reallifedocumentarian:

ankh-kush:

This has gotta be the coolest thing I’ve ever seen on the internet
Black Panther Party and the Asian American Political Alliance

The very birth of the term Asian American came from a rejection of white supremacy, institutional racism and in full support of Black Power [via the Asian American Political Alliance, particularly in regards to the work being done by the Black Panthers]. We stood together. Some of us still stand together. We must stand together again.
I fucking love this gif.

reallifedocumentarian:

ankh-kush:

This has gotta be the coolest thing I’ve ever seen on the internet

Black Panther Party and the Asian American Political Alliance

The very birth of the term Asian American came from a rejection of white supremacy, institutional racism and in full support of Black Power [via the Asian American Political Alliance, particularly in regards to the work being done by the Black Panthers]. We stood together. Some of us still stand together. We must stand together again.

I fucking love this gif.

sinidentidades:

New York City, September 1969

sinidentidades:

New York City, September 1969

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

520 years of resistance to racism, slavery and genocide!

We should all kick off Columbus day with an abundance of native american heritage information and struggles as well as discussions of general white washing of history.

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

520 years of resistance to racism, slavery and genocide!

We should all kick off Columbus day with an abundance of native american heritage information and struggles as well as discussions of general white washing of history.

To the Peoples of the World
To the Occupy Movement
To the Oakland Commune
To Our Sisters and Brothers in Struggle on the Other Side of the Border

We don’t need to remind you of the deep connections between Wall Street, Gringo Capitalism and our Mexican misery. From Imperialist wars to the initial experiments in agrobiotechnology, Mexico has been the principal landscape for offensives by northern capital. We have participated and continue to, in the uprising of the Zapatistas against the neoliberal attack of NAFTA. The uprising which set the spark for the movement against neoliberalism. We met each other at the summits of Seattle, Prague, Genoa, Miami and Cancun. We met each other through a great global conversation.

It’s been a long time since we fought together in the movement against neoliberalism and the world has changed since those times. Today the narco war is devastating our society. As two sides of the same coin, on one side we have the narco and on the other the militarization of the country. These two faces are crushing us from both sides. Although it seems like they fight, they are both at the service of capital and in the modern world local capital is connected in a strong fashion to global capital. In the last few months we have learned these connections between Wall Street and narco money. According to one analysis, narco money was the liquid capital necessary to rescue the banking sector from the initial hits of the financial crisis in 2008 [1].

Further, the huge quantity of drug profits needs a laundromat just as large. Although we don’t have a detailed balance, we know that Wall Street facilitates this laundering. For example according to the US justice department, one bank, Wachovia, laundered $378 billion narco dollars from Mexico between only 2004 and 2007. This bank fell and ironically was acquired by Wells Fargo, the same bank which still has the salaries of our fathers and grandfathers who worked in the bracero program. The same bank which funds detention centers for immigrants where our brothers and sisters die only trying to provide for their families.

But in Mexico there isn’t only the cultivation of misery. Here we drew one of the first lines of struggle against global capitalism in our laboratory of resistance. With humility in front of you, our comrades, we would like to tell of our experience. Encampments and occupations are common in Mexico and comrades joke about the lack of space to put up more encampments. But this isn’t by chance and was won through struggle.

One recent example: in 2006, in the state of Oaxaca, the local teachers union setup an encampment in the center of Oaxaca City during their annual collective bargaining. One morning, on the 14th of June, the state police tried to take down the camp of the teachers and the city rose up, they not only retook the plaza but kicked the police out of the city. The Commune of Oaxaca was born on this day and the following 6 months transformed Oaxaca and the participants in the uprising.

Like you, they also had problems of repression and representation. Against the repression they put up thousands of barricades each night to protect the population from the murderous paramilitaries of Governor Ulises Ruiz, who they struggled to kick out. Against the lying representation of the media, they took over their television and radio studios, collectivized the resources and began to have conversations that had never been had by those means.

We are following closely everything that is happening in Oakland. The police kill youth like Oscar Grant [2] and gravely injure anti-war veterans such as Scott Olsen [3]. The media lies about the popular participation in the movement and they propagate superficial divisions. The self-defense and sefl-representation of our movements are essential to our collective struggle. We invite you to learn from our experiences and we hope to learn from yours. Together and in concert we are toppling this miserable system.

In our stories you will see your story.

We Walk by Asking, We Reclaim by Occupying.

From Mexico with total support for Occupy Oakland.

