249 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
249 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
BUILDING A COHESIVE VISION FOR INFOSHOPS
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or "What the fuck are we doing anyway?"
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We recently had a(nother) collective meeting in Chicago to
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discuss the "focus" of our infoshop. After some discussion, i
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felt frustrated because our direction was still ambigous. Our
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present day paths were not being defined in the context of our
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future goals. This was because as a group we had not yet had a
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discussion of what our long term aspirations were, how to get
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there, and what that meant we should be doing now.
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I felt a lack of long term goals was also present at the Detroit
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gathering. We had absolutely ZERO discussion on WHY we were
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doing infoshops, what our ideas of "the revolution" were, and
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what role infoshops play in achieving them. Not to slag off the
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gathering, it was definitely positive in many ways and served as
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a necessary point for us to meet, share experiences, trade
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knowledge & advice, and get inspired. But now that we've gotten
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the ball rolling, so to speak, we need to figure out what game
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we're playing, and what the best strategy is.
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You may be asking, "Why is this necessary?" Well, i have found
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"lack of vision" detrimental in many ways. In terms of internal
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dynamics, i have noticed that those with a clear concept of their
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"political" aspirations have pretty definite ideas of what
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projects they want to be doing now, while those without definite
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long term goals are more likely to get involved with projects
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that feel good, and rarely start new ones themselves. This leads
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to informal hierarchies, and also to disparities in terms of
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taking on workloads and responsibilities, as some are more
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"driven" than others. Such imbalances then lead to problems
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inside groups on personal and political levels, etc... In terms
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of our infoshop network, political near-sightedness is dangerous,
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because without our own direction we can become easily
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manipulated into projects that aren't necessarily in alignment
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with our unclear goals. Thus issue-based politics get pursued
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instead of more revolutionary politics, or we get sucked into
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time-consuming spectacular politics like national days of action,
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which have little actual effect, and fall far clear of the impact
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of say, community organizing. There are plenty of ways to be an
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"activist" and do absolutely nothing effective at all (but hey
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you might look good and will definitely feel "active"), and if we
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don't have some theory-action praxis going, we are in danger of
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falling into such powerless protest modes. Not having
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revolutionary goals and ideas of how to get there also mean that
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we are selling ourselves and "the movement" short, by not living
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up to our full potential, and we will pose no real organized
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threat to the status quo. Having a lackadaisical attitude about
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politics, "the revolution", etc. puts us right alongside wishy
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washy leftists and liberals who, by their inaction and near-
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sightedness, end up supporting the status quo with no clear
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critiques or alternatives to offer.
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I feel very strongly that we need to start having more discussion
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and political advancement as a movement. I'm not saying that we
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need to define our political line as a collective entity
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(although working out some collective goals would be great!), but
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that we need to start bouncing more ideas off each other and
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thinking realistically about how we're going to go about changing
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this world. This means discussing our concepts of revolution,
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what kind of "movement" we need, what roles infoshops (and other
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counter-institutions) play in that movement, and how they relate
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to the projects we are doing/should be doing now. I'm raising
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these vision issues now because i want to see them discussed in
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the pages of this zine, over the aaa-web, and everywhere else.
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I'm also interested in seeing political discussion and
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advancement be an equal focus to networking and skill-sharing at
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our next conference.
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We've started to have some of these discussions in Chicago. They
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have in fact helped us to somewhat define our present day focus
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for the A-Zone; and a major part of that focus is having a space
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open for people to pass on ideas & experiences, interact &
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debate, teach & learn & be inspired. We want to increase the
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amount of "political education" in our communities so that
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everyone can develop their own vision of what revolution is, how
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to get there, and therefore what to do now. While many people
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have a vision of their ideal society, and some are anti-
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authoritarians because of it, many also don't have practical
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ideas of how to reach that society, and so they are missing
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crucial theory-practice and present-future dialectics in their
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politics (oops, sorry if that was too marxist for ya!).
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This also raises the question of making our informal network more
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of a formal network. Do we want/need to, or should we just be
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doing MORE nethworking, MORE THINGS with our network?
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I can see there being some resistance to having these discussions
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because the potential for conflict and alienation is high. We've
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all been conditioned by society to see politics as stupid,
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pointless, and not empowering, and it's hard enough just "making
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a living", right? Also, looking at the groups that compose are
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informal network, it's clear that their nature makes it a de
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facto radical anti-authoritarian network. So there is going to
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be some minimum political definition, whether we like it or not.
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That will inevitably exclude and alienate some groups and people
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from the network who aren't necessarily going in the same
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direction (this can be good and bad). Obviously, we want to
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avoid doing what Love & Rage just did (narrowing the politics and
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organization to further a specific anarchist tendency). We do,
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however, need to start discussing and developing theory and
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variety and differences are important for this so that real
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debate can occur. It is also important to network with groups
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that are outside our network, that may not necessarily be going
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in the same direction, but that we can work with, share ideas
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with, and learn from, as well as influencing them ourselves.
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Not to be all talk, and at great risk to myself, i will now throw
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out some of my personal ideas and thoughts concerning these
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issues. Basically, i want to encourage some open discussion, so
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feel free to critique and/or support what i have to say.
