<div class="gmail_quote">
<div>Pls come tonight to Marchmont Centre 7pm: <a href="http://www.peoplesassemblies.org/2011/05/may-23rd-open-london-assembly/">http://www.peoplesassemblies.org/2011/05/may-23rd-open-london-assembly/</a></div>
<div> </div>
<div>But also, Belgravia Square 7pm every night this week do read Tim's latest blog entry: </div>
<div><a href="http://beyondclicktivism.com/2011/05/22/theres-revolution-in-the-air/" target="_blank">http://beyondclicktivism.com/2011/05/22/theres-revolution-in-the-air/</a></div>
<div> </div>
<div>Have been asked to put together some Real Democracy stuff relevant to UK. So, aside from Tim's piece here's what I came up (numbers 1 - 6 beow) after some trawling around. If anyone finds any other UK / global related stuff on this please send me. Ta</div>
<div> </div>
<div>Mark</div>
<div> </div>
<div>(1) <a href="http://jointhespanishrevolution.wordpress.com/2011/05/20/joinus-why-should-your-country-consider-joining-the-protests-that-are-taking-place-in-spain/" target="_blank">http://jointhespanishrevolution.wordpress.com/2011/05/20/joinus-why-should-your-country-consider-joining-the-protests-that-are-taking-place-in-spain/</a></div>
<div> </div>
<div>(2) And some stuff we came up with earlier in UK movements / wider networks..</div>
<div> </div>
<div> <strong>People's Assembly Network | Call for a Global Movement of Assemblies</strong></div>
<div> </div>
<div>In response to political and economic crises, austerity cuts and the pressures of globalisation, we are now witnessing the rise of social movements from across the political spectrum in Europe, North Africa and beyond. But how can this popular discontent be transformed into an emancipatory political movement?</div>
<div> </div>
<div>To transform capitalist globalisation into a liberating process, our network believes a very different form of mobilisation is now urgently required. What is needed is a new kind of democratic politics that supports people and planet in a universal sense, able to mobilise everywhere locally for new social and political relations, but also transnationally for a new world all under one inclusive, recognisable banner...</div>
<div> </div>
<div>Generally as a network we see People’s Assemblies as an inclusive organisational strategy with which to take power, through direct democracy from below, anywhere and everywhere in the world. But they are also the means by which other services can be democratically provided, and thereby a new, horizontal society be built by everyone together. So, a strategic mobilisation of this kind will allow us to effect a new form of democratic globalisation, with practical solidarity to the whole human family across all communities.</div>
<div> </div>
<div>There is an English saying “strike while the iron is hot” which can rarely have been more apt than at this time. With this in mind, and taking inspiration from the People’s Assembly at last year’s Climate Justice Action (CJA) mobilisation in Copenhagen, the Toronto General Assembly, the Peoples Assembly Network and the many spontaneous assemblies now forming worldwide, this is a call for the convening of People’s Assemblies in institutions and communities in the UK, Europe and a conscious joining up with other Assemblies across the planet.</div>
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<div>Liberation: Beyond Resistance!</div>
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<div>We have nothing to lose but our chains!</div>
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<div><a href="http://www.peoplesassemblies.org/" target="_blank">www.peoplesassemblies.org</a></div>
<div> </div>
<div><strong>Campaign for Real Democracy 2010/2011 Statement</strong></div>
<div><a href="https://groups.google.com/group/project2012/web/crd-principles?hl=" target="_blank">https://groups.google.com/group/project2012/web/crd-principles?hl=</a></div>
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<div><em>Peoples Assemblies and the world we believe they can bring about</em> ~</div>
<div> </div>
<div>VALUES:</div>
<div> </div>
<div>Equality – each person is able to speak and be listened to – there is no elite platform</div>
<div>Difference – we learn from each other’s perspectives; we may disagree, but we listen to one another respectfully and our views become refined through the experience</div>
<div>Solidarity – we are together because we believe in the existence of a common agenda. In spite of our differences, we pursue and find consensus over ideas and shared actions</div>
<div>Sharing – we believe in a society in which sharing and co-operation triumph over competition. We freely share food and other gifts at our meetings</div>
<div>Secularity and Spirituality – we respect and are happy to learn from different belief systems</div>
<div>Ecology – we believe in a new, really democratic society with a very low/zero carbon footprint</div>
