What kind of talk is that?

Philosophers including Gramsci, Marx, Orwell, Russell and Wittgenstein noted that language shapes thought. Authoritarians from Lenin onwards built their dictatorships on this principle.

Anarchist blogger and linguistic pedant Mal Content, author of runaway bestseller The Authority of the Boot-Maker, has noted that when people fail to communicate effectively they are apt to stab one another. His glossary of current usage explores the deliberate blurring of meaning driven by the media and political class, with a little help from A.I.

“He who knows, does not speak. He who speaks, does not know.”

– Lao Tzu.

“Lao Tzu didn’t know, or he wouldn’t have spoken.”

– Kenneth Roy Park.

What is Mal talking about?

Boscombe Rising! Benefit gig 17th January 2026.

Underground, 560 Christchurch Rd, Boscombe, Bournemouth BH1 4BH (Opposite the TARDIS) 3 p.m. to 2 a.m. £12 advance or cash on the door.

facebook event

Ticket Link

Featuring:

  • All in Vain – Banjo-driven Folken Crust, Anarchist.
  • Dan Kemp – Insurrectionary folk-punk, traditional and modern.
  • Tabitha Wild – Ukelele-driven comedy festival tales, with double entendres and rude words.
  • Ancient Hostility – Modern stories of resistance, grief and direct action in traditional English close-harmony style, anarchist. (Party like it’s 1829)
  • Millie Watson – socially conscious local acoustic singer-songwriter, festival favourite.
  • Call in Sick – proper antifascist Oi! From Portsmouth (Party like it’s 1979)
  • Uncivilized – Fast-paced danceable Pompey post-punk.
  • Traffic cone Wizard – Local favourites, psychedelic post-punk goth with wide-ranging influences.
  • Spanner – Anarchist ska-punk from Bristol. Always antifascist!
  • Roots reggae with D.J. Ranking T and late night set from D.J. Mike.

Running order to be announced.

We have assembled a crew who not only passionately believe in revolution, but are actively, individually and collectively working to bring it about.

Here’s a true English rebel song from the Luddite days, when our illustrious leaderless army tied up sixteen thousand troops for three years. Let’s make the Working Class great again!

Make November International Terrorism Month. By Jesus Abu Bakr Al-Sideeq Ó Flaithbheartaigh.

Let’s face it, November is a bloody boring month, sandwiched between the Holy Month of Halloween and the weird rituals that accompany the latter-day midwinter feast; bonfire night ain’t what it was.

On 25th November we celebrate Class warrior John Hardy, killed in action on that day in 1830 near his home in Tisbury, Wiltshire. Four hundred quarrymen and labourers confronted the landowner and local M.P. John Bennett to demand two shillings per day. Bennett was knocked unconscious and his threshing machines broken. The starving workers were attacked by the infamous Yeoman Cavalry, a petty bourgeois militia modelled on such as the Carolina slave patrols, French Gendarmerie and the Dublin Constabulary, the ancestors of modern law enforcement. Fighting with a crowbar and an axe, Hardy put up ferocious resistance, slaying two cavalrymen and unhorsing another, as he took aim with a captured musket he was shot dead.

What is terrorism? It’s how states govern, instilling fear of starvation, exclusion, incarceration, violence and death at the hands of their hired thugs. The world over, governments of venal charlatans accuse journalists, musicians, artists, writers and peaceful campaigners – even medics, of terrorism, whilst butchering non-combatants with impunity.

So this November, let’s celebrate all those who fearlessly, recklessly or fecklessly took up arms against overwhelming force, in the name of personal autonomy and conscience. Now we know none of these are spotless, they are only flesh and blood, so pick your favourites and we won’t judge.

You might like: John Brown, Dedan Kimathi, Wat Tyler, Ravachole, Laureano Cerrado Santos, Abdullah Ocalan, Kaneko Fumiko, Bobby Sands, Leila Khaled, Francesc Sabate LLopart, Nat Turner, Warren James, Emilliano Zapata, Alexander Berkman, Spartacus, Alfredo Bonanno, Constance Markievicz, Manuel Lecha, Peter the Painter, John Barker, Luigi Galleani, Georg Elser, Clara and Pavel Thalmann, Mikhail Bakunin, James Connolly, Marusya Nikiforova, Stuart Christie, Fanya Kaplan, Satoshi Kirishima, Cato, Nelson Mandela, Wolfe Tone, Anna Campbell, Buenaventura Durruti, the Ascasos, Karari Njama, Jim Larkin, Bhagwati Charan Vohra, Ulrike Meinhof, Joe Slovo, Jack White, Toussaint L’Ouverture, General Ludd and Captain Swing, the Arditi del Populo, the Makhnovtchina, the Communards, the Chartists, the Bonnot Gang, the People’s Will, the Zapatistas, Conspiracy of the Cells of Fire.