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Seeing as how we are a network of counter-institutions, i feel
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pretty safe saying we likely all see revolution more as a process
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than an event; and that process starts now with everyone one of
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us in our hearts and heads, killing the cops inside. Now i feel
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that revolution must include all people (altho we will doubtless
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have enemies and opposition), and the movement to overthrow the
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status quo and establish a new society must be popular and be
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working to establish that new society now, both in terms of
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personal dynamics and political praxis.
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I see counter-instutions as playing a crucial role in this
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movement because of the concept of dual power: challenging the
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power of state and capital while also working against the
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insidious forms of hierarchy and domination that have worked
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themselves into every conceivable relationship, both in our
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movement and in society. I envision a strategy of self-
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organized, informed communities creating direct democratic,
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collective counter-institutions that fulfill people's needs (and
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take away their reliance on state institutions), while working
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together and confederating as needed to create a popular
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counterpower to the existing corporate and military structure.
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I also feel that a distinct situation exists in the U$ in terms
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of its oppressed internal colonies (black, latino, indigenous
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nations, etc.), and that the strongest leash keeping white people
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from being revolutionary is white privilege, and so i feel it is
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the responsibility of white people to refuse and destroy that
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privilege and the social construct of race it props up, while
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providing solidarity and support to self-determined struggles of
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the internal colonies. So as a "white" autonomist, i am
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interested in developing counter-institutions, and especially
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infoshops, to be an information and support resource for
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communities for developing counter-institutions, while beginning
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the struggle against personal-social power dynamics, especially
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those of white privilege and "whiteness".
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Ideally these counter-institutions will work to create
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"situations" that deconstruct the spectacle and affect people's
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consciences, as people are moved towards change most by direct
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experience. I am also interested in creating non-hierarchical
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ties of support and solidarity with counter-institutions
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developed by the colonized nations. I think a good start is
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developing a counter-institutional network to discuss these
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issues, provide mutual aid (see ad in this issue), and provide
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info and resources to other self-organized groups.
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Well, that's a basic general overview. Trying to cram my
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politics into one bloody paragraph is kinda ridiculous, but what
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the hell. I should explain that i feel there is no "true theory"
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about the practice of revolution, but that there is a dialectic
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interrelation among theory & practice: "theory only advances as
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the support of the struggle, the practice only advances when it
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is backed by a theoretical construction". This is merely where
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i'm at right now, hopefully it will continually change!. Go at
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it.
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I do feel there's a few particular questions that merit
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discussion in terms of infoshop focus. Primary is whether
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infoshops should function more as a resource for the movement or
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more as a resource for and organizing our
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neighborhoods/communities. In Chicago, we made the mistake of
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trying to be both when we weren't really prepared or skilled in
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being a community resource. One might point to the European
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Infoshop network and how they are primarily for movement support,
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as they provide space for meetings and events, distribute
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literature, and have a fairly sophisticated info-sharing system
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inluding 'zines and computer networks. Yet that could also be
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looked at as detrimental because they ignored their communities
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as they isolated themselves from valuable support. In the U$,
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many of our groups are primarily white yet operate in non-white
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gentrifying neighborhoods, so the community role clearly cannot
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be ignored!
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These are just a few off the top of my head. Others are
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developing an anti-colonial/race traitor perspective, security,
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ghettoization, etc etc etc . We have so much to discuss and
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figure out, and if we are serious revolutionaries, we should
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start doing so now!
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So that's my rant, i'm going to end it with a list of some good
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reading material to spark ideas & discussion, and a list of
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questions we used at a recent Autonomous Zone meeting. Later.
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Sprite
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thanks to mckay, kate, lee, and purple bruise for the feedback!
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Some good reading:
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--Defining the Autonomous Struggle (article in Wind Chill Factor
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#9)
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--Settlers: Mythology of the White Proletariat, by J. Sakai
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--False Nationalism, False Internationalism
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--Nightvision: Illuminating War & Class on the neo-colonial
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terrain
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--Race Traitor: A journal of the New Abolitionism
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(the 2nd issue of The Blast! has a good article on this)
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--situationist theory on the spectacle and creating situations
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--Revolutionary Self Theory: A Beginner's Manual
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--Anti-Mass Methods of Organization for Collectives
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--Building United Judgement: A Handbook for Consensus Decision
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Making
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--The Dispossessed, by Ursula LeGuin (good sci-fi depicting an
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anarchist society)
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--From Riot to Insurrection
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--Post Scarcity Anarchism, by Murray Bookchin
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--The Irrational In Politics, by Maurice Brinton
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Questions we recently discussed at the Autonomous Zone:
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--What is our/your vision of revolution and the society it will
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produce (realistically & practically)? How do we get there?
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What role will the infoshop play in that movement activity? What
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does this mean we should be doing now?
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--What do we see the A-Zone looking like and doing 6 months, 1
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year, 5 years from now?
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--What is our current role in the neighborhood community and how
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do we see it changing?
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--What is our current role in the activist community and how do
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we see it changing?
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--How do we encourage other collectives and counter-institutions
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to form outside the A-Zone?
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--How does the A-Zone operate internally?
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--What makes people feel good about being involveds here?
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mail: Box 420, 1573 N. Milwaukee, CHILL 60622 U$A
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* / \ * phone: 312-278-0775, fax: 312-252-8269
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* * matrix: thak@midway.uchicago.edu
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* * *
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"If you're not outraged, you're not paying attention!"
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