Archive for July, 2008
Which Way Forward for the Black Liberation Movement?
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 27, 2008
Eastside Arts Alliance (ESAA) the freedom Archives and the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement (MXGM) invite you join us on Wednesday, July 30th for a discussion with Muhammad Ahmad, author of We Will Return in the Whirlwind: Black Radical Organizations 1960 – 1975 and co-founder of the Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM), about the lessons from the Black Liberation Movement from the 1960’s and 70’s and the central challenges, tasks and possibilities of the Black Liberation Movement today.
Dr. Ahmad is currently teaching in the Department of African American Studies at Temple University and has been an activist scholar for over four decades. He has worked closely with Malcolm X, Robert F. Williams, Jesse Gray, Amiri Baraka, Kwame Ture (Stokely Carmichael), James and Grace Lee Boggs, James Forman and Queen Mother Audley Moore.
Join us at 7:30 pm at Eastside Cultural Center located at 2277 International Blvd (at 23rd) in Oakland. For more information call ESAA at 510.533.6629 or MXGM at 510.593.3956.
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MST Under Attack
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 27, 2008
Noted Dominican friar and activist Frei Betto denounces the criminalization of the social movements that once swept Lula into the Brazilian presidency.
by Frei Betto
One of the great attributes of Lula’s government is the non-criminalizing of social movements which were repressed during Fernando Henrique Cardoso’s government even by calling in army troops. If Lula were to treat them as a police matter and not as a political one, he would be condemning his own past.
Many will remember the strikes and workers’ demonstrations led by our President in São Paulo’s ABC (an area containing the districts of Santo André, São Bernardo do Campo and São Caetano do Sul) with army helicopters flying over the Vila Euclides stadium and pointing guns at metal workers’ assemblies, the troops of the Military Police surrounding the cathedral in São Bernardo do Campo which sheltered the leaders of the workers and police cars from the DEOPS (Department of Political and Social Order) carrying union leaders off to prison.
This happened during the dictatorship. Today we have recovered the State of Law where strikes, demonstrations and workers’ assemblies are rights which are assured by the Federal Constitution. Except in Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil’s southernmost state), where arbitrariness still reigns.
In September 2007 the Brigada Militar, as the Military Police is known in Rio Grande do Sul, tried to stop a three column march of landless peasants on their way to the municipality of Coqueiros do Sul. In a report handed to the general commander of the Brigada Militar, to the Public Ministry of Rio Grande do Sul and to the Federal Public Ministry, the sub commander Colonel Paulo Roberto Mendes Rodrigues described the MST (Landless Peasants Movement) and the Via Campesina as “criminal movements”.
In December 2007 the Superior Council of Rio Grande do Sul’s Public Ministry named a team of district attorneys to “promote public civil action towards the dissolution of the MST and to declare it illegal”. When will the Judiciary demand abolishing the latifundium?
It also decided on the “intervention in MST schools in order to comply with all necessary measures towards readjusting with a view to legalization both in the pedagogical aspect as well as regards the MST’s outside influences”. This decision goes against the International Pact on Civil and Political Rights recognized by the Brazilian government (Decree 592 6/7/92). It also disrespects the Federal Constitution.
On March 11 2008 the Federal Public Ministry denounced eight members of the MST for “participating in groups which aim at changing the State of Law” and accused the movement’s encampments of becoming a “Parallel State” supported by the FARC (Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces)… This affront goes against the conclusions of the Federal Police penal inquiry which investigated the MST in 2007 and concluded that there were no ties between the movement and the FARC or any practice of crimes against national security.
THE MST is a legitimate movement which keeps 150,000 persons encamped on the sides of roads thus avoiding the growth of the favelas (shanty towns) which surround the cities. It defends the right of access to land for four million families who, during past decades, were thrown off the land by the expansion of the latifundium and agro business and by the construction of dams as well as by the banks’ increased interest rates.
As a principle for its actions the MST adopts non-violent methods such as those used by Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr. (both of whom actually suffered similar accusations and were assassinated). The occupied areas are non productive or have been invaded by squatters who falsely took over lands which belonged to the government, as is the case of many ranches in the Pontal do Paranapanema in the state of São Paulo.
Brazil and Argentina are the only countries within the three Americas which never instituted land reform. Our country has the largest amount of arable lands on the Continent, approximately 600 million hectares, of which 710.2 thousand square kilometres (59% of the country) are being used illegally by squatters, small farmers and large land owners.
The MST today struggles for the democratization of land in order to prioritise the producton of foodstuffs for the internal market (120 million potential consumers) through medium and small properties free from the control of transnational companies, guaranteeing dominion over our country’s food. A sustainable change in land structure requires a new technological pattern capable of preserving the environment, implementing agro industries throughout the country in the form of cooperatives and access to quality education for all.
We cannot permit Brazilian land to fall into the hands of foreigners simply because they have more money. Lands should be within reach of families who are receiving the Bolsa Família (allowance for very low income families). Thus the government would no longer need to worry about increasing the allowance. More than food, cooker and fridge, these families require access to land in order to become independent of government help and produce their own income.
All citizens’ rights – women’s vote, labour laws, health services, pensions etc. – were achieved by social movements. This is the story of all of them, in every country and in every era, no different to what challenges the MST today – misunderstanding, persecution, massacres and assassinations (Eldorado dos Carajás, Dorothy Stang, Chico Mendes) etc. If the price of freedom is eternal vigilance, the price of democracy is the socialising of power, not allowing it to be the privilege of a cast or class.
Translation by Food First.
About the author
Frei Betto is a Brazilian Dominican with an international reputation as a liberation theologian. Within Brazil he is equally famous as a writer, with over 52 books to his name. In 1985 he won Brazil’s most important literary prize, the Jabuti, and was elected Intellectual of the Year by the members of the Brazilian Writers’ Union.
He has always been active in Brazilian social movements, and has been an adviser to the Church’s ministry to workers in São Paulo’s industrial belt, to the Church base communities, and to the Landless Rural Workers’ Movement (MST).
In 2003-2004, Betto was Special Adviser to President Lula and Coordinator of Social Mobilisation for the Brazilian Government’s Zero Hunger program.
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Care to Brown Up the Plantation?
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 26, 2008
If so, hit ‘em up. Lord, please make it a conscious person of color…
Infoshop.org is part of an organization called the Alternative Media Project, which is run by a small collective. These collective members work together and with volunteers to run the website on a daily basis. We are developing AMP as a nonprofit organization that will be doing non-internet projects such as book and magazine publishing.
In 2008, we want to add one or two new people to our collective. At this time, we are only interested in adding a woman and/or person of color to our project (or a person older than 55). To be considered, please send a message to the collective explaining who you are, what projects you’ve been involved in, two references, an explanation of your politics, what you would like to do as part of our project, and why you want to join us. All of this should add up to around 500 words, but we’re not hard asses about the word count. Potential collective members should understand that being a collective member is a multi-year commitment. Potential collective members should also be in agreement with our “big tent” philosophy concerning anti-authoritarian and radical politics. Perks include subsidized travel to conferences and bookfairs.
We are also looking for “interns” who would work with the collective on special projects and be quasi-collective members for six months or an other short, temporary period.
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Deadline for SDS Action Camp 7/28
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 26, 2008
SDS ACTION CAMP APPLICATION PACKET!
Hello! You are cordially and cord-less-ly invited to join your fellow comradicals on the SDS Action Camp, in Asheville, North Carolina, August 15-17th. Deadline: July 28.
What you need to do next:
1. Please fill out this registration packet and mail it to sdsactioncamp08@gmail.com
2. Please submit your promised registration fee by paypal (click the “Make a Donation” button on www.newsds.org). We prefer if you pay in advance so we can cover costs before the camp, but if you are unable to pay online, please bring cash or a check when you arrive at the camp!
3. Get excited! (More excited, that is.)
SURVEY : Please fill out all these questions so that we can help your camp experience be pleasant and comfortable but not at all quaint.
*Logistics Questions:*
Do you have special dietary preferences or needs? For omnivores, is vegan/vegetarian food satisfying and adequate nutrition?
