"I barely survived on Chicago-Lake Liquors wages": an account of a campaign
Logistics worker killed while on strike in Piacenza, Italy
Hat Trick
A piece by John O’Reilly in Minnesota about his experiences working at a liquor store. Sports is often there in the background shaping our interactions, defining relationships, and reflecting the struggles and aspirations of workers. In Hat Trick O’Reilly reminds us of the role of sports setting out the divisions and unity in our lives.
Insurrection and Production
Package Handler’s Report and Analysis
In this essay, IWW organizer Coeur de Bord analyses the first year of organizing at a United Parcel Service hub in Minneapolis outside of the preexisting trade union structure. They show how even a small core of organizers can engage large numbers of workers and mobilize them around concrete demands.
Free parking - Phinneas Gage
In this piece Phinneas Gage recalls the challenges of organizing under punitive back to work legislation and the effect it had on shop floor organising. As tensions grow over a dispute about the safety of various parking arrangements around renovated facilities the shop again begins to mobilise. Then tragedy strikes and the workers are reminded that sometimes the cost of a partial victory can be as great as any defeat.
Careerists and Corporate Interest: Why despite endless failure the drug war will continue indefinitely
Nicer ways to do it? Bolivian miners fighting back
Easy Money: The Reserve Bank of Australia and the tremors in capital accumulation
The RCP's current solution to the gay question
[The Netherlands] The Area Ban against anarchists in a broader context of repression in The Hague
2016 historical U.S. anarchism archiving project
Dutch Mayor issues area bans for anarchists
What's new to libcom.org (July 2016)
Recent interview with Clinton aide contains disturbing hints of the wars to come
Tenant power: Portland Solidarity Network takes demands to a landlord
Strike in the port of Koper
Turfs, and also clumps
Paperboy of the 1990s - Juan Conatz
Thoughts on the movement, or why we still don't even Corbyn - Joseph Kay and Ed Goddard
It’s a lonely world these days for an anti-parliamentary socialist with all politics seeming to have taken a back seat to the current Labour Party shenanigans. While the deluge of establishment groupthink currently arrayed on Corbyn is as disgusting as it is cynical, we're still not pinning any hopes on him in the (now quite likely) event he comes out on top in the next leadership election.