<div>Self-determination – we struggle for a new kind of freedom based on community, nurturing, true individuality, and vice versa – “It takes a village to bring up a child”</div>
<div> </div>
<div>DEMOCRATIC PROCESSES:</div>
<div>(1) Peoples Assemblies make decisions horizontally</div>
<div>(2) Peoples Assemblies are interested to learn about, try out and embody new democratic practices</div>
<div> </div>
<div>CORE AIMS:</div>
<div>(1) Real Democracy – PAs should find ways to campaign for a really ecological, democratic society at local, national and global levels</div>
<div>(2) Decentralisation – to bring this about, sovereignty should be vested at the neighbourhood / community / workplace / study place level</div>
<div>(3) Internationalism – PA communities link up in solidarity and support across the world</div>
<div>(4) Ideals – we are interested to bring about a world based on a Reclaimation of the Commons, Truth, Peace, Sustainability, Justice and Compassion above all things and we are willing to fight non-violently to this end</div>
<div>(5) Peoples Assembly movement – to bring these aims about we are calling for a movement based on the idea of Peoples Assemblies</div>
<div>IDEOLOGY:</div>
<div>(1) local, democratic not private or state led provision of public services (the real third way)</div>
<div>(2) really democratic, people powered globalisation, not capitalist or state-led (the real third "world", or international) as a means in its end, but also a way of forcing the nation states to work together for the good of all</div>
<div>(3) a new appropriate political economy to match</div>
<div> </div>
<div>(3) Oh here's another one from overseas : </div>
<div> </div>
<div>".. Finally, it is important to remember that the 15th May Movement is<br>linked to a wider current of European protests triggered as a reaction<br>to so-called “austerity” measures. These protests are shaking up the<br>
desert of the real, leaving behind the image of a formless and silent<br>mass of European citizens that so befits the interests of political<br>and economical elites. We are talking here of campaigns like the<br>British UKUncut against Cameron’s policies, of the mass mobilisations<br>
of Geraçao a Rasca in Portugal, or indeed of what took place in<br>Iceland after the people decided not to bail out the bankers. And, of<br>course, inspiration is found above all in the Arab Uprising, the<br>democratic revolts in Egypt and Tunisia who managed to overthrow their<br>
corrupt leaders.</div>
<div>Needless to say, we have no idea what the ultimate fate of the 15th<br>May Movement will be. But we can definitely state something at this<br>stage, now we have at least two different routes out of this crisis:<br>implementing yet more cuts or constructing a real democracy. We know<br>
what the first one has delivered so far: not only has it failed to<br>bring back any semblance of economic “normality”, it has created an<br>atmosphere of “everyman for himself”, a war of all against all. The<br>second one promises an absolute and constituent democracy, all we can<br>
say about it is that it has just begun and that is starting to lay<br>down its path. But the choice seems clear to us, it is down this path<br>that we would like to go.</div>
<div> </div>
<div>Tomás Herreros and Emmanuel Rodríguez (Universidad Nómada)</div>
<div>(hurriedly translated by Yaiza Hernández Velázquez)</div>
<div> </div>
<div>please feel free to distribute, copy, quote..."</div>
<div> </div>
<div> [ Full piece at bottom of mail]</div>
<div> </div>
<div>(4) This from Manchester:</div>
<div> </div>
<div>
<div><span><strong>"</strong>Fake democracies all across Europe are in great danger</span><span> because the Revolution has just started. </span><span>This is a</span><span> time for action, </span><span>for</span><span> ris</span><span>ing</span><span> up together and chang</span><span>ing</span><span> the system.</span></div>
<div><br></div>
<div><span>Europe </span><span>is suffering</span><span> from political regimes that set the citizens aside and lack from a plural representation and by doing so, they become false democracies that do not represent the wishes, aspirations and needs of men and women of each country.</span></div>
<div><br></div>
<div><span>They only </span><span>consider</span><span> our vote as a mean to reach the power and, as soon as they get it, they forget</span><span> that</span><span> their duty is to represent the people. It is then when, as it happened in Spain and other </span><span>E</span><span>uropean countries, they </span><span>give way</span><span> to the market and banking dictates.</span></div>
<div><span>Because of t</span><span>his</span><span>, our intention is to change the current system, this miscalled democracy, into a new one where the citizenship play a significant role in political decisions </span><span>via</span><span> assemblies and other means of participation, with a freer communication media available to them and with a true separation of powers. A democracy to serve the people instead of the markets.</span></div>
