đž Archived View for library.inu.red âş document âş solidarity-federation-young-property captured on 2023-04-20 at 00:44:26. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
âŹ ď¸ Previous capture (2023-03-20)
âĄď¸ Next capture (2023-07-10)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: Young Property Date: Autumn 1998 Source: Retrieved on June 20, 2005 from [[https://web.archive.org/web/20050620082329/http://www.directa.force9.co.uk/archive/da8-features.htm][web.archive.org]] Notes: Published in <em>Direct Action</em> #8 â Autumn 1998. Authors: Solidarity Federation Topics: youth liberation, abuse, Direct Action Magazine Published: 2021-10-29 16:03:53Z
<strong><em>Discipline and punish. The cycle of abuse continues. Young people are cheap property, or worse still, play objects for brutal games.</em></strong>
<strong><strong><em>Before âCheap Labourâ was elected to power last year, Jack Straw, then Shadow Home Secretary, advocated a curfew for children. He planned to ban children from the streets after 9pm. The curfew plan was couched in terms of âempowering local communitiesâ. It would have little effect on the children of the rich, but it would severely infringe the lives and liberties of working class children, who have only the street in which to play.</em></strong></strong>
At present, the curfew plan is one plank on a raft of repressive measures which have originated from one of Cheap Labourâs many expensive think-tanks. Near the top of the Governmentâs wish-list, is the idea of a national identity card for young people.
Initially the scheme is voluntary, and carrying the card will be mandatory for young people wanting to prove they are legally old enough to purchase scratch cards, alcohol, cigarettes, solvents, and to hire videos. The Citizenâs Card, as it will be called, may not be compulsory, but it has all the trappings of any National Identity Card, including photo and hologram. It is the thin end of the wedge, and will lead to a National ID card for everyone, regardless of age. The government has chosen young people as an easy target, so that we will become used to the idea of young people being asked to prove their identity wherever they go. And when they are âold enoughâ, they will be âofferedâ a New Deal (which one is not permitted to refuse), and be put to work on âmarketâ wages â because Cheap Labour donât believe in a minimum wage for younger workers.
The Citizen Card Planning Group is currently negotiating with 16 Trade Associations, the National Lottery and Railtrack. In addition, there have been pledges of support from the Tobacco Manufacturers Association and the National Federation of Retail Newsagents. Businesses and industry have been asked for ÂŁ330,000 to start the scheme up. And by the way, all card applicants will be asked to pay ÂŁ5 and provide their own photos.
The Citizen Card and those corporations supporting it should be rejected and boycotted. On the latter, older people need to be prepared to help out with the boycott of cards. Why co-operate with a card which (a) is designed to assist in strengthening Government information networks, not merely prove age, and (b) will be expanded â so it will be YOU next? Unless, that is, the Citizen Card is deemed unenforceable. Donât give it a chance, give young people a chance instead.