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April 2013

Colombian Antinatalist Speech

Partial transcript:
“Heaven and happiness do not exist. That’s your parents’ way to justify the crime of having brought you into this world. What exists is reality, the tough reality, this slaughterhouse we’ve come to die in, if not to kill and to eat the animals, our fellow creatures. Therefore, do not reproduce, do not repeat the crimes committed against you, do not give back the same, evil paid with evil, as imposing life is the ultimate crime. Do not disturb the unborn, let them be in the peace of nothingness, anyway we’ll all eventually go back there, so why beat around the bush?”
Fernando Vallejo


Filed under: Antinatalism, Videos
Tagged with: ,

Stop Severing Incarcerated Parents from their Children! Take action to support SHB 1284 today!

Incarcerated parents and their children need a more fair chance to work toward reunification and safe permanency options that don't involve severing family ties forever!

On April 22, the Washington State legislature – by a near unanimous vote – passed SHB 1284 that guides the courts’ current discretion to delay termination of parental rights if the parent’s incarceration or prior incarceration is a significant factor for the child’s continued out-of-home placement, as long as the delay is in the best interest of the child.

All the bill needs to become law is the governor's

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On May Day this Year I will be Fasting in Solidarity with Salvador Zamora’s Hunger Strike for Immigration Reform

Salvador Zamor (far left) has been on a hunger strike for 21 days as of 4-30.
The  other day, while out flyering for the May Day march, I came across Salvador Zamora. While talking to him, I learned that Salvador has a long history of sacrificing himself physically for the cause of immigration reform.

In fact, he is currently conducting a hunger strike across the street from the Federal Courthouse in Las Vegas for 21 days (as of 4-30) demanding genuine immigration reform. I was personally pretty impressed by that, since I get cranky whenever I miss a single meal. I'd be hard pressed to even imagine going without food for three weeks (and counting). And he even told me that he once went 70 days without eating during a previous hunger strike

So honor what he is doing and because it is the spirit of May Day, the true worker's holiday, I will be joining him in solidarity to support and help bring attention to his cause and would like to invite others to join me.

You can find out more info either on FaceBook here: May Day Solidarity Rally event or on our Meetup group here: Las Vegas Anarchy Meetup May Day Solidarity Rally.

Unfortunately, this is very short notice due to the fact that I didn't even know he was doing this until I happened to walk past and see him. While he has received some coverage from the local Spanish language media, none of the other local media has even mentioned it at all. Personally, I'm pretty hard pressed to understand how a guy going without food for over three weeks (and counting) isn't newsworthy, regardless of the reasons.

Although it isn't actually required to participate in the rally, I will be fasting for 24 hours beginning at midnight once May Day officially starts to show my support for his own sacrifice.

There is no "official" start time, although I'll be going down there in the morning and spending the day with Salvador. You are welcome to come at whatever time is convenient for you.

There will also be an official, albeit really sanitized and docile, May Day parade hosted by local unions and politicians beginning around 4 o'clock at the federal courthouse that you may or may not want to take part in. If so, you could just show up a bit early to show Salvador some support.

I hope to see you there. You can find the location on the map below:

View Larger Map

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Gun Control: Why isn’t it ever discussed this way?

Folks always talk about the threat of the government maybe doing something terrible and the need to protect yourself...but that's only one side of the coin. The other side is crazy Earl down the street who believes in black helicopters accumulating an arsenal. Personally, I think that the latter is the greater danger to folks in the U.S. at this moment. In fact, the people who most loudly talk about their need to own AK-47s, who have extreme paranoid delusions about the government, are precisely the people that I'm most afraid of owning high powered weapons.

Obama condemns indefinite detention (and himself)

US President Barack Obama today condemned the Guantanamo Bay prison camp run by US President Barack Obama, channeling the moral outrage last heard on the 2008 campaign trail.

"The idea that we would still detain forever a group of individuals that have not been tried, that is contrary to who we are, that is contrary to our interests and it has to stop,” the president said during a press conference at the White House.

The rhetoric was bold and progressive. The reality? At least half of 166 never-tried, never-convicted prisoners that reside at Guantanamo Bay are engaged in a hunger strike that is making the president look bad. And so the man with a kill list who is ultimately responsible for them being there – and who's initial plan for closing the prison was simply moving it to Illinois – had to act as if he was deeply troubled by his poor human rights record, like an oil executive shedding tears for Mother Earth after a big spill.

