Thursday, December 19, 2024

 

So, What the Hell is Post-Left Anarchism Anyway?

From CounterPunch by Nicky Reid

I have spent the better part of my life as a bomb-throwing, dyed-in-the-wool, radical leftist, and there was a time when I would have gladly laid down my own life for that cause, probably because there was a time when that cause quite literally saved my life. Growing up Queer and strange in a very small, spiritually abusive community, I didn’t have a whole lot to live for but the far-left, at least as I understood it, gave me something to fight for and gave me something to fight with.

In a profoundly unsafe environment where I was surrounded by institutional authoritarianism, in a place where literally everyone I knew and every institution that I engaged with on a daily basis was strictly governed by the same church that oversaw my molestation, it was the analysis of iconoclastic creatures like Herbert Marcuse, Noam Chomsky, Ivan Illich, Jacques Ellul, and Frantz Fanon that gave me the means not just to comprehend the cruelty of my existence, but to overcome it as well.

These values were driven home even further by my exposure to early punk rock and 60’s counterculture absorbed through the unlikely medium of moldy old magazines in my mother’s basement vintage clothing store. Time and Life may have intended for those articles to demonize someone else’s youth culture, but I was electrified by their shocking stories about Black Panthers and Sex Pistols.

Fearless degenerates going toe to toe with the same high-minded culture of moral decency which had forfeited my scary body over to a pair of pedophile priests and gagged my screams with balled up pages of the Old Testament. These were junkies and juvenile delinquents with shotguns and Stratocasters, taking pot shots at the greatest empire on earth and then shouting ‘fuck you’ from the ramparts when the beast came roaring back.

This was the left as I knew it. One that existed, much like my bewitching gender identity, somewhere else, on the periphery, but one committed to doing battle directly with the forces of authoritarianism on every conceivable front, and it was under this influence that I committed myself entirely to the social anarchisms of libertarian Marxism and libertarian socialism. But lately I’ve been coming to believe that either the left has changed, or I never really understood the movement to begin with.

During an age when the Atlanticist war machine is suing for nuclear holocaust on multiple battlefields and the prison state is digging its claws into every pocket carrying a smartphone, most self-proclaimed leftists seem to be more concerned with quibbling over the petty details of 19th century dogma, that is when they’re not busy virtue signaling on a soapbox of collegiate cultural superiority and labeling any portion of the map that has fallen under the poisonous sway of Trumpism to be irredeemably fascist.

Meanwhile, even professed social anarchists seem eager to hop into bed with any big government solution that gets them laid with cute hippie chicks on the quad. Sure, just give the federal government unfettered access to every school, hospital, and computer lab, just so long as they promise to make it free for the proletariat because that’s leftism, right? Not smashing the institutions of upper-class domination but handing them even bigger hammers in exchange for a conditional allowance of free shit.

Maybe. Maybe not. But in this environment, I can no longer call myself a leftist without cringing and so, in this environment, I have increasingly come to self-identify as post-left. But what the hell is a post-left anarchism anyway? According to some typically brilliant social anarchists like Murray Bookchin and Noam Chomsky, it’s all just “lifestyle anarchism”, a bunch of horny faggots and luddites playing Rousseau and getting their “noble savage” on by smashing computers in gawdy face paint.

A decidedly less grouchy-grandpa interpretation would be a return to non-sectarian 19th century style anarchism, what was once referred to as anarchism without adjectives, only updated with a critique of modern anarchism’s problematic relationship with traditional left-wing politics. But if you’re asking me personally, I prefer to refer to my old mentor Johnny Rotten, at least before he sold out.

When the Sex Pistols failed to serve as anything but a shallow parody of the iconoclasm that they once represented, John Lydon, the artist formerly known as Johnny Rotten, didn’t give up on punk rock to sell patio furniture in Cornwall. He formed Public Image Ltd and helped re-invent punk rock with post-punk, a subgenre that sought to revitalize punk not just by looking back to its founding fathers in acts like the Stooges and the Velvet Underground, but by expanding its revolutionary potential with some assistance from noisy troublemakers that existed totally outside of the genre like Yoko Ono, Alice Coltrane, and Captain Beefheart.

The result was returning punk rock to its avante garde roots while also encouraging kids like Henry Rollins and Ian MacKaye in the burgeoning hardcore scene to build their own revolution in their parents’ garages.

