Workshop “Networks sociali nei movimenti globali”

Start event:
End event:

Location:l.o.a. Acrobax

Start event: 8/02/12 – 18:00End event: 8/02/12 – 20:45Location:l.o.a. AcrobaxMercoledì 8 Febbraio – ore 18 Networks sociali nei movimenti globali Verso l’Hubmeeting 2.0 LOA Acrobax Introduzione: Punti San Precario Roma Relatori: Aitor Tinoco i Girona – Attivista di Democracia Real Ya (DRY), Barcellona. Vincenzo Carbone -  Ricercatore di sociologia dei processi sociali e comunicativi, Universitá [...]

Romattiva cambia indirizzo

Romattiva si trasferisce all’indirizzo http://romattiva.wordpress.com Rimane sempre attivo il dominio www.romattiva.org

ANTIFA!nzine n. 2 – Primo numero scaricabile gratuitamente in occasione dell’uscita del n.2!

Secondo appuntamento con la rivista autoprodotta della Corto Comix Presentato in anteprima durante la manifestazione Attraversamenti Multipli(18 novembre 2011) a Roma, il secondo numero di ANTIFA!nzine è finalmente realtà! Tra le sue pagine potrete sfogliare: – Nuove storie a fumetti di Toni Bruno, Alex Tirana, ZeroCalcare eGianluca Romano & Claudio Calia! – Un racconto di Roberto Mandracchia direttamente dalla redazione di TerraNullius e illustrato da La [...]

E nella notte romana anche Occupy Grazioli con qualche tensione con la polizia

VIDEO : http://video.repubblica.it/dossier/berlusconi-dimissioni-governo-2011/occupy-palazzo-grazioli-e-nella-notte-parte-il-trenino/80630/79020 http://video.repubblica.it/dossier/berlusconi-dimissioni-governo-2011/tensione-sotto-palazzo-grazioli/80622/79012  

Vespa contestato e insultato davanti al Valle

30 OTTOBRE 2011 Vespa contestato e insultato davanti al Valle Parolacce, fischi e cori contro il conduttore di Porta a Porta. Il video che sta girando su Facebook mostra il giornalista alle prese con un gruppo di persone che gli urla “Venduto, la Rai è servizio pubblico” VIDEO : http://video.repubblica.it/edizione/roma/vespa-contestato-e-insultato-davanti-al-valle/79603?video  

[15 ottobre] Diretta audio della giornata su www.transizionedifase.org

transizionedifase.org sta trasmettendo una diretta dal mediacenter di indymedia. Trasmetteremo notizie, corrispondenze audio e aggiornamenti sulla manifestazione del 15 ottobre United for Global Change. Per ascoltarci vai su www.transizionedifase.org

I peccati della Maddalena e Fratelli di Tav (video)

I peccati della Maddalena from fratelli di TAV on Vimeo.

TEHRAN ECHOES > echi di rivolta dall’Iran @ Strike SpA

Yo Migro! Orgoglio meticcio – presenta

TEHRAN ECHOES
Echi di rivolta dall’Iran

Martedì 14 settembre h. 21.00 @ Strike PiuB

«Chi governa ha paura delle voci, perché raccontano di una rivoluzione tradita e di un popolo calpestato e il governo teme la verità e i fantasmi. I basij, pochi metri più sotto, perlustrano la strada con le teste alzate, ma non è facile vedere nella notte della capitale. Le voci sono snervanti e impalpabili, nemici che non si possono colpire. I fantasmi sono dappertutto. Le loro grida si inseguono, si fanno coro, si sovrappongono. A volte scorgi nel buio un movimento fugace, sul tetto di fronte o su quell’altro vicino, ma non potresti giurare di averlo visto davvero. Sembra che trent’anni di storia collassino qui, sotto questo cielo carico di voci disperate e piene di speranza».

