Category: News

Global Teach-In – Press Release

Edinburgh represents Scotland in first grassroots ‘Global Teach-In’ focused on building a sustainable economy

How can local communities in Edinburgh respond to an economic crisis that is truly global? How can local groups learn from potentially useful developments taking place half way around the world?

These are the questions we hope to answer by participating in a ground-breaking ‘Global Teach-In’

We will use video link-ups and live feeds to simultaneously connect local communities in 7 nations and across 4 continents.

On April 25, Edinburgh hosts Global Teach-In Scotland at the Augustine Unitarian Church, Edinburgh. A live audience of activists and engaged citizens will gather to respond and discuss a series of live talks and international webcasts that will be beamed from New York, Sweden, and 13 other cities around the world. The Edinburgh group will also be speaking live to a global audience expected to number in the thousands.

At the Edinburgh event, commentator and broadcaster Lesley Riddoch will report on land reform in Scotland, Mike Small, founder of the Fife Diet, will discuss the local food movement, journalist Peter Geoghegan will talk about creative alternatives to the youth unemployment crisis, and final year Ph.D. student, Jamie Hamilton, will discuss the role of groups like Occupy in building a sustainable economy.

Orientation begins at 4.30pm and there is a global kick-off event at 5pm British Summer Time. Local speakers will feature from 6-8pm and the event ends at 9pm. The audience will respond to segments of webcasts and live speakers by posing questions provoked by the case studies and reflecting on ways in which international examples inspire local action. The event is free with donations welcome to cover costs.

April 25th is the first day of the United Nations Conference on International Organization in San Francisco where cities around the world will address concrete solutions to the economic, environmental and energy crises.

This event will highlight the alternative policies needed globally, nationally and locally to constitute a concrete plan of action. Speakers will address the need for not only new tax and budgetary policies, but also the necessity to build new economic institutions from the ground up. These include: alternative banks, utilities, cooperatives and other new economic forms to promote needed economic and ecological changes.

The world’s leading thinkers and activists will be involved in this event, including: Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org (US); Gar Alperovitz, founding Principal of The Democracy Collaborative (US); Colin Hines, Convenor of the Green New Deal (UK); Bruce Nixon, environmental author and activist (UK); Ellen Hodgson Brown, Chairman and President, Public Banking Institute (US); Alice Slater, noted peace and anti-nuclear activist (US); Robert Pollin, a leading economist on green economic transformations (US); Pamela Brown, a leader of the movement against student debt (US); Joel Rogers, a leading green activist (US); Oscar Kejllberg, Former President of Sweden’s leading cooperative bank (Sweden); and Dada Maheshvarananda, a leader of the PROUT movement for economic democracy (Venezuela). Jonathan M. Feldman (Sweden), principal convenor, organized the televised national Green New Deal Conference in Sweden in March 2009 and was a principal organizer of the May 2, 1990 National Town Meeting on the Peace Dividend held in Washington, D.C.

 

[ENDS]

Contact information: Tricia Muñoz 07973569860 e: mail@paciapr.com

Global Teach-In Scotland http://globalteachinscotland.eventbrite.co.uk/

Promotional video: http://vimeo.com/39371903

Global Teach-In Webpage:  http://www.globalteachin.com/

You Can’t Evict An Idea

occupybw

You can’t evict an idea

 

 

Press release regarding Eviction

Essential Edinburgh will proceed with a lengthy eviction process, Occupy Edinburgh has learned today. Members of the movement had reached out to the company, offering a substantial downscale of the camp, decreasing tent presence by two-thirds and promising no overnight camping.
Andy Neal, Chief Executive of Essential Edinburgh, said that while this negotiation was an option yesterday, today the offer was now “too late”, just 24 hours later.

A member of Occupy Edinburgh and union negotiator, Willie Black, said: “It is now clear that there was no real intention to allow us to remain in St Andrew Sq; we could have made any offer, but it would have been rejected.”
Mike Ferrigan, former co-ordinator of the council-concented vigil for the Scottish Parliment said: “Considering the recent motion passed by the council supporting the Occupy Movement and protest politics as a legitimate form of representation, it is truly shameful that they have entirely withdrawn their support. We now face a legal battle with a company which claims to represent over 500 businesses; it seems the council-approved motion of support was all talk.”

Chris Sharp said: “It seems the right to protest only justifies actions that our politicians can (and do) ignore. The City of London Corporation claim that peaceful protests are a ‘daily occurance’ and yet they have only increased their reckless practices over the last decade.”

Jamie Mann said: “We have found out the hard way that the offer of negotiation with Essential Edinburgh was merely an illusion. We have complied with the requests of the company including downsizing the camp for Christmas and Hogmanay events. Essential Edinburgh are funded by the businesses in central Edinburgh and ultimately, allowing the camp to remain protesting against corporate greed would not be in thier interests.”

You can’t evict an idea.

Comment on the Evening News/Scotsman story of 09/01/12

We were asked by Edinburgh Evening News and the Scotsman to comment on the story that appeared on Monday 9th January 2012. The full story can be found online here. Here was our response:

Is it really time for Occupy Edinburgh to go?

