SPREAD THE INFORMATION

Any information or special reports about various countries may be published with photos/videos on the world blog with bold legit source. All languages ​​are welcome. Mail to lucschrijvers@hotmail.com.

Search for an article in this Worldwide information blog

donderdag 6 september 2018

Anarchic update news all over the world -5.06.2018

Today's Topics:

   

1.  US, m1aa: An Anarchism of the Working-Class: A Review of
      Whither Anarchism? By Miriam Pickens (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
   

2.  Czech: afed: Pilsen Pride 2018 -- Report from the Pilsen
      March for LGBTQ Rights [machine translation] 

      (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
   

3.  Greece, [Thessaloniki] Open call to guard the occupation of
      Libertatia By APO (gr) [machine translation] (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
   

4.  France, Alternative Libertaire AL - Syria-Kurdistan, A
      libertarian communist in IFB # 11: "Back in France, other forms
      of struggle" (fr, it, pt)[machine translation] (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
   

5.  Poland, zsp: Deceived employees of Edyta Lucinska recover
      their salaries [machine translation] (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1





I appreciate Kristian Williams' pamphlet, both the thought put into it and the challenge 
it represents. I learned a lot from its history, and in particular gained insight into the 
behavior of anarchists I meet today. Williams traces some practices of contemporary US 
anarchism back to pacifism, looking at how contemporary anarchists unthinkingly accept 
much of that philosophy. In my view, that influence led to the movement prioritizing 
providing comfort to its participants, rather than organizing to change the circumstances 
that led to the discomfort they feel with society in the first place. This emphasis 
accepts the inevitability of capitalism and is therefore a strategy to live within its 
parameters. But I don't think capitalism will allow us these spaces. Instead, it has to be 
overthrown and not allowed to come back.

Williams' pamphlet is made up of three essays: "My Anarchism," "Whither Anarchism?" and 
"Conclusion: Revolutions, Scientific and Otherwise."

In Williams' first essay, "My Anarchism," he shares his belief that "the core of 
anarchism[is]to be captured in the proposition that decisions must be made by those most 
affected by them." He further states that "that belief, in turn, relies on a pair of 
values, those of freedom and equality." He develops his understanding of these values by 
defining equality as meaning "that we are all equally human, and equally entitled to the 
respect and consideration worthy of a human being."(3-4) He stresses that "[B]y freedomI 
mean simply that people can live their lives without interference, arranging their affairs 
according to their own best judgment - and . . . enjoy practical opportunities to widen 
the scope of their possible activities." (4-5)

These are the values Williams cites as the basis of the society he wants. I agree with 
these values. I understand that there has never been a society that embodies these ideals, 
so I see them as something to strive and to fight for. I see them as values that our 
current system, world capitalism, gives lip-service to, but defines in a way that does not 
value people as equals and that limits our freedoms so that we cannot even conceive of 
freedom in the same way we would if we were free. That is, our understandings and 
consciousness are also determined and limited by the system we live within, something 
Williams understands. We should know that we can grow and develop beyond our current 
understanding of what is possible.

The attainment of these ideals is also collective. We not only cannot gain them as 
individuals, we cannot experience them individually. The denial of these rights is 
systemic and collective. Therefore, our fight for them must also be system-wide and 
collective.

Williams centers the relationship that control of resources has to power by stating that

"The accumulation of resources brings with it a large measure of power, and to the degree 
that this power is accepted as legitimate, authority as well. Likewise, the accumulation 
of power grants one the ability to acquire and control additional resources. Sometimes 
this power is used to directly coerce individual people, but more routinely its 
application is impersonal, establishing policies and making choices which shape the 
conditions under which we all must live." He develops the impersonal and structural nature 
of capitalism by showing that "even those at the very top often feel their decisions to be 
dictated by the internal logic of the system itself." (5)

Williams ties power and authority, the ability to give/take away freedom and equality, to 
the control of resources. I agree with this. It is why I think our fight has to center 
around the fight for material resources and to be centered within those who need the 
resources and are fighting for them. I call this the working class in its most inclusive 
definition. That is, not just people who have jobs, but also including the families and 
communities that are also without power, without capital, and who have resources withheld 
from them.

