595 lines
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595 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
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P r a c t i c a l @ n a r c h y
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O N L I N E
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Issue 2.2, March 1993
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An electronic zine concerning anarchy from a practical point of
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view, to help you put some anarchy in your everyday life. The
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anarchy scene is covered through reviews and reports from people
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in the living anarchy.
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Editors:
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Chuck Munson
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Internet cmunson@macc.wisc.edu
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Bitnet cmunson@wiscmacc.bitnet
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Postal address Practical Anarchy
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PO Box 173
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Madison, WI 53701-0173
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USA
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Mikael Cardell
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Internet cardell@lysator.liu.se
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Fidonet Mikael Cardell, 2:205/223
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Postal address Practical Anarchy
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c/o Mikael Cardell
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Gustav Adolfsgatan 3
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S-582 20 LINKOPING
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SWEDEN
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Subscription of PA Online is free in it's electronic format and
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each issue is anti-copyright and may be distributed freely as
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long as the source is credited. Please direct subscription
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matters to cardell at the above address.
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We encourage our readers to submit articles and to send in bits
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of news from everywhere. Local or worldwide doesn't matter -- we
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publish it. Send mail to the editors.
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=@= EDITORIALS =@=
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Editorial from the U.S.A.
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by Chuck
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Well, not much is happening on the anarchist front here in Madis-
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on. One can probably attribute the lethargy of area anarchists
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to the fact that we are still in the throes of Winter. Hopeful-
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ly, the anarchists will thaw out when the ground does. They
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better, as we only have five months until we host our gathering.
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The circulation of the paper copy of this zine has gone over 300
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and I expect to break 500 by the end of the year. I may have to
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consider switching to offset printing sooner than I had antici-
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pated. Luckily, subscriptions are starting to pour in so not as
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much money flows out of Chuck's pockets.
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The new president of the United States (you'll notice I don't
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refer to him as "our" president) has been office for almost three
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months. The liberals are still telling leftists and us anarchists
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to give him a chance. They just don't get it do they. Anarchist
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oppose all leaders, but some more so than others. Sure, Bill
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Clinton may be more progressive than George Bush, but his leash
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is still connected to those with money, which is usually the rich
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and corporations. He's a consumate politician. He wants to be
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re-elected again and again and again. Hell, they even have
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staffers devoted to this "perpetual campaign" thing. OK, so Bill
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Clinton closed some military bases. Why didn't he close all of
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them? Have you heard anything lately about a proposal to cut our
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nuclear arsenal in half by next year? Don't bank on it. Clinton
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has already beat a hasty retreat on letting gays into the mili-
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tary. I don't support the military, but it would be a nice sym-
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bolic act.
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How's Clinton doing on the intervention front? Well, he's look-
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ing for ways to get embroiled in the Balkans. Troops are still
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in Somalia. The U.S. probably still has troops in the Iraq
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area. Where next? Somewhere definitely as the americocentric
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belief that the U.S. should save the world from itself still
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holds sway over much of the american media.
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The deficit is not an issue. I don't care what the deficit is, I
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care about the health of this damn planet. I care about the wom-
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en who are treated like shit around the world. Want to pay off
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the deficit? Liquidate the military and all defense contractors.
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They are the folks that have been running up the tab for the past
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40 years. Also, go knock on the doors of americans ages 35 and
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on up. They are the ones that supported this stupid Cold War.
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Mom and Dad, don't come knocking on my door looking for a han-
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dout.
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- P@ Online -
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edimatorial from sweden
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by mikael cardell
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oh well, i've just experienced the first beggar of my life. this
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is not something that is common in sweden, but anyway, there he
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was. i was heading home from the university and when i got off
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the bus and was going towards the house a man called out and ges-
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tured towards himself. i went towards him, wondering what he
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wanted, and stopped just in front of him.
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he started talking about the black, five-pointed star, i wore on
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my black coat and babbled about it being the freedom star of the
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land of ghana. he said the he himself was from namibia but that
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he was born in cape town and that he now was on a visit here in
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sweden. he had no money and no possibility to get any, being only
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a visitor from another country.
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oh, shit. what do you do in a situation like that? i sure haven't
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been in anything even remotely reminding of this situation be-
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fore. after a short discussion about what he was doing in sweden
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and why he couldn't get any money in any other way i invited him
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to my home. i figured he at least could get some food if not any
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money. i don't have a lot of that kind myself.
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at home we discussed further. he was apparantly a very learned
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man who had studied sociology at uppsala university in sweden
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back in 1964, but then he had returned to his home country. now
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he was back in sweden, and broke. we finally arranged so that he
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could lend some money until friday since he explained that he
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could get money until then.