Do you have housing needs that require that you have specific accommodations (ex: quiet/early sleep, sober housing, non-sober housing, female-bodied space)?
Where are you coming from?
What is your mode of transportation?
If you are driving, do you have extra seats? How many?
Do you want us to help you find a rideshare with another participant?
When are you planning to arrive?
How much can you pitch in to cover the costs of the Action Camp (food, trainers, meeting space, materials, etc)? We are asking from $25-150. No one will be turned away due to lack of money. Please, in assessing your budget, consider your privelege and background. Registration fees help make the camp affordable for people who could not otherwise attend.
Do you have any other needs that we should know about to make the convention a better experience for you? (wheelchair accessibility, translators, etc) Or any other concerns?*
**Limited travel stipends are available pending fundraising. Let us know if you are interested.*
Demographic Questions:* What chapter(s) have you worked with in the past? What chapter do you currently work with?
How long have you been working with SDS? Have you been involved in National SDS work?
Are you a member of a caucus(es)? If so, which ones?
Did you come to the SDS Action Camp last year?
The syllabus for the Action Camp will include workshops in the following categories. Please rate them from 1 (not very important) to 4 (of top most importance)
-Anti-Oppression and Collective Liberation work——_______
-Campaign Strategy———————————-_______
-Chapter Building Tools and Strategy—————–_______
-Civil Disobedience/NVDA—————————–_______
-Media Strategy and Skills—————————-_______
-Movement History and Strategy———————_______
-Facilitation Skills————————————-_______
-Emotional Support Work—————————-_______
*Release Form*
We all hate this legal stuff, but we couldn’t have the camp without it, so please read it, sign it, and work for a better world where we don’t need so many forms!
Participant name: __________________________________
Participant’s age on August 15, 2008: ___________________
1. I agree that SDS shall have full use of my image in pictures or videos taken during the action camp to display on its website, in print publications, or other media.
2. I agree to abide by the rules provided by our hosts. I understand that failure to follow these rules may result in my immediate removal from the action camp.
3. The following items are prohibited: alcohol, illegal drugs, firearms, ammunition, and explosives or weapons of any sort, pets (with the exception of service animals).
Who should we contact in case of emergency?
Name: ____________________ Relationship: ________________________
Phone #:___________________ Alternate phone #: _____________________
Supervision of minors:
SDS staff will be responsible for supervising minors during the Action Camp and at all times. Minors must follow all instructions from SDS staff. Minors will have the opportunity to participate in the full agenda of activities and trainings. We are not ageists. This section is only for the lawyers.
Liability release:
I do for myself (or on behalf of the minor participant, if under 18) hereby release, forever discharge and agree to hold harmless Students for a Democratic Society and the staff thereof from any and all liability, claims or demands for personal injury, sickness or death, as well as property damages and expenses, of any nature whatsoever which may be incurred by the undersigned and/or the minor participant that occur while said is participating in SDS’s Action Camp. Furthermore, I (and for or on behalf of the minor participant, if under the age of 18 years) hereby assume all risk of personal injury, sickness, death, damage and expense as a result of participation in the activities involved therein.
Further, authorization and permission is given to said trip and travel organizers to furnish and hereby release liability of transportation, food and lodging for this participant.
The undersigned further hereby agrees to hold harmless and indemnify said organization(s), its directors, employees and agents, for any liability sustained by said travel organizers as the result of negligent, willful or intentional acts of said participant, including expenses incurred attendant thereto.
(If the participant is under 18):
I am the parent or legal guardian of this participant, and hereby grant my permission for him/her to participate fully in said event and hereby give my permission to take said participant to a doctor or hospital and hereby authorize medical treatment, including but not limited to emergency surgery or medical treatment, and assume the responsibility of all medical bills, if any/ Further, should it become necessary for the participant to return home due to medical reasons, disciplinary action or otherwise, I hereby assume all transportation costs.
My electronic signature hereby qualifies as legal documentation and assertion of my identity and consent.
Print name of participant
Signed by parent or guardian ____________________________________________ Date _____________
Relationship to the participant:
_________________________________________
Trip Participant Only I have read the above and understand the rules of conduct and will fully abide by them, as well as all additional instructions of the leadership of this action camp and activity directors.
X ________________________________________
Please sign this form and mail it to sdsactioncamp08@gmail.com
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No Border Patras
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 26, 2008
Year 2008 and the administrators of the worldwide authority wage wars and spread exploitation in order to further spread their sovereignty. One of these war conflicts is in Afghanistan, where the western powers, including the Greek state, and leaded by the USA, invaded in the name of the “war against terrorism” and they still fight this so called “humanitarian” war seeking to dominate the region on all levels. When the first bombs fell on Afghanistan the Greek society was demonstrating against the war, but today that the repercussions of war reach our region most of the people are hypocritically closing their eyes in front of these repercussions.
One of these repercussions is the situation in the city of Patras. Refugees from Afghanistan and other Arabian countries come to this city-gate of Europe with the expectation to travel further into Europe, and for some of them who might be lucky to acquire papers to stay in Greece. But they live in a climate of terror and violence by the authorities. They leave their countries because of the war which destroys everything or they leave in order to escape from the religious fundamentalism of the Taliban. They live and travel with the hope to establish in Europe a new life, a life more dignified and free from the one they left behind. However even here they suffer a different expression of the same war, as they are “illegal”, without papers, and they are not allowed to move freely. They live in the outskirts of society and actually they are deprived the recognition of the right in existence.
In Patras, the Afghan refugees reside in an off-hand settlement which is besieged by the police. The settlement is located in the eastern part of the city near the port and it is blockaded by the police in order not to exit freely from it. The population reaches approximately 1000 young men and during the summer a lot more. These small in space community exist in Patras the last 13 years, when it was originally built by Kurds of Iraq. The refugees are stacked in off-hand lodgings, which they construct by scrap materials. The hygiene conditions are non-existed as they are not allowed to have water, electricity or even toilets. As all these were not enough, since January 2008 they experience a blockade because of a relative decision by the authorities that forbids them to move in the city and especially around the port. So the police have surrounded the settlement on a permanent basis and whoever attempts to exit its borders is beaten, arrested, or even kidnapped and deported.
The majority of the local society is indifferent; they pretend that they do not see the crime committed in Patras, they continue to live their life without speaking for or against the situation. Nevertheless a small portion of the citizens has allied with local businessmen asking for the destruction of the settlement and the displacement of the refugees. In the same context the authorities of the municipality and the prefecture together with the local mass media, refuse to look into the matter and they even try to prevent any kind of material help. On the other hand, organizations of the antiauthoritarian space and the left space have formed a solidarity front and they accomplished to prevent a planed police operation, which aimed to the demolition of the settlement, by organizing two big marches with all the refugees in the city center (January – February 2008), and furthermore they support the immigrants by material, legal, and medical aid on an everyday basis. An example of this is the installation of a water network inside the refugees’ camp during the preparatory meeting of May 2008 and its legalization by the solidarity movement.
But as the matter remains open, with a hot summer in hand and the police besiegement in full effect, a multiform and dynamic action is more than necessary. A continuous social and politically activity that will communicate the problems and the demands more widely, that will bring closer the Greeks with the refugees, so as to reach its peak with an event that will force the society to open her eyes and decide at last to take an active position.
We call for No Border Patras from the 29th until the 31st of August 2008. The importance of such a No Border has a double meaning, since the city of Patras faces both internal and external borders. Internal borders in the forbidden zone of the port, which in the name of security excludes the city from its access to the life-giving factor of the sea; internal borders that have enclosed the refugees inside the settlement. On the other hand we face the national borders, which forbid refugees form entering the port or traveling to another european country.
Some of the objectives of No Border Patras are through a series of events, discussions, and direct actions to bring an end in the multidimensional violence that is practiced on the refugees and to make the voice of the refugees to be heard as widely as possible.
Our speech and action of an essential solidarity must listen to the demands of the refugees and transforms them into a spearhead for a free and dignified life for everyone. No Border Patras can constitute a place of freedom against any kind of borders and against the monodimensional beliefs, so as to create a wide and solid front that will deconstruct the EU anti-immigrant policies aiming the transformation of Europe into a fortress and a world divided according to the interests of the sovereigns.
