Share this fundraiser with friends online using ChipIn!

Support Anarchist Bloggers!

Anarchoblogs depends on contributions from readers like you to stay running. We're doing a fundraising drive for the months of October and November.

Donations provide for the costs of running anarchoblogs.org and provide direct financial support to active Anarchoblogs contributors. See the donation page for more details.


January 2010

Japan Stands Up to the Empire

One of last week’s more important news stories involved a mayoral election in the city of Nago, Okinawa. Nago is a small coastal city (population 60,000), known by many tourists for its beautiful beaches.



As some of you might remember, back in 2006, the Bush administration reached a deal with the Japanese government to move a US air base from Ginowan City in northeastern Okinawa to Nago. Though initially resistant to the move, Nago’s then-mayor, Yoshikazu Shimabukuro, finally came around, having no doubt been pressured by the national government, which had always acquiesced to American demands.

But last August, Japanese voters elected a new government, one which had campaigned on the promise to move the air base out of Okinawa altogether. And then last week, Nago voters elected Susumu Inamine as their mayor, a man who adamantly opposes relocating the base to his city.

The presence of American troops has never played well in Japan, especially in Okinawa, where locals have had a long history of being victimized by GIs. The most well-known example of this occurred in 1995 when three American soldiers assaulted and gang-raped a twelve-year-old Japanese girl.

“Other incidents of bodily harm, intimidation and death continue in Okinawa on an almost daily basis,” Chalmers Johnson writes, “including hit-and-run collisions between American troops and Okinawans on foot or on auto bikes, robberies and assaults, bar brawls and drunken and disorderly conduct.”

To make matters worse, these wrongdoers often walk away with complete impunity. The military has an abysmal record prosecuting soldiers involved in such incidents, and a supplement to the 1953 American-Japanese Status of Forces Agreement severely restricts Japan’s jurisdiction in these matters. Johnson notes, “The U.S. argued strenuously for this codicil because it feared that otherwise it would face the likelihood of some 350 servicemen per year being sent to Japanese jails for sex crimes.”

Following last week's election, Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said that the people of Nago had clearly spoken, and he insisted that his government now had no choice but to reconsider the 2006 accord. “The country will start from scratch on this issue and take responsibility to reach a conclusion by the end of May.”

Empires, of course, don’t like being told what to do, and the US has maintained there’s nothing to reconsider. Spokesmen from both the Pentagon and State Department have made it clear that the US has no intention of renegotiating a deal. And Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has “reiterated his stance on the Futenma base issue, saying the current plan is the only one that can be achieved and it should be implemented as soon as possible under the current agreement.”

So much for those American ideals of democracy and self-determination. When the Empire wants to station its troops in someone else’s country, then that’s exactly what it’s going to do. Never mind the sentiments of the people actually living there.

But Hatoyama, undoubtedly realizing the political fallout that could result from succumbing to the Americans, has so far continued standing strong. Having been an American my entire life, I’ve learned not to put much hope in politicians. But, who knows, maybe this one will be different.

Molly’sBlog 2010-01-31 22:21:00

ANARCHIST THEORY:MOLLY’S ANARCHISM PART 4-FREEDOM TO AND FREEDOM FROM:In parts one, two and three of this series I began to define what I consider the anarchism that I have held to for many decades. To say the least my ideas have changed over that ti…

Continue reading at Molly'sBlog …

not chicago(D).


rain knocking about the windowpanes-floor, scrubbing floor-drunken drunkeness-a cascade of water that ruins the wood of this old house-summer-i am my own now and i can take my car anywhere i want to go except joy-when the bed was a mess and ghosts rearranged my closet and turned the lights off and on every night-before you came and chased them away, took the brush from the floor where i dropped it, poured all my liquor down the drain, and changed the sheets.

