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Jun 25 2024

Why we disrupt


Why we will DISRUPT land forces in 2024

Weapons enforce resource extraction & dispossession

Weapons enforce resource extraction

Weapons in the hands of public and private security agencies enforce resource extraction, providing corporations with the coercive force they need in order to log rainforests, dig coal, frack farmland and burn the earth for palm oil.

Weapons drive dispossession

Armed soldiers and police ensure that private corporations can ‘invest’ and extract against the will and without the consent of sovereign peoples. People who resist extractive projects are frequently murdered or arrested by security forces. Sovereign people lose access to the material and cultural means of survival and become outcast, alienated, dispossessed and impoverished.

Wilderness under attack

80% of the earth’s wild places are protected by 3% of her people: First Nations people. Weapons are pouring into indigenous lands to enforce extraction and suppress resistance. The weapons used to attack people’s movements from the Amazon to Arizona will be up for sale at Land Forces in Melbourne from 11-13 September.

Weapons cause climate chaos

War is a carbon bomb

The climate breakdown and emissions caused by weapons are appalling; the US military is the highest carbon emitter in the world. Weapons have a massive carbon footprint, both in the manufacturing phase and in their deployment. Weapons are burning our planet, both with actual ‘firepower’ and with greenhouse gases.

Weapons devastate wildlife and ecosystems

Tanks, missiles, jets, bombs, grenades and chemical agents rip out forests, destroy ecosystems, pollute waterways and maim wildlife. The toxic waste warfare leaves behind can contaminate soil and water for decades.

Weapons are a waste product

There are no ‘eco-friendly’ weapons. The arms industry creates 100% waste products – products designed to destroy and to be destroyed. Warfare is the opposite of sustainable; it is the ultimate waste industry. Weapons are manufacture to lay waste and to be waste.

War = peak toxic masculinity

Take the toys from the boys

was a refrain of the Second Wave Feminist movement from Greenham Common through to Pine Gap. Women and children are the most heavily impacted by war and its toxic aftermath. Feminists have pro-actively resisted conscription, militarization and the arms trade since Australian women successfully opposed the draft in World War One. Today, Palestinian and West Papuan (and millions more) women uphold this centuries-old resistance to the toxic masculinity of war when they assert their right to give birth to and raise children free from the threat of murder by the military.

Saya tidak melahirkan anak saya untuk menjadi sasaran TNI .

I didn’t birth my child to be a military target.

All humans will be better off when we can separate masculinity and manhood from mechanized violence.

The children born of our wombs deserve protection, not violence
Saya tidak melahirkan anak saya untuk menjadi sasaran
Weapons companies are making a killing

Weapons corps are making a killing. They siphon off public money and turn that into weapons which corporations and states then use against us to protect profit. Which ever way we look at it, their profits are our losses.

Arms dealers make billions exporting terror

Weapons sales directly cause immense human suffering. Occupying armies and police forces kill, rape and mutilate human beings and every other species in every part of the world. The arms industry is profiting from the misery of others in the most direct way possible. Weapons companies are literally making a killing.

Weapons turn public wealth into private profit.

The weapons sold at Land Forces end up in the hands of state security institutions – armies, navies, police forces etc – and as such are paid for with public money. At Land Forces hundreds of billions of dollars will be siphoned from working people, via taxes, into the bank accounts of weapons corporations. Climate breakdown, ecosystem degradation, forcible extraction, land alienation, famine and war itself form a vicious cycle that harms everybody – except the profit-seeking corporations – and we pay for it.

War causes famine and creates refugees

War causes famine

Weapons cause starvation and famine. Armies intentionally destroy crops and supply systems, starving cities. Occupying armies make it unsafe to farm, alienating farmers from arable land. Forests and waterways become unsafe, so that wild food is no longer available. Long after hostilities have ceased, contaminated soil and water impact food production. Wherever you see famine, there you will find weapons of war.

War creates refugees

War and militarism are what cause people to flee from their homes and seek refuge in other, safer countries. Warfare and persecution by armed forces cause millions of people every year to leave their homes and begin a risky journey into the unknown. After suffering through war, persecution, torture, famine, rape and terror, refugees finally reach ‘safe’ countries like ours, only to find themselves vilified and locked up. Most weapons in the world are exported from ‘safe’ countries like ours. Let’s stop weapons exports where they start – right here where we live.

Those weapons are meant for us

Repression of resistance

Whether we live in a ‘safe’ country or in a war zone, the weapons sold at Land Forces will ultimately point at us. Police forces around the world are increasingly militarized, meaning that they use military grade weapons, uniforms, vehicles and surveillance technology. Weapons are used to suppress civil society movements with disturbing regularity, from tear gas and water cannons through to machine guns and sniper rifles. Recently we have seen the police in Chile aiming rubber bullets at people’s eyes, blinding many. At least 25 West Papuan civilians were killed by the army and police in 2020, on suspicion of being ‘separatists’. Two of those killed were 12 years old. The Amazon is a particularly dangerous place to be an environmental activist, as is the Philippines, while Australia and the US are dangerous places to be black. There is no safety where there are heavily armed soldiers and police. Whoever and wherever we are, those weapons are meant for us.


Written by Lil Ba · Categorized: Uncategorized

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