Green Left Weekly's European correspondent and Socialist Alliance member Dick Nichols, usually based in Barcelona, was in Athens for the historic win. He is speaking across the country about SYRIZA's challenge to austerity and elite rule. Radical leftist party SYRIZA has swept to power in Greece promising to end austerity and threatening to spark an anti-austerity fight-back across Europe. Dick will be speaking this Sunday in Hobart - so don't miss out on this opportunity to learn about this historic victory.
Showing posts with label Green Left Weekly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Green Left Weekly. Show all posts
February 24, 2015
December 04, 2014
End of Year BBQ
The Hobart Branch of Socialist Alliance invites you to their End of Year BBQ, which will be also be a farewell for Linda and to their last Salamanca stall for the year so please come along and join us.
Our special guest will be Shamikh Badra who is currently touring Australia as he's the youth and students coordinator for the Palestinian People Party in the Palestinian Gaza Strip - so definitely an event not to be missed!
September 11, 2014
Come along to the Hobart Premiere of Disruption
In the lead-up to the People's Climate March later this month, filmmakers are releasing a new documentary called "Disruption," which highlights the consequences of ignoring climate change. The film features well-known environmental leaders such as Bill McKibben and Dr. James Hansen, and documents activists' efforts to mobilize people for what may be the largest climate change march in history.
"We’re the first generation to feel the impacts of climate disruption, and the last generation that can do something about it," the film's synopsis reads." Huffington Post.
To participate in Hobart's Climate Picnic see https://www.facebook.com/events/847020905317252/?ref_dashboard_filter=upcoming
May 09, 2014
March 10, 2014
November 27, 2013
End of Year BBQ
Celebrate our year of struggle to change
Tasmania and the world for the better with the hope that people and the
environment count more than corporate capitalist greed at our end of
year BBQ. Relax with some scrumptious food, company, drinks and maybe a
bit of politics!

June 16, 2013
Palestinian Film Showing
Please come along to see the award winning "5 Broken Cameras" which will be shown as part of a Green Left Weekly fund raiser on Sat June 29th. This is a "deeply personal, first-hand account of non-violent resistance" not to be missed!
- Dinner at 6:30pm $6/$4 conc.
- Movie at 7pm $10/$8 conc.
- Activist Centre 225 Murray St Hobart.
- For more info ph 6234 6397. Please come along and bring your friends.
"An extraordinary work of both cinematic and political activism, 5 Broken Cameras is a deeply personal, first-hand account of non-violent resistance in Bil'in, a West Bank village threatened by encroaching Israeli settlements. Shot almost entirely by Palestinian farmer Emad Burnat, who bought his first camera in 2005 to record the birth of his youngest son, the footage was later given to Israeli co-director Guy Davidi to edit. Structured around the violent destruction of each one of Burnat's cameras, the filmmakers' collaboration follows one family's evolution over five years of village turmoil. Burnat watches from behind the lens as olive trees are bulldozed, protests intensify, and lives are lost. "I feel like the camera protects me," he says, "but it's an illusion." -- (C) Kino Lorber" "It's impossible to understate the importance of this documentary in helping us see exactly what life is like in occupied Palestine... it's showing you how it feels to be oppressed in your own home, stripped of freedoms and basic rights. And this makes it utterly unmissable."Rich Cline |
April 26, 2012
‘Just Do It'
Don’t
miss ‘Just Do It' – inspirational film about environmental activism this Friday 27th April, 7pm
For one
eventful year, Emily James was allowed unprecedented access to film the
secretive world of environmental direct action. Two years later, Just Do It – a
tale of modern-day outlaws hit the big screen. Just Do It lifts the lid on
climate activism and the daring troublemakers who have crossed the line to
become modern-day outlaws.
Emily James' film follows
these activists as they blockade factories, attack coal power stations and glue
themselves to the trading floors of international banks despite the very real
threat of arrest.
