Anarchy Works Anarchy Works by Peter Gelderloos
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Resistance: Do the Ends Justify the Means?
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/282069814 Resistance: Do the Ends Justify the Means? Article · July 2014 DOI: 10.5822/978-1-61091-458-1_28 CITATIONS READS 2 40 1 author: Bron Raymond Taylor University of Florida 78 PUBLICATIONS 1,012 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: Radical Environmentalism (interdisciplinary analysis of) View project Biological conservation and ethics: human rights, animal rights, earth rights View project All content following this page was uploaded by Bron Raymond Taylor on 02 January 2017. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. State of the World 2013 IS SUSTAINABILITY Still Possible? THE WORLDWATCH INSTITUTE CHAPTER 28 Resistance: Do the Ends Justify the Means? Bron Taylor Has the time come for a massive wave of direct action resistance to acceler- ating rates of environmental degradation around the world—degradation that is only getting worse due to climate change? Is a new wave of direct action resistance emerging, one similar but more widespread than that sparked by Earth First!, the first avowedly “radical” environmental group? The radical environmental movement, which was formed in the United States in 1980, controversially transformed environmental politics by en- gaging in and promoting civil disobedience and sabotage as environmen- talist tactics. By the late 1980s and into the 1990s, when the most militant radical environmentalists adopted the Earth Liberation Front name, arson was increasingly deployed. The targets included gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles, U.S. Forest Service and timber company offices, resorts and com- mercial developments expanding into wildlife habitat, and universities and corporations engaged in research creating genetically modified organisms. -
Culture of Resistance – Interview with Lierre Keith, Co-Author of Deep Green Resistance: Strategy to Save the Planet (With
Culture of Resistance – Interview with Lierre Keith, co-author of Deep Green Resistance: Strategy to Save the Planet (with Derrick Jensen and Aric McBay – Seven Stories Press, 2011) Helen Moore: Many people reading this will have woken up to the fact that industrial civilisation is having catastrophic effects on our planet, and they may also be engaged in artistic or scientific endeavours to address the ecological and spiritual crisis we collectively face. Human consciousness is clearly at a crossroads right now, and there’s growing awareness of our deep interconnection with all beings and a need for radical change in how we live. However, you and your co-authors have concluded that for life on Earth to be preserved, we require a co-ordinated resistance movement. Could you begin by talking about this? Lierre Keith: Your question cuts to the heart of the difference between liberalism and radicalism. For liberals, social reality is constituted of thoughts and ideas. This is called idealism. Social change, then, happens through education, through rational discussion and discourse. It happens by changing people’s minds. In contrast, radicals understand that society is made up of material institutions that organize the subordination of one group to another. Education is always a necessary activity for a resistance movement, but education for what purpose? If education is the end goal, that’s a liberal approach. For radicals, education raises consciousness and gives people the tools to name their experience and hopefully they are then inspired to join a resistance movement. That’s the goal of political education. It’s that resistance that confronts and dismantles the structures of power. -
WHY WE ARE FEMINISTS by Lierre Keith GET INVOLVED
