Convergence 2010
Update via Olympic Resistance Network, http://olympicresistance.net/content/schedule
BASIC SCHEDULE:
The Convergence is called for Feb 10-15:
- Wed Feb 10- Thurs Feb 11: Olympic Resistance Summit from noon until 10 pm.Workshops and speakers discussing Impact of the Olympics on Indigenous Communities and Land Defence, Corporatization of the Games, Legal Rights, Housing and Poverty Impacts, Creative Resistance, and Struggle beyond 2010. Childcare and Food will be provided. Wise Hall (1882 Adanac St) and nearby Centre For Socialist Education (706 Clark Dr). Details: http://olympicresistance.net
- Fri Feb 12: Resist the Torch! Come meet with us at Grandview , Commercial Drive. The 2010 Commercial Drive Torch Welcoming Committee invites everyone to speak their minds about the corporate circus that's starving our schools, health care, and social services and turning our neighbourhoods into militarized zones.
- Fri Feb 12: Take Back Our City! “Welcome” the 2010 Olympic Torch with Free Games, Free Speech, and Free Food! Beginning with a festival at the Vancouver Art Gallery at 3 pm, followed by a parade and protest to BC Place Stadium. Details, including childcare, at: http://2010welcoming.wordpress.com/
- Sat Feb 13. 2010 Heart Attack: Street March to Clog the Arteries of Capitalism. Arrive at 8:30 am in Thornton Park (Main and Terminal). This demonstration will respect diversity of tactics and aims to disturb "business as unusual" on the first day of the Games! Details: http://olympicresistance.net/content/2010-heart-attack
- On Sun Feb 14th, we will be standing with the 19th Annual Women's Memorial March to honour all the missing and murdered and women in the DTES (this is not an anti-Olympic protest). Details at: http://womensmemorialmarch.wordpress.com/
- Mon Feb 15 (ONGOING): Noon at Pigeon Park (Carrall and Hastings). No empty talk, no empty lots! Rally for Homes and Support the Olympic Tent Village. Organized by DTES-based, anti-poverty, and housing rights groups. Visit: http://dtesjustice.wordpress.com/
- Mon Feb 15: Vancouver Art Gallery, Gathering at 6:00pm and leaving at 6:30pm. Come out and be part of an anti-war and anti-militarization moving spectacle. This event is a festive and creative demand for the Canadian government to respect and uphold human-rights, international law, the right to self-determination and civil rights.Organized by Stopwar.ca
ADDITIONAL EVENTS:
We will also be updating this description and our website with additional anti-Olympic events occurring during the entire month of February: http://olympicresistance.net or http://no2010.com
- Mon Feb 1 at 7 pm. There will be a roundtable discussion on Olympic Crimes: Corporate Swindles, Stolen Land & Stolen Dreams. Conference Room 1205 C, CEDAR Building, Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Surrey. Jeff Shantz, Caelie Frampton, Alex Mah, Myka Abramson, Ben West and others.
- Wed Feb 3. Megaphone Magazine special issue entitled "Vancouver's Downtown Eastside: A People's History", the issue aims to change the perception of the neighbourhood and the people that populate it.Launch at the Interurban Gallery at 11 a.m. Speakers: Sean Condon, Irwin Ootindie, and Dalannah Gail Bowen.
- Wednesday Feb 3 from 7-9 pm. The Olympics are Coming, Let's Yack! WISE Hall, 1882 Adanac Street. Planning, sharing Olympic resistance activities. Organized by Community Olympics Watch.
- Thursday Feb 4. 112 West Hastings 8pm. $5-$10 entrance; $5 performer registration. The 2nd Annual CrossRoads Slam! With Burning Hearts: Fair Play! Inspired by the pending arrival of the 2010 Olympics poets are invited to slam on topics that explore the notion of Fair Play. Info: http://urbanink.ca/?p=252
- Thursday, Feb 4th. Pink Resistance hosts a discussion at Spartacus Books (684 E Hastings) at 5 pm on the impact of the Olympics towards queer and trans people, pre-Olympic cutbacks to HIV and AIDS services, concerns about the Olympic Pride House”, and more. Open to allies.
- Friday Feb 5 till Monday Feb 8: Indigenous Peoples Assembly in Secwepemc Territories. For Indigenous people only. For information email nymcommunications@gmail.com. Full callout posted at: http://mostlywater.org/indigenous_peoples_assembly_2010
- Saturday Feb 6. Empowerment 2010 Tour at the HD Lab (1814 Pandora St). Performances by The Outspoken Wordsmiths, Testament, Illogik and El Vuh. Doors at 8pm show at 9pm. $5 to $10 suggested donation no one turned away. A benefit for the Vancouver Media Co-op.
