Nagarjuna

joined 4 years ago
[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 1 points 2 years ago

GG Allen, is that you?

[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 0 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Northern Ireland's desire for independence will continue until they eventually get it, with Sinn Féin governing they're on the democratic road to socialism.

As the climate crisis continues and global multi-polarity intensifies, Brazil's Workers' Party will find itself needing to take increasingly radical action and having increasing room to do it.

Brazil's moves will open the way for the rest of Latin America. Bolivia and Venezuela will quickly follow into the space opened by Brazil.

Africa's got potential, but not until Western Hegemony has been damaged more and they can assert real sovereignty and create a common currency, at which point my money is on Kenya.

But Kenya's not number 5. Instead, we've got a sleeper appearance for the Phillipines! Losing the US's backing, the regime falls from power and the NPA and CPP seize power and begin the intertwined projects of socialization and democratization.

[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 1 points 2 years ago

I don't care if anarchists organized this or local teens organized it. Either way it's working class self activity. We aren't some special group floating above the working class and directing it, we're workers fighting for our own interests.

This kind of thinking about the left as separate from the class comes from the professionalization of politics and while it's sometimes neccesary to pay staff, we should not do it uncritically.

[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 0 points 2 years ago (3 children)

I think there's a thin line between the opportunistic and and the political in working class politics. The goal of looting is to improve the lives of working class people. The goal of striking is to improve the lives of working class people. They both do it by taking from the profits of buisnesses and by disrupting norms like working-for-a-wage and purchasing-commodities.

When anarchists organize looting as political protest, they're pointing out just how thin that line is.

 

The law allows tickets of up to 500 dollars and 60 days in jail. Mutual aid activists have called it "war on the unhoused." West Palm Beach FnB has been ticketed over 25 times under this law.

This is the front line of the fight against fascism in Florida.

 

Housing is a human right. This is what decomoddification from the bottom up looks like.

[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 1 points 2 years ago

The part about not assigning blame helps a lot of people get out of the trap of tallying favors and grievances. That said, he sells his books by pyramid scheme, dresses it up in pseudoscience and is needlessly dogmatic.

[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 0 points 2 years ago (8 children)

This is the same kind of politics of resentment that splits anarchists and leninists. Not sure if I dig it

 

Till every cage is empty.

[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 0 points 2 years ago (1 children)

No, they're the funders, they're the mark.

[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 1 points 2 years ago (3 children)

I swear you can have the worst takes and if you say "material conditions," then hexbear will upvote you 50 times.

You want materialism? The current level of meat consumption in the US is propped up by exploitation of migrant labor and an extractive mode of agriculture which is unsustainable and relies on external inputs like fertilizer which are themselves the product of other extractive industries.

We could dramatically reduce meat consumption without any technological changes by:

--Paying meat packers a living wage

--Organize Whole Foods and Wal-Mart, driving up meat cutters' wages

--Stop subsidizing meat

--Stop subsidizing feed crops

--Switch to permacultural farming practices

Banking on a tech breakthrough is ideological in the sense that it protects the status quo and marshals venture capital into mostly speculative assets.

Additionally, convincing people to go vegetarian is not idealist. Mass media has a huge effect, and using it to encourage vegetarianism is a material process. So either, we can take material measures to encourage vegetarianism, or you don't believe we'll ever wield power. Based on your defense of lab meat (a vc grift similar to tech start-ups), I think it's the latter.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by Nagarjuna@hexbear.net to c/politics@hexbear.net
 

From a prefigurative perspective, this is socializing 7.5 million people to participate in a communist economy. It can't happen without toppling the capitalists, but it's a neccesary step.

[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 1 points 2 years ago (3 children)

Wait, we're not conservatives? Then why have we been celebrating our big wet boy?

[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 0 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I see Lincoln as being a lot like Lenin, a problematic figure who ultimately oversaw an important and mostly liberatory project

[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

If we can get it, they're still in bargaining and the Stellantis proposal was basically "fuck you, suck my nuts"

[–] Nagarjuna@hexbear.net 6 points 2 years ago (3 children)

The 32 hour workweek is huge.

 

Fuck the cops. Fuck the courts. Empty the cages. Trans Liberation.

acab-2

 

Libs are getting banned too fast. They should get a little time to demonstrate whether or not they're here in good faith, and a little time to get dunked on if they're not.

Let us play with our food before we eat it.

 

Yet again the social democrat pivots right once in government. Crazy how this keeps happening. It's almost like we need revolutionary change which electoral institutions cannot offer, even when staffed by committed abolitionists.

 

Nobody wants to work anymore, but Oregon's willing to do something about it.

God bless the Soviet State of Oregon

 

1) There's two things that work: Direct Action and pressure campaigns.

in a pressure campaign, you've got to figure out who's got decision making power and target them specifically. It can be a politician who's a swing vote, a boss who's refusing to recognize a union, the bargaining team for the police officers guild, or a landlord who's refusing repairs.

Figure out your leverage. Workers have leverage in that they provide labor. tennants have leverage in providing rent. voters provide votes. There's other kinds of pressure too, for example, landlords often care about impressing neighbors, coworkers, charitable organization board members, and fellow congregants. Universities need to retain students. But! you might not have leverage over every target! A massive chain's shareholders might be able to eat the impact of a strike, but a local manager might lose his job because of it. In that case, your leverage is over him, not the shareholders.

Every action should be part of an escalation campaign. In other words, start small (petitions, buttons, pins, etc.), build up bigger, maybe to flyering. Then work up to pickets. After that, protests, after that, vandalism and blockades, etc. This way, the longer things go on, the worse it gets for your target. They can make it all stop by giving a raise, or doing repairs, or freezing the rents, or ceasing construction. It is not enough to just protest!