I do not think we have to limit our fights to these issues, however. In fact, I think we 
need to take on the entire social complexity that limits or diminishes us. But our basic 
struggle is for resources: land, food, shelter, clean air and water, public space, time, 
along with the respect and dignity due us as human beings. Williams breaks down the 
arguments of the inevitability of the way things are by separating organization from 
hierarchy. "[I]f society is to survive there must be some means of organization, but our 
organizations need not be hierarchical and need not be driven by the profit motive." (6)

Williams spends quite a bit of time laying out his vision of how a new society might be 
organized: "as a decentralized network of democratically-run institutions and voluntary 
associations." He sees the need for flexibility by stating that "there may yet be some 
sorts of activities most effectively or efficiently pursued by creating a single central 
clearing house, or adopting a level of standardization, or appointing a steering 
committee. Leadership, supervision, and even coercive authority may sometimes still be 
necessary. The important thing is that any such position, or the exercise of such power, 
would need to be understood as requiring at every stage a kind of justification." His 
vision clearly states that "the democratization of both power and resources would spell an 
end to capitalism and class society. So too would it mean an end to the state . . . and 
also demand of us all that we eliminate any stratification based on race, gender, 
ethnicity, nationality, ancestry, sexual orientation, age, physical ability, or any other 
prejudicial or extraneous consideration."(6-7)

What Williams does not say is that the active fight for revolution, for a violent 
overthrow of the capitalist system, is what would provide the basis for the type of 
society he outlines. A new society does not just result, nor does democratization happen, 
without a fight. It is in the course of this struggle that change occurs, both in the 
minds of the people doing the struggling and in the concrete circumstances of their lives.

Reading Whither Anarchism?, I appreciate the way Williams unmasks the subtleties of how we 
are impacted by the society we live in. For instance, I came of age politically in the 
1960s and 70s, when a mass movement was alive in our cities and streets, everyday 
working-class people were reading, discussing, and thinking about the big issues of the 
state, revolution, and the role of organization. My early development as a 
Jewish-Communist child in 1950s Compton, California led me to value the organization and 
collective activity of working-class people. I saw multiracial groups challenging both the 
large and small expressions of oppression and power. I was a part of picket lines, 
demonstrations large and small, and cultural gatherings that were multiracial, of all 
ages, and from all parts of the world. We were united in our opposition to "the system," 
although my childish understanding was far from complex or nuanced.

My activity inside Marxist organizations (Independent Socialist Clubs, International 
Socialists, Revolutionary Socialist League) and my thirty years inside a Detroit auto 
factory put me in the middle of a movement that sought to understand and challenge power.

We incorporated insights gained from the Black freedom struggle, feminism, the emerging 
gay movements, and the intersectionality of the Black women's movement, and used them to 
broaden and deepen our ideas of "the working class," so that we spoke of the working class 
as specifically not only white men, but of all races, all genders, and all orientations. 
We began to develop understandings of how skilled workers and their families were given 
more middle-class opportunities, better housing and education, than those workers on the 
bottom. We saw how demands for "respectability" were used to control and contain our 
movements and to divide our class. We focused our attention on the lowest paid workers, 
with the idea that if they get their needs met, all the rest would too.

Williams says that "our habits of difference and entitlement may rule us more subtly and 
thus more firmly, and may prove the greater obstacle to our own liberation. Equality, in 
other words, must be alive in our minds as a positive ideal. It is not merely the absence 
of inequality or subordination. It requires a new sociability, perhaps a new subjectivity, 
formed both within and between us as we work together to re-order society and discover new 
ways of relating - as we, in short, learn both to exercise and to respect freedom." (7)

This does not happen in a vacuum, nor simply because we want it to though. These power 
relations are understood and overturned in the course of struggling together for common 
goals, where the exercise of power between people gets in the way and limits our 
struggles. We are forced to break out of old habits, because they hold us back. It is this 
understanding that girds us to fight for everyone's freedom and equality, not just because 
it is our values, but because our own freedom and equality, our chance to survive, develop 
and grow, depends upon it.

In some ways, Williams recognizes this:

"For as social barriers fall, as the stigma of inequality fades, our ability to relate to 
one another improves, becomes more natural, less fraught. We all profit from the contact 
with a wider array of perspectives, experiences, insights. The creation of this sort of 
society, or anything like it, would require a kind of revolution, and that is true no 
matter what means are used to bring it about. For revolution denotes the extent of social 
change, not the method for achieving it. Progress will come erratically, unevenly, and not 
according to anyone's timetable. Likely it will not even look like a revolution as it 
unfolds, but as a series of crises, small miracles, wrenching compromises, painful 
defeats, stupid missteps, heroic sacrifices, frustrating reversals, bold experiments, 
regrettable excesses, ridiculous half-measures, reckless gambles, and righteous refusals - 
until finally, slowly, the overall shape of the new society begins to emerge, and the 
direction of events becomes clear." (10)

