Iconoclast Media

Archive for the 'Media' Category

June 27, 2010- TCMN Press Statement

The G8/G20 are anti-democratic illegitimate institutions that inflict daily violence on our communities. Everywhere the G8 and G20 have met to further their exploitative agendas – from London to Pittsburgh to Toronto - they have faced huge opposition from local communities. The kind of mass resistance we have seen in Toronto has and will continue to follow them wherever they go.

For several months, communities across Toronto have been coming together to resist the imposition of austerity measures advanced at the G8/G20 summits. The Harper government spends 1.2 billion taxpayer dollars to host the G8/G20 summits while it cuts social spending in ways that have drastic impacts people in the Toronto area and other parts of Canada.

Since these communities have come together, the police have been using intimidation tactics to repress and silence people in the Toronto community. Police and intelligence officers went to community organizers’ homes and harassed them in the streets. Now they have arrested many of these people, many of them young organizers of color, and charged them with conspiracy.

These people hold the Harper government to account and they speak out against policies that are making ordinary people poorer, sicker and more desperate. As a result, they have been intimidated, harassed, and imprisoned. They are political prisoners in this country, where the police repression shows that its claims of democracy are simply window dressing.

While police continue to intimidate people, individuals and community members keep going out in the streets to show that they are not afraid and stand with political prisoners as well as oppressed peoples – first nations communities, immigrants and refugees, poor people, people of color, women, trans people, people with disabilities and queer communities.

The police intimidation and repression added to the anger and frustration people have with the G8/G20 policies and leaders that destroy their lives and the lives of people around the world. This is why people targeted banks and multinational corporations, and the property of police.

Ultimately, 1 billion dollars were spent on beating people who were demonstrating throughout the week, on intimidating community members in the streets, on arresting organizers of color and indigenous solidarity organizers, on sending demonstrators to hospital with broken bones, and on using tear gas on those in the so-called designated “free speech” zone. 1 billion dollars has not been used to protect people and to keep the city safe. Instead it has been used to repress the people who are working to make this city, and planet a fairer, more just, and more humane place.

Toronto Community Mobilization Network

Share/Save/Bookmark

posted by admin in Anarchism, G20, Labour, Media, Politics, Rebellion, Repression and have No Comments

G20 Protests Heat Up

Many in Canada are furious with the world leaders gathered there. Thousands marched through Toronto to protest over the G8 and G20 summits.

Share/Save/Bookmark

posted by admin in Anarchism, Economy, G20, Labour, Media, Politics, Rebellion, Repression and have No Comments

Media Review: The Dominion G20 Special Issue

The Dominion shows that there is more to be told; critical coverage that moves from the boardrooms to the global streets, clears the gas clouds, takes off the masks and confronts the forgotten and un(der)-reported issues. The mainstream media portrays these summits as rigid dichotomies of mask-clad protesters clashing with faceless riot police in a cloud of tear gas, all while world leaders try to right the global economic ship.

The Dominion is a project of Canada’s first media cooperative, jointly owned and democratically controlled by its readers, contributors and editors. The Dominion is affiliated with the Toronto Media Co-op, a grassroots media project taking aim at forgotten, skipped over, and poorly reported stories that reflect the reality of life in the metropolis. During the G8 and G20 summits, the Toronto Media Co-op aims to be a hub for independent, critical coverage.

The Dominion remains one of the best media sources about social and political issues in Canada, and this special issue once again shows why.

http://www.dominionpaper.ca
http://www.toronto.mediacoop.ca

Share/Save/Bookmark

posted by admin in G20, Media, Media Review and have No Comments

Anarchists scapegoats for RBC arson

Despite widespread claims by the media, there is no indication that the recent “firebombing” of an RBC bank branch in Ottawa was carried out by “anarchists”.

Nowhere in the statement or video that was published online was it claimed that those responsible were anarchists.

For the media to claim that this is the work of anarchists without any evidence is the worst sort of red-baiting and gets a F grade in basic journalism.

We have no idea what the politics of those who did this are. We also can’t rule out the possibility that this act was carried out by agent-provocateurs.

“This act should also be put in the context of the significant violence that is perpetrated on a daily basis by the state capitalist system such as the violence of war, poverty, colonialism and environmental destruction. While we seek to build resistance based on mass movements of working and oppressed peoples, we understand why people are angry at the banks”, says Common Cause Ottawa member Kyle James.

Anarchism is not about violence and chaos. Anarchism is about creating a highly organized and democratic society, free of hierarchy and exploitation.

As anarchists, we support the building of revolutionary, democratic, mass movements that will challenge capitalism directly through labour and community organizing and mass direct action such as strikes, picket lines and occupations.

