blog of the post capitalist transition.. Read or download the novel here + latest relevant posts
Author: thefreeonline
The Free is a book and a blog. Download free E/book ...”the most detailed fictional treatment of the movement from a world recognizably like our own to an anarchist society that I have read...
As police violence intensifies alongside the inequalities it exists to enforce, some communities are mobilizing to defend themselves, while others have yet to understand why this is necessary. In response, we’ve prepared this poster stressing the structural role the police play in maintaining capitalism. A large full-color poster printed on white book paper to decorate the walls of your city! The back contains the essay Seven Myths about the Police.
This week far-Right and vigilante violence against Black Lives Matter demonstrators ramped up.
We’ve got reports of someone shot at a statue protest in Albuquerque, New Mexico by a militia member;
Proud Boys attacking someone in Seattle, WA;
violent Trump supporters clashing with a rural Black Lives Matter demonstration in Ohio;
neo-Nazis pulling a gun on people outside of Pittsburgh;
and a Unicorn Riot reporter attacked by white vigilantes while the police watched and then threatened to arrest the reporter for “inciting a riot.”
Meanwhile, a Boogaloo PR manual has been leaked, a slew of arrests have taken place following previous far-Right incidents and attacks and we got doxxes of Operation: Werewolf, the Three Percenters, and more!
note> the Twitter posts and videos don’t reproduce here or without media.. see original HERE>This Week in Fascism
Without further ado, let’s begin!
News
Albuquerque Militia Member Opens Fire at Protest Calling for the Removal of Spanish Conquistador Statue, Injures One
Protesters attempting to pull down a statue of Conquistador Juan de Oñate, a brutal colonial governor who oversaw Spanish rule and the 1599 Acoma Massacre, faced off against heavily armed members of the New Mexico Civil Guard today. At one point, a counter-demonstrator took out a pistol and was pushed away from the statue by demonstrators, after which he opened fire, injuring one person who was taken to the hospital.
#Albuquerque activists IDing shooter as son of former sheriff who once ran for City Council because he “felt compelled to seek his first elected office out of fear [of] the community… becoming a “third world country.” Also attended #GOP convention in 2016 as an alt-delegate. https://t.co/mAX3Mk2MEGpic.twitter.com/uzMENWgfg
Why are we squatting? We, women and queer people, feminists, precarious, exiled and marginalised on several levels, are occupying a building in Strasbourg that has been abandoned for several years. Since February 27th 2020, La Pigeonne has become a squat for housing and organization in a selected mix (without cisgender men*). Originally published by Squat Net. As…
Mutual aid initiatives have rapidly spread during the coronavirus pandemic. But as the crisis is only likely to change and not abate, can community-led action stay the course? Argentina may well have the answer.
Illustrations by Michelle Pereira, for The Correspondent
On a sunny Thursday afternoon in April, an estimated 500,000 senior citizens across Argentina opened their doors to receive a freshly prepared meal, delivered entirely free of charge. It was a simple, yet touching gesture that showed the recipients that their need to feed themselves despite living under compulsory isolation had not gone unnoticed.
This impressive logistical feat was not carried out by the government. Instead, the initiative, involving 2,000 community-run kitchens across the country and support and funding from small businesses from butchers to bakeries, was the brainchild of the Argentinian grassroots social movement, Barrios de Pie.
It is just one example among thousands of acts of compassion, solidarity and voluntary cooperation that have been making headlines around the world. This groundswell of activity – which falls under the banner of “mutual aid” because it comes from within communities themselves and is geared long-term, as Barrios de Pie put it, at social justice and societal transformation – has, in many instances, outpaced state-led attempts at volunteering.
Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised that humans are kind. After all, this is the case Russian author, nobleman and anarchist Peter Kropotkin, who came up with the term, makes in his 1902 essay in which he writes: “Besides the law of mutual struggle there is in nature the law of mutual aid, which, for the success of the struggle for life, and especially for the progressive evolution of the species, is far more important than the law of mutual contest.”
Hypersonic nuclear-capable missiles will return us to the madness of the Cold War
By Karl Grossman
The United States is seeking to acquire “volumes of hundreds or even thousands” of nuclear-capable hypersonic missiles that are “stealthy” and can fly undetected at 3,600 miles per hour, five times faster than the speed of sound. In unveiling the plan, Trump called the new weapon a ‘super-duper’ missile. But with even less time to respond to a potential threat, will this lead to a deadly misjudgment?
Why so many? A Pentagon official is quoted in the current issue of Aviation Week & Space Technology as saying “we have to be careful we’re not building boutique weapons. If we build boutique weapons, we won’t—we’ll be very reluctant to—use them.”
The article in the aerospace industry trade journal is headlined: “Hypersonic Mass Production.” A subhead reads: “Pentagon Forms Hypersonic Industry ‘War Room.’”
On March 19, 2020, the U.S. conducted its first hypersonic missile test from its Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kauai, Hawaii.