Williams' view of revolution here seems unreal to me, as if we live in a vacuum. Where is 
the ruling class, with all its police and armies, in this scenario? What are they doing 
while we are building our new society? They are attacking us, dividing us, killing us. 
They are fighting our revolutionary movement with all the resources available to them! If 
we are not prepared to meet their violence with all the resources at our command - our 
organization, unity, our vision, along with a practical material struggle - we will 
certainly lose. Our revolution is a form of self-defense. We must withhold the labor and 
resources they take from us. We must organize strategically and tactically to fight them: 
for resources, including land, territory, food, water, what we need to survive. Do not 
think this will not be violent. On their part, willful violence, as we have seen our whole 
lives, taken out on individuals as police murders, on communities as the bombing of the 
MOVE organization in Philadelphia showed, on the taking of entire countries and land. On 
our part, an armed defense of ourselves, our families, our communities, our neighborhoods, 
our land, our revolution. Power is never given away. It must be taken. This is not a 
gradual unfolding, this is a wrenching away, a destruction of the state apparatus, a 
burning of prisons and records of debt. The existing power must be destroyed root and 
branch before we can gradually build anything. When we encourage people to join our fight 
and do not prepare for this, we are being negligent and dishonest. This is an either-or 
situation. We cannot have a free society as long as capitalism continues to exist.

One of the main lessons of the Russian Revolution of 1917 is that seizing state power is 
not enough. They ended up with capitalism controlled by the state in the name of "the 
worker's state." Despite its names and propaganda, it remained capitalist, and unfree. 
Power, hierarchical relations, must be destroyed, not taken over or redirected or given to 
someone else. Our attempts will be violently resisted, and we must be prepared.

My experience with Marxists is that they were always analyzing capitalism, but that 
anarchists almost never had discussions about the economy, its direction, and how it 
affects the ways we need to focus our struggles. Marxists, however, tend to fit what they 
see into predetermined boxes and that almost always leads them to support the liberal wing 
of the bourgeoisie. As anarchists we are trying to promote a view that our enemy is the 
entire capitalist class, both its reactionary and its reformist elements, including its 
state capitalist manifestations, like the former Soviet Union. In fact, it is the 
reformist element we need to watch out for in particular ways, as it is always trying to 
rope us in to support of its section of the ruling class. At this point in time, the 
reactionary section is letting loose and is enabling the organization and development of a 
mass fascist base. We need a theory that can put us in opposition to both sections and 
strategies of the capitalist class, reformist and reactionary.

I began to identify as an anarchist after meeting anarchists during the 2011 Occupy 
movement. I agreed with how their expressions of antiauthoritarianism resonated within me 
and how they talked about not just seizing state power, but doing away with the state, and 
with hierarchy and power relations as a whole. I joined First of May Anarchist Alliance 
(M1) as an intentional revolutionary group and through that, the Direct Action Committee 
of Occupy. We focused our energies on an ongoing struggle in Detroit to keep people in 
their homes. We used direct action tactics such as blocking streets with dumpsters and 
laying down in the doorways of banks. We also used social media and, of most importance, 
direct democratic forms of organization and participation. We fought hard against elitists 
and saviors, many nonprofits and Democratic Party representatives, who wanted to take 
leadership of our movement. We insisted that no one is coming to save us and that it was 
the people affected who must decide the best ways forward. We argued that direct 
democratic meetings with open participation was the best way to ensure that people 
affected could voice their concerns and determine their course of action. It was the 
homeowners losing their homes, their friends, family and communities who came out to 
support and defend our fight. Detroit Eviction Defense exists today as a result of that 
effort. Not just anarchists, of course. Union people, social democrats, Marxists, radicals 
and liberals, all ages, races, and genders came together to fight for material needs: 
housing. The neoliberal plan for Detroit has included turning homeowners into tenants. We 
fight this.

Williams recognizes that his vision of a new society is "related to how the new society is 
to be brought about. How can it be defended and sustain itself? How are disputes to be 
settled? How do we prevent new tyrannies from arising? I think we have to say that we 
don't have answers to these questions. And I agree with Williams that "to translate our 
ideals into reality requires a strategy. It will not be enough to rely on our ethical 
sense and our desire for freedom." (11-12) The need for a strategy to prevent the 
reemergence of capitalism is precisely why a revolutionary anarchist organization is 
necessary. To set out from the beginning our commitment to going all the way to defeat 
capitalism. We must have confidence that in the course of struggle, people will learn and 
develop skills that will enable them to define a new way of living that promotes a new 
culture.

In his second essay, "Whither Anarchism?," Williams focuses on the history of anarchism in 
the United States in the 20thcentury, observing that "What was once a mass movement based 
mainly in working-class immigrant communities is now an archipelago of subcultural scenes 
inhabited largely by disaffected young people from the declining middle class." (13) 
Williams uses Andrew Cornell's Unruly Equality: U.S. Anarchism in the Twentieth Century 
and Spencer Sunshine's dissertation, "Post-1960 U.S. Anarchism and Social Theory," as 
guides to his discussion of how this change occurred.