* No-one is illegal
* Asylum for everyone
* Against internal, national and supernational borders
* Freedom of movement
against the police blockade of the refugee settlement
against the arrests, the kidnappings and the beatings
* Abolition of the Return Directive and all the international anti-immigrant agreements.
* Reclaim the public space of the port by Patras’ society
Via No Border Patras
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Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 25, 2008
California Food & Justice Coalition presents “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas”; Oakland, CA
Thursday, August 7 | Parkway Theatre | 1834 Park Boulevard, Oakland, CA | 9:15pm | $9.00 | 21 +
JOIN US at the Parkway Theatre to show your support for the California Food and Justice Coalition and our work to create a community-driven, sustainable and just food system for all Californians. A portion of the price of the movie ticket goes towards supporting CFJC.
HELP US MAKE IT HAPPEN! We have a big year planned and the proceeds of the movie night will go towards helping us:
- direct monies available in the 2008 Farm Bill to the people that need it: urban and small farmers and grassroots groups working to rebuild local food systems and increase access to healthy food
- building upon our new training and mentorship program to grow and support the movement
- future advocacy campaigns for food justice.
FEAR AND LOATHING IN LAS VEGAS (1998) is a whirlwind of a movie adapted from the book by Hunter S. Thomson (1971), Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream. Journalist Raoul Duke (Johnny Depp) heads to Las Vegas to cover a motorcycle race, bringing along his Samoan lawyer, Dr. Gonzo (Benicio Del Toro). Duke and Gonzo are on their way with a frightened hitchhiker (Tobey Maguire) and a trunk full of drugs. Depp is terrific as Duke and Del Toro is a riot as the crazy lawyer. A master of complex, bizarre visual imagery, Terry Gilliam directed this cult classic that captures the frenetic pace of the counterculture novel.
FOR MORE INFORMATION please contact Jessica Bell at 510 704 0245 or jessicabell@cafoodjustice.org.
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Dissidents, Idiot Leftists Protest Dalai Lama
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 25, 2008
By Bill Weinberg
The New York Times’ City Room blog reports a strange spectacle from 6th Ave. July 17:
As thousands of people, mostly of Tibetan and Nepalese ancestry, streamed out of Radio City Music Hall on Thursday afternoon, where they had gone to hear the Dalai Lama give a lecture on the Four Noble Truths of Buddhism, they found themselves in a chaotic scene on the Avenue of the Americas.
About 200 members of a Buddhist sect, the Western Shugden Society, were outside the hall protesting the Dalai Lama, who they said had persecuted monks who supported the sect. Some among the thousands coming out of the lecture began shouting at the protesters. The crowd began to swell, and eventually thousands were shouting “Long Live Dalai Lama” and waving dollar bills at the protesters, asserting that they had been paid by the Chinese government.
Police officers on horseback, and dozens on the ground, began scrambling to set up barriers and push the crowds off of the streets, but the avenue was closed for about 20 minutes around 5 p.m. Office workers stood at windows along Rockefeller Center’s office buildings, gazing down at the crowds, which grew louder and larger.
Some of the Dalai Lama supporters began approaching the protesters and were shoved away by police.
After his lecture to a sold-out house at Radio City, where some supporters paid as much as $1,000 a ticket, the Dalai Lama took questions that audience members had submitted in advance. The second question was whether he had anything to say about the protesters outside, who had begun setting up long before the Dalai Lama’s lecture began at 2 p.m.
The Dalai Lama said he used to follow their practice, known as Dorje Shugden, from about 1951 until the early 1970s, but that he had given it up because it was intolerant of other Buddhist teachings.
“This is just spirit worship,” he said. “After I read more about it, I realized my mistake and dropped my practice.”
He added: “I think 99 percent of Tibetans follow my practice. Some small portion worship this spirit. I am committed to freedom of speech, freedom of talk. So I say to them, enjoy freedom of talk.”
He also argued that two past Dalai Lamas had restricted the practice, and that he was following tradition.
The Western Shudgen Society asserts that the Dalai Lama has more than a decade “been fostering a campaign of intimidation, humiliation, and ostracism” against practitioners of Dorje Shugden.
Kelsang Pema, a spokeswoman for the Western Shugden Society, said she had flown from England to engage in the protest. More than half of the protesters appeared to be Westerners, although Ms. Pema said 100 Tibetan monks also took part in the protest.
Although the crowd who attended the lecture at Radio City contained a sprinkling of Westerners, most were of Himalayan ancestry and they were the ones shouting at the protesters from across the Avenue of the Americas and from the north side of 50th Street.
The protesters were on the southwest corner of 50th and Sixth, behind police barricades. There did not appear to be any arrests. Ms. Pema said of the Dalai Lama, “He’s a Hollywood monk. If you ask him something serious, he smiles and laughs and pretends he doesn’t know English.” (The Dalai Lama answered the question in English, with some help with words and phrases from a translator seated near him on the stage.)
Ms. Pema said people had come from 18 countries to participate in the protest. She denied that her group had been paid by the Chinese government. “We get no money from the Chinese. They can check our organization. We’re clean.” The protesters handed out literature explaining their position.
The Times fails to note that the idiot-left group Fight Imperialism-Stand Together (FIST) also had a contingent at the anti-Dalai Lama gig. Here’s their press release. Note the last sentence:
A protest of Washington’s anti-China policies is planned for July 17 when the Dalai Lama will be speaking at Radio City Music Hall here. The U.S. government has been involved in the “Free Tibet” campaign from the beginning, while the media facilitates its execution.
The latest efforts began in mid-March, when the Dalai Lama covertly encouraged Tibetans to riot. The rioters looted, burned and attacked non-Tibetan ethnic groups, killing and wounding scores. Then in April, protesters attacked Olympic torch runners in several countries in a clear campaign against this year’s Beijing Olympics. These attacks and accompanying protests were glorified by a media that has failed to exhibit similar enthusiasm for covering anti-war protests.
The Dalai Lama and the U.S. imperialists have worked hard to erase the Dalai Lama’s past as a feudal leader, and these days hardly anyone in the Western media questions the fact that he is supposed to be a living deity. “Spiritual” leaders, it seems, are condemned or elevated according to their strategic utility to the ruling class. In the U.S., the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, for example, was raked over the coals by the media for his preaching against racism. But Washington, which was comfortable with Tibet’s status as a part of China before the Chinese Revolution, now considers the Dalai Lama to be of great importance and therefore greatly “spiritual.”
The Dalai Lama also supports past and present U.S. military operations in south Korea, Afghanistan, Yugoslavia and Iraq. He is hardly a representative of peace.
Not everyone has such short memories, however. The twelfth Samding Dorje Phagmo, Tibet’s only living female Buddha, a critic of the Dalai Lama and vice-chairwoman of Tibet’s regional government, says that “Old Tibet was dark and cruel, the serfs lived worse than horses and cattle.” (Reuters)
We won’t ask how FIST professes to know that the Dalai Lama “covertly” encouraged Tibetans to riot. More interesting is the reference to the twelfth Samding Dorje Phagmo. If you look up the April 30 Reuters story (which FIST fails to either date or link to), you will find that it cites China’s official Xinhua agency—and that the twelfth Samding Dorje Phagmo is a vice-chair of the Beijing-compliant Tibetan Autonomous Regional People’s Congress!
Tibet’s only female living Buddha, Samding Dorje Phagmo, who is also a top regional official, accused the Dalai Lama of violating Buddhist teachings, referring to the riots in Lhasa last month.
The twelfth Samding Dorje Phagmo said Tibet’s incorporation into Communist China has transformed it from the backwards feudal society of largely illiterate serfs with little medical care.
“Old Tibet was dark and cruel, the serfs lived worse than horses and cattle,” she told the official Xinhua agency.
The 66-year old woman was chosen as the incarnation of the deity Vajravarahi. Head of the Samding monastery, she is also a vice-chairwoman of the standing committee of the Tibetan Autonomous Regional People’s Congress, or regional parliament.
“Watching on television a tiny number of unscrupulous people burning and smashing shops, schools and public property, brandishing knives and sticks to attack unfortunate passers-by I felt boundless surprise, deep heartache and indignant resentment,” she said.