To me, this is the true meaning of post-left anarchism. It is not a wholesale rejection of leftism but an attempt to expand upon its original vision by thinking outside of the rusty lockbox that has become the increasingly antiquated left-right paradigm. It’s about returning to the deeper critiques of mainstream society and modern progress as a whole laid out by often overlooked left-wing thinkers like William Morris, Emma Goldman, John Africa, and the Situationist International while also daring to expand upon those ideas under the influence of provocateurs totally outside of traditional leftist dogma like Michel Foucault, Murray Rothbard, Malcolm X, and Ted Kaczynski.

But more than anything, it is about expanding the far-left’s critique of power dynamics to every institution in which one class is made the master of another. This means confronting the tyranny of psychiatry over those of us deemed insane. This means confronting the tyranny that teachers maintain over their students and the tyranny that doctors maintain over their patients. This means confronting the fact that these institutions are no more redeemable than the prison or the police.

This means holding all means of class division accountable including those created by the tax code and the welfare state, regardless of whether that squares with whatever the hell leftism is or whatever the hell leftism has become. And yes, this means smashing computers in gawdy face paint because theater is a weapon accessible to everyone and civilization is a weapon of the rich.

That’s what being post-left means to me. It’s not a rejection of leftism but a reassessment of what leftism means and that means not only being willing to confront old school leftism on its bullshit but also being willing to learn from its triumphs as well.

Post-left anarchists who choose to reject leftism in its entirety do so to their own detriment because there is still a great deal that leftism has to teach us that we all seem to forget, perhaps the most important of which is solidarity and intersectionality across all lines, including ideology. This means being willing to stand by Islamists in Palestine, Orthodox traditionalists in the Donbass, anti-modern tribalists in New Guinea, and yes, even Maoists in the Philippines.

And this is why I feel very strongly that panarchy is the strongest tactic that post-left anarchists can utilize in our struggle to smash the tyranny of the modern nation state. Rejecting the traditional propertarian model of governance entirely in favor of thousands if not millions of totally voluntary governments that exist without boundaries, allowing a tribe of grumpy Bookchinites to operate a busy system of social services in the same neighborhood as my pack of feral Queer luddites, just so long as neither of us attempts to impose our system on anyone without their consent, including our own citizens.

I believe that this is the way out, the escape hatch in the current apocalyptic nightmare of our dystopian age and it doesn’t even require a bloodbath to achieve it. The revolution could be as simple as a million communities becoming self-sufficient and removing themselves from a deeply polluted society en mass.

My favorite quote by a stodgy old social anarchist comes from Rudolf Rocker, the father of anarcho-syndicalism who also happened to be an anarchist without adjectives. Rudolf once proclaimed quite sagely that “I am not an anarchist because I believe that it is the final solution, I am an anarchist because I believe that there is no final solution.”

Well, I suppose that you could say that I am not a post-left anarchist because I believe that rejecting the left is the final solution, I am a post-left anarchist because I believe that the true legacy of the left lies in a world with a million final solutions. Pick twelve and pay it forward.

 

Announcing The Beautiful Idea: A New Anarchist Podcast

From It's Going Down

Announcing The Beautiful Idea: A New Anarchist Podcast on Frontline Struggles

Announcing a new anarchist podcast, The Beautiful IdeaFollow them on Mastodon here.

We are happy to announce the first episode of The Beautiful Idea, a new project from a collective of several anarchist and autonomous media producers scattered around the world. We’re bringing you interviews and stories from the front-lines of autonomous social movements and struggles, as well as original commentary and analysis. We plan to put out about two episodes a month; one will be more focused on action news and include shorter interviews with front-line activists and organizers, and the other will feature longer, more deep-dive interviews on specific topics, including theoretical and historical analysis.

On today’s show we feature our Behind the Barricades roundup of movement news, events, and updates, along with a look at the recent explosion following the shooting of a United Healthcare CEO in New York. We then speak with someone involved in a new campaign to support Stop Cop City defendants facing both RICO and domestic terrorism charges. Finally, we speak with a long-time anarchist to look back on the historic mobilization against the World Trade Organization in Seattle in 1999.

Music: Seaside Tryst and Breakaway

Transcript

Behind the Barricades News Roundup

Welcome to Behind the Barricades on The Beautiful Idea, a roundup of action news and upcoming events across so-called North America.

In October in Austin, TX, anarchists and pro-Palestinian demonstrators rallied and marched against tech giants and their role in facilitating the ongoing genocide in Gaza. Counter-info site Autonomedia reported:

Such an escalation sets the stage for a real confrontation and challenge to the most important local ties to the genocide. This also forces the local movement into a confrontation with the economic forces that dominate the city and its economic interests–themselves aligned with a domestic project of displacement, development, and dispossession.

