Archive for August, 2008
The Black and Brown Project
Posted by illvox collective in General on August 31, 2008
Hip-hop crews Self Scientific and Sick Symphonies have teamed up for The Black & Brown Project, a collab intended to build Black and Latino solidarity. States Self Scientific, “Too necessary. We have a serious problem with the Black & Brown violence in this City (L.A.).” Check the music through the link.
Via Grandgood
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50 Shots And Counting
Posted by illvox collective in General on August 31, 2008
SMH @ the Carl Dix/RCP inclusion, but whatever…
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Help Prisoners in New Orleans
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on August 31, 2008
Prisoners and Families of New Orleans needs your help immediately!
If you haven’t heard already Hurricane Gustav is headed for New Orleans and is predicted to be a category 3 hurricane, the same as Hurricane Katrina. There will possibly be a mandate for all people (outside of prisons and jails) of New Orleans to evacuate starting tomorrow August 29th, the three year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. It is predicted that hurricane Gustav will pose great flooding potential regardless of its category rating, the levee that broke by elected official’s decisions during Hurricane Katrina has not been fixed to it’s potential, or replaced.
The over crowding Orleans Parish Prison, located in New Orleans, holds 2, 500 prisoners (this count is not certain, due to lack of information given to the public.) Although not official, we have information that the Prisoners of Orleans Parish Prison will be evacuating to Angola Prison and Hunt Prison in the next coming days and are also prisons that can be affected by Hurricane Gustav due to overcrowding.
During Hurricane Katrina there were prisoners able to evacuate and others who remained locked in their cells with a minimal chance of survival. Prisoners were left in flooded cells, with no food, and had minimal ventilation, to say the least. Family members, of prisoners who were held at Orleans Parish Prison, are still in the fight to locate their loved ones who had been evacuated to other prisons during Katrina. Due to the flooding, lack of organization and care from New Orleans Department of Corrections and elected officials, prisoner’s records were also missing. As a result, prisoner’s constitutional rights have been violated.
This abuse can not happen again!
What will happen to the prisoners of Orleans Parish Prison located in New Orleans this time?
Critical Resistance (CR) is demanding that the elected officials of New Orleans will not create the same devastating wrongs as they did to the prisoners of Orleans Parish Prison during hurricane Katrina.
1. we demand a full and safe evacuation of all prisoners
2. we demand to know what the evacuation plan for prisoners is
3. we demand to see a public document about that plan immediately
4. we demand information about how we can find people after an evacuation
We are urging every member, ally and comrade of New Orleans across the country, to make atleast one call to:
Sheriff Malrin Gusman: 504.827.8505
(James Carter’s secretary said “Orleans Parish Prison is Gusman’s prison”)
James Carter: 504.658.1030
(Criminal Justice Council Member who is able to put pressure on the sheriff even if they say they can’t)
You can also send an email: JCarter@cityofno.com
please put in your email subject: How will you protect prisoners this time?
Please call as many times as you can to put pressure on them and let them know our demands and it is their job to be accountable to us!
For further information from us please contact Critical Resistance New Orleans:
Mayaba: 917.385.5472 or mayaba@criticalresistance.org
Koolblack: 504.813.4714 or koolblack@criticalresistance.org
(If you can’t get through due to evacuation please contact: pilar@criticalresistance.org for further information)
In solidarity,
Critical Resistance
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Interview: Zack De La Rocha
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on August 30, 2008
These days, the rock scene is low on mysterious figures. As the music has lost its countercultural edge, many of its champions have transformed into average celebrities, happy to speak into any microphone that wanders by. That’s not true of Zack de la Rocha: the Rage Against the Machine vocalist is the rare rock star who keeps his distance from the hype.
De la Rocha is as famous for his radical politics as for incendiary poetics. Between his retirement from Rage in 2000 and his recent reunion with the band, he’s limited his public appearances to the occasional rally or benefit show. His musical output has been spare too: only a few songs have seen light.
But this summer, the 38-year-old Southland native is back and seemingly unstoppable. He has a new musical project — One Day as a Lion, which pairs him with drummer Jon Theodore. One Day as a Lion’s self-titled debut EP, on Anti- Records, hit No. 28 on the Billboard charts with minimal media attention, and is gaining traction nationally on rock radio. A full release will come in the fall.
De la Rocha has also found a way to embrace Rage again. A 2007 Coachella appearance marked the band’s return as a live unit, and its shows have become major events. Earlier this month, Rage blazed through a chaos-inspiring set at Lollapalooza in Chicago, and the band has just announced a Sept. 3 Minneapolis date, which will serve as a protest against the Republican National Convention occurring simultaneously in St. Paul.
This burst of activity has even inspired De la Rocha to break his media silence. He spoke Monday by phone about the current state of political music, his creative process, and the future of One Day as a Lion – and Rage Against the Machine. A shorter version is running in Tuesday’s paper but Soundboard has the full edited interview below.
How did One Day as a Lion, your new project with drummer Jon Theodore, come about?
I’ve known Jon for several years now, and I saw some of his first performances as a member of the Mars Volta. He come from Baltimore and had been in some underground bands there, so I’d heard of him. When I did see him it was clear that music in L.A. was never going be the same now that he was here! I’ve worked with some great drummers, and have seen people try to execute those kinds of things before, but never as effortlessly and with as much feel. He exists in this realm between John Bonham and Elvin Jones. I haven’t seen drumming like that in a long time.
So I immediately felt compelled to get to know the guy and pick his brain and find out what kind of music he was interested in. We had a lot in common. We met in jams a couple of summers ago, without the intention of making an album.
Jon had a friend named Troy Zeigler, who now plays with Serj Tankian, and Troy had this very small rehearsal space where he would teach drum lessons. A couple of summers ago, Jon and I went in there to talk to Troy. He wasn’t there. Jon sat down on one of the student’s kits and started playing. The room was filled with random instruments – there was percussive stuff, these old 80s metal amps that hadn’t been used in ages, and a dusty Rhodes keyboard with some broken keys. I plugged in through a metal amp and ran it through this messed-up delay pedal that had a trigger on it and we immediately started playing. It felt like two people having a conversation using whatever phrases were at our disposal. We had to document it.
We’re still using that keyboard. We had to put an old Number Two pencil and jam it into the side to keep the top on.
The EP came out without much warning and basically no hype. What was the strategy involved in releasing it that way?