China has accused the Dalai Lama, Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader, of plotting the riots and unrest that spread across many ethnic Tibetan parts of the country, in a bid to overshadow the Olympic Games and push for independence.
“The sins of the Dalai Lama and his followers seriously violate the basic teachings and precepts of Buddhism and seriously damage traditional Tibetan Buddhism’s normal order and good reputation,” the Samding Dorje Phagmo was quoted as saying.
The Dalai Lama rejects China’s claims, saying he supports the Olympic Games and seeks only greater autonomy for Tibet.
We’ve already noted some of the surreal politics of the officially atheist Chinese state’s game of divide-and-rule with Tibet’s Buddhists. It is perversely amusing to see FIST (the latest front group for the retro-Stalinist Workers World Party) drawn into the game…
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Claim No Easy Victories: An Anarchist Analysis of ARA and its Contributions to the Building of a Radical Anti-Racist Movement
Posted by illvox collective in Organizing on July 25, 2008
by Rory McGowan, BRICK Collective (FRAC-GL)
1) WE GO WHERE THEY GO: Whenever fascists are organizing or active in public, we’re there. We don’t believe in ignoring them. Never let the nazis have the streets!
2) WE DON’T RELY ON THE COPS OR THE COURTS TO DO OUR WORK FOR US: This doesn’t mean we never go to court. But we must rely on ourselves to protect ourselves and stop the fascists.
3) NON-SECTARIAN DEFENSE OF OTHER ANTI-FASCISTS: In ARA, we have lots of different groups and individuals. We don’t agree about everything and we have the right to differ openly. But in this movement an attack on one is an attack on us all. We stand behind each other.
4) WE SUPPORT ABORTION RIGHTS AND REPRODUCTIVE FREEDOM: ARA intends to do the hard work necessary to build a broad, strong movement against racism, sexism, anti-Semitism, homophobia, discrimination against the disabled, the oldest, the youngest and the most oppressed people. WE INTEND TO WIN!
-Anti-Racist Action’s ‘Points of Unity’
The current climate of war and repression is foisting on us an urgent need to try and decipher what in hell is happening. Questions of capitalist restructuring and expansion, occupation, white supremacy, racism, white privilege and fascism are all topics being raised in anarchist circles. Questions, that are of the utmost importance in our developing of a fighting movement that can intervene in struggles that are breaking out, or soon will.
Without veering too far into negativity, it must be said that for much of the North American anarchist movement, we are short on theory and much of an analysis of historical conditions and developments. While there is growth and promise, we still have an uphill journey. Partly because the current anarchist movement is quite young in age and does not have a solid connection with any historical lineage – no institutions or infrastructure that we can claim some linear connection to, not much living history that is explicitly anarchist and maps out decisions or breaks made for the political or social advancement of our groups and people in struggle. However, this isn’t to say we haven’t participated in any way or that were short on experience. Since the mid 1980’s the North American anarchist scene/movement has been developing collectively and taking part in struggles that, when examined, can give lessons to build on. We are young, but we have been a part of many not-so-insignificant projects and battles. Looking back wards from recent direct action against the war, to the globalization protests, to political prisoner/prison abolition work, to Zapatista support, to further back with anti-apartheid work and solidarity with people of color and the oppressed, including Black and Native struggles, looking at this it is clear anarchists have sought to develop ourselves by learning from and being real participants in these many fights.
It is in these struggles that we can gage our success and failings, and with the formation of critical perspectives, applied and integrated into our work, we may be in better positions to identify, defend, and help generate more autonomous and potentially insurrectionary action.
For fourteen years the work of ARA has been to popularize the ideas of direct action in the fight against racism. Along the way ARA’s own internal development has meant connecting racism to other struggles against oppression, from the pro-choice and anti-patriarchal organizing to pro-queer struggles to emphasizing the continual need for participation and initiative in political direction from young people. While there is no single, homogenous, ARA political line beyond ARA’s ‘Points of Unity’, generally, ARA has and continues to be an anti-authoritarian arena for debate and action around the connectedness of various forms of oppression. This allows for an experimentation and self-activity essential to the development of a conscious movement outside of the control and direction of the State. Constructing organizations and movements at the grassroots can be instructive in both the difficulties and simultaneously the radical potentials of people in action.
And that is what we need. From a revolutionary perspective, we need movements that can challenge peoples notions of what is possible and then sketch out in our heads what its going to take to make our endeavors succeed. Is ARA such a movement? Is the work done by ARA building towards an actual radical opposition movement? Is that even the intention of ARA? After forteen years what has ARA’s contribution been? And what has been the contribution of anarchists within ARA? If we find in ARA the elements that are essential components of a movement capable of influencing the emergence of radical currents, is ARA up to the challenge of understanding and building on these elements.
These questions represent a kind of “ruler” that I think we size up ARA with, and provide a context for discussion. While I hope this article answers these questions, I am prepared to admit that it only scratches the surface and prompts more questions than it satisfies (but this isn’t a bad thing). If ARA is to be relevant it’s got to be constantly subjected to a critical assessment of its work, from outside and from within. And in regard to the broader discussion of where we revolutionary anarchists see organizing potentials and lessons to be learnt, then ARA may be as good a starting point then most anything our movement has been connected to.
To best access the impact ARA has had and what role it could play in the future, it could be helpful to look at its past and development. From starting as an organization of anti-racist Skinhead crews in the late 1980’s, to remaking itself into a political movement of nearly two thousand during the mid 1990’s, and ending with the current period of the ARA movements life.
FIGHT THE REAL ENEMY! FIGHT THE POWER!
ARA originally came out of the efforts of Minneapolis anti-racist skinheads to create an organization that could combat the presence of nazi skinheads in their city and its neighboring city, St. Paul. The Baldies, a multi-racial skinhead crew having members of black, white, Asian, and Native American origins, was fighting the Nazi skinhead group, the White Knights, and had set a code within the local punk and skinhead scenes: if Baldies came upon White Knights at shows, in the streets downtown, or wherever, the nazis were warned once. If Baldies came across the nazis again, then the nazis could expect to be attacked, or served some of what the Baldies called “Righteous Violence.”
While the Baldies actions went a long way to limiting the presence and organizing efforts of nazis in the Twin Cities areas, the Baldies realized that a successful drive against the nazis would mean having to form a broader group that appealed to kids other than just Skins; ARA was that group. However, the attempt to make ARA into a group beyond the Baldies was met with limited success, and ARA remained predominantly skinhead.
But the experience of the Baldies was not limited to Minneapolis alone. Across the Midwest, nazi activity was growing and anti-racist Skinheads were organizing in similar ways to what the Baldies had done. Soon, these different anti-racist skinhead crews were meeting up with each other and deciding to create a united organization of anti-racist skinhead crews. ARA as a name was adopted and a brief network of the crews was formed: the Syndicate.
Like Minneapolis, Chicago had multi-racial crews. These ARA skins were generally left-wing sympathetic and in Chicago it was not uncommon to find some Skins warming to Black liberation/Nationalist ideas. And it was not just racist and nazi ideas that were confronted. The Chicago ARA crew banned the wearing of American flags patches on jackets on bomber jackets (a standard piece of the Skin attire). At this point in time this was a rather significant step in Skinhead circles. While many Skinheads could claim to be “anti-racist”, a vast majority also were ProAmS (Pro American Skins). It was generally unheard of to find whole crews of Skinheads rejecting patriotic trappings. Many ARA skins took their cue from the words of groups like Public Enemy, America was a racist nightmare and the Stars and Stripes a symbol for, “…a land that never gave a damn.”
The success of ARA could be found in its being a truly organic product of a youth culture. Young people, in this example Skinheads, were creating a group that was explicitly anti-racist and sought to confront and shut out the nazi presence in the scenes specifically and the cities generally. ARA as an idea was made a pole to rally around and as an actual body of people it fought for “turf” and the establishment of a type of hegemony – lines were drawn and you had to choose where you stood. From putting on music shows, to producing zines and literature, to holding conferences where people could meet up and hang out while simultaneously trying to build an actual political project capable of fighting and winning.
