Tuesday, March 28, 2006
Standstill. posted by Richard Seymour
The awareness that they are about to make the continuum of history explode is characteristic of the revolutionary classes at the moment of their action. The great revolution introduced a new calendar. The initial day of a calendar serves as a historical time-lapse camera. And, basically, it is the same day that keeps recurring in the guise of holidays, which are days of remembrance. Thus the calendars do no measure time as clocks do; they are monuments of a historical consciousness of which not the slightest trace has been apparent in Europe in the past hundred years. In the July revolution an incident occurred which showed this consciousness still alive. On the first evening of fighting it turned out that the clocks in towers were being fired on simultaneously and independently from several places in Paris. An eye-witness, who may have owed his insight to the rhyme, wrote as follows:
Who would have believed it! we are told that new Joshuasat the foot of every tower, as though irritated with time itself, fired at the dials in order to stop the day. (Walter Benjamin, Theses on the Philosophy of History
U.K. Strike May Be Biggest in 80 Years as Local Services Close.
Thousands of pupils have been told to stay home as schools and some colleges close. Although teachers are not striking, support workers such as janitors, cooks and lollipop men will be involved.
In Liverpool, commuters faced disruption as the Mersey river tunnels shut and ferries stopped running. All buses and trains were cancelled in Northern Ireland and in London 70 percent of schools failed to open.
The Tower of London was also closed and the river Thames anti-flood barrier reduced to emergency staffing levels. One airport, the regional Leeds Bradford, suffered minimal delays..
One day strike paralyses Ulster
Sound of birds twittering...
Meanwhile...
And in France...
Hundreds of thousands protest in France.
France Deploys Police Amid National Strike.