In Chicago, Unsalted reported on a mobilization against the Mid-Continent Gas Conference. A report-back wrote:

A group of people entered the hotel hosting the conference and crashed the attendee’s welcome reception of the 2024 Mid-Continent Gas Conference. A banner with the words, “Enbridge Out of the Great Lakes, Shut Down Line 5 Now!” on one side and, “Evil Enbridge, Fuck Off!” on the other side was unfurled at the cocktail hour reception. People sang, and chanted with a bullhorn, played instruments, and left messages for Enbridge and other gas companies inside the hotel. After causing a ruckus inside, the group walked outside to the bar’s patio overlooking the Chicago River, and less than one mile from Lake Michigan, to “greet” more LDC conference attendees with noise, banners, and rowdy jeers. One person was arrested by the pigs for allegedly trespassing and released onsite.

In Ypsilanti, MI, on Halloween night, a rowdy crowd held a “spooky” demonstration outside of a slumlord’s home. A report-back posted to Unsalted wrote:

Hark! Let it be known that on this 31st of October – Devil’s Night – we, the peasants of so-called Ypsilanti, have declared that we have HAD ENOUGH of landlords!…You have left us serfs with garbage, so we left you with our garbage. Eggs on your stupid giant windows, rotten tomatoes all over your door and porch, and remnants of our chamber pots in the form of toilet paper all over your trees.

The Ghosts of Christmas Past gave Scrooge a second chance, but the Ghosts of Devil’s Night and Halloween do not. [This slumlord] will know no comfort until he abandons his properties and makes reparations for his crimes…We do not need them. Until they are thrown off and everything they have stolen has been reclaimed… Every night can be Devil’s Night.

In November in Boston, clashes broke out when hundreds of pro-choice counter-demonstrators faced off against riot police and far-Right gender fascists holding a “Men’s March to Abolish Abortion.” Police made several arrests of counter-demonstrators, who attempted to block streets in the face of the far-Right procession. Check out a report back, here.

Anger is rising in so-called British Columbia against the PRGT pipeline. An anonymous report on BC Counter-Info claimed credit for spiking “thousands of trees along the PRGT pipeline [route]…” It went on to state, “Its up to each of us to combat this project, we hope this effort poses one more obstacle.” Indigenous people are also currently fighting the project in a variety of ways.

In Cleveland, OH, around 100 people rallied outside of a jail in support of several people arrested for supposedly writing graffiti slogans in support of Palestine on a college campus. Also in Claremont, CA, over 100 people rallied in support of students being targeted for repression over ongoing actions in support of the anti-war struggle.

Hundreds protested in solidarity with Palestine at UT Austin against an appearance by former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett. In 2013, Bennett claimed, “I have killed lots of Arabs in my life, and there is no problem with that.”

In antifascist news, a small protest was held outside of the yearly white supremacist ‘American Renaissance’ conference in Tennessee.

In Albuquerque, NM, hundreds mobilized in support of the LGBTQ+ community and against proposed book bans by gender fascists. Demonstrators also rallied against attempts by MAGA grifters to speak before the local school board. A post to BlueSky reported, “The community was able to surround and force [some of the gender fascists rallying outside] to leave, while filling the air with chants of solidarity and love. Drowning out their mic and speaker. We saw many people along the outskirts of this crowd breaking in to tears as they felt the [power of the] community stand together.”

Hundreds rallied at Penn State against a “Pray the Gay Away” event by washed-up white supremacist Milo Yiannopoulos, best known for promoting white nationalism at Breitbart before being fired for endorsing pedophilia and working with neo-Nazi Nick Fuentes.

In Columbus, OH, a group of neo-Nazis attempted to hold a small march with swastika flags, but quickly found themselves attacked by members of the community. While stopped by local law enforcement, white supremacists told police that “people pulled guns on them and threw cans and vegetables as they marched…” and they were also covered in pepper-spray by angry locals. The next day, a “…group of Black men organized a counter-march.”

Students at Lafayette, LA, organized a demonstration against gender fascists with Turning Point USA, who held an event attacking trans people on Trans Day of Remembrance.

In Montreal, antifascists held a large march and demonstration against a metal festival scheduled to feature several acts connected to the far-Right and neo-Nazi groups.

Antifascist researchers have also released doxxes and exposes on neo-Nazis in North Carolina, members of the Goyim Defense League, and the now defunct National Justice Party (NJP).

