Submission
đ€đ¶
It is unclear what the struggle for Palestinian liberation will look like in the coming days. At the time of this writing a ceasefire has just been reached between Hamas and the Zionist entity, at the same time the Zionist entity continues to devastate Gaza and the West Bank. Last year a specific struggle against a local technology company connected the dots between Palestinian liberation, local gentrification, education, militarism, and borders. The company in question, Ghost Robotics, has come under fire for creating robot dogs used by the Israeli Defense Forces. That struggle may well be ongoing and this zine is not meant to push struggles into the safety of history, its aim is to inspire revolt, specifically against Ghost Robotics and generally against all aspects of domination. The struggle against Ghost Robotics has taken many forms, from spreading information and popular education, to organizing demonstrations, to destroying property. By reflecting on the past struggles we can better imagine and carry out our struggles today. This zine brings together writings about Ghost Robotics, a timeline of publicly documented action against Ghost Robotics, communiques from anonymous actions, a few photos. All information is taken from sources listed in the Resources section at the end.
Philadelphia, Occupied Lenapehoking,
Winter 2025
[PDF] [PDF For Printing]
Posts by Philly Anti-Cap
Zine: The Struggle Against Ghost Robotics
Philly All Out To