Graffiti for Disappeared People in Mexico

From Instagram

Sidewalk graffiti outside the Mexican Consulate calling for justice for the thousands of people disappeared, including 43 students.

Mobile phone security Lab by Radicante.Media

from Facebook

Once again the Digital Self Defense Series is here, this time Mobile Phone Security Lab. Come and learn how to secure your conversations over your phone device. Let’s have a discussion about the tool that you carry everywhere with you, how this device tracks your data, your friends, locations, ect. Then let’s do a hands on lab to try tools to protect your data and your compxs. Encryption + Signal + Orbot + IMSI catchers and more! //// Una vez mas ya esta aqui La Serie Auto Defensa Digital, esta vez para hablar de Seguridad en Telefonos Mobiles. Ven y aprende como tener conversaciones mas seguras en tu dispositivo telefonico. Tengamos una discusion sobre esa herramienta que llevas contigo a todas partes, como este dispositivo rastrea tus datos, a tus amigxs, lugares que visitas, etc. Luego vamos a la parte manos a la obra en el Laboratorio para probar herramientas para protegerte y a tus compxs. Encriptacion + Signal + Orbot + IMSI catchers y mucho mas!!

[October 5 from 7pm to 9pm at A-Space 4722 Baltimore Ave]

Anathema Volume 2 Issue 9

from Anathema

Volume 2 Issue 9

In this issue:

  • Prisons are Lit
  • Police Story
  • A Politics of Care
  • Sept 9th POP!Back
  • Speaking Truth to Power
  • What Went Down

Graffiti for Charlotte Uprising in South Philly

from It’s Going Down

Tonight we smashed five billboards along I-76 in South Philly. Two say “PHILLY TO CHARLOTTE FUCK THE POLICE”, one “COP LIVES DON’T MATTER” and two had paint thrown on them.

Complicity with the Charlotte uprising.



Insurrectionary Memory

Submission

These posters were made with the intention of remembering and passing along stories of revolt. As authority fragments our lives and relations, so many moments of resistance fall through the cracks, and the world around us seems more and more overwhelming.

Often we’ve felt isolated as we try to attack the things that make us unfree; it’s easy to forget that people have been resisting and continue to fight around us. We want these posters to commemorate and inspire struggle against domination, exclusion, and separation in Philadelphia.

All the images in these posters are from local actions taking place over the last five years in Philly and some surrounding towns and suburbs. These images are gleaned without permission from various sources.

Dedicated to all the rebels known and unknown who refuse to accept this world. Your courage and creativity inspire us to keep taking aim at everything that oppresses us.

 


[click Continue Reading to see the other posters]

Sept 9th POP!back

Submission

Word of the September 9th noise demonstration at the Juvenile Justice Center (JJC) was spread through social media, flyers handed out at bus stops to people going on prison visits, flyers handed out around the neighborhood where the demonstration took place, as well as to people visiting the youth inside.

The point of the demonstration was to make noise for the youth on the inside and to give them a change to let loose, even if only in a limited way inside their cages.

A meet-up was organized via facebook north of the center at 48th and Aspen St. It became known after the demo that some people had problems finding the meet-up location and that this may have lowered turnout. At this spot a group of people in masks started setting up banners and handing out whistles as well as fireworks.

There was an awkward division between the masked up peeps and those who were not in masks. Although some communication happened between the groups, I would like to see more exchanges between people at demonstrations for a better understanding of why some people choose to wear masks and some do not.

People waited around and some started to set off bottle rockets. About 15 minutes after 8pm, someone with a megaphone said it was time to move (as a cop car had rolled by just earlier). The group moved ahead behind a set of banners down 48th toward the JJC. We took the streets and got generally positive responses from people in cars (unlike most demonstrations in center city where angry yuppies try to run marches down). Flyers about the prison strike and just about hating prisons in general were tossed into the air like confetti all along the march.

Some had decided to meet up at the JJC ahead of time. There was some confusion between the marchers and the people set up at the JJC. The marchers walked past the front of the center near 48th and Haverford about halfway down the block to the side parking-lot. The reason was that the front building is an office building for social workers and on the side of the complex behind the parking lot was where the youth were being held in “dorms.”

There was also some confusion expressed as to who organized the demonstration, framed as concern that the demonstration was a ploy by cops. The reason for this was the fireworks. There was fear that this would agitate the cops into giving people gun charges (which is not unheard of) or take it as an excuse to come smash up the demo. A few people left the demonstration because they felt unsafe, which is a completely reasonable response that deserves support. It is important for everyone to be able to assess their own risk. The remaining people joined the demonstration near the parking-lot.

As the noise demonstration went on we saw some people waving on the inside, but it was hard to see much because of the way the center is built to isolate.

Outside there was a cop with a camera taking video of the whole scene, especially trying to film people’s faces. “Civil affairs” – or protest cops who wear plain clothes and orange armbands to almost every protest – especially use this information. This information also has the potential to be integrated into facial recognition software, as more departments request funds for “upgrades” (this is the flip side of body-cameras). Eventually some people in masks took exception to this and started putting flags in front of the camera, drumming on the camera, and throwing trash at the cop. Some people shot fireworks at cops and shouted at them to quit their jobs or kill themselves.