Watch the preview at: http://justdoitfilm.com/
The film, due for
release in the U.S.
in April, and already in the running for various awards, is likely to stimulate
discussion and debate about effective protest strategies … Mark it in your
diary now!
Shown on the big screen
in the hall at the Hobart Activist Centre, 225 Murray St, Hobart.
Ph 6234 3645 or email hobart@socialist-alliance.org for more info. Cost of the film is $10/8 concession. Cheap
meal available for $6/4 concession at 6:30pm. Fundraiser for Green Left Weekly.
February 24, 2012
Red Cinema Presents "Capitalism: A Love Story"
Come join us at 6:30 on Friday 2nd March 2012 for cheap meal ($6/$4) followed at 7pm by Michael
Moore’s Capitalism: A Love Story in which he comes home to the issue
he’s been examining throughout his career: the disastrous impact of
corporate dominance on the everyday lives of Americans (and by default,
the rest of the world). ($10/$8) at 225 Murray St, Hobart
May 15, 2011
Climate Change-Social Change conference
http://climatechangesocialchange2011.wordpress.com/
Humanity is in a race against time to avoid environmental catastrophe and social collapse.
We sometimes seem to be losing that race. Climate change, no longer just a prediction, is already extinguishing species, destroying essential food production and forcing thousands of people to flee their island homes. More people are directly affected by more wars than ever before in history. And while the structural causes of last year’s global financial crisis continue unabated, governments are imposing vicious austerity policies on the majority in both the Global North and South to pay for the capitalists’ bail-out.
Sponsored by the Office of Environmental Programs, Melbourne UniversityOrganised by Green Left Weekly and the Socialist Alliance
Humanity is in a race against time to avoid environmental catastrophe and social collapse.
We sometimes seem to be losing that race. Climate change, no longer just a prediction, is already extinguishing species, destroying essential food production and forcing thousands of people to flee their island homes. More people are directly affected by more wars than ever before in history. And while the structural causes of last year’s global financial crisis continue unabated, governments are imposing vicious austerity policies on the majority in both the Global North and South to pay for the capitalists’ bail-out.
Sponsored by the Office of Environmental Programs, Melbourne UniversityOrganised by Green Left Weekly and the Socialist Alliance
March 27, 2011
Announcing the Premiere Screenings in Tasmania of John Pilger's controversial new film
'The War You Don't See' is a powerful and timely investigation into the media's role in war, tracing the history of 'embedded' and independent reporting from the carnage of World War One to the destruction of Hiroshima, and from the invasion of Vietnam to the current war in Afghanistan and disaster in Iraq. As weapons and propaganda become even more sophisticated, the nature of war is developing into an 'electronic battlefield' in which journalists play a key role, and civilians are the victims.
Includes an interview with WikiLeaks founder and editor-in-chief Julian Assange.
Includes an interview with WikiLeaks founder and editor-in-chief Julian Assange.
View trailer at: http://www.johnpilger.com/videos/the-war-you-dont-see-trailer
Organised by Green Left Weekly - People Powered Media
Ph 6234 6397, 0418 643 133
February 22, 2011
November 02, 2010
September 05, 2010
Poster for October Environment Film Festival
Come along and bring your friends to see these must-see award winning environmental films
Download this poster to help spread the word or RSVP on Facebook and share event there with others...
Download this poster to help spread the word or RSVP on Facebook and share event there with others...
The Yes Men Fix the World - Last Film of Environment Film Festival
09 October · 19:00 - 21:00 | |
225 Murray St Hobart, Australia | |
Andy Bichlbaum and Mike Bonanno are two guys who just can't take "no" for an answer.
They have an unusual hobby: posing as top executives of corporations they hate. Armed with nothing but thrift-store suits, the Yes Men lie their way into business conferences and parody their corporate targets in ever more extreme ways - basically doing everything that they can to wake up their audiences to the danger of letting greed run our world.
One day Andy, purporting to be a Dow Chemical spokesperson, gets on the biggest TV news program in the world and announces that Dow will finally clean up the site of the largest industrial accident in history, the Bhopal catastrophe. The result: as people worldwide celebrate, Dow's stock value loses two billion dollars. People want Dow to do the right thing, but the market decides that it can't.
