$100,000 bail set for civil disobedients in West Virginia

Mountaintop removal is probably the single biggest act of hubris committed by humanity against the earth that I can think of. They blow up mountains and dump everything but the scraps of goal they can find into nearby valleys, destroying everything. There’s a committed grassroots coalition fighting tooth and nail against this, and those who speak out against the coal companies in West Virginia routinely have their lives threatened, their dogs shot, etc. etc.

One group, Climate Ground Zero, uses non-violent direct action to confront the mining and the mining companies… things like treesits, blockades, mass trespassing, etc.

Yesterday, two civil disobedients blockaded the entrance to Massey Energy, one of those rare genuinely-evil corporations (for christ’s sake, just look at their logo). Massey is known for breaking the union in the 80s, for being a main proponent of MTR, for poisoning entire cities and wiping out entire towns. The CEO is this guy named Don Blankenship, the highest-paid person in the coal industry. He’s got a hitler mustache, lives above a city he poisoned on a mansion on a mountaintop, where he comes and goes by helicopter. I mean, you can’t make this stuff up: no one would believe a fictional villain this gross. He attacked an ABC reporter and told the journalist that he would be shot if he tried to film him. (I’ve seen the video of it, but can only find that article with stills online).

Right, anyhow, two people blockaded Massey’s office, and now bail is set at an incredible $100,000. West Virginia loves its coal companies, even as they destroy West Virginia physically, economically, and socially (whole towns wiped out regularly, everyone young just leaves the state, etc. etc.).

An Open Letter To Glenn Beck From AK Press

My friends at AK Press have written a really interesting open letter to Glenn Beck, getting at him for accusing the anarchists in greece of not being anarchists at all… basically, pointing out that Glenn Beck is afraid of calling us anarchists because he’s afraid that his libertarian listeners might actually get excited about us.

I’ve also got all kinds of awesome pictures and such to post about my travels, but don’t have really good access to a computer right now in Germany with which to post. My apologies about that, sorry I’m mostly just reposting a bunch of anarcho news.

Things all wacky

It’s been an awkward couple of weeks to be an anarchist. Maybe couple of years. It’s not really a secret that I find the direction that the anarchist movement seems to be taking, at least in the USA, to be troubling. The rejection of attempts to build anarchist society strike me as particularly absurd. And now, in the past few weeks, after May Day riots in Santa Cruz and Asheville showed a lack of… a lack of nuance in their choice in targets (both attacking small businesses, and in some cases worker’s cars, and in one case a worker-run business and completely ignoring the one chain store in town) there’s been a spate of attempts, by the media and unfortunately by anarchists, to split anarchists into good anarchists and bad anarchists.

It’s remarkably frustrating.

But there’ve been some good analyses coming out of this. In Asheville, Firestorm Cafe put out a communique about how badly anarchism is being represented in the media that gets to the core of some of the problems, while still clearly intended to be read and understood by a non-anarchist audience. In Santa Cruz, a local paper wrote a “good anarchy” piece that is problematic in many ways but at least gets a short quote by Wes Modes in about how it sucks to split us into good and bad anarchists. And in Greece, where anarchists almost certainly just killed three bank workers (by accident, but not that much by accident), people are finally starting to talk about how fucked up that is. (I’ve only skimmed that article so far).

Maybe I’m just nostalgic for 8 years ago, when it seemed like anarchists understood the value of building an anarchist society, of networking with other groups, of respecting a diversity of tactics, of targeted and intentioned sabotage of the oppressive machine, of strategic thinking and actually going about this whole thing like we might want to actually I don’t know… win. When we didn’t buy into the stereotype that the media has always, for 150 years, had for us of being mindless lunatics hell-bent on destruction. Which I think people are buying into out of alienation and hopelessness. When all you could hope to do is lash out at this fucked up society. It’s not subtle, and it’s not strategic.

I still believe very strongly that we anarchists need to have solidarity with one another, that we need to support our arrested comrades. Many of whom are “innocent,” but all of whom were fighting against a society that is unarguably in the process of destroying the earth and oppressing the majority of the people and non-human animals on this planet.

Speaking Sunday, May 9th, in Amsterdam

Sorry, I’m really shit about short-notice posts about events I’m doing. Tomorrow night I’m speaking at the MKZ about anarchism in the United States. It’s at 20:00, and it’s free. I might even have visual aids, but I’m not certain about that yet. This was a special request from friends here in Amsterdam that I speak on this subject, and I hope to do justice to the actually really vibrant and diverse scene that I hail from.