SIGNED:
jóvenes en resistencia alternativa
Universidad de la Tierra en Oaxaca, A.C.
Colectivo Radio Zapatista
Regeneración Radio
Colectivo Cordyceps
Colectivo Noticias de la Rebelion
Amig@s de Mumia de Mexico
Furia de las Calles
El Centro Cultural La Piramide
Marea Creciente México (Capítulo del red internacional por justícia climática Rising Tide)
Konvergencia Gráfica
Sublevarte Collective
Hacklab Autónomo
El Enemigo Común
Centro Social Okupado “Casa Naranja”

Gustavo Esteva, Oaxaca, México
Bocafloja, DF, México
Patricia Westendarp, Querétaro, México
Alejandro Reyes Arias, Chiapas, México
José Rabasa, México
Cristian Guerrero, México

"That’s the sound of history being made. That’s the sound of revolution. And that’s the sound of a democracy being born. — They sure as hell wanna be on the winning side, and here’s the deepest truth.. We ARE going to win. When the government becomes destructive of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness it is the right of the people to alter, abolish it."

Derrick Jensen - Occupy DC 10-7-11 2/2

dieeinsamkeitalsmensch:

evanfleischer:

thelifetimenetwork:

Mainstream US media outlets are ignoring the Occupy Wall Street protest today.

Al Jazeera isn’t. Keep up to date here.

If by “mainstream,” you mean The New York Times, CBS, CNN, and ABC, then, yeah, they’re totally ignoring it.

Though credit to Al Jazeera for being so good.

Update: 5:21PM: TPM just joined the coverage fray.

The major media outlets offer us nothing. Spread the info on this event through every possible alternative means.

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

August 8 - Third night of anti-racist rebellion in London

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

August 8 - Third night of anti-racist rebellion in London

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

Chilean student protester vs. riot cop

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

Chilean student protester vs. riot cop

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

Protesters wave Egyptian flags and chant slogans as they gather in Tahrir Square, the focal point of the Egyptian uprising, in Cairo, Egypt, July 8, 2011. 
Thousands of Egyptians took to the streets around the country Friday to demand justice for victims of Hosni Mubarak’s regime and press the new military rulers for a clear plan of transition to democracy. The banner in the background, in Arabic, reads, “the free people are behind bars and the killers are free.”

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

Protesters wave Egyptian flags and chant slogans as they gather in Tahrir Square, the focal point of the Egyptian uprising, in Cairo, Egypt, July 8, 2011.

Thousands of Egyptians took to the streets around the country Friday to demand justice for victims of Hosni Mubarak’s regime and press the new military rulers for a clear plan of transition to democracy. The banner in the background, in Arabic, reads, “the free people are behind bars and the killers are free.”

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

Hundreds of thousands of Yemeni anti-government protesters rally in the city of Ibb, saying that President Ali Abdullah Saleh is “politically dead,” July 8, 2011.

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

Hundreds of thousands of Yemeni anti-government protesters rally in the city of Ibb, saying that President Ali Abdullah Saleh is “politically dead,” July 8, 2011.

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

Thousands of demonstrators have flooded Cairo’s now-iconic Tahrir Square and other rallying points across the country to demand immediate reforms and swifter prosecution of former officials from the toppled government of Hosni Mubarak.

Friday’s “March of the Million”, as protesters are calling the new uprising, is expected to be the biggest demonstration since the fall of Mubarak on February 11.

Many Egyptians feel that little has changed since the regime was forced out, and the nationwide protests are the latest calls for the country’s interim military rulers to provide a roadmap towards democracy, jobs and infrastructure improvements.

Most of Egypt’s political parties and coalitions, including the Muslim Brotherhood, supported widespread calls for the protest to be staged across Egypt. Hundreds of protesters gathered in Suez and Alexandria, among other locations.

“The main frustration here is over the release of the officers accused of killing protesters during the revolution is the main focus of the people here,” said Al Jazeera correspondent Sherine Tadros from Suez. “What people here are asking for is justice and faster trials of those responsible for the killings of protesters.

Tadros added that the military is trying to maintain control and show a visible presence in Suez.

“However, they are careful not to overshadow the protesters to make it out in many ways that they are here to stop the protest,” Tadros said.

Five months after the revolution, many activists behind Friday’s protest say few of the goals of the original uprising have been achieved. One rallying point is the claim that military rulers have failed to provide justice for the victims of the former regime.

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

Athens, Greece: A telecommunications relay van burns in Syntagma Square during protests against austerity measures, June 28, 2011.

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

Athens, Greece: A telecommunications relay van burns in Syntagma Square during protests against austerity measures, June 28, 2011.

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

May 22, 2011: Six Nations youth and supporters reclaim the old Police Station in  “Ohsweken” (on the Six Nations Grand River Territory in Ontario) following a  march. A banner which reads “Welcome to the  Onkwehonwe Youth Centre” now covers the former “Police” logo on the front of the  building.

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

May 22, 2011: Six Nations youth and supporters reclaim the old Police Station in “Ohsweken” (on the Six Nations Grand River Territory in Ontario) following a march. A banner which reads “Welcome to the Onkwehonwe Youth Centre” now covers the former “Police” logo on the front of the building.