- Sunday Feb 7. 3rd Annual Poverty Olympics in the DTES. Relay starts at 12:30 at VANDU (380 East Hastings St.), 1-3 pm at Japanese Hall (487 Alexander St) Free, family event. http://povertyolympics.ca
- Sunday Feb 7. Leave Out Violence Presents youth-led media collaboration (films, photography, and live performances) that focus directly on "What does 2010 mean to you?" Strathcona Park from 5-9 pm. Email: lcyaction@gmail.com
- Sunday, Feb 7 at 5:30 pm. 2010 Abbotsford Olympic Torch Welcoming Committee at the Abbotsford Exhibition Park, 32470 Haida Drive. Let's make some noise and show them how we feel about their waste of 7 billion dollars while 156,000 children in this province live in poverty.
- Sunday Feb 7. Women's International League for Peace and Freedom presents a Panel Discussion on Women and the Olympics. Rhizome Café, 317 East Broadway, from 6-8 pm. Free event, donations appreciated.
- Mon Feb 8, 2010 onwards: Rhizome Cafe, 317 East Broadway. Bring in your own contributions—photos, posters, original artwork—for our collective art show: “Bringing the World together--In Collaboration, not Competition.” As the Olympics unfold all around us, Rhizome is sharing images of other ways that the world comes together: in solidarity and collaboration to address global social and environmental issues.
- Mon Feb 8, 2010: Direct Action Training at UBC. From 5:00pm - 8:00pm at SUB Room 245, UBC. Just four days before the Torch Reception protest at UBC and the beginning of the 2010 Convergence! Let's all attend and learn everything we can! Organized by UBC Social Justice Centre.
- Thursday, Feb. 11 between 6-7pm. Protest the Torch relay at UBC. Social justice groups on UBC campus invite Olympic resisters to rally at the Old Bus Loop (corner of University Boulevard and East Mall near the Student Union Building).
- Friday, Feb 12, 2010 at 8:00pm, Legion Hall, 2205 Commerical Drive. We do not like the Olympics Celebration Party! Lineup: Dreamscene, Legally Blind, DJ Josef, DJ Kinky Kitty, Team YPE Cost: $3 - ($1297 cheaper than a ticket to the opening ceremonies). Nobody turned away.
- Fri Feb 12: Resistance Media Lounge at Rhizome Café, 317 East Broadway at 8 pm. Join the Vancouver Media Co-op for a mash up of protest footage, news, and images from the actions against the Olympic torch and the kick off of the anti-Olympics convergence.
- Sat Feb 13, 8:00pm at Rhizome Cafe (317 East Broadway). Anne Feeney in Concert: 5 Ring Circus Special. Join Anne Feeney for political songs about: the environment, jobs, gay rights, women's rights, stopping racism and other forms of discrimination, homelessness, a world without war, and much, much more. $12-$20 sliding scale.
- Sunday Feb 14. People's Prom. The most kick ass antidote to Valentine’s Day in the city. You like funk and frolic? Love and revolution? Perfect. All money raised goes toward grassroot, direct action and creative resistance groups engaged in the resistance to the 2010 Olympics. http://peoplesprom.resist.ca/
- Friday, Feb 19, 7:00pm at Rhizome Cafe (317 East Broadway). Board Games are Soooo Gay! Board Games, not Olympic Games! Bring your favourite games or use ours. Our in-house DJs will keep the tunes coming.
- Saturday, Feb 20. Rally for a National Housing Program from noon-2 pm, north Side of Vancouver Art Gallery. The UN now calls Canada's housing crisis, 'a national emergency.' Come join this rally to pressure the federal government to once again re-establish a national housing program in Canada. Organized by Impact on Communities Coalition.
From Feb 10-15, 2010, Vancouver will host the 2010 Convergence against the Winter Olympics, a gathering of anti-colonial and anti-capitalist forces to confront corporate invasion, displacement, and state repression... Please note: the Winter Olympics will begin Feb. 12, 2010... Stay Tuned to No2010.com
Anti-Colonial - Anti-Capitalist - Convergence 2010
Calling on all native warriors, anarchists, anti-capitalists, anti-poverty activists, environmentalists, and concerned individuals, to converge against the 2010 Winter Olympic Games.
