Take back space, Destroy patriarchy, fight capitalism, Amsterdam 8M Occupation

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Report back from the 8th of March squatting action in Amsterdam [Video]

Amsterdam. Netherlands. Today, in honor of 8th of March, we organized a squatting action with demonstration. Due to security concerns, it was organized silently, sharing call-out in private channels.

Despite this, more that 60 comrades came to support our action! 3 banners (“Woman life freedom”, “Sex work is work”, “destroy patriarchy, fight capitalism, smash the state”) were dropped with flares from the windows of the squatted building. Police were present, but no one was arrested.

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We are told that there are not enough houses for everyone, that there are not enough spaces for the refugees and migrants coming here fleeing imperialist wars and economies that have been destroyed by (neo)colonialism.

It is unacceptable that the media blame migration for the fact that we all seem to struggle to find a home. This is an example of scapegoating migrants and refugees. .

There is no problem of a lack of space, there is no “housing crisis”, the only problem is the unequal distribution of wealth. The problem is capitalism.

We are being pushed out of our city by rising rent prices and gentrification. Social housing is being sold off privately and the lack of affordable housing means working class people are forced to leave the city.

kraken gaat door http://www.glop.nl/index.php | Internet

Even people with essential professions such as teachers, healthcare workers and social workers are forced to move. People struggle to pay rent while speculators are given free range to do as they please.

Some private investors have hundreds of houses, for example, prince Bernhard has more than 600 houses, and the owner of this building, Anthonie Mans, owns over 100 other properties in the Netherlands.

Waiting lists for social housing are ridiculous and it can take from 8 to 14 years for people to get a place. But for every homeless person there is an estimate of 750m2 of empty building in Amsterdam.

Rent is theft. Maintenance of one room does not cost hundreds of euros per month. This money goes directly into the pockets of landlords or speculators.

Anarchistische Bibliotheek - Anarchistische Groep Amsterdam

Anarchistische Bibliotheek – Anarchistische Groep Amsterdam

The housing issue disproportionately affects women and queer people. For example, queer teenagers are more likely to become homeless.

People who experience domestic abuse are sometimes forced to stay in unsafe situations because they cannot financially afford to leave.

Landlords often discriminate against potential renters based on their ethnicity, income, gender, sexuality and ability. They are known to often be intimidating, unreasonable and feel entitled to tell us how to live our private lives.

Since the squatting ban came into effect, homelessness has doubled.

However, far too often there has been an uncomfortably close relationship between squatting and gentrification, and nowhere does this ring more true than in Amsterdam.

Squatting has historically been a movement against gentrification, the extortion of rent and a rejection of the institution of private property all together- but in the last years rather than fighting gentrification some squatters have been actively leading it way. Working together with the state in order to try and hold on to the little ‘free spaces’ and legalized squats that are still left (often without success).

We reject this position and strategy. We want housing for all, not just for a select group of ‘artists and freethinkers’. We need to speak to our oppressors from a position of power, not beg them to throw us some crumbs. The city belongs to all that live in it, and it is time that we take it back.

Sex workers are told they are not allowed to work while other contact professions are – this only contributes to the further stigmatization of sex work.

Decriminalize Prostitution! (San Francisco, CA)

The government is closing windows in Amsterdam supposedly because it wants to rescue sex workers from human trafficking and bring down crime, not only is there no empirical evidence that closing windows would help with this, taking away someone’s workplace will more likely only make their situation more precarious and dangerous.

Moving sex workers away from the city center to a less rich neighborhood to remove “disturbance” from the rich neighborhood, falls into a structural pattern of stigmatizing sex work and stigmatizing the working class. If the state really cared about sex workers, rather than victimizing us they would give material support during this pandemic, or allow us to work.

Sex work is work. Fighting for worker’s rights means fighting for sex workers rights as well.

The history of the 8th of March is very radical and inspirational. It even was the starting point of Russian revolution!

But what happened to the 8th of March and feminism in general? Capitalism.

As the modern economic learned how to commodify and take profit from the protest against it, feminism wasn’t an exception. As a result, when people hear the word feminism, they don’t always think about radical, intersectional and anti-capitalist feminism.

Marcha 8M en Ciudad de México – YouTube

They think about a type of feminism that says there should be “more female politicians”, “more girl bosses”. This is called “liberal feminism”, but it’s more like a meticulously crafted advertisement campaign.