“Fast and Furiously Accurate” is the title of an article about hypersonic missiles written by a U.S. Navy officer which appeared last year on a U.S. Naval Institute website.
The piece declares that by “specifically integrating hypersonic weapons with U.S. Navy submarines, the United States may gain an edge in developing the fastest, most precise weapons the world has ever seen.”
“Hypersonic weapons,” explains the article by U.S. Navy Lieutenant Andrea Howard, “travel faster than Mach 5—at least five times the speed of sound, around 3,600 mph, or one mile per second….They are similar to but faster than existing missiles, such as the subsonic U.S. Tomahawk missile, which maxes out around 550 mph.”
“While hypersonic weapons can carry conventional or nuclear warheads, they differ from existing technologies in three critical ways,” writes Howard. “First…a one-kilogram object delivered precisely and traveling multiples of the speed of sound can be more destructive than one kilogram of TNT. Second, the low-altitude path helps mask HCMs [Hypersonic Cruise Missiles] when coupled with the curvature of the Earth” and so “they are mostly invisible to early warning radars. And third…they can maneuver during flight; in contrast with the predictable ballistic-missile descend, they are more difficult to intercept, if even detected.”
An early hypersonic cruise missile engine, developed in 2002, traveled at Mach 6. (Photo courtesy DARPA/ONR/NASA Langley Research Center.)
“By offering the precision of near-zero-miss weapons, the speed of ballistic missiles, and the maneuverability of cruise missiles, hypersonic weapons are a disruptive technology capable of striking anywhere on the globe in less than an hour,” declares the Navy officer.
The article also notes that Russian “President Vladimir Putin unveiled six new” what he called “invincible” hypersonic missiles as part of a March 2018 “state of the nation” speech. “Russia has successfully tested the air-to-ground hypersonic missile” named Kinzhal for dagger, “multiple times using the MIG-31 fighter.” It’s “mounting the Kinzhal on its Tu-22M3 strategic bomber.” The article also says “China, too, is working on hypersonic technologies.”
A group of activists and neighbors have made public the construction of a self-managed urban garden and a multipurpose popular space, available to the whole neighborhood. The almost ten thousand square meters of land belongs to CaixaBank and has been abandoned for more than twelve years
PUBLISHED: June 13, 2020 / Guillem Martí Guillem Martí guimmart
Located on the outskirts of the neighborhood of Sant Francesc, adjacent to the old town of Sant Cugat del Vallès, and at the beginning of the industrial estate of Can Magí, there is a plot of land that years ago had housed an old factory, according to aerial photographs of the Cartographic and Geological Institute of Catalonia, of which only the foundations remain.
They are 9,595 square meters in disuse, covered with tall grass and some trees, which, for more than twelve years, were hidden from view by sporadic pedestrians passing through the area by a long wall.
However, some neighbors say that the factory had been abandoned for more than fifteen years before going to the ground. Since 2012, the land has been owned by Servihabitat, CaixaBank’s real estate company, but for a few days now a group of activists has been working on it to build the Horta Alliberada de Sant Cugat, (Liberated Garden) which opened to the public on Saturday, June 13th.
The activists have been preparing the ground for a few days and creating the first terraces in the most fertile area, “to make it attractive to the neighborhood and to counter the pejorative image that can be had of the squatters,” says Pau, member of the garden assembly.
Supporters of the project and local entities have met in the early hours of Saturday morning to spread the project among the neighborhood, hang posters, hand out leaflets and make information pickets, and a press conference has been convened with local media where has read a manifesto. The first open assembly of the Garden will be held on Sunday, but always respecting the safety measures and restrictions imposed by phase two of decontamination.
“One of the goals of the garden that we have set ourselves from the beginning is to reach all sectors of the population,” explains Marta, also a member of the assembly.
“We have written the manifesto in three languages, including Arabic, to represent the cultural diversity of the neighborhood, unlike the City Council,” he added, referring to the segregation by cultural origin and origin that is it ends up generating among the users of other urban gardens of the municipality.
A Beginning Note–This post ought to keep the old farts busy for awhile slinging insults and spreading their manure……enjoy. The newest situation that has the lie machine working overtime is that of the Autonomous Zone in Seattle……a new way to protest….or is it?
Before let me give my reader a little context…..
The very term makes people with a history background think about 1871 and the Paris Commune….
The Paris Commune was a popular-led democratic government that ruled Paris from March 18 to May 28, 1871. Inspired by the Marxist politics and revolutionary goals of the International Workingmen’s Organization (also known as the First International), workers of Paris united to overthrow the existing French regime which had failed to protect the city from Prussian siege, and formed the first truly democratic government in the city and in all of France.
The elected council of the Commune passed socialist policies and oversaw city functions for just over two months, until the French army retook the city for the French government, slaughtering tens of thousands of working-class Parisians in order to do so.