In February 2010 the Winter Olympic Games and its supporters will be converging on Vancouver, Whistler, and surrounding unceded native land in Coast Salish Territories.
Let them know that it will not be business as usual and that where ever the neo-colonial beast spreads its parasitic tentacles that the people will rise to sever them.
Converge against the Olympics and let our voices be heard!
No Olympics on Stolen Native Land!
No Social Cleansing!
No Environmental Destruction!
For more info:
convergence@no2010.com
See also:
"Ts'iin, Welcome to the Spirit of Warrior Harriet Nahanee Site. This weblog is dedicated to Harriet’s Actions, the sacrifice she made for the future generations and the legacy she left us.
We believe in carrying on Harriet’s legacy in the form of actions expressing dissent of colonization, injustice and oppression. It is the Olympics 2010 ... that are responsible for the death of Harriet Nahanee, the deepening of poverty and homelessness in Vancouver, specifically the Downtown Eastside, and the massive theft of Indigenous lands and the denial of Indigenous rights..."
Spirit of Warrior Harriet Nahanee Site
Convergence 2010 update
*PLEASE FORWARD WIDELY*
NO OLYMPICS ON STOLEN NATIVE LAND!
Convergence February 2010, Vancouver BC
Coast Salish Territory
The 2010 Winter Olympics are set to take place on unceded indigenous land from February 12-28. In addition to building ongoing educational and resistance efforts, we are organizing toward a convergence in 2010, called for between Feb 10th-15th. Building on the call by native warriors - particularly at the Indigenous Peoples Gathering in Senora, Mexico in October 2007 – we will be working to coordinate the logistics to host all those converging on Vancouver, Whistler, and surrounding unceded native
land during Feb 2010. To that end, we are asking groups and individuals planning to travel to the convergence to contact us now so that we are able to assess potential numbers and the logistical support that will be required in terms of housing, food, and other forms of support.
=> Please email the 2010 Logistics Committee at 2010logistics@riseup.net
to let us now if you are planning to come to the convergence, and
include any information about specific forms of logistical support that you might require such as housing needs, travel, border crossings and visas, etc. Alternatively, if you are planning to organize events to coincide with the 2010 convergence in your own communities, please inform us of those plans as well.
=> If you haven't already, join the Olympic Resistance Network email list to receive news and announcements, as well as post updates and report backs from your own city or community. Email
olympicresistance@riseup.net to add your email to the list.
Over the course of the next ten months, we encourage communities to fundraise, raise awareness, and organize in preparation for the anti-2010 Olympic convergence. We hope to see you all in 2010 to demonstrate our indignation and resistance!
~BACKGROUND~
Far from being simply about ‘sport’, the history of the Olympics is one rooted in displacement, corporate greed, fascism, repression, and violence. Only the political and corporate elite – from real estate developers to security corporations – have anything to gain from the Olympics industry. The effects of the upcoming Winter Games have already manifested themselves- with the expansion of sport tourism and resource extraction on indigenous lands; increasing homelessness and gentrification of poor neighbourhoods; increasing privatization of public services; union busting through imposed contracts and exploitative conditions especially for migrant labour; the fortification of the national security apparatus; ballooning public spending and public debt; and unprecedented destruction of the environment.
The Olympics Resistance Network is primarily based in Vancouver, Coast Salish Territories and exists as a space to coordinate anti-2010 Olympics efforts. In doing so, we act in solidarity with other communities across 'BC' - particularly indigenous communities who have been defending their land against the onslaught of the Olympics since the bid itself. Our organizing is largely being done under the banner of "No Olympics on Stolen Native Land", while creating an opportunity for all anti-capitalist, indigenous, anti poverty, labour, migrant justice, environmental justice, anti war, and anti colonial activists to come together to confront this two-week circus and the oppression it represents.
In solidarity,
The 2010 Convergence Logistics committee
www.olympicresistance.net
www.no2010.com
www.2010watch.com



Over 200 Gather at Anti-2010 Conference in Vancouver
October 27, 2008 - 11:31 — no2010
More than 200 gather to discuss adverse effects of 2010 Games
Allison Cross, Vancouver Sun
Published: Monday, October 27, 2008
The negative impact of the 2010 Olympic Games on the environment and civil liberties were among the topics discussed at a conference in Vancouver on Sunday for people opposed to the Games.
At least 200 people gathered at the downtown event to discuss the adverse effects of the Games on different communities and how those communities might work better together, said panelist Dustin Johnson, an organizer with Native 2010 Resistance.