Things are still hot on campus, as the student intifada keeps the pressure on university administrators to divest from Israeli apartheid. In Montreal, thousands of students took part in massive coordinated strikes demanding divestment as student strikers marched through the Concordia campus, picketing and briefly occupying buildings. The next day, a mass march took place against a NATO summit, as a large black bloc broke out windows at the event center holding the submit, as demonstrators clashed with authorities. A communique from the black bloc wrote:

The military interventions supported by NATO protect governments aligned with American interests and crush any alternative, keeping the global south under capitalist constraints. NATO’s alliance with the zionist entity is ideologically coherent, as a colonial enterprise, but Israel also provides technologies of control and weapons that NATO states use throughout the world, in their imperialist missions and on their own populations.

Our actions have had a symbolic and material impact: they have imposed costs financially, have disrupted and disturbed, have propagated our ideals and made visible this very legitimate and necessary struggle.

The media will focus on our violence, they will manipulate our messages, our messages confronting the atrocities perpetrated by Israel and NATO – responsible for millions of deaths. So it is crucial to say again that it is the brutality of the oppressive structures governing us that we fight, that the worst violence is the State’s…

Back in New York, students on the CUNY campus took over a floor used by administrators, naming it “Fatima’s Floor,” demanding divestment from the school. Students at the nearby Sarah Lawrence College also engaged in a sit-in and building takeover, dropping banners and demanding divestment. Students then set up an encampment outside the building to continue the protest.

The 13th hunger strike this year has kicked off a the NorthWest Detention Center in Tacoma, WA, according to La Resistencia. According to the group, 40 people are taking part. Prisoners are demanding an end to solitary confinement, better food and conditions, and for ICE to end its contract with the GEO Group.

In tenant news, a rent strike in Missouri has continued into its third month, with residents vowing to not back down until their demands are met, “including a rent cap among other priorities.”

Meanwhile in Sweetwater, FL, residents of a mobile-home community are taking in the streets in protest against a looming threat of eviction. In this episode, we present an audio report on the struggle from a member of the Black Rose Anarchist Federation.

Since this report was recorded, tension ignited again after police violently arrested one woman who was protesting as homes were being destroyed. Check out a longer report and info on ways to support the struggle, here.

In the bay area, “75 people converged at Travis Air Force Base,” shutting down the entrance to the base with a blockade “…[in an effort to] block the weapons supply chain, from Travis to Israel, of US bombs and military supplies that aid in the ongoing horrors of genocide.” Close to 30 people were arrested.

Lastly, in Philadelphia, a communique claimed credit for flooding a home belonging to the CEO of Ghost Robotics, which “develops robot dogs that are used in occupied Palestine and [along] the US/Mexico border.” Another anonymous report claimed responsibility for writing graffiti slogans on the home of a University of Michigan police officer involved in repressing student protests against the ongoing genocide in Gaza.

A few updates to put on your radar:

Upcoming Events 

  • December 31st: New Year’s Eve Noise Demonstrations. More info here.
  1. Asheville, NC: More info here.
  2. Chicago, IL: More info here.
  3. Brooklyn, NY: More info here.
  4. Montreal, QC: More info here.
  • February 1st: Austin Anarchist Bookfair. Austin, TX. More info here.
  • February 28th – March 2nd: Florida Abolitionist Gathering. Gainesville, FL. More info here.
  • May 15th – 21st: Constellation Anarchist Festival. Montreal, QC. More info here.

Finally, a call has been circulating for “festivals of resistance” the week before Trump takes office. Here’s an audio version of the call.

“I Hope That People Are Hungry”

On Wednesday, December 4th, Brian Thompson, the CEO of United Healthcare was shot dead by a masked assassin, as he walked into an investor meeting at a Hilton hotel in Manhattan, NY. While the motive at first remained unclear, writing on the bullet casings left behind at the scene read three words, “Deny, defend, depose,” a reference to the systematic way in which major insurance companies deny coverage to those seeking medical care.

A recent statement released by the press from a person arrested in connection to the shooting makes these sentiments only even more clear:

Frankly, these parasites simply had it coming. A reminder: the US has the #1 most expensive healthcare system in the world, yet we rank roughly #42 in life expectancy.

It is not an issue of awareness at this point, but clearly power games at play. Evidently I am the first to face it with such brutal honesty.