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what would you have done if you were in the same situation? here
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was a man that fell through the social security safety net that
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sweden is so famous for; he couldn't get any money from the so-
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cial bureau since he legally wasn't a swedish citizen. i don't
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know if i'm going to get my money back, ever, but that is a
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secondary point. the point is that i've discovered how the every-
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day life for a lot of people is like. how many beggars are there
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in india? how many in the usa? what are these people prepared to
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do to survive?
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go visit the slum. see how people actually live. then do some-
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thing about it!
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=@= LETTERS TO THE EDITORS =@=
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i'd like to respond to the information from the i.w.w. that ap-
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peared in this zine the 011993 issue. people join a union not
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only to advance their interests as workers, but also to simply
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enjoy the most basic fair treatment that current labor laws spell
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out.
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having been an i.w.w. member in the mid-eighties, this defense of
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basic rights was not their strong point. unless you can move a
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large number of your fellow workers to act with you, something
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that is very difficult to achieve, you are likely to lose your
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struggle without the kind of protection a traditional labor union
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can provide. if people want to join the i.w.w., that's fine, but
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don't expect much support on the job site.
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it seems unfair of them to slam traditional labor unions when
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these organizations are providing valuable services to their
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members in the daily struggle between workers and management.
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sure, these unions are bureaucracies; sure, they do not aim to
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take over the workplace; sure, they are not models of participa-
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tory democracy. but they are surely not enemies of the workers.
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they see to it that employers do not violate the existing labor
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laws, and work to see that better laws are put into place.
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i wish i had the luxury of saying that workers should not put
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their faith in traditional unions and the legal system. if only
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our fellow workers would stick together, we could perhaps discard
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the existing system. but if you are out there earning a living
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in the real world, the fine words of the i.w.w. will not protect
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you from your employer. it's a do-it-yourself union.
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ed stamm <stamm@ukanvm.bitnet>
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=@= CULTURE SCENE =@=
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New and Recent Books
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reviewed by Chuck
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-o- Chronicles of Dissent. Noam Chomsky / Interviews with Davis
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Barsamian. Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press / Stirling, Scot-
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land: AK Press 1992. 398pp.
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This collection of interviews is an excellent introduction to
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Chomsky's criticisms of U.S. foreign policy, activism, universi-
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ties, commercial media, and the Cold War. Chomsky's critique of
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the U.S. has consistently been anti-authoritarian and had a
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characteristic anarchist flavor. His analysis has been a clear,
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bright beacon in the black hole known as contemporary American
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politics. Chomsky points out in one interview how the American
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left (also read anarchists) needs to develop more spokespeople
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like himself. He says he doesn't mind doing lectures and
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speeches, but he feels that many activists have the skills to do
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the things he does so well. Also of note are his criticisms of
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the "intellectual commissars" that haunt the universities today.
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These are the folks who are in the forefront of the status quo.
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Ever notice how it easier to talk about anarchy with a working
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person than with a person who has eighteen degrees?
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-o- Friendly Fire. Bob Black. Brooklyn, NY: Autonomedia, 1992.
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282pp.
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A new collection of stuff from the mind that brought us that
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legendary tract "The Abolition of Work." Several essays further
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elaborate his critique of work. Black is also at his best when
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he does creative projects like his posters and "happenings." Bob
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Black, anarchist creator extraordinaire, is one of the most arti-
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culate critics of contemporary anarchism. Where would we be
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without him? Wall Street?
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-o- The Art and Science of Dumpster Diving. John Hoffman. Port
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Townsend, WA: Loompanics Unlimited, 1993. 152pp. Comix by Ace
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Backwords.
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This new offering from Loompanics is a coffee table guide to
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dumpster diving. Dumpster diving is the practice of raiding
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dumpsters for useful items ranging from pizzas to microwave
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ovens. Tips on how to dumpster dive, tools for diving, and
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"treasure" spots. One can really subsist on dumpster food if
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they have to. If you are an artist there are many wonderful ma-
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terials to be found in dumpsters. When i was in art school
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several years ago I often cruised dumpsters, landfills, and junk-
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yards for materials for sculptures. You'd be amazed at the elec-
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tronic equipment and perfectly good contruction materials that
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you can find being thrown away. I still prize the aluminum logo
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that said "Oasis" that i salvaged from an old water cooler /
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drinking fountain. Dive and enjoy!
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-o- The World of Zines: A guide to the independent magazine revo-
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lution. Mike Gunderloy and Cari Goldberg Janice. Penguin: 1992.
