We Retain the Dignity of the Revolution
The answer to why we don’t accept that Assad remains in power is obvious: he killed our children, and the scars of their smiles are etched on our hearts.
We Retain the Dignity of the Revolution Read More »
Love and Rage! Manifestos, calls to action, howls, demands, and declarations.
The answer to why we don’t accept that Assad remains in power is obvious: he killed our children, and the scars of their smiles are etched on our hearts.
We Retain the Dignity of the Revolution Read More »
After three days of complex operations in the central Mediterranean, SOS Méditerranée calls on European and international authorities to clarify framework underlying Libyan Coastguard interventions
Sea Rescue Operation to EU: Explain Yourself 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 »
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 »
We stand for socialism as a concept of human emancipation and an affirmative vision distinguished from the authoritarian regimes that called themselves “Communist.”
Alliance of Middle Eastern Socialists – Founding Statement of Principles Read More »
War produces death and slavery. The outcome of any war will not support starting a social revolution, in fact it damages and weakens the revolutionary climate.
Kirkuk: Kurds Against a Kurdish State Read More »
For us, any victim, alive or dead, who isn’t recovered will represent a forced disappearance.
On Mutual Aid and Confronting State Power in Disaster Read More »
The political signaling of this ban on an internet platform is clear: it is not merely an attack on a specific structure but against the entire left.
The “Extremism” Cudgel Read More »
Iñaki need not worry about being thrown in prison; he need not fear pursuit: the Spanish justice system does not persecute his ethnicity. He currently lives in a villa on Lake Geneva. His bank account is full.
The laws have changed their names, but they are still laws of exception, and they still have the same consequences for dissidents: persecution, criminalization, repression, and imprisonment. Freedom of expression exists only for those who think the way they do.
“In our mouths, words become crimes.” Read More »