DEEP GREEN RESISTANCE (DGR) IS A MOVEMENT BASED PARTLY ON THE BOOK, BY DERRICK JENSEN, LIERRE KEITH, AND ARIC MCBAY CALLED DEEP GREEN RESISTANCE: STRATEGY TO SAVE THE PLANET. DGR HAS A PLAN OF ACTION FOR ANYONE DETERMINED TO WHY WE ARE FIGHT FOR THIS PLanet—and WIN. SUBSCRIBE TO THE WEBSITE, GIVE FEEDBACK, AND LET OTHERS KNOW. TAKE ACTION. START OR JOIN A DGR FEMINISTS ACTION GROUP. VOLUNTEER. BY GET INVOLVED Website: deepgreenresistancenewyork.wordpress.com LIERRE KEITH Facebook.com/dgrnewyork Phone: (917) 830-3595 E-mail: [email protected] deepgreenresistance.org WHY WE ARE FEMINISTS: • Langford, Rae and June D. Thompson. Mosby’s Handbook of Dis- eases, 3rd Edition. St. Louis, MO: Elsevier Health Sciences, 2005. THE FEMINIST FRAMEWORK OF DGR • Lenskyj, Helen. “An Analysis of Violence Against Women: A Manu- BY LIERRE KEITH al for Educators and Administrators.” Toronto: Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, 1992. • Jeffreys, Sheila. “Sado-Masochism: The Erotic Cult of Fascism.” Q: Is DGR a feminist organization? Lesbian Ethics 2, No. 1, Spring 1986. A: Unconditionally yes. • Smedley, Audrey. Race in North America: Origin and Evolution of a Worldview. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 2007. In the words of Andrea Dworkin, “Feminism is the political • “UN calls for strong action to eliminate violence against wom- en.” UN News Centre. http://www.un.org/apps/news/story. practice of fighting male supremacy in behalf of women as asp?NewsID=16674&Cr=&Cr1=. a class.”1 SUGGESTED READING • Andrea Dworkin. Life and Death. New York: The Free Press, 1997. Let’s start with the phrase “women as a class.” From a radical • Cordelia Fine. -
Difference Between Anarchy and the Academy
The Difference between Anarchy and the Academy Peter Gelderloos 2009 I recently had the opportunity to participate in the international academic con- ference, “Hierarchy and Power in the History of Civilizations,” put on by the Rus- sian Academy of Sciences, in Moscow. I was on two panels focused on building alternatives to hierarchy and current state repression of social movements. I find this amusing because I am a college dropout: I didn’t even finish three semesters of university, I generally dislike academics, and I believe the academy is one of the institutions of power that need to be abolished. Of over a hundred participants, I think I was one of only two who were not a PhD or a PhD candidate (and the other lowbrow was on the same panels as I) and the only one without any university de- gree. It would have been funny and worthwhile if I had scammed my way there — in fact university credentials are easy to forge, so radicals who want to be teachers need not waste five years of their lives getting the right papers. But in thiscaseI was invited by the panel organizers, who also have their criticisms of the academy and wanted to put together panels without so great a theoretical remove from the actuality of social movements and repression. If I were an anthropologist I could write quite an ethnology about that queer tribe of academics. But from my vantage as an anarchist I can find even more to say. It would be as easy as dogma to point out that the academy is one of the rul- ing institutions, therefore it’s our enemy, and that’s the end of it. -
Human-Computer Insurrection
Human-Computer Insurrection Notes on an Anarchist HCI Os Keyes∗ Josephine Hoy∗ Margaret Drouhard∗ University of Washington University of Washington University of Washington Seattle, WA, USA Seattle, WA, USA Seattle, WA, USA [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] ABSTRACT 2019), May 4–9, 2019, Glasgow, Scotland, UK. ACM, New York, NY, The HCIcommunity has worked to expand and improve our USA, 13 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/3290605.3300569 consideration of the societal implications of our work and our corresponding responsibilities. Despite this increased 1 INTRODUCTION engagement, HCI continues to lack an explicitly articulated "You are ultimately—consciously or uncon- politic, which we argue re-inscribes and amplifies systemic sciously—salesmen for a delusive ballet in oppression. In this paper, we set out an explicit political vi- the ideas of democracy, equal opportunity sion of an HCI grounded in emancipatory autonomy—an an- and free enterprise among people who haven’t archist HCI, aimed at dismantling all oppressive systems by the possibility of profiting from these." [74] mandating suspicion of and a reckoning with imbalanced The last few decades have seen HCI take a turn to exam- distributions of power. We outline some of the principles ine the societal implications of our work: who is included and accountability mechanisms that constitute an anarchist [10, 68, 71, 79], what values it promotes or embodies [56, 57, HCI. We offer a potential framework for radically reorient- 129], and how we respond (or do not) to social shifts [93]. ing the field towards creating prefigurative counterpower—systems While this is politically-motivated work, HCI has tended to and spaces that exemplify the world we wish to see, as we avoid making our politics explicit [15, 89]. -