As journalist Taylor Lorenz wrote:

When it comes to denying healthcare coverage, UnitedHealth stands above its competitors. The insurance company denies an average of 32% of claims, double the industry average. UnitedHealth does this through [a] myriad [of] ways. In one instance, according to a recent lawsuit, it has used a deeply flawed AI algorithm that generates wildly inaccurate predictions in order to deny health coverage to severely ill patients by cutting the time they can spend in extended care. The AI system has a 90% error rate, and yet it remained in use. [One investigation] found that UnitedHealth pushed employees to follow an algorithm to cut off Medicare patients… Meanwhile, UnitedHealthcare made $8.9 billion in profit through the first three quarters of this year alone.

Matthew Cortland went on to argue:

UnitedHealthcare makes its money by denying necessary care to people who need [it]. Brian Thompson was a mass murderer. He killed adults, he killed children. He murdered them with spreadsheets and contracts. He did it for money. Thompson was…a very well paid killer.

In response to the assassination of Thompson, there has been wide scale dejection and denouncement of the healthcare industry across social media – with many people on various platforms sharing their own horror stories about being denied coverage – along with mass indifference and even outright celebration in the wake of the murder of Thompson through memes, TikTok video, viral original songs, and shitposts.

Tech reporter Matt Novak of Gizmodo mused, “TikTok is pretty wild right now. I don’t think the ruling class is prepared for the cultural shift that’s happening this week. These aren’t edgelords. There’s a real shift in the way the average American is discussing this.”

Meanwhile, a collection of both neoliberal and far-right gatekeepers, pundits, and grifters have attempted to wag their fingers at the working class, who gleefully cheer on the masked killer, correctly pointing out the mass hypocrisy of a system that systematically murders people for massive profit, yet expects us to shed a tear when a CEO gets smoked.

The cultural phenomenon that has erupted following Thompson’s murder; from a recent round of ‘look-alike contests,’ to thirst trap posts about how hot the shooter is, to the long screeds posted against healthcare in this capitalist hell-scape – points to the first collective eruption of working-class self-interest (albeit largely online) which has been able to manifest itself in a real way, in the wake of the election spectacle; which ironically was marked by the near total absence of discussion on health-care, apart from Harris going back on her 2020 call for universal coverage and the Republicans vowing to further slash social programs like medicaid and medicare and destroy the Affordable Care Act.

Like the viral celebrations which erupted after neo-Nazi Richard Spencer was punched in 2017 or the polls which showed that over 54% of Americans supported the burning of the 3rd precinct during the George Floyd uprising in 2020, the gleeful laughter and resignation following Thompson’s death shows the chasm that exists between people’s lived realities and that of the narratives produced by the technocrats in power and the media institutions they control.

But moreover, the elite rush to clutch their pearls over public sentiment following the assassination in Manhattan lays bare not only mass anger at inequality in this society and how violence is unevenly distributed in it, but moreover how it is unevenly mourned over. Millions are sacrificed on the altar of the capitalist economy, a reality that the pandemic made even more clear, yet we are supposed to shed tears for someone who made this slaughter possible and was enriched by it in the process?

To further illustrate this point, look at the reaction to the recent stabbing of two migrant teenagers, one fatally, in New York City literally a night after the shooting in Manhattan. The two teens were attacked in a racist assault by someone who approached them and asked if they “spoke English.” Predictably, this attack and murder did not generate the same police mobilization or manhunt. Clearly, the life of a CEO shot by an angry assassin is worth more than that of a teenage migrant killed by a racist vigilante.

To add insult to injury, on the same day that a suspect was arrested in connection to Thompson’s murder, Daniel Penny, 26, was found not guilty for the strangling to death a Black homeless man who was on a New York subway car. Here’s a clip from Fox News, decrying the outpouring of support for the CEO shooter, while also uplifting those who called Penny, “a hero.”

Meanwhile on the far-Right, interestingly enough, blowhards like Ben Shapiro and Matt Walsh are being dragged by their own fans, as their recent reaction videos complaining about how the “Revolutionary Left” is cheering on the CEO’s murder, have been panned and mass down-voted on platforms like YouTube.

Thousands of comments are dunking on Shapiro. As one person stated, “Ben you’re a millionaire, you aren’t a “true blue collar conservative” you’re a rich guy that tries to appeal to working class republicans. You don’t understand what poor people go through.” Another wrote, “Ben Shapiro is the CEO of his company so it makes sense that he might see a little of himself in the victim.” These comments have thousands of likes.

This blow-back against the Right is interesting, and points to the reality that many people hold sentiments that run physically counter to whatever fixed partisan identity they might currently adhere to, or party they may vote for.