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181pp.
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From the folks that brought us the original Factsheet Five zine
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that reviewed almost every zine on the planet. This is a special
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book published by one of the mainstream publishers in the U.S.
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They review a range of zines including the paper version of Prac-
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tical Anarchy. Some critics have complained that they should
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have included more reviews, but this is a competent effort. The
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wonderful thing about this book is that it will appear in some
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suburban bookstores and maybe a few more people will hear about
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the "zine phenomenon." I have gotten a few requests for Practi-
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cal Anarchy from people who'd bought this book.
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-o- Addicted to Militarism: Why the U.S. can't kick militarism.
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An illustrated expose by Joel Andreas. Philadelphia, PA: New So-
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ciety Publishers, 1993. 64pp.
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A wonderful illustrated guide to U.S. militarism. I sure hope
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they pass this one out to the kids in schools. Covers how cor-
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porations are involved in the war machine. Deals with the U.S.
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war against Iraq as well as the history of two centuries of U.S.
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intervention and terrorism abroad.
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-o- Ecstatic Incisions: the collages of Freddie Baer. Freddie
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Baer. Stirling, Scotland: AK Press, 1992. 73pp.
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A collection of collages and art by the women who has provided
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several fine covers for Anarchy magazine (Columbia, MO). Com-
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ments from Peter Lamborn Wilson. Freddie's style uses thought-
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provoking collages of old etchings and other materials. Her work
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is usually anti-authoritarian. She has made collages for zine
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and book covers, posters, and t-shirts. Also includes a scary
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collage essay on the U.S./Iraq War and a piece to accompany a re-
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print from Fifth Estate on the pope's visit to Detroit several
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years ago. Highly recommended.
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-o- Sabotage in the American Workplace: anecdotes of dissatisfac-
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tion, mischief and revenge. Edited by Martin Sprouse. Pressure
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Drop Press / AK Press, 1992. 175pp.
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Couldn't put this down once I'd started reading. This book is
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one of the bestsellers in alternative bookstores right now. A
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sort of *Working* with an anarchist flavor. Sprouse provides the
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reader with anecdotes from workers in various occupations. It's
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interesting how workers justify their sabotage, workplace pranks,
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slow downs , and revenges. The design of this book is excellent.
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Some of the best humor I've seen in a long time. Back to work!
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*Addresses*
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Pressure Drop Press
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POB 460754
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San Francisco, CA 94146 U.S.A.
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AK Press
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3 Balmoral Place
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Stirling, Scotland, FK8 2RD
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Great Britain
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New Society Publishers
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4527 Springfield Ave.
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Philadelphia, PA 19143 U.S.A.
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Loompanics Unlimited
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PO Box 1197
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Port Townsend, WA 98368 U.S.A.
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Autonomedia
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POB 568 Williamsburgh Station
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Brooklyn, NY 11211-0568 U.S.A.
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Common Courage Press
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Box 702
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Monroe, ME 04951 U.S.A.
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- P@ Online -
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the alternative electronic publishing company
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by mikael cardell
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a new type of company has seen the light of the day. it's the
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electronic publishing company. the inspiration is taken from free
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software business like cygnus and signum who provides support to
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free software. the difference is that the free e-text publishing
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company instead of providing support provides access to electron-
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ic texts, often in combination with other services like electron-
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ic mail, news, irc and the lot.
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the basic idea is to hold a lot of electronic texts available for
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download by anyone. probably there will be a lot of material
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available from these companies by project gutenberg and the on-
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line book initiative, but increasingly, the publishers will get
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some original material in as well. what they would offer is, sim-
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ply, the access to electronic texts for a fee. the other services
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may be seen as a bonus. for a person with no interest in elec-
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tronic books or magazines things might be seen the other way
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around, of course.
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what the companies sell is therefore not the individual texts,
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but services, computer time and the access to company hard disks.
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if they sold the individual texts i guess they would have to
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prevent copying, like a paper publisher would do, but in an elec-
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tronic world this is much harder, with the war between software
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companies and software pirates as the prime example. the idea is,
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therefore, to publish the texts under copyleft instead of copy-
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right and allow copying. i mean, copying is the way these texts
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are distributed in the first place, so there's no possibility to
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stop it.
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hey, you say, will writers agree with this treatment of their
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text? i think they will, because copyright isn't protecting the
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author anyway; it's a way of protecting the publisher. i mean, if
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the writer gets paid by the publisher he's happy, and i can't see
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why the writer can't be paid by a publisher that earns money by
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providing access to books instead of selling copies of them. am i
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right? or are there any writers out there who disagrees with me?