I wish I could say there was a strategy involved! We felt that the collection of songs we had chosen had resonated with us and it was really something we wanted people to discover on their own. That’s been missing from music, in a way; we’ve been marketed to so much, rather than people discovering something and picking it up.
When I heard Public Enemy for the first time, it was on the soundtrack for the movie “Less than Zero,” tucked between a Madonna song and some other ’80s rehash. I was in a friend’s car, he put the soundtrack on and I thought, what is this junk? When it got to “Bring the Noise,” I had that kind of urgent reaction where you just had to stop what you’re doing. It sounded like breaking news.
How did the signing with Anti- come about?
I’ve known Brett [Gurewitz, Bad Religion guitarist and the labels' founder] for years and we’ve collaborated on a few things in the past, and I appreciate his perspective on making music. He has a genuine respect for artists. I think Anti- can bring in a number of voices that wouldn’t be considered in our rigid radio format-dominated industry still. I found that appealing. And it’s kind of in the neighborhood. But they also have the ability to enable us to grow if that ends up happening. We are working on another album now. And we want to play shows and be a band and go out and start some noise.
The band’s name, One Day as a Lion, hints that this might not be a long-lived project. Am I reading that right?
No! This is not simply a burst of energy. We are going to be making records and writing songs. We’re still in the process of forming as a band — we need a keyboard player, I’m not good enough to do it all myself — so that will be rectified soon.
The name speaks about a generation of people, a kind of development that I feel. It’s an intuition about people who aren’t going to be so concerned about elections to get what they need. And whose politics aren’t going to revolve around a bourgeois morality. Their interests are going to be focused on food and housing and justice and revenge. And without going too far into that, that’s an intuition that I had.
Why is there no guitar in these new songs?
I’ve always wanted to experiment with sounds that could provide a kind of tension, something you can’t avoid. When I first heard the sirens and high sax squeals of hip hop in the late 80s, I was drawn to creating those textures. With this new music, it’s wasn’t a choice not to use guitars so much as the spontaneity of that moment when Jon and I got together, regardless of the instrumentation. We wanted to produce a sound that was much larger than what you’d think it could be.
You’ve worked with many collaborators since leaving Rage, including Trent Reznor and DJ Shadow. Did what you learned from those experiments factor into ODAAL?
To an extent it did, and it didn’t. When I left Rage… first off, I was very heartbroken, and secondly, I became obsessed with completely reinventing my wheel. In an unhealthy way, to a degree. I kind of forgot that old way of allowing yourself to just be a conduit. When I was working with Trent and Shadow, I felt that I was going through the motions. Not that what was produced wasn’t great, but I feel now that I’ve maybe reinvented the base sounds that emanate from the songs. But I’m still doing what I feel I do well, while looking for a more minimal sound.
The first ODAAL single is called “Wild International.” That implies a global politics from the get go. How does your work fit into that scenario?
Before we get into the larger thing, that song is a response to the way we saw the U.S. government try to reframe the conflicts of the world. Particularly when the Soviet Union had collapsed, there was no way to subject the country to the kind of fear needed to justify what I consider to be an ill distribution of wealth. After 9/11 you could see that reframing taking place. The specter of Communism no longer haunted the U.S., justifying its actions in Latin America and all over the world. What filled that void were Al Qaeda and the Muslim world in general. That song is, in an abstract way, addressing the way the right has distracted people from this huge rush of wealth from the bottom to the top.
Beyond that, I’m speaking toward a deeper sentiment that I feel and I know a lot of people feel. Most of the songs have to do with redemptive moments that come in the face of some real indignity. And that’s the current that I’m trying to tap into, because I think that for a lot of people — for the real participants who live in the shadows and work at car washes and are forced to cross the border and are struggling and facing the real economic consequences — they’re often left out off the debate because of the language they speak or even the terminology that they use.
So it stems from my own frustration. It stems from seeing how things have been developing politically, and watching so much dissatisfaction and people very upset about the way the country is going. And watching all of that frustration steered back into a more traditional political process. The problems stem far deeper than anything that Brother Obama can address, and eventually people are going to have to respond.
I think maybe like a conduit for that expression. I have those same feelings too. I’m a Mexicano growing up in that colonized Southwest. I’m an artist, but I didn’t grow up wealthy.
On the surface, some of these new songs seem very anti-religious, including the single.
I don’t see it as an anti-religious song. I see it as the West has been using Christianity as a way to justify its actions when in reality, those figures, Christ and Muhammad, were rebels. These two religious figures have been co-opted to justify power, although they fought against the abuses of power and the expansion of empire. It’s almost like, what would Christ and Muhammad do?
What do you think of the state of political art now? Sometimes it seems to have really died down, what with a mainstream full of teen pop and reality television.
I’m listening to things all the time. There have been eight years of the Bush administration and the decline of real wages, and people are responding all the time. It’s unfortunate that more conscious artists or political artists in general haven’t been heard in the mainstream. But I think back to when I was going to hardcore shows and I saw the Bad Brains, those moments resonate and are life-altering moments. Those people who were at those shows have become artists or activists as a result of having their perspective shifted. During the 1980s when punk was seen as unviable or dangerous, or threatening to the music industry, those voices went underground and created their own networks and vehicles for producing what they produced. It did create a very politicized generation. So I don’t necessarily feel that music within the mainstream is always an indication of the political frustrations that exist beneath the surface.
I’ve traveled back and forth between here and Mexico a lot, especially since the Zapatista uprising in 1994. The Rand Corporation did this study about how the Zapatistas were able to create such an international presence and have their experiences and the objectives of the rebellion outlined for so many people worldwide, and how that was responsible for fending off a more direct military action against the communities. It had a lot to do with the Internet. Whether you’re interested in change and growing up in the Lacandon jungle, or whether you’re young here and watching these horrors unfold in Iraq and Afghanistan, we now have the tools to provide a countervoice.
One line jumped out at me, from the title track — “If L.A. were Baghdad, we’d be Iraqi. “
In one sense, that line about one of those redemptive moments that run through the whole EP. But I’m also making a comparison between the expansion of U.S. power into Iraq and Afghanistan and the history of the Southwest, which has been erased. There’s a very close relationship between what happened in Fallujah and what happened at the Alamo.
When settlers fleeing the South after the Civil War came into San Antonio, primarily because they wanted to practice slavery, an altercation took place and James Polk used it as an excuse to invade, to fulfill Manifest Destiny in the Southwest, which is really a misnomer — this is really Northeastern Mexico.