Matt Taibbi on David Brooks on Haiti: “Translating David Brooks”

Funny and interesting. The piece is a series of responses to large blocks of text of Brooks' article, so beyond the first paragraph you'll have to click on the link and read it since that format doesn't translate well into blog form: "A friend of mine sent a link to Sunday’s David Brooks column on Haiti, a genuinely beautiful piece of occasional literature. Not many writers would have the

anarchist notes (february 1, 2010)

Melbourne Black

is the title of a new anarchist zine to be published in Melbourne. It’s intended to provide coverage of local issues from an anarchist perspective, and general information on social struggles in the city. The zine is intended to be published monthly and the organising collective is holding its first meeting this Saturday, February 6. More details to follow.

The Class War Kids

The Class War Kids (Canada) have released a 4-Song Digital EP with all monies received earmarked for relief efforts in Haiti. The songs are covers of Joe Strummer (Coma Girl), Randy (Freedom Song), The Weakerthans (Confessions Of An Futon Revolutionist) and Chubby Checker (The Hucklebuck). All proceeds are being forwarded to The Batay Ouvriye Haiti Solidarity Network.

What was Amtrak Terrorist Ojore Lutalo reading that got him arrested?

is the question asked by Brother Jonah @ Not My Tribe. Among the many possible candidates is Anti Racist Action’s zine Turning the Tide. The latest # (January–March 2010 [PDF]) of the zine contains ‘An Interview with RASH-Bogotá by RASH-Paris’; later this month, LASNET will be screening a film on union struggles in Colombia @ MARC.

Categories: Anarchism
Tagged with:

Molly’sBlog 2010-01-31 16:56:00

CANADIAN LABOUR-TORONTO:FRASER PAPER PENSIONERS OCCUPY CORPORATE OFFICE:Many kudos to the penioners of Fraser Paper who have taken their future in their own hands and occupied the offices of Brookfield Asset Management in Toronto to demand what is righ…

Continue reading at Molly'sBlog …

Brainstorming Center For a Stateless Society Graphics

Center For a Stateless Society is definitely in need of graphics: at the very least, a logo and banner ads.

I was trying to think of appropriate designs today. I thought of images that emphasized the cooperative aspects of anarchism.

Early ideas involved a picture of Earth. A handshake or circle-A could be superimposed on it.

A lot of C4SS works talk about decentralized production technology and free resilient communities. Solar panels or windmills probably wouldn’t do it. I considered a lathe, that wouldn’t work well in a logo. A simpler tool, the adjustable wrench, seemed like a good one. It is adaptable to many scenarios and can be used for building or taking things apart. Then I remembered that Crimethinc already did that, which is probably why I thought of it.

So then I actually looked up “tools” in Google Image search (seriously!) and found this:

What about a similar four-block image with one letter of “C4SS” superimposed over each square? With or without tools in each square?

Then I took a look at other think tank logos. It doesn’t look like it would be too difficult to best some of these.

So I went ahead and messed around in Photoshop.

Black for Anarchy, Sea Green as a pleasant libertarian color (the color of the Levellers)


They look good, but this logo looks like it belongs on a chemical tank, not a political study.

So I channeled the market for a new color:

I feel the same about this color scheme.

Try dropping adjectives and going gold and black?

Total chemical warning label.

Blue seems to be a think-tanky color. How about throwing blue in there?


I could deal with these.

But what about a banner?

Too dark.


This would look good cleaned up and with a picture of breaking chains added in the upper left region. I don’t feel like doing that right now.

I do like the color scheme of c4ss.org so it might be a good idea to design for that.

Tagged with:

The Picket Line — 1 February 2010

A special Picket Line treat: the complete text of William Davis’s “The Fries Rebellion,” lovingly reformatted in semantic HTML.

Continue reading at The Picket Line …

Shameless Self-promotion Sunday

It’s Sunday Sunday Sunday. Time to get Shameless Shameless Shameless.

What have you been up to this week? Write anything? Leave a link and a short description for your post in the comments. Or fire away about anything else you might want to talk about.

An example of why 19th century German philosophy was more insightful than Anglo-American philosophy.

After putting it down for a long time I've come back to "The Romantic Imperative" by Frederick C. Beiser, a book all about the philosophical ideas of the early 19th century Romantic thinkers in Germany. These folks were taking on the world in general and weren't purely limited to aesthetic criticism. They followed in the philosophical tradition of Kant and of the current that would be known as