Williams points out that "American anarchism . . . saw itself as a movement of the working 
class, fighting for the liberation of humanity from capitalism and the state, and it 
presented the labor union as the means by which workers could both overturn capitalism and 
organize the future society." He stresses that the Wobblies, the Industrial Workers of the 
World (IWW), were the primary organization pushing this agenda in the early 20thcentury, 
"But the Red Scare of 1917-1920 all but destroyed the IWW, and with it the movement." What 
this resulted in was

"What remained of syndicalism was occupied primarily with legal defense, and other 
anarchists came to focus more on education and creating counter institutions, rather than 
mass organizing. Hence, anarchists were on the sidelines during the upheavals of the 
1930s. Then, during the Second World War, the remaining movement split over the question 
of militarism, with pacifism becoming the dominant strain. At the same time, increasingly 
much of anarchist activity was in the cultural sphere, and the movement became wedded to 
the emerging counterculture."

All of this resulted in the type of anarchism all-too-familiar today, with, as Williams 
quotes Andy Cornell observing "[R]eadings, performances, and exclusive parties (having) 
moved to the center of anarchist praxis." (14) Williams concludes by lamenting that 
"Anarchists deserted the class war at precisely the moment that the largest number of 
workers were clamoring to enlist in it."(15)

This "desertion of the class war" was also the result of immigrants, primarily seeking to 
be identified as "white," establishing themselves on the upper levels of the working class 
as skilled workers and in the lower rungs of the middle class, as educated professionals. 
This represented an acceptance of capitalism and a value system that put themselves above, 
and different from, other workers. The failure to demand that the whole class move forward 
is an acceptance of the capitalist program of divide and rule, giving white workers 
benefits and securities not allowed people of color who were also working class. Racism, 
intertwined with the capitalist system, allowed the ruling class to co-opt sections of the 
working class without protest by anarchists. The communists also accepted many ruling 
class divisions and elitist practices, but they fought racism and valued that fight, even 
while some of their pro-capitalist policies misled many struggles, primarily by supporting 
pro-capitalist forces inside the movement (popular front support for politicians) and 
limiting the struggle of the workers themselves (no strike pledges during WW2).

It was easier for the immigrant communities to fight for assimilation and cultural ease 
than to maintain a struggle and identification with the entire working class, made up of 
many different races and ethnicities. They gave up on their "all or none" motto, which led 
to their defeat.

Unfortunately, Williams keeps his analysis to the US. As a result, he misses out on one of 
the greatest bodies of anarchist work, the Spanish Civil War. Here, in the crucible of 
struggle, we can learn from the situations faced by anarchists, what might work again, and 
what are now obvious failings and mistakes. It is in struggle that we learn. We can and 
should theorize, discuss, write. But to remove this process from the struggle itself and 
from the people doing the actual work, is to miss the point of theory as well as to miss 
the opportunity to test our theories in the real world.

Williams takes issue with the anarchist emphasis on prefiguration, which he identifies 
originating with the influence of pacifism, which "locked the anarchist movement in a 
particular ‘prefigurative' orientation."(15) Williams shows how this orientation has 
limited our movement, resulting in an attempt "to compensate for our underdeveloped 
politics with an overdeveloped moralism, and anarchists (becoming) preoccupied with the 
minutiae of individual choice rather than organizing collective action."(16)

The heart of prefiguration, in my mind, is that we can act as if we are free and thereby 
become free. But Williams argues that:

"Freedom cannot simply be chosen, it must be created. Were we capable of behaving as we 
would in a society without capitalism and the state, then there would be no need to 
abolish either. Instead, it is only possible to act as free and equal beings under 
conditions of freedom and equality; we cannot create those conditions simply by pretending 
they exist" He therefore argues that an emphasis on prefiguration "turns our attention 
away from the structural features of our society and toward the moral character of 
individuals within the movement." (16)

I agree with Williams. The anarchist scene is very much as he describes it, and "not on 
the whole a place where sensible people would want to live."(16) There is also almost a 
fear of reaching out to working class communities - a desire to remain on the other side 
of the professional desk - a willingness to do service for, but a reluctance to organize 
with, working class communities, as equals in our common struggle. This is defended as 
"being allies" or as "letting the ones affected lead" or "whites can only support people 
of color, not put out counter ideas." This is an approach that guarantees the separation 
of the class, because it absolves one section (white) of taking responsibility for the 
whole class. It also results in tokenizing people of color, and allows for a cult of 
celebrity, with people being accepted and promoted as "leaders" without a constructive 
dialogue and debate. We should counterpose a leadership of ideas so that leadership and 
direction become collective endeavors.

