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“A Much-Needed Invitation to Discuss the Offensive Against the State, Capital, and All Forms of Authority”

February 27th, 2012 Comments off

From Hommodolars Contrainformación (August 12, 2010) via Liberación Total (July 30, 2010): http://thisisourjob.wordpress.com/2011/09/10/a-much-needed-invitation-to-discuss-the-offensive-against-the-state-capital-and-all-forms-of-authority/

Note from TIOJ: As you can see, this piece has been in our “translation queue” for just over a year now. We finally decided to finish it because we feel it’s a worthwhile addition to the general discourse surrounding insurrectionary praxis. Some of the ideas have already been applied by various groups, while others prefigure certain events of the past year. In any case, many thanks to the comrades who wrote it, and we apologize for the delay!
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“Society is a madhouse without doors and windows”

February 27th, 2012 Comments off
From Wwoof SerbiaIn today’s technological society everything is under control, everything must be managed, and even the “environment” (which is a technocratic term for nature in the Orwellian Newspeak). “Wilderness” is subjected to special “protection techniques” of national and international agencies. Whom do they protect it from and what is the purpose of their protection? Is it protection against the greedy corporations, industry and developers with their bulldozers and excavators, or maybe against us, ordinary people? Who, in the end, use and benefit of that “wilderness”? What socialites hunt, drive jeeps and build ski resorts there, and later sell those “pleasures” to others? More important than the social divisions and inequalities in access to nature as a property and “resource” is the question: How does the average person in mass society feel about nature, where is its place in our collective consciousness? How is it possible that treating nature as a “factor of production” and “an enormous reservoir of stored energy”, content of exclusive goods and services and background of media spectacle, has become widely accepted and commonplace?

Breaking from immediate, vital relationships with the communities of living beings in nature and progress of specialization and division of labour among men, stand for the famous beginning of agricultural and industrial civilization. Since then, with each new generation, people experience nature all the more mediate, increasingly distance themselves from it, isolate and sterilize dead environments in which they live, work, consume, and have fun. Danger, dirt and chaos lurk behind the walls of comfortable flats, schools, hospitals and prisons! The driving force of that deviation, in which terminal phase we live today, is the feverish urge for establishing control and domination over the nature. The fields which were once the habitats of thousands of plant species, are now covered with a single industrial monoculture. Lined up in columns and rows like an army, selected, modified and chemically treated for generations, these plants are the reflection of people’s situation, as well.
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‘Rain & Fire’ – Statement from a UK FAI sector

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Posted on September 13, 2011 by actforfreedomnow:  http://actforfreedomnow.wordpress.com/2011/09/13/%e2%80%98rain-fire%e2%80%99-%e2%80%93-statement-from-a-uk-fai-sector/

‘Rain & Fire’ – Statement from a UK FAI sector

325 receives and transmits:   Rain & Fire  

This text was written during the course of the growing European social war, and our attempts to situate ourselves in the context of that, whilst in the midst of rising fascism, complicity from most of the society and a fractured and divisive anti-capitalist ‘movement’. These scant few pages cannot express the complexity of the various situations being described in any great depth, but we write so that other rebels at the edges can know how it is for us here. As we were putting the final touches to the text, cities in the UK exploded and remain volatile. However this is not an analysis of the riots – this is a text from inside the social conditions which gave rise to the insurrection.  

This text has been collaboratively written by many individuals in our network over a period of discussion, planning and attack. We have been brief in our communiques so far, but we felt it was time to write something longer.  

“Why are we writing?” Because we know how important it has been for us to hear the knocks on the wall from other renegades in other cells, and because we would like to reach out beyond the people we already know, beyond the realities we have lived in, created, abandoned or remain tied to. As revolutionaries, we are highly critical of these realities and of ourselves, and we write because just, as individuals, we strive to be ‘better’ than we are, we also desire for this world to be better than it is. We are open to the fallacy of our opinions and wish to surpass our expectations, such as they are. We also try to communicate with those outside our circles, and we attempt to staunch the tendency towards self-referentialism which is endemic to many forms of communication. In the end, we have to accept that this text is written to persons unknown and that wherever it is read and whoever it reaches, there will be those who will have an understanding of what is written here – and this is for them.  

There is no longer any sure statement that can be made about this changing world, which catches fire more and more, everyday.  

The present day United Kingdom is a controlled theme-park, covered in surveillance cameras, vehicle tracking, identical housing estates, post-industrial zones and sprawling road and train networks. There is virtually no wilderness left, the powerful and rich control the ‘countryside’, as much as, or even more than the cities, and there is little freedom beyond the mainstream, unless you take it – the same as anywhere else. The prison of everyday life is so total here that the only choice remaining is its complete destruction.  

We welcomed the renewed call by the Conspiracy of Cells of Fire / Informal Anarchist Federation for a world-wide informal anarchist structure based on revolutionary solidarity and direct action: the International Revolutionary Front. As we continue to develop our own project of revolutionary organisation, we affirm the global informal ‘network’ or ‘federation’ of revolutionary groups in existence who are developing, encouraging and participating in uncontrollable confrontation against State and Capital, whilst organising and developing their own initiatives of attack: this is our signal of collaboration. Read more…

from “From Riot to Insurrection: Analysis for an Anarchist perspective against post-industrial capitalism,” by Alredo M. Bonanno

February 27th, 2012 Comments off

[editor’s note:  This was another introduction to Anarchist thinking, and another old blog post re-located here.  This text, and other writings of Bonanno can be found translated to English can be found for free online from Digital Elephant, or The Anarchist Library.]

 

“Capital’s utopia contains something technically mistaken, that is, it wants to do three things that contradict one another:  to assure the wellbeing of a minority, exploit the majority to the limits of survival, and prevent insurgence by the latter in the name of their rights.”

-Bonanno’s points in this text are really to use moments of irrational rioting to institute “an insurrectional and revolutionary reality” before there is ever to be a social revolution, because the communications controls of the ‘included’ classes of society are another manipulation of economy for all those that make up the ‘excluded’ class in post-industrial capitalism that need to be eliminated in order for the excluded to begin freeing themselves and all people of the previous dominating mindset that has been used to control not only the excluded but all peoples in a post-industrial capitalist society.

If I am wrong in this understanding of Bonanno’s text, feel free to correct me or to add any relevant information to enrich my understanding in his anti-political outlook.

from “The Relevance of Anarchism to Modern Society,” by Sam Dolgoff

February 27th, 2012 Comments off

[editor’s note: This was one of the first works read in the initial discovery of Anarchism, and one we have transferred to this blog from the old blog. Some quotes were thougt to be pertinent to others as well.]

“Anarchy or no anarchy, the people must eat and be provided with the necessities of life. The cities must be provisioned and vital services cannot be disrupted.”

“The progress of the new society will depend greatly upon the extent to which its self-governing units will be able to speed up direct communication–to understand each other’s problems and better coordinate activities.”

“One of the most cogent contributions of anarchism to social theory is the proper emphasis on how political institutions, in turn, mold economic life.”