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The Left Culture Club hosts social events, skill-sharing workshops, cultural activities, film screenings, reading groups and games nights for London's progressives, dissidents, and radicals. Everyone is welcome, whatever your politics or your level of political committment.
The Club was created to solve a problem: how do we bring together all people trying to face the political, economic and social challenges of our times and give them a space to understand each other better, without making political parties or activist organisations the starting point? There's nothing worse than trying to get to know people and explore progressive politics when the price of admission to these spaces is making all the right political committments, reading all the right literature, or having the right backstory. The LCC wants to make the political left a welcoming place again, and that means providing a space for progressives and radicals to move together without having to sign up to each others' newsletters from day one.
If you ever wanted to learn more about emancipatory politics, or if you've ever felt like your activist group or political org wasn't providing the social space that every broad movement needs in order to hold itself together, then the Left Culture Club is for you.
We're committed to making every one of our events welcoming and safe for everybody. Our spaces are non-partisan, but not apolitical. Racism, sexism, antisemitism, classism, forms of discrimination based on sexual preference or gender identity: all these are obviously way out of line. If you are a victim of bigotry or harrasment at any of our events, please raise this with an organiser who will act appropriately. We broadly follow this code of conduct https://wiki.dbzer0.com/the-anarchist-code-of-conduct/.
今後のイベント (4)件
すべて見る- Climb Club: Indoor Rock Climbing @ Stratford City Bouldering (£14.5 ENTRY)City Bouldering Stratford, London
Hello verticalists! Join us Friday, May 30th as LCC goes (indoor) rock climbing, aka bouldering. We'll start from around 17:30 and stick around until around 8PM - feel free to join us at any point within the window.
This is a surprisingly addictive, fun sport, easy to master and always great for your upper body, core and grip strength, hand-eye co-ordination and general mobility. Indoor bouldering is a great way to get the rush of rock climbing in a safer environment without the need of complex rope and anchor systems.
For this inaugural meetup, we'll be at Stratford City Bouldering, just a few minutes' walk south of Stratford station or west of the Stratford High Street DLR stop. Peak time entry to City Bouldering locations is £14.5 and shoe hire (if you don't have your own to bring along) is £3.
If it's your first time at this location, be sure to fill out the mandatory pre-registration form at this link and find out more about bouldering in general here.
In future, we'll check out other locations across London and experiment with non-peak times if there's sufficient demand.
Take care and see you on the walls!
- LMRG WORLD @ WAR 2025: The Gulf War Did Not Take Place [1991], CHAPTER 2London Action Resource Centre, London
TEXT FOR THIS MEETUP: The Gulf War Did Not Take Place, Chapter 2
LENGTH: 25 pages
LINK: https://archive.org/details/the-gulf-war-did-not-take-place-jean-baudrillard/mode/2up
Hi all and welcome back for instalment the third of our Baudrillard reading group! This time we're continuing to march through chapter 2, with the hope of finally finishing off our epic journey through this rich, if sometimes confusing, chapter, with a view to making our next meetup the last one for Baudrillard this year.
As usual, we'll meet upstairs at London Action Resource Centre in Whitechapel for the main event of the evening, which should last about 2 hours. Afterwards we'll head to the Good Samaritan pub up the road to keep the convo going on a more informal level.
For context on the text and the LMRG reading series of which it will be the first of many, here's the background we provided in the description for our last meetup:
We're starting off with Jean Baudrillard's series of essays, collected in 1991 with the provocative title The Gulf War Did Not Take Place. Rather than deny the literal reality of the Gulf War, Baudrillard challenged his readers to consider the non-reality of "The Gulf War" as it was then (and is now) known to mass-media consumer audiences in Europe and the Anglophone countries, i.e. as a spectacular, perfect war, over within weeks, in which all the death and destruction was suffered on one side while the other simply kicked back in their air-conditioned control rooms and cockpits, pressing buttons and unleashing hell with impunity. The text addresses questions of technology, media, and spectacle as they relate to modern conflicts; the Gulf War prefigured not only the subsequent US invasion of Iraq but also the entire contemporary model of how high-tech wars, in the minds of military planners and PR/psychological operations specialists, are supposed to go. Even today, decades on, as conventional conflicts rage across the globe, we can see how mass media and social media continue to mediate our relationship with conflict, especially as non-combatants but even (increasingly) as participants. FPV drones for example have not only revolutionised battlefield tactics but, perhaps as importantly, the way recruitment and propaganda materials are filmed.
Happy reading comrades and see you soon!
- LCC Nature Walks: RODING VALLEY WAY, Loughton to Ilford [EAST LONDON]Loughton Underground Station, IG10 3BS
Hello again and welcome back to LCC's year-long nature walks series! This time we're finally turning our way back east with a roughly 13km trek down the Roding Valley Way, following the River Roding continuously from our starting point in the Loughton through to Ilford.
The Roding is one of London's great unsung rivers. With its source at Molehill Green in Essex, it winds leisurely on its way through group of villages in the county known collectively as the Rodings. Close to Loughton (our starting point), it forms the centrepiece of the the Roding Valley Meadows, which make up the largest surviving area of traditionally managed river-valley habitat in Essex. They have a rich variety of plant species, including the largest beds in Essex of the rare brown sedge. The flood meadows have a number of uncommon species, including carex panicea and marsh-marigold. Management of the meadows is done via old-fashioned hay cutting and grazing by traditional breeds of cattle.
This nature reserve consists of unimproved wet and dry hay meadows, rich with flora and fauna and bounded by thick hedgerows, scrubland, secondary woodland and tree plantation. The meadows stretch down as far as the M11 motorway, where the river itself enters Woodford and winds its way down through Ilford and on into the Thames.
Ilford takes its name from Ilefort, "ford on the River Hyle", which was the ancient name for the lower part of the Roding, based on an earlier Celtic word.
Ilford and the Redbridge area of which it forms the major economic and population centre should be on every politically conscious persons' mental map of London. Last year's snap general election saw a local Ilford MP, Wes Streeting - now the health minister and a go-to government spokesperson for all kinds of policies, and a possible PM-in-waiting among Labour elites - come within a few hundred votes of losing his seat to a young upstart, the socialist and anti-imperialist British Palestinian activist Leanne Mohammed. Electoral Calculus polling from this year suggests that if the election were re-done today, Labour would now lose the seat. On our walk, we'll be joined by locals who will share their insights into the changing economic, social, ecological and political landscapes of the area, situating us in the history of Ilford and providing a jumping-off point for discussions of its possible futures as politics and communities continue to change.
We'll meet at Loughton station on the Central Line at 12 noon for a 12:30 set-off time. This is a long walk, but if anyone wants or needs to leave us early, there are plenty of transport links all along the Way available for anyone to jump off and grab at their convenience. We'll hit up a pub at the end for a late lunch/early dinner and drinks, with transport links in Ilford (like the Elizabeth Line station) to take you anywhere you need to go.
- Distance/Time: About 13-14km for a roughly 4.5-5 hours' walk, depending on our speed
- Terrain: Mostly flat and clear, with possible muddy patches - bring good shoes or boots!
- Supplies: 2.5L water and some snacks or a portable lunch - we'll hit up an Ilford pub for a pint and late lunch after
- Weather: Mostly sunny if our luck holds; possibly cloudy and wet at times. Bring a windbreaker and/or rain layer and a packable jumper with a small rucksack if possible
Take care comrades and see you in the meadows!