaborations between mass mobilization, community based, and union activists. There remains a lot of work to do on this. We hope that whatever happens during the RNC will help contribute to that effort.

There are many opportunities for groups to support each other’s work. We hope that you will join and support the actions planned by the different groups: United for Peace and Justice March on August 29, the Poor People's Still We Rise March on NY: Still We Rise on August 30, the August 31 Day of Direct Action, and the Labor Day Protest on September 1.

III Media and Messaging
In NYC there is a media campaign that aims to put New Yorkers at odds with out-of-town protestors and to criminalize dissent expressed against the RNC. It attempts to portray dissent as being from out-of-town and the fringe as opposed to local and mainstream. This diversion marginalizes or completely erases the issues. It puts the protester, instead of the policies we are trying to critique, on the defensive.

Despite media attempts at criminalizing dissent, many people in NYC are pissed that the RNC is coming here. You will hear folks talking about it on the subway, in the corner deli, on stoops, and on busses. Listen to what they have to say. Everyone has their own reason to be angry with the Republicans. While there is a crackdown on dissent, the Republicans are leading an ongoing attack on oppressed communities, which include: people of color, poor people, queer folks, non-citizens, transgender people and women. The RNC presents an opportunity to build dissent in alliance with those most affected by these oppressive policies. To be effective we should focus on four or five concrete messages. For example we could focus on the violation of civil and human rights pertaining to the detention and deportation of immigrants, the diversion of domestic spending to a military budget, and economic draft of poor people into the army.

How could our message be proactive, critical and demanding? Does our message build the movement or does it alienate people? How does it push a progressive politic debate beyond the election? The same local media is also engaged in a white-out* of local opposition to Bush. There is a vast grassroots movement challenging the daily enactment of Bush’s policies in NYC. This movement is made up of those bearing the brunt of these policies. They are oppressed communities including poor people, people of color, women, queer people, non-citizens and transgender people. Not only does the mainstream media white-out the dissent coming from these communities, it criminalizes them daily. This reality doesn’t end when the protests are over. How can we challenge the media-led criminalization of dissent? How can we challenge the white-out around local opposition to Bush and the criminalization of communities? These are questions we should always keep in mind when doing media work.

IV Prison and Jail Solidarity
Safety from police, prisons, and surveillance will be a concern for us all during the RNC. We should be prepared to keep others and ourselves safe. We have to be responsible and communicate our concerns and needs.

The RNC will bring a heightened police repression of dissent. It will amplify the already overwhelming impact of policing and prisons on oppressed communities in the city. There will be way more cops on the street in midtown than is usual for any neighborhood, but in areas like Crown Heights and Bed-Stuy in Brooklyn, neighborhoods targeted by the NYPD’s Operation Impact, it’s not unusual to see 8-10 cops on every block, every day of the year. Manhattan D.A. Robert Morganthau announced that the city is anticipating up to 1,000 daily arrests during the RNC. He did not mention that daily citywide arrest rates of almost 1,000 adults per day are business as usual for the NYPD.

Police will try to pit arrested protesters and their cellmates against each other. We can’t let this happen. Solidarity means more than supporting folks who share your political agenda. It means standing with all people who are surviving the violence of police, jails, and prisons. This means staying attuned to the needs of everyone who is being held in police custody. If you get arrested, you can expect that the officers won’t always act according to the law. They will privilege white folks, traditionally gendered folks, citizens, and the rich and middle class. During the RNC, many activists will have access to media attention, legal support, and financial resources. We have to recognize the privileges that activists can have within the system, and support other folks inside with the resources we can access.

When you consider the actions you take, please remember that the NYPD has a history of using unbridled force against protesters. An arrest in NYC could mean a night in jail or more and return visits to court for months to come.

V Repression and Aftermath
The city has already spent $25 million on security for the RNC. There was no public process, no discussion and no parameters put on what that security will entail and certainly no limit on the future use of whatever new toys this money will buy the NYPD.

In the run-up to the WTO protests in Seattle, the police force contracted with a local club-maker to outfit the entire force with new, improved clubs. All of these clubs are still in use. The SPD was also supplied with a modified street tank with tear gas and pepper spray cannons, which are also still in use. And that's just Seattle, with a police force less than 1/10th the size of NYC's.

