I think one reason I enjoyed this article is because I had no idea who Leonora Carrington was. I still don't know what she's going to do next.
Some of her art is on wikiart: https://www.wikiart.org/en/leonora-carrington
The latest Harley Poe album is best Harley Poe album.
"In the spring of 2015 a group of anarchist and prison abolitionists worked together to experiment with a pirate radio station that broadcasted into a prison. The project lasted nine months before it was raided and shut down by a coalition of law enforcement. Transmissions in a Hostile Territory is a reflection on that project, how we did it and what we learned from the following legal case. The intention of the zine is to encourage creative engagement in the anti-prison struggle. Fire to prisons, until every cage is empty!"
Direct link to imposed PDF: https://itsgoingdown.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/radio.pdf
People either love me or they hate me, or they don't really care. --banksy
"On this episode, Kumars is joined by first-time guest host Deellan Kashani, our resident Kurdish expert who wrote her undergraduate thesis on radical political organization in the Kurdish-controlled autonomous region of Rojava in northern Syria. Our guest is Brace Belden (better known by his former Twitter handle, @PissPigGranddad), a florist who recently returned from fighting with the Kurdish YPG forces to defend Rojava against ISIS."
This guy linked to my article on Joe Hill in the description of his video analysis of PewDiePie's name.
A long Austin Chronicle article on the Red Guards Austin. My favorite part is when the assistant chief of police calls them "anarchists". Marxist-Leninists love that.
I was happy to discover that the "Urban Camping Ban" is a significant portion of the Wikipedia article on downtown Denver.
(I read this revision: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Downtown_Denver&oldid=743430248)
A NYMag piece on PissPigGranddad's six-month tour of duty with the YPG in Syria. This article includes quite a bit of overlap with the Rolling Stones article I have linked to before, but it's even better.
Magpie Killjoy on being an anarchist then and now.
'I refuse to be like them': why the man shot while protesting Milo Yiannopoulos doesn't want revenge
I'm definitely glad this guy is walking around again.
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Dukes was studying the prison system at the time of the shooting, reading books like Slavery by Another Name and watching the documentary 13th, and he believes in the abolition of prisons.
“She’s going to go into a system that will eat her alive and that’s awful,” he says of Elizabeth Hokoana. “It’s hard to wish that on anyone.”
“Right now, we’re continually escalating violence,” Dukes said of the divide between the right and the left. “Maybe if we can have a larger conversation, maybe we can turn this thing around. We have to start seeing each other as people, and talk about how other people are people.”
“I refuse not to recognize these people as people, because I refuse to be like them.”
It's almost unbelievable to me how much effort law enforcement put into identifying someone accused of throwing an unlit molotov at a protest.
If I had just known that back in November, I never would have voted for Trump.
The first randomized trial of industrial employment on workers reveals that people DON'T like being coerced from their land to work in sweatshops. Surprise!
On Wednesday, April 5, 2017, after a day and a half of testimony, the jury for Denver’s first camping ban trial found the three co-defendants guilty. Jerry Burton and Randy Russell were each given a 6-month probation and ordered to complete 30 hours of community service, while Terese Howard has a 1-year probation and has to complete 60 hours of community service.
In one clip, Boyle criticizes an officer who had been telling homeless individuals that they have to take down their tents because it would be better for them to be in a shelter.
“Are you an expert in social change, or are you an expert in following orders?” asks Boyle, pointing his camera toward the officer in the cruiser.
The police officer bites his lip, then chuckles. “That’s not my job to change society,” the officer says.
“So then why are you giving advice [to the homeless].... Isn’t your job to be here and follow orders?” Boyle retorts.
The frustrating thing is that capitalists like Kevin Crissey and Jamie Baker have more class-consciousness than most workers.
Randall Munroe's low-frame-rate animated short about a boy and a girl who go for a hike in the Mediterranean.