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there has been some electronic publishing companies before, but i
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haven't heard of any successfull ones so far. perhaps that's be-
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cause most of them just have been interested in a form of elec-
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tronic comercials in videotex systems and the like. anyway, i
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think this new form of e-publishing has a great potential that
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the former really lacked. there are a lot of people that are
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prepared to pay to get access to the latest e-zines and e-books
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as well as getting their daily usenet fix.
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=@= ANNOUNCEMENTS =@=
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Call for submissions
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To a Book of Essays on the Topic of
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PRACTICAL ANARCHY
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Forthcoming for the Summer of 1994
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We are an editorial collective dedicated to elaborating the ful-
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lest range of possibilities under anarchy, and to investigating
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new ways to invigorate the anarchist presence in North America.
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We hope to collect essays, bibliographies, addresses and other
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resources which detail an array of practical strategies and tac-
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tics and sensibilities that include but are not limited to:
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o Food production and Consumption (horticulture, community spon-
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sored agriculture, communal farming, gardening collectives, &c)
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o Housing (Squatting, Urban and Rural Co-ops, &c)
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o Neighborhood and campus organizing, integrated strategies for
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local political organization
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o DIY art, music, and beautification (stenciling, wheatpasting,
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alteration, zine production, publication, &c)
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o How-to ideas on putting together a People's Bank of Goods &
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Services, Pirate Radio Stations, Anarchist hostles, reading
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rooms, study groups, bicycle repair collectives, a Free Universi-
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ty, an anti-racist action network, &c)
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o Women's Health and defense, Menstrual Extraction and other is-
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sues of specific concern to women
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Send Submissions, Ideas, Graphics, Hate Mail To:
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joseph average
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c/o B A U
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po box 3207 bloomington
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in 47402-3207
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OR
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chuck munson
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c/o Practical Anarchy
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po box 173 madison
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wi 53701-0173
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=@= PRACTICAL ANARCHY =@=
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Practical Anarchy Suggestions
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o Make your own subvertisements. Destroy advertising!
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o Produce a show on your local cable access station. Take back
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the media!
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o Organize people in your community against militarism. Let's
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abolish the Pentagon by the year 2000!
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o Read up on the corporations in your area. Find out if they are
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unionized or if they emit toxic substances.
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o Fight the war on drugs. Picket at your local jail or prison in
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support of those incarcerated who would otherwise be free if
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drugs were decriminalized.
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- P@ Online -
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What is the Anarchist Black Cross?
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The Anarchist Black Cross (ABC) is an international network of
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autonomous groups of anarchists who work to ensure that im-
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prisoned activists aren't forgotten.
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The origins of the Anarchist Black Cross date back prior to the
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Russian Revolution. An Anarchist *Red* Cross was formed in Tsar-
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ist Russia to organize aid for political prisoners and their fam-
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ilies, and self-defense against political raids by the Cossack
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army. During the Russian Civil War, the organization changed its
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name to the Black Cross in order to avoid confusion with the Red
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Cross who were organizing relief in the country. After the
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Bolsheviks seized power the Black Cross moved to berlin. It con-
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tinued to aid prisoners of the Bolshevik regime, as well as vic-
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tims of Italian fascism and others. Despite the increasing
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demand for its services, the Black Cross folded in the '40s due
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to a simultaneous decline in available finances. In the late
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'60s the organization resurfaced in England, where it initially
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worked to aid prisoners of the Spanish resistance to Franco's
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fascist regime. In the 1980's the ABC expanded and now has
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groups in many different regions of the world.
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Working Towards Liberation
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We believe that prisons serve no function except to preserve the
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ruling classes. We also believe that free society must find al-
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ternative, *effective* ways of dealing with anti-social crime.
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But a decrease in anti-social crime is only likely to happen (and
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therefore prison abolition can only be a realistic option) accom-
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panied by a dramatic change in our economic, social and political
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systems. These conditions lie at the root of both anti-social
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crime and the reasons for a prison system. Our primary goal is
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to make these fundamental changes. We work for a stateless,
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cooperative/classless society free from privilege or domination
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based on race or gender. But it's not enough to build the
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grassroots movements necessary to bring about these changes in
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society, we must also be able to defend them. The ABC defends
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those who are captured and persecuted for carrying out acts on
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behalf of our movements.
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Support for Imprisoned Activists
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The ABC aims to recognize, expose and support the struggles of
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prisoners in general, and of Political Prisoners and Prisoners of
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War in particular. The form our solidarity takes depends on each
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individual's situation. To some we send financial or material
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aid. With others, we keep in contact through mail, make visits,
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provide political literature, and discuss strategy and tactics.