In Fallujah, there were Blackwater mercenaries, and U.S. soldiers taking over schools and using them as a military base in the interest of Exxon Mobil. And the students and their parents reacted by staging a protest. Several students were killed. The U.S. used that as a pretext to go in and decimate Fallujah. I’m exploring that in the song.
How do those two elements of your own life — activism and music-making — intersect or diverge now?
I don’t think the separation is valid, especially in these times. For me, the only time that that line gets drawn when you’re producing music and you’re trying to flush out a certain idea — that’s very liberating, in a very abstract way. It’s in those moments where you feel free, and you can go ahead and explore why you feel free in those moments. In the past moments with Shadow and Trent I didn’t feel that.
Participating in the Son Jarocho work [his activist work with urban farmers in South Central Los Angeles, which included playing folk music with the group Son de Madera] felt more community based, more collective. I was part of a collective voice and not on my own as an artist, and something about that attracted me.
It’s so funny; I’ve read a couple things someone said that there were bets being placed on who would finish their album first, Axl Rose or me. One joke was that Axl was calling his record “Chinese Democracy,” and that there would be democracy in China by the time he finished! I laughed when I considered calling this record “American Democracy. ” But I kinda spoke too soon on that!
It’s an election year here in the U.S. — did that factor in to your decision to debut new music now?
I’d be lying if I said it was coincidental. I think that it’s an interesting moment. The lowest approval rating in the history of any presidency — and for Congress. There’s this interesting rupture developing, and I think it’s a healthy one.
To watch the Democrats, who were really our only institutional obstruction to this extremely rightward swing, fall in lockstep behind this new imperial fantasy that became reality — that was a pivotal moment. A lot of people began to question the whole nature of both parties. Now more than ever, there’s a more fertile ground for artists to try to reveal the nature of both parties, who are mainly the public relations team for transnational corporations.
Barack is clearly the most viable candidate, the most intelligent, the one with the most forward-thinking position, but I would hate to see the flames of discontent be watered down by rhetorical visions of hope and change, when historically those things have only come from immigrant workers or people fighting against segregation, or against the second class position of women. History has taught us that when it comes to ending war, it’s always been the people on the ground who’ve led the movement. Veterans who have come home and fought against the war. Iraqi kids. And artists and musicians.
You’ve been touring with Rage again. What is your relationship like with those guys now?
So much has changed. When you get older, you look back on tensions and grievances and have another perspective on it. I think our relationship now is better than it’s ever been. I would even describe it as great. We’re going to keep playing shows — we have a couple of big ones happening in front of both conventions. As far as us recording music in the future, I don’t know where we all fit with that. We’ve all embraced each other’s projects and support them, and that’s great.
When you look out a crowd like the one you played in front of at Lollapalooza, what kind of potential do you see there?
There was this interesting thing that happened during the Clinton administration; people were looking inward and not outward, and not addressing what was going on. Rage set the political foreground for things that would come very shortly thereafter. I think people might see that what we are saying has more relevance now than when the band first came out.
Can we look forward to some live ODAAL gigs in the near future?
Definitely. I’ve always hoped that a project I was involved in could be a little more spontaneous, set up on a block and play. Me and Jon see eye to eye on doing that.
Meanwhile, as you said, Rage is playing in Minneapolis the same night the Republican convention happens in St. Paul. What do you anticipate for that show?
You’re gonna have to come and cover it. I think we both know what we expect. Good shoes would help. And you might wanna dip that bandanna in some vinegar.
Via Davey D
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Acción Zapatista Radio Documentary
Posted by illvox collective in General on August 30, 2008
Radio documentary (10 minutes; MP3) on resistance, autonomy and knowledge production in the academy, and the strategies used by the Acción Zapatista collective at Humboldt State University to liberate academic learning from the neoliberal logic.
Via Indymedia
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Beyond Blockades: Thinking Through RNC 08 Tactics
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on August 30, 2008
A Strategy for Failure?
“You may not be interested in strategy, but strategy is interested in you.” Leon Trotsky
While we do not want to cause any division in the anarchist movement in the USA, honesty in evaluating direct action is important when anarchists in the United States seem like we might have a chance at actually winning by redefining the dominant discourse in the United States. It is in this spirit that we produce the following critique of the astoundingly conventional “three-tier strategy” put forward by Unconventional Action in hope that at best this late stage in the build up to the Republican National Convention a viable action alternative strategy can be created or anarchists can at least be aware of the high potential for failure of the “three-tier strategy” and plan accordingly.
The first thing to notice about the “Three-Tier Strategy” is that it is a plan based on blockades. All three tiers are blockades based on stopping delegates, with each tier simply being a different kind of target. Essentially, the “three tiers” are one and the same thing. You don’t need a Webster’s Dictionary to realize that all three are described by synonyms – “blockade; immobilize; block.”. The inspiration for Unconventional Action seems to be a heartfelt but desperate hope to repeat the success of Seattle for the RNC 2008. This fetish for blockades ignores the reality that the Seattle blockades were successful because the police were not prepared and there was a large amount of people in the Northwest, primarily Earth First! veterans, who were well-trained and had a large tradition of blockading. Despite exclamations that “we already have blockading skills” by the RNC Welcoming Committee, the reality of this is doubtful at best. The anarcho-liberals from California will no doubt come, but they are a minuscule force at best, incapable of shutting anything down outside of San Francisco, as proven by the disastrous day of action at the 2004 RNC. Furthermore, they will not likely come in large numbers due to the lack of a non-violence code. When is the last time large-scale blockades have been successful in the USA? Are there going to be large, mass-scale participation by liberals, with skilled blockading trainers? None of these factors seem to hold in St. Paul.
Victory will only be gained by numbers or surprise, and surprise has been lost. Unconventional Action claims that RNC 2008 hosts “strategic vulnerabilities unique to any trade summit or party convention of recent years.” Although the river does present obvious blockading points, these strategic vulnerabilities have at this point been announced to the police. In RNC 2008, the police would be foolish not to be very well prepared for any blockades, especially as Unconventional Action has announced the strategy long in advance. The police should be ready and waiting at the obvious intersections to pounce on protesters. The success of the blockades at Seattle were entirely due to surprise, which has been lost over a decade. Previous attempts to repeat Seattle have almost all ended in failure. Blockades at the A16 protests against the IMF in Washington DC in 2001 had mixed results, and the protests at the FTAA in Quebec in 2001 where the blockades failed but the move towards massive street fighting was viewed as a success.