(Anticipazione da Tehran Echoes, ed. Postcart, in corso di stampa 2010)

h.21.00 incontro con

Pietro Masturzo (fotografo vincitore del World Press Photo 2009) e Carlo Maddalena (giornalista)
Freelancers a Tehran durante le proteste del 2009
e autori di Tehran Echoes, in prossima uscita edizioni Postcart

Shon Meckfessel
Rete FreeOurFriends per la liberazione di Shane, Sarah e Josh,
media-attivisti detenuti in Iran dal luglio 2009

A seguire proiezione di:

Roofs of Tehran
E-motion di Pietro Masturzo e Woka Productions
La rivolta dei tetti nel giugno 2009

Un ponte tra oriente e occidente
Selezione foto e video dei lavori di Shan Bauer, Sarah Shourd e Josh Fattal tra Palestina, Iraq e Iran

È il giugno 2009 quando in Iran scoppia la rivolta. Una rivolta innescata da elezioni farsa e che in pochi giorni attraverserà Teheran come un fiume in piena, nutrendosi della città stessa e dei suoi sogni, ingrossandosi e rimescolandosi in istanze diverse, non amalgamate, ma unite in un fermo desiderio di riappropriazione del presente. Pietro Masturzo e Carlo Maddalena, freelancers presenti in Iran in quei giorni, sono stati testimoni e al tempo stesso protagonisti di quella lotta, sfidando il divieto imposto ai giornalisti stranieri e rimanendo al fianco degli studenti che si riprendevano strade e tetti della città, in una battagli carica di simbolismi e rimandi. Poche settimane dopo, nel luglio 2009, tre giovani attivisti statunitensi, Shane Bauer (giornalista), Sarah Shourd (insegnante) e Josh Fattal (media-attivista), vengono arrestati al confine tra Iraq e Iran. All’oggi sono ancora detenuti nelle carceri iraniane, con Sarah in costante regime di isolamento. Shon Meckfessel, attivista e amico che viaggiava con loro al momento dell’arresto, è in tour in Europa per denunciare la loro condizione e presentare una selezione dei lavori realizzati dai tre nel corso del tempo.

www.pietromasturzo.com
www.worldpressphoto.org
www.freeourfriends.eu

Martedì 14 settembre h.21:00 @ Strike PiuB
Via U. Partini 21 (Portonaccio/Casalbertone).
Metro B Tiburtina. Bus: 409, 545.

www.strike-spa.net
http://yomigro.noblogs.org/

In vista dell’autunno caldo, indyroma si rivede

Indyroma si rivede Domenica 3 ottobre al Volturno (via Volturno 37, nei pressi di Termini) alle ore 20.00 Dopo il periodo di “congelamento” abbiamo deciso di interrogarci sulle sorti di indyroma (ritornare attiva o meno), sui suoi rapporti con indymedia a livello nazionale, su critiche, proposte e spunti nati dalla mailing list, e commenti a [...]

Controversial Call Gives Casual Soccer Fans Reason to Follow Team USA

Take the case of Armando Galarraga. Before his almost-no-hitter, he was just a pitcher struggling to maintain his spot in the Tigers’ rotation. But after Jim Joyce blew a call at first base with two outs in the ninth inning of Galarraga’s perfect game, he went from nobody to Detroit’s — and America’s — ‘sweetheart.’ Nobody outside of the Motor City (and probably many of those within it) wouldn’t even know his name if Joyce hadn’t stolen perfection from him.

Isn’t that what’s happening with the U.S. soccer team, too?

Now, people who would never classify themselves as soccer fans are suddenly invested in the U.S.’ fate in the first round of the World Cup. Why? Because a bad call could stand in between the U.S. and the opportunity to continue competing for the honor of winning a worldwide competition that only happens once every four years.

The U.S. is certainly no favorite to keep competing in South Africa. Nobody expects it to win, just like nobody expected to see America’s hockey team playing against Canada for the gold medal in February.

But that happened. And so could this — if bad calls don’t get in the way.

On June 19, in the midst of its second game of the World Cup, the U.S. was deadlocked at 1 against Slovenia when Maurice Edu found the back of the net in the 86th minute. This, during a game in which the Americans rallied from a two-goal deficit at halftime — during a game when the U.S. could have become the first team in 80 years to overcome that margin en route to victory.

Instead, referee Koman Coulibaly blew the whistle just before Edu fired his shot, and the unquestionably- good goal was disallowed. Edu wasn’t offsides. He wasn’t jostling anyone wearing white any more than they were returning the favor. The two teams finished in a draw, and the U.S. lost two points instead of putting itself in prime position to keep playing long after Wednesday.

According to Landon Donovan, Coulibaly would not offer an explanation for why he blew the whistle in the first place. During his postgame news conference, U.S. head coach Bob Bradley still had no idea what the foul call was for.

“I still don’t know why the goal was disallowed,” Bradley told the media. “Nobody knows at this moment.”

New England Revolution forward Taylor Twellman has another theory as to why no explanation was offered after the call was made.