Williams describes the movement of the 1970s by highlighting the radical pacifist Movement 
for a New Society, noting its activity in anti-war, environmental, and anti-nuclear work, 
brought "an explicitly anti-racist, feminist, class-conscious perspective." But, he observes,

"After a few decades of pacifist-anarchist cross-pollination. . .we are left with the 
structure and culture of the pacifist movement without its commitment to nonviolence . . . 
There is an ethos common to all surviving brands of anarchism . . . It consists of a 
prefigurative insistence on modeling in our lives and our communities the values and 
practices of the society we wish to create; a ritualized emphasis on ‘direct action' 
tactics . . . a strong affinity for . . . a specific subculture or counterculture, and a 
tendency to view ourselves as outside of and apart from society as a whole." (17-18)

While this all may be true, this discussion excludes Black anarchists, who cut their teeth 
in the Black freedom movement, women and gay anarchists who fought for their right to be 
open and self-defined, Latinx anarchists who fought for their right to stolen land, etc. 
all within movements of that same period - the 1970s-that are largely ignored by white 
anarchists. So who gets to call themselves an anarchist and claim traditions?

Williams continues, using Sunshine's dissertation, to examine the course of anarchist 
thought, with Sunshine complaining that: "Anarchist theory has become detached from its 
foundations in Classical Anarchism and instead has increasingly relied on ideas borrowed 
from other traditions, re-oriented toward anti-state conclusions. Anarchists fostered 
cooperation with other radicals, and even liberals, where it was possible to find common 
ground." This ran parallel with the phenomenon of action taking "precedence over 
ideology." Williams sees all this resulting in this "formalist 
anarchism-as-practice-not-theory approach (reaching) its logical conclusion in the 2011 
Occupy movement. There the focus on how activists do things completely eclipsed any 
consideration of what they were doing or why . . . with no coherent strategy or even 
agreed-upon aims." (20-21)

After a discussion of the larger changes within anarchism and the world, Williams notes 
that "Anarchists stopped thinking of themselves as a social force potentially capable of 
organizing millions of people, destroying the existing power structure, and reconstituting 
society. The anarchist vision shrank, from the One Big Union and the General Strike, to 
the affinity group and the poetry reading."(23)

Despite all this, Williams looks to the future. He believes "current attempts to create 
broad, public, formal anarchist organizations," such as the Black Rose Anarchist 
Federation/Federación Anarquista Rosa Negra, and the May First Anarchist Alliance, are a 
"hopeful sign," because they "represent efforts to raise anarchism up from the 
underground, to break it out of its subcultural confines, and to engage again with the 
public at large without the mediating filter of the black mask." While encouraged by the 
formation and work of these organizations, he cautions that, "while new organizations may 
be needed, they are clearly not all that is needed. For they will inevitably have to 
answer in practice the exact questions that anarchism has been evading with its peculiarly 
patchwork approach to theory. Capitalism, the state, social stratification, and the left 
have all changed - and both our theories and our movements need to address themselves to 
those changes." (24-25)

For this task, Williams thinks the "place any new anarchist theory should start is with 
re-centering the old ideals of freedom and equality." (25) He recognizes that "the very 
attempt at reformulation would demand a fundamental shift in anarchism as it is presently 
conceived, as essentially a philosophy of refusal. The negative formulation of anarchism 
is responsible for a lot of our present theoretical underdevelopment." (26) Williams 
concludes his second essay with the warning that "Without substantive changes within 
anarchism, it will never produce another revolution, much less a new society."(32)

In his final essay, "Conclusion: Revolutions, Scientific and Otherwise," Williams outlines 
the scientific method of Thomas Kuhn, which takes account of evidence and incorporates 
anomalies into a coherent system. In contrast to the method of Kuhn, Williams writes, 
anarchists are prone to

"simply ignoring the evidence that does not fit."(33)He describes our current movement as 
having "entered a phase that Kuhn did not describe, in which one paradigm has collapsed, 
but no new paradigm has replaced it. All that remains are propositions and platitudes, 
lacking any unifying structure, common premises, shared vocabulary, or agreed-upon 
methodology. What once promised to become a coherent philosophy capable of inspiring 
individuals, guiding a broad movement, and restructuring society, has become instead a 
collection of unsorted half-remembered, often borrowed axioms and arcane cultural 
practices delineating a self-limiting in-group."(33-35)Williams' main point is "that we 
must reinvigorate our tradition, beginning with a careful and demanding examination of our 
own premises."(35)

Williams thinks that "the revolution in anarchist thought will emerge, if at all, from a 
loose association of politically engaged scholars in sustained dialogue, building on one 
another's theories, challenging each other's ideas, considering questions and addressing 
problems that sometimes overlap and sometimes dovetail." To do this, "what we need is an 
intellectual community, joined together not by points of common doctrine, but by a shared 
commitment to developing and refining our thinking."(36) But this is