One could object that we are misinterpreting the blockades as merely nonviolent civil disobedience. While there were no huge burning barricades, some of the blockades at the RNC 2000 were far from non-violent, and yet were still swept off the streets by cops quickly and effectively with minimal to no disruption of the delegates. The same can be said of the decentralized blockading strategy based on a “diversity of tactics” put forward by the People’s Strike in Washington, D.C., which resulted in almost everyone being arrested before they even got to the streets. For some inane reason this decentralized blockading idea was foolishly repeated with a more fluffy flavor and even less results at the A31 at RNC 2004. Recent moderately successful blockades overseas at the G8 in Scotland in 2005 and Germany in 2007 relied on a huge rural terrain and a police force that was spread very thin, conditions unlike those in St. Paul. The best bet for blockades would be if there were few police and the blockades were spread around the city in an unpredictable manner, but this would require a level of self-organization of affinity groups and blockading skills that seems to be unlikely at best. The definition of insanity is to repeat something that has failed again and again, and expect different results.
If one does not have surprise, one can assume sheer numbers might lead to success. In the RNC 2008, who exactly is going to do these blockades proposed by Unconventional Action? Where are the numbers? The primary difference between this convention action and the Seattle WTO protests is that it finally seems that many Americans may actually sympathize with action against the Republicans. However, sympathy does not translate into numbers, as the decline of the anti-war marches happened at the same time popular discontent with the Iraq war was at its highest. If liberals are having a hard time marching, one wonders about their ability to do blockades. One can assume that maybe large amounts of liberals and pacifists will show up, although this is questionable at best given the distance from San Francisco to Minneapolis. Unlike the West Coast, the Midwest does not have a tradition of blockades. Minneapolis radicals do have a tradition of defending autonomous zones like the Minnehaha Free State in 1998 and even fighting through a police line at the International Society for Animal Genetics (ISAG) in 2000. Midwest anarchists recently with the I-69 campaign also are learning well the skills of fast-moving “hit and run” direct actions.
The “Three Tier” plan seems to be aimed at mostly Black Bloc anarchists, despite it not calling for a Black Bloc. Even assuming that most Black Bloc anarchists types decide to do the blockades, this is likely at most a thousand protesters (the largest Black Bloc being A16 2001 at the Inaugural 2004, or maybe two thousand if everyone from San Francisco comes), which might very well be surrounded with ease if divided into a dozen roving mini-Black Blocs. Perhaps a few small Black Blocs could be successful, but again, the key is numbers and surprise. We should remember that at RNC 2000 and 2004, about seven thousand or so non-Black Bloc people showed up for the blockades in total (including liberals, anarchists, and every stripe in between), and were easily wiped off the streets by a large, well-equipped, and moderately brutal police force. Maybe the liberal march will somehow merge with the blockades like the Steel Workers in Seattle, but betting money or time in jail on this seems foolish. The main positive difference is that the Minneapolis and St. Paul police forces are considerably smaller than those at earlier RNCs, but the Minneapolis Police are already well versed in tasers, and if their crackdown on the Critical Mass of the preRNC is any sign, they will not hesitate to just arrest people at the earliest opportunity. Also, cops may be bussed in from elsewhere. The only hope seems to that SDS will motivate thousands to show up and do civil disobedience, and that the police will be both unprepared and not increase their relatively small numbers. This is unlikely as the convention is during school, so SDS will not show in large numbers. The numbers game does not look good.
The general trajectory at the protests in the United States is generally some sort of untenable plan based on “repeating Seattle” via blockades thought up by either the local organizers or a series of consultas…or rammed down our throats by professional activists. Like in Miami FTAA 2003, after people start arriving at the protest they realize the plan put forward by the “organizers” is a bad idea. At the last minute there is a consensus meeting where the vast majority of people try to come up with an actual plan with some chance of working, but this is usually derailed by professional activist “facilitators” who attempt to preserve their untenable plan and – worse case, as in Miami – any deals they struck with the police. In frustration, anarchists usually attempt a Black Bloc, there are some last minute secret plans, and many people gravitate towards the “Official” plan. This results in a botched and ineffective protests, since there is neither time nor resources to put together a good alternative. While we appreciate the idealistic yet untenable plan is being put forward based on blockades by Unconventional Action, who we have the utmost of respect for, we feel like it would be a good time to step back and honestly look “outside the box” of the “Three-Tier” plan while there is still a little time left. The time is now to formulate a Plan B. A rather academic analysis of the Seattle WTO protest is not enough.
There is an Alternative
“Do not repeat the tactics which have gained you one victory, but let your methods be regulated by the infinite variety of circumstances.” Sun Tzu
The obvious alternative is to attempt to disrupt the convention via a frontal assault with large numbers: the infamous Black Bloc. Given their behavior at previous events, increasing numbers of everyone from the SDS to punks are interested in this alternative. At every recent protest from the Inaugural 2004 to the “Suicide March” at the G8 in Scotland to the 2007 October Rebellion in DC, a large Black Bloc has been surprisingly effective. Our courage seems to be directly proportional to the amount of other anarchists near us, and Black Blocs of over a few hundred are difficult for police to simply mass arrest, unlike smaller groups doing blockades. Ideally for the RNC, a Black Bloc of over a thousand could be formed, one with a tight tactical group of locals who can both help prepare defensive materials and have a great knowledge of the local streets. Black Blocs are best organized via closed affinity groups who meet before-hand and then announce a Bloc in public on the Net so people can come prepared, but keep the details of its precise meeting hidden with an eventual public announcement right before the protest. If a Black Bloc is exceptionally well-prepared, having the ability to move fast, break down into smaller groups and reform (as in the “Five-Fingers” tactic at the G8 in Germany, although this tactic is best used with very large numbers), as well as reform at agreed-upon reconvergence spots, can be a huge asset. At worse, the Black Bloc leads to an epic confrontation with the police and large arrests, which is arguably better than hosts of small confrontations of the police and large arrests that would go unnoticed. At best, the police can be overpowered. There is a call for an Anti-Capitalist Bloc by what apparently is the IWW (Industrial Workers of the World), but it appears to be more of a public relations strategy during the march, as they explicitly deny being a “black bloc” like in Seattle, strange given that it was the most effective Black Bloc in recent history, with the possible exception of the A16 Anti-IMF Black Bloc.