However, ARA had many weaknesses’ that would lead to this initial incarnation having to be “reformed.” ARA was at this point predominantly male, and despite the growing political consciousness and understanding that ARA needed to be more than just a Skinhead group, the emphasis placed on physical confrontation and violence often breed a mentality where in the end, ARA was only about beating down the nazis. Larger political concerns became subordinate to the internal scene life. Women in the ARA groups saw double standards. While emphasis was placed on combating the oppression of racism, sexism ran rampant. Several women would leave ARA to look for a politic that dealt more fundamentally with Patriarchy. Some left in plain disgust at the macho behavior of some ARA men. Other women decided to stay in the movement and challenge the behavior and attempt to integrate radical and feminist ideas into the core politics of ARA. The decision by these women to stay was based on the realization that there were few other organizations existing that were as radical and militant. ARA had managed to attract a number of dedicated and determined individuals and this encouraged the idea that it was possible to develop an anti-sexist vision.
ARA helped expand peoples understanding of politics and oppression but the sword is double edged, and the new political consciousness worked to illustrate the limitations of this first incarnation of ARA. ARA needed to grapple with its internal contradictions if it was to develop into the broad, militant anti-racist youth organization and movement it originally hoped to be.
THE CHOICE OF A NEW GENERATION…
From ‘88 to ‘90 ARA had spread throughout the Midwest United States and was even seeing some West coast groups spring up. However, by 1991 the Minneapolis grouping represented the most consistent and in many ways the more diverse and politically engaged group, this was made possible in part by ARA’s relationship with revolutionary anarchist groups like the RABL (Revolutionary Anarchist Bowling League). Despite the somewhat silly name, RABL had a rep for being extremely confrontational and solidly pro-class war anarchist. Some of the members of ARA and the Baldies were involved with RABL and hoped to bring anarchist politics into ARA’s program.
While keeping the militancy and uncompromising attitude that ARA had been built on, anarchists in ARA made efforts to address the weakness that had run through ARA earlier. Attention to Queer struggles, Patriarchy, imbalance of power between whites and people of color, were all issues thrown to the fore now.
ARA Minneapolis was trying to turn itself into a popular, anti-authoritarian direct action group. Institutionalized oppressions of class society were given as much priority to thought and action as the continued struggle against nazi organizing. From police brutality to anti-war activity to actions to defend abortion clinics, ARA was a much more dynamic organization and this aided in its recruitment of new militants.
ARA had ceased to be a group centered around Skinhead culture, and while the limited potential of ARA’s first wave had been overcome, problems would still plague the group. Understanding class, gender, sexual definition and internal sexism would continue to be a challenge for ARA. By 1993, ARA in Minneapolis had reached a stage where after an extremely intense and inwardly focused grappling with group and individual identity, ARA almost totally fell apart and for the next year ARA remained dormant. It was now in Canada that ARA would find its strength.
ON THE PROWL AND IN THE STREETS
Toronto ARA was formed in 1992 as a response to a rise in nazi activity in the city. Arson, vandalism, and physical attacks were being carried out by fascists. Made up of anti-prison activists, native/indigenous organizers, anti-racists, anarchists, and kids from the local punk and skinhead scenes, ARA went to work to challenge and shutdown the fascists.
At this point the main organization of fascists in Toronto was the Heritage Front (HF). Founded by long time neo-nazi and KKK organizers, the HF was attempting to bring the different nazi tendencies together under its banner. The most well known of these fascist groups was the pre-Matt Hale COTC (Church of the Creator) which served as the “muscle” to the HF’s political rhetoric.
Through the work done by ARA in the States and its promotion in the radical anti-imperialist press, Love and Rage’s newspaper, and the punk scenes many publications (in particular magazines like MRR and Profane Existence), ARA as a name and model seemed to be the best avenue for organizing a grass roots, militant, and independent anti-racist project.
Like previous ARA organizing, emphasis was put on creating a visible culture through music shows, literature, and mass in your face demonstrations. ARA Toronto was having organizing meetings of over a hundred and their demos were in the several of hundreds. Toronto ARA quickly became a successful campaign and it’s establishment in youth scenes and areas of Toronto like Kennsington Market made it impossible for fascists to carry out their activity openly. ARA proceeded to go after the HF leadership and held “outings”, instead of organizing boring demos with speakers talking to the wind, ARA mobilized to march on the homes and hangouts of the nazis.
While previous incarnations of ARA had envisioned themselves moving towards a broad youth oriented style of organizing, it was Toronto ARA which really illustrated the potentials for ARA to do just that. The support and interest ARA created in less than a year’s time was seen when an anti-HF demo in downtown Toronto in January of 1993 drew over 500 anti-racists who were going to prevent HF members from marching through the streets. The ARA contingent was attacked by police on horse back, with some ARA members being arrested for assaulting police.
Despite the attack, ARA found the demo an overall success. The demo sought to shut down the nazi march and it did that, but it went further and showed ARA as an organization uninterested in playing the games of established liberal “anti-racist” and left groups. ARA knew that direct action was a more powerful force than lobbying for State action or selling papers – two things which will never stop racist and fascist organizing.
The success, and draw towards, ARA’s work would soon catch the attention of larger political Left groups. Organizations like the IS (International Socialist) tried to enter into ARA, but after a period of a couple months were voted out by a 2/3 majority. However, ARA now a known force and center for militant youths and activists would be sought out more and more for joint actions and Left groups would try and place themselves into a position of “leadership” within ARA, this especially with the formation of the ARA Network in 1995.
WE GO WHERE THEY GO
In 1995 several different groups came together to discuss creating a united front of various independent anti-racist forces. ARA had reemerged in Minneapolis and met with members of the MAFNet (Midwest Antifascist Network), an ARA type group that contained several Left tendencies from anarchists to smaller Marxist groups like the Trotskyist League to older SDS veterans.
After much debate, the new body would be called the Anti-Racist Action Network, and would be held together by the ‘Points of Unity’ (POU). Any individual could participate in a chapter so long as they agreed to the POU (although, different chapters could have additional political points of unity, reflecting the specific groups political orientation. This would later cause trouble where one groups POU would be taken as the Networks). Strategically, it brought in a larger mass of people and could be a vehicle for taking direct action and democratic left ideas of organizing to a higher level. The new ARA Net was also genuine in its not being a front for any one political group.
Utilizing internal discussion bulletins, national meetings, having a delegate system to facilitate decision making between the different chapters, ARA Net represented something new and fresh. And it also was an overwhelmingly anti-authoritarian organization. A sizable segment of the membership identified as anarchist and were now in a position to argue for anarchist models of organizing. There was no other movement that was currently existing that saw anarchists in a position to define avenues of action.
Anarchists involved with Love and Rage Revolutionary Anarchist Federation worked within ARA to keep the organizations structure and aims transparent and participatory. Love and Rage, as an organization, viewed ARA as a potential mass movement (e.g.: SDS), where politics could be raised and debated and where through practice and constant analysis win people to more and more radical positions. The relationship between the different political tendencies was often rocky, and there was constant debate around the setting up of different committees and how much influence they would have. Other issues of contention were the ability of organizations to join ARA en masse. ARA Net was set up on a chapter basis, and each chapter was made up of individuals. No organization could just join ARA Net. Chapters could have its members coming from any tendency, but a specific organization could hold no sway beyond the number of chapters their members were apart of. And even then each chapter was allowed only two votes. This made it difficult for Left sects to highjack ARA for opportunistic interests.
The next several years saw hundreds of activists join up with ARA. Network annual conferences could easily see 500 in attendance and conference weekends would be a mix of both decision making plenary and educational workshops with topics ranging from anti-Prison work to Colonialism to State repression to developments in the Far Right movements.
But the life’s blood of ARA remained its action in the streets. The following years from ‘96 to ‘98 provided ARA militants the greatest chance of demonstrating the politics of the movement on a much more mass level. But this period would also emerge as the most difficult period in ARA’s life. From accountability, to the need for a more coherent analysis of race, class and gender, these issues along with the ever present need to struggle against sexism, patriarchy and internal power imbalances would come to dominate the movement unlike at any time previously. Internal conflicts would split ARA at the seams and it would take the pulse of the new protest movements erupting in Seattle ‘99 to give help ARA a new focus and energy.