"almost the opposite of the political culture that we inhabit. The culture that we 
actually have is one characterized by norms borrowed from fundamentalism: the tendency to 
assume conclusions at the outset, to disregard contrary evidence, to refuse to consider 
competing views, to cast all those who disagree as mortal enemies, to transmute every 
issue into a test of virtue, to ignore all nuance and flatten all complexity and deny even 
the possibility of doubt. This approach is limiting in innumerable ways. It prevents us 
from hearing each other, from taking in new information, from challenging ourselves, from 
learning. We can still cast aspersions, dismissively sneer, talk past one another, or 
prejudge arguments without considering them. But we have lost the ability to properly 
disagree. Nearly every political discussion begins and ends as an exercise in cementing or 
policing group loyalties."(36)

Williams continues, "It is not enough to develop the ideas, we need also to develop the 
thinkers who are ready for the ideas . . . We have to create the structures that will 
enable us to re-learn the necessary intellectual skills and to circulate, scrutinize, and 
refine our theories about the world . . . such intellectual work is part of how political 
agency is formed, common interests discovered, and solidarity built." (37)

Williams ends by asserting that "if anarchism is to thrive, either as a political force or 
as a body of thought, we will first need to take on the arduous task of creating the 
circumstances under which honesty is possible, and decency expected, and critical thinking 
part of the common work of the movement." (40)

I like that Williams is advocating for the opening of discussion, and recentering our 
primary values, and defining them. We are for freedom; we mean this to be for all people, 
without exception. We are for equality as human beings. Each of us deserves respect, to be 
treated fairly. We are against authoritarianism: bosses, masters, supervisors. None of 
this is possible under capitalism; we can attempt to treat each other rightly, but there 
are many structural indignities and unfairness, including the ones we have internalized.

But I part with Williams in that I don't think we can leave this intellectual work only to 
"scholars," unless we are clearly stating that working-class people can be included in 
this category of intellectuals and thinkers. Our society has limited this category of 
thinkers to the middle class and has not allowed working class people the time, energy or 
support to fully participate. As a result, the people most affected are not the ones whose 
ideas are accepted. Middle-class scholars are eager to substitute themselves for the 
working class. I am not against academics and those who make their livelihood within the 
realm of learning and teaching, however, I do think they need to be clear on the class 
basis from which they see the world. Theory will be developed by discussion, as Williams 
outlines, but who is doing this theorizing? If it is not working-class people engaged in 
working class struggle, it remains the province of an elitist middle class seeking, as 
always, to control, speak for, represent, and substitute themselves for the working class.

A leadership of ideas, rather than a leadership of cult celebrities, can cut through a lot 
of the pretension of the current anarchist movement, as described so aptly by Williams. 
However, we need people who are committed to organizing for these ideas, taking 
responsibility within the movements of which we are a part. In fact, this is a part of how 
we test our ideas against reality, refining our understanding of splits and differences 
within the capitalist class, evaluating which existing pressure points are to our 
advantage, etc.

Because of racism and ongoing segregation, white anarchists in the US often don't look at 
people of color. They talk about themselves and each other as if their experience is 
universal. People of color, in turn, are themselves tokenized and their experiences 
discounted. This has led to a segregation of the movement which will doom us to defeat if 
it is not corrected. Fascists in the US include the Klan. They have terrorized African 
Americans through mob action, lynching, rape, murder, stealing businesses and homes, 
running them out of public space, with calling the police on them only being the current 
iteration. Yet when anarchists come out against fascists, as Antifa, they don't even talk 
about this history. They talk about Nazi Germany and Europe. When Mark Bray wrote Antifa: 
The Anti-Fascist Handbook, he didn't say anything about people who fought the Klan. He 
presented a very Eurocentric view of fascism. Why don't we identify fascism in this 
country and fight it? Why don't we join with African Americans who are fighting the Klan, 
and the police, and develop an understanding that this is the same struggle?

A final point of difference I have with Williams is that I don't think revolution is a 
slow chipping away at power. I think a revolutionary upsurge must take power away from the 
bourgeoisie, and smash that power, do away with it: root and branch. This is violent, and 
it must go all the way. Any small hesitation will allow the reaction to overpower our 
forces and turn back our attempts to take power. History shows us, from the days of 
Versailles, that the streets will run with our blood if we neglect this.

Anarchism needs to be pulled back to its working-class roots, to its involvement in 
material struggles, to its direct condemnation of all attacks on the entire, international 
working class and all of its most vulnerable sections. Capitalism must be identified as 
the systemic cause of the violence, oppression, lack of freedom and equality experienced 
by all people. When this system is abolished, by the direct action of the working class of 
the world, we will have begun to lay a basis for true freedom and a possibility of living 
our lives as we freely choose.

