12 Anarchists still Held Hostage without Bail in Argentina

Argentina: All 12 Anarchist Comrades Detained in November Are Being Held in Preventive Detention

en castellano abajo

Note from the Chilean blog Publicacion Refractario: Despite the continuous contradictory information that has come to us from different factions regarding the detained comrades on the other side of the mountain range, which is related to the fact that their situation is not being publicized- their names, the charges, everything that happened has been silenced.

We prefer to publish the communique from the ‘Union of Lawyers and Attorneys’ who are quite clear about the recent events that have taken place in the Argentine territory… Against silence and indifference: To spread insurrectionist anti-prison solidarity.The attacks and mass arrests of the anarchists came just before the G20 Meeting in Buenos Aires.All the detained anarchists defended by our union have been processed and placed in preventive detention.

In total there are 12 anarchist political prisoners.

One is accused of throwing an explosive device at Judge Bonadio’s car. His name is Marco Viola. Two others are accused of having attacked the tomb of the criminal chief of the Federal Police Colonel Ramón Falcón. Their names are Anahi Salcedo and Hugo Rodriguez.

There was a raid on a social center in the Barrio of Constitución, in CABA (Autonomous City of Buenos Aires) and they detained everybody who was meeting in this place, some with more permanence, others circumstantially.

ALL OF THEM have been accused of EVERYTHING.

They are all under investigation for being part of an organized structure established and created to commit offences among which are those that we have already mentioned.

Bail was refused for all of the detainees.

Now Judge Ercolini has indicted all of the accused. The prosecution ruling for PREVENTIVE DETENTION was passed. . They have ordered that ALL the anarchist detainees remain imprisoned until their trial.

The Union will appeal the resolution.

Union of Lawyers and Attorneys.         December 2018



 

Publicacion RefractarioOn November 14, an explosive device detonated inside the Recoleta Cemetery, near the tomb of the miserable Colonel Falcon (military chief responsible for the massacres of workers at the beginning of the last century and happily executed in revenge by the anarchist comrade Simon Radowitzky). (In fact it was the anniversary of his death and just before the G20 Meeting )

As a result of the apparently premature detonation of the small bomb two people were arrested at the scene. Continue reading “12 Anarchists still Held Hostage without Bail in Argentina”

#YellowVests: A Call for Intergalactic Actions of Solidarity

ACT 5: THIS TIME IT’S INTERGALACTIC. A call out from the gilets jaunes (yellow vests), for solidarity actions everywhere. On Saturday the 15th of December 2018.

Originally published by Gilets Jaunes Intergalactiques

It began as anger against neoliberal climate policies, a revolt against unfair petrol taxes that pass on the cost to working people rather than the rich and the very multinationals most responsible for polluting our planet.

Now four weeks later, it has become a popular uprising for dignity, a rebellion against the elite and their world, a cry for equality. It has evolved into a powerful refusal of representation, of spokes people, political parties and unions.

We have all been overtaken by what has been happening, everyone hasbecome more than themselves; because we are impossible to define, the only code we have is a colour code, all the other codes are broken. We are too diverse and decentralized to be called a movement, too different to be categorized, let’s simply say we are an uprising ! Continue reading “#YellowVests: A Call for Intergalactic Actions of Solidarity”

The SDF conquer 35% of Hajin , the last big Fortress of ISIS

note: this blog thefreeonline.wordpress.com, has now been banned in Turkey with Dozens more pro Rojava and anti Fascist sites

The SDF conquer 35% of Hajin with heavy losses
Wednesday, December 12, 2018 The northern part of the city, including the hospital, has been conquered by the Syrian Democratic Forces, (SDF) after fighting throughout the week.

Thirty Islamists have died in the fighting. The Islamic State had been entrenched in the hospital and the mosque despite being non-combat sites. Continue reading “The SDF conquer 35% of Hajin , the last big Fortress of ISIS”

335 people Refuse to Pay Tax for Military Spending in Spain

335 people refused to pay the part of their taxes dedicated to military spending in 2018 in the Spanish State

They diverted 35.882 € to projects of peace and justice.

(en castellano abajo)

According to the “Report: Fiscal Objection 2018 Survey of Alternativa 335 personas desobedientes al Gasto Militar en el 2017Antimilitarista.Moc”, 335 people, from 30 provinces of the Spanish State, refused in 2018 to contribute their taxes to finance the armies and their wars when making their tax declarations .

This action of collective disobedience was framed in the campaign of Fiscal Objection to Military Expenditure, now going since 1983, 35 years ago. A total of 35,888 euros was diverted to finance alternative projects for the defense of Peace and Social Justice. Continue reading “335 people Refuse to Pay Tax for Military Spending in Spain”

When the State is Unjust, we may Use Violence as one Tactic

When the state is unjust, citizens may use justifiable violence
by Jason Brennan   from Aeon with thanks. (Inserts and illustrations added)

If you see police choking someone to death – such as Eric Garner, the 43-year-old black horticulturalist wrestled down on the streets of New York City in 2014 – you might choose to pepper-spray them and flee.