LET THE BATTLE BEGIN
Newspapers were scrambling for info on the new street militants and their ideology of anarchism, debate started to rage in the radical press. The Black Bloc was seen by some as misled youth, interested only in adventurism. Sometimes the Black Bloc was condemned outright and treated as criminal – an attitude that rolled in from the established Left. During riots, liberal and leftists do-gooders actually tried to defend capitalist property from the anarchists. In several instances, avowed ‘pacifists’ have attacked the Black Bloc in an effort to protect places like the Gap and Starbucks.
The actions by the Black Bloc and anarchists turned traditional politics on its head… ARA groups quickly defended the Seattle Black Bloc, seeing a similarity in tactics and motivation – also in the way that militant anti-fascism had suffered from the denunciations by the established left and liberal reformists.
The Seattle events had an immense effect on the ARA movement. ARA, like many groups, was taken by surprise when the Battle of Seattle erupted. The profound change the demonstrations had on political discourse and life itself could hardly have been foreseen. In ARA, there had long been debate about expanding our role and focus beyond the most basic anti-racist organizing. Many saw ARA as a grassroots direct action, anti-racist, anti-nazi, and for many ARA’ers, anti-cop movement. But explicit anti-capitalism was never taken up as a whole. Within several individual chapters this would have been probable, mostly in the anarchist dominated groups in Minneapolis, Detroit (two cities that also had L&R members as active ARA organizers) and Chicago. But within ARA, there were tendencies that saw adopting more explicit politics as potentially detrimental to ARA. Seattle helped to turn this around.
But this gets too far ahead, it is important to first outline the pre-Seattle ARA period and raise what events were fueling its growth and significance.
Throughout the Midwestern United States, Klan groups were on the offensive and holding blatantly provocative mass rallies that could attract hundreds of supporters. The Klan and assorted neo-Nazi allies were pinpointing cities that were faced with tinderbox-like racial tension. Fights around affirmative action, welfare, police brutality, housing, continued school de-segregation practice, or any struggle that brought about conflicts that poised people of color against the interests of White Supremacy in either its institutionalized form or autonomous actions by White citizens, the Klan would use as an opportunity to polarize the debate and saw their numbers and influence grow. Klan groups, like the one lead by longtime KKK member and neo-Nazi Tom Robb, became seen as fighters for White “rights.”
From Cincinnati, Ohio to Ann Arbor, Michigan, the Klan started holding its demos but the effect was that thousands of counter demonstrators came out to vent their disapproval and hatred of the racists. In some of these cities the smoldering racial tension that had long been present was about to be ignited. It was this counter-organizing that became the main thrust of the ARA Network. Doing pre-rally agitating, trying to meet up with sympathetic groups, and boldly stating that the aim of it’s counter-protesting was to “shut down” the rallies, ARA established itself as the group that rolled out to force the racists to take flight.
In particular, there was a massive riot that erupted when the Robb Klan faction came under attack from Black residents and ARA’ers in Ann Arbor. Police attacked the crowd using tear gas. Several Klansmen and fascists were wounded by protesters. Six years later, that riot is still talked about in Ann Arbor, partly due to continued legal issues brought on by the subsequent arrest of dozens of anti-racists charged with inciting and participating in mob action and assault. The arrests came two months after the Ann Arbor action, when at another Klan rally in Kalazamoo, Michigan, police using both video tape and statements made by “peace” marshals, identified several activists. The “peace” marshals, whose ranks were comprised of mostly older male Trade Unionists, had seen their influence and authority at the Ann Arbor rally ignored and undermined – they had been unable to prevent anti-Klan protesters from (un)peacefully taking matters into their own hands. While Ann Arbor was seen as a victory for anti-racists, the later arrests seriously demoralized many ARA’ers and showed that ARA was not completely ready for the repercussions of its activity. Many arrested activists felt let down and un-supported. The combination of high legal costs and the potential of lengthy jail time left many activists feeling alone and insufficiently supported. Even more, without a solid political understanding of how these actions were part of a broader strategy, it is easy to see how the stress could make some question the relevance of what ARA was doing. There were cases of activists asking why they were risking so much for a few hours of street fighting. This is a real concern that should not be discounted.
Many radicals in ARA could point to the significance of the mass action: sharpening political differences and solidifying existing positions, generating spontaneous organizing and/or the need to quickly reassess plans, the coming together of comrades and new groups of people, and polarizing the mass of the protesters against the police and government officials who would be spending time and money to allow the racists to rally. For anarchists, this atmosphere provided opportunities to speak and agitate for more radical positions and actions while simultaneously supporting steps being taken by folks from the communities who were operating outside of any political formation and sought to work in ways that directly went against government or community “leaderships” sanctioned plans and conduct. Out of these actions, connections and dialogue could be had about what the needs of the communities are, beyond these one time explosions of anti-racist action. For anarchists, an assessment of the confidence and abilities of our forces could be made. Anarchist revolutionaries wanted to spread and popularize ARA, but personal and group development was equally important. This process of developing a nuclei, or cadre, of fighters is an important point of militant, extra-legal activity.
The ability of a movement like ARA to resist the emergence of a centralized, top-down structure where there would be a minority determining the politics and the strategy, would be found though the widest possible discussion and planning within the various ARA circles, and stressing the collective process. It happened on more than one occasion that one person would form an ARA group and would attempt to exercise ownership over it. Others who would come into the group would feel as if their opinions and work were subordinate to a few who may have greater economic resources or social influence. As with any growing movement, the result was an attraction of individuals who sought to use the movement for their own ends, rather than making ARA the property of the whole of the membership. These groups did not last long within ARA, but they had the effect of alienating many new and enthused activists, including women, who felt some of the ARA locals were controlled by men who were interested in women for dating purposes more than as comrades.
It should be emphasized that at this time (1996-97), ARA had reached its pinnacle in membership, easily estimated at 1,500 supporting activists. The anti-Klan organizing and a number of anti-police brutality campaigns initiated by ARA groups had helped swell the ranks of ARA. But in 1998 at the ARA national conference several internal conflicts would put the fire to ARA and test its ability to cope with its own weakness’. A series of accounts from women of having been treated in abusive and demeaning ways, and one woman ARA activist having been sexual assaulted by a male involved in ARA, lead to a major split. Local ARA groups collapsed into different factions and individual members would sometimes side with particular split off factions in other cities, depending on who knew who. At the core of this was the fact that several women felt that their concerns and struggles against sexism were being ignored or undermined by their own male “comrades”. Women were told to not bring their personal issues to the meetings and long standing cases of blatant male chauvinism were discounted as having been exaggerated by women to suit their private interests. ARA’s movement structure had little in terms of a plan of resolution. ARA existed as a loose network centered around the POU, and mechanisms of accountability and action to solve internal disputes and problems of such high and sensitive degree were not present. A few activists intimately connected to the situation used this unfortunate truth to evade criticism. Though ARA was being affected as a whole, individuals directly involved (or who had sided with certain persons who were being accused of sexism and misconduct) would say that the matters were of local concern and that they were uninterested in Network involvement, despite several women contacting ARA groups and individuals in other cities asking for help because the local group would not deal with, and in effect would try and mute, the issues.
Attempts at mediation failed and ARA left its annual conference splintered and demoralized. Several local groups never regained momentum and others who outwardly appeared strong would themselves come crashing inwards. Most notable was the split in the ARA affiliated RASH UNITED (Red & Anarchist Skinheads) who split into East Coast and Midwest factions, and ultimately ceased all together (a Canadian RASH in Quebec continued but was more thoughtful and committed to group accountability than many of its American counterparts). Once again cases of sexism and un-accountability by a mostly male membership caused implosion.
While the next year did not see ARA groups stop their organizing, it was a rough year and introspection on the part of many in the movement slowed down outward perceptions of action. It was crucial for ARA to grapple with its limitations, and many comrades worked tirelessly to open up debate about what had happened and what needed to change: how groups formed or were “vested” into the ARA Net, structures and practice for resolution, rotating Network roles, and attempting to hold more gatherings where internal network life and issues involving its members could be discussed. ARA would remain a network of chapters united around the Points of Unity, but it was smaller and the level of discourse was more intense and productive than before. If ARA was to continue as a movement, then a higher commitment on the parts of its overall membership was required and a realization that a few words of who it was or some mechanical structural adjustments would not be adequate. Emphasizing political quality over membership numbers was what the movement needed.