We believe in the power of millions of working-class people standing together against the bankers, bosses, and their states. We need unlimited general strikes of all workers across Canada and internationally to defeat the attacks on the working class by the capitalists.

Workers, including bank workers, have nothing to fear from anarchists. Together the working class has the power to shut this entire capitalist system down and work for our own needs instead of the profits of the bosses.

Common Cause is an Ontario anarchist organization with branches in Ottawa, London, Toronto and Hamilton.

A french translation of this press release can be obtained here.

Common Cause
http://linchpin.ca
commoncauseontario@gmail.com

Share/Save/Bookmark

posted by admin in Anarchism, G20, Media, Rebellion and have No Comments

Media Review: Agents of Repression

Calling the FBI ‘America’s political police’, this book examines the agency’s harassment, surveillance, and disruption of black and Native American groups in the 1960s and 1970s, and shows how it sought to maintain the sociopolitical status quo within the country. The authors demonstrate how the FBI’s covert counter-intelligence program known as COINTELPRO, which was set up to undermine radical groups, came to symbolize clandestine political repression activities.

Agents of Repression features one of the best histories of the FBI siege of Wounded Knee, the FBI efforts against the Black Panthers, and the development of COINTELPRO. While the FBI seems a less flagrantly violent organization now than in the 1970s, readers will learn why America’s political police force remains a threat to those committed to fundamental social change.

“This study gives a chilling account of the government attack against AIM and the Black Panthers, placed in the context of the traditional use of the FBI for domestic political repression. It is a powerful indictment, with far-reaching implications.”

—Noam Chomsky

Share/Save/Bookmark

posted by admin in Media, Repression and have No Comments

Hamilton Anarchist Book Fair

Hamilton Anarchist Book Fair, June 5, 2010 — Join us for the Third Annual Hamilton Anarchist Book Fair, presented by Common Cause. Special guests include Peter Gelderloos, author of How Nonviolence Protects The State, and Gord Hill, author of 500 Years of Indigenous Resistance.

Admission is free. Child care available. Runs from 10am to 4pm at Westdale High School, 700 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario.

Share/Save/Bookmark

posted by admin in Anarchism, Crisis, Economy, Labour, Media and have No Comments

Parecon Today: An Interview with Michael Albert

By Chris Spannos

Where did parecon come from? What is its history?

Participatory economics, or parecon, came mainly from the cumulative struggles of diverse populations trying to win liberation from capitalism. Parecon owes, in particular, to the anarchist and the libertarian socialist heritage, to the most recent experiences of the New Left of the Sixties, but also to every historical uprising and project aimed at eliminating class rule from the beginning to the present. It has learned from successes and from failures.

I once heard about a strike, billed as the first, by Egyptian peasants against a Pharaoh who moved from requiring six days labor on the pyramid a week, to requiring seven days, and from providing food to providing nothing. I think parecon harks back all the way to that uprising. I think it owes to every essay, speech, and book, and to every activist project and movement that has tried to shed light on the meaning or practice of classlessness.

Parecon meaning classlessness most broadly was born when revolutionaries of various camps began imagining and seeking a classless economy. Kropotkin, Rocker, Bakunin, Pannekoek. That’s what parecon is, a classless economy. It is not capitalism but it is also not an economy ruled by roughly a fifth of the population that monopolizes empowering conditions. In parecon a few participants don’t dominate the remaining participants.

Parecon itself, the model, came into being more recently, however, with a particular conception of defining institutions, when Robin Hahnel and I thought through our reactions to various schools of anti capitalist activism, and set out our views in a book titled Looking Forward, about sixteen years ago. Since then parecon has been repeatedly refined, partly in its conception, but mostly in how to communicate about it.

What are the central institutional features of parecon which, if they were absent, then an economy wouldn’t be a parecon anymore? And beyond the features essential to being a parecon, what range of variety and choice is there in any specific participatory economy?

The central features of the model called parecon are workers and consumers self managed councils, balanced job complexes, remuneration for duration, intensity, and onerousness of socially valued labor, and participatory planning.

I think these institutional features are to the parecon model what private ownership, corporate divisions of labor, remuneration for property, power, and output, and market allocation are to capitalism. You can’t have a classless economy without these defining features.

But just as capitalism comes in many shapes, often dramatically different from one instance to the next, and just as this diversity of capitalisms is not due solely to countries having different populations, resources, levels of technology, or differences in other parts of social life, but also owes to countless variations in the implementation of key economic features and in the implementation of endless second, third, and fourth order economic features as well - the same will hold for actual participatory economies.

Thus, different instances of participatory economy will differ in the details of how labor is measured, how jobs are balanced, how councils meet and make decisions, how participatory planning is carried out, and, beyond that, in all manner of less central attributes within and between workplaces and communities.