<div><br></div>
<div><span>We moved from "I have a dream" to the "We have a dream". We walk together in this with other people from the UK, Italy, France, Germany, Holland and many other European countries. What happens in London, Madrid, Milan, Berlin, Amsterdam... is also happening in other cities and th</span><span>us</span><span> we all want to get together under this revolution.</span></div>
<div><br></div>
<div><span>A revolution with the only labels of participation, freedom and no violence. Without flags or political parties; just with the people. With honest men and women who have risen up to change a system that rejects them, a world that does not work at all. Because in the end, we are world citizens tired </span><span>of enduring</span><span> this situation."</span></div>
<div><br></div>
<div><span>People from Manchester: </span><span><a href="http://realdemocracymanchester.blogspot.com/" target="_blank"><font color="#2288bb">http://realdemocracymanchester.blogspot.com</font></a></span></div></div>
<div> </div>
<div> </div>
<div>(5) [rest of Universidad Nomada piece]:</div>
<div> </div>
<div>On 15th May 2011, around 150,000 people took to the streets in 60<br>Spanish towns and cities to demand “Real Democracy Now”, marching<br>under the slogan “We are not commodities in the hands of bankers and<br>politicians”. The protest was organised through web-based social<br>
networks without the involvement of any major unions or political<br>parties. At the end of the march some people decided to stay the night<br>at the Plaza del Sol in Madrid. They were forcefully evacuated by the<br>police in the early hours of the morning. This, in turn, generated a<br>
mass call for everyone to occupy his or her local squares that<br>thousands all over Spain took up. As we write, 65 public squares are<br>being occupied, with support protests taking place in Spanish<br>Embassies from Buenos Aires to Vienna and, indeed, London. You<br>
probably have not have read about it in the British press, but it is<br>certainly happening. Try #spanishrevolution, #yeswecamp, #nonosvamos<br>or #acampadasol on Twitter and see for yourself. What follows is a<br>text by Emmanuel Rodríguez and Tomás Herreros from the Spanish<br>
collective Universidad Nómada.</div>
<div>IT’S THE REAL DEMOCRACY, STUPID 15TH May, from Outrage to Hope</div>
<div>There is no doubt that Sunday 15th May 2011 has come to mark a turning<br>point: from the web to the street, from conversations around the<br>kitchen table to mass mobilisations, but more than anything else, from<br>
outrage to hope. Tens of thousands of people, ordinary citizens<br>responding to a call that started and spread on the internet, have<br>taken the streets with a clear and promising demand: they want a real<br>democracy, a democracy no longer tailored to the greed of the few, but<br>
to the needs of the people. They have been unequivocal in their<br>denunciation of a political class that, since the beginning of the<br>crisis, has run the country by turning away from them and obeying the<br>dictates of the euphemistically called “markets”.</div>
<div>We will have to watch over the next weeks and months to see how this<br>demand for real democracy now takes shape and develops. But everything<br>seems to point to a movement that will grow even stronger. The<br>clearest sign of its future strength comes from the taking over of<br>
public squares and the impromptu camping sites that have appeared in<br>pretty much every major Spanish town and city. Today––four days after<br>the first march––social networks are bursting with support for the<br>movement, a virtual support that is bolstered by its resonance in the<br>
streets and squares. While forecasting where this will take us is<br>still too difficult, it is already possible to advance some questions<br>that this movement has put on the table.</div>
<div>Firstly, the criticisms that have been raised by the 15th May Movement<br>are spot on. A growing sector of the population is outraged by<br>parliamentary politics as we have come to known them, as our political<br>parties are implementing it today––by making the weakest sectors of<br>
society pay for the crisis. In the last few years we have witnessed<br>with a growing sense of disbelief how the big banks received millions<br>in bail-outs, while cuts in social provision, brutal assaults on basic<br>rights and covert privatisations ate away at an already skeletal<br>
Spanish welfare state. Today, none doubts that these politics are a<br>danger to our present and our immediate future. This outrage is made<br>even more explicit when it is confronted by the cowardice of<br>politicians, unable to put an end to the rule of the financial world.<br>