Even current internal strategy plannning and political discussions have been influenced by this introspection started a few years back. Drawing out experiences within ARA combined with developing theories of women in society and our movements, several ARA chapters have tried to draw more attention to the need for anti-patriarchal organizing and political priorotizing. The Chicago ARA group (which found its beginnings firmly rooted in clinic defense and exposing far-right ties to the anti-abortion movements) is one chapter that has tried to integrate a more serious women’s focus into its work. With a recent ARA conference held this past April, and the fact that several committed and longtime ARA activists are women and continue acting as “responsibles,” ARA will be hosting a women’s conference towards the end of summer to continue to elevate anti-patriarchal politics to the front of direct action, and anti-fascist, organizing.
But moving back to Seattle. It was at this time that several ARA affiliates re-grouped and started to organize, building off of their connections and history of direct action. Seattle was a moment that lit up peoples imaginations and many ARA groups that were still active threw themselves into the various mass protests. Seattle, Washington DC, Cincinnati, and Quebec City saw numerous ARA militants participating in the protests’ planning and actions. While internal debates over anti-capitalism and ARA’s adoption of this as a unifying politic continued, the majority of ARA supported the organizing and saw issues of “globalization” intrinsically connected to larger struggles around race, gender, and class inequality. Another point for ARA to organize around was the increased attraction the “anti-globalization” movement was having for far-right and neo-fascist groups .It was here that work by smaller ARA groups took shape. More theoretical works were developed to analyze ARA’s activity and the emerging social movements – from advancements and tactics in State repression to the needs of social and more specifically, revolutionary left – to build on current battles with the State and resist co-option or destabilization, to the influence the new movement was having on other areas of struggle. Mass protest and the increased connectedness movements had with one another via internet and these series of mass demos helped expand possibilities for quick mobilization and affinity that had in the past been established less frequently and taken a greater period of time to develop.
But ARA’s orientation was not to be defined solely by its relationship to the anti-globalization movement. ARA had for years been struggling against racism and fascist organizing. Many Klan groups saw their rallies cease as they suffered from their own internal power struggles, State infiltration/repression, and having ARA outmaneuver them on many occasions, by successfully mounting campaigns to build effective street and community resistance. But new fascist organizing, lead by more sophisticated and potentially dangerous fascist movements, started to emerge. In the days following the 9/11 attacks, the National Alliance started a campaign to build on white people’s insecurities and fears. ARA participated in defense of Mosques and Arab centers. Struggles to fight the tightening of immigration laws, the rising number of cases of detentions and deportations of immigrants, and the general racist backlash, were all areas that ARA activists found themselves involved in. Yet the rapidly changing circumstances of 9/11 and the escalation of Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq made it difficult for much of the Left and progressive forces to get a stable footing. The US State was quickly moving to inact stauncher repression measures that were geared towards silencing protest with fear and intimidation. More concerning, they may potentially be launching a campaign of infiltration and encapsulation wherein the State may actually direct the activity and political trajectory of a group or movement by utilizing moles and dis-information. The authorities were now working overtime to curb outbreaks of militant action.
IN CONCLUSION
A recent article entitled “Revolutionary Anti-Fascism,” published in NEFAC’s agitational magazine Barricada, posed several questions about ARA. While it praised ARA’s commitment to organizing street level defense against racist attacks and fascist groups, where most of the Left fails miserably, the article is critical of ARA’s continued lack of developing positions on a range of issues: patriarchy, white supremacy, class, and even fascism. The article is important and I sympathize notably with its emphasizing that ARA needs to seriously grapple with political questions and commit itself to a higher level of debate, whether or not there is immediate agreement. Where I disagree with the article is that beyond articulating radical anti-fascist positions it see’s ARA’s main contribution in the past and future as its anti-fascist organizing, anti-fascist organizing that is based more times than not on straight-forward anti-nazi activity. A point the article makes is that where there is no visible or active nazi presence, ARA groups fall into a state of inactivity. This has become an unfortunate reality for a lot of ARA groups and shows an inability to connect anti-racism with other struggles beyond the pale of nazi activity. Anti-nazi action is important, but like past ARA attempts to attack inequality and oppression in the interconnected realms of race, gender, and class exploitation, current ARA activists would do well to connect with developments in their cities, communities, schools and workplaces. Sorry for the run on sentence, but the main point here is that anti-fascist politics should be a lens threw which we view class society as a whole. It is a critique of power and anti-human tendencies and its incorporation coupled with a willingness to fight and utilize direct action in whatever arena we are struggling in, may help to develop the neccessaru mass movements capable of breaking down our societys rule of exploitation and division.
I chose the title “Claim No Easy Victories” to point out that ARA has been an essential fighting movement in North American radical politics. Its success in mobilizing and politicizing hundreds of activists can not be ignored. Current organizing by anarchists would look vastly different if ARA had not exploded into the scenes, or had ceased when difficulties arose. However, while significant advancements have been the result of ARA organizing – the development of anti-fascist politics, staunch defense of collective and decentralized organizing, the use of direct action and militancy in the face of a legalistic and pacifist Left, and the important defeats of various fascist organizing – ARA still has a long road ahead of itself, and it may be too easy to rest on what has been done thus far. Success is temporal and fleeting – the struggle continues…
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“Life Sentence” Film
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 24, 2008
NewFilmmakers presents some urban realities.
Date: Tuesday 29 July 2008
Time: 7:20pm-8:20pm
Location: Anthology Film Archives
32 Second Ave. (at 2nd St.), New York
Admission: $5
“Life Sentence” is a personal look at the impact of long-term imprisonment and the adjustment back into society. While providing positive opportunities for other formerly incarcerated people, these six successful men and women must deal with the hindrances of lifetime parole. The film explores the criminal justice system, as well as the hope, ambition, and obstacles they’ve overcome to prove change is possible.
Meet the remarkable people of your community, the formerly incarcerated people of this film, who on a daily basis create opportunity and positive transformation for others.
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Traces of the Trade
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 24, 2008
First-time filmmaker Katrina Browne makes a troubling discovery — her New England ancestors were the largest slave-trading family in U.S. history. She and nine fellow descendants set off to retrace the Triangle Trade: from their old hometown in Rhode Island to slave forts in Ghana to sugar plantation ruins in Cuba. Traces of the Trade had its national broadcast premiere on PBS on Tuesday, June 24, 2008, opening the 21st season of the P.O.V. documentary series. Official Selection, Sundance Film Festival 2008.
Simon Kilmurry, executive director, P.O.V.; Liz Dory, director of photography, Traces of the Trade; Jennifer Carr, national outreach director, Traces of the Trade; and Michelle Materre, outreach and distribution consultant, Traces of the Trade to follow
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Common White Fallacies When Dealing with People of Color
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 24, 2008
A white person needs to listen to the personal experiences of people of colour. On the other hand, it is dangerous, and usually racist, to generalize from one or a handful of people of color and make a general claim. These two statements do not contradict each other.
White people need to understand the basic structure behind first-order logic to avoid the errors of both (i) ignoring the voices of people of color, and (ii) making generalizations about all people of color based on the voices of some people of color.
Errors in Making Generalizations about People of Colour
Fallacy: Confusing Existential Quantification for Universal Quantification (Interchangeable People of Color)
The following reasoning is invalid:
A black person x thinks P.
Therefore, all black people think P.
This reasoning is invalid because black people are not interchangeable, and one (or any) black person is not the spokesperson for all black people. Just as with white people, black people are individuals and are diverse in thought, culture, appearance, and other properties.
Fallacy: Hasty Generalization
The following reasoning is invalid:
A black person x thinks P.
A black person y thinks P.
A black person z thinks P.
Therefore, all black people think P.
