767 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
767 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
MEANDER QUARTERLY
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Newsletter of Evolutionary Anarchists
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@Liberty, Equality, Cooperation, Respect for Nature@
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Vol. 5, No. 2 August 1993
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<<<<<< SPECIAL SPUNK PRESS ELECTRONIC EDITION >>>>>>
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Please send all newsletter correspondence, material for publication,
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donations, and address changes to:
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Ed Stamm, PO Box 1402, Lawrence KS 66044 USA. Note: If you have a
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long essay or letter, if possible send it to me on a 5 1/4" floppy disk
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saved as ASCII text. I will return your disk.
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
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ELECTRONIC MAIL ANARCHY ZINE
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Correction: The E-Mail address for submitting material to
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"Practical Anarchy On-line" has changed to:
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Internet <ctmunson@macc.wisc.edu>
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Bitnet <ctmunson@wiscmacc.bitnet>
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If you want to be added to the list of subscribers (it's free), contact
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Chuck at:
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<ctmunson@macc.wisc.edu>
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PETITION TO REMOVE STATUE
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A effort is underway to have the statue of Teddy Roosevelt removed
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from the grounds of the Museum of Natural History on Central Park West in
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New York city. Roosevelt is mounted on a horse, with an indigenous
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american on foot on one side, and an african american on foot on the other
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side, giving the appearance of a master/servant relationship. Contact:
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NANA, Chief-Chairperson Osceola, 137-35 Northern Blvd, Flushing NY 11345.
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BEE ENTHUSIAST FIGHTING DISCRIMINATION
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Garry De Young was recently asked to alter his presentation to the
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Northeast Oklahoma Beekeeper's Assoc., because some members of the audience
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might be offended by his reference to Andrew D. White's "The History of the
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Conflict Between Science and Religion in Christendom". He refused to
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change his text and refused to speak. "The Speedy Bee" refused to publish
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De Young's account of the incident, and terminated him as a columnist. If
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you would like copies of De Young's correspondence, send $5.00 to: Garry
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De Young, Box 76 - Rt 1, Stark KS 66775.
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INTERNATIONAL
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LEAH (LEILA) FELDMAN (1899-1993)
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Born in Warsaw, active in the London Yiddish-speaking anarchist
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movement, participant in the Russian revolution, organizer of an anarchist
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federation in Palestine, active upon her return to London as a supporter of
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German anti-militarists and of the anarchist movement during the Spanish
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Civil war, member of a collective with Spanish and other exiles in London,
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she was remembered by a gathering of her friends and comrades on January 7,
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1993. (from "K.S.L.")
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FASCIST VIOLENCE IN LONDON
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"On the night of April 12, an attempt was made to burn down the 121
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Centre. 121 has been open for several years as a drop-in and advice
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center, with a cafe and bookshop. The 121 collective has been involved in
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local housing and poll tax campaigns, as well as struggles against police
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violence and council corruption. They have consistently opposed fascism
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and racism." 121 Railton Rd, Brixton, SE24 London, England (ph 071 274
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6655). The flyer also mentions that Freedom Bookshop has recently been
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attacked and damaged.
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TURKISH ANARCHISTS SEEK CONTACTS
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"In December 1992, a group of Turkish anarchists began publishing
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"Ates Hirsizi" (Fire Thief),....coming out of Istanbul, with articles
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mainly in Turkish, but with a few in English and Kurdish." Ates Hirsizi,
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Lodfarer Caddesi, Dr. Sevki Bey Sokak No. 4, 2 Sultanahmet, Istanbul,
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TURKEY.
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(from "Industrial Worker")
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ARTICLES AND LETTERS
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I would like to respond to the article entitled "On Social
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Anarchism" in the Meander (Vol. 4) #4, April 1993. In it Donald F. Busky
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rants on abut the history of anarchism and mentions such prominent names as
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Bakunin and Kropotkin. But as I sometimes call myself a communist
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anarchist I can't hold myself from objecting to what he writes about
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Kropotkin. First, a trivial note. Kropotkin was not, as Mr. Busky tells
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us in his article, a russian crown prince. He was indeed a nobleman and
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was at one time working as a servant boy at the russian court, but crown
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prince? No. However, this was not my point. My point is that Mr. Busky
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got the whole principle of communist anarchism wrong when he writes, "In
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other words, there would be an economy based on free production and
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distribution." The case is, that the communist anarchist economy would be
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based on free consumption, not free production. If you build an economy
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with the first principle being free production you get an economy where
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competition rules and you find yourself back in capitalism. To build an
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anarchist economy you have to regulate the production according to the
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demand created by the free consumption. No, this regulated production
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doesn't necessarily mean that you have to have a centralized state that
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takes care of the actual regulation. Instead, I favor the syndicalistic
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solution with a network of communes and federations where the regulation
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takes place within the network by means of constant "trade". If an
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independent commune desperately needs a lot of Dr. Marten's boots they tell
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the federation. In the federation a number of other communes are
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represented and one of them might just have a factory that makes Dr.
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Marten's boots and can deliver them to the requester. What is the
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difference, then, between this structure and the classical communist
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structure where the state handles questions of production? The difference
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is power. The federation in a syndicalist network of this kind doesn't
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have the power to decide anything for a commune, the federation is just a
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cooperative organization for a number of independent communes.