Liberal “feminism” doesn’t really care about socially oppressed groups even if they are women. It refuses to see the root of gender inequality, it tries to be fair, but stops half-way.

Liberal feminism fails to recognize the relationship between capitalism and patriarchy. But if we oppose patriarchy, we should oppose capitalism and vice versa.

While women have to go to work, when they get home they still have to do house duties and provide emotional support, this is also work but work that is undervalued and unpaid.

Instead of fighting the problem, which is capitalism, liberal feminism has people fighting for ways to coexist with it.

Such ideology paints the intersectional feminist movement as “crazy-man-haters”.

With the help of capital, they buy your attention from screens of your laptops/tvs/phones with “feel good girl power” movies, songs etc. They sell you nice clothes with “feel good girl power” slogans. They are giving you a discount to buy cosmetics in the honor of 8th of March “strong ladies day”.

In this way they are erasing the history and the meaning of such an incredibly important day for all women.

Premiere film "Squatted freedom" | IndyMedia

Premiere film “Squatted freedom” | IndyMedia

The 8th of March is the day to remember the struggle of the women that came before us! It is the day to show solidarity with women who struggle today! It is the day, to celebrate our fight against capitalism and smash this damn patriarchy!

As long as the 1% rule the world, even if half of them are women, the lives of the 99% will not be better!

As fem folks we are often told not to take up too much space. We are socially conditioned to keep our mouths shut and our legs closed. Not to dream too big or breath too loudly.

But we are being strangled and we are expected to smile. There is no space that is safe under this patriarchal capitalist system.

Solidarity is the only solution. Stand by those who are fighting their own oppression, their struggle is your struggle, their fight is our fight. We are not free until all are free. We will not let ourselves be the collateral damage of this crisis.

We will not let ourselves be pushed out of this city! It’s time to take back space!

As feminists, we know that struggle involves work and it involves love. We stand in solidarity with the Kurdish women who have been imprisoned by the Turkish state, who are fighting in the mountains of Kurdistan and who are building new ways of life across society in all four parts of Kurdistan.

We stand in solidarity with Angel, the refugee woman who came to the Netherlands to find safety but was murdered by the Dutch immigration system. She was a political struggler! She was a trans woman! We stand in solidarity with her and all immigrants!

There is no space that is safe under this patriarchal capitalist system, so we have to fight back.
Enough is enough! we need to take back space!
Anarcha-Feminist Group Amsterdam

‘Kraken zal niet stoppen’ – Omroep Brabant

International Anarchist Statement for 8M: Against patriarchal oppression and capitalist exploitation: No one is alone!

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Statement on International Working Women’s Day 2021.

Originally published by Anarkismo.

Today, March 8, we commemorate International Working Women’s Day, a historic date on which we raise the struggle for the political, social, economic, and sexual rights of women, lesbians, and transgender people of the oppressed classes. Today, we aim to put an end to the systematic violence of patriarchy and support the revolutionary workers’, popular and anti-colonial struggle.

First proposed by a group of socialist women at the Second International Conference of Socialist Women in 1910 in Copenhagen, the day was initially intended to promote women’s civil rights. Later, it became a day of agitation, mobilization, protest, and strike for the lives and liberty of women and dissidents of the gender system across the globe.

From the protest for women’s labor and political rights in the industrial states at the beginning of the 20th century to the revolt for bread and peace by working women that began, along with other strikes and demonstrations, the Russian Revolution of February 1917, March 8 as International Women’s Day was slowly consolidated through the active struggle of working-class women.

Therefore, we rescue such great attainment that allows us to remember the achievements of the feminist movement against patriarchal oppression. March 8 also allows us to appropriate the debates and proposals our predecessors had and build spaces that enable us to raise our voices against the injustices and violence of this capitalist, patriarchal and colonialist, system of domination.

The international commemorative day has had multiple banners of struggle that vary in each territory and time. Highlighting among them there’s the struggle for suffrage and equal pay, the recognition of care work and other tasks relegated to the private sphere performed mostly by women, the struggle for the decriminalization and legalization of abortion and access to contraceptives, and the abolition of gender-based violence materialized in high numbers of sexual abuse, femicides, and transfeminicides, among others.