A second alternative would rely on surprise, not just the numbers of a Black Bloc. Closed blockading affinity groups that scout the locations and and decide on blockading places in secret have a chance of actually getting to their blockading locations. Unlike the vast majority of protesters, these groups could rely on whatever disruption is caused by the “public” blockades and a possible Black Bloc to put themselves into position, even as protesters are being swept off the streets by the cops. By preparing blockading material and being trained in advance, these groups could move swiftly and quickly reconfigure their blockades based on police presence. Again, such group or groups would have to form outside any open meetings, but this could be done and has been done with success in the past, ranging from the G8 in Scotland 2005 to the IMF protests in Prague in 2001. These networks of closed group do not have to limit themselves to “blockades” but going after whatever targets they believe will maximize the chances of victory. What locations and times would the police never suspect? These are the places and times for closed groups to strike.
A last alternative would be some yet unarticulated plan based on both numbers and surprise, a Plan B. This could involve striking at a different time and place, going after some target besides the obvious moving of the delegates, an action meant to maximize morale and puncture the media spectacle of the ritualized mass protest that no-one, even most anarchists, seem to believe in anymore. This was the spirit of the Seattle Black Bloc, and while repeating its form like dressing in black may be foolish, the actual content may be possible. With surprise, less numbers are needed. The trick would be to make whatever happen in this Plan B actually work, with full knowledge that most of the time “Plan B” fails at the last possible moment, like in Germany in 2007. The main reason for Plan B failing is lack of having a plan that makes people complicit and so it lacks enough numbers – so that a small group striking by itself of course looses its backbone. What would be needed is a Plan B that happened at the same time as the majority of people were on the streets, and could join in organically.
What do these alternatives leave the RNC Welcoming Committee and Unconventional Action? First of all, they are complementary to the official “three-tier” blockading strategy. All the proposed alternatives also need all the concrete resources, from housing to large meetings, provided by the RNC Welcoming Committee. Already, it is far too late to convince everyone to abandon the “three-tier” blockading strategy, and no doubt there will be people attempting to go ahead with it. The alternatives from a Black Bloc to closed groupings could then strike at the same time and in the same general location as the official “three-tier strategy” could take advantage of the chaos caused by whatever groups are involved in the “three-tier strategy” distracting the police and being arrested. Groups involved in the “three-tier strategy” could also not go to any announced locations and so into the waiting arms of the police, but be prepared to move in a chaotic, swarm-like fashion over the entire zone of conflict, making themselves less predictable and likely to be arrested. Lastly, all these groups could come prepared not just for vaguely “blockading,” but for the necessity of self-defense against the violence of the police. Remember that a vague plan one cannot easily visualize happening is not going to happen. And there should always be even more secret plans, not just a single “Plan B” but one, two, a thousand. Betting everything on one day of action may not be the best of ideas. Any plan should have enough angles so that if one component fails, another component may still succeed. If these are components are well-known and spread, depending on the level of security needed, through word of mouth and public announcement, it seems like real victory might be possible. Never accept the verdict of the “organizers” for any strategic plan – always think for yourself. And as for the day of action – the combination of groups with secret plans, public blockades that are more chaotic than the police are ready for, and a large Black Bloc could be a perfect storm to defeat the Republicans, much more so than the “three-tier” blockading plan by itself.
Why Anarchists Need Strategy
“Tactics teaches the use of armed forces in the engagement; strategy, the use of engagements for the object of the war.” Karl von Clausewitz
The difference between tactics and strategy is subtle but magnified in times when history itself is open for the taking. Tactics are means, made concrete by the use of actions to accomplish victory at a particular engagement in a war. For example, if one wishes to stop a car, one could sit down in front of it, or puncture its tires. To break a window requires rocks or boots. One could cause “disruption” by sitting in the streets or throwing a rock at a cop. These are tactical, not strategic, choices and a diversity of tactics means to agree that different tactics can be used at the same time. Nothing more, nothing less, from the Black Bloc to nonviolent blockades. Strategy is the use of engagements in the pursuit of ends, and the ends of war are victory. Why should one break a window or stop a car in the first place? How does this gain you any advantage? The “Three-Tier Strategy” is not a strategy, but a tactical framework for a particular engagement, the RNC 2008. It just fails as a strategy. It assumes that the end is the blocking of delegates getting to the convention, and so the “Three Tier So-Called Strategy” actually limits tactics by assuming that everyone shares this goal of blocking delegates. One could argue that despite a lack of strategy, any action is better than no action. Yet is a defeat based on a flawed tactical framework better than nothing happening? That is nothing more than the logic of endless campaign-based activism and summit-hopping. A failure on the scope of Miami 2003 could actually kill off the resurgent anarchist activity in the United States, Some may be offended that we dare critique the “Three-Tier Strategy”? Is that not also the type of thinking of of liberals and leftists, who have never been able to talk to their friends honestly and constructively? It is great to put a plan forward early like Unconventional Action did, but only if it begins a conversation, not ends it prematurely.
What is lacking is a real strategy for anarchists in the United States and around the globe. After RNC 2008, what next? Anarchists in the United States has no answer. The ends of the strategy is not stopping the delegates of the RNC 2008, but the destruction of capitalism itself and the self-organization of new social relationships. We have no choice but to join this social war, as capitalism is engaged in total war against most of humanity and life on this planet. The real strategic question is whether or not the RNC 2008 is a useful engagement in this longer war against capital. We believe it is, but not just by repeating the same worn-out formulae of yesteryear like the blockading of the WTO Seattle protests in 1999. The world has moved on. It is time not just for tactical thinking, but strategic thinking by the anarchist movement in the United States.The discourse of the War on Terror is no longer even believed by large swathes of Americans, and the Republicans are hated by more and more as the embodiment of a dying order and a failed occupation. If the stage of history can be redefined not as America versus Al-Qaeda, but as anarchists against capital, then there has been victory regardless of whether or not any delegates are stopped. In this analysis, it does not matter if anarchist block a single delegate. What matters is that we win by committing new and dangerous actions that both raise our morale, build our collective strength instead of dissipating it, spread the knowledge that resistance is possible throughout the media, and increase the complicity of all those around us in our war against capital. A tactical framework that keeps these broader tactical goals in mind can then show how the RNC 2008 can play a part in a strategy for victory in the war against capital. There is always a Plan B. The goal is the complete destruction of the enemy’s potential, and such a victory can almost always be obtained.