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I liked what Mike Thain said about living without taking much from
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the system and particularly what he said about not giving much back. Could
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you tell us more about your way of life, Mike? I mean, how is it possible
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to earn enough money for food and rent working just two days a week? Where
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and how do you live? What do you eat? This is indeed practical anarchy!
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I want to establish a temporary free
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zone in my home as well! Miekael Cardell, Sweden
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[When discussing economics, one thing which must be made clear is
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whether you are discussing a transformation of the existing economy, or
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creating an independent economy just among anarchists. My personal
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opinion is that any attempt to transform society as a whole is hopeless. A
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system of free consumption would quickly collapse from higher than previous
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demand and lower than previous production. Who would strive to consume
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less while continuing to work almost as hard as they do now? Only those
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who are ideologically committed to making the scheme work. It would be
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necessary to cut back on production of non-essentials, and increase
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production of necessities in order to meet everyone's basic needs. Most
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people are not willing to give up their goodies to help other people meet
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their basic needs or to slow the destruction of the environment. However,
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we would be unable to meet the basic needs of all the world's poor through
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our own meager anarchist production; we would quickly become impoverished
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ourselves. The maximum program of converting the entire world economy
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would involve too much bloodshed to even consider and then we'd have to set
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up a police state to maintain it. If we just do our own thing among
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ourselves, the necessary exchange mechanisms will evolve on their own
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through negotiation, and hopefully we will be able to co-exist more or less
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peacefully with the rest of society. Ed]
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******
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Caracas, May 20, 1993
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Dear Friends: Recently we learned of your address, so we are
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sending the latest number of our
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"Correo A", and to let you know about our group and publication, we would
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like to point out the following:
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a) "Correo A" is a publication of Colectivo Circulo A, which is a
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socialist libertarian group working in Venezuela since the 80's, where an
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anarchist tradition did not exist until then. The first number appeared in
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Nov. 87 and we have tried to publish 4 numbers per year.
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b) We produce around 1200 copies that are sold at a rather symbolic price
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of US $0.23, and they are distributed in Caracas (capital city of
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Venezuela) and 12 other cities in the rest of the country. "Correo A" is
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not just the only libertarian publication in Venezuela, but it is also the
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only regular publication of the extra-parliamentarian left. Because of
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this it is well appreciated among politically interested young people
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wanting alternative points of view, in an intellectual environment where
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alternatives are few.
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c) Colectivo Circulo A tries to organize groups to discuss and act
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according to anarchist ideas and take part and collaborate with several
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social and popular movements. Even though we are rather few in number we
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try to keep a permanent and enthusiastic presence in our society, which we
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hope will develop a higher consideration of our positions.
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d) We have published a few booklets about anarchism and in December 1990
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we co-edited with Editorial Recortes, related to the Federacion Anarquista
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Uruguaya, the book "El Pensamiento de Malatesta" written by Angel
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Cappelletti, one of our collaborators. We have some projects along these
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lines that will be fulfilled according to our possibilities.
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e) We keep postal contacts and we interchange publications with 55
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libertarian groups in 17 countries. We are now trying with some others.
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If you answer this letter we shall be delighted to keep on sending
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our "Correo A" and to write articles for you in reference to Venezuela,
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Caribbean countries or Latin America. It will also be a pleasure to
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welcome any of you that happen to come to this part of the world, and to
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receive your publication sent to the address written below, and any other
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publication or contribution as well (in English, French, Italian,
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Portuguese or Spanish, of course). Everything we can get will be very
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useful for us because of our lack of information, except for the
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ideologically oriented mass media. You can send our address to any other
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group you wish and reprint any article of "Correo A".
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We are very pleased to know about you. We look forward to the
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beginning of a libertarian and brotherlike relationship. SALUD, ALEGRIA Y
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ANARQUIA!! (HEALTH, JOY AND ANARCHY!) Colectivo Circulo A (Circle A
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Collective)
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Our address: N. Mendez
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Casilla 25, Fac. Ingenieria
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UCV, Ciudad Universitaria
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Caracas 1040
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VENEZUELA
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P.S. We received your "Meander Quarterly"...Thanks!
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["Greetings fellow anarchists!
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I was glad to receive your letter and the copies of your
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publications. Unfortunately, I can only read English, some French, and a
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tiny bit of Spanish, but I will print your letter in the next issue of
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"Meander Quarterly" and ask for a volunteer to translate some of it for us.
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Enclosed is the latest issue of our publication.
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You sound very well organized. Here in North America, instead of
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having one publication with a circulation of 1200, we have 50 publications
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with a circulation of 100! That's an exaggeration, but not much.
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Actually, this decentralization is healthy up to a point, but we have no
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federation that includes all anarchists, no international bureau for
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contacts and translations, and too many big egos and extremists who are
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unwilling to compromise for the good of the cause. We give anarchism a bad
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name because we confirm the image of being disorganized and anti-social.
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Hopefully the example set by your group and our other foreign comrades will
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shame us into action, but I doubt it.