Whither Anarchism? is available from AK Press

Born in 1950 to a Jewish Communist family, Miriam grew up in Compton, California. She was 
active in the movements for civil rights, against the Vietnam war, and in support of the 
Black Panthers and all the various efforts to develop a revolutionary alternative to the 
system. She started working at General Motors in 1976 in Detroit, and was active inside 
the plant, as part of the Revolutionary Autoworker caucus and as an active member of UAW 
Local 909. She retired in 2007, but joined the Occupy Wall Street movement in 2011, in 
particular the Direct Action Group, where she first met anarchists, joining the First of 
May Anarchist Alliance in 2012. Her main activity now, in addition to May First, is with 
the Detroit Eviction Defense group and with the Solidarity and Defense organization.

http://m1aa.org/?p=1571


------------------------------

Message: 2





The second year of the Pilsen Pride festival - the local equivalent of the Prague Grand 
Prix - took place this year in Pilsen. The march, which took place on Saturday 25 August, 
was attended by members and members of the Anarchist Federation, part of the block 
organized by the Alt * Pride group, which also set out to support the LGBTQ community in 
Pilsen. ---- Around the third afternoon, participants in the Mill Mill began to meet the 
march. Despite the weather that was not as sunny as it used to be, the rainbow flags 
eventually gathered around 300 people - whether from the LGBTQ community, friends of the 
LGBTQ community, or just people who do not care how society matters rights for all.
A few dozen meters away, a circle of about 40 neo-Nazis from the DSSS and the obsessive 
association "Czech Pilsen" were hanging on social networks calling their supporters at a 
meeting "for a traditional family".

After some time, the rainbow march went on the road - it is obvious at first glance that 
it is a much smaller event than the Prague Pride, which is still discovering its 
potential. Compared to the gigantic Prague Pride, there are no allegorical cars, musical 
accompaniments or balloons, but there is no determination and good mood.

Last year , a group of neo-Nazis defending the "traditional family" attempted to disrupt 
the march, and the police had begun to deal with the situation very late, which was 
certainly an unpleasant experience for all who had to listen to the homophobic and 
transfomous mobs of the nazi.

This year, the police obviously decided to rectify their reputation and perhaps put all 
the available technology and human resources into action. In the city, for example, a 
water cannon, a dron and a certain, yet unknown type of cops resembling pyrotechnics.

In spite of all the deployed forces, however, the cops failed to prevent the Nazis' 
attempt to block, so warriors for the "traditional family" (allegedly "bullfighting to 
distract") stopped the march for several minutes. As decent citizens, however, they 
listened to the police and stood on the sidewalk so that, apart from the heavy-haired, 
they could scream with curses and spray Coca-Cola. But no bigger clash took place, and 
besides the padded jacket, this bizarre action did not have any consequences.

The neo-Nazi action of the morals of the present did not diminish, on the contrary, she 
raised it when they were labeled as a traitor, and the procession went on a march through 
the center of the city. Many people of all age groups expressed support from the windows 
and the atmosphere was excellent all the time.

After less than an hour, the participants took the action to the end of the route - to the 
Pilsen Papírna, where they could refresh and pick up magazines and merch different groups 
(among others the Alt * Pride group). However, most of the participants were quickly taken 
to the after-party, which took place in the nearby club.

We are delighted that we could support this event, which hopefully will soon become a 
tradition, and the numbers of its participants will only increase.

So we hope that next year we will see you in Pilsen, Pilsen Pride really deserves our support.

https://www.afed.cz/text/6872/pilsen-pride-2018

------------------------------

Message: 3





On Thursday 30/8, the Macedonia Macedonian Struggle of Thessaloniki invites the Army C 
Army to begin at 20.00 to head to the MTR headquarters. Their aim is, as they say, to 
create an identity crisis for mattresses, forcing them to choose between their identity as 
boss dogs or as nationalists. In view of the TEC's macedonian efforts, on 8 and 9/9 the 
nationalist frenzy tries again to claim space. Nationalism with fascism goes hand in hand 
and that is why we must raise our own mounds again and not let the snake re-raise its 
head. ---- Tomorrow we will guard our occupation and we call anyone wishing to support 
with his / her presence at 18.00 in the field of occupation. ---- AGAINST THE NATIONAL 
DISCLAIMER INTERNATIONALIST SOLIDARITY SHALL GIVE THE PHASE THREAT - ALL AND ALL IN THE 
TEN DEFENSE-ANTI-NATIONALIST BLOCKS

https://libertatiasquat.blogspot.com/2018/08/libertatia.html?m=1

------------------------------

Message: 4





"With the YPG-YPJ, as well as with the communists of Turkey and anarchists of all 
countries, I have been able to experience another way of experiencing comradeship, 
necessarily different from the one we know in Europe." ---- Libertarian Alternative 
reproduces the posts of the blog Kurdistan-Autogestion-Revolution where, after Arthur 
Aberlin, engaged in the YPG, now expresses Damien Keller, engaged him in the International 
Liberation Battalion (IFB). ---- Over the weeks, he will testify to life in the IFB, the 
debates that are going on and the evolution of the revolutionary process in the Democratic 
Federation of Northern Syria. ---- This is my last post on this blog. I have been back in 
Europe for a few days, after several months in the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria.
With the YPG-YPJ as well as with the communists of Turkey and anarchists of all countries, 
I was able to experience another way of experiencing camaraderie, necessarily different 
from the one we know in Europe.