Where did all those promises to give capitalism a human face made in<br>the wake of the sub-prime crisis go? What happened to the idea of<br>abolishing tax havens? What became of the proclamation that the<br>financial system would be brought under control? What of the plans to<br>
tax speculative gains and the promise to stop tax benefits for the<br>highest earners?</div>
<div>Secondly, the 15th May Movement is a lot more than a warning to the<br>so-called Left. It is possible (in fact it is quite probable) that on<br>22nd May, when local and regional elections take place in Spain, the<br>
left will suffer a catastrophic defeat. If that were the case, it<br>would be only be a preamble to what would happen in the general<br>elections. What can be said today without hesitation is that the<br>institutional left (parties and major unions) is the target of a<br>
generalised political disaffection due to its sheer inability come up<br>with novel solutions to this crisis. This is where the two-fold<br>explanation of its predicted electoral defeat lies. On the one hand,<br>its policies are unable to step outside a completely tendentious way<br>
of reading the crisis that, to this day, accepts that the problem lies<br>in the scarcity of our resources. Let’s say it loud and clear: no such<br>a problem exists, there is no lack of resources, the real problem is<br>the extremely uneven way in which wealth is distributed, and financial<br>
“discipline” is making this problem even more acute every passing day.<br>Where are the infinite benefits of the real estate bubble today? Where<br>are the returns of such ridiculous projects as the airports in<br>Castellón or Lleida, to name but a few? Who is benefiting from the<br>
gigantic mountain of debt crippling so many families and individuals?<br>The institutional left has been unable to stand on the side of, and<br>work with, the many emerging movements that are calling for freedom<br>and democracy. Who can forgive Zapatero’s words when the proposal to<br>
accept the dación de pago# was rejected by parliament on the basis<br>that it could “jeopardise the solvency of the Spanish financial<br>system”? Who was he addressing with these words? The millions of<br>people enslaved by their mortgages or the interests of major banks?<br>
And what can we say of their indecent law of intellectual property,<br>the infamous Ley Sinde? Was he standing with those who have given<br>shape to the web or with those who plan to make money out of it, as if<br>culture was just another commodity? If the institutional left<br>
continues to ignore social movements, if it refuses to break away from<br>a script written by the financial and economic elites and fails to<br>come out with a plan B that could lead us out of the crisis, it will<br>stay in opposition for a very long time. There is no time for more<br>
deferrals: either they change or they will lose whatever social<br>legitimation they still have to represent the values they claim to<br>stand for. Thirdly, the 15th May Movement reveals that far from being<br>the passive agents that so many analysts take them to be, citizens<br>
have been able to organise themselves in the midst of a profound<br>crisis of political representation and institutional abandonment. The<br>new generations have learnt how to shape the web, creating new ways of<br>“being together”, without taking recourse to ideological clichés,<br>
armed with a savvy pragmatism, escaping from pre-conceived political<br>categories and big bureaucratic apparatuses. We are witnessing the<br>emergence of new “majority minorities” that demand democracy in the<br>face of a war “of all against all” and the idiotic atomisation<br>
promoted by neoliberalism, one that demands social rights against the<br>logic of privatisation and cuts imposed by the economical powers. And<br>it is quite possible that at this juncture old political goals will be<br>of little or no use. Hoping for an impossible return to the fold of<br>
Estate, or aiming for full employment––like the whole spectrum of the<br>Spanish parliamentary left seems to be doing––is a pointless task.<br>Reinventing democracy requires, at the very least, pointing to new<br>ways of distributing wealth, to citizenship rights for all regardless<br>
of where they were born (something in keeping with this globalised<br>times), to the defence of common goods (environmental resources, yes,<br>but also knowledge, education, the internet and health) and to<br>different forms of self-governance that can leave behind the<br>
corruption of current ones.</div>
<div>Finally, it is important to remember that the 15th May Movement is<br>linked to a wider current of European protests triggered as a reaction<br>to so-called “austerity” measures. These protests are shaking up the<br>