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If you are able to penetrate the iron curtain that surrounds the
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U.S., write to us and we can try to set up contacts in the cities you plan
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to visit. Kansas is nice but not very interesting. If you do plan to pass
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through, visit me! In Solidarity, Ed Stamm"
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If anyone can translate from Spanish to English, and would like to
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take a look at their publication, and translate some of it, I'll forward
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"Correo A" to you. If we did have an anarchist federation, it would also
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be nice to have a committee that would mediate disputes among anarchists.
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Ed]
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******
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"The target county for a(n electoral) takeover should be as remote
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and obscure, dirt poor & good-for-nothing as we can find, because we're
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probably going to have to fight legal battles with present residents & I'd
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prefer to fight weak opponents....I envision some 200 or more voters moving
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to a place, associating mostly among themselves & with whatever locals are
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compatible, if any are; if not, avoid them....I agree it would not be easy
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to attract 200 freedom-seekers to "the middle of nowhere." If we're only
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willing to try what's easy, we may as well quit right now." Jim Stumm
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(from "ABAPA Freer")
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[The county he favors is Esmeralda in Nevada (pop. 1343 with 806
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voters in a recent election). This discussion is taking place mostly among
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Libertarians, and includes other strategies as well. One problem
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anarchists would have with this plan is that we are mostly wage-slaves, not
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self-employed or professionals who can tele-commute. We probably would
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need to be within commuting distance of at least a medium sized city. If
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we got involved in such an effort, we could set up our own town independent
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of the Libertarians, but within the same county. Ed]
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******
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"Imagine for a moment that you are visiting a plant nursery. You
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hear a commotion outside, so you investigate. You find a young assistant
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struggling with a rose bush. He is trying to force open the petals of a
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rose, and muttering in frustration. You ask him what he is doing, and he
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explains, "My boss wants all these roses to bloom this week, so last week I
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taped all the early ones, and now I'm opening the late ones." You protest
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that every rose has its own schedule of blooming; it is absurd to try to
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slow down or speed this up; it doesn't matter when roses bloom; a rose will
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always bloom at its own best time.
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You look at the rose again, and see that it is wilting. But when
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you point this out, he replies, "Oh too bad, it has genetic dysbloomia.
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I'll have to call an expert." "No, no!" you say. "You caused the wilting.
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All you needed to do was meet the flower's needs for water and sunshine,
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and leave the rest to nature!" You can't believe this is happening. Why
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is his boss so unrealistic and uninformed about roses?
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Such a scene would never take place in a nursery, of course, but it
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happens daily in schools. Teachers, pressured by their bosses, follow
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official timetables which demand that all children learn at the same rate,
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and in the same way. Yet children are no different than roses in their
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development: they are born with the capacity and desire to learn, they
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learn at different rates, and they learn in different ways. If we can meet
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their needs, provide a safe, nurturing environment, and keep from
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interfering with our doubts, anxieties, and arbitrary timetables, then -
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like roses - they will bloom at their own best time." Jan Hunt
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(from "LUNO")
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******
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"When they came for the Fourth Amendment I didn't say anything
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because I had nothing to hide.
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When they came for the Second Amendment I didn't say anything
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because I didn't own a gun.
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When they came for the Fifth and Sixth Amendments I didn't say
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anything because I had committed no crimes.
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When they came for the First Amendment I couldn't say anything."
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(from "Urine Nation News")
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******
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Mr. Ed Stamm: 5 June 1993
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I'm going to be more fair with your than you were with me. You
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directed yourself toward me in the April 1993 issue of The Me@nder by
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saying, "Prisoners." Well, Mr. Ed Stamm, I do have a name. So because I
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don't fit your whimsy classification of "doing what people thought was
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right in a tight situation," that gives you the uppity right to direct
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yourself at me in any way you want? I don't have a split personality, and
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I'm not more than one person, yet being in prison does seem to give certain
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idiots the right to direct themselves toward me in very impersonal,
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look-down-the-nose ways, or, at least, they think it does. Fine! I'm used
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to it anyways....
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From your comments of the L.A. Riots, I see that you're so blind to
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the rage that fueled them that you cannot even fathom the reason and force
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behind them. I guess you have never seen someone clubbed and kicked while
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they are handcuffed (other than on television), and much less have you been
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beaten in this manner. You have not had an unarmed close friend shot in
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the back and left paralyzed by a racist National City cop. You have not
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seen or lived in the barrios or ghettos that are rotting with poverty and
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inopportunity, where many of the young and old think of stealing, robbing,
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and drug dealing, not as a risk, but as a necessity, or as an opportunity.
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You have never felt trapped and been embittered with rage and pain where,
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like the lion or wolf whose leg gets stuck in the steel teeth of a trap,
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you lash out at everything and everyone and even bite into yourself....
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Yes, you are so blind because you fear giving people with this rage
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hope and a new idea of what the future should be, because deep down in your
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heart you know that these people with rage will not just sit back and wait,
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but that they will transform this anger and hate into the energy that
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propels them into constructing and evolving a better future -- not
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tomorrow, not in 50 years, but today. You fear arming people with new
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ideas, with renewed hope, because you are complacent with your status and
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your position in life. Your are complacent with the myriad of jails and
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prisons that surround you. Your are complacent with the schools that
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strangle ideas, and that efface the voices of those that struggle for the
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betterment of society. You don't seek evolution; you tenaciously seek
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listlessness.