We also highlight the date as a space for women and dissidents that have historically allowed the organizational articulation of the feminist movement.

Lately, and has been characterized by massive mobilizations, most recently by the International Women’s Strike with beginning in Spain, the movement in Argentina and Latin America, and the struggle for legal, safe and free abortion in countries around the world.

Today we, working women, experience, on the front line, the social and economic crisis resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, which uncovered types of violence and patriarchal domination often made invisible as the exploitation of feminine labor in the private sphere and subordination to the male figure within it. COVID-19 also facilitated the resurgence of domestic violence, harassment, and the increase in cases of femicides, transfeminicides, and sexual abuse due to confinement, which is why we mobilize on March 8 with such heartfelt urgency.

However, while we recognize the importance of the feminist struggle in our times, we are aware, and therefore reject, the existence of white, bourgeois, and binary “feminism” that seeks to become hegemonic to the detriment of the oppressed.

Thus, we raise, out of our social and grassroots organizations, disputes against patriarchal oppression from below and through direct action.

We are also alert of the influence of the State on this plurality of currents present within feminism which seeks to accommodate the struggles and demands of working women within its institutions, to corset them in its machinery.

On the commemoration date, we also stress the importance of women and dissidents in the struggle for the rights of the working class and those oppressed by the system of capitalist domination, highlighting the activism of militants such as Teresa Claramunt, Luisa Capetillo, Lucia Sánchez, and Virginia Bolten, for the rights of women and dissidents, for the curbing of environmental exploitation, for the abolition of the State and the end of all oppressions, looking at the revolutionary transformation of reality.

Thus, through mutual support, class solidarity, and collective care, and through the critique of the construction of a political theory based on traditional hierarchical, binary, and exclusionary conceptions of gender too, we fight for socialism and freedom for all.

Therefore, we commemorate March 8 as a day of the revolutionary struggle for our emancipation that, as Emma Goldman wrote in The Tragedy of Woman’s Emancipation (1906): “Should make it possible for women to be human in the truest sense.

Everything within her that craves assertion and activity should reach its fullest expression; all artificial barriers should be broken, and the road towards greater freedom cleared of every trace of centuries of submission and slavery”

For the liberation of the oppressed, Long live those who struggle!

☆ Alternativa Libertaria/ Federazione dei Comunisti Anarchici (AL/FdCA) – Italy
☆ Anarchist Communist Group (ACG) – Britain
☆ Αναρχική Ομοσπονδία – Anarchist Federation – Greece
☆ Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement (AWSM) – Aotearoa/New Zealand
☆ Coordenação Anarquista Brasileira (CAB) – Brazil
☆ Die Plattform – Anarchakommunistische Organisation – Germany
☆ Embat – Organització Llibertària de Catalunya – Catalonia
☆ Federación Anarquista de Rosario (FAR) – Argentina
☆ Federación Anarquista de Santiago (FAS) – Chile
☆ Federación Anarquista Uruguaya (FAU) – Uruguay
☆ Grupo Libertario Vía Libre – Colombia
☆ Libertäre Aktion – Switzerland
☆ Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group (MACG) – Australia
☆ Organización Anarquista de Córdoba (OAC) – Argentina
☆ Organización Anarquista de Tucumán (OAT) – Argentina
☆ Organisation Socialiste Libertaire (OSL) – Switzerland
☆ Union Communiste Libertaire (UCL) – France
☆ Workers Solidarity Movement (WSM) – Ireland
☆ Zabalaza Anarchist Communist Front (ZACF) – South Africa


Until All Are Free: Black Feminism, #Anarchism, and Interlocking Oppression

A Rapist in Your Way ..videos and texts: Un Violador en tu Camino .. power perfomance sweeps Latin America and World (updated)

thefreeonline's avatarThe Free

A Rapist in Your Way .. via Ear to the Ground , 30/11/19 shared with thanks

Today’s piece pays homage– and it must– to the brave women of Chile and around the world who are standing up for their right to be free from sexual and gender-based violence..

Its an amazing performance video, easy to learn and now reproducing in women’s demos all over Latin America

see full lyrics in Spanish, English and German BELOW

Original Performance, Collective LasTesis, Santiago, Chile, November 25, 2019 wherethe Pinera Regime has been deploying sexual violence, torture and disappearances in response to recent anti-austerity protests.