"It's indigenous communities, students, anti-poverty activists, homeless people, academics," said Johnson. "It's a very diverse group involved."
Byron Peters, who attended the event, said not everyone who came was affiliated with an established resistance group and participants varied greatly in age.
"I'm here because I believe that it's very important for the public to be aware of the real issues that have been washed over by the media around the 2010 Olympics and how the facts aren't being told about the detrimental effects of the Olympics," said Peters, 23.
Protests against the 2010 Olympics are a common sight in Vancouver and the rest of Canada and police expect they will get more intense as the Games near.
Not everyone has the same ideas when it comes to resisting the Olympics, or stopping them completely, Johnson said.
"There is a diverse group of people that have different politics, so if some group has an objective to stop, some group has an objective to protest and some group has an objective to symbolically protest or create dissent, that's fine," he said. "That's the space they're given. I can't speak for all these people but there are different groups with different ends."
Olympic protesters disrupted an event last month in Port Moody meant to celebrate the departure of the Spirit Train.
across@vancouversun.com
© The Vancouver Sun 2008
Activists meet to plan, get support for resistance against 2010 Olympics
October 26, 2008, Canadian Press
VANCOUVER, B.C. — Activists met in Vancouver Sunday to talk strategy around resisting the 2010 Winter Olympic Games.
While opposition to the Games has been steady since before Vancouver won them in 2003, protests are usually connected to a single of the many issues around them.
But dozens gathered at the one-day conference to focus on converging Canada's diverse activist community under one banner for the Games.
"It's important to use to connect with each other," said conference participant Phillipa Ryan.
"Our humanity needs to be respected."
The issues around the Olympics range from the displacement of low-income residents from inner-city communities to the environmental consequences of development for the Nordic venues near Whistler, B.C.
"All of those things are going to be the legacy of the Olympic Games and from our perspective this legacy is something we can use in order to build resistance to the 2010 Games," said Harsha Walia, a member of the Olympic Resistance Network and a panellist at the conference.
The network is also hoping to draw activists from other causes under the anti-Olympic banner by showing how many environmental and social issues can be connected to the Games.
One example given is how some companies supporting the Games are the same ones supporting resource extraction in B.C. and in the Alberta tar sands.
"(The Games) provides an opportunity for people to come together and target something very tangible that's having a very visible impact," said Walia.
Games organizing committee spokeswoman Renee Smith-Valade, however, said officials take their responsibility for staging a socially and environmentally responsible Games seriously.
And, Smith-Valade said, organizers are working to ensure positive legacies both before and after the Games.
"While the vast majority of Canadians support the 2010 Games, we know there will be some who chose to use them as a platform to highlight various issues," she said.
"Of course, they have the right to peacefully demonstrate, and we would only hope that protesters recognize the rights of Games supporters, especially families and children, to enjoy pre-Games and Games-time events and celebrations in a safe, respectful environment," Smith-Valade added.
And, the Olympic organizing committee has reached out to groups involved in all of the potential hotspots around the Games.
Multimillion-dollar agreements have been signed between the federal and provincial governments and the four First Nations on whose traditional territories the Games are being held.
The organizing committee also hired environmental watchdog The David Suzuki Foundation to do a study on how it could run a carbon-neutral Olympics.
The committee has given $250,000 for temporary shelter beds during the Games and has a remaining $250,000 to allocate for Games' time housing.
It also recently announced that temporary athletes housing being built in Whistler, B.C. will be converted to provincially funded low-income housing in six communities around the province after the Games.
But, said some conference participants, the official connections between the Games and community agencies also has the effect of silencing dissent.
"We have to take this issue back into the population," said conference participant Robert Annis.
Annis said he believes the global financial crisis will make the issues around the Games much more real to the general population as governments are forced to make cutbacks to social programs yet still fund the Olympics.
While the lead speakers at the conference - parts of which were closed to the media - were all well-known in the resistance movement, they said there were many new faces in the crowd.
"Usually at this stage, a year before the Games, you actually see the opposition beginning to vanish," said Chris Shaw, of 2010 Watch and one of the early Olympic naysayers.
"We're not seeing that here. This is the first time to my knowledge that you actually see an opposition building."
Conference organizers acknowledged right up front that stopping the Olympics at this point isn't an option.
However, they hope the coming together of groups will help lay the groundwork for a more connected protest movement in Canada in the future.
It's of particular importance in 2010, they said, as in addition to the Olympics, both the G8 and the Security and Prosperity Partnership meetings will be held in Canada.