World Behind Bars: the Expansion of the American Prison Sell
The Anarchist Library Anti-Copyright World Behind Bars: The Expansion of the American Prison Sell Peter Gelderloos and Patrick Lincoln 2005 Peter Gelderloos and Patrick Lincoln World Behind Bars: The Expansion of the American Prison Sell 2005 Scanned from self-published pamphlet Edited by Peter Gelderloos from materials compiled by Patrick Lincoln and Peter Gelderloos. Signalfire Press, 2005 theanarchistlibrary.org Contents What is prison? ....................... 6 Prison in the media ..................... 6 Why is it important to talk about prison? . 9 Not your typical prisoners . 10 Who is going to prison, and for what? . 11 Judicial Racism ........................ 12 Conditions in prison ..................... 15 Prisoners’ stories ....................... 21 How prison authorities maintain control . 23 Control in higher security and jail . 26 Control in minimum security . 30 Prison on the outside .................... 32 The Prison-Industrial Complex . 33 Violent and Controlling Intervention . 42 Repressing Dissent ...................... 48 Peddling Fear, Selling Security . 52 Breaking Down Walls: Anti-Prison Organizing and Movement Building . 56 Policy Activism v. Power Activism . 57 Reform vs. Revolution .................... 59 Sustaining Activism ..................... 59 Academic Activism ..................... 60 War at Home ......................... 60 Morality of the State ..................... 61 Post Script: December 10, 2005 . 62 Recommended Resources . 64 3 NW 80th St. #148, Seattle WA 98117) a newsletter written forand founded by prisoners. • www.jerichony.org/prisoners.html • www.prisonactivist.org • www.breakthechains.net • www.anarchistblackcross.org • www.abcf.net • www.november.org • www.famm.org • www.criticalresistance.org Support Prisoners: Write Them! A great list of political prisoners, with descriptions, is available from the Anarchist Black Cross Federation. You can find it online at www.abcf.net/abcf.asp?page=prisoners# Or find “normal” prisoners from your area and write them or visit them. -
Anarchist Solution to Global Warming
The Anarchist Library Anti-Copyright An Anarchist Solution to Global Warming Peter Gelderloos 2010 If the Green Capitalist response to climate change will only add more fuel to the fire, and if government at a global scale is incapable of solving the problem, as I argue in previous articles12, how would anarchists suggest we reorganize society in order to decrease the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere and to survive an already changed world? There is no single anarchist position, and many anarchists refuse to offer any proposal at all, arguing that if society liberates itself from State and capitalism, it will change organically, not on the lines of any blueprint. Besides, the attitude of policy, seeing the world from above and imposing changes, is inextricable from the Peter Gelderloos culture that is responsible for destroying the planet and oppressing An Anarchist Solution to Global Warming its inhabitants. 2010 Nonetheless, I want to outline one possible way we could or- Retrieved on 24 November 2010 from anarchistnews.org ganize our lives, not to make a concrete proposal, but because vi- sions make us stronger, and we all need the courage to break once theanarchistlibrary.org 1www.counterpunch.org 2news.infoshop.org and for all with the existing institutions and the false solutions they offer. For the purposes of this text I’m not going to enterinto any of the important debates regarding ideals — appropriate levels of technology, scale, organization, coordination, and formalization. I’m going to describe how an ecological, anti-authoritarian society could manifest itself, as it flows from the un-ideal complexity of the present moment. -
What Is Anarcho-Primitivism?