“Part of soccer culture is, when you make a call, the two captains and come over and ask you, ‘What was the call?’ And you’re supposed to respond,” Twellman said on Monday’s “Toucher and Rich Show” on 98.5 The Sports Hub. “I’ve talked to some of the players via email and stuff, and the funny thing is, on the field, [Coulibaly said], ‘I don’t speak English.’ Well, after the game, FIFA says, ‘No, he’s bilingual, he speaks English and French.’”

Whatever the reason for Coulibaly’s lack of explanation, there’s still no excuse for it — and now, it could cost the U.S. its chance to advance in the competition. The referees should not be the ones deciding who gets the opportunity to keep playing, and when the referees become a hindrance instead of an equalizing force, there’s a problem.

“I’m honestly still stunned,” Twellman said. “I just hope the U.S. gets through so we can stop talking about it. … I’m just tired of it. Let the players play, let the ball decide it and put the whistle away.”

In the case of Galarraga, at least Jim Joyce immediately admitted that he was in the wrong. At least he admitted that he blew the call, promptly apologized for something that umpires have no obligation to apologize for, took the blame.

This, though, is not like an umpire missing a close call at first. There’s no room for error in the World Cup, not when it only happens once every four years and you’ve got one shot to go big or go home. How do you explain to Donovan, to Bradley, that there’s no reason a game they won was stolen from them? How do you explain to them that they just have to suck it up and move on?

FIFA has been in the process of reviewing Coulibaly’s performance (a standard practice which all referees are subject to), but it is unlikely he will be disciplined publicly, if at all. According to The Wall Street Journal, even if the committee finds that Coulibaly made a mistake, there won’t be any kind of public shaming. in all likelihood, he just won’t be assigned to any future matches.

That’s great, but none of that helps the U.S. get its goal back.

There’s no excuse for a referee making a bad call and getting away with it – not when the stakes are this high, even in a country that isn’t — or wasn’t — completely invested in the sport.

There aren’t many positives to take from the outcome of last Friday’s game, but undeniably, one of them is the fact that this controversy has lit a fire under a nation that didn’t care before there was something to care about. The bad call — no matter how bad it was — has given fans in the U.S. something to unite over, something to feel passionate about. Sure, it would have been nice to get a win over Slovenia (and it’s not as though a win wouldn’t have given American fans those same vibes), but controversy like this always gets sports fans going more than winning. Controversy gives you something besides the opponent triumph over, something else to beat. Because controversy makes the road to victory more difficult, it also renders the eventual win all the more gratifying.

Even the team notices this strange phenomenon — that people suddenly care.

“Things are starting to leak into our training camp,” goalkeeper Tim Howard told the Telegraph (U.K.). “People are up in arms and they can’t believe the call. That’s pretty cool. … For people, particularly our American fans back home, to be so up in arms about it does show that firstly, they care, and secondly, they are getting hip to the game and starting to understand how it all works.”

America has never been gung-ho about soccer, but controversy has a way of making people take notice, think, pay attention. It has a way of making people care.
Unfortunately, though, all those Americans who now suddenly care could be gearing up to watch the U.S.’s last game on Wednesday against Algeria.

And if that happens — if the U.S. loses — there will be plenty of fans pointing to this one mistake as the moment the tides turned.

Regardless of the outcome, though, one thing is for sure: Everyone will be watching.

“I think we’ve all been pretty well informed as to response back home via text, e-mail, phone calls, Facebook etc., Internet,” Donovan told The Associated Press on Monday. “In some ways, it’s really heartening to see how much people care. And the one thing we do know is that Wednesday night, or Wednesday morning in the States, is going to a be a really big occasion and we relish that because we don’t get that very often. We know people are talking about it and people care.”

If the U.S. can overcome a devastating blow like this, then the call — the missed opportunity — becomes only a bump in the road. It doesn’t define this summer for this team. Hopefully, the fans who do care about the fate of this team get something to continue to root for. Hopefully, the U.S. can rally just like it did on Friday, because that would certainly be the best thing for a nation that just isn’t interested in the sport. It’s exactly the kind of storyline we all love — rags to riches, overcoming the impossible en route to the greatest victory of all.

But if the U.S. loses — well, all those fans the team gained in the midst of the controversy won’t be sticking around.

That call could be the moment that crushed the dreams of the U.S. soccer team. But if a few cards fall the right way on Wednesday — if the U.S. gets a good bounce instead of a devastating one — it also could be the moment that this country started caring about those dreams in the first place.