You Are Not Durruti, But We Are Uncontrollable

You Are Not Durruti, But We Are Uncontrollable: Beyond A Critique Of Non-ViolenceWe came across a zine a while back titled “You Are Not Durruti, But We Are Uncrontrollable: Beyond a Critique of Non-violence” that we encourage folks to read.

It’s an exploration of the “Occupy” phenomenon – rooted in the experience of some folks in Oakland – and how Occupy relates to “the Left.” It starts by looking at the debate over “violence” and “non-violence” and argues that there is a more fundamental issue: whether Occupy is against the state.

The zine presents good critiques of the “99%” idea in Occupy (and concluding that people should stop using it!), the unions, the role of the Left, social movements, and the tension within Occupy between reform and revolution.

The zine summarizes what those on the Left in Occupy want:

“For the Left, (the Democratic Party, the unions, non-profits, various Marxists sects, liberals, activists, etc) the Occupy Movement then is simply a democratic, albeit directly democratic push towards reforming the state and how it manages capital. We hear talk of abolishing the federal reserve, giving more power to the unions, and stronger taxes on corporations. These are not even reforms that seek to gain concessions that might make life better for the working class; they only attempt to make capitalism ‘work better,’ or give more power to the institutions that manage the proletariat.”

By way of contrast, for anarchists:

“…we wish to completely and utterly negate all that makes us who we are as proletarians and create an entirely new way of living, meeting our needs, and actually being human. We are faced with a question of whether to build popular fronts with those that do not share our politics (albeit often begrudgingly), or to push and expand unmediated class conflict, expand social struggles, and deepen and defend insurrectionary situations. The fires lit in Oakland will not die out; the processes, experiments, and beginnings of communization will not soon be smothered. We must understand the tensions that exist in the revolutionary movement and proceed, attacking what makes us not free, taking space that we need, and forever trying to divorce ourselves from the regime of work, diving into the joy of the commune.”

You can print the zine at Zinelibrary or you can read the text.

April Political Prisoner Birthday Poster

April Political Prisoner Birthday CalendarThe always great monthly political prisoner birthday poster for April is out. Please take a moment to send birthday wishes to our locked up comrades. Even better, get together with your friends and make a night (or day) of it!

Some news from this month’s update:

Black Liberation Army POW, Robert Seth Hayes and former Black Panther Jalil Muntaqim are coming up for parole again in June. Robert is asking supporters for help. You can read more about Robert’s parole hearing and request for support here.

Herman Bell was just denied parole again. He’s asking supporters to help Robert and Jalil’s upcoming parole hearings. You can read an article about that here.

April 5: Never Alone: Long-Term Anarchist Prisoner Support Tour

Never Alone: Long Term Anarchist Prisoner Support Tour PosterThe Never Alone Tour is a speaking tour about long-term anarchist prisoner support, taking a close look at the cases of Eric McDavid and Marie Mason.

  • April 5 @ The DAAC (115 S Division Ave)
  • 7pm veg. potluck, presentation to follow
  • $5-15 donation, no one turned away for lack of funds, all donations go to legal support

Focusing specifically on the cases of Eric McDavid and Marie Mason, the tour will mark the spots where the events of these cases unfolded, using multimedia presentations to bring the facts of these cases to light.

As well as raising awareness and support for Eric and Marie, the tour will also feature strategizing about how to more effectively grow a culture of resistance that can breach the prison walls and sustain us and our friends for the long term, a security culture beyond 101 workshop (updated for 2012, now with extra tech!) and some awesome guest speakers.

About Marie Mason

Marie Mason is a loving mother of two and a long-time activist in the environmental and labor movements. In March 2008, she was arrested by federal authorities after her former partner, Frank Ambrose, turned informant for the FBI. Facing a life sentence if she went to trial, she accepted a plea bargain in September 2008, admitting her involvement in two acts of property destruction that occurred in 1999 and 2000 – damaging an office connected to GMO (Genetically Modified Organism) research, and destroying a piece of logging equipment. No one was injured in either act. On February 5, 2009, she was sentenced to just under 22 years. She is now serving the longest sentence of any “Green Scare” prisoner.  Marie is currently being held in an incredibly restrictive unit at the prison in Carswell, TX.  Other political prisoners, such as Lynne Stewart, are also housed there.  For more information on Marie and her case, please visit http://www.supportmariemason.org.