In this film they visit the twisted (and accidentally hilarious) underworld of the free-market think tanks, where they figure out a way to defeat the logic that's destroying our planet. And as they appear on the BBC before 300 million viewers, or before 1000 New Orleans contractors alongside Mayor Ray Nagin, the layers of lies are peeled back to reveal the raw heart of truth - a truth that brings with it hope.
Showing on the big screen at the Hobart Activist Centre as part of Green Left Weekly's Environment Film Festival. Money raised goes towards producing the alternative newspaper Green Left Weekly.
Entry $12/$8 concession per film or $25/$15 conc for a festival pass.
Delicious cheap meals available at 6:30pm.
Call 03 62346397 for more details.
End of the Line - Second Day of Environment Film Festival
09 October · 16:00 - 18:00 | |
225 Murray St Hobart, Australia | |
The End of the Line is the first major feature documentary film revealing the impact of overfishing on our oceans.In the film we see firsthand the effects of our global love affair with fish as food.
It examines the imminent extinction of bluefin tuna, brought on by increasing western demand for sushi; the impact on marine life resulting in huge overpopulation of jellyfish; and the profound implications of a future world with no ...fish that would bring certain mass starvation.
Filmed over two years, The End of the Line follows the investigative reporter Charles Clover as he confronts politicians and celebrity restaurateurs, who exhibit little regard for the damage they are doing to the oceans.
Filmed across the world – from the Straits of Gibraltar to the coasts of Senegal and Alaska to the Tokyo fish market – featuring top scientists, indigenous fishermen and fisheries enforcement officials, The End of the Line is a wake-up call to the world.
Showing on the big screen at the Hobart Activist Centre as part of Green Left Weekly's Environment Film Festival. Money raised goes towards producing the alternative newspaper Green Left Weekly.
Entry $12/$8 concession per film or $25/$15 conc for a festival pass.
Phone 03 6234 6397
FOOD, INC. - First Film of Environment Film Festival
| Time | 08 October · 19:00 - 21:00 |
|---|---|
| Location | 225 Murray St Hobart, Australia |
The way we eat has changed more in the past 50 years than it did in the previous 10,000 years; that's the opening claim of this powerfully didactic documentary FOOD, INC. which looks beyond the supermarket shelves to see how the food Americans eat is prepared.
It's a shocking indictment of an industry which has been taken over by greedy, litigious, multi-national corporations who not only want to put small farmers and food suppliers out of business, they want to keep quiet about the dangerous practices they use in the slaughtering of animals for food and other farming practices.
It looks at the stories of a woman whose two year old son died of E-Coli poisoning after eating a hamburger; a Latino couple who simply can't afford to buy healthy food because it's dearer than junk food; and a small farmer sued by a giant company for wanting to use his own seed for planting; the company owns the rights to genetically modified soybeans.
You'll never look at dinner the same way again.
Showing on the big screen at the Hobart Activist Centre as part of Green Left Weekly's Environment Film Festival. Money raised goes towards producing the alternative newspaper Green Left Weekly.
Entry $12/$8 concession per film or $25/$15 conc for a festival pass.
Delicious cheap meals available at 6:30pm.
Phone 03 62346397 for more details.
July 11, 2010
Mel Barnes for DENISON in FEDERAL ELECTION 2010
Mel Barnes: Vote for real change
Mel Barnes, a well-known Tasmanian political activist, will contest the seat of Denison in the upcoming federal elections, for the Socialist Alliance. Barnes is a leading climate and renewable energy campaigner involved in Climate Action Hobart.
She has also campaigned for women’s rights, Palestine solidarity, refugee rights and Latin American solidarity. In 2006, Barnes went on a solidarity tour of Venezuela to learn about the revolutionary changes occurring there. Barnes stood for the Socialist Alliance in the recent state elections.