Protesters are coming and the city is using this to justify flooding the NYPD with numerous new repressive tools (while not offering them a contract).** Here in NYC, the police force is more like an army. The cops will not just be out in force for us. They're sweeping the streets right now, just as they did yesterday, and the day before. Now they use new equipment.

We will only experience a fraction of this use at the RNC. Oppressed communities will see them from now on. We can’t take action to change this on the streets, but we can use this information when we’re talking to the media.

VI. Tying It All Together.
In our organizing efforts around the RNC we are trying to fit the protests into a long- term strategy for change. We feel we can do this is by supporting the organizing efforts of oppressed communities through out the RNC and after. We plan to: participate in demos organized by community based groups, make links between Republican led international, national and local policies, and lend skills learned at past mobilizations to support the organizing efforts of oppressed communities. We are also trying to not dominate oppressed community-led initiatives through silencing and marginalizing their continued efforts. We hope that the radical movement, locally and nationally, is stronger after the RNC protests because of the bonds created by grassroots, labor and mass mobilization activists. The RNC is one event in the long fight for a new society. We hope to continue to learn from the success and mistakes in order to build a larger, stronger, and smarter movement.

We hope this letter helps spark discussion and raise ideas. We look forward to seeing you all at the RNC.

Good luck, and stay safe,
The Basement Cluster
basement-cluster@riseup.net

P.S.
Thanks to the various folks outside of the Basement Cluster who put time and energy into giving feedback for this letter.

The Basement Cluster is currently a cluster of white identified affinity groups and individuals. We have come together around the RNC to engage in movement-wide conversations of mass mobilizations, long-term strategy, and racism; and to take action against the RNC.

*We use the term “white out” because the media often shows only white people when it covers stories about protests.

** The police and fire departments and teachers union are all fighting for new labor contracts. It is likely that if you’re protesting in front of an RNC event, there will be cops, firefighters and teachers protesting next to you.

--------

Link:
http://lists.riseup.net/www/arc/pbnberkeley/2004-08/msg00014.html

Informant: John Vance

19
Jun
2004

The Power of People's Media

Unabashedly progressive and fiercely independent media outlets reach more people than Rupert Murdoch's Fox Network.

While Big Media are "simply in the business of selling products, the people's media reach more people than FOX does.

Democratic reformer Henry Adams, who decried the decline in democracy as the robber barons rose to power in the nineteenth century, did not mince words about the failure of the news media of his day: "The press is the hired agent of a monied system," he wrote, "and set up for no other purpose than to tell lies where the interests are involved."

Imagine the verbal scorching Henry would give to today's media barons, who are not merely hired agents of monied interests they have become the interests, fully corporatized, conglomerated and well-practiced in the art of journalistic lying to perpetuate the power and profits of the elites.

A handful of self-serving corporate fiefdoms now controls practically all of America's mass-market sources of news and information. GE now owns NBC, Disney owns ABC, Viacom owns CBS, News Corp. owns Fox, and Time Warner owns CNN; these five have a lock on TV news. Of the 1,500 daily newspapers, only 281 are independently owned -- three companies control 25 percent of the daily news circulated in the entire world.

These aloof giants openly assert that meeting their own profit needs is the media's reason for existence -- as opposed to meeting the larger public's need for a vigorous, democratic discourse. Lowry Mays, honcho of Clear Channel Inc. (which owns more than 1,200 radio stations -- a third of all the stations in America), opines that: "We're not in the business of providing news and information We're simply in the business of selling our customers' products."

This single-minded mercenary focus combines with general corporate arrogance to bloat the egos of media chieftains, leading them to think that they really are the infallible gods of our daily newsfeed, with no need to be accountable to the public: "We paid $3 billion for these television stations," said an executive with a Fox affiliate in Tampa; "We decide what the news is. The news is what we tell you it is."

Crude, corporate censorship of our news by these boardroom types is less common than the subtle, internal self-censorship done by general managers, top editors, and some reporters who avoid topics and dilute stories that the corporate hierarchy might find offensive or simply not comprehend. A 2000 survey by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press found that a third of local reporters admit softening a news story on behalf of the interests of their media organizations. A fourth say they have been told by superiors to ignore a story because it was dull, but the reporters suspected that the real motivation was that the story could harm the media company's financial interests. And that's only the reporters who confess!