The Anarchist Library Anti-Copyright What is Anarcho-Primitivism? Anonymous Anonymous What is Anarcho-Primitivism? 2005 Retrieved on 11 December 2010 from blackandgreenbulletin.blogspot.com theanarchistlibrary.org 2005 Rousseau, Jean Jacques. (2001). On the Inequality among Mankind. Vol. XXXIV, Part 3. The Harvard Classics. (Origi- nal 1754). Retrieved November 13, 2005, from Bartleby.com: www.bartleby.com Sahlins, Marshall. (1972). “The Original Affluent Society.” 1–39. In Stone Age Economics. Hawthorne, New York: Aldine de Gruyter. Sale, Kirkpatrick. (1995a). Rebels against the future: the Luddites and their war on the Industrial Revolution: lessons for the computer age. New York: Addison-Wesley. — . (1995b, September 25). “Unabomber’s Secret Treatise: Is There Method In His Madness?” The Nation, 261, 9, 305–311. “Situationism”. (2002). The Art Industri Group. Retrieved Novem- ber 15, 2005, from Art Movements Directory: www.artmovements.co.uk Stobbe, Mike (2005, Dec 8). “U.S. Life Expectancy Hits All- Time High.” Retrieved December 8, 2005, from Yahoo! News: news.yahoo.com — Tucker, Kevin. (2003, Spring). “The Spectacle of the Symbolic.” Species Traitor: An Insurrectionary Anarcho-Primitivist Journal, 3, 15–21. U.S. Forestland by Age Class. Retrieved December 7, 2005, from Endgame Research Services: www.endgame.org Zerzan, John. (1994). Future Primitive and Other Essays. Brooklyn: Autonomedia. — . (2002, Spring). “It’s All Coming Down!” In Green Anarchy, 8, 3–3. — . (2002). Running on Emptiness: The Pathology of Civilisation. Los Angeles: Feral House. Zinn, Howard. (1997). “Anarchism.” 644–655. In The Zinn Reader: Writings on disobedience and democracy. New York: Seven Sto- ries. 23 Kassiola, Joel Jay. (1990) The Death of Industrial Civilization: The Limits to Economic Growth and the Repoliticization of Advanced Industrial Society. -
From 15M to Podemos
From 15M to Podemos The Regeneration of Spanish Democracy, and the Maligned Promise of Chaos by Peter Gelderloos I. Emergence Spring 2011. “This is our revolution! No barricades, nothing romantic like that, but what do we expect? It's a piece of shit, but we already knew this is the world we live in.” I was shoulder to shoulder with a friend, pushing through the swarming crowds, the tens of thousands that had coalesced out of the democratic desolation to fill Plaça Catalunya, Barcelona's central plaza. We were on our way back from a copy shop whose employees, also taken up in the fervor, let us print another five hundred copies of the latest open letter with a huge discount, easily paid for with all the change people were leaving in the donations jar at the info table we anarchists had set up. In less than an hour, all the pamphlets had been snatched up, we'd met more people who shared some of our ideas, had another couple engaging debates, another brief argument. Decades of social isolation had suddenly been drowned in a sudden, unexpected outpouring of social angst, anger, hope, a desire to relate. A million individual needs for the expression of collective needs: Yes, I need that, too. A million solitary voices recognizing themselves in a cry they all took up together: Yes, I am here, too. A million stories of loneliness finding themselves in a shared alienation: Yes, I feel that, too. It was hard not to get carried away. We felt it too. But in that commune of alienation we also felt a certain cynicism. -
Anarchist Pedagogies: Collective Actions, Theories, and Critical Reflections on Education Edited by Robert H
Anarchist Pedagogies: Collective Actions, Theories, and Critical Reflections on Education Edited by Robert H. Haworth Anarchist Pedagogies: Collective Actions, Theories, and Critical Reflections on Education Edited by Robert H. Haworth © 2012 PM Press All rights reserved. ISBN: 978–1–60486–484–7 Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927981 Cover: John Yates / www.stealworks.com Interior design by briandesign 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 PM Press PO Box 23912 Oakland, CA 94623 www.pmpress.org Printed in the USA on recycled paper, by the Employee Owners of Thomson-Shore in Dexter, Michigan. www.thomsonshore.com contents Introduction 1 Robert H. Haworth Section I Anarchism & Education: Learning from Historical Experimentations Dialogue 1 (On a desert island, between friends) 12 Alejandro de Acosta cHAPteR 1 Anarchism, the State, and the Role of Education 14 Justin Mueller chapteR 