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If you remember correctly, the reason that I spoke out first was to
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address your specious assumption that prisoners were criminals that
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shouldn't burden the pocketbooks of the opposition since they lacked andy
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redeeming qualities. That is unless they fell under certain of your
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flimflammations. Information that edifies, and that gives a person a
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better understanding of the world, and that empowers him with hope and
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ideas, does not belong to any particular class of people -- it belongs to
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all! Why do you want to deny this information to the people that are more
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inclined to listen, and that have the most time to reflect on themselves
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and on the world? To the complacent, it is but a mere hobby when it comes
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to social change, but to the forlorn it is a hope that they will grasp with
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all their human strength and power of the mind. What do you really want
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Mr. Ed Stamm, criminals who seek to sate themselves with greed, or people
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struggling with the new hope in the hearts for a better tomorrow -- for
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all?
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Con safos, Jaime Enrique Baxter, 88410-012 F.C.I., 8901 S Wilmot
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Rd, Tucson AZ 85706.
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[Dear Mr. Baxter, I apologize for not addressing you personally.
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I was commenting on the general topic of prisoners, and I used your case as
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a general example. Still, I should have addressed you by name.
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The L.A. riots seemed to be fueled more by the desire for consumer
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goods than by anger. Most participants were too busy looting to liberate
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territory, unless you consider carrying off athletic shoes, jewelry,
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electronics and alcohol to be expressions of rage.
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I worked in fast food, landscaping, and restaurants for many years
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before I finally got a clerical job. I guess some victims of the system
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are above these sorts of occupations. I'm not arguing that the existing
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system is fair, but it is possible to eek out a living under the present
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harsh conditions without resorting to crime. Just because someone feels
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criminal activity is justified does not mean it is. We must have objective
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standards or we'll all be preying on one another.
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I feel my efforts are worthwhile. At least I can say I have
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pursued this cause without hope of personal gain, in my own precious free
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time away from my job, at the expense of my family, without placing a
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burden on the movement.
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If we had unlimited resources, we could send free subscriptions to
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everyone who requests one. But since we don't (see our deficit on the
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financial statement) we have to carefully choose who to send it to. I
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personally feel that prisoners, in general, are a bad choice, because of
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the anti-social tendencies that landed them in prison. I still feel that
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common criminals do not deserve political prisoner status. Apparently few
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prisoners retain an interest in anarchism once they are out, because they
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drop off the mailing list and do not bother to keep in touch. Ed]
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******
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"BEHOLD A PALE HORSE"
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"The (Kate Sharpley Library) has been fortunate enough to get a
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video cassette of the film "Behold a Pale Horse". Starring Gregory Peck as
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the "bandit", Anthony Quinn as the head of the Guardia Civil and Omar
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Sharif as the priest, anarchists will have missed it when it was shown as a
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film, with no A. mag then appearing to call attention to it. It is a
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portrayal of the Spanish resistance (though it only refers to Republicans
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and Nationalists and you could be forgiven for not realising it was a
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picture of the CNT struggle against fascism, if you didn't know too much
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about Spain)." (from "K.S.L.")
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[How many of you recognized the "crazy" chained prisoner on the
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train in "Dr. Zhivago" as an anarchist? (He was played by a famous German
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actor, whose name escapes me). Ed]
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******
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Dear Ed: 06/14/93
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Hi. There has been a lot of slagging about what I said in a past
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issue, about monkeywrenching and shoplifting. I'm going to do something I
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don't do all that often. I take back most of what I said. But I will
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explain myself anyway, to try to set the record straight. First off, I did
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not mean we should intentionally create chaos. Rather, I meant if a
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minimum wage worker can't get paid enough to survive, he or she should not
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feel extremely guilty to tack back what they need from what has been taken
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from them by the ruling class. I guess I kind of thought that: 1.) if
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everybody did it, it would be impossible to get caught, and 2.) if
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everybody took what they needed, it would make little difference how much
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they actually got paid. In this way, logically, the poorer would steal
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more and the richer would steal less, and ideally everything would balance
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out. I guess it would be better to suggest such a concept to socialists,
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perhaps. But c'mon guys, lay off, this isn't my guiding philosophy.
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Aren't we all entitled to spout off our spontaneous crazy dreams on a whim?
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But when you get so analytical with it, of course you can pour cold water
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on it. But I really wasn't advocating violence and terrorism. I just
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|
basically thought if you're going to screw somebody to survive, it would be
|
|
better to screw a huge, lifeless corporation than an individual, especially
|
|
when your underpaid sweat goes into the building of that corporation.
|
|
TO ED: "Newsletter of Moderate Anarchists"? Are "we" moderate?
|
|
Since when? That would seem to be a euphemism for "Newsletter of
|
|
Capitalists" or "Newsletter of Libertarians". "Moderate" is a political
|
|
orientation - not for individual freedoms or corporate freedoms, but both,
|
|
and therefore neither. Anarchists, as far as I can tell, are supposed to
|
|
be apolitical, not middle-of-the-road. No need to pigeon-hole within
|
|
anarchism, there are so few of us as it is. Leave room for everyone. Keep
|
|
the subtitle as it is. PLEASE don't call us "moderate".