Eventually after an hour and a half people started marching back toward Aspen. There was concern expressed that the march was moving too fast for some people. At one point someone shouted to the front to slow down. Making people with needs have to shout to be seen creates an unwelcome dynamic and could potentially lead to the most vulnerable being snagged by the cops. Collectively taking the responsibility to be more mindful of who is around us in the future may address some of these concerns about accessibility.

At this point there was a cop van in front “leading” (more like kettling) the march, but eventually someone threw a flagpole at the back of the van and it moved farther ahead. When the march got back to Aspen St, some people loitered (fuck the police, amirite?) around for a bit longer shouting at cops but eventually everyone dispersed into the night with no arrests.

Some concluding observations:
1) People are gonna do what they’re gonna do at these kinds of rackets, like bring fireworks and get rowdy. That’s the point of autonomy. There are no leaders or organizers whose goal is to keep things orderly. Just the opposite — the goal is to get disorderly. That said, we must be aware that our actions may “turn off” others and split the demo or cause people to leave. Fireworks, flag throwing, and camera blocking are new tactics that are an escalation in the context of demos in the last few years, which has the potential to both expand what people think as well as to demobilize protest state repression or some people avoiding demos that are not specifically designated as “peaceful.”

2) Safety at demonstrations is an illusion, or at the very least relative, and it is not something that can be guaranteed. Ultimately the cops define what is illegal. However, there are steps we can take, like being aware of where people are in the group and trying to keep people together who want to be in the relative safety of a group.

3) There are practical steps we can all take to lessen the impact of surveillance. Wearing masks and refusing to claim actions with named organizations can avoid repression/surveillance down the line because there is less in the way of social ties that can be tracked and people may feel empowered to organize another demonstration completely apart from the initial group who comes together on one particular night.

So take this as an invitation to keep up these demonstrations and be free in the streets.

-a (seriously) sweaty bitch

Philadelphia: UPS Box Vandalized in Solidarity with Strike

from It’s Going Down

A couple nights ago we went out and poured paint on a UPS Drop Box and blacked out some nearby security cameras with spray paint. UPS uses prison labor which is why we targeted them.

It was pretty fun and easy, here’s a link to find some boxes near you if you want to try it out too.

https://www.ups.com/dropoff

Click the menu “+See All Options” and then the menu “+Location Type” and check off “UPS Drop Box” for a map of all the boxes in the country.

SAVE LAVA FROM REAL ESTATE CHUMP

From gofundme

Help!!

LAVA Space is a grassroots organizing and media center located in the Belmont neighborhood of Philadelphia. For over two decades the space has served as a place for activist groups and communities to meet, eat and share art and music.

The LAVA collective was recently given notice that a lien for $1600 in unpaid taxes was placed on the property two years ago. This lien was purchased by a real estate developer who is now pressuring the city to put the property up for auction. The company has bought liens on other buildings in the neighborhood as well in an attempt to cheaply acquire as much property as they can. If this happens, LAVA along with many of the long-time residents of the Belmont neighborhood will most likely be pushed out to make room for an ever-expanding University City. In order to stop this from happening we need to come up with money to pay back the lien and any other out-standing debts we have before our court hearing on October 13. We will also need to cover lawyer fees and court costs, which is why we are asking for $2000.

LAVA was established to provide a meeting space and resources to a neighborhood with serious needs. The downstairs of the building houses a library, weekly produce distribution and an event space that gives a platform to artists and organizations from a wide range of backgrounds. The upstairs is used as affordable office space for groups fighting for social justice (Human Rights Coalition and Radio Prometheus) and the Shark Tank recording studio, which has become an important resource for young musicians in the community.

Please help keep LAVA from falling into the hands of a real estate developer by donating what you can and sharing this page with your networks.

Thanks!!!

Help spread the word!

Prison Strike Graffiti

from Instagram

#prisonstrike graffiti on bus stop at 8th and Lombard

November 5th: Run the Nazis Out of Harrisburg, PA

from It’s Going Down

Remember, Remember…on November 5th, the National Socialist Movement (NSM), one of the largest Neo-Nazi and white nationalist organizations in the US will attempt to hold a rally at the State Capitol of Pennsylvania, in the city of Harrisburg. The NSM is calling on their supporters to arrive at 2pm, we are asking people to be there at 1pm.

The NSM in many ways is attempting to become a much bigger player in the white nationalist scene lately. They have worked closely with Matthew Heimbach of the Traditionalist Worker Party (TWP) to draft the Aryan Nationalist Alliance and have already attempted to organize several demonstrations in the last few months, including a total failure in Buffalo, NY. Let’s make sure that trend continues.

Already, antifa groups from the Eastern Seaboard and beyond are geared up to meet them there. They expect opposition to be low because of the Million Mask March in DC, but let’s make a firm commitment to show up and make them remember why they should stay hidden in their dark basements.