2 Updating the Anarchist Forecast for Social Justice in Our Compulsory Schools 32 David Gabbard ChapteR 3 Educate, Organize, Emancipate: The Work People’s College and The Industrial Workers of the World 47 Saku Pinta cHAPteR 4 From Deschooling to Unschooling: Rethinking Anarchopedagogy after Ivan Illich 69 Joseph Todd Section II Anarchist Pedagogies in the “Here and Now” Dialogue 2 (In a crowded place, between strangers) 88 Alejandro de Acosta cHAPteR 5 Street Medicine, Anarchism, and Ciencia Popular 90 Matthew Weinstein cHAPteR 6 Anarchist Pedagogy in Action: Paideia, Escuela Libre 107 Isabelle Fremeaux and John Jordan cHAPteR 7 Spaces of Learning: The Anarchist Free Skool 124 Jeffery Shantz cHAPteR 8 The Nottingham Free School: Notes Toward a Systemization of Praxis 145 Sara C. -
Gender Identity Bibliography
Gender Identity Ideology – A Partial Bibliography of Online Coverage Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities - Voltaire What good is a gender outlaw who is still abiding by the law of gender? - Janice Raymond Section 1- Actions and Resistance (speaking out, naming, refusing to be silent: this entire bibliography is filled with examples of resistance...these are just a few) http://manfridayuk.org/blog/ started off as one woman going to her local swimming pool on “men-only” day to demand they accept her as a man on her say-so https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5780623/Female-protesters-break-men-lido-leap- pool.html https://www.telegraph.co .uk/news/2019/10/23/stonewall-splits-accused-promoting-trans- agenda-expense-gay/ https://womansplaceuk.org/2019/10/24/misogyny-in-action-a-rebuttal-of-statement-by- trans-action-oxford/ https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/jenni-murray-transgender-real- women-sunday- times-magazine-womans-hour-a7612781.html longtime BBC TV program host who speaks of her anger at trans “women” claiming to be women https://www.feministcurrent.com/2019/02/11/interview-amy-eileen-hamm-and-holly- hutton-demonstrate-regular-women-can-change-the-conversation/ https://conatusnews.com/stephanie-davies-arai-transgender-trend-john-maddox-prize/ very significant short-listing for very prestigious science award to founder of Transgender Trend https://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/news/politics/joanna-cherry-calls-labour- candidate-apologise-sharing-terf-image-824843 https://www.holyrood.com/inside-politics/view,cofounder-of-stonewall-calls-for- -
Animal Ethics: Beyond Neutrality, Universality, and Consistency
Bangladesh Journal of Bioethics 2016; 7(3): 34-45 Original Article Animal Ethics: Beyond Neutrality, Universality, and Consistency Sreetama Chakraborty Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy Belda College, West Midnapore, West Bengal, India Email: [email protected] Abstract: This paper reflects a possibility of going beyond the postmodernists’ way of ethically examining non-human animals based on the tripartite pillars of neutrality, universality, and consistency. My concentration focuses on some interrelated queries, such as – What does animal ethics conventionally mean? How did power, hierarchy, and domination separate humans from other animals? How does the fate of non-human animals (whether they ought to be morally considered or not) depend on humans’ moral values? How far is it justified to secure animal rights in the age of perilous animal use, especially for food or during animal experimentation? While examining these issues, I bring into light the several arguments and positions put forward by thinkers such as Jeremy Bentham, Peter Singer, Tom Regan, Carl Cohen, Brian Berry, and others. Moreover, my search is for a non-anthropocentric sustainable paradigm, to balance human interests and animal needs together, in order to sustain the future generations of human and non-human intimacy. Key Words : Animal Ethics, Sentience, Universality, Moral Values, Animal Experimentation, Sustainable ethics. Introduction: The aim of this paper is to, first, analyze the postmodernists’ approach to animal ethics that is a departure from the traditional way of doing animal ethics adopted especially by the analytic thinkers, and, second, to interpret it in the light of socio-cultural construction. Conventionally, the ethical considerability of non-human animals is judged in the context of standard moral ethical theories such as virtue ethics, consequentialism, and deontology.