You might even save an innocent life. But what ethical considerations justify such dangerous heroics? (After all, the cops might arrest or kill you.) More important: do we have the right to defend ourselves and others from government injustice when government agents are following an unjust law?

I think the answer is yes.

Image result for the failure of non violence Peter Gelderloos pdf ...

But that view needs defending. Under what circumstances might active self-defence, including possible violence, be justified, as opposed to the passive resistance of civil disobedience that Americans generally applaud?

Civil disobedience is a public act that aims to create social or legal change. Think of Henry David Thoreau’s arrest in 1846 for refusing to pay taxes to fund the colonial exploits of the United States, or Martin Luther King Jr courting the ire of the authorities in 1963 to shame white America into respecting black civil rights. In such cases, disobedient citizens visibly break the law and accept punishment, so as to draw attention to a cause.


..’The police are not your friends..–..More police come and push a lot of people back. As there is still nowhere to go people trip over and collapse and soon have police standing on them as they try to grab their targets. I am grabbed by the arms by two officers whist a third punches me in the face three times. I think he is trying to knock me unconscious so I’ll be easier to drag out of the crowd. There is a lot of screaming. A woman to my left shouts ‘someone is going to die…’/


But justifiable resistance need not have a civic character. It need not aim at changing the law, reforming dysfunctional institutions or replacing bad leaders. Sometimes, it is simply about stopping an immediate injustice­. If you stop a mugging, you are trying to stop that mugging in that moment, not trying to end muggings everywhere. Indeed, had you pepper-sprayed the police officer Daniel Pantaleo while he choked Eric Garner, you’d have been trying to save Garner, not reform US policing.Related image

Generally, we agree that it’s wrong to lie, cheat, steal, deceive, manipulate, destroy property or attack people. But few of us think that the prohibitions against such actions are absolute. Commonsense morality holds that such actions are permissible in self-defence or in defence of others (even if the law doesn’t always agree). You may lie to the murderer at the door. You may smash the windows of the would-be kidnapper’s car. You may kill the would-be rapist.

Here’s a philosophical exercise. Imagine a situation in which a civilian commits an injustice, the kind against which you believe it is permissible to use deception, subterfuge or violence to defend yourself or others.


The Failure of Related imageNonviolence  .. Peter Gelderloos ..’A diversity of methods is necessary in our struggle because none of us have the answer regarding the one true strategy for revolution; because there is no one size that fits all and each of us must develop a unique form of struggle for our respective situations; and because in fact our movements are harder to repress when we replace a party-line unity with a broad solidarity, when we attack as a swarm and not as an opposing army. Whether that army is pacifist or combative, the discipline required to coerce or intimidate everyone into following one set of pre-approved tactics, and to exclude those who fall out of line, is authoritarian. In such a contest, whichever army won— the army of the government or the army of the movement—the State would triumph..’.

For instance, imagine your friend makes an improper stop at a red light, and his dad, in anger, yanks him out of the car, beats the hell out of him, and continues to strike the back of his skull even after your friend lies subdued and prostrate. May you use violence, if it’s necessary to stop the father?

Now imagine the same scene, except this time the attacker is a police officer in Ohio, and the victim is Richard Hubbard III, who in 2017 experienced just such an attack as described. Does that change things? Must you let the police officer possibly kill Hubbard rather than intervene?Related image

Most people answer yes, believing that we are forbidden from stopping government agents who violate our rights. I find this puzzling. On this view, my neighbours can eliminate our right of self-defence and our rights to defend others by granting someone an office or passing a bad law.

On this view, our rights to life, liberty, due process and security of person can disappear by political fiat – or even when a cop has a bad day. In When All Else Fails: The Ethics of Resistance to State Injustice (2019), I argue instead that we may act defensively against government agents under the same conditions in which we may act defensively against civilians.

In my view, civilian and government agents are on a par, and we have identical rights of self-defence (and defence of others) against both.

<p><em>Photo by Samuel Corum/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images</em></p>

We should presume, by default, that government agents have no special immunity against self-defence, unless we can discover good reason to think otherwise. But it turns out that the leading arguments for special immunity are weak.

Some people say we may not defend ourselves against government injustice because governments and their agents have ‘authority’. (By definition, a government has authority over you if, and only if, it can oblige you to obey by fiat: you have to do what it says because it says so.) But the authority argument doesn’t work.