About Eric McDavid

Eric McDavid was arrested on January 13, 2006 and charged with a single count of “conspiracy to damage and destroy property by fire and explosive.”  No action ever took place.  Eric was arrested after being entrapped by a government informant, known as “Anna,” who was paid over $65,000 for her work with the FBI.  Eric stood strong in the face of great repression and refused to cooperate with the government, choosing instead to take his case to trial (even after both of his former co-defendants took a plea bargain and agreed to testify against him in court).  After a trial riddled with errors, a jury convicted Eric in September 2007.  Many of these same jurors later went on record making damning statements about the FBI.  Two of them later submitted declarations to the court stating that they believed Eric deserves, at the very least, a new trial.  Despite this, in May 2008, the judge in Eric’s case sentenced him to an outrageous 19 years and 7 months in prison.  Eric is now serving an almost 20 year sentence for what amounts to “thought crime.”  For more info on Eric and his case, please visit http://www.supporteric.org.

Radio Show: Conspiracy Trials, Grand Juries, Security Culture and Technology

Recently on the radio show The Final Straw out of Asheville, NC featured an important interview with Ian Coldwater of the Coldsnap Legal Collective. The show titled “Conspiracy Trials, Grand Juries, Security Culture, and Technology” provides a good overview of the way conspiracy charges work and how the state actively works to suppress anarchist resistance.

You can listen to it using the player embedded in this post, or get it from archive.org

For further background, check out the piece “The Age of Conspiracy Charges” for an overview of recent conspiracy charges against anarchists.

March Political Prisoner Birthdays Poster

March Political Prisoner Birthdays PosterThe Chapel Hill Prison Books Collective’s monthly political prisoner birthdays poster for March is out now. It would be rad if you could write these prisoners a birthday note and/or use the calendar as a basis for hosting a letter writing event.

In their monthly update, there is also some important updates on political prisoners:

First, there is an ongoing campaign to get political prisoner Russell Maroon Shoats out of solitary confinement. Please sign the online petition to get him out of solitary confinement and receive needed medical care.

Second, political Prisoner Alvaro Hernandez was recently framed on bogus weapons charges. Alvaro just released a statement to the larger political prisoner support community regarding his situation, which you can read here.

Third, Jaan Laaman, who is featured on this month’s poster, edits the excellent magazine 4StruggleMag. This magazine covers views, thoughts, and analysis from the hearts and minds of North American political prisoners and friends. Consider subscribing to help fund their prisoner subscriptions or you could download the magazine and distribute it in your community.

Lastly, on January 30th, Marie Mason released an update letting all of her supporters know how she’s doing. You can read her statement here.

New Zine: Small Town Organizing for Anarchists

Cover: Small Town Organizing for AnarchistsWe’re really excited to share a new zine with folks titled Small Town Organizing for Anarchists.

This zine contains a wealth of helpful suggestions for anarchists living in small towns who want to create anarchy. Topics covered include finding other anarchists, deciding on what projects to work on, figuring out how to relate to liberals, and doing a distro—this zine is full of good ideas and advice.

Not only for small towns, the authors of the zine state: “If you can count the active anarchists in your areas on your fingers, this guide is for you.”

The text originally appeared in Rolling Thunder #7. It was accompanied by an examination of anarchist organizing in the small town of Winona, Minnesota where the author(s) are based.

Get it from us or from Zinelibrary.

Greece on Fire

A couple weeks ago, we posted a few short videos exploring anarchism in Greece. Since that time, things have gotten pretty crazy in Greece. There was 48-hour general strike in response to a Eurozone bailout agreement that promises further austerity measures.

Hundreds of thousands of people participated in the General Strike and last night there were running street battles in Athens outside of parliament as Greek legislators voted to approve the agreement. According to the police, as many as forty-five buildings had fire damage with several banks being burned to the ground. Numerous buildings were also occupied, including the Athens Law School.

Occupied London has good coverage of the protests (folks should also check out ContraInfo), with an overview of what has happened during the general strike and a summary of last night’s events. From the summary posted there:

“There are various estimations about the number of the people concentrated on the streets and squares of the country. Athens had anything over 500,000 people on the streets, it is not easy to estimate it, but before the attack of the police every street leading to Syntagma and the square were packed, with thousands more coming from the neighbourhoods on foot or by buses and trains. Half an hour before the demo one could see the metro stations and the bus stops full of people waiting to get on a vehicle that would bring them to the centre. Every city saw rallies and mass marches, with Heraclion of Crete, a city that holds a record in the recent wave of suicides, having a 30,000-strong march. Demonstrations all around the country turned violent, with people destroying banks or occupying governmental buildings, e.g. in Volos the branch of Eurobank, the Inland Revenue Offices and the town hall were torched or in Corfu people attacked to the offices of their region’s MPs, trashing them, the town hall of Rhodes was occupied during the demo and still is occupied, to mention but a few of such actions.

