<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[Revolutionary Initiative]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[http://revolutionary-initiative.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Revolutionary Initiative]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://revolutionary-initiative.com/author/revolutionaryinitiative/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[Student Rebellion in London,&nbsp;England]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<span class="embed-youtube" style="text-align:center; display: block;"><iframe class='youtube-player' width='640' height='360' src='https://www.youtube.com/embed/MmudJafnQh0?version=3&#038;rel=1&#038;fs=1&#038;autohide=2&#038;showsearch=0&#038;showinfo=1&#038;iv_load_policy=1&#038;wmode=transparent' allowfullscreen='true' style='border:0;'></iframe></span>
<h3>Inside the Millbank Tower riots</h3>
<p>Posted by <a href="http://www.newstatesman.com/writers/laurie_penny">Laurie Penny</a> on <a href="http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/laurie-penny/2010/11/young-scary-future-riot-crowd">The New Statesman</a>&#8211; 11 November 2010 11:41</p>
<p><img class="alignnone" title="Milbank Tower Protest" src="https://mikeely.files.wordpress.com/2010/11/milbank-tower.jpg?w=440&#038;h=281" alt="" width="440" height="281" /></p>
<p><strong>“This is scary but not as scary as what’s happening to our future.”</strong></p>
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<div><img src="/DOCUME%7E1/jesse/LOCALS%7E1/Temp/moz-screenshot.png" alt="" /></div>
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<p>It’s a bright, cold November afternoon, and inside 30 Millbank, the  headquarters of the Conservative Party,  a line of riot police with  shields and truncheons are facing down a  groaning crowd of young people  with sticks and smoke bombs.</p>
<p>Screams  and the smash of trodden glass cram the foyer as the  ceiling-high  windows, entirely broken through, fill with some of the  52,000 angry  students and schoolchildren who have marched through the  heart of London  today to voice their dissent to the government’s savage  attack on  public education and public services. Ministers are cowering  on the  third floor, and through the smoke and shouting a young man in a  college  hoodie crouches on top of the rubble that was once the front  desk of  the building, his red hair tumbling into his flushed,  frightened face.</p>
<p>He  meets my eyes, just for a second.  The boy, clearly not a seasoned  anarchist, has allowed rage and the  crowd to carry him through the  boundaries of what was once considered  good behaviour, and found no one  there to stop him. The grown-ups  didn’t stop him. The police didn’t stop  him. Even the walls didn’t stop  him. His twisted expression is one I  recognise in my own face,  reflected in the screen as I type. It’s the  terrified exhilaration of a  generation that’s finally waking up to its  own frantic power.</p>
<p><!--more-->Glass  is being thrown; I fling myself behind a barrier and scramble  on to a  ledge for safety. A nonplussed school pupil from south London  has had  the same idea. He grins, gives me a hand up and offers me a  cigarette of  which he is at least two years too young to be in  possession. I find  that my teeth are chattering and not just from cold.  “It’s scary, isn’t  it?” I ask. The boy shrugs. “Yeah,” he says, “I  suppose it is scary. But  frankly…” He lights up, cradling the  contraband fag, “frankly, it’s  not half as scary as what’s happening to  our future.”</p>
<p>There are three things to note about this riot, the first of its kind  in Britain  for decades, that aren’t being covered by the press. The  first is that  not all of the young people who have come to London to  protest are  university students. Lots are school pupils, and many of  the 15, 16 and  17 year olds present have been threatened with expulsion  or withdrawal  of their EMA benefits if they chose to protest today.  They are here  anyway, alongside teachers, young working people and  unemployed  graduates.</p>
<p>What unites them? A chant strikes up: “We’re young! We’re poor! We won’t pay any more!”</p>
<p>The  second is that this is not, as the right-wing news would have  you  believe, just a bunch of selfish college kids not wanting to pay  their  fees (many of the students here will not even be directly  affected by  the fee changes). This is about far more than university  fees, far more  even than the coming massacre of public education.</p>
<p>This  is about a political settlement that has broken its promises  not once  but  <strong></strong>repeatedly, and proven that it exists to represent the  best  interests of the business community, rather than to be accountable  to  the people. The students I speak to are not just angry about fees,   although the Liberal Democrats’  U-turn on that issue is manifestly an  occasion of indignation: quite  simply, they feel betrayed. They feel  that their futures have been sold  in order to pay for the financial  failings of the rich, and they are  correct in their suspicions. One  tiny girl in animal-print leggings  carries a sign that reads: “I’ve  always wanted to be a bin man.”</p>
<p>The  third and most salient point is that the violence kicking off  around  Tory HQ — and make no mistake, there is violence, most of it  directed  at government property — is not down to a “small group of  anarchists  ruining it for the rest.” Not only are Her Majesty’s finest  clearly  giving as good as they’re getting, the vandalism is being  committed  largely by consensus — those at the front are being carried  through by a  groundswell of movement from the crowd.</p>