By merely two individuals (with no anarcho-Trotskyist front groups, unlike some of the groups endorsing the “Three-tier strategy”!) involved in the last decade of summit mobilizations.
Via Infoshop
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PETA: The Hillary Clinton of Social Justice
Posted by illvox collective in General on August 29, 2008
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has a long track record for racial insensitivity. Who could forget its advertising campaign comparing killing cows to lynching Black people? Now word from Vivir Latino is that PETA is offering its own support to the border wall via advertising. Says PETA:
“We think that Mexicans and other immigrants should be warned if they cross into the U.S. they are putting their health at risk by leaving behind a healthier, staple diet of corn tortillas, beans, rice, fruits and vegetables,” said Lindsay Rajt, assistant manager of PETA’s vegan campaigns.
Great to see PETA can ignore the anti-immigrant, bigoted implications of the wall and make a grab for a opportunity to forward itself, opinions and work of people of color be damned.
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Peltier Letter to DNC Protesters
Posted by illvox collective in Ideas on August 29, 2008
Greetings my friends and relatives,
First of all, I can’t express to you near as much as I’d like to. The sincere appreciation I have that you would gather together remembering all the political prisoners, hostages and myself the way you have.
Gatherings like this are extremely important because it reminds people of the sacrifices that are made daily through out the world for freedom, justice, and a clean and sane environment for our future generations. The powers that exploit our resources and people will always be there, generation after generation.
And the creator will always call upon people to stand against that exploitation. Even if the creator does not call. Any just man or woman, with any semblance of justice, be it spiritual, social or environmental, He will find cause to take issue with those enemies of humanity and nature.
One of the reasons I am so appreciative is because I want you to know, from where I stand the gatherings that you do mean so very, very much to the other political prisoners, other hostages and myself. It is an extreme importance that political prisoners and hostages not be forgotten. Not necessarily for the sake of the prisoners and hostages themselves, but for the sake of future generations. To appreciate and protect and jealously guard the freedoms they possess; that was paid for with someone’s life. I think the most difficult times for a political prisoner or hostage, is when people start to forget what their sacrifice was about, when people become complacent because of some economic level they have attained, and forget the sacrifices that were made and the danger of them losing those gains is imminent. And I know from personal experience, the joy I feel when I receive letters of appreciations or visitors and that is second to the joy I feel when I know that my efforts were not in vain. And there are young people taking up the cause and responsibility of regaining our lost freedoms and resources.
I dearly miss the touch of friends, I dearly miss walking through a forest or across a meadow or even through the traffic of a busy street, or feeling the wind blowing against my skin, directly, rather than a window or some chain link fence.
But with all this, I can’t express to you how at a great loss I would feel if the reason and cause of the many political prisoners and hostages throughout the world was forgotten. Swept aside, because people become too comfortable with their status quo.
I have been here for 33 years that is more than half of my life. I would give almost anything to go home. But I won’t give up.
I would give almost anything to be with my family. But I won’t be quiet.
I would give almost anything to say goodbye to this place, but I won’t say goodbye to my beliefs and our struggle.
I would give almost anything to walk out this door and never return. But I will never walk away from the love of my people.
When I think of the things that I hear and see in the media, about how many different special interest groups, speak of various subjects, like the right to live, or pro-life, I can’t help but think of the children around the world who never get a chance to live because of the exploitation of their resources of their country and their people.
All of the destruction that is taking place here and abroad is a direct result of people, special interest groups, whose interest is primarily wealth and taking more than they need.
The religious people, or should I say the spiritual people of America, and anywhere else for that matter, should seek to aggressively band together to stop the unjust wars that truly impact primarily the common man, the common man, who in his village or farm, city or anywhere else, is destroyed by bombs from the various governments. Governments who in the name of nationalism and patriotism seek to gain political power and control over someone else’s resource and political system. They should actively band together and identify the things they have in common rather than dwelling on their differences. Perhaps I am rambling too much in my statement, after 33 years in prison and 63 years upon this earth, much of this time spent thinking, praying, analyzing, and mediating, on the information that I gather from various forms of writings, books and observations, I somehow feel I have a little bit of a right, to say what I think and feel.
I love you all and I am so honored that I would be invited to make a statement to you. And if I could hug each one of you individually, I guarantee you would damn well be hugged!
I have never given up in my struggle for freedom.
Freedom is a natural inclination of all living creatures up on the earth. Even a newborn will struggle when held too tightly.
I deeply regret being in prison I deeply regret losing family members while in here, I deeply regret all the wonderful things in life that I have missed, but I will never regret standing up for my people for as long as I can draw my breath. My heart is with them always, and my heart is with you today.
So long for now; I will remember you in my prayers and until next time.
Keep the faith.
Your relative always
In the spirit of crazy horse,
Leonard Peltier
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Friends of Congo Seeking Women Songwriters
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on August 29, 2008
Nearly six million people have died as a direct result of war in the Congo since 1996. 1,200 people die every day from treatable diseases, malnutrition and violence. There are 200,000 documented cases of sexual violence and rape against women and children. The Congolese people have suffered through the most brutal rule in modern history and there is a great silence surrounding this tragedy.
Friends of the Congo is working in solidarity with southern women singer/songwriters in an attempt to break the silence surrounding this humanitarian crisis.
We are asking artists such as you to consider donating a recording as a means of lending your voice to the women and children of the Congo who have no one to speak for them. Southern women have a special and unique perspective on strength in the face of adversity, and hope in the presence of despair, which would be especially valuable to this project. We also hope to contribute funds for a group of independent journalists to travel to Congo and document the root causes of this tragedy. Would you please consider contributing a song to the compilation?
It could be a song that has been released on a previous album, but which speaks to the message or intention of the compilation. Or, perhaps you have a live, an acoustic, or demo version of a released song you’d like to contribute? This might offer your fans a unique version of a song they love and may also bring greater attention to the compilation. In that regard, it might be possible to bring a mobile recording unit out to a show or sound check and capture impromptu moments or collaborations you wish to share. The suffering of the women in the Congo, particularly in the east of the country, has reached biblical proportions, and still the silence continues throughout the global community. Hundreds of thousands of women have been violently raped, mutilated and terrorized. Human Rights Watch is only one of many organizations that have documented this, but still, media in the United States has ignored this tragedy. Doctors Without Borders has consistently reported throughout the past decade that the conflict in the Congo is one of the top ten most underreported stories in the world.
