Waar: Beursplein, Amsterdam, Netherlands (GPS lat: 52.374200 lon: 4.895486)
Wanneer: 13/10/2012 - 14:00
# globalNOISE is een oproep tot actie om de solidariteit tussen internationale sociale bewegingen te tonen door middel van een gecoördineerde wereldwijde actie om lawaai te maken. Groepen van over de hele wereld zullen op 13 oktober op potten en pannen slaan, muziek maken, zingen en schreeuwen om hun zorgen te uiten. We laten horen dat er wereldwijd een beweging is waarbij mensen strijden tegen de financiele zwendel en voor economische en sociale rechtvaardigheid.
Op dit moment is #globalNOISE in Amsterdam feedback en voorstellen om mee te doen aan het verzamelen van sociale bewegingen en andere groepen. Wij vragen aan iedereen om dit voorstel tot wereldwijde actie te ondersteunen en deze oproep verder te verspreiden.
Wil je helpen bij de co-creatie van het event of bij het organiseren van de # globalNOISE in Amsterdam? Stuur een e-mail naar: info@occupyamsterdam.nl
Bezoek de # globalNOISE website op : www.globalnoise.net
#globalNOISE event Amsterdam Facebook https://www.facebook.com/events/100344706788335/ :
video here:
http://ourmediaindymedia.blogspot.nl/2012/10/potten-en-pannen-tegen-de-f...
and some english from : http://www.globalnoise.net
What is globalNOISE?
Activists involved in the Indignato, Occupy, #yosoy132, etc movements have begun a campaign to create GlobalNoise, a worldwide cacerolazo, or casserole march, on Saturday, October 13th, 2012. The hope is that local Occupations and Collectives will take up the call to march, using the method of a casserole march to highlight whatever issues are the most important to their community.
Historically, banging on a pot has been a universally understood means to gain attention. The casserole march has its origins as a means to call attention to problems facing the community that the power structure is not addressing, using a method that is hard to ignore. In the past, this form of activism has been used to draw attention to education reform, starvation, government corruption, inequality in resources, and more.
It has been revived recently in the international Occupy and Spanish Indignatos movements, and most notably by the Student movement in Canada. Since then, it has spread worldwide. It is from these historical references and recent examples that the idea of a coordinated worldwide cacerolazo emerged. An international showing of frustration and unrest on a global scale that would be hard to ignore. A GlobalNoise.
Kitchen equipment may be the first choice, it is most certainly not the only choice. You can use whatever will make noise, even actual instruments, like whistles, horns, vuvuzelas, or even drums. DIY instruments or established noise makers don’t matter, just make noise. You can even encourage drivers to join in with their horns as you pass them on the march. In Spain, they call that “Pitodromo”.
join the working group!
The bigger the group the louder the noise, but even one person banging on a pot makes a lot of noise.
The GlobalNoise working group encourages you to organize Cacerolazo actions in your own city for October 13th 2012. (Due to events already being planned and in progress in various assemblies, some groups and collectives will have GlobalNoise actions over the course of that week. So if the 13th is impossible for your group, try for another day in that week.
Remember, potbanging marches are particularly suited for spontaneous participation, especially if the attitude and tone of the march stays festive and positive. Spectators quickly realize that they don’t need anything more than a noise maker to join in.