While I personally think it’s silly, and even dangerous, to imagine the “Left and the Right” coming together around some vague notion of ‘populism,’ this is a moment that shows talking and relating to people on the wavelength of shared material conditions and lived experience is powerful. An anti-capitalist position makes sense. It is popular. We should be thinking about how we can deepen these contradictions and break off working-class people who voted for Trump in the hopes he would improve their lives, along with people who thought that the Democrats would be a bulwark against attacks by the GOP, and bring them into social movements that are in conflict with capitalism.

This moment also gives us an opportunity to ask exactly how and why people end up supporting politicians and billionaires which are pushing through the very policies which allow corporations like United Healthcare to exist with impunity. How anti-Blackness, white supremacy, and transphobia all are weaponized in an attempt to sell white workers (and beyond) the bedtime story that they have more in common with the elites than they do other poor and working people.

As the holidays approach, and Trump continues to stack his cabinet with billionaires intent on looting the country, slashing taxes on the wealthy, deregulating corporations, and gutting basic safety net programs, it will be interesting to see how this “Eat the Rich” sentiment continues to evolve. I hope that people are hungry.

Supporters of Stop Cop City Defendants Launch New “Community is Not a Crime” Campaign

For more information on the struggle against Cop City, go here.

  • On Instagram, follow @CommunityIsNotACrime
  • For more information on how to support Jack, go to: freejack.co
  • Follow RICO trial updates at: @ACPClive @FireAntDefense @TheATLSolFund

Looking Back on 25 Years Since the “Battle in Seattle”

For more history on the mass mobilization against corporate globalization and the World Trade Organization (WTO) in Seattle, WA in 1999, check out this collection from CrimethInc. here and the film Breaking the Spell.

Thanks for Listening!

Thanks for listening to today’s episode of The Beautiful Idea, news and analysis from the front-lines of anarchist and autonomous struggles everywhere. Catch you next time.

Follow our website for future episodes here!

Follow us on Mastodon here!

Contact us at: thebeautifulideashow@protonmail.com

 

Joan Busquets Vergés, the last Catalan Maquis

From Memoria Libertaria
November 30, 2024

During this November, Joan Busquets, “El Senzill” visited the Spanish State to present his claim as a victim of Francoism.

In this post you can find the chronicle of the event and the recording at the FAL (Fundación Anselmo Lorenzo) on the 19th, the press conference in Barcelona, and a conversation between him and the historian and researcher Dolors Marín.

On the morning of November 19, the CGT had called for a rally in front of the Congress of Deputies in Madrid. A group of National Police officers, who had been specifically warned, prevented Joan and several activists from unfurling a banner prepared for this rally. No deputy, no party, deigned to leave the building, the seat of the “sovereignty” of the Spanish people, and receive a person who gave years of his life for freedom.

Talk at the Anselmo Lorenzo Foundation (CNT) in Madrid

“I spent more than 20 years in prison, but my companions had worse luck and were shot.” ​​At 96 years old, the Catalan maquis Joan Busquets, “El Senzill”, has travelled to Madrid to tell his life experience as a libertarian guerrilla and to demand recognition from the State and financial compensation for the suffering and persecution to which the Franco regime and authorities subjected him for almost his entire life. “I think I am the last one left alive from that generation of companions, who were seven or eight years older than me. If there are any left, which I don’t know, they must be more than a hundred years old.” Joan, who still has completely clear events and anecdotes that he experienced decades ago when he was barely 18 or 20 years old, began to take direct action in France. He contacted anarchist groups and soon joined the guerrilla. Although he was born in July 1928, the fascist coup of 1936 caught him at just eight years of age and the end of the war at eleven, he perfectly remembers the misery and hunger that his people suffered, as well as the brutal repression that came with Franco's "victory" (which they called "peace"). Joan "formed" himself after the Civil War. Little by little he became aware of and internalized libertarian ideas. His own father, who worked in a workshop when the Revolution began on July 19, 1936, was affiliated with the National Confederation of Labor. The information that Joan provides about how things worked during this stage in small businesses is curious. In the case of the place where his father was employed, the boss agreed to become another worker, without objecting to anything. His father, whom he remembers during his talk, was responsible for the materials that were used and needed in the workshop.