desert of the real, leaving behind the image of a formless and silent<br>mass of European citizens that so befits the interests of political<br>and economical elites. We are talking here of campaigns like the<br>British UKUncut against Cameron’s policies, of the mass mobilisations<br>
of Geraçao a Rasca in Portugal, or indeed of what took place in<br>Iceland after the people decided not to bail out the bankers. And, of<br>course, inspiration is found above all in the Arab Uprising, the<br>democratic revolts in Egypt and Tunisia who managed to overthrow their<br>
corrupt leaders.</div>
<div>Needless to say, we have no idea what the ultimate fate of the 15th<br>May Movement will be. But we can definitely state something at this<br>stage, now we have at least two different routes out of this crisis:<br>implementing yet more cuts or constructing a real democracy. We know<br>
what the first one has delivered so far: not only has it failed to<br>bring back any semblance of economic “normality”, it has created an<br>atmosphere of “everyman for himself”, a war of all against all. The<br>second one promises an absolute and constituent democracy, all we can<br>
say about it is that it has just begun and that is starting to lay<br>down its path. But the choice seems clear to us, it is down this path<br>that we would like to go.</div>
<div>Tomás Herreros and Emmanuel Rodríguez (Universidad Nómada)</div>
<div>(hurriedly translated by Yaiza Hernández Velázquez)</div>
<div>please feel free to distribute, copy, quote...</div>
<div><strong></strong> </div>
<div><strong>(6) Democracia Real Ya - as you already know but put it here just for completeness</strong></div>
<div>
<p>We are ordinary people. We are like you: people, who get up every morning to study, work or find a job, people who have family and friends. People, who work hard every day to provide a better future for those around us.</p>
<p>Some of us consider ourselves progressive, others conservative. Some of us are believers, some not. Some of us have clearly defined ideologies, others are apolitical, but we are all concerned and angry about the political, economic, and social outlook which we see around us: corruption among politicians, businessmen, bankers, leaving us helpless, without a voice.</p>
<p>This situation has become normal, a daily suffering, without hope. But if we join forces, we can change it. It’ss time to change things, time to build a better society together. Therefore, we strongly argue that:</p>
<p>The priorities of any advanced society must be equality, progress, solidarity, freedom of culture, sustainability and development, welfare and people’s happiness.</p>
<p>These are inalienable truths that we should abide by in our society: the right to housing, employment, culture, health, education, political participation, free personal development, and consumer rights for a healthy and happy life.</p>
<p>The current status of our government and economic system does not take care of these rights, and in many ways is an obstacle to human progress.</p>
<p>Democracy belongs to the people (demos = people, kr�tos = government) which means that government is made of every one of us. However, in Spain most of the political class does not even listen to us. Politicians should be bringing our voice to the institutions, facilitating the political participation of citizens through direct channels that provide the greatest benefit to the wider society, not to get rich and prosper at our expense, attending only to the dictatorship of major economic powers and holding them in power through a bipartidism headed by the immovable acronym PP & PSOE.</p>
<p>Lust for power and its accumulation in only a few; create inequality, tension and injustice, which leads to violence, which we reject. The obsolete and unnatural economic model fuels the social machinery in a growing spiral that consumes itself by enriching a few and sends into poverty the rest. Until the collapse.</p>
<p>The will and purpose of the current system is the accumulation of money, not regarding efficiency and the welfare of society. Wasting resources, destroying the planet, creating unemployment and unhappy consumers.</p>
<p>Citizens are the gears of a machine designed to enrich a minority which does not regard our needs. We are anonymous, but without us none of this would exist, because we move the world.</p>
<p>If as a society we learn to not trust our future to an abstract economy, which never returns benefits for the most, we can eliminate the abuse that we are all suffering.</p>
<p>We need an ethical revolution. Instead of placing money above human beings, we shall put it back to our service. We are people, not products. I am not a product of what I buy, why I buy and who I buy from.</p>
<p>For all of the above, I am outraged.</p>
<p>I think I can change it.</p>
<p>I think I can help.</p>
<p>I know that together we can.I think I can help.</p>
<p>I know that together we can.</p>
<p>-------</p>
<p>Do use any of it!! </p>
<p>X </p></div></div>