Central Pennsylvania Antifa is asking for your help in making sure that the people of Pennsylvania, a richly diverse population, know that someone is there to defend them when the Nazis show their ugly faces.

Your Comrades in Central PA

Resources

Central PA Antifa Facebook Page

Facebook Event For Sharing

Promotional Video for Sharing

Flyer for Printing

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Rowdy no-gooders make huge fucking racket near the juvenile detention center in west philadelphia

Submission

September 10, 2016th

Last night was way too hot to be wearing a damn hoodie, but at least no one figured out i was the one who farted at the demo #worthit. Anyways some people came together and got a lil ignorant out front (actually to the side of) the youth prison in west philly, for the prison strike.

First Bernie showed up, but he got punched in the face and drove off in an Uber screaming about outside agitators. Then some reckless nobodies started shooting off fireworks left and right and slanging old sneakers on the nearby powerlines, real anti-civ shit. Cops were so scared that we couldn’t tell if they were sweating their underwear or pissing themselves. Taking pity on the knaves, people went to the police’s aid, helping them cover their video recording gear with black flags so it wouldn’t get wet during the flier storm. Some people drummed on buckets, some people drummed on the police’s camera, they weren’t into that. A masked up anarchist color guard of two traced obscene gestures in the air toward the cops, shouting 9/11 was an inside job.

We saw some waving from the inside, but not a lot, the fools who built the spot put a parking lot in the way so it was hard to see, plus even the parking lot had a wall on it, bruh!?! We took note of the parking lot as a potential place to dunk on the cops big time in the basketball game we call life, but like later, cause not now.

Some people had no chill. Like a cop got hit with an empty roman candle or a water bottle or something, like maybe a few times. A friend also got hit with a firework, but they were too hype to care, it just bounced off their aura, maaaan. People brought the whole toy store to the demo, like whistles, sparklers, flares, plastic harmonicas, even that new Furby that laughs when you tickle the belly, okay. On the way out some police car tried to lead the way, but we said “fuck off” and sent them some trash long-distance, maybe like half-court, crowd went wild.

No one got popped, locked or dropped as far as we know.

Long live the strike!
Free dat bois!
Toast marshmallows on the flames of insurrection!
Flip over prison society!

¯\_(ツ)_/¯ some other people might write a serious one so hang in there if that’s your thing ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

-Some overdressed sweaty bitches

Philly Solidarity March with Standing Rock #NoDAPL

from Facebook

In response to the Global Weeks of Action called by the Red Warrior Camp and Camp of the Sacred Stones, Philadelphia will be marching in solidarity with Indigneous land defenders on the Standing Rock reservation in North Dakota.

Sunoco Logistics is currently trying to build the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) that threatens cultural sites on the reservation, and TD Bank has provided a loan for construction of the DAPL, an 1,120 mile fracked-oil pipeline. The pipeline would be installed underneath the Missouri River a 1/2 mile upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.

Last week, DAPL crews bulldozed through recently identified burial grounds and sacred sites, deploying attack dogs when confronted by non-violent water protectors.

Sunoco Logistics and TD Bank both have a presence in Philadelphia and are actively profiting off of this cultural genocide and the destruction of water and Earth. We will be marching through downtown Philly, starting at Philly City Hall (15th and Market).

In the spirit of the Camps this protest will be completely non-violent.

[September 17 from 1pm to 2:30pm at City Hall (15th and Market)]

Today is the day

from Instagram

Today is the day. #prisonstrike

Standing Rock Solidarity Fundraiser Dinner

from Facebook

Come support the unified efforts of the Native Americans and all those standing up for our Waters, Mother Earth, and all of her Inhabitants. We will gather At Ahimsa House, Monday the 12th at 7:30 to share food and a fire circle. Please come to support our relatives in North Dakota who are praying for the protection of their sacred sites, water and land to not be destroyed by the Dakota Access Pipeline.

Sliding scale donation: $8- $30.00, no one denied ever…
All Proceeds will be sent to the Water Protectors camp in North Dakota at the gates of pipeline construction site.

[September 12 from 7:30PM to 10:30PM at Ahimsa House]

While the Iron is Hot: a workshop on the ongoing prison strike

from Facebook

A nationwide prison strike is beginning on September 9. Movement for No Society is offering this workshop to consider prison strikes in context of the struggle for liberation today.

Presenters will give report backs on the events and organizing that led up to the strike, followed by a discussion on the following questions:

▲ What are some ways to get involved and contribute to this struggle?
▲ What is the history of similar prison actions?
▲ How have prison uprisings in the past decade contributed to making prisons a focal point of the struggle against white supremacy and capitalism?
▲How can we be thinking about anti-prison organizing beyond the prison abolitionist framework that’s currently getting mainstreamed?

We invite people to share their experiences with agitating/ organizing against prisons as well as their ideas for moving forward.

[September 11 from 7pm to 10pm at A-Space 4722 Baltimore Ave]