Busquets' claim is completely fair. The State must fully and not just "symbolically" compensate this man whose life has been at the service of freedom (or as the political class likes to say, "at the service of Democracy"). This is what the lawyer of the Legal Office of CGT, Raúl Maíllo, is working on. They filed a claim on July 19, 2024, and he is aware that the State is not going to respond to this procedure that the anarcho-syndicalist organization has initiated. "It is twenty years of sentence served, five years of forced labor, and a lifetime of persecution for fighting for freedom. He went through a lot of need and all this left him with psychological and physical consequences. It is time for the Spanish State to comply with Joan ," argued Maíllo. "The State has and must guarantee the principles of Truth, Justice and Reparation proposed, precisely by the UN, and this is what we have focused on through legal means."

The current Law on Democratic Memory represents a break not only with the previous law, but also with the Francoist sentences, which are all null and void. In addition, the current law recognises the fundamental role played by the guerrillas or maquis in the fight against the fascist regime and its repression after the war. For the CGT lawyer, this new law is a victory for the Memorialist Movement, “that is why we are now demanding recognition of those who gave their lives and their years fighting.”

The action of a maquis

“I made many trips with war material on me. Material that often weighed more than 40 kilos, and the trip took seven days or more, because we advanced at night.” Joan dedicated himself to getting this material from France to Catalonia, specifically to Manresa. They used it to plan and carry out sabotage of different kinds. The sabotage did a lot of damage to the regime, because sometimes they managed to disable the railway or leave entire territories without electricity. “These sabotages did damage to the regime and we also managed to get the foreign press to echo them, and therefore an organised resistance against the dictator.” Joan always thought, or at least during the first years in the guerrilla, that they would be able to overthrow the dictatorship. But then, with the passage of time and events, especially at an international level, he changed his mind and accepted, perhaps with great pain, that they were not going to be able to.

1949 was a year in which many anti-fascist guerrillas were eliminated. “There were guerrillas of other ideologies, such as socialists and communists, but the most numerous were the anarchists. Ramón Capdevila’s group of maquis was very well known and greatly admired in France. The libertarian guerrillas or those of the CNT always acted independently of other groups or collectives of maquis.” This was also due to the fact that the organization, the CNT itself in exile, was not in favor of this form of struggle. However, the anarchist maquis continued fighting on the ground, independently of the vision of the International Committee of the organization.

Joan was arrested in 1949. He spent 20 years in prison, where he would not surrender either. He would organize an escape, the “escape from San Miguel de los Reyes (Valencia),” in 1954. But this action would go wrong, and when he climbed down one of the facades he had a fall and broke his femur. Thus, with this serious injury, he was arrested and brutally beaten by the Civil Guard, and then he was transferred to a punishment cell, where he would spend more than a week without medical attention. “My fellow prisoners protested, they protested a lot and infected others. The regime did not want this to go any further and so they took me to the hospital where they treated me medically, but in prison, the prison officials did not even want to let me sleep on a bed.” These physical wounds were open for more than 50 years. “They stopped oozing in the year 2000,” Joan explained during his talk.

When he was released in 1969, he admitted that he had great difficulty in reintegrating into the dynamics of society at that time. Although he tried to “start” over again by looking for a job, the Political and Social Brigade literally did not let him live in peace. He was continually harassed and persecuted, insulted and accused. All of this was decisive in Joan's decision to go to France and settle there.

Macarena Amores for the CGT November 20, 2024

Initially, they were composed of young, mostly working-class, men who had escaped into the mountains and woods to avoid conscription into Vichy France's Service ...

The group is introduced in the two-part episode "The Maquis" of the television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, building on a plot foundation introduced in ...


 

Plastic in Utero #4 is out!

Note: Sorry for poor image. --- Issue #4 has arrived!

For those new, Plastic in Utero: a journal of anti-civ anarchy reborn from the compost of wasteland modernity (from now on, PIU) is an extension of the Uncivilized Project, which encompasses the Uncivilized Podcast and Uncivilized Distro. It centers the idea that anarchist ideas/theory can be fun and provocative, not dry and orderly. PIU contributors don’t participate to make a system of thought or propose a blue-print for the masses (well hopefully not, because we won’t encourage that here).

Issue #4 centers on the topics of strategy and tactics, generally. Maybe these debates have been beaten to death, but I think there’s a constant relevance and tension that needs exploration. The conversations are happening anyways. Unfortunately, these conversations are usually boring, basic, and a simple repetition of old ideas.