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We do whatever we can to prevent prisoners becoming isolated from
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the rest of the movement. We fundraise on behalf of prisoners or
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their defense committees for legal cases or other needs, and or-
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ganize demonstrations or public campaigns of solidarity with
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prisoners we support. We regard prisoners as an active part of
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our movement and seek to maintain their past and potential con-
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tributions by acting as a link back to the continuing struggle.
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Increased communication between activists both inside and outside
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prison inspires resistance on both sides of the prison walls. We
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hope that we can encourage other activists by providing assurance
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that even if you are persecuted for your activities, the movement
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will not abandon you: we will take care of our own. Through the
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ABC, we are building organizational support for resistance.
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Defending Resistance
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Outside of prisoner support work, the ABC is committed to the
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wider resistance in which many of these prisoners are engaged.
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We see a need to be highly organized if we are to effectively
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meet the organized repression of the State and avoid defeat.
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When power is challenged, be it in South Africa, occupied Pales-
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tine, Chile, Ireland or Canada, it inevitably turns to violent
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repression and political imprisonment to maintain itself. In
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1989 we set up an "Emergency Response Network" (ERN) to respond
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|
to political raids, crackdowns, death sentences, hungerstrikes,
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|
torture or killings of members of or communities we work in soli-
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|
darity with. An ERN mobilization means ABC groups and others
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|
around the world send telegrams and phone calls, organize demons-
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|
trations or other actions within 48 hours of the network being
|
|
alerted. For instance, two Greek anarchist prisoners reported to
|
|
be held incommunicado and subject to torture were released from
|
|
solitary confinement and allowed access to lawyers after the
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|
ERN's first mobilization brought demonstrations, calls, faxes,
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|
and telegrams to Greek embassies around the world. The ABC's
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|
international network plays the one trump card grassroots move-
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ments have in our deck: solidarity.
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Remember: We're Still Here
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We decide what prisoners to support and what work we will do on a
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|
case-by-case basis. We put priority on the cases of
|
|
political/politicized prisoners and POWs as this corresponds to
|
|
our committment to building resistance. Although imprisonment is
|
|
in itself "political", Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War
|
|
are being held specifically for their beliefs or actions. Unlike
|
|
Amnesty International, we don't place judgements on what are
|
|
valid and invalid expressions of resistance: non-violence is not
|
|
a criterion for support. Unlike other organizations supporting
|
|
political prisoners, we include those who were "politicized" by
|
|
the prison experience and have since become organizers inside
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|
prison. Many "politicized" prisoners face increased harrassment
|
|
in return for their activism.
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Getting Involved
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There are many ways of getting involved in this work. You or
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|
your group can:
|
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* join your local ABC group
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* set up your local ABC group
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* donate labour, materials or money to the ABC
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* become active in the Emergency Response Network
|
|
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|
* or help as an individual by spreading information about pris-
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|
oners, writing to them, making visits, sending reading materials
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|
and more...
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For more information on the ABC and getting involved, contact us
|
|
at the address below.
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Chicago Anarchist Black Cross
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c/o WCF, PO Box 81961
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Chicago, IL 60681
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USA
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- P@ Online -
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Calendar
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|
Great Lakes Regional Anarchist Gathering
|
|
August 5th-8th, 1993
|
|
Madison, WI U.S.A.
|
|
Contact Chuck at PO Box 173, madison, WI 53701-0173
|
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|
|
Anarchist Conference
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|
"The Frenzy"
|
|
July 23rd - August 1st, 1993
|
|
#122 1895 Commercial Drive
|
|
Vancouver, BC
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|
V5N 4A6
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|
CANADA
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|
Philadelphia Gathering
|
|
This Summer (no known date)
|
|
Voltarine de Cleyre Cultural Center
|
|
4722 Baltimore Ave.
|
|
Philadelphia, PA 19143 U.S.A.
|
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|
Love & Rage Network
|
|
Next meeting
|
|
Early Summer 1993 / Somewhere in San Diego
|
|
Love & Rage Network
|
|
PO Box 3 Prince St. Station
|
|
New York, NY 10012 U.S.A.
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|
Thanks to the Web Collective in San Francisco for these announce-
|
|
ments. They are looking for submissions for their direct action
|
|
manual. Their Address: The Web, PO Box 40890, San Francisco, CA
|
|
94110 U.S.A.
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THE END
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This e-zine is published on 100% recycled electrons
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