|
|
ON ED'S ALTERNATIVE COMMUNITY: Ed, it sounds great. Have lots of
|
|
like-minded people living in the same neighborhood. It might even work.
|
|
But please keep in mind that anarchists are among the hated and feared (the
|
|
cultists in Waco were hated and feared by the FBI). If you concentrate
|
|
your forces, you turn many targets into one target, albeit a stronger one.
|
|
Learn from Factsheet Five, as a parallel. Thousands of people depended on
|
|
F.F. for all their networking needs. And one man, Hudson Luce, managed to
|
|
wipe it all out in one fell swoop. But now people are wising up and
|
|
spreading out, linking with more sources, creating a complex web of
|
|
communications that can't be easily broken. I'm not arguing with your
|
|
plan, a planned community can be good. I'm only questioning the idea of
|
|
anarchist separatism in general. It seems the only way anarchy can exist
|
|
is on a universal basis. That's why we're "evolutionary anarchists" isn't
|
|
it? Because we realize that anarchism has to first become widely accepted
|
|
before it can truly be practiced. The people must be enlightened before
|
|
they can reform.
|
|
SOCIALIZED HEALTH CARE: I'm all for it. Right now I'm out of
|
|
school for a year and I don't work full-time, so I have no health care at
|
|
all. Government sponsored health care couldn't be any worse than the
|
|
corrupted political entity known as the health industry is now. Why
|
|
couldn't the government support health care as a last resort, but also
|
|
allow private doctors to compete with them? At least I could get a
|
|
prescription for antibiotics if I get bronchitis without paying well over a
|
|
hundred dollars. Plus, then the private doctors wouldn't have to go
|
|
through the political rigamarole involved with Medicare. Maybe it could
|
|
work something like the legal system, where poor people can at least get a
|
|
crappy public defender - better than nothing. Americans are so brainwashed
|
|
into fearing anything socialized. They try to ignore socialism as it
|
|
pertains to the postal service and national parks. The Soviet Union gave
|
|
socialism a bad name by mixing it with totalitarianism, but it doesn't have
|
|
to be like that, does it? Socialism seems to be the next potential step
|
|
towards anarchy, as it dismantles the class system.
|
|
Well Ed, keep up the good work. Oh yeah, one more thing. A lot of
|
|
people seem to think that if someone sends an essay or whatever to a
|
|
publication, and the editor chooses not to print it for whatever reason, or
|
|
edits it for clarity or any other reason, that this can be somehow
|
|
considered censorship.....But as editor, it is your responsibility to pick
|
|
and choose....Of course, editing should not change the meaning or context
|
|
of the writing, but otherwise it is usually necessary to edit. In other
|
|
words, you should feel free to print only parts of letters if you wish, and
|
|
leave out the ones that don't particularly add to the content of the zine.
|
|
I guess this regards your offer to send copies of the letter and essay you
|
|
left out.
|
|
Authority and Obedience, Mike Thain
|
|
|
|
[We really should not spout off crazy ideas, because no one is
|
|
going to listen to us if we do. An economy based on theft would not last
|
|
very long. No one is going to produce anything if they know it will be
|
|
stolen. People have to have some faith that if they work to attain
|
|
something, they have a chance of attaining it and it will not be taken
|
|
away. Otherwise you end up with everyone screwing over everyone, i.e.
|
|
chaos. The reason things are getting so bad here in the U.S. is that
|
|
people are losing hope of achieving their goals through honest labor. If
|
|
you're "unskilled", you have trouble finding work. If you do have a job,
|
|
you may be laid off. If you don't get laid off, about 25% of your pay goes
|
|
to taxes, which isn't counting sales tax, property tax, license fees,
|
|
telephone tax, etc., etc. I believe that changing society as a whole is
|
|
beyond our means, and a waste of our effort since most of the population
|
|
doesn't appreciate our vision. Better to concentrate on getting our own
|
|
system going.
|
|
My definition of "moderate" is as follows:
|
|
"Thoughtful; balanced; not excessive or extreme". Those of us who do not
|
|
support criminal, irresponsible, crude or extreme views and measures need
|
|
our own forum for discussion. Does the movement really need another "Fifth
|
|
Estate", "Anarchy", "Open Road", "The Match", "Bayou La Rose", or "Love and
|
|
Rage"? Moderate anarchists are anarchists who think about long term
|
|
goals, sustainability, how our actions and words appear to non-believers,
|
|
and especially the right of other individuals to be non-believers. We are
|
|
not satisfied with spouting dogma or praising any desperate act of sabotage
|
|
or violence. One very major distinction is that we do not advocate the use
|
|
of violence by a minority to transform society. Some groups claim to
|
|
represent the majority, but the majority does not seem to share their
|
|
enthusiasm. Transforming society as a whole, through a violent revolution,
|
|
is a dangerous fantasy that will not play out as expected. We need to "win
|
|
people over instead of winning over people". If society uses violence to
|
|
attempt to exterminate us however, then our response may be a rational,
|
|
controlled, organized, and self-disciplined use of violence to defend our
|
|
community. But not a chaotic gaggle of individuals going off half-cocked
|
|
with no clear objective. We may decide that fleeing the country or going
|
|
underground are better tactics if we are not sufficiently numerous or
|
|
organized to put up a decent struggle. Hopefully this is not a scenario we
|
|
will have to face, but we do need to think about it.
