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Merthyr to Mayo

Submitted by Toadministrator on Sun, 01/02/2011 - 14:29

Merthyr to Mayo Solidarity Bike Ride
Making links between communities resisting fossil fuel extraction
May - June 2010

Across the planet, in the places where fossil fuels are sourced, people are resisting new energy developments.

Communities are standing together to defend their homes, health, land and water, and our shared planet… This is localised resistance with huge global significance….

From the tar sands of Alberta, Canada to the woods of Mainshill, Scotland….

from the rivers and plains of the Niger Delta to the Amazon jungles of Peru….

and

from the valleys of Merthyr Tydfil, Wales to the Northwest coast of Mayo, Ireland…

CoMutiny - Debunking BT's Greenwash

Submitted by Toadministrator on Sun, 01/02/2011 - 14:23

Bristol CoMutiny: Debunking BT's Greenwash
18 September 2009

 

On Friday 18th September during the Co-Mutiny Repossess the Banks protest, Rising Tide took action against BT offices in Bristol to highlight the link between the BT Pensions Scheme and the giant Ffos y Fran opencast coal mine at Merthyr Tydfil in South Wales. Fake coal was strewn on the floor of one office and walking lumps of coal attempted to enter another. A number of activists were arrested.

 

Santa visits BT

Submitted by Toadministrator on Sun, 01/02/2011 - 14:14

Santa visits BT and exposes coal investment
2 December 2009

 

This morning a team of Santa's arrived at the BT offices in Bristol Temple Quay to expose the truth behind the companies pension scheme. BT pensions are funding coal mining in South Wales, where Merthyr Tydfil hosts one of Europe's largest opencast coal mines.

 

 

Santa writes: BT Pension Scheme owns a company called Hermes who own Argent, of Miller-Argent fame - the company who operate the mine. Staff pension money is secretly being spent on coal mining.

 

Santas Against Excessive Consumption take to the streets of London **new pictures added**

Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 12/28/2010 - 12:34
Santas Against Excessive Consumption take to the streets of London **new pictures added**We at London Rising Tide love Christmas – reconnecting with family and friends, the rosy glow of happiness that spreads through the country as people have a chance to get closer to whatever and whoever’s most important to them. The frosty weather that envelopes us and makes us appreciate what we have all the more, and the sound of people drawn out of their houses to play in the snow. We can’t spend all our time scheming plans to topple the climate criminals working to turn our world and environment into a machine for their profit, and Christmas comes as a welcome break.

Not a Climate for Cuts

Submitted by Anonymous on Fri, 12/17/2010 - 12:28
Not a Climate for Cuts

Rising Tide has never believed that national governments are capable of truly and fairly tackling climate change. This is partly because they refuse to accept the root causes and partly, as people have seen in Germany, even an elected "Green" Party is quickly co-opted into mainstream political approaches. So over the past ten years, rather than lobbying, we have focused our attention on tackling these root causes and building grassroots alternatives to the crisis. Our analysis – that climate change is intimately connected to social justice struggles and indeed, is a product of global inequality – has gained ground during that time.

6th Annual LRT "Santas Against Excessive Consumption", Saturday the 18th December

Submitted by Anonymous on Mon, 12/06/2010 - 12:58
6th Annual LRT "Santas Against Excessive Consumption", Saturday the 18th December

Crass Xmas commercialisation - aren'tcha just sickovit?

Well, here's the antidote: a Christmas fluffy-ish singing action - brave entrepid counterculture guerrilla warriors don Santa Suits, sing anti-consumerist and anti-capitalist Xmas carols and leaflet for more mindful attention to love, gifts, and climate change - in Oxford Street, the heart of the shopping district, on one of the busiest shopping days of the year!

Londoners Go Mad About Nothing for Buy Nothing Day!

Submitted by Anonymous on Mon, 12/06/2010 - 12:37

Boxes2On a chilly Saturday afternoon on 27th of November, Oxford street shoppers were distracted by the launch of London Rising Tide's sales and advertising team's new product, Nothing(c).

We decided to mark the annual Buy Nothing Day this year by giving out a thousand free samples of '˜Nothing' to the desperate shoppers scrabbling for the latest must-have item. On our stall we had Nothing for everyone: “ Nothing for Men, Nothing for Women, Nothing Lite, Nothing for Those who have Everything and Nothing - Now with even Less. A cheeky flyer explaining the authenticity of our product and giving a link to the Buy Nothing Day website was given out along with the box of Nothing.

Not a Climate for Cuts

Submitted by Anonymous on Fri, 12/03/2010 - 10:42

cutsgraphicRising Tide has never believed that national governments are capable of truly and fairly tackling climate change. This is partly because they refuse to accept the root causes and partly, as people have seen in Germany, even an elected "Green" Party is quickly co-opted into mainstream political approaches. So over the past ten years, rather than lobbying, we have focused our attention on tackling these root causes and building grassroots alternatives to the crisis. Our analysis – that climate change is intimately connected to social justice struggles and indeed, is a product of global inequality – has gained ground during that time.

This Saturday - "Green Solutions Not Nuclear Greenwash" bloc at London Climate March

Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 11/30/2010 - 17:16
This Saturday - "Green Solutions Not Nuclear Greenwash" bloc at London Climate MarchCome and join us this Saturday the 4th of December, where we'll be joining Kick Nuclear and others from the Stop Nuclear Power Network in a vibrant "Green Energy Not Nuclear Greenwash" bloc at the National Climate Marchfor a Zero Carbon Britain. Our group will be kitted out in our white radiation hazard suits to bring the message to our government that the waste and risk involved in Nuclear energy mean that it is not a way out of our responsibilities to switch to genuinely responsible and sustainable energy.