It is a debilitating mistake to get caught up in seeking an inflexible, unvarying blueprint. Parecon is not inflexible or unvarying. It no more specifies the details of all future parecons than any broad description of capitalism’s defining features tell us everything about the U.S., Sweden, Chile, and South Africa. The model shows central defining features, no more, no less.

You say balanced job complexes are also central to classlessness, and that classlessness can’t do without them. How do you arrive at that claim?

We want classlessness and by definition of what classes are, that means that we can’t have our economic institutions giving some producers more power which they use to accumulate excessive wealth, better conditions, and so on.

We know that if we let people own means of production and determine its use they will dominate outcomes and accumulate extreme wealth. Parecon, seeking classlessness, excludes that. That much is straightforward.

But it also turns out that if some people do only rote and tedious, obedient labor, while other people do only work that involves empowering conditions, the former traditional workers, will be dominated by the latter group who I call the coordinator class. The logic of seeking balanced job complexes stems from this observation.

With balanced job complexes, we honor expertise, of course, but each worker does a mix of tasks - not solely rote or solely empowering - so that everyone is comparably and sufficiently prepared by their economic position to participate in self managing councils. We have to have balanced job complexes, in which we all have a mix of tasks of comparable empowerment impact, to avoid a division of labor that separates a coordinator class above from a working class below.

What difference can parecon make now? Is this vision just for the future, or can it matter in the present, and if so, how?

I am baffled when people say vision has no implications. To me it is like saying to someone looking for their terminal at the airport, hey, where you want to go has no relevance, just tell me how you are feeling about where you are, that is enough to decide your terminal. You see the problem. You can’t have good activist strategy, good organizational structure, good policies in the movement, or good policies regarding the broader society, unless you know what you are trying to attain. Without vision, you can make your strategy fit your current means and assets. You can make it oppose what you dislike. But you can’t orient it to arrive at a preferred destination. How many times must people suffer the disasters of directionless activism before we elevate having a destination to priority importance?

[www.zcommunications.org/parecon-today-by-michael-albert]

Share/Save/Bookmark

posted by admin in Crisis, Economy, Labour, London, Media, Politics and have No Comments

Steal Something From Work Day VIDEO!

Our comrades at Submedia have teamed up with Iconoclast Media to produce the above video short, an exciting follow-up to the first STEAL SOMETHING FROM WORK DAY video.

Share/Save/Bookmark

posted by admin in Anarchism, Commercialism, Labour, Media, Rebellion and have No Comments

Announcing First London (Ontario) Anarchist Bookfair

Announcing the 1st Ever LONDON (Ontario) ANARCHIST BOOKFAIR!

Anarchists in London, Ontario are pleased to announce that we have formed a collective and are in the process of planning the biggest anarchist event our city has ever seen! On October 22-24, 2010, all roads lead to LONDON! We are now looking for accomplices! Consider this an open invitation to scheme with us. We’re looking for anarchist book distributors and publishers, anarchist musicians, anarchist artists, anarchist poets, anarchist speakers, anarchist authors, anarchist everything! We are anarchists without adjectives but we don’t hate adjective bearing anarchists. We want your insurrectionists, your syndicalists, your lifestylists, your primitivists, your anarcha-feminists, your radical queer bash backers, your straight-edge vegans, your drunken anarcho-punk hooligans, your pirates, and of course traveler kids (cuz they’re likely to travel here).

The schedule we have decided on is this:

Friday Oct. 22nd:

5PM: Opening ceremony and speaker
7PM: March Against Police Brutality
9PM: ANARCHIST PUNK SHOW!

Saturday Oct. 23rd:

9AM: Vegan Pancake Breakfast
10AM-6PM: 1st LONDON ANARCHIST BOOKFAIR
10AM-6PM: ANARCHIST ART GALLERY/SILENT AUCTION
6PM: keynote speaker (TBA)
8PM: Anarchist Variety Show!

Sunday Oct. 24th:

10AM-5PM Workshops at various radical spaces throughout the city.

Actions Against Eco-Criminals throughout the day (supposedly someone designated this ‘THE’ day of action against climate change so we should do as much as we can within the confines of this 24 hour period)

Contact us at londonanarchistbookfair@gmail.com to get involved in organizing, reserve a table, host a workshop, organize another event or action, perform at shows, have art at art gallery, offer to help with food or childcare, offer housing, donate to our currently broke-ass collective, condemn us for self-commodification, or simply to say you’re gonna come!

Share/Save/Bookmark

posted by admin in Anarchism, London, Media and have Comment (1)

Ann Coulter @ UWO

Coverage of Ann Coulter’s recent visit to UWO.

CBC

London Free Press

UWO Gazette

nationalpost

the Star

Share/Save/Bookmark

posted by admin in London, Media, On Campus, Politics and have No Comments