Russia’s Working Poor
“I hear the call to be a patriot from every radio, TV set, and kitchen appliance. What are you going on about, guys? I have been humiliated my entire life, paid crumbs for a difficult job.”
Russia’s Working Poor Read More »
“I hear the call to be a patriot from every radio, TV set, and kitchen appliance. What are you going on about, guys? I have been humiliated my entire life, paid crumbs for a difficult job.”
Russia’s Working Poor Read More »
The protesters’ grievances have been reasonably clear: price hikes, unemployment, and poverty—and in a dictatorship this inevitably evolved towards more political slogans against corruption and against the dictator.
“Excuse us, now we have to stand up.” Read More »
On December 19, protests against the KRG erupted in Suleimaniya and surrounding towns. But the strategy of the demonstrators as well as the reaction of the authorities has everyone at a bit of a loss.
“We are taking back our dignity!” Read More »
“The enslaved are agents of history – perhaps the most important agents in the making of opposition to the Western world as we know it.”
Beyond the Possibilities: On Black Radical Thought Read More »
There will always be people who celebrate even the cruelest of tyrants, be it out of ignorance, sadism, fear, or being advantaged by these rulers. But does that make a tyrant’s regime “legitimate”?
Only We Can Bring Peace to Syria Read More »
We understand militancy as the ability to defend oneself not just physically but mentally against hegemonic ideology, as well as the ability to make alternative ways of living conceivable and practicable.
The War Is (Also) In Our Heads Read More »
As we were leaving the camp, locals confronted us, asking why we were helping the Syrians. They did not know about the three-month-old baby who had died right next door to them.
“This place is hell and it cannot be fixed.” Read More »
Antifascism is not radical. It is normal.
Cinema Utopia: The Antifascists Read More »
Faced with environmental dangers on a local and global scale, marginalized communities of workers are left with few choices except direct action.
Worker Solidarity with Camp Makwa and the Movement for Environmental Justice Read More »
Gentrification is class war from above which must be answered with struggle from below. This requires accessible projects that can establish a broad and militant praxis.
Ice Cream, Concrete, and Squats Read More »