Anarchapistemology

I don’t actually really know what epistomology means (and I have no idea if I’m spelling it right, cause this computer is spellchecking thinking I’m writing in Dutch), but today I ran across anarchapistemology. It’s a rather interesting anarcha-feminist blog. They’ve got a really solid analysis… almost non-analysis, of what happened in Pittsburgh at the g-20 (parts two and three are worth reading as well.) From the last post:

I wanted to write about the street medics who had created a clinic with skilled medical volunteers, anarchist staff, massage, acupuncture, herbalists. The street medics who stayed behind in Schenley Park to treat college students while all the activists got the hell out, and who got arrested mid-treatments, prevented from helping, held chained on buses for hours and hours in the cold, came out with handcuff injuries and tears. The injuries and the emotional trauma. The fear, the helplessness felt by unprepared victims of completely arbitrary police violence. The helplessness felt by the medics and friends trying to support a crowd of people who they couldn’t get to. Medic work is hard and important, and shouldn’t ever be overlooked or thankless. It is one of the greatest contributions to the new world that we are actively building right there, right there within the act of destroying the old!

The thing I love about this is that it sidesteps a false dichotomy. There are people who say “protests are traumatic, therefore we shouldn’t go to protests, and anyone who says we should is practically responsible for causing the trauma themselves.” and this irritates the piss out of me. And there are people who say “who cares about sissy stuff like trauma? we’ve got cops to fight! er, I mean, summits to counter-demonstrate!” who, clearly from my sardonic tone, I have no time for either. Instead, the author goes about describing how we can learn to be powerful, how we can address the mental wounds we will be taking as we confront state power.

I just came from a memorial for an israeli anarchist friend of mine, Tal, who died this past winter of cancer. She was one of the most powerful and vibrant and stern people I’ve known. It’s always the case that when people die, we use hyperboles to describe them, but Tal really was one of the most bad-ass folks I’d met. I, of course, wish I’d known her better. But when I came back to Amsterdam the second time, in 2006, she let me stay at her place. I was worrying about this or that emotional thing. She looked at me sternly: “You american anarchists. You’re all too sensitive.” Sometimes, I think she’s right. I’m a bit fond of cold, emotionless cultures myself. But we can’t just “toughen up” all the time, not internally, not within our own discourse among people who should be our allies.

So much going on in anarchism…

Several people I care about are facing serious charges resulting from May Day.

In Santa Cruz, the illustrator of Times Square, my friend Wes Modes has been labeled as the “leader” of the local anarchist movement it seems. He was already being harrassed and facing charges for a bunch of bullshit, but now the police are harassing SubRosa Infoshop and, near as I can tell from being quite far away, accusing Wes of basically orchestrating everything. This is, of course, absurd. It’s always absurd when they accuse us of having authoritarian leaders, but it’s always even more absurd the people they pick to harrass. I personally think they’re picking people who are the oldest and most public men.

In Asheville, 11 anarchists are facing serious charges of vandalism, etc. for being present at a May Day protest that targeted some property. They faced ridiculously high bail, disproportionate, of course, to the amount of damage that they’re accused of inflicting. Fortunately, the Boulvedier has fashion advice for them.

Oh, and a US IWW member, Alexandra Svoboda, was found guilty of having her leg broken by a cop a march in 2007. As we all know, getting the shit beat out of you by cops is a crime in this country: it’s called assaulting an officer. Basically, any time the police injure you, they need to manufacture a case that you attacked them. In this case, they claim that she hit the police with a pair of drumsticks. Drumsticks? You’d be better off hitting someone with your fists! Yeah fucking right she attacked the police with a pair of drumsticks. Look at her leg and tell me the police haven’t committed a crime. Anyhow, now she’s facing four years in jail, cause she got found guilty.

And finally, the 5th of May in Greece was the day of a general strike. Over 200,000 people poured into the streets. When a bank was set on fire with a molotov, three employees died of smoke inhalation. To say that this is tragic is an understatement. To say that it is embarassing is, well, sort of vain. But it’s tragic and it’s embarassing, regardless. Already, everyone is pointing the finger at everyone else about who’s fault this is. But as much as I’m mournful that it was probably anarchists throwing a molotov that caused this death directly, the most damning thing I’ve seen is this letter from an employee of the bank that places the blame on the employers, who actually locked the employees in the building, threatened everyone with firing if they joined the strike, and denied them internet access for the day to keep them communicating with the outside world. Wage slavery, indeed:

“I feel an obligation toward my co-workers who have so unjustly died today to speak out and to say some objective truths. I am sending this message to all media outlets. Anyone who still bares some consciousness should publish it. The rest can continue to play the government’s game.

The fire brigade had never issued an operating license to the building in question. The agreement for it to operate was under the table, as it practically happens with all businesses and companies in Greece.

The building in question has no fire safety mechanisms in place, neither planned nor installed ones – that is, it has no ceiling sprinklers, fire exits or fire hoses. There are only some portable fire extinguishers which, of course, cannot help in dealing with extensive fire in a building that is built with long-outdated security standards.