See CrimethInc’s recent piece, “The Case For Resistance”:

“But we don’t know how the first Trump era would have gone if not for the ways that millions of people engaged in various forms of resistance. Difficult as it was, it could have been much worse. We didn’t topple capitalism or abolish the police, but we kept fascists from taking over the streets, and we prevented Trump and his supporters from accomplishing a great deal of their agenda. Anyone who tells you otherwise is trying to conceal our collective power [...] If we play our cards right, we should be able to force Democrat-controlled local and state governments and agencies to refuse to cooperate with at least some of Trump’s programs”

Is this the sort of liberal-activist mentality we want? Thinking that anything less than the total end of this homogenizing, flattening, planetary death/work machine is a win? That Trump is a uniquely evil and dangerous President, so much so we ought to be a pressure group upon the Democrats? Give me a fucking break!

Issue #4 has contributions concerning the nature of victory and how anarchists must differ our conception of success from those of authoritarians, contemporary writings on colonization, an anarchist view on self-discipline, and more. We invite discussion, debate, maybe even a sternly worded letter to the editor!

Any orders, inquiries, or non-Kaczyski inspired packages can be sent to (PIU#5 to be announced soon!)
Uncivilized Distro
PO box 72
Seymour, IL 61875

PIU accepts the following:
Essays, reviews, and interviews, and fiction writings (2,500 word limit)
Art and photography (keep to one page, but feel free to submit several)
Poetry (keep to two pages, please be clear on formatting requests)
Letters (350 word limit)
If text submissions are mailed, format at 9 or 10 pt font, Times New Roman, landscape, two columns.

Uncivilized Distro currently has the following (all are free to prisoners; otherwise, zines are free at bookfairs and meet-ups). We are always expanding our line-up and welcome the opportunity to distro your zines or turn your works into zines!:
1. PIU #1, 34 pages. $3/copy
2. PIU #2, 42 pages. $3/copy
3. PIU #3, 38 pages #3/copy
4. Anarchism in Review #1: "Leo Tolstoy (1828-1919)" by Luigi Galleani, including a biography by Artxmis Graham Thoreau. $2 if ordered alone, free if requested with a copy of PIU.
5/ Religion is killing the earth, only spirituality can save it a zine created from a presentation given by Artxmis Graham Thoreau at the 2023 Lawrence, KS Anarchist Bookfair. Created by civfucks distro. $2/copy
6. Anti-Semitism and the Beirut Pogrom by Fredy Perlman ($2) Fredy recounts how encounters with racism in Central Europe, Bolivia and the U.S. heightened his perception and prepared him to denounce American “cheerleaders for Israel.” He is astounded that potential victims of Nazi extermination can accept, even support, Israeli massacres of Palestinian refugees. (Copy and description from Detritus Books)
7. Liberty over Labor: A critique of Bakunin’s Productivism and Hegelianism by Artxmis Graham Thoreau* ($2/Free if ordered with other texts) This essay by Artxmis is a critique of some limits on Bakunin’s liberatory project, including determinism, scientism, and a belief in Progress
8. If An Agent Knocks: Federal Investigators & Your Rights (In English and Spanish) ($2) What are my rights when a federal agent knocks? What should I do/not do? This gives some insights! Stay safe, stay dangerous.
9. Fragments Against Servitude Vol. 1, Vol. 2, Vol. 3 by VOF ($4/set) Volume 1: A short text tackling several topics such as anthropological dependency in Primitivism and science-as-religion. Volume 2: Exploring ecology, technology, and the nature of modern control. Is ecology the grid of contemporary domestication? Volume 3: Thematically similar to Vol. 2, more emphasis on the nature of ecology (no pun intended!) From bumfucknowhere WV.
10. Armed Joy by Alfredo Bonanno ($4) A foundational piece in the insurrectionary milieu. Bonanno (RIP!) explores the failure of Marxism (and Leftism generally) and acts as a call for playful, affirming action!
11. What is Security Culture? ($2) Excerpt from a larger CrimeThinc piece. A bit dated, but well worth the refresh or introduction, if needed! From Sprout Distro.
12. Racism, Nationalism, and Revolt by Julian Langer ($2) From Julian Langer, this short anti-essentialist, anti-racist text explores, much as Perlman does in “The Continuing Appeal of Nationalism” the limits of a nationalist framework, applied to Israel and Palestine, especially.
13. Random shit that we have at any given time.

There are 2 Comments

No one can take anti-civ seriously when it's posted on YouTube. What a crock. Use high technology to attack - er - merely question - er - poke fun at - technology? Shall we roast artificial marshmallows while the cities burn? Drink Mountain Dew as we topple cell phone towers? Let's have a bake sale too. As long as you buy into the system you are that system (or just another cog in the machine).

john zerzan wears glasses and has a podcast! everybody freak out!