Barnes is running on a platform of 100% renewable energy by 2020, ending native forest logging, ending the racist Northern Territory intervention and bringing all troops back from Afghanistan.
“Climate change is the greatest threat to ever face humanity”, Barnes told Green Left Weekly. “Yet both major parties have abandoned any action to reduce carbon emissions. They are totally tied to the interests of big polluters and refuse to put people and the planet before profits.”
Barnes called for a vote for actual political change, not a mere rebranding exercise.
"In the face of Kevin Rudd's epic nosedive in the polls since April, the prime ministerial change from Rudd to Julia Gillard is a desperate attempt by Labor to rebrand itself. But Gillard will only mean more of the same.
“Gillard has been responsible for some of this government's most anti-social acts. As federal workplace relations minister, she maintained the Australian Building and Construction Commission, which denies construction workers basic human rights. As education minister, she allowed damaging school league tables to be used by the media, stigmatising those from disadvantaged schools.”
Barnes said the federal Labor government was motivated by short-term political interest, not society’s best interest.
“We must reject this style of politics and vote for parties committed towards genuine change”, she said.
GREEN LEFT WEEKLY ARTICLE (see http://www.greenleft.org.au/node/44659)
Saturday, July 3, 2010 By Susan Austin, Hobart
Authorised by D Nichols. 23 Abercrombie St Chippendale 2008.
Mel Barnes, a well-known Tasmanian political activist, will contest the seat of Denison in the upcoming federal elections, for the Socialist Alliance. Barnes is a leading climate and renewable energy campaigner involved in Climate Action Hobart.
She has also campaigned for women’s rights, Palestine solidarity, refugee rights and Latin American solidarity. In 2006, Barnes went on a solidarity tour of Venezuela to learn about the revolutionary changes occurring there. Barnes stood for the Socialist Alliance in the recent state elections.
Barnes is running on a platform of 100% renewable energy by 2020, ending native forest logging, ending the racist Northern Territory intervention and bringing all troops back from Afghanistan.
“Climate change is the greatest threat to ever face humanity”, Barnes told Green Left Weekly. “Yet both major parties have abandoned any action to reduce carbon emissions. They are totally tied to the interests of big polluters and refuse to put people and the planet before profits.”
Barnes called for a vote for actual political change, not a mere rebranding exercise.
"In the face of Kevin Rudd's epic nosedive in the polls since April, the prime ministerial change from Rudd to Julia Gillard is a desperate attempt by Labor to rebrand itself. But Gillard will only mean more of the same.
“Gillard has been responsible for some of this government's most anti-social acts. As federal workplace relations minister, she maintained the Australian Building and Construction Commission, which denies construction workers basic human rights. As education minister, she allowed damaging school league tables to be used by the media, stigmatising those from disadvantaged schools.”
Barnes said the federal Labor government was motivated by short-term political interest, not society’s best interest.
“We must reject this style of politics and vote for parties committed towards genuine change”, she said.
GREEN LEFT WEEKLY ARTICLE (see http://www.greenleft.org.au/node/44659)
Saturday, July 3, 2010 By Susan Austin, Hobart
Authorised by D Nichols. 23 Abercrombie St Chippendale 2008.
December 16, 2009
Making a Positive Contribution Towards Change in 2009
by Susan Austin, Hobart convener
In writing this report, I was reminded of why we are all probably feeling a bit tired as the year winds to an end. Having a Labor government in power at both federal and state levels has not made the work of Socialist Alliance any easier, except that maybe more people can see that our democracy is failing us on many of the big issues of our time, and as the earth heats up, and social injustice rages, many people are looking for an alternative.
Socialist Alliance (along with Resistance, socialist youth organization) have been playing an active role in the Climate Action Hobart group which has been meeting fortnightly and has been going from strength to strength since being established early this year. Meetings are vibrant, democratic and inclusive and the group has achieved a lot, including a climate emergency rally on parliament house lawns in June, a one day workshop and forum at the Philip Smith Centre to further develop our excellent ten-point plan for climate action, 350.org actions in October, a successful quiz night last week at the Republic bar, a fundraising raffle and, along with four other organizations, yesterday's fantastic Walk Against Warming.