In direct action, you make what you want happen yourself. Churches hate hunger, so they organize food banks; food banks are now the most effective form of welfare in america. Animal rights activists hate mink farming, so they sabotage the farms; the PNW fur industry is now a 10th the size it was in the 80s. Puerto Ricans were being denied aid after a hurricane, so they snuck into the aid warehouses and delivered it themselves. The IWW hated having bosses, so they elected their own and refused to recognize the company's. Revolution is direct action on a mass scale

2) Don't be a weirdo! The other day, a Maoist came up to me in a red scarf and started asking me questions about my struggles as a worker. The maoist asthetic is off-putting and corny. Acting like you're a third party outside of the working class is cringe. You're a worker, I'm a worker. If you want to find out about my struggles, gripe about work with me. Calling it social investigation makes you think of yourself as a detective. You're not a detective, you're my pal getting drinks after work.

DSA grew so fast because they called themselves "democratic socialists." That's just optics. A lot of DSA work is the same as ML party work: strike support, salting, socialist education, mutual aid, shooting practice. But they got more members because they used words and asthetics americans are comfortable with. Ditch the red scarf and the hammer and sickle and the fealty to Mao. It doesn't mean don't read and apply Mao, it just means be normal.

3) you've got to be engaged in struggles in your own life. You can't just ask other people to have a revolution for you. In the 70s, socialist parties had their members all take jobs in the same factories and organize fighting unions in them. Your party can go into warehouses, hospitals, meatpacking plants, even universities! Anywhere there's thousands of workers. The IWW helps general membership organize each others workplaces. Salting or organizing where you stand doesn't matter. What matters is that you're helping each other to organize in your own lives. you can do the same thing living in the same apartment building or forming a solidarity network to fight for each others stolen deposits. You can even go to the same church!

Protests ask other people to act. Organizing in your own life prepares you and your community to act. If you're raising awareness about imperialism, you're asking other people to act. On the other hand, if you organize with the diaspora, in their apartments, in their workplaces, in their churches, you're creating the capacity to overthrow their oppressors with them.

4) You can't win without people

Militancy is good, but you've got to warm most people up to it. You do this through one on one conversations or by fighting and winning to demonstrate it can be done (and then through more one on ones).

If you're not sure if you can pull off a big action, do a structure test! You can test individuals by asking them to do something like "get so and so to sign a petition." You can structure test coworkers through petitions, getting people to wear pins or holding a mock strike vote. You can structure test neighborhoods by going door to door asking people to sign pledge cards or give you their contact info.

If your structure test fails, it's time to do more one on ones. If you act with a small group, you'll get retaliated against. There's safety in numbers, so build numbers.

what might this look like? A few hypotheticals:

Stop cop city:

What if local groups ran escalation campaigns against local offices of contractors and funders associated with the project? What happens to the project when investment managers at local banks are subjected to pressure campaigns? When regional directors of building contractors are as well? How about when shareholders start getting phone zapped?

Defund the Police:

What if the next time the cops were bargaining a contract with the city and putting up resistance to reform, we mounted pressure on their bargaining team? How dedicated to qualified immunity would their bargainers be when there's a pressure campaign on the landlords and their pastors? What if we were in power in the unions and could threaten to kick the police out of the labor council if they weren't open to reforms?

Covid 19:

What if our response to Covid had been to organize for sick time and ventilation upgrades in our workplaces? If we were in warehouses and could win those reforms in a 5000 person workplace, that would have a huge impact on viral spread.

In short: Stop protesting, start organizing.

 

In this thread, share your favorite books on praxis: Guides on how to organize rather than guides on what to organize against.

Protest and blockades:

Earth First Direct Action Manual How to run blockades, organize protests, do tree sits, etc. Great for environmental actions, but applicable to other campaigns as well.

Recipes for Disaster An anarchist how-to on protests, sabotage, dumpster diving, non-monogamy and more. Like the edgiest table at a zine fair in a single book

Labor and Tenant organizing:

Secrets of a Successful Organizer A how to on organizing written by Labor Notes, a militant, pro-democracy conference and newspaper for the American Labor Movement.

Building a Solidarity Network A SolNet or SolFed is like a worker center, but entirely volunteer run and focused on direct action. Example

EWOC organizing guide this is a collab of the DSA and United Electrical, which is one of two remaining "red" unions from the original CIO (the other being the ILWU).

Running Meetings:

Rusty's Rules of Order: How to Hold a Good Meeting

How to Bottomline

Guide to Consensus Decision Making

 

A barricade closes the street, but it opens the way --French proverb

Look Chapos, I'm dead serious.

fake general strikes like this one do nothing.

--They Work. The airport protests that blockaded the gates delayed the Muslim bans by months. The barricades erected by students in Mai '68 were quickly followed by a general strike. The barricades put on train tracks by Indigenous people in so-called "canada" stopped the police incursion in Wet'suwet'en territory. The Oka crisis barricades stopped the construction of a golf course on Mohawk land.

--Labor doesn't start general strikes, social movements do. Fredy Perlman once observed that Mai '68 was not the product of communist parties or labor unions, but "a handful of madmen". The general strike of '68 didn't start with the unions but with students barricading the streets. It was only when the students mobilized that the unions followed.

--They do the same kind of economic damage that strikes do All construction is done on massive loans with massive interest. Every hour of delay is massive amounts of lost money. Stopping trucks, cement mixers, trains, waste interest, paid labor, and so much more. You are effectively forcing hundreds of workers to go on strike for the day.

So go to the protests, the lib ones, the socialist ones, the planned parenthood ones, and talk to them about blockades. A lot of times, folks will follow anyone with a bullhorn and a banner. They're the clipboard and yellow vest of protests.

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