Rape has become the main tool of violence against women and children and has pervaded the culture. This is an opportunity to help break the silence surrounding one of the great humanitarian tragedies of our lifetime.
Please consider helping us with this effort. All organizers are donating their time, so rest assured that everything will be directed to the successful release of a CD compilation and no money will go toward overhead, except for the physical mastering of the CD. We will raise these funds on our own. Friends of the Congo is a United States based 501 (c,3) and any artist can get a letter from us for the value of their in-kind contribution to FOC. We realize your work has monetary merit and want to recognize that as well.
Who are we?
We are Friends of Congo (www.friendsofthecongo.org), human rights investigator, Georgianne Nienaber who has worked in Congo. (Nienaber is also the publicist for NOLA musicians Susan Cowsill and Kim Carson), and Sonia Tetlow.
Thank you.
Maurice Carney
Georgianne Nienaber
Sonia Tetlow
Please respond to Georgianne Nienaber at nienaber@tds.net or Sonia Tetlow at sonicgrrl@mindspring.com
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Strategic Lessons from DNC Protests
Posted by illvox collective in Organizing on August 28, 2008
Major police assaults on mass marches, mass arrests at anti-capitalist marches, a raid on the Converegence space.
The PIGS are trying to “re-create ‘68″ their own way with a police riot-or more likely, a premeditated conspiracy to deprive us all of our rights at the DNC and the RNC.
If the police strategy is one or pre-emption at major public events and spaces, there is an obvious contermeasure:
Those planning direct action need to stay out of sight until their primary action. This should be ONE action only in the course of both conventions: Think it through, plan it right, and then go kick their asses.
Do this stuff in small, squad-size affinity groups of 12-20 people. Some things may only require a team of four good warriors. These affinity groups and the members within them need deploy once only, which means they CANNOT be pre-empted if known public spaces and events are avoided both before and(if the event would bring real charges) afterward.
Those NOT planning direct action could then take precautions to avoid charges that stick and march anyway, knowing the heavy shit will come from elsewhere.
A model to think of here is the campaign against HLS: If announced protests against HLS meet police repression, the protests may stop, but ALF has sometimes responded with up to a TENFOLD intensification of small-unit guerrilla warfare against the offending targets.
I was in NYC during the RNC there, and the really important stuff was done by small committed teams that did that one thing only. These actions were highly disruptive. The only flat-out victory over the cops won by a large-scale action was the seizure of Central park-and that required a march of over 500,000 people. That’s 100 brigades, folks-five times as many as Bush sent to Iraq!
We are at WAR, people! There has been not only the police attacks in Denver, but an Infoshop raided on the West Coast and a police attack on Indymedia journalists in the Twin Cities-a week BEFORE the DNC.
Since the Enemy has arms we are not choosing to carry and e are not gaining a ten to one numerical advantage, we need to rely on asymmetrical tactics that can give us the winning edge.
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Upheaval Seeks Articles
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on August 28, 2008
Upheaval is currently seeking article submissions, artwork, and feedback in the form of letters to the editor, which will be published in future issues. All submissions can be sent electronically to upheavalphx@gmail.com. Please specify if your submission is intended to be an article or letter and note that by submitting a piece to this address you are consenting to the possibility of having your work published and/or edited.
By publishing Upheaval, the Phoenix Anarchist Coalition seeks not only to agitate and educate, but to reframe mainstream political debate and to create a discourse on issues of interest to anarchists, radicals, and the working class in general such as:
• Border issues and (im)migration
• Police brutality and repression
• Gender, feminist, and queer issues
• Struggles against white supremacy, white privilege, and racism
• Gentrification and community displacement
• Ecological issues
• Prisoner resistance and the prison-industrial complex
• Subverting the alienation of everyday life
• Methods of turning our visions of a new world into a reality
If you would like to make a donation, you can do so by sending well-concealed cash the P.O. Box listed
below.
Upheaval
c/o PAC
PO Box 3348
Tempe, AZ 85280-3438
pac@phoenixanarchist.org
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Jura Art Callout
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on August 28, 2008
Jura Books is looking for artists of all ages, styles and levels of experience to submit entries for a political poster design competition. The general theme of the poster should be to explore some aspect of the past 30 years of radical struggle in Sydney, and/or imagine what you would like the world to look like in 30 years time. The poster must also celebrate Jura Books in some way – past, present and/or future, and include our website or street address somewhere on the poster.
Jura Books has been operating as a center for social change and innovation for 30 years, and we currently combine a bookshop, library, food co-op and organising space. Over the years we have supported a vast range of political collectives and struggles – feminist, youth, enviro, art, publishing, workers control, and many more. We have put on hundreds of events, from film nights and punk gigs to political actions and worker organising conferences. Jura is also home to one of Australia’s best political poster archives (for images click here).
The poster design competition is about commemorating this history, and also building towards an even better future. The entries will be exhibited at Jura and we will produce 1000 copies of the winning design. The winner will also receive a book prize pack valued at $100, as well as the satisfaction of helping a worthwhile cause, and eternal fame/notoriety. The winning design will also be used to help promote Jura Books and raise money so that we can pay off our mortgage, make Jura environmentally sustainable and properly care for the political poster archive.
More details
* Competition closes on 30th September 2008.
* You can submit as many entries per person as you like, in whatever style you wish. Bring entries into the shop in person, or send them to PO Box N32, Petersham North, NSW 2049, or email them to jura@jura.org.au
* The general theme of the poster should be to explore some aspect of the
past 30 years of radical struggle in Sydney, and/or imagine what you
would like the world to look like in 30 years time. The poster must
also celebrate Jura Books in some way – past, present and/or future. The name Jura Books must appear somewhere on the poster. Either our website (www.jura.org.au) or our street address (440 Parramatta Rd, Petersham) must also appear on the poster somewhere.
* The size should be A2, and ideally able to be reproduced digitally without significant loss of quality.
* Colour is a great idea, however bear in mind that some subtleties of colour may be lost in digital reproduction, so simple and dramatic colours and shapes usually work better than complex or intricate colours and shapes.
* At the discretion of the Jura Collective, entries recieved may be exhibited, used to promote Jura, and placed into the poster archive at Jura, unless other arrangements are agreed between the artist and the Jura Collective before submission.
