Wednesday, 3 October 2012
The road to resistance in Sussex
NOT just housing developments but new roads are once again threatening the beauty of Sussex's countryside.
The photo above and this video show an event staged in East Sussex by local campaigners the Combe Haven Defenders, who are determined to prevent the environmentally disastrous white-elephant that is the “Bexhill-Hastings Link Road” from devastating one of Hastings’ and Bexhill’s most amazing natural treasures.
Some 200 people attended the “Stop the Road” Camp & Rally in Combe Haven on 29/30 September, celebrating the beauty of the valley and enjoying an amazing weekend of speeches, workshops, shadow puppetry, children’s theatre, story-telling, campfires, local music and great food.
The Camp saw the launch of the “Stop the Road – Save Our Valley” pledge. You can download a copy of the Pledge here.
Media coverage extended to the national press, with the Daily Mail and the Sunday Times (see below) both running articles linking the Camp’s preparations for future direct action with George Osborne’s plans to build hundreds of new roads around the UK.
The Camp was also name-checked in the Guardian, where a letter from the Defenders also appeared.
Other coverage included BBC Sussex, ITV Meridian, and local coverage on the Hastings [1] and Bexhill Observer web-sites [1] [2]
Meanwhile, the machineries of capitalism are threatening our wildlife and environment near Henfield in West Sussex, with plans being mooted for 10,000 homes on green land, creating a "new Milton Keynes", according to the local CPRE.
And Arun District Council's plans to concrete over their remaining countryside have gone so far that they have even incurred the wrath of Tory MP Nick Herbert.
Other ecocidal schemes in the pipeline are for 4,500 homes north of Horsham, West Sussex, up to 3,500 west of Ifield, West Sussex, and thousands more between Southwater and Christ's Hospital School.
With the prospect of a second runway at Gatwick Airport creeping back on to the agenda in recent months, it looks like a full-scale Sussex revolt will be needed to keep the money men and their bulldozers at bay!
Sunday, 8 April 2012
Protest planned after oaks chopped down
THE FELLING of some mighty Sussex oaks in the Horsham area has caused some outrage locally.
The huge greenfield development at Broadbridge Heath had already got permission to go ahead, so it was perhaps to be expected.
But a few dry paragraphs in the local paper and the reality of what is actually involved are a long way apart and the destruction has woken a few people up in the area, it would seem.
With more massive development schemes planned for that area, and all across Sussex, more and more of us are saying we are not prepared to stand back and watch it happen.
With this in mind, Save Our Sussex Alliance is holding a protest at the site where the trees were taken down.
This is on Saturday April 28, at 2pm, next to Newbridge Nurseries on the A264 at Broadbridge Heath - not far from the A24 underpass and on the road leading from Horsham towards Billingshurst.
Be there and be heard!
Friday, 24 February 2012
Civilisation just can't go on like this

SOMETIMES an apparent coincidence is in fact telling us something rather important.
No sooner had we heard the shocking news of plans for a 11,500-home new town in the heart of our Sussex countryside, at Sayers Common, than a major report came out warning us that we just can't go on like this.
Here is part of an article from The Guardian:
Celebrated scientists and development thinkers today warn that civilisation is faced with a perfect storm of ecological and social problems driven by overpopulation, overconsumption and environmentally malign technologies.
In the face of an "absolutely unprecedented emergency", say the 18 past winners of the Blue Planet prize – the unofficial Nobel for the environment – society has "no choice but to take dramatic action to avert a collapse of civilisation. Either we will change our ways and build an entirely new kind of global society, or they will be changed for us".
Apart from dire warnings about biodiversity loss and climate change, the group challenges governments to think differently about economic 'progress'.
"The perpetual growth myth ... promotes the impossible idea that indiscriminate economic growth is the cure for all the world's problems, while it is actually the disease that is at the root cause of our unsustainable global practices", they say.
Meanwhile, here in Sussex more and more voices are being raised against the insanity of endless 'development' destroying our natural heritage.
Below is a section from one recent comment piece in a local paper.
We are supposed to sit back and simply watch as meadows, trees, footpaths and breathing space are stolen away from us by the men from the City.
I for one find it impossible to sign up to the consensus that allows this to happen.
Where will it all end? The logic of this mindset is that more and more land must be destroyed (the polite term is ‘developed’) on a permanently ongoing basis.
Logically, the brakes can never go on, otherwise the ‘economy’ suffers. Logically, every last blade of grass will have to be ripped up to feed this cancerous expansion.
Logically, all life on the planet will be sacrificed to the gods of profit and ‘progress’.
Saturday, 14 January 2012
Protest in Hove on January 28
SAVE Our Sussex Alliance is holding another protest - this time outside the Tory party offices in Hove.
Saturday 28 January 2012 @ 2pm
outside Brighton & Hove Conservative Party HQ
109 Church Road, Hove, BN3 2AF
with guest speaker Keith Taylor,
Green MEP for South East England
Says the SOSA website: "SOSA wishes to make it
clear that, while the current round of SOSA protests is taking place
outside Conservative Party HQs across both East and West Sussex, our
opposition is based on principles, not on party politics.
