November 24, 2020
From Radical Glasgow (UK)
132 views


       So many injustices, so many inequalities, causing so many mass protests, like forest fires across the globe, perhaps the spark of one will leap across and ignite another area and our world will be ablaze with passion, burning all those injustices turning to ashes all those inequalities. Certainly we will never see a planet at peace as long as we allow to exist an economic system that spawns inequality, injustice and poverty for the many while lavishing pampered privilege on the few.

THE MURMUR OF THE POOR.

Brokers, bankers, Earls and Dukes,
callous, mercenary, pirate crew
gasconading through the land
bloated, pampered, privileged few.

Striding with selfish arrogance
plundering as you go
grasping at the fruits
the common people sow.

Take heed, you swaggering fat-cats,
in our world you don’t belong,
that murmur you hear is the poor
rehearsing an angry song.

The day is fast approaching
when our chorus loud you’ll hear,
then all your greed and treachery
will surely cost you dear.

A price you’ll pay for being blind
to the hungry at your door,
oh, haste the day our angry chorus
becomes a mighty roar. 

       At least 30 protesters were detained during big pro-democracy demonstrations in Peru, with multiple reports of heavy-handed treatment of largely peaceful attendees. The health ministry reported two protesters were killed and more than 30 people were being treated for injuries on Saturday after nearly a week of unrest over the controversial removal of MartĂ­n Vizcarra as president.
      Vizcarra’s replacement by a de facto government is seen by many Peruvians as a coup and people have demanded the resignation of Manuel Merino, the former speaker of congress who was sworn in as president on Tuesday
Peru’s president MartĂ­n Vizcarra ousted in impeachment vote
Two killed as huge pro-democracy protests continue in Peru

And:

       Thousands of protesters rallied for a second day in Bangkok to
condemn police use of teargas and chemical-laced water cannon jets
against them. Demonstrators gathered outside the national police
headquarters, hurling blue and yellow paint and spraying graffiti
fiercely critical of the country’s king. More than 50 people were
injured during the violent clashes with police earlier in the week
sparking calls for changes to the constitution, reform of the monarchy
and the removal of the prime minister


And:

         A black man has died after being beaten by supermarket security
guards in the city of Porto Alegre on the eve of Black Consciousness
Day. Videos of the incident circulated on social media and have sparked
outrage and protests across Brazil, with people entering Carrefour supermarkets and demanding justice for Freitas


And:

       Belarus police have arrested more than 200 people in the capital, Minsk, during the latest anti-government protests ignited by a disputed presidential election in August, human rights activists have said. Thousands took to the streets on Sunday, and police used stun grenades to disperse crowds, several Belarusian media outlets reported.

And:

        Thousands of people have staged the biggest protest yet against
Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei, with some setting fire to
Congress, fuelled by anger over cuts in the 2021 budget as the country
reels from back-to-back storms.

And:

         Thousands of demonstrators have taken to the streets of Paris on
Saturday to protest a proposed new law that would criminalise the
dissemination of images of police officers. Protesters gathered on
the Esplanade of Human Rights at the TrocadĂ©ro, chanting “Liberty!” and
carrying placards saying: “No to the police state”.

And:

       Large crowds protested in Berlin against the German government’s push to
enshrine coronavirus restrictions into an existing law. Police
intervened as the crowds sought to approach the parliament.

And:

         Tens of thousands of people marched through Australian cities and towns
for Black Lives Matter protests on Saturday, defying an attempt from the
police to ban one demonstration through the courts and despite pleas
from the prime minister and state leaders for people to stay home.

And:

        Over 3,000 primary school teachers clashed with police in the second week of protests over hiring reforms. Teachers in Athens demonstrated on Monday against government plans to change the hiring system for the public sector. Protesters held banners that read: “Permanent hirings now!”

And and and and and —

 

Visit ann arky’s home at https://radicalglasgow.me.uk   




Source: Radicalglasgowblog.blogspot.com