And don’t forget those who were tarred with the terrorist brush by spiteful and clueless regimes: Francisco Ferrer, Fred Hampton, Big Bill Heywood, Iris Mills, Angela Davis, Andreu Nin, Emma Goldman, Altheia Jones-LeCointe, the Reavey and O’Dowd families, Frank Little, Flores Magón, Ethel MacDonald, Steve Biko, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Winston Silcott, Kneecap, Darcus Howe, Anas al-Sharif, Jean-Charles de Menezes, Martyrs – Haymarket and Tolpuddle, the sailors of the Baltic Fleet at Kronstadt, Bradford, Guildford and Birmingham numbers, the Enugu Colliers, the proprietors and patrons of McGurk’s bar.

How to celebrate? Well that’s up to you, but if you’ve never heard of these people you could start by doing a little research, then you can judge their actions by your own standards. And if you’ve ever been accused of terrorism, take courage, it’s nothing to be ashamed of.

Thanks for your support!

Please donate to the bookfair if you can, you could also buy a T-shirt or a book – ed.

Anarchy in the Sticks!

Dear Comrades,

Thank you to all who supported our Boscombe mini Bookfair:

As always Elkie, Chris and Staff at Obsidian Café who understand what we are doing and go out of their way to help. To Dan Kemp, and to Tabitha Wild and John D Revelator who stepped in at the last moment to save our gig. To the volunteers and speakers. Some visitors made very generous donations and we really appreciate it.

Our events survive on the voluntary anarchist-communist principle; “from each according to their ability, to each according to their needs”. Books and T-shirts go out at cost. We are trying to deconstruct the concept of transaction because it creates hierarchy, so if you are skint and want to read a pamphlet, have it on us. If you are destitute and hungry, come and eat with us anyway. If your pockets are empty you can still come to the party.

All our artists played for travel expenses, a few people gave us a donation to this but most did not. If you are one of those and haven’t got a pot to piss in you’re welcome, most of the Collective are in the same boat. If however, you find you can afford to contribute to the cost of the food and entertainment, please consider making a donation. These events cannot continue without your goodwill.

The DRB Collective is boycotting Chaplin’s because we have been treated with disrespect and are not welcome there. We tried to explain this to our friends, with limited success.

Consumer boycotts and withdrawal of labour are the only effective weapons of our Class. Without solidarity we are powerless, none of you would consider crossing a picket line. Anyway, it’s a shit venue and not a patch on the old Riviera, which is back in business. So if we can put the Boscome Punx off the place we might get a change of regime and a more realistic attitude – over to you!

Here’s John D with a song about the Bristol Bus Boycott – it does work, you know!

The Authority of the Boot-Maker, by Mal Content.


To order the book quote quantity and delivery address. Make payment £20 each including postage, by bank transfer to: ‘Dorset Bookfair’, Account number 84669314, Sort code 51-81-18

If the above link takes you away from the page, it’s dorsetbookfair [at] riseup [dot] net

Or read it online.

Stop the city (London) 21st February 2019

People against capitalism 12th January 2018 London

Lords v Commoners Week of Action for Land Rights April 14th to 22nd- Land Justice Network callout

Found at London Anarchist Communists
It’s time. This is a call out to groups and individuals all over the country who think that the time has come for us to have more control of our land. In order to draw attention to this injustice, we invite you to organise an event in your area between the 14th and 22nd of April. This could be a public meeting or protest with leafleting or maybe a banner drop, occupation or mass trespass. for change Join us and make the call for land justice echo around the country. get in touch via: landjusticeuk@gmail.com http://www.landjustice.uk

On Saturday April 14th, the Land Justice Network will be holding a walking tour of two of the wealthiest boroughs in London, yet where many still live in poverty: Westminster, owned largely by the Duke of Westminster, and Kensington and Chelsea, where the Earl of Cadogan owns 93 acres. Here we can see the massive area that has been taken from the people centuries ago, and now home to some of the richest landowners, investors and property speculators. By accident of birth these privileged individuals inherit a life of luxury, and by use of trusts they avoid the inheritance taxes everyone else is required to pay, so enabling the grossly unequal distribution of land to continue. Is it right that the rich can avoid paying their taxes and that their land and wealth continues to grow at the expense of the rest of society? In the countryside, large landowners dominate agriculture, squeezing out small farmers and collective farming. Agriculture workers are poorly paid and struggle to find housing that they can afford. Huge tracts of land are turned over to grouse moors to provide the rich with space for their destructive pasttimes. Our freedom to walk and enjoy nature is largely restricted to a limited network of ‘rights of way’. In the cities, land is also unequally distributed, owned by a combination of traditional aristocrats and their modern-day equivalent: offshore companies and institutional investors. Increasingly homes are now owned by buy-to-let landlords rather than by individual home owners or social landlords. All of this forces up the cost of living for those who have to rent. Tenants have little security with standard tenancies running for just 6 months. There are no controls on rent, so now on average people pay a quarter of their wages to their landlord, while in London its roughly half their salary. Even those who manage to buy their own home rarely own it outright until late in life. Most people are stuck paying a big chunk of their salary on their mortgage every month, with the worry that if they lose their job they could lose their home too. In the last 6 years homelessness has dramatically increased. It is obscene that in this day and age so many people do not have a secure home. This could be achieved if the £9.3 billion a year paid in Housing Benefit to wealthy landlords was instead used to build social housing in all communities. Urban areas also need well managed parks, community gardens and allotments, so that everyone has access to nature and the opportunity to grow food. But increasingly these spaces are being sold off or rented out to private companies for events – so damaging the parks and shutting out local residents for lengthy periods of time.