No branch of Marfin bank has had any member of staff trained in dealing with fire, not even in the use of the few fire extinguishers. The management also uses the high costs of such training as a pretext and will not take even the most basic measures to protect its staff.

There has never been a single evacuation exercise in any building by staff members, nor have there been any training sessions by the fire-brigade, to give instructions for situations like this. The only training sessions that have taken place at Marfin Bank concern terrorist action scenarios and specifically planning the escape of the banks’ “big heads” from their offices in such a situation.

The building in question had no special accommodation for the case of fire, even though its construction is very sensitive under such circumstances and even though it was filled with materials from floor to ceiling. Materials which are very inflammable, such as paper, plastics, wires, furniture. The building is objectively unsuitable for use as a bank due to its construction.

No member of security has any knowledge of first aid or fire extinguishing, even though they are every time practically charged with securing the building. The bank employees have to turn into firemen or security staff according to the appetite of Mr Vgenopoulos [owner of Marfin Bank].

The management of the bank strictly bared the employees from leaving today, even though they had persistently asked so themselves from very early this morning – while they also forced the employees to lock up the doors and repeatedly confirmed that the building remained locked up throughout the day, over the phone. They even blocked off their internet access so as to prevent the employees from communicating with the outside world.

For many days now there has been some complete terrorisation of the bank’s employees in regard to the mobilisations of these days, with the verbal “offer”: you either work, or you get fired.

The two undercover police who are dispatched at the branch in question for robbery prevention did not show up today, even though the bank’s management had verbally promised to the employees that they would be there.

At last, gentlemen, make your self-criticism and stop wandering around pretending to be shocked. You are responsible for what happened today and in any rightful state (like the ones you like to use from time to time as leading examples on your TV shows) you would have already been arrested for the above actions. My co-workers lost their lives today by malice: the malice of Marfin Bank and Mr. Vgenopoulos personally who explicitly stated that whoever didin’t come to work today [May 5th, a day of a general strike!] should not bother showing up for work tomorrow [as they would get fired].”

– An employee of Marfin Ban

Glen Beck Attempts To Unite The Left

This is awesome: Glen Beck is giving more PR for the radicals, this time for anarchists. (Last time it was for “The Coming Insurrection,” this time for We Are An Image From The Future, a book about Greek anarchism). Of course, he tries to claim that these books weren’t written by anarchists (right in one case, wrong in another). But then he goes on to say that all the leftist groups are all happily working together as one big strong movement.

I think he’s afraid of the (A) word because he figures his libertarian viewers might be sympathetic to us.

May Day! – Nijmegen

May Day is my favorite holiday. Actually, it’s kind of my only holiday. I celebrate christmas with my family, and my dad calls me on winter solstice to wish me a happy new year, but May Day is the one I really feel a connection to.

This year, I took a train to the city of Nijmegen in the east of Holland to attend an anarchist demonstration there. The Dutch haven’t had much of a May Day tradition in something like 50 years, so it was wonderful to be part of the largest such event in decades. Anyhow, the local anarchists had even gone ahead and gotten a permit for the event, since May Day is intended as a celebration, and they wanted the event to be as kid friendly as possible. But the police simply cannot be trusted to keep their truncheons to themselves.

It started of nice enough, with a bunch of speeches I couldn’t understand. The crowd was decently mixed: mostly younger punk/squatter anarchist types, but there were a fair number of older folks and children as well. We left the station and paraded about, with a few younger kids putting up stickers and some folks wheatpasting. We told the police they would not be allowed to enter the march itself. At one point, a cop started walking inside the crowd. He was confronted and then left. We stopped at a beautiful squatted building with a fantastic mural. Then we marched to another neighborhood that was going to be entirely demolished to make way for gentrification. All along, the police horses were skittish, and the police clearly had poor control over them.

We marched through a tunnel. Once again, the police tried to get into the march. We didn’t allow them. Some stencils, stickers, spraypaint, and wheatpaste went up. On the other side, a police horse knocked an unaffiliated woman off her bicycle and sent her to the hospital. Shortly thereafter, a police horse trampled a man right in front of me (who I was both unable to help or photograph, so much for that cliched dillemma). After this, they started attacking the crowd. It’s almost a joke: we always say “the police started it” and the media always says we do. But honestly, we rarely start in with the violence. Here, the police trampled someone, then started freaking out about losing control, so they began to attack with sticks and horses. People defended themselves, with flagpoles and bottles.

After awhile, things calmed down a bit, and the police started marching us around. I got out and watched as people were forced towards the police station. The police station, though, was right next to the train station, and the remaining crowd was put into the station and told to leave town. Regardless of where they lived.

But in the end, only three people were arrested, all of whom were let out later that night. Most people eventually left the train station and reconverged for dinner and conversation.

More about the whole thing (mostly in dutch, but with some video and photos) can be found on indymedia.nl.

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