This is partly due to the Tekmil, the regular meeting inherited from Turkish Maoism, 
during which everyone is invited to self-criticize, criticize (including officers) and 
make proposals to improve daily.

But it is of course especially the context of armed conflict that changes everything: 
overnight, a comrade with whom we had tea the day before can be killed by bombing the 
Turkish state or by a mine. Daech.

But here, according to the adage, "  martyrs do not die  " ("  Sehîd namirin  "), and 
their memory is everywhere. Public tributes are paid to them ; there are cemeteries 
reserved for the sehîd (in the canton of Afrîn, the Islamists have destroyed two) ; their 
portraits are displayed in many places: in shops, in the streets, in houses, on bus and 
car hoods ; public institutions (schools, hospitals, ...) often carry their names. Even 
our war names are dedicated to them.

Finally, the committees of the families of martyrs create spaces of memory, often large 
rooms with walls covered with their portraits.

These moments of commemoration are moments of political and human cohesion, as were, for 
decades, the "  rise to the wall of federates  " for the Paris Commune of 1871, or the 
great meetings of the Spanish Exile in memory of the fallen martyrs in the face of 
Francoism, or the Irish marches to commemorate the 1916 Easter uprising.

Soon will begin the trial of the murderers of Clement Meric ; one day, hopefully, there 
will be the one of the assassins of Adama Traore. The annual events in their memory are 
the way to claim justice, keep their memory, and show that the fight continues.

During my return, I will think of all these comrades, European volunteers like me, but 
especially Turkish, Arab, Kurdish, Yazidis, Alevis, Turkmen, Assyrians ... to those killed 
by the Islamic State, by groups of the ASL in Afrîn, by the tanks and planes of the 
Turkish state.

Staying a volunteer
Back in France, it is of course impossible for my armed commitment to Rojava to influence 
my militant practices. The armed struggle has nothing to do with the political, social and 
historical context of the country, nor with the level of class consciousness and revolt in 
the population. This was already the case in the 1980s, the time of the Red Army Fraction 
and Action Directe ...

The fight for the revolution in Rojava is far from over, we can not predict the outcome. 
This conflict will last for several years and the imperialist states - the United States, 
Russia, France ... - will still seek to exploit the Kurdish left to serve their interests. 
It is therefore important for it to benefit from other political support, including that 
of the revolutionary movement. More international and international libertarian volunteers 
are needed in the YPG-YPJ ranks. And of course, abroad, you have to participate in 
solidarity demonstrations with the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria ; seek justice 
for the murder of Sakine Cansiz, Fidan Dogan and Leyla Söylemez ; help feminist, 
ecological and democratic projects to take shape.

Long live the revolution !

Damien Keller, August 28, 2018

http://www.alternativelibertaire.org/?Un-communiste-libertaire-dans-l-IFB-11-De-retour-en-France-d-autres-formes-de

------------------------------

Message: 5





As part of the campaign "Enough exploitation for public money" of the Polish Syndicalists' 
Union, construction workers have organized to fight for their unpaid wages. ---- These 
employees worked in black for the subcontractor of the Real Estate Management Department 
in the Warsaw Wola district, Edyta Lucinska. In 2016, they carried out repairs of 
municipal and social premises. They never received remuneration from a subcontractor for 
this work. ---- A lawyer cooperating with ZSP obtained a payment order for employees in 
court, and after two years the execution was effective. ---- The case is important because 
employees worked for the sub-contractor of the Real Estate Management Department without 
any contracts. However, they managed to prove that they are entitled to remuneration for 
the period worked. Spokesman of the District Office, and vice-mayor Marek Sitarski, did 
not see any fault of the District authorities in 2016 in the fact that the legality of 
employment with the subcontractor was not checked.

ZSP demands compliance with social clauses in public tenders and the employment of 
subcontractors' employees in a legal way on employment contracts.

http://zsp.net.pl/oszukani-pracownicy-firmy-edyta-lucinska-wygrali-nakaz-zaplaty

------------------------------

Geen opmerkingen:

Een reactie posten