What Obama is banking on is the fact that most people (including his base) aren't terribly detail oriented. The tale liberal Democrats tell themselves, and which the liberal media tells the rest of us, is that the fight over Guantanamo Bay is Obama and a bunch of ACLU lawyers on one side, the forces of fear-mongering, reactionary insanity on the other. The president, it is to be understood, is facing irrational hostility from the Chicken Littles of the right and would like to the do the right thing -- of course he would -- but, you know: Republicans.

That narrative, unfortunately, is false. The true story, obfuscated by the president's occasional condemnations of his own human rights record, is that Obama himself signed an executive order creating "a formal system of indefinite detention for those held at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay." Rather than repudiate the notion of “detain[ing] forever a group of individuals that have not been tried,” Obama (through a task force he commissioned) determined that 48 of the prison camp's detainees were “too dangerous to transfer but not feasible for prosecution.” The evidence against those men would not be admissible even by the weakened standards of a military court – that is, it was probably gained through torture – but rather than release them, as if they were persons endowed with certain inalienable rights, the Obama administration would prefer to lock them away until they die.

The president has even refused to release dozens of Yemeni citizens who have been cleared of all wrongdoing. Obama also signed (and his lawyers later defended in court) a bill that allows for the indefinite detention of US citizens. And let's not forget that kill list, which is based on the idea that it's alright for the president to act as judge, jury and executioner, so long as the unilateral justice is being delivered abroad. So when the president of the United States righteously condemns the idea of imprisoning someone forever without charge or trial, it's important to remember the truth about his record. It's important to remember he is lying.

Cordial and Sanguine, Part 49: NAPtime!

There’s been a debate on the non-aggression principle going on for a while at BHL and related sites; I finally weighed in today with Eudaimonism and Non-Aggression.

I also announced the mailing of iRad #2 with Celebrate the iRadvent.

STATEMENT FROM LYNNE STEWART & RALPH POYNTER RE: HER COMPASSIONATE RELEASE

4/28/13: 5:55pm: CARSWELL FEDERAL MEDICAL CENTER

A worldwide Embrace to all of the thousands of People who helped Me ! As my hero said, we are motivated by great feelings of love and compassion and I am fortunate to be the beneficiary, this time around. To savor this victory, you all should know that the Carswell Prison authorities kept telling me " It can't be done". You don't qualify. Why bother? Wait till you are closer to death!

To all of them I replied that I have been fighting battles like this all my life and I would never quit.

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May Day, Our Day.





           Wednesday May 1st. MayDay, Labour Day, Workers Day, call it what you will, but it is all about the ordinary people coming together to celebrate their struggles and their victories. A day to remember all those working class heroes, who struggled and fought for the betterment of all, fought for a society that sees to the needs of all our people. Organise your own celebration, make for the streets, make new friends, meet up with old friends. Make it an opportunity to re-new that vision of a fair and just society that is buried in all out hearts, show the strength of solidarity that will get us there. May Day, a time to re-new that Spirit of Revolt.

                                  
 
           Now more than ever we have to show solidarity, we have to come together to defend our standard of living. May Day this year is an ideal opportunity to show that solidarity with all the ordinary people of this country and across the world, to lay down a marker, as the pampered parasite political class make a ruthless and savage grasp to capitalise everything in sight to save their gambling spiv bankster friends and bond merchants, from carrying their own gambling debts. We are expected to quietly pay off the gamblers losses and stand by while they privatise everything they can lay their sweaty palms on, that can make them money. It is their world -- or it is our world, you can decide.
            May Day is a day to realise our strength and see that road to the better world we all desire.

ann arky's home.

Para el debate – Economía venezolana: los 10 grandes problemas hoy

[Tomado de NOT-ING 3-206, Boletín informativo electrónico de la ANIH - Academia Nacional de la Ingeniería y el Hábitat]
 
FALTA DE DÓLARES. Los meses previos a las elecciones del 07/04 el Gobierno disparó el gasto público para incentivar el consumo, por lo tanto, desembolsó suficientes dólares para importar masivamente y elevar la oferta, pero una vez alcanzado el objetivo político no tuvo más alternativa que cerrar el grifo de las divisas. El mecanismo de “subastas” SICAD tan solo ha colocado en el mercado USD 200 M. Un número creciente de empresas recurren al mercado paralelo.
 