* The winner will recieve a book prize valued at $100. This will include a $50 book voucher and $50 in stock that we will send you. There will also be a certificate.
* 1000 copies of the winning design will be produced by the Jura Collective. Of this, 500 will be premium quality, and 500 will be of lesser quality. Of the 500 premium quality copies, 100 will be numbered and signed by the artist – these will be used to fundraise for Jura Books. Another 50 of the premium quality copies will be given to the artist. Another 100 of the premium qulaity copies will be sold in the Jura Bookshop. Another 250 of the premium quality copies will be distributed to anarchist collectives internationallly. The 500 copies on cheaper paper will be put up around the streets of Sydney.
* In keeping with the anarchist politic, please consider this a friendly competition, or better yet a mutual collaboration in clebration of political art! The Jura Collective looks forward to exhibiting and admiring all submissions in their diversity. Everyone should feel welcome to participate! And we reserve the right to share the prize and production between more than one entry if we wish.
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A30: Day of the Disappeared
Posted by illvox collective in Uncategorized on August 27, 2008
In solidarity with the international call from the Association of Families of the Disappeared and Victims of Violations of Human Rights in Mexico (AFADEM), and by the Latin American Federation of Associations of Families of Disappeared Detainees (FEDEFAM)…
We of the Solidarity Without Borders Delegation call upon groups in the United States to participate in August 30, as a day of remembrance and a day of action for those disappeared and those detained.
As repression rises across the United States against immigrant communities and communities of color…
As political prisoners continue to struggle for freedom behind bars, and as more dissidents are taken captive as “terrorists” under the pretext of homeland security…
As Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) imposes a reign of terror with raids, roundups, deportations, detentions and disappearances…
As the government strips detainees of their rights from Guantanamo to Iraq to Black Sites across the globe…
As private corporations, multinationals and security contractors profit from every detention, disappearance, and incarceration, from our communities to occupied territories abroad…
MAKE AUGUST 30 A DAY FOR MEMORY AGAINST FORGETTING. A DAY FOR STRUGGLE AGAINST SILENCE.
As the US exports this repression globally to serve and protect its corporate interests, to enforce its capitalist agenda on the world…
As the US sponsors state and paramilitary violence against people’s movements in Mexico, such as the Zapatistas in Chiapas and the popular struggles in Oaxaca…
As the US continues its 30-year campaign to silence those who resist in Latin America, from Plan Colombia to Plan Mexico and on to the Security and Prosperity Partnership…
As occupying forces continue to disappear thousands of people from their homes and streets in Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine, Haiti, and beyond…
As those who commit these crimes against humanity have never been brought to justice, and as impunity reigns in the halls of power…
MAKE AUGUST 30 A DAY TO GLOBALIZE OUR REMEMBRANCE, A DAY TO GLOBALIZE OUR RESISTANCE.
ON AUGUST 30 WE ALSO STAND IN SOLIDARITY WITH…
Those commemorating Black August, in memory of the freedom fighters.
Those still struggling in New Orleans and beyond on the anniversary of Katrina.
Those mobilizing for political prisoners and for immigrant rights at the DNC and those mobilizing against the RNC.
Those struggling every day in their communities and behind bars.
THIS AUGUST 30 AND BEYOND, WE UNITE WITH OUR SISTERS AND BROTHERS IN AFFECTED COMMUNITIES TO DEMAND…
Freedom to All Political Prisoners!
Appearance of the Disappeared!
Not One More Raid! Not One More Deportation!
Not One More Detention! Not One More Murder!
WHAT SHAPE COULD THE AUGUST 30 DAY OF ACTION TAKE IN YOUR COMMUNITY?
A March of Silence?
A Disappear-In? Direct Action Street Theatre?
An action at your local Detention Center?
An act of solidarity around the DNC or RNC?
A display of the faces and names of those disappeared or detained in your community?
A dialogue or forum with the families and communities hit hardest by repression?
Building local coalitions, supporting existing movements of resistance in your community?
It’s up to you…
EDUCATE. AGITATE. ORGANIZE.
For Our Dead and Disappeared
Not a Moment of Silence But a Lifetime of Struggle!
From Oaxaca, Mexico in struggle,
Solidarity Without Borders Delegation
ORIGINAL CALL TO ACTION FROM AFADEM/FEDEFAM
International Day of the Disappeared Detainee
Since 1981, we have commemorated the International Day of the Disappeared Detainee in Latin America. The purpose of this day is to remember men and women who were taken from their homes by criminal hands. They were beings who did not hesitate to offer their life to construct a world where peace with justice predominates.
They were taken prisoner by those who thought themselves lords of their lives, who applied the doctrine of national security through the most ferocious terrorism of the State, commiting grave violations of human rights, excelling by their cruelty to the forced disappearance.
Throughout these years, families have been added to the commemoration of the disappeared in Asia, Africa, and the European Continent. Various governments of these continents have recognized the proposal pushed by the Latin American Federation of Associations of Families of Disappeared Detainees
(FEDEFAM), the establishment of the 30th of August as the International Day of the Disappeared Detainee, among them the Bolivarian of Venezuela.
Sadly, in Colombia, the forced disappearance is still practiced. Every day many Colombians are victims of disappearance and other violations of human rights, they are assassinated and tortured. But also in other countries of our Latin America, repression and the perpetual violation of rights live on, above all those that apply the economic project designed by the government of the USA. For this reason we demand the termination of any attempt to continue training soldiers to repress and murder the peoples.
Impunity is a grave problem that we confront day to day in many of our countries, thanks to which those who committed crimes against humanity have never even been brought to justice nor punished. This is leaving grave consequences among our people. Human life is devalorized, confidence in justice is lost, and democracy is degraded.
We, FEDEFAM, together with social organizations, will continue pushing preventative actions so that the forced disappearance will be definitively eradicated in Latin America and in the world.
FEDEFAM:
25 Years of Struggle for Truth
For Justice and Against Impunity!
For the Right Not to Be Disappeared!
Association of Families of Disappeared Detainees and Victims of Violations
of Human Rights in Mexico, AFADEM-FEDEFAM
FEDEFAM: 20 years of struggle against impunity
AFADEM: 30 years of struggle against impunity
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Savage Family @ DNC
Posted by illvox collective in General on August 26, 2008
Colorado indigenous rap crew Savage Family hits it Monday at the Festival of Democracy.
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What Do You Say?