Currently, Mexico…

View original post 1,733 more words

7 Feminists and Collectives That Revolutionized Latinx History

7 Feminists and Collectives That Revolutionized Latinx History — Emperifollá

From Brazil to Chile and the Caribbean, individuals and collectives have taken matters into their own hands, urging and forcing governments to recognize the terrifying numbers of femicides and the undisputable right to choose.

When I was in high school, I learned about Magali García Ramis’s “Solo para hombres en la semana de la mujer” (or, “Only for Men on Women’s Week”). It’s an essay the Puerto Rican writer penned to observe the concept of manhood, one that has been historically intertwined with a morbid obsession of war, pain, and humiliation. 

“We [women] didn’t have to prove with forced and external pain that we are strong,” García Ramis writes. “We proved it by birthing you and feeding you while you could fend for yourself.”

Continue reading “7 Feminists and Collectives That Revolutionized Latinx History”

Statement of support for Ruymán Rodríguez: Trial of 24th March Postponed.. Eng/Esp

Statement of support for Ruymán Rodríguez

from alasbarricadas + A trial
by anonerror on Thu, 03/04/2021 on the FAGC website.translation thefreeonline

Trial of 24th March Postponed

@Federacion Anarquista Gran Canaria 18h 25 March 2021:


We report: the civil guards ask that they be declared excluded and that the Provincial Court judge him. The case has been postponed until it is decided whether Ruyman should go to the Provincial court. Our opinion: the pressure has scared them. Later we will share beautiful images.

Informamos: los guardias civiles piden que se les declare aforados y que les juzgue la Audiencia Provincial. La vista se ha aplazado hasta que se decida si sigue en el Penal o va al Provincial. Nuestra opinión: la presión les ha asustado. Después compartimos imágenes preciosas.


_____________________________

Statement of support for Ruymán Rodríguez:

On March 24, the exemplary Spanish democracy will celebrate a new farce, a trial for another police and judicial set-up that only seeks to hide another case of torture by the State Security Forces and Bodies. The prosecution requests 1 year and 6 months in jail, in addition to a 770 euro fine, to our colleague Ruymán Rodríguez for allegedly having kicked a civil guard in the barracks where he was being held and tortured after an illegal arrest.

The trial is framed, suspiciously, in an aggravated repressive wave that has ended with Pablo Hasel and Elgio convicted for their letters, and with several detainees in the protests that have been organized as a result of it in several cities of the State. Faced with increasing inequality, the absence of a future and opportunities, and uncertainty, the State’s response is to arm itself and strike.

Continue reading “Statement of support for Ruymán Rodríguez: Trial of 24th March Postponed.. Eng/Esp”

Cuba: 250 million dollars in two decades to manufacture the Cuban “dissidence”

Subversion against Cuba is still ongoing from the United States. It was expected that the extreme and cruel sanctions terrorism under Trump would end as Biden was vice President under Obama who timidly reduced the generations long repression of the small Cuban island…but it seems the new ‘Democratic’ regime is just as bad.

Although it has not borne the fruits that its North American promoters expect, subversion against Cuba continues to be a lucrative business that moves millions of dollars.

by Juventud Rebelde.-Rebel Youth.-Nearly 250 million dollars have been dedicated by the administrations of the United States in the last two decades to subversion programs against Cuba.

The cash, distributed through agencies, companies and organizations such as the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), funds activities aimed at overthrowing the Cuban Revolution, the local newspaper Granma denounced today.

These include the most recent incitements to violence, provocations in front of the Ministry of Culture (Mincult) to seek confrontations, and the actions of different communication platforms, which according to the country’s media have been encouraged and sponsored from the United States.

Proof of this is the coverage made by Nelson Julio Álvarez for the site ADN Cuba about the events of January 27 at the Mincult, for which he received between $ 150 and $ 200, according to a video by Álvarez himself published in the group of Facebook Cuban Telescope.

The Cuba Money Project site, by American journalist Tracey Eaton, states that in 2020 alone agencies such as the USAID dedicated around 2.5 million dollars to subversive activities.

The data corresponds to the public information that these North American organizations handle on their digital portals, but it is considered a partial figure, since there are many secret programs about which the recipients of the funds are not known.

