London's Overthrow: China Miéville's love poem and lament for London

London's Overthrow is an expanded, illustrated version of 'Oh, London, You Drama Queen', China Miéville's editorial in the New York Times. Part warning, part love-poem, a must-read.

30 November. Above the invisible bridge at Blackfriars, red Victorian pilings jutting from the Thames, helicopters dangle like ugly Christmas baubles. They surveil thronging streets. Two million public-sector workers strike today, and tens of thousands of them and their supporters are whooping through central London.

Mary Ezekiel, lifelong Londoner, Highgate by way of Hackney, staff nurse at University College London Hospital, itemizes the effects pension cuts, the action's cause, will have. She flattens down her red t-shirt. Much British tat is emblazoned with the cloying World War II propaganda slogan 'Keep Calm and Carry On'. 'Get Angry', Ezekiel's shirt demands instead, 'and Fight Back'. 'All the speakers have been amazing', she says. 'That's what I feel positive about. I just hope it reaches Mr Cameron' — she says the Prime Minister's name disdainfully — 'in his mansion.'

Cameron first denounced, then dismissed the day's action. For the Right, strikes are both devilish and pathetic, have both terrible and absolutely no effects.

'The perils of marching!' a young woman laughs, pushing banners out of her face. 'Lashed by flags!' A thousands-strong sprawl of bobbing cloth and cardboard. The logo of the Society of Radiographers wobbles near placards of the Worker-Communist Party of Iran. Holding up a huge pink triangle, a young Ugandan man Abbey says, 'We are helping gay asylum seekers from over the world, especially Uganda, Nigeria, Cameroon, Senegal.' He's there to support the workers. It's all linked, he explains. Cuts to social spending, soaring tuition fees, scapegoating.

London's Overthrow – China Miéville (via 3 Quarks Daily)