A Crime Called Freedom - AudioZine
From Resonance: An Anarchist Audio Distro
A Crime Called Freedom: Writings of Os Cangaceiros Vol. 1 – by Os Cangaceiros – Download MP3
From Resonance: An Anarchist Audio Distro
A Crime Called Freedom: Writings of Os Cangaceiros Vol. 1 – by Os Cangaceiros – Download MP3
This is the podcast Dispossess where we explore the ideas, tendencies, ideologies, spooks, spirits, and other possessions and conversations that are relevant to the hosts of the show as providing for nourishing dialogue from the perspective of a non-ideological critique of civilization
For the four episode we will be discussing the subject of identity and exploring the tensions between individuality and identity.
The story goes that the very first gathering of Occupy Wall Street began as an old-fashioned top-down rally with speakers droning on—until a Greek student (and perhaps—an anarchist?) interrupted it and demanded that they hold a proper horizontal assembly instead. She and some of the youngsters in attendance sat down in a circle on the other side of the plaza and began holding a meeting using consensus process. One by one, people trickled over from the audience that had been listening to speakers and joined the circle. It was August 2, 2011.
If you think you are an insurrectionary hard ass, please show me, don't tell me.
At least stop insisting that your rhetoric be included in totally insecure organizing conversations we're having. Save it for anonymous internet comments or other places where anonymity maybe kind of exists. Thank you.
Seriously, why can't people express their support for riots (or whatever) with their actions, instead of their statements? What do you people have against plausible deniability? Why so scared to navigate the choppy waters of liberalism?
listen here: http://freeradicalradio.net/2016/01/20/baedan-the-anti-chamber/
This is an excerpt from the queer nihilist journal Baedan
Join September as it attempts to cultivate a politics of poop:
Also can be read here: http://freeradicalradio.net/2016/01/15/prison-society-an-account-of-the-...