If you detect a corporate bias in your news, don't feel lonely. Two-thirds of Americans told pollsters last September that they believe special interests or a self-serving corporate-political agenda infect news coverage. We can all wring our hands and wail about this corporate, monopolistic grasp on our news sources, but here's a better idea: Let's do something about it.

A grassroots flowering

The Austin Motel is a refurbished, New Deal-era business on South Congress Avenue near my home. It has an old brightly-lit marquee out front that proudly boasts the credo of the current owners: "No additives, No preservatives, Corporate-free since 1938."

Wouldn't that make a fine slogan for a new democratic media for America?

Oh, you say, Hightower, don't toy with us. It would take billions and billions of dollars to build a broad-based media network outside the established TV, radio, and newspaper conglomerates, so that's just a pipe dream. Well, yes, it would take those impossible billions if we set out merely to duplicate the media Goliaths. But what if we wanted to develop a David ? a sprightly, nimble network of media outlets that are not capital-intensive and not burdened with either multimillion-dollar salaries or voracious conglomerate bureaucracies?

I have good news for you: This is already happening! Thousands of hardy, grassroots people have been working steadily and creatively over the years in every area of media, and the result of their combined efforts is that a new media force is now flowering coast to coast -- a force of hundreds of media outlets that is unabashedly progressive, fiercely independent, diverse, dispersed, and democratic. Some of these outlets are nationally known, others only locally known; some are brand new, others have been plugging away for decades. But the significant thing is that, collectively, they are a force to be reckoned with, celebrated, strategically deployed and deliberately expanded.

I have known and worked closely with many of these varied outlets my entire political life, but it was only last year that I realized what can happen if we learn to connect the various components and tap into the full power that they offer.

The occasion was a most modest one: The launch of my book, Thieves in High Places. In addition to being about the monied kleptocracy that has seized our people's democratic power, the heart of this book is about the deeply-encouraging rise of you grassroots Americans out there who're battling the thieves -- and often beating them. These are inspiring stories of democratic activism that the media establishment largely ignores, and I wanted as many people as possible to know about the stories, so that others might take heart and battle on.

Call me cynical, but I knew from experience that the barons of media power were not likely to rush forward to embrace and disseminate my antiestablishment message. I was right -- none of the morning TV shows ("Today," "Good Morning America," etc.) allowed me to talk about it; no evening newsmagazine show ("20/20," "Dateline," etc.) would touch it; there were no reviews in the mass-market newspapers and magazines (New York Times, Newsweek, etc.) and even NPR and public television gave it the cold shoulder. It was a case of libra non grata. Yet, a funny (and fun) thing happened: Thieves rose into the top 10 of nearly every best-seller list across the country, including the New York Times list. You could almost hear the incredulous compilers of sales data asking: "How the hell did this thing get on our list?"

It got there, quickly reaching a mass-market audience, by way of your and my very own rag-tag, patchwork media network, which most of us don't even know we have. I stumbled on the breadth and depth of this network because Sean Doles and Laura Ehrlich in my office had organized a guerrilla campaign to get the word out about the book. Working with community-radio stations, alternative newsweeklies, independent bookstores, web-active organizations, progressive (and aggressive) magazines, websites and publications of grassroots organizations, local organizing groups, some upstart television rebels -- and, of course, you scrappy Lowdowners -- we found that progressives are not voiceless in a corporate-media wasteland after all if only we recognize that we have powerful media assets of our own.

My book doesn't matter, but the concept of connecting this patchwork of assets does matter greatly. Any particular piece of this progressive media patchwork is small (and too often scoffed at by progressives themselves as "insignificant"). But add the pieces together and we have a far-flung network of outlets that -- each and every day -- is reaching tens of millions of people.

Also, the people who are tuning in to our progressive outlets are not just cumulative numbers to be sold to advertisers; mostly they're readers, listeners, online clickers, and viewers who give a damn and are looking for action. We saw an example last year of what can happen when even some of these components connect. The FCC, led by laissez-faire nutball Michael Powell, was ramming through a rules change that effectively would allow one or two media conglomerates to control the TV, radio, and newspaper outlets in every U.S. city.

Essentially, this unregulation of media ownership would lead to the full-scale monopolization of our news sources. Corporate lobbyists and government lawyers had holed up in a dark back room to whisper sweet legalese to each other, and we Joe and Joline Schmoes would have known nothing about it until after the fact, when we would've heard that wet, smoooooooching sound coming from Washington that tells us -- uh-oh -- another dirty deed has been done to us.

