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The post Sadiq Khan’s Officials Suppressed Report Showing LTNs Don’t Cut Car Use appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
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The Sceptic | Episode 51: Charlie Kirk, Free Speech and the Scourge of ?Anti-Fascism?, and Why Brits... Fri Sep 19, 2025 07:00 | Richard Eldred
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Comments (7 of 7)
Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7This guy was great down at Shannon the last time ... wearing his chefs hat and pushing the food trolley around
does anyone know where you can get a good high resolution copy of the fnb logo, ye know the one with the raised fist holding a carrot, its cool and I want to do up some banners and t-shirts to start an fnb in my area at some point
The .com email address listed by PC is incorrect it should be .org, email foodnotbombs-subscribe@thisbetterworld.org to become a member of the FNB mailing list. email foodnotbombs@thisbetterworld.org to send to the list (due to SPAM only members can post)
In many cities in the United States, anarchists have organized "Food Not
Bombs" feeds. The organizers of these projects will explain that food
should be free, that no one should ever have to go hungry. Certainly a fine
sentiment...and one to which the anarchists respond in much the same way as
christians, hippies or left liberals -- by starting a charity.
We will be told, however, that "Food Not Bombs" is different. The decision-
making process used by the organizers is nonheirarchical. They recieve no
government or corporate grants. In many cities, they serve their meals as
an act of civil disobedience, risking arrest. Obviously, "Food Not Bombs"
is not a large-scale charitable bureaucracy; in fact, it is often a very
slip-shod effort...but it is a charity -- and that is never questioned by
its anarchist organizers.
Charities are a necessary part of any economic social system. The scarcity
imposed by the economy creates a situation in which some people are unable
to meet their most basic needs through the normal channels. Even in nations
with highly developed social welfare programs, there are those who fall
through the cracks in the system. Charities take up the slack where the
state's welfare programs can't or won't help. Groups like "Food Not Bombs"
are, thus a voluntary workforce helping to preserve the social order by
reinforcing the dependence of the poor upon programs not of their own
creation.
No matter how non-heirarchal the decision-making process used by the
relationship is always authoritarian. The beneficiaries of a charity are at
the mercy of the organizers of the program and so are not free to act on
their own terms in this relationship. This can be seen in the humiliating
way in which one must recieve charity. Charity feeds like "Food Not Bombs"
require the beneficiaries to arrive at a time not of their choosing in
order to stand in line to recieve food not of their choosing (and usually
poorly made) in quantities doled out by some volunteer who wants to make
sure that everyone gets a fair share. Of course, it's better than going
hungry, but the humiliaton is at least as great as that of waiting in line
at the grocery store to pay for food one actually wants and can eat when
one wants it. The numbness we develop to such humiliation -- the numbness
which is made evident by the case with which certain anarchists will opt to
eat at charity feeds every day in order to avoid paying for food, as though
there were no other options -- shows the extent to which our society is
permeated with such humiliating interactions. Still, one would think that
anarchists would refuse such interactions as far as it lies within their
power to do so and would seek to create interactions of a different sort in
order to destroy the humiliation imposed by society. Instead, many create
programs that reinforce this humiliation.
But what of the empathy one may feel for another who is suffering from a
poverty one knows all too well; what of the desire to share food with
others? Programs like "Food Not Bombs" do not express empathy, they express
pity. Doling out food is not sharing; it is an impersonal, hierarchical
relationship between social role "donor" and social role "beneficiary".
Lack of imagination has led anarchists to deal with the question of hunger
(which is an abstract question for most of them) in much the same way as
christians and liberals, creating institutions which parallel those which
already exist. As is to be expected when anarchists attempt to do an
inherently authoritarian task, they do a piss-poor job...Why not leave
charity work to those who have no illusions about it? Anarchists would do
better to find ways of sharing individually if they are so moved, ways
which encourage self-determination rather than dependence and affinity
rather than pity.
There is nothing anarchist about "Food Not Bombs". Even the name is a
demand being made to the authorities. This is why its organizers so
frequently use civil disobedience -- it is an attempt to appeal to the
consciences of those in power, to get them to feed and house the poor.
There is nothing in this program that encourages self-determination. There
is nothing that would encourage the beneficiaries to refuse that role and
begin to take what they want and need without following the rules. "Food
Not Bombs", like every other charity, encourages its beneficiaries to
remain passive recipients rather than becoming active creators of their own
lives. Charity must be recognized for what it is: another aspect of the
institutionalized humiliation inherent in our economized existence which
must be destroyed so we can fully live.
go to the website and you find a eps version of the carot try that if not mail me at honkdub@yahoo.com and ill find the right thing for ya at home
you don't seem to know much about fnb as one of founding principals was to be not charity and directly involve those it shares food with
This is my personal experience with FnB. I admit this is not from reading 'the founding principals', as pc commented, 'direct involvement'. This is from my own, personal interaction with FnB:
Feral writes: "it is a charity - and that is never questioned by it's anarchist organizers".
Feral, you've done interviews with every FnB all over the world, and never once have found an incorrectness with your description of FnB?
Words like 'never' and 'always' in writings raise red flags for me. I become suspect.
FnB where I've worked, has frequently been open to people coming to contribute their time. The line can be quite blurry between who does the work and who recieves the benefit, with many people being on both sides. Frequently, when I've been in the kitchen preparing, people have walked up to the house, and offered to help - and they have. These people had previously recieved the benefit of FnB. People at food distro sites pitch in carrying boxes or massaging the throngs of people into somewhat saner configurations.
In the ordinary charity, Feral seems to be at pains to compare FnB with, again from my own experience, the following scenario:
Unwashed 'street types' (myself included) recieving a set amount of barely digestible food from a nicely-dressed church lady across the table. There is no clear way to contribute; cash donations by people recieving food are usually declined.
(I think it's nice to learn how to recieve.)
'"Food Not Bombs", like every other charity, encourages its beneficiaries to remain passive recipients rather than becoming active creators of their own lives.' I have not see this happen. FnB due to it's autonomous nature, may have people in some cities operating it as a normal charity, although I have not seen this happen. If people 'on the street' are offering help, and barred from doing so, as a contributor to FnB I would strongly question my ethos for doing so. As well, if I was unaware of my behaviour, I appreciate it when someone who notices, comes to me and makes it clear what is incorrect, without creating unnecessary drama.
Feral's comments: "Pity" and "Doling out food". In my memory, perhaps inaccurate, I have not felt 'pity' when working with FnB. Food, in experiences, is placed on park benches in 5-gallon buckets. People come up and serve themselves, in part because of health-code regulations. People are inspired. It is unusual for anyone to stand and dole out food.
I think a helpful way is for readers who are not involved in FnB, to go to the local FnB kitchen, help where they can. For readers who are involved, to help by engaging in discussion on how better FnB can be done. Expansion, food sources, creation of new ideas. Or making it smaller, while a re-organization takes place, or while crowds shrink. Fliers, etc., increased participation. FnB is an event, a gathering.
Have fun!