Greeks Bearing Gifts

Some citizens of Greece aren’t just going suck it up while soaring inflation starts to hit:

Greek “Robin Hoods” raid stores to fight high prices

Greek anarchists stormed a supermarket on Thursday and handed out food for free in the latest of a wave of raids provoked by soaring consumer prices.

About 20 unarmed people, mostly wearing black hoods, carried out the midday robbery in the northern city of Thesaaloniki, police said.

Local media have labelled the raiders “Robin Hoods” following previous raids.

They take only packets of pasta, rice and cartons of milk which they drop in the middle of the street for people to collect, a police official said.

“They have never stolen money or hurt anyone. They ask people to remain calm but use ambush tactics, jumping over cash desks,” he said.

[Just an aside on how the editorial voice can potentially distort a story: how do Reuters know these people are ‘anarchists’, not just tapped-out supermarket customers or a gang of generous common thieves with a sense of humour? And what do they mean by ‘anarchist’ exactly? Small ‘a’ anarchists or big ‘A’, Black Bloc, agents provocateur type Anarchists?]

Ordinary people turn out to be decent, despite best Daily Mail efforts

Over the decades the British tabloids and rightwing press have kept up a firestorm of hatred against asylum seekers, portraying them as everything from dole scroungers to pedophiles to swan eaters, often in language only slightly less intemperate than that found in theglory days of Der Sturmer. Asylum seekers (always called “bogus” or “failed” by these newspapers were supposed to take the jobs and homes of decent British working families, so you’d think there would be a lot of resentment in those neighbourhoods were the Home Office chose to settle asylum seekers, usually not the best of estates. But funnily enough, when “decent British working families” come into contact with asylum seekers and sees what happens to these people when their claim is rejected they see them as people, not scroungers and resist attempts to evict them:

The estate became home for hundreds of families escaping persecution and torture in places such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Algeria, Uganda and Congo. Most had their request for asylum in the UK turned down, and when the Home Office began coming to the estate at 5am to remove them, Donnachie and the rest of the residents looked on in horror. “It was like watching the Gestapo – men with armour, going in to flats with battering rams. I’ve never seen people living in fear like it,” says Donnachie. “I saw a man jump from two storeys up when they came for him and his family. I stood there and I cried, and I said to myself, ‘I am not going to stand by and watch this happen again.'”

She got together with her friend Noreen and organised the residents into daily dawn patrols, looking out for immigration vans. When the vans arrived, a phone system would swing in to action, warning asylum seekers to escape.

The whole estate pitched in, gathering in large crowds in the early-morning dark to jeer at immigration officials as they entered the tower blocks. On more than one occasion, the vans left the estate empty – the people they had come for had got out in time and were hidden by the crowd. The estate kept this up for two years until forced removals stopped.

But what happened on the Kingsway is not unique. Over the past few years there has been a growing resistance to the government’s attempts to deport failed asylum seekers. From Manchester, from Sheffield, from Belfast, from Bristol, the Home Office is being bombarded with requests from British people all over the country asking for asylum seekers to be given another chance.

One reason why deportations are being challenged is that, despite reports to the contrary, many asylum-seeking families have successfully integrated. Inefficiencies in the system have meant cases have taken years to process, giving families, in particular, the chance to put down roots. Many of their children were born in Britain, go to school here and have close friendships with local children. The government does not allow asylum seekers to work, so many put in hours of voluntary work to occupy their time. They have forged strong links with locals, who have helped them fight to stay.

The same happened here in the Netherlands, where a grassroots resistance movement against evicting asylum seekers grew as much out of local people being concerned for their neighbours as it did out of principled if theoretical opposition against the system itself. Ordinary people can be surprisingly decent if they get the chance, but if you only look at what the gutter press says “they” want, you’d think they all can’t wait to lynch every failed asylum seeker in the country.

Match it for Pratchett

On the sidebar to the right, just above the Steve Gilliard memorial picture, you’ll find a new cause that you, the Prog Gold reader, can contribute to. As you may now if, like us, you’re a fantasy reader, Terry Pratchett was diagnosed with a rare form of Alzheimer’s last year and this year he has decided to fight back, which he started by donating a million dollars to the Alzheimers Research Trust. He outlined his reasons for doing so in a speech he gave to the society (PDF file).

It’s a shock and a shame, then, to find out that funding for research is three per cent of that which goes to find cancer cures. Perhaps that is why, for example, that I know three people who have successfully survived brain tumours but no-one who has beaten Alzheimer’s…although among the Greek Chorus are some who are giving it a hard time.

I’d like a chance to die like my father did—of Cancer, at 86. (Remember, I’m speaking as a man with Alzheimer’s, which strips away your living self a bit at a time). Before he went to spend his last two weeks in a hospice he was bustling around the house, fixing things. He talked to us right up to the last few days, knowing who we were and who he was. Right now, I envy him. And there are thousands like me, except that they don’t get heard.

So let’s shout something loud enough to hear. We need you and you need money. I’m giving you a million dollars. Spend it wisely.

Science fiction author Pat Cadigan thought fandom should take up the challenge to provide matching funds, and some kind person at Blogenspiel put together a button to promote the cause, which you now see at right.

So what do you say? You can donate to the Alzheimers Research Trust, or The Alzheimer’s Association in the USA, or even the Dutch Alzheimer foundation.

Bit skint? Want to do something useful but can’t spent the money at the moment? There’s something else you can do, not to combat Alzheimer but to help with another widespread medical problem: the worldwide shortage of organ donors. If you haven’t gotten your donor card filled out yet, please do so now, in honour of World Kidney Day, which was held yesterday.

Routing Round Obstacles

American and looking for the censored wikileaks.org?

Try here. ..

Let me know if it works for you.

UPDATE: That reminds me – Freenet is not yet censored in any way.

Freenet is a global peer-to-peer network designed to allow users to publish and consume information without fear of censorship. To use it, you must download the Freenet software, available for Windows, Mac, Linux and other operating systems. Your computer will then form part of a global, decentralized P2P network, and you will be able to publish and consume information anonymously, either through your web browser, or through a variety of third party applications, such as Frost (see http://jtcfrost.sf.net/).

You can download it here.