This time, though, was different. Several public-interest organizations picked up on the FCC's back-room move and alerted such grassroots groups as Common Cause, which sent up red flares to engage its 200,000 members. Then, like the pamphleteers of old, dozens of community radio stations plastered on-air broadsheets all across the country, translating the FCC's regulatory gobbledygook into straightforward rallying cries. They pounded the issue day after day. Next came the Web-active group MoveOn.org, which gave this growing grassroots opposition the mechanism it needed for a targeted response -- and some 170,000 emails poured into Washington.

The result was that, last July, the U.S. House of Representatives voted 400 to 21 in favor of an amendment by Rep. David Obey to stop the FCC's media-monopolization rule. The decisive 400 House votes were from Congress critters (Democrats as well as Republicans) who had taken buckets full of campaign cash from the very media barons they suddenly decided they had to vote against.

The battle is not over, but the fact that this arcane issue of media-ownership regulations could, in such a short time, ignite a prairie fire of popular rebellion is a testament to the power at our disposal.

Radio

As I've learned from the past dozen years of on-air experience, radio can be a very democratic little box, in part because it's ubiquitous (in our bedrooms, cars, showers, etc.), and also because people tend to hear what's said on radio, as opposed to TV, where they get an image but don't much follow the story being told. The bad news is that the radio dial is fast being bought up by Clear Channel and a couple of other conglomerates. The good news, however, is that we still have hundreds of extremely important stations in our hands, beaming out a steady progressive message to millions every day.

Since 1993, my own two-minute radio commentaries ("little pops of populism," we call them) have aired every weekday, and are now being heard on a mix of 130 commercial and community stations coast to coast, plus Alaska, Hawaii, and -- get this -- Armed Forces Radio, as well as on the web (www.jimhightower.com). But I'm the least of it. From Amy Goodman's sassy Democracy Now to Working Assets Radio with Laura Flanders, from New Dimensions to Latino USA, from Counterspin to RadioNation, from ACORN Radio to Alternative Radio with David Barsamian, from Media Matters with Bob McChesney to The World -- there's a wealth of national and local broadcasters putting forth progressive issues and insights every day.

Because of the corporate bias of its owners, commercial radio is the hardest nut to crack, but we have such voices as Enid Goldstein at KNRC in Denver, Sly Sylvester on WTDY in Madison, and Mitch Albom on WJR in Detroit. And now, Air America is making a bold play to bring 17 hours a day of progressive talk radio through its burgeoning network, broadcasting such live-wire hosts as Al Franken, Janeane Garofalo, Randi Rhodes, Chuck D, and Rachel Maddow. This brand-new upstart is already in 15 cities, and is drawing millions more listeners each day on the web (www.airamericaradio.com).

Then there are our community owned stations. Many people assume that these are little one-watt nothings, but that's nonsense. Indeed, some are powerhouse blasters in big cities, such as the Pacifica Network's five flagship stations in Berkeley, New York City, Los Angeles, Washington, DC, and Houston. Pacifica's KPFK in LA, for example, is 110,000 watts, reaching from San Diego to Santa Barbara and stretching inland to San Bernardino. Likewise, the independent community station WMNF in Tampa is a 70,000- watt treasure that reaches from Sarasota on the Gulf Coast almost to Orlando in the middle of the state.

Even the small-town community broadcasters pack a punch. WERU in Blue Hill, Maine (pop. 700), for example, reaches clear to the state capital in Augusta and is a beloved rallying point for the whole Penobscot Bay area ("We-are-you" is how the station pronounces its call letters). The same with KAOS in Olympia, KBOO in Portland, KGNU in Boulder, and so many more�€�people don't just tune in, they count on these stations, trust them in a way no one would trust Clear Channel, and are willing to act on the information they receive.

The web

A democratic tool that Jefferson, Madison, and the other Bill of Righters could not have imagined, but would gleefully embrace today, is the world wide web. This computerized architecture of interconnected hubs and spokes allows us to link our thoughts and actions instantly in virtual space and produce tangible political results that would have taken months before.

Every progressive group (even Luddites like me) now has lively, interactive web sites through which we can share a gold mine of information, forge coalitions, hold "meetings," and mobilize mass actions (from local to global).