INFLACIÓN. El Gobierno logró contener la inflación a medias en 2012, pero desde octubre del año pasado la fórmula se agotó. El Gobierno no ha tenido más alternativa que devaluar el tipo de cambio oficial, lo que inevitablemente impactará el precio de los productos regulados, principalmente alimentos y medicinas. La inflación registra un salto de 16,2%.
 
DÉFICIT FISCAL. La presión que tiene el Gobierno para cubrir la gestión de la administración central (gastos de funcionamiento de los entes oficiales, salarios, subsidios, entre otros) así como de las empresas estatales, ha hecho que los ingresos petroleros y tributarios sean insuficientes y el desequilibrio en las cuentas fiscales se acentúe. La gestión gubernamental se centra en la búsqueda de ingresos, porque la revisión del gasto se le complica, en especial, por la nómina.
 
ENDEUDAMIENTO. El endeudamiento del sector público se ha acelerado. La necesidad de mantener el régimen cambiario y atender el elevado volumen de gasto público llevó al Ejecutivo nacional a incrementar las obligaciones internas y externas. Diversas bancas de inversión han señalado que la deuda total (Gobierno central, Pdvsa y préstamos con el Banco de Desarrollo de China) es elevada y calculan que ya representa más de 45% del PIB.
 
PETRÓLEO. La producción petrolera en Venezuela muestra un estancamiento. Si se consideran la producción de crudos más los líquidos del gas natural y el condensado, entonces el resultado es una baja de 3%. Las metas del Plan Siembra no sean cumplido. Durante el año pasado la producción petrolera en el Oriente del país disminuyó. La evolución de las exportaciones no ha sido satisfactoria.
 
ELECTRICIDAD. Después de procurar desembolsos importantes y constantes a la industria eléctrica en los últimos años, el sistema sigue presentando fallas y cortes del servicio, en forma diaria y en distintas regiones del país. El Gobierno ha atribuido nuevamente a hechos de sabotaje muchas de las interrupciones registradas, mientras que trabajadores y analistas aseguran que esos eventos son el resultado de las deficiencias en generación y la falta de mantenimiento y equipamiento en las áreas de distribución y transmisión.
 
MANUFACTURA. El crecimiento económico de los últimos años, impulsado por el ingreso petrolero, no ha permitido potenciar el aparato productivo. Por el contrario, los datos oficiales muestran que el ingreso sólo ha fomentado un boom de importaciones en detrimento de la producción nacional. Para los economistas esto es lo que se conoce como un crecimiento de "baja calidad", ya que sectores que generan poca inversión y empleo son los que más se expanden. Sin un cambio en las políticas económicas, no se obtendrán resultados distintos.
 
AGRO. La producción agrícola se mantiene estancada a pesar de los recursos que se han destinado para estimular y desarrollar la actividad. La meta de alcanzar la soberanía alimentaria todavía luce lejana y la política de importaciones continúa en vigencia. El Gobierno no ha tomado las medidas necesarias para garantizar los recursos. El rezago en los precios controlados amenaza la inversión para los próximos ciclos de siembra. La escasez de insumos es la principal piedra de tranca. La infraestructura no ha sido rehabilitada en un año donde el clima amenaza los rendimientos de producción.
 
EMPRESAS BÁSICAS. Las empresas básicas de Guayana, salvo contadas excepciones, presentan pérdidas y estados financieros negativos, debido a la baja producción, falta de materias primas, de mantenimiento y renovación de sus equipos y conflictividad laboral.
 
LABORAL. La falta de políticas que contribuyan al desarrollo de actividades productivas ha castigado la calidad de empleo en el país. Si bien el Instituto Nacional de Estadística refleja una reducción de la informalidad en el país, la realidad es que 40% de la fuerza laboral no ha podido ser conquistada por el sector formal.