He adds that since Donald Trump assumed the presidency in 2017, at least 54 groups operated programs with money from the USAID or the NED.

https://popularresistance-uploads.s3.amazonaws.com/uploads/2021/01/cuba.jpg

The combination of these actions with the economic pressures generated by the intensification of the economic, commercial and financial blockade, and with the establishment of other unilateral coercive measures against Cuba, was the commitment of that administration to destroy the social system of the Caribbean country, according to a review PL

: 250 millones de dólares en dos décadas para fabricar la “disidencia” cubana

Denuncian financiamiento millonario de Estados Unidos para promover subversión contra Cuba

Aunque no ha dado los frutos que esperan sus promotores norteamericanos, la subversión contra Cuba sigue siendo un lucrativo negocio que mueve millones de dólares

Juventud Rebelde.- Cerca de 250 millones de dólares dedicaron las administraciones de Estados Unidos en las últimas dos décadas para los programas de subversión contra Cuba.

La cifra, distribuida a través de agencias, empresas y organizaciones como la Agencia de los Estados Unidos para el Desarrollo Internacional (Usaid, por sus siglas en inglés) y la Fundación Nacional para la Democracia (NED), financia actividades cuyo propósito es el derrocamiento de la Revolución cubana, denunció hoy el diario local Granma.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/__export/1507316955550/sites/telesur/img/multimedia/2017/10/06/efe_cuba.png

Cubans Remember Terrorist Bombing of Cubana Flight 455 .

Entre estas se incluyen las más recientes incitaciones a la violencia, las provocaciones frente al Ministerio de Cultura (Mincult) para buscar confrontaciones, y las acciones de diferentes plataformas comunicativas, que según revelaron medios del país han sido alentadas y patrocinadas desde territorio estadounidense.

Muestra de ello es la cobertura realizada por Nelson Julio Álvarez para el sitio ADN Cuba sobre los sucesos del 27 de enero en el Mincult, por la cual recibió entre 150 y 200 dólares, de acuerdo con un video del propio Álvarez publicado en el grupo de Facebook Telescopio Cubano.

El sitio Cuba Money Project, del periodista estadounidense Tracey Eaton, afirma que solo en 2020 agencias como la Usaid dedicaron alrededor de 2,5 millones de dólares a las actividades subversivas.

El dato corresponde a la información pública que manejan en sus portales digitales esas organizaciones norteamericanas, pero es considerada una cifra parcial, debido a que hay muchos programas secretos sobre los cuales no se conocen los destinatarios de los fondos.

Añade que desde que Donald Trump asumió la presidencia en 2017, al menos 54 grupos operaron programas con dinero proveniente de la Usaid o de la NED.

La combinación de estas acciones con las presiones económicas generadas por el recrudecimiento del bloqueo económico, comercial y financiero, y con el establecimiento de otras medidas coercitivas unilaterales contra Cuba, fue la apuesta de esa administración para destruir el sistema social del país caribeño, según reseña PL

Free the Saudi women’s rights activists still jailed for speaking out!

Saudi activist Loujain al-Hathloul was released from prison at last, but several others remain in detention.

Freedom NOW for Samar, Badawi and Mayaa
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Rights groups welcomed the release of women’s rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul from prison, but several other activists remain behind bars in Saudi Arabia..

Over the past three years, Saudi Arabia has detained hundreds of people it sees as dissenters – including activists like al-Hathloul – but it has begun provisionally releasing some as it comes under a little pressure from the new administration in the United States.

Saudi Arabia has always had a ‘blank cheque’ to do what it likes from the US regime, due in the past to oil dependence and now to the 100 billion dollar arms deals, ignoring its sponsorship of Islamic terrorists, long war on the northern Yemeni people, links to 9/11, lack of democracy, slave-like immigrant labour force and, of course its treatment of women as slaves and chattels.

The detentions of women protestors cast a spotlight on the human rights record of the kingdom, an absolute monarchy that has also faced intense criticism over the 2018 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi by a team of Saudi agents in its consulate in Istanbul.

Al-Hathloul was one of at least a dozen women’s rights activists detained in Saudi Arabia in 2018, three of whom are believed to remain in prison:

Continue reading “Free the Saudi women’s rights activists still jailed for speaking out!”