It’s one thing to say that you have a duty to pay your taxes, show up for jury duty, or follow the speed limit. It is quite another to show that you are specifically bound to allow a government and its agents to use excessive violence and ignore your rights to due process. A central idea in liberalism is that whatever authority governments have is limited.Image result for the failure of non violence Peter Gelderloos pdf ...

Others say that we should resist government injustice, but only through peaceful methods. Indeed, we should, but that doesn’t differentiate between self-defence against civilians or government. The common-law doctrine of self-defence is always governed by a necessity proviso: you may lie or use violence only if necessary, that is, only if peaceful actions are not as effective. But peaceful methods often fail to stop wrongdoing. Eric Garner peacefully complained: ‘I can’t breathe,’ until he drew his last breath.

Another argument is that we shouldn’t act as vigilantes. But invoking this point here misunderstands the antivigilante principle, which says that when there exists a workable public system of justice, you should defer to public agents trying, in good faith, to administer justice. So if cops attempt to stop a mugging, you shouldn’t insert yourself.

But if they ignore or can’t stop a mugging, you may intervene. If the police themselves are the muggers – as in unjust civil forfeiture – the antivigilante principle does not forbid you from defending yourself. It insists you defer to more competent government agents when they administer justice, not that you must let them commit injustice.Image result for the failure of non violence Peter Gelderloos pdf ...

Some people find my thesis too dangerous. They claim that it’s hard to know exactly when self-defence is justified; that people make mistakes, resisting when they should not. Perhaps. But that’s true of self-defence against civilians, too. No one says we lack a right of self-defence against each other because applying the principle is hard. Rather, some moral principles are hard to apply.

However, this objection gets the problem exactly backwards. In real life, people are too deferential and conformist in the face of government authority. Image result for police kill black man

They are all-too-willing to electrocute experimental subjects, gas Jews or bomb civilians when ordered to, and reluctant to stand up to political injustice.

If anything, the dangerous thesis – the thesis that most people will mistakenly misapply – is that we should defer to government agents when they seem to act unjustly. Remember, self-defence against the state is about stopping an immediate injustice, not fixing broken rules.Image result for the failure of non violence Peter Gelderloos pdf ...

Of course, strategic nonviolence is usually the most effective way to induce lasting social change. But we should not assume that strategic nonviolence of the sort that King practised always works alone.

Two recent books – Charles Cobb Jr’s This Nonviolent Stuff’ll Get You Killed (2014) and Akinyele Omowale Umoja’s We Will Shoot Back (2013) – show that the later ‘nonviolent’ phase of US civil rights activism succeeded (in so far as it has) only because, in earlier phases, black people armed themselves and shot back in self-defence.

Once murderous mobs and white police learned that black people would fight back, they turned to less violent forms of oppression, and black people in turn began using nonviolent tactics. Defensive subterfuge, deceit and violence are rarely first resorts, but that doesn’t mean they are never justified.

Image result for the failure of non violence Peter Gelderloos pdf ...

Jason Brennan is professor of strategy, economics, ethics, and public policy at Georgetown University. He is the author, together with Peter Jaworski, of Markets Without Limits (2015), and his latest book is When All Else Fails: The Ethics of Resistance to State Injustice (2018).

authoritarianism, Conservative Moral Hierarchy, identity politics, Philosophy, Violence

 

#France: “Topple the System or it will Crush Us!”

 
on the brink: “Either we topple the system or it will crush us!” Translated statement from French radicals

      Lundi matin,

Diez años después de la Revuelta inspiradora en Grecia

   

“[…] Cuando llegaron a Patission y se encontraron en las afueras de la histórica puerta de la Politécnica, la que había sido atacada por los tanques en 1973, cortaron la avenida sin preguntarnos qué hacer y, a continuación, corearon el típico eslogan “Batsi, gourounya, dolofoni!” – “¡maderos, cerdos, asesinos!”. Al presenciar esta escena, me sentí extasiado. Comprendí en este momento que el avión de la insurrección había despegado. Era más grande que nosotros. No digo que nos hubiera superado, aunque muchos de sus participantes sí lo creen así. Quizás les había superado a ellos porque pensaban que jamás iba a pasar algo semejante. Lo que la insurrección consiguió es que se superaran las ideas pesimistas que pensaban que algo así jamás podía pasar” – Maderos, cerdos, asesinos. Crónica del Diciembre Griego (Editorial Klinamen, 2011)

Este mes se cumple el décimo aniversario de la Revuelta en Grecia de 2008, también conocida como el Diciembre Griego, un masivo conflicto social iniciado abiertamente el sábado 6 de diciembre de 2008 a raíz de la muerte, por el disparo de un policía, de un adolescente de 15 años llamado Alexandros (Alexis) Grigorópulos en las calles de Exárchia, un céntrico y degradado barrio de Atenas con una fortísima presencia de anarquistas. Continue reading “Diez años después de la Revuelta inspiradora en Grecia”