|
|
I am not proposing a rigidly organized anarchist "compound". I
|
|
just want us to be in the same neighborhood, and have people organize
|
|
themselves as they see fit. If our community approach is successful, a
|
|
violent suppression would be unlikely. It would be much more costly than
|
|
the suppression of a small, fanatical cult. The government would have to
|
|
suppress an entire, diverse community.
|
|
If the government picks up the tab for only those people with no
|
|
private health care, then we'll have the usual scenario where all the
|
|
paying customers go to private industry, and the government gets all those
|
|
who can't pay. No wonder the national debt is so large. Anything that
|
|
produces revenue is privatized and anything that loses money is socialized!
|
|
Who is paying for the bank failures? The tax payers. All of our natural
|
|
resources like timber, minerals, and oil are either sold to or leased by
|
|
corporations while the taxpayers get stuck paying for the wars and cleaning
|
|
up the messes. Our health is destroyed by our jobs, but we pay the medical
|
|
bills. We pay to be taxed, policed, ordered about, and drafted, to
|
|
paraphrase Prudhomme. I want out of this scam.
|
|
The post office and the national parks are also bad examples of
|
|
socialism. They are bureaucratic and antagonistic towards the people they
|
|
serve. This seems to be a recurring phenomenon in socialist systems, one
|
|
we will need to work on.
|
|
I try not to edit, because it is easy to edit out views one
|
|
disagrees with or views which are not especially interesting to the editor.
|
|
The editor should be more like a technician than a shaper of the
|
|
discussion. However I do agree that a small portion of the material
|
|
submitted either doesn't fit the zine, is obviously the work of a crazed
|
|
mind, or is simply offensive and not worthy of discussion.
|
|
I do try to list all the material that is submitted but not printed, so
|
|
that readers can decide if I made the right decision. I use a .... to show
|
|
where a letter has been trimmed, and I keep the originals in case someone
|
|
requests a copy of the unedited version. I did slip this issue when I
|
|
threw away some literature which crudely accused a certain ethnic group of
|
|
secretly controlling society. I felt at the time that it was not even
|
|
worthy of mentioning, but readers should at least have the right to know
|
|
that censorship is taking place. I did, in effect, censor those views out
|
|
of the discussion. Unlike Joffre Stewart's rants, which caused such a
|
|
controversy in the SRAF Bulletin, these flyers contained not even a grain
|
|
of valid criticism mixed in with the racist theories. Joffre was at least
|
|
a self-proclaimed anarchist, somewhat thoughtful in a nutty way, and a rare
|
|
black anarchist at that. I would no longer favor publishing Joffre's
|
|
material (which I did at the time), but I would make it available to those
|
|
who requested it. Should we trust each new editor's discretion, or would
|
|
readers prefer to have available copies of all material not published? Ed]
|
|
|
|
******
|
|
|
|
Dear Ed, for the Meander,
|
|
I think your proposal for a network of moderate anarchists is an
|
|
excellent idea. To me anarchy is a lifestyle or better yet an attitude
|
|
toward life. All the old lefty stuff about being politically correct and
|
|
serious politics and ideology is the opposite of what I want in my life.
|
|
Sure anarchy is the free expression of living spirit, but the way Fred
|
|
Woodworth puts it (The Match #88 p. 70) for example makes things hard, even
|
|
sort of ugly. These sorts of attitudes only assure that anarchy remains
|
|
valid for a small group of individuals who are a curiosity but not part of
|
|
[the] mainstream. The answer is not political but one of life style and a
|
|
question of ethics. If our lives are important to live then lets not
|
|
sacrifice ourselves to politics.
|
|
I don't know how you plan to bring people together in a common
|
|
community, but it is a good idea as long as you are able to build sound
|
|
relationships with the larger community around you. I have already many
|
|
years invested in this community (The Lardeau Valley) and would find it
|
|
hard to move although I could support such an effort somehow. There are a
|
|
few anarchist types around here and we are working towards lofting our
|
|
social ideals into reality, some of us have land which can be used and some
|
|
of us have skills which can be shared etc. For example, a woodfired
|
|
brick oven bakery is being built on one location. These ovens are large
|
|
enough to be commercially viable and the bread produced is excellent. It
|
|
is also a good commodity to barter, exchange or even give away. We also
|
|
have in operation a flour mill which is big enough to supply the needs of
|
|
several ovens or bakeries. We hope by getting things like this going we
|
|
can redefine the economics of the valley. Other self-sufficient kinds of
|
|
economies are also developing (by economy I mean the flow of goods and
|
|
providing of services, not the exchange of money).
|
|
Politics is an authoritarian way to control labor and economies,
|
|
why not just do it yourself as an expression of your own life, a form of
|
|
direct action?
|
|
"Any Time Now" is a publication project intended to be of relevance
|
|
to anybody who wishes to explore a life affirming process of liberation.