This year's Walk Against Warming was part of an international day of action held in the middle of the Copenhagen climate treaty negotiations. About 40,000 people marched in Melbourne, 15,000 in Sydney and many thousands in the other capital cities around Australia and the world. In southern Tasmania up to 2000 people traveled the 2 hours from Hobart to attend the Walk in the Upper Florentine Valley. The Walk was actually along the newly-bulldozed forestry access road and the stage was set up along it, so protestors could experience listening to speakers about climate change amongst magnificent tall trees destined for the woodchip mill.
We had strong, radical demands including for protecting the world's forests, reducing GHG emissions to below 350ppm, a just transition for workers to a low carbon economy and making Tasmania a renewable energy island. I was appalled that such a significant demonstration didn't even get a mention in the ABC news last night, or today's Mercury newspaper. It reminds me why, now more than ever, we need an alternative news source like Green Left Weekly that can spread information about our campaigns and really get behind the issues that the mainstream media block out, fudge over or misrepresent.
If the future of our planet's ecosystem and the peoples in the third world depended on knowing who Tiger Woods last had sex with, I wouldn't mind it being on the front page of the Mercury instead of the Walk Against Warming. But somehow I think that climate change will have more of a bearing on our future!
Thanks to all those people who have donated money to the 2009 Green Left Weekly fighting fund appeal. We have put on an interesting range of fundraising events this year, including the Premier of the 2 new Che films by Steven Sodenburgh, a fabulous mid-year dinner including a film screening of Tim Anderson's documentary on Cuban doctors, and other film festivals.
It takes a lot of money to keep an alternative newspaper pumping off the press each week and Hobart branch set a Green Left target of $5000 to fundraise this year, and we've made a pretty good attempt to reach that, collecting over $200 at our end-of-year BBQ which means we are only about $600 off.
Socialist Alliance and Resistance members have been involved in the protests happening in Brighton in support of the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre, who is campaigning to stop the construction of the Brighton bypass. There are very significant cultural artifacts on the proposed site, some as old as 18,000 years. It is also a place where Aboriginal elders have been buried, as well as it being a meeting place for Aboriginals. It is one of the most culturally significant places in Tasmania and also in Australia. TAC has consequently compared the construction of the bypass as the equivalent of bulldozing the pyramids to construct a McDonalds. Our members have been involved in the blockade of the site as the bulldozers went to work in late November. At one protest 18 people from TAC and four from Socialist Alliance were arrested and are due to go to court in February on charges of trespass. We see indigenous rights as a crucial area of work and also participated in the sorry day protests in January and the protest against Rudd over the Northern Territory intervention. This year we have been able to build stronger connections with members of TAC and hope to continue to further this relationship next year.
Our national Socialist Alliance Aboriginal and Torres Straits Islander policy was launched this year, along with a book on the history of indigenous struggle and the socialist and trade union movements, so we may look to launch these publications in Hobart in the first part of next year. Education in our branch has been given a shot of adrenalin with Tim Dobson arriving and taking on the role of organizing interesting socialist discussion groups which have covered wide-ranging books and topics such as Karl Marx's Wage, Labour and Capital, and the Communist Manifesto, Lenin's - Imperialism - The Highest Stage of Capitalism, the French revolution, fascism and more.
We also hosted retired coalminer Graham Brown who gave forums on Green Jobs, Margartia Windisch who spoke about the economic crisis and launched the pamphlet Meltdown and Canadian eco-socialist Ian Angus. In March we launched the Voices from Venezuela book and gave report-backs from the December Venezuela solidarity brigade at the Hobart Bookshop.
Rene and Linda, with the help of other members, have played an important solidarity role with the people of El Salvador, including organizing an El Salvadorian MP and health worker to tour down here, and Rene has made sure that the campaigns to Free the Cuban Five and end the coup in Honduras were given some expression here.