"It is the Conservative Party which is spearheading and defending the ‘National Planning Policy Framework’, and it is this Party which is now advocating the removal or weakening of crucial EU legislation which protects biodiversity, on the grounds that this vital protection of the UK’s flora and fauna involves ‘ridiculous cost’. It is therefore the Conservative Party which must be the focus of SOSA’s protests at the present time."
Monday, 7 November 2011
Protest in Horsham on December 3
FOLLOWING the success of our Worthing protest on October 15, we are delighted to hear that Save Our Sussex Alliance have called for a demonstration in Horsham on Saturday December 3.
The protest is again against the free rein to property developers that will be given by the government's proposed National Planning Policy Framework.
As many organisations and individuals are pointing out, its presumption in favour of 'sustainable development' is meaningless when it does not define 'sustainable'. Or rather, its meaning is simply a presumption in favour of development, full stop!
We urge anyone who opposes this assault on our county to gather at 2pm on Saturday December 3 outside the Conservative Party HQ, Gough House, in Madeira Avenue, Horsham (near the town entrance to Horsham Park).
Can Sussex endure?
This lament to the destruction of our county was written by that great lover of the Sussex countryside, Hilaire Belloc, back in 1936. But it very much reflects what many of us feel today.
Can Sussex endure? No man knows the answer to that question, but in measuring the chances we of the county must admit that they are heavily against our survival. It would seem that the forces making for the destruction of this county, its traditions, its personality, are too powerful to be withstood.
Moreover, they are working at such speed that our own generation may well see the end of the land we knew.
It is, in a sense, the coming of a new mode of transport which thus threatens us. The internal combustion engine, which has revolutionised the world, strikes with peculiar force at the ancient spirit of this county, on account of its situation between London and the sea.
The internal combustion engine has done many other things upon a larger scale. It has destroyed the military security of England, it has made wholesale death and mutilation upon the roads familiar to the modern mind; it has killed quiet and with quiet all dignity: there is peace nowhere.
Side by side with all this mechanical change has gone a spiritual change which destroys our powers of resistance.
Men have lost their doctrines, and therefore their manners and morals, and the passing of all the ideas that made our civilisation is due more to this loss of standards than to any material causes.
In the midst of so much evil the passing of Sussex would seem a small thing, but to us it is a great one.
Which of us could have thought, when we wandered, years ago, in the full peace of the summer Weald, or through the sublime void of the high Downs, that the things upon which we had been nourished since first we could take joy in the world would be thus rapidly destroyed in our own time, dying even before we ourselves should die?
Yet apparently it has come. In the old days when the huge amorphous mass of London, more numerous than many a state, was only linked with the sea-coast by the railway, we feared for the future, but did not despair of it.
The coast might become a line of alien building, and here and there upon the main arteries across the Weald some suburban thing having no fellowship with the county at all would grow up round a station; but Sussex as a whole remained untainted by the intrusion.
The contrast between the meaningless new watering places, the suburban blotches and the ancient plough land, woodland, downland, was only the stronger.
Then came the change: London broke out like a bursting reservoir, flooding all the ways to the sea, swamping our history and our past, so that already we are hardly ourselves.
Of a week-end the roads from north to south are like a city street. The new engines climb the Downs; they invade every corner. You may hear the machine-gun fire of a motor bicycle on the greensward of Chanctonbury Ring. There is no retreat wherein you can escape the blind inhuman mechanic clatter. How could any organism survive this ubiquitous thrusting into its substance of alien things?
There is much more than this mechanical cause at work. There is the pressing down of individuality by modern monopoly in every shape: uniformity which is the death of character.
The schools and wireless between them should kill all local speech. All our press is now a town press, and in every activity the slow rhythm which is native to mankind has been shattered. It cannot be recovered.
More than any other district of England, this belt between London and the sea must be harried and broken up by the new machines. Worse than this, the sky itself must be troubled with a perpetual noise, for Sussex faces the peril from air in war as traffic through the air in peace.
How long will it be before there shall be no man left alive who can remember the old affair? It was ancient and rooted beyond all others in England, it was a kingdom under its own king when Claudius came, it remained one separate unit through the centuries of the Dark Ages, the latest to receive religion from overseas, the latest to receive any change at all.
We boasted that it would resist for ever. We cannot so boast to-day. Rather are we on the point of surrender and of admitting that the effort of resistance must now be abandoned.
There is only one consideraation which may lighten somewhat the burden of what seems inevitable. It is this: that, just as we could not foresee the sudden tidal wave which has swept over us, so the future, even the immediate future, may check the ruin of our home, of our most ancient life.
Some incalculable further change may stop the further process of disintegration. It is not conceivable - but often enough the inconceivable happens. Disaster and decline might destroy machines and so save, before they had disappeared, the last stocks and found some new repose wherein they might strike root again.
But as things now stand there would seem to be no prospect of survival through the coming years; nor will there be any Sussex any more: Ubi Troja fuit.
Sunday, 9 October 2011
How to get there on October 15
LESS than a week to go before the protest in Worthing and here is a map to help you find your way there.
Click here to see it on the Google Map site.
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