Land ownership in Britain is one of the most unequal in the world: 0.06% of the population – 36,000 people – own 50% of the rural land of England & Wales. Source: Country Land & Business Association (CLA) Land inequality is both a rural and urban issue. More than a third of our land is still owned by the aristocracy, whose ancestors seized it during the Norman Conquest. By fencing off land and using violence to exclude people, landowners (the lords) have deprived the rest of us of what should be a shared resource. The vast majority of us, the commoners, own little or nothing. Even most of the land that was once declared common land (for local use) has been taken away from us. Land saved for community use, such as for hospitals, fire stations, school playing fields, is increasingly being sold off and asset stripped by private developers. Land issues lie at the heart of so much inequality and environmental degradation in society today. Landowners are able to control and exploit our natural resources and force the rest of us to be beholden to them for food, shelter and other needs. Despite their huge wealth, our taxes are used to pay landowner £billions in farming subsidies and housing benefit, increasing inequality still further.

In the countryside, large landowners dominate agriculture, squeezing out small farmers and collective farming. Agriculture workers are poorly paid and struggle to find housing that they can afford. Huge tracts of land are turned over to grouse moors to provide the rich with space for their destructive pasttimes. Our freedom to walk and enjoy nature is largely restricted to a limited network of ‘rights of way’. In the cities, land is also unequally distributed, owned by a combination of traditional aristocrats and their modern-day equivalent: offshore companies and institutional investors. Increasingly homes are now owned by buy-to-let landlords rather than by individual home owners or social landlords. All of this forces up the cost of living for those who have to rent. Tenants have little security with standard tenancies running for just 6 months. There are no controls on rent, so now on average people pay a quarter of their wages to their landlord, while in London its roughly half their salary. Even those who manage to buy their own home rarely own it outright until late in life. Most people are stuck paying a big chunk of their salary on their mortgage every month, with the worry that if they lose their job they could lose their home too. In the last 6 years homelessness has dramatically increased. It is obscene that in this day and age so many people do not have a secure home. This could be achieved if the £9.3 billion a year paid in Housing Benefit to wealthy landlords was instead used to build social housing in all communities. Urban areas also need well managed parks, community gardens and allotments, so that everyone has access to nature and the opportunity to grow food. But increasingly these spaces are being sold off or rented out to private companies for events – so damaging the parks and shutting out local residents for lengthy periods of time.

Join us and make the call for land justice echo around the country. get in touch via: landjusticeuk@gmail.com http://www.landjustice.uk

A Mass Lambeth Walk to the Shard.

Occupy Bournemouth Homeless Sanctuary evicted, re-taken, evicted again.

Homeless are doing it for themselves in Bournemouth.

The kitchen re-built yesterday

The  site was partially evicted on the 2nd January by high court bailiffs and police, re-squatted almost immediately and the infrastructure re-built. A second, even more heavy-handed eviction took place earlier this morning 5th January. Dorset police, who can barely be arsed to turn out these days for burglary and arson unless someone dies, were complicit in the destruction of the residents’ personal effects. A.C.A.B.

Friday afternoon

The landlord, local ‘businessman’ Ammar Alkhiami (above, centre) has been described by capitalist-apologists Dorset Echo as a refugee from the Syrian Civil War.

Let us be clear, Mr Alkhiami is not a refugee, he is a capitalist. Let’s not confuse him with the unfortunates at Calais or adrift on the high seas. He entered this country with sufficient funds to set himself up as a property speculator and proprietor of numerous companies whose dealings are shrouded in mystery. He isn’t a young man, so those funds were acquired within and under the regime of the genocidal demagogue Bashar Al-Assad.

We welcome refugees from the bosses’ wars, but we do not welcome the bosses. Capitalism rests on war and relies for its survival on the state maintaining its monopoly on violence. All capitalists are therefore complicit in war and the violence of the state, if Mr Alkhiami enjoyed the protection of that regime, he has blood on his hands.

You’ve got another war on your hands now Mr Alkhiami, the Class War.

http://www.directorstats.co.uk/director/ammar-alkhiami/

Address for service: R.J. Hull accountants 312 Charminster Road, Bournemouth, BH8 9RT
Tel: 01202 533370 Fax: 01202 534267 www.rjhullaccountants.co.uk

  • Reference Library

  • The Authority of the Boot-Maker, by Mal Content.

  • New T shirt designs from Wessex Solidarity, Proceeds to D.R.B.

  • Dorset Radical Bookfair 2024

    Dorset Radical Bookfair 2023
  • Red and Black Telly.

  • Dorset IWW

  • Anarchist Action Network.

  • Anti-Fascist Network

  • Anarchist events

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