Tim Dobson has taken initiative in organizing Tamil solidarity events including a rally, book launch and forum. Tim Douglas, Duncan and Mel have stayed involved with the simmering campaign against the Pulp Mill. We have been out to the Florentine a few times to support the activists fighting old growth logging there and participated in the solidarity arrest-me-too action in town earlier this year.
We should remember to raise our glasses for one of the biggest victories for the people and the environment this year, the Save Ralph's Bay campaign success when the planning body released its draft report finding that the cons majorly outweighed the pros. So this massive canal development is very unlikely to be given the green light needed for construction, and the birds and ecosystem of the area can survive.
Resistance joined lots of people at O'week and played a great role in reviving the environment collective on campus this year.
Other achievements of our branch this year have included pulling off a refugee rights protest outside Duncan Kerr's office and one near the mall, a Palestine vigil, a protest against the war in Afghanistan when Rudd came to town in October, raising the flag for the Western Sahara people, hosting a Get Up forum on a bill of rights, involving lots of members in a successful Sustainable Living Expo stall over 2 days in November, organising a stall at the climate festival in Launceston in March, supporting a protest in solidarity with Ark Tribe and the COAG action when Rudd was in town in April. I'm sure there's also lots more things that I haven't included.
Linda has played a leading role in NTEU campaign, and Jenny and myself have been involved recently in the health professional industrial campaign. Members have traveled interstate to participate in the National Climate Summit, the Latin American Solidarity Conference, the Easter World at a Crossroads conference, Resistance national conference and FMLN meetings.
We have also made a good start on our March 2010 election campaign, with two members stepping forward into the role of candidates to take socialist ideas out to a broader audience. Mel and Jenny are both fantastic representatives of the Alliance and have the full support of our branch. We have a good team in place to help with the campaign, and have already produced and distributed hundreds of leaflets introducing our candidates and explaining our main policy points, as well as begun developing the campaign website, corflutes and policy. Only a small number of people came to our first election forum on December 3, but we will be sure to look for many more opportunities next year for our candidates to speak. Socialist Alliance Hobart is one of the smaller branches in the country, and I think that it is obvious that all those involved put in an enormous amount of work to pull off the range and number of events that we do.
On top of this, we try and stay engaged in the political and activist life of the city by building and attending other progressive organisations' forums and events. We also make a big effort to reach out and engage with the general public by doing regular stalls in the city, at uni, at the Salamanca markets and at rallies and events. No-one in Hobart is paid to do any of this work, it is all purely voluntary. It couldn't be done without members working as a team, and while there are moments of frustration for organizers who feel like they are carrying the can, for the most part I am proud to say that the Hobart branch functions as a very skillful and dynamic team. In small branch it is easy for personality clashes to wreak havoc, or for people to take their frustrations out on each other, but with good democratic processes and a focus on the urgent task of social and environmental change at hand, we manage to cohere a very effective team of activists, with everyone playing an important role, no matter how small or large the time commitment or no matter how trivial or complex the task.
Alby, one of our longer term members, has been an integral part of that team, and we will be very sad to see him go. Brisbane branch are lucky to be getting a ready-made revolutionary activist and team player like Alby coming their way!
We have 7 or so members going to Sydney in January for the 7th national Socialist Alliance conference, which will be a fantastic opportunity to take the Alliance forward in terms of policy development, campaign planning and gearing up for the 2010 federal elections. We hope to gain lots of ideas from other branches, and come away with some clear priorities for campaigning. So, while we will be having a well-earned break for a few weeks over the festive season, we will be gearing up again in mid-January next year for another year of frantic, fast-paced socialist activism. I would like to thanks everyone for their support over the course of this year, and encourage you to join us and get involved in whatever way you can next year. All the campaigns will be continuing as there remains an urgent need to see some real improvement in our governments' climate change strategies and social justice approach.
In the meantime, have a wonderful Christmas and New Year festive season.
In solidarity,Susan
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