This seems to be the opinion of Conservative Councillor Mowat who has said that Occupy Edinburgh has ‘made their point’. (We regret that the Evening News did not gain the opinions of the other four parties which unanimously supported us in the Council vote in November). If this were really the case then we expect Ms. Mowat to have already proposed new legislation tackling the blatant corruption and injustice that still permeates the very core of our society.
Will the council of Edinburgh take the lead in ensuring fair tax is paid by all, that the risky derivatives market is regulated or that re-hypothecation of assets in the billions is stopped? Will they invest directly in local businesses rather than encourage exploitative lending by the banks, and restore the power to create money to the public and not private institutions? These are our points, and the council have yet to do anything to show they have acknowledged or are dealing with these issues, despite openly declaring support for them.

There are various arguments about whether or not Occupy Edinburgh should remain in the square, from claiming a decrease in business, to the fact that the square is, in fact, owned by private companies, and the ridiculous “they’re killing the grass” argument. Firstly, it is we at Occupy Edinburgh who are protesting the austerity measures, which are leading to reduced business everywhere, not just around the square. Secondly, if the square is privately owned then why was is it £1.2m of public money that is spent renovating it and keeping it tidy? And thirdly, grass grows back..with added crocuses.

We have maintained a good and cooperative relationship with Andy Neal of Essential Edinburgh, rearranging our camp to allow the Christmas festivities to take place in the same manner that they do every year. We have done our utmost to keep the square tidy and safe despite the hurricanes, cold weather and drunken abuse from those outside of the movement.

The campsite is a microcosm of society at large, with many of its problems. The difference is that while society at large has been afforded public help, the square has not. The movement in St. Andrew Square has done remarkably well at finding productive places in society for some of the hardest hit by the current broken system. Instead of simply evicting the whole of Occupy Edinburgh in order to disperse a minority with alcohol or drug issues, the council and local organisations should be using this opportunity to reach out and actually help them.

Meeting To Discuss The Future of Occupy Edinburgh

 

An important meeting will be held tomorrow morning (time and location details below) to discuss both the future of the St Andrew Sq camp, and our local movement as a whole. Please attend if you can; this meeting is open to everyone so please invite anyone who has ever been involved in, or has supported the movement.

11AM – St Andrew’s and St George’s West, 58 Shandwick Place EH2 4RT View Here on Google Maps: http://g.co/maps/zzhx6

To ensure a progressive discussion, this meeting will facilitated by someone independent from Occupy Edinburgh.

Sincere and Eternal Thanks To Everyone Who Has Supported The Movement So Far.

Occupy Inverness

Let’s Help Occupy Inverness Get On Their Feet. Please Share and invite those to their Facebook page (facbook.com/OccupyInverness) especially to those in the North.

http://www.facebook.com/OccupyInverness

 

 

Page 4 of Today’s Scottish Daily Record

Pirate Bank Continues To Attract The Press...

Revealing Scotland’s Pirates

Where The People's Treasure Is Hoarded - Photo by Bob Shields

 

RBS Unleash Their New, More Honest Flag

OCCUPY UK: SECOND NATIONAL CONFERENCE STATEMENT

Members of Occupy camps from around the UK met in Edinburgh from Fri 16th to Sun 18th December 2011 for the second national conference of UK occupiers. All comers were welcome.
In attendance were members of Occupy camps already established in Birmingham, Edinburgh, Exeter, Leeds, Liverpool, London (St Paul’s and Bank of Ideas), Newcastle, Norwich and Sheffield. The conference:
1. Was pleased to note the growing support for Occupy around the UK and beyond;
2. Resolved to share resources, skills and enthusiasm to help fellow occupiers negotiate the upcoming distracting period of court cases and bad weather as we move towards Spring;
3. The foundations of Occupy in the UK had now been laid and the movement was now ready to forge ahead in 2012, with resources in place to enable new members and occupations no matter where they are in the UK;
4. Expressed solidarity with Occupiers around the world especially those experiencing oppression this weekend in NYC;
5. Unanimously dubbed the event “inspiring” and “a total success”.

Sessions were held on logistics, safer spaces, political campaigning, transparency and reliability in dealing with donations, media, social networking policy and winterisation, together with other ways to assist fellow members of the Occupy Movement. Among other decisions made were the agreement of a new safer spaces policy, a new autonomy statement for discussion by individual general assemblies, the compilation of an Occupiers’ Handbook, the foundation of a new cross-site women’s group and the design of a new national website to co-ordinate the dissemination of information.

The conference confirmed its commitment to campaign for a world that is no longer designed for the benefit of the 1%. We seek a more egalitarian and fair society, an open and peaceful environment for discussion, and inclusiveness for people of all backgrounds. We seek a twenty first century Enlightenment.

Conference looked forward to the third national conference which will be held 21-23 January 2012 in Sheffield.

Live Stream Of National Assembly

Watch the live stream of the second national assembly at The People’s Cafe now:

http://www.livestream.com/occupylsx

 

And contribute to the our evolving agenda of the weekend at our wiki:

https://occupywiki.org.uk/wiki/International_Occupy_Assembly/Edinburgh_2011