CalendarMay 22 Demo Against Cuts in South Gloucestershire May 22 Bristol Socialist Caucus - May May 23 China, capitalism and class struggle May 24 Action to demand brands pay compensation to Bangladeshi victims of fac... May 24 VegfestUK Bristol 2013 (May 24th - 26th @ the Amphitheatre) May 24 Riots Reframed - Documentary May 24 Hoochie Coochie at the Mauretania May 25 Hook, Skip, Repeat May 25 Email Encryption for Beginners (Hydra Books) more >>EDL push against police line @ Bristol demo Bristol Anarchist Bookfair 7th May 2011 Hamilton House 10:30am - 6:30pm ![]() indycycle
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bristol / the environment Wednesday February 06, 2013 09:39 by Ashley Vale Action Group
Community Organisation Offers 1/2 Price Solar to Homes in Areas that Need it Most A pioneering energy-saving community group based in St Werburghs has devised a scheme to help Bristol go solar - more affordably. Called 'Let’s Go Solar', the scheme is looking for Bristol homeowners interested in having a solar-powered hot water system installed in their home for around half the normal price. The energy-saving kits use the power of the sun to heat hot water, enabling homeowners to save on fuel bills as well as reduce their individual carbon footprint. Particularly welcome are homes deemed deprived according to government statistics such as some parts of St Agnes, St Pauls, Lockleaze, Eastville, Easton, Ashley Down, St Werburgh’s, Knowle, Hartcliffe, Fishponds etc. Thanks to securing both government funding and local bargaining power, the not-for-profit community group, Ashley Vale Action Group (AVAG), has cut the typical cost of installing solar-powered hot water heating from around £5,000 to approximately £2,500. Ashley Vale Action Group was one of 38 UK-wide groups, and the only Bristol group, to successfully bid for a share of £3 million from the UK government. The government scheme aims to make renewable technologies accessible to more people in its effort to help reduce the UK’s overall carbon dioxide emissions. In addition, Let’s Go Solar has cut the costs even further by negotiating with nine local solar installers to use their collective power to buy hot water heating kits in bulk. We should receive expressions of interest by the 28th February, with the majority of systems installed by the end of March so contact us today to check your eligibility and to arrange a free and non-binding survey of your home.
Monday February 4th, 8pm., Cube Cinema, Bristol Entry £3/£4 (But nobody turned away due to lack of funds) See the link below for an introduction to debates around the commons.
south west / the environment Friday February 01, 2013 10:03 by Frack Free Somerset
From fracking to opencast, biofuels to nuclear, energy companies are turning to more and more extreme ways to extract energy. Despite their nightmarish variety, these tecnologies are connected by their disastrous impacts, and by the corporate agendas driving them. How do we make our resistance to all these forms of extreme energy just as connected? As part of the Frack Free February month of action, local coalition, Frack Free Somerset in collaboration with Frack Off and Bristol Rising Tide are leading a workshop on community resistance to extreme energy. The workshop will look at what 'extreme energy' is and place these developments in the context of the bigger picture before looking at models of resistance around the world. There will be the chance to hear activists from: Rising Tide Australia, involved in the 'Lock the Gate' & Coal Seam Gas Free Communities. The Copenhagen (Denmark) based network The Climate Collective, who are mobilising against shale gas extraction and fracking in Denmark with the initiative Skifergas - Nej tak! (shalegas no thanks!) Biofuel Watch Stop New Nuclear and the campaign against Hinkley Point C and the local resistance to fracking and coal bed methane in Somerset Community resistance in the UK will then be explored as well as next steps for Somerset & the South West. http://risingtide.org.uk/bristol http://frack-off.org.uk
Date: Thursday 31st January, 2013 Book Launch – Physical Resistance: A Hundred Year’s of Anti-Fascism by Dave Hann Large-scale confrontations, disruption of meetings, sabotage and street fighting have been part of the practice of anti-fascism from the early twentieth century until the twenty-first. Rarely endorsed by any political party, the use of collective bodily strength remains a strategy of activists working in alliances and coalitions against fascism. In Physical Resistance famous battles against fascists, from the Olympia arena, Earls Court in 1934 and Cable Street in 1936 to Southall in 1978 and Bradford 2010, are told through the voices of participants. Anarchists, communists and socialists who belonged to a shifting series of anti-fascist organizations relate well-known events alongside many forgotten but significant episodes. For more on the book details see: http://www.zero-books.net/books/physical-resistance
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Blog feed from around BristolIWW help in victory against Bad Boss in the care sector Bristol IWW Riots Reframed From Bristol with Love No place for capitalism in ecology movement Permanent Culture Now South Gloucs Anti Cuts Demo Bristol Unite the Resistance iDocs 2012 Media Ecologies Bristol Hunt Sabs at Vegfest 2013 Bristol Hunt Sabs Werqin? 9 to 5 Bristol Radical History Organization of American States launches groundbreaking report explori... Transform Five ?Black Flag? Anarchists Arrested in Raids in Catalonia Bristol ABC Status? Nah, I just fancy you sian and crooked rib ?Creating A New World In The Shell Of The Old? ? Report Back from Shef... Bristol Anarchist Federation ?URSA? in the Bearpit. Prints available. Pics of Grand Unveiling Gig b... PRSC Indymedia.org FeaturesGlobal Warming impacts escalate as Climate negotiations stall in Doha BATTLE OF NOTRE-DAME-DES-LANDES: Megalomaniac Airport Project In Western France Economic growth driving Global Warming towards 6 degrees C A BUILDING IS NOT ENOUGH: Occupying a Skyscraper for Art |