|
|
Subscriptions are 4 issues for $4.00. Write to "Any Time Now", Argenta
|
|
B.C., V0G 1B0 Canada. For Peace and Freedom, Dick Martin
|
|
|
|
[Are there jobs available in your community for those of us who are
|
|
dependent on outside income? Are there really enough potential customers
|
|
for the bread you will be baking to support more than a few people? Are
|
|
there any urban areas nearby where jobs are available? It sounds like you
|
|
have many excellent projects in the works, but I think your community could
|
|
only be seriously considered as a location for our neighborhood if the
|
|
answer to at least one of these questions is "yes". Not many of us are
|
|
skilled enough to be self-employed, or tough enough, or single and
|
|
childless enough to live at the poverty level, especially if we are doing
|
|
better in regular jobs. But if we located near a decent sized city, you
|
|
would have the anarchists with wage slave jobs as customers for your bread,
|
|
not to mention being a more visible example to the general public of
|
|
successful cooperation. Would you like to be added to the Affinity Group
|
|
of Moderate Anarchists address exchange list? Ed]
|
|
|
|
******
|
|
|
|
It seems to me that the various kinds of anarchists and
|
|
libertarians are wasting lots of energy arguing about which arm of the
|
|
octopus is most dangerous. Even worse are the Left fascists and Right
|
|
fascists who try to make a pet of a particular arm and feed it in hopes
|
|
that it will limit the other arms. Can't we consense that ALL arms are
|
|
dangerous and need to be (at least) drastically shrunk - and get on with
|
|
it?
|
|
I think "anarchist" is no longer a useful label, except for those
|
|
who DO want chaos (the popular image). "Libertarian" isn't good either,
|
|
except for the Libertarian Party. "Voluntaryist" gets confused with
|
|
volunteering - not quite the same. We need a new term.
|
|
The most confusing terms of all are "anarcho-socialist" and
|
|
"anarcho-capitalist". Of course the people who so label themselves don't
|
|
have in mind recent U.S.S.R or U.S. systems. But why take a term with a
|
|
bad public image and try to redefine and idealize it? STUPID!
|
|
Pat of "ABAPA Freer"
|
|
|
|
[There are actual differences between anarchists and libertarians,
|
|
mostly based on legitimate differences of opinion about what the best form
|
|
of society would look like. We are "fellow-travellers" on some issues, but
|
|
completely opposed on others. It would be nice if we could set aside our
|
|
differences and work together on the issues we agree on. But this is not
|
|
as simple as it sounds. Libertarians would like to have no restrictions on
|
|
private property while anarchists would like to see collective ownership of
|
|
the means of production. If we focus on society as a whole, we're
|
|
deadlocked. But if we established a "free zone" together, people could
|
|
participate in whichever system they choose.
|
|
As far as calling ourselves "anarchists", this has been a
|
|
continuing controversy in our movement. I think there are two reasons we
|
|
stick with this term. First, the anarchist movement has a history that
|
|
most of us feel we are an extension of. Second, the term very clearly
|
|
distinguishes us from other groups whose programs may appear to be similar
|
|
to ours, but who lack the love of freedom that is central to our beliefs.
|
|
Ed]
|
|
|
|
NEWS BRIEFS
|
|
|
|
209 TOY WORKERS PERISH IN FACTORY FIRE
|
|
A fire at the Buddha Monthon toy factory in Bangkok, Thailand
|
|
killed 209 workers and injured 500 more. All but one of the exits were
|
|
locked when the fire occured, trapping the workers inside. The factory was
|
|
partly owned by Kader Industries, a Hong Kong export company that sells
|
|
toys to Hasbro, Fischer-Price, Tyco and Toys-R-Us. (from "Industrial
|
|
Worker")
|
|
|
|
BOYCOTTS
|
|
Newspaper Guild #3 (AFL-CIO) has called for a boycott of "U.S. News
|
|
& World Report" and "The Atlantic" to counter the union busting tactics of
|
|
owner Mortimer Zuckerman. For more info contact the union at 133 W 44th
|
|
St, New York NY 10036.
|
|
Teamsters Local 636 has called a boycott of the Iron Age Protective
|
|
Shoe Company, which makes steel-toed boots. For more info write the union
|
|
at 616 Chartiers Ave, McKees Rocks PA 15136 or call (412) 331-3208. (from
|
|
"Industrial Worker")
|
|
|
|
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
|
|
|
|
Balance before V5N1 -25.00
|
|
|
|
INCOME (prior to V5N1)
|
|
Contributions 18.00
|
|
Paid Ads 0.00
|
|
|
|
EXPENSES (V5N1)
|
|
Computer Typesetting -20.77
|
|
Laser Printing -13.80
|
|
Printing -58.75 (130 copies)
|
|
Sales Tax -4.65
|
|
Domestic Postage -30.74 (106 copies)
|
|
International Postage -19.93 (16 copies)
|
|
Remail Returned V5N1 -0.72
|
|
Remail Returned V4N4 -0.87
|
|
|
|
Balance (before V5N2) -157.23
|
|
|
|
INCOME (prior to V5N2)
|
|
Contributions 48.32
|
|
Thanks to: Thomas Cooper, Jaime Enrique Baxter, Ed Stamm, Lee
|
|
Rivers, Mike Thain
|
|
Paid Ads 1.00
|
|
|
|
Balance (before V5N2) -107.91
|
|
=======
|
|
|
|
In an effort to cut expenses, I did this issue on my own PC and
|
|
dot-matrix printer, saving us the expense of typesetting and laser
|
|
printing. I will itemize expenses for this issue in the next issue.