The growth of the net is explosive -- 68 billion emails per day, for example, and 10 million daily blogs by everyone from the kid next-door to famous pundits to me! MoveOn.org, TrueMajority.org, and the Howard Dean campaign have shown the phenomenal potential of the web, not only for fund-raising and blitzing Congress with citizen opinion, but especially for organizing people for action (a breakthrough that you'll hear more about as the Lowdown itself develops a web-active program to link all of us Lowdowners into more grassroots civil action).

The web gives us the means to bypass the corporate media, creating our own low-cost, decentralized network of news that, say, The New York Times does not consider "fit to print."

In addition to hundreds of specialized news sites, there are "aggregators" that amount to news services for progressive content -- credible outfits like Alternet.org, TomPaine.com, Buzzflash.com, and CommonDreams.org.

Some are creating their own virtual newspapers. Check out iBrattleboro.com. For more than a year now, this Vermont website lets the readers be the reporters on what's really going on in town. Anyone can contribute, and anyone can comment on the contributions. In a town of 12,000, the virtual pages of iBrattleboro are getting 260,000 viewers a year.

Alternatives galore

If reading the daily press depresses you, get a lift by going beyond your "Daily Blather" newspaper to such spunky journals as The Nation, Mother Jones, The Progressive, In These Times, American Prospect, Ms., Harper's, and The Progressive Populist. Also, Utne rounds up articles every month from more than 2,000 alternative media sources. And two groups, the Independent Press Association (indypress.org) and the Alternative Press Center (altpress.org), give you access to magazines, newsletters, and 'zines that cover every political and cultural issue imaginable.

Chances are your own town has one or more independent weekly newspapers offering detailed coverage of progressive issues and events that the monopoly dailies miss or avoid. The Association of Alternative Weeklies (aan.org) plugs you into 120 of these local voices that, collectively, reach 17 million readers a week. Even television, the feeblest member of our democracy's media mob, is perking up a bit. PBS's Now with Bill Moyers has been a blast of fresh air (though its direction is uncertain now that he has announced his retirement), and C-SPAN continues to do a great public service by simply clicking on its cameras and letting us see events without edits or editorializing. And you can forget the network news and go directly to The Daily Show for Jon Stewart's irreverent, on-target satires, broadcast on Comedy Central.

Especially encouraging in TV-land are the insurgents of the air, including Free Speech TV and WorldLink TV, reaching a combined 20 million homes. Grassroots rebels are also making their own TV, thanks to Cable Access Television, available on some 600 public-access channels, as well as a feisty group of Independent Media Centers (indymedia.org) that are particularly good at streaming raw footage of protests and other actions, with their media activists taking their web-driven videocams right into the center of things, bringing you news as it happens.

Finally, don't discount the power of face-to-face networks. On any given day, thousands of people are gathered in various-sized groupings to listen, learn, discuss, interact, strategize, and organize. These forums include the nation's 2,200 independent bookstores, which are not merely book peddlers, but also community meeting places and informal bulletin boards (go to booksense.com to find ones near you). Public libraries, progressive speakers' series, pot-luck suppers, conversation cafes and progressive festivals (Greenfest, Bioneers, Rolling Thunder, etc.) are also part of this vibrant, high-touch outreach that goes on daily in practically every city and neighborhood.

Years ago, my momma taught me that two wrongs don't make a right -- but I soon figured out that three left turns do. We must apply that same kind of street savvy if we're ever to find our way around the media blockages that the corporate interests have put in place to shut out our voices.

Jim Hightower is the best-selling author of "Let's Stop Beating Around the Bush," from Viking Press. For more information, visit jimhightower.com

http://www.alternet.org/mediaculture/18966/


Informant: Laurel

20
Apr
2004

Erfolgsbedingungen Neuer Sozialer Bewegungen heute

Theorie-Praxis-Werkstatt

"Erfolgsbedingungen Neuer Sozialer Bewegungen heute"
mit Prof. Roland Roth (Berlin/Magdeburg)

Bremen, Gästehaus der Universität Bremen, Am Teerhof 58
Samstag, 8. Mai von 14.30 bis 18.00 Uhr

Tausende bei den Castor-Transporten nach Gorleben, Hunderttausende in Genua, Florenz, Porto Allegre oder Mumbay bei den Demonstrationen und Versammlungen der GlobalisierungskritikerInnen, Millionen weltweit auf den Straßen gegen den Irak-Krieg, Gründung von Sozialforen in vielen Städten, RentnerInnen-Demos gegen Sozialabbau und Ziviler Ungehorsam gegen Gentechnik - wir erleben derzeit eine neue Welle sozialer Bewegungen: viele Menschen sehen ihre Interessen von den etablierten Formen der Politik nicht mehr vertreten und suchen nach Formen des Protests und der politischen Artikulation. Soziale Bewegungen waren schon immer ein Motor gesellschaftlichen und politischen Wandels.