First of all, this argument is never deductively valid, no matter how large the sample size, unless the sample set is equivalent to the population set to which you want to generalize. Inductive reasoning is always deductively invalid. (Science and statistics use empirical observations to draw conclusions, but they are not making inductive arguments.*)
If, instead, the reasoner wants to make a statistical claim about the population of black people, then she may be committing a hasty generalization. The sample size may be too small, and even when the sample size is large enough, it may not be representative of the general population. For example, if you surveyed black people in certain areas of the Internet and found that most were gamers, it says nothing about black people in general.
Errors in Ignoring People of Colour
Fallacy: White is Right
The following reasoning is invalid:
A white person x thinks P.
A Chinese person y thinks not P.
Therefore, x is right and P is true.
This reasoning is invalid because a white person is not necessarily more rational than a Chinese person. Although Western culture identifies the West with rationality and logic, and the East with irrationality and superstition, this does not mean that it is true in reality. A white person is not necessarily correct when the opponent is a black person or any non-white person, either. If a person assumes that this is true, he has an implicit belief in “white supremacy.”
Fallacy: Appeal to White Belief
The following reasoning is invalid:
Most white people think P.
Most non-white people think not P.
There are more white people than non-white people (in the United States).
Therefore, P is true.
Appeal to White Belief is a racial form of the fallacious Appeal to Belief, which has the following form:
Most people believe that a claim, P, is true.
Therefore, P is true.
Appeal to White Belief and the more general Appeal to Belief are invalid because the fact that most people believe that something is true does not mean that is true. For example, if most white Americans believe that racism no longer exists in the United States, and most black Americans believe that racism still exists, then this does not mean that the whites are objective and the blacks have a persecution complex. Appeal to White Belief may appear together with the “White is Right” fallacy.
Fallacy: My Black Friend Agrees With Me
The following reasoning is invalid:
A black person w agrees with me.
A black person x agrees with me.
A black person y disagrees with me.
A black person z disagrees with me.
Therefore, y and z are wrong and stupid.
Sometimes the number of black people who disagree with the white person in question is larger than the number of black people who agree with him, and the white person still thinks that those who disagree with him do not count because they disagree. This reasoning is fallacious, because the fact that one or some black people agree with the white person does not entail that those are the “good blacks” and the rest are the “bad blacks” who are wrong and stupid. The blacks who agree with the white person may agree with him because they are different demographically from those who disagree, or their social position may hinge on being agreeable to whites.
For an example of demographic differences, Oprah Winfrey may think that any black person from the ghetto can become rich if she tried, but Oprah is of the demographic of black billionaires who started off poor, which is not representative of the general black demographic.
It is more difficult to give a concrete example of the fragile social position situation, because it posits that the agreeable blacks have or are influenced by an ulterior motive. However, this sometimes happens, as being outwardly agreeable towards authority figures is not uncommon for humans in general. (For example, you may outwardly ‘agree’ with your boss about something and your boss may believe that you truly agree with her, but your desire for job security may or may not have influenced your behavior.) Whether or not this is true for a given situation depends on the individual situation.
In any case, the truth or falsity of your belief is not determined by the fact that some black people agree with you, or the number of people who agree with you, even if more black people agree with you than disagree. This is a variation of the “Appeal to Belief” discussed above. In the “My Black Friend Agrees With Me” fallacy, the fact that the blacks who agree with the white person are favoured over those who disagree may be influenced by the “White is Right” fallacy as well.
This reasoning is fallacious even when you substitute any non-white racial group for ‘black’. Whites should not ignore or dismiss non-white voices just because they disagree. Any criticism should be considered and evaluated seriously.
* Karl Popper’s account of falsification is a more accurate picture of how the scientific method works, although Thomas Kuhn’s picture is more accurate than Popper’s, and others have criticized Kuhn, etc. A full explanation is much too complicated and is irrelevant to this post. The point here is that claiming that inductive logic is invalid is not the same as a criticism of science, statistics, or empiricism in general. Science, statistics, and empirical methods are very good ways of gathering knowledge.
Via Restructure
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Black Panthers’ “Grandmother” Celebrates 102 Years
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 23, 2008
At 102, ‘grandmother’ of Black Panthers is honored
By Kamika Dunlap
Staff Writer
OAKLAND — At 102, Ruth Villa Jones is still committed to the work of the Black Panther Party.
She is considered the “grandmother” of many of the party’s programs and was honored Saturday at the Oakland Community School Reunion and Picnic.
The East Oakland school was founded by the Panthers more than 30 years ago, and Jones was there at the beginning. She helped with everything from the party’s free breakfast program to passing out shoes to poor children.
“It’s so wonderful that she always thinks of others first and herself last,” said Betty Reuben, who was a parent volunteer at the school.
About 50 former students, staff members and parents gathered for the event at Dimond Park. They greeted each other, and Jones, the oldest living former Panther member, with hugs and smiles. The reunion was the first official gathering since the school closed at the end of 1981.
The school grew out of a need to help African-American and other disadvantaged children caught in an unequal public education system that tended to have better schools in middle-class and affluent neighborhoods than in poor inner-city areas. It began in 1974 with about 90 children and was located at 6118 E. 14th St.
Poets, artists and activists, including Rosa Parks, Maya Angelou, Cesar Chavez, James Baldwin and Richard Pryor were guest teachers and lecturers at the school.
Party members say Jones was a “real comrade” and had a strong sense of commitment
She was recruited by Panthers co-founders Huey Newton and Bobby Seale to help with the school and other party work. Jones founded the party’s Seniors Against A Fearful Environment (SAFE) program.
“She was always there at critical times and on the picket lines for the party,” said Melvin Dickson, a former party member. He said he remembers how Jones supported Newton when he returned to the U.S. from Cuba by attending his court hearings. She was also present to protect the party against negative attacks from the media.
Today, Jones is still on the move and uses a walker to get around. Last week, she celebrated her birthday and was recognized by the Rev. Cecil Williams of Glide Memorial Church for her long-standing work in the community.
At the reunion, Jones said she was glad to connect with her friends from the school.
“I’m happy I’m able to see what the party has done,” she said. “We did the work, and many seeds were planted.”
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How To Tell People They Sound Racist
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 23, 2008
Jay Smooth lays out the knowledge in this video.
Via Ill Doctrine
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DMX and the Struggle for Health Care
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on July 23, 2008
By Counterhegemony
Sometimes a social movement does not get to select its spokesperson. Who knew when the civil rights movement began that a baseball player such Hank Aaron would become such a durable symbol of equality. Aaron’s contribution? He endured the savage threats of white racists and constant pressure of the commercial media which came along with breaking Babe Ruth’s long standing home run record. Aaron accomplished this with a quiet dignity that spoke volumes about the abilities and determination emerging from the African-American community.
Yesterday, such a role was thrust upon another commercial star who also happens to be an African-American. It seems that the legally embattled hip-hop artist DMX was arrested for using the false identity of “Troy Jones” to avoid paying a $7,500 medical bill. The bill was incurred during his visit to the Scottsdale, Az. Mayo Clinic. Most of the major media outlets connect this latest arrest with DMXs recent string of arrests for offenses such as driving without a license and animal cruelty.
Perhaps, though, there is another story here. Taking a page from the civil rights movement we can argue that an immoral law ceases to be a law. A moral person is then encouraged if not mandated to break such a law. Charging a human being for receiving health care is immoral. I therefore applaud DMXs attempt to avoid payment and would even encourage organized groups to follow his lead. The provision of healthcare should be a human right offered to all people in this society regardless of their ability to pay.
There is a long list of negative consequences as a result of having a health care system monopolized by private companies. 47 million have no insurance, more than 20 million more are under insured and some 100,000 people per year die from health problems which could have been solved with the proper attention. Even senior citizens are being targeted by private companies as the public system of Medicare is slowly placed into private hands. Finally and directly related to DMXs actions, health care debts are the highest cause of personal bankruptcy.
So, move over Henry Aaron, DMX may be the new super star face of a social movement. DMX would do well to publicly endorse the resolution currently in the House of Representatives known as H.R. 676, or the National Health Insurance Act. This bill would provide health care to everyone – it would cover DMX and the millions of “Troy Jones’” suffering under a privatized health system.
Via Counterhegemonic
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