|
|
If anyone is not interested in receiving "Meander Quarterly",
|
|
please let me know so I can take you off the mailing list.
|
|
If you know anyone who you think would be very interested in
|
|
receiving this publication, have them write me. If you appreciate this
|
|
zine and haven't made a contribution recently, please consider doing so -
|
|
every little bit helps. The cost of production and distribution is about
|
|
$0.75 a copy (includes printing and postage only - labor is donated).
|
|
|
|
ADVERTISE IN "MEANDER QUARTERLY"!
|
|
Paid advertisements about 1/4 of a page (2" x 4") will be accepted
|
|
at the rate of $2.00 per issue. Ads will appear together near the last
|
|
page. This is a no-profit operation and any excess funds will be passed on
|
|
to the new publisher next year. Some ads may appear free, as a public
|
|
service or on an exchange basis. Circulation is about 125.
|
|
|
|
OTHER BUSINESS
|
|
|
|
POSTAL ADVICE - F.Y.I.
|
|
Some copies of the last MQ were returned for 10 cents postage due
|
|
because the zine was classified by zealous postal officials as oversized
|
|
mail. They measure the mail according to the direction the address label
|
|
runs. Mail is
|
|
allowed to be wide, but not very tall. Because of the way I attached the
|
|
mailing labels, the zine was considered too tall. Luckily this rule
|
|
doesn't seem to be too strictly enforced, or else I would have gotten them
|
|
all back (whew!). Also, mail going to Canada and Mexico needs to be in
|
|
envelopes.
|
|
|
|
NO CURRENT ADDRESS
|
|
If you are in touch with any of the following, have them send us
|
|
their new address if they would like to get back on the mailing list:
|
|
John McGreevy
|
|
Mike Kolhoff
|
|
|
|
ITEMS SUBMITTED FOR PUBLICATION BUT NOT PUBLISHED
|
|
Readers can send a self-addressed stamped envelope (SASE) plus the
|
|
duplication fee (stamps are ok) and I will send you a copy of the items you
|
|
request:
|
|
Poems by Thomas Alexander Cooper (5c)
|
|
Promotional flyer from Ernest Mann (10c)
|
|
|
|
OTHER PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED
|
|
ABAPA Freer, c/o Pat, PO Box 759-MQ, Veneta OR 97487.
|
|
Forum for seekers of individual freedom.
|
|
Any Time Now, Affinity Place, Argenta B.C., V0G 1B0 CANADA.
|
|
Ideology, compassion, electoral anarchism,
|
|
war and social evolution, panarchy. Mail order
|
|
anarchist literature.
|
|
Discussion Bulletin, PO Box 1564, Grand Rapids MI 49501
|
|
Forum for "non-market, anti-statist, libertarian
|
|
socialists".
|
|
The Fire Fly, PO Box 1077, Mission SD 57555.
|
|
Teaching and raising children, praise for Cuba,
|
|
dialog explaining anarchism.
|
|
Industrial Worker, 1095 Market St Ste 204, San Francisco CA
|
|
94103. Tabloid of the Industrial Workers of the
|
|
World. Labor news and commentary.
|
|
K.S.L., Bulletin of the Kate Sharpley Library, BM Hurricane,
|
|
London WC1 3XX ENGLAND. Historical essays on
|
|
anarchism, pamphlets, books, archives/library.
|
|
LUNO, c/o Gene Lehman, 31960 SE Chin St, Boring OR 97009.
|
|
Alternative educational strategies and commentary.
|
|
The Match!, PO Box 3488, Tucson AZ 85722.
|
|
Anarchist magazine focusing on individual rights.
|
|
People's Culture, Box 5224, Kansas City KS 66119.
|
|
Women in Literature, Art and Action; Russia; the
|
|
most recent split in the Communist Party USA.
|
|
Permafrost, Karl Myers, PO Box 339, Seattle WA 98111-0339
|
|
Personal experiences of the editor and his
|
|
observations on life.
|
|
Practical Anarchy, PO Box 173, Madison WI 53701-0173.
|
|
News, events, reviews, and discussion of topics of
|
|
interest to anarchists (and librarians).
|
|
The Urine Nation News, Digit Press/imageTECH, PO Box 2149,
|
|
Roswell GA 30077. Against drug testing and in
|
|
favor of legalizing hemp (a.k.a. marijuana).
|
|
Yello Submarine, PO Box 81, Elmira NY 14902-0081
|
|
Raunchy humor, cartoons and populist politics.
|
|
Interesting reprints from other zines.
|
|
|
|
ADVERTISMENTS
|
|
|
|
SOCIALIST LITERATURE
|
|
Philadelphia Solidarity,
|
|
"a group of socialists attracted
|
|
by the concept of anti-hierarch-
|
|
ical workers' councils and repell-
|
|
ed by the bureaucracy of the
|
|
vanguard workers' parties" has
|
|
lots of literature available.
|
|
Write for a listing, or send $5.00
|
|
for a sample bundle: Box 25224,
|
|
Philadelphia PA 19119, or call Ben
|
|
Perry at (215) 849-2765.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|