Ob BürgerInnenrechte, Umweltschutz oder Frieden - es waren soziale Bewegungen, die diese Anliegen oftmals gegen große Widerstände auf die Tagesordnung setzten und gesellschaftliche Veränderungen bewirkt haben. Das bedeutet aber nicht, dass ihre Geschichte eine durchgängige Erfolgsstory ist. Auch wenn soziale Bewegungen gelegentlich schnelle und spektakuläre Erfolge erzielen, scheitern sie mindestens ebenso oft beim Erreichen ihrer Ziele. So stellt sich die Frage, wann und warum soziale Bewegungen besonders erfolgreich waren oder sind.

Wir haben den Bewegungsforscher Prof. Roland Roth von der FH Magdeburg-Stendal gebeten, uns zur Frage nach den "Erfolgsbedingungen Neuer Sozialer Bewegungen heute" im Rahmen einer Theorie-Praxis-Werkstatt aktuelle Erkenntnisse und Thesen aus der Sozialen Bewegungsforschung vorzustellen.

Exemplarisch werden im Anschluss einige Aktive aus Sozialen Bewegungen über Gründe von Erfolgen und Misserfolgen berichten und damit einen lebendigen gemeinsamen Austausch über und zwischen Theorie und Praxis sozialer Bewegungen einleiten.

Die Theorie-Praxis-Werkstatt findet am Samstag 8. Mai von 14.30 bis 18.00 Uhr im Gästehaus "Teerhof" der Universität Bremen, statt.
http://www.gaestehaus.uni-bremen.de/ght.html .

Am Abend laden wir zu einem gemütlichen Ausklang mit den Veranstaltern im Centre Pertho, Am Schwarzen Meer 16-18 in Bremen ein.

Veranstalter:

Archiv Aktiv e.V.

Auswertungen und Anregungen für gewaltfreie Bewegungen
Sternschanze 1, 20357 Hamburg, Tel. 040-430 20 46,
info@archiv-aktiv.org, http://www.archiv-aktiv.de

Das Archiv Aktiv verfügt über eine in Deutschland einzigartige Quellensammlung zur Geschichte organisierter gewaltfreier Aktion. Das Archiv Aktiv versteht sich als Bewegungsgedächtnis und will konstruktive Impulse zur Fortentwicklung der gewaltfreien Bewegung geben.

Bewegungsakademie e.V., Artilleriestr. 6, 27283 Verden an der Aller
Tel: 04231/957-595, Fax: -400
info@bewegungsakademie.de http://www.bewegungsakademie.de

Die Bewegungsakademie versteht sich als Ideengeber für soziale Bewegungen und will diese durch Seminare, Workshops und Tagungen unterstützen. Sie ist in Verden (Aller) bei Bremen ansässig und wird getragen von einem Team, das selbst in zahlreichen Kampagnen, Aktionen und Projekten engagiert ist bzw. diese mit aufgebaut und unterstützt hat. Dazu zählen Attac Deutschland,die Kampagnen " X-tausendmal quer", "resist - Sich dem Irak-Krieg widersetzen!" oder "Gewaltspirale durchbrechen".

Referent:
Prof. Dr. Roland Roth, geb. 1949, lehrt Politikwissenschaft an der FH Magdeburg-Stendal, Mitarbeit im Arbeitsausschuss des "Komitee für Grundrechte und Demokratie", langjähriges Mitglied der "links"-Redaktion und des Archiv Aktiv in Hamburg. Aktuelle Forschungsschwerpunkte: Soziale Proteste, Neue Soziale Bewegungen, Citizenship, Kommunen im Globalisierungsprozess.

In Kooperation mit Prof. Dr. Frank Nullmeier und Dr. Lothar Probst, Institut für Politikwissenschaft an der Universität Bremen.
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