<p><img title="Milbank Tower, 10 November 2010. Credit: Dougal Wallace" src="https://i2.wp.com/images.newstatesman.com/blogs/November2010/milibank2.jpg" alt="Milbank Tower, 10 November 2010. Credit: Dougal Wallace" width="441" height="293" /></p>
<p>Not  all of those smashing through the foyer are in any way kitted  out like  your standard anarchist black-mask gang. These are kids making  it up as  they go along. A shy looking girl in a nice tweed coat and  bobble hat  ducks out of the way of some flying glass, squeaks in  fright, but sets  her lips determinedly and walks forward, not back,  towards the line of  riot cops. I see her pull up the neck of her pink  polo-neck to hide her  face, aping those who have improvised bandanas.  She gives the glass  under her feet a tentative stomp, and then a firmer  one. Crunch, it  goes. Crunch.</p>
<p>As more riot vans roll up and the military police move in, let’s  whisk back three hours and 300 metres up the road, to Parliament Square.  The cold winter sun  beats down on 52,000 young people pouring down  Whitehall to the  Commons. There are twice as many people here as anyone  anticipated, and  the barriers erected by the stewards can’t contain  them all: the  demonstration shivers between the thump of techno sound  systems and the  stamp of samba drums, is a living, panting beast,  taking a full hour to  slough past Big Ben in all its honking glory. A  brass band plays the Liberty Bell  while excited students yammer and  dance and snap pictures on their  phones. “It’s a party out here!” one  excited posh girl tells her mobile,  tottering on Vivienne Westwood  boots while a bunch of Manchester anarchists run past with a banner  saying “Fuck Capitalism”.</p>
<p>One  can often take the temperature of a demonstration by the tone of  the  chanting. The cry that goes up most often at this protest is a   thunderous, wordless roar, starting from the back of the crowd and   reverberating up and down Whitehall. There are no words. It’s a shout of   sorrow and celebration and solidarity and it slices through the chill   winter air like a knife to the stomach of a trauma patient. Somehow,  the  pressure has been released and the rage of Europe’s young people is   flowing free after a year, two years, ten years of poisonous   capitulation.</p>
<p>They  spent their childhoods working hard and doing what they were  told with  the promise that one day, far in the future, if they wished  very hard  and followed their star, their dreams might come true. They  spent their  young lives being polite and articulate whilst the  government lied and  lied and lied to them again. They are not prepared  to be polite and  articulate any more. They just want to scream until  something changes.  Perhaps that’s what it takes to be heard.</p>
<p>“Look,  we all saw what happened at the big anti-war protest back in  2003,”  says Tom, a postgraduate student from London. “Bugger all,  that’s what  happened. Everyone turned up, listened to some speeches and  then went  home. It’s sad that it’s come to this, but…” he gestures  behind him to  the bonfires burning in front of the shattered windows of  Tory HQ.  “What else can we do?”</p>
<p>We’re  back at Millbank and bonfires are burning; a sign reading  “Fund our  Future!” goes up in flames. Nobody quite expected this.  Whatever we’d  whispered among ourselves, we didn’t expect that so many  of us would  share the same strength of feeling, the same anger, enough  to carry  2,000 young people over the border of legality. We didn’t  expect it to  be so easy, nor to meet so little resistance. We didn’t  expect suddenly  to feel ourselves so powerful, and now — now we don’t  quite know what  to do with it. I put my hands to my face and find it  tight with tears.  This is tragic, as well as exhilarating.</p>
<p>Yells  of “Tory Scum!” and “No ifs, no buts, no education cuts!”  mingle with  anguished cries of “Don’t throw shit!” over the panicked  rhythm of drums  as the thousand kids crowded into the atrium try to  persuade those who  have made it to the roof not to chuck anything that  might actually hurt  the police. But somebody, there’s always one, has  already thrown a fire  extinguisher. A boy with a scraggly ginger beard  rushes in front of the  riot lines. He hollers, “Stop throwing stuff,  you twats! You’re making  us look bad!” A girl stumbles out of the  building with a streaming head  wound; it’s about to turn ugly. “I just  wanted to get in and they were  pushing from the back,” she says. “A  policeman just lifted up his baton  and smacked me.”</p>
<p>“We  voted for people who promised to change things for the better,  and they  broke all their promises,” Tom tells me. “There’s nothing left  for us  but direct action. I’m not one of those black-mask anarchists,  by the  way. I just think this is right. This is what needed to happen.  We  needed to make ourselves heard.”</p>
<p>Tom  invites me to join him on the sofa. With a slight double-take, I   realise that this is one of the executive sofas from inside Tory HQ,   dragged out and plonked in the middle of the pavement with the burning   signs and the litter. “Come on, sit down,” he says. “If we’re going to   be kettled, we may as well get comfy.”</p>
<p>Suddenly  there’s a cheer. The boys and girls who have made it to the  roof have  dropped a banner to announce their presence. The sunshine  glints off  their faces; we squint as we peer up to where they’re  punching the air,  shouting in triumph, dropping more banners and  leaflets fluttering like  ticker-tape in the sharp winter light. A young  couple lean over the edge  and begin to kiss and cuddle each other, and  for a moment it’s  beautiful, we are beautiful, we can do anything.</p>
<p>Then behind the crowd, I hear another sound, coming closer. It’s the sound of an ambulance.</p>
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