Can happen, Will happen, Stuff happens

I have been in an awkward position lately regarding the whole “anarchist” thing. Here in Minneapolis there has been a big controversy involving a group that I have volunteered with and people that I know (on all sides of the issue) that has gotten so incredibly nasty that I have started feeling embarrassed to be associated with any of this. And more than anything I feel just plain heart-broken that all of this is happening. Also, in places much farther away from here other self-proclaimed “anarchists” are doing other things that I have similar thoughts/feelings about, though since they are so much more distant from me these are not quite as intense as the local Twin Cities stuff. No matter how you cut it, though, it is all just pain, exhaustion, embarrassment and overwhelming defeat all around.

And yet, despite all of this stuff, I am still whole-heartedly into the whole anarchism thing. My reasoning is this – people who consider themselves to be “anarchists” are not necessarily the same people who actually make real-life "anarchy" happen. The people who publicly adorn themselves with that particular fringe-label are the folks who (hopefully) subscribe to particular political & social analyses, values, principles and other theoretical interpretations. The actual making-anarchy-happen part is another thing altogether, requiring an entirely different set of skills. Some of the people whom I’ve met in my life who I would say are very successful at living anarchically in their own lives and relationships are also often folks who have never even heard of “anarchism” and who would run away as fast they can if somebody wanted to try to instruct them on the theory about it.

The same goes with social and political change. In my life-time perhaps two of the people to who were most effective at enacting change in the world at large (although not necessarily the kind of change that I am wanting) have been folks like Mark Zuckerberg and Mohamed Bouazizi - not the scores of people out there who proudly proclaim themselves to be “revolutionaries”, “activists”, “organizers”, and “social change agents”. In this current era that we live in, mass social and political change seems to come about more from somebody happening to do something at the right place and the right time that sparks something within people that already exists within them but has been laying dormant waiting to come out. This is the same rationale behind anarchists and other self-proclaimed “revolutionaries” who endorse things like riots and armed struggle, but the difference is that I don’t think that those kinds of things are actually successful at achieving the kind of society that “anarchism” is supposedly all about.

I once asked a guy who was an anarchist for many years why he still stuck with it all. Throughout his “anarchist career” he had seen so many different failures, dysfunctional dynamics and sheer nonsense over the years being carried out by people within the “anarchist” scene, and yet he's still there. His response to me was “well, what is the alternative to being an anarchist? To become a jerk who starts bossing people around and making threats?”

It is exactly this – anarchism is a way to look at the world that takes away the masks and the lies of the things that we call “government”, “capitalism”, and “authority” in general. Seeing the truth of these things does not suddenly make one into an angel in one’s own behavior. An evil is still an evil even if one has failed at achieving the good. I am not about to start believing in something that I know is wrong, harmful, and is in fact destroying so much of life on this planet just because the alternative has not come about.

What it comes down to is that I believe that an anarchist society, and an anarchist social revolution that achieves such a society, is possible, not probable. That is the difference. “Can happen” and “will happen” are two separate things. I believe that in all likelihood various authoritarian regimes, alienated social relationships leading to social fragmentation and ecological devastation are the future for humanity. And, at the same time, I do believe that “another world is possible”.

I am reminded of a quote by Carl Rogers – “When I look at the world I'm pessimistic, but when I look at people I am optimistic.” I believe that within each human being are great vast capacities for love, creativity, sharing, courage, cooperation and expression. The thing is that this is all safely locked away in people, made out of reach by fear, by anger, by old habits and sheer laziness. Continuing on with the same-old, same-old does nothing to unlock oneself nor does it contribute anything towards getting rid of the chains that the world at large has around us all.

The value that I find in anarchism is that of being an ethical framework that guides both how one sees the world and how one chooses to act within that world. The world is as it is, here and now, regardless of what labels are ostensibly placed upon that world or society. The people within any given society are behaving in certain ways and engaging in particular social dynamics, and the benefit of having an anarchist lens to view it with is that it enables one to more clearly determine how one wants to respond and act in relation to what is going on. In other words, one can see more clearly what one is contributing to, what one is not contributing to, how much, and in what ways. Certain dynamics, certain relationships, can be more liberatory, dare I say more “anarchist.” And these particular kinds of dynamics and relationships can build on each other to ultimately have an anarchist society, a new anarchist world.

Not that this will happen. But it can.