Several banks, governmental buildings and two police departments (Acropolis and Exarchia depts.) were attacked by demonstrators during the night, while Athens city hall was occupied, but police concentrated forces invaded the building and arrested the occupiers. Over 40 buildings were burnt in Athens, while occupations of public buildings still are holding all around Greece. The Law School occupation issued a statement in early morning of 13/02/2012: “It was decided by the assembly of the Law School occupation that the occupation continues. We call everyone on the streets to continue the struggle. Nothing ended, everything now starts, the Law School is a centre of the struggle and as such it will remain”.

We’d also encourage folks to check out a statement from the Law School occupation titled “In order to liberate ourselves from debt, we must destroy the economy.” It does a good job of arguing that the only way out of the “crisis” is the destruction of all forms of hierarchy, including those of the left. It concludes stating:

The only solution is social revolution. Against all the above, we propose social revolution, which we consider the only solution in order to have a life, not bare survival. This means, to rise up against any financial and political institution. It requires, through the route of revolt, to take measures such as the abolition of the state, of property and any sort of measurability, the family, the nation, exchange and social genders. In order for us to extend gratuitness and freedom across the entire social life.
This is what revolution means! Bringing to this direction any struggle centred on wage demands; any self-organised structure and assembly, especially at a conjuncture, as the present one, when the political-governmental form of the systemic crisis can lead to a social explosion.

Looking at what happened in Greece in response to the debt bailout is exciting. In situations like this, it’s always tempting to ask the proverbial “why doesn’t that happen here?” question. Aside from obvious differences in the political circumstances, there are very strong differences in how anarchists work in Greece vs. in the United States. There’s no easy answer or obvious conclusions to reach, but for folks interested in contemplating these topics, two good sources that we know of that look at how Greek anarchists organize are an interview with the VOID Network from 2009 and another article titled “How to Organize an Insurrection.”

New Zine: Blocs, Black and Otherwise

Blocs, Black and Otherwise - Zine CoverWhile going through our archive of zines to add new titles to the distro, we came across a copy of a zine titled “Blocs, Black and Otherwise.” It’s one of the many “how to” guides in Crimethinc’s Recipies for Disaster and is a very good overview of how to organize and participate in a black bloc. Surprisingly, we couldn’t find a PDF of it online, so we put it together in a printable format, adding the short text “Fashion Tips for the Brave” that offers some additional thoughts on anonymity when participating in a black bloc.

You can get the zine from us or on Zine Library.

We dedicate this edition to Chris Hedges and Derrick Jensen—you make us want to party like it’s 1999!

Movie: The Oakland Commune

We saw this neat movie about Occupy Oakland over at Infoshop.org and thought it was worth sharing. It does a really good job explaining how and why Occupy Oakland has turned out how it has by looking at how the occupation connects with ongoing social struggles in the Bay Area:

The filmmakers’ description:

On October 10th 2011, hundreds of people in downtown Oakland occupied Frank Ogawa Plaza in front of city hall. They built a self-organized tent city and began to meet some of the community’s most urgent needs. They renamed the plaza Oscar Grant Plaza in honor of a young African-American man who was shot and killed by BART Police in 2009. Although the action was partially inspired by Occupy Wall Street and austerity protests throughout the world, Occupy Oakland’s particular character resulted from years of struggle and repression in the Bay Area. This short documentary details the ongoing story of the Oakland Commune.

 

February Political Prisoners Birthday Calendar

February 2012 Political Prisoner Birthday CalendarThe February political prisoners birthday calendar is out. As always, please take a moment to send a quick birthday card or note to one or all of the prisoners on this month’s calendar. It’s an easy way to send support to those that the state has stolen from us.

Two other quick prison related notes:

  1. Occupy Oakland has called for a nationwide occupy day in support of prisoners on February 20th. They are asking that Occupy groups hold demonstrations outside of prisons, jails, juvenile halls, and detention centers to stand in solidarity with the people confined within prison walls and to “demand the end of the incarceration as a means of containing those dispossessed by unjust social policies.”
  2. Longtime political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal has been transferred out of solitary confinement into general population. Last week his wife was scheduled to meet him and he was looking forward to being able to hug her for the first time in thirty years.