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The days are getting longer and the weather is getting milder. Spring is with us. So, in search of a new jumper and some obscure German music, I took a stroll to Brick Lane on Sunday and it’s not just the flowers that are bursting out. There was a bumper harvest of political ideas emerging from their winter dormancy.

First up outside Tesco was the Communist League catering for the shopper who wanted a bit of Thomas Sankara or Fidel Castro to read over their Sunday roast. It’s one of the smaller Tesco branches and only sells papers and magazines so they’ve spotted an obvious gap in the market. Once again the League is contesting the Bethnal Green seat and while superficial thinkers sneer at the thirty five votes they got last time I think that shows a fundamental misunderstanding of what the figure represents for a group demanding a workers’ and farmers’ government. A rough reckoning suggests that they must have got almost 100% of the votes of the staff of the three city farms in or near the constituency. That’s the real headline number.

In Brick Lane itself your first political contact is with a group with a fairly similar world view to the Communist League, and even if they are really different I’m not remotely interested in finding out what the dividing lines are. Fight Racism Fight Imperialism were asking the hung-over locals and curious tourists to sign a petition “to help the people of Haiti”. A few hundred yards away the same audience was asked to sign a petition to “stop the BNP”. How’s this supposed to work? Do the petitions get delivered to Nick Griffin or Ban Ki-moon who then says “gosh, I didn’t realise so many Spanish tourists felt so strongly about things. It’s time for a radical change of direction”?

Outside the fur shop was a very muted group of animal rights protesters keeping the sort of distance from the premises which makes you think they’ve been served with an injunction. Just beside them was a sizeable bunch from the Whitechapel Anarchist Group  giving away their highly entertaining free paper. The last time I saw the anarchists the cops were all over them taking photos of all their members as well as passers by who asked for a copy of the paper. You’d have thought that they’d just returned from a two week training course with Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau. In common with most taxpayers my thoughts on seeing this were “leave those radicals alone. There are dozens of bastard bicycle thieves in this street you should be tormenting.”

I’m no lawyer but one interpretation of the cover of the free newspaper they were handing out could be that it’s inciting readers to go postal as their contribution to the electoral frenzy and the text inside the target area saying “enemies of the people” does support that opinion. It’s combined with a slight encouragement to arson. What you don’t see from the image is that carefully taped to the front of each copy is a match, the idea being that you use it to burn your ballot paper, assuming you’ve not already been arrested for taking pot shots at Nick Clegg.

On the back page is an advert for an event on election day at which there will be music, fun, food and a mass ballot paper burning. Unlike their Catalan sisters and brothers the British anarchists are obliged to include the rider “weather permitting”. And people accuse them of being unrealistic.

My hunch is that after the election we are likely to see a growth in anarchist influenced currents. The content of the paper rages against all the things it’s right to be angry about and, even if they are a bit short of solutions other than setting fire to things and revolution tomorrow, they are expressing a deeply held contempt for the political classes and a growing distance from bourgeois democracy among large numbers of young people. The French election results remind us of that.

11 responses to “Spring flowers”

  1. the Communist League people are nice, apart from the fact, that you easily can confuse them at first glance with Mormon missionaries … and their Militant has become much better during the last years

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  2. “First up outside Tesco was the Communist League..”
    The presence of the CL is always a good indicator that an area is likely to experience a rise in property values.
    There’s now an expensive fish restaurant called “Livebait” near their old bookshop at The Cut.

    Brick Lane is only seperated from the trendy Old Spitalfields Market by Fournier St.
    “Fairy Goth Mother” in Lamb Street is de rigeur for female underwear requirements.

    http://www.fairygothmother.co.uk/

    It’s all a bit different from when my family all lived around there.

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  3. “…obscure German music”

    What sort of obscure German music. That’s what I want to know. Can? Stockhausen? Bierkeller/Lederhosen sing-along favourites? I think we should be told.

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  4. Did Guy Fawkes start with ballot burning and then he had bigger ideas?

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  5. Er thanks for the enlightening link priankoff.

    Alf – Harmonia and Cluster. My shelves are already groaning under the weight of bierkeller singalong cds.

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  6. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_left

    For a list of 31 ‘leftwing ‘ parties organising in Britain – don’t know how accurate this is

    http://bristol.indymedia.org/

    for report on yesterdays struggle to stop the latest tesco development in Bristol: 70 police, two dozen bailiffs and several hundred ‘squatters and their supporters’.

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  7. I have a lot of time for the WAG. During the Tower Hamlets College strike it so happened that a couple of their members were squatting in a terraced house about 30 seconds walk from the Arbour Square picket line. They supplied the strikers with endless cups of tea and biscuits and didn’t mind a knock on the door in the early hours or any time by a striker wanting to use their toilet (picturesque outdoor loo). Real solidarity without ever trying to get someone to buy a paper – quite different from another more prominent political group who hung around the strike!

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  8. Voting is pretty much a waste of time except where a campaign can locate and organise resistance. Of course I think we should vote socialist or anticuts or candidates of struggle or whatever but far more important than elections is organising.

    Keeping revolutionary ideas laive is also important but as well as revolution we need activity now to mobilise communites, workplaces against the impending cuts and the other attacks whichever set of bourgeois politicians wins the election

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  9. didn’t mind a knock on the door in the early hours or any time by a striker wanting to use their toilet (picturesque outdoor loo). Real solidarity without ever trying to get someone to buy a paper
    But if you need something to wipe your arse with…

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  10. Without necessarily disagreeing with any of your comments, I always enjoy the FRFI newspaper (I used to subscribe). It has some well researched, detailed articles. Their member (or sympathiser? not sure) Helen Yaffe has also recently published the best book on Che Guevara ever to be available in English. Everyone should read it. “Che Guevara: The economics of revolution”published by Palgrave MacMillan. More interesting than the title suggests, I promise.

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  11. yes I subscribe to FRFI but I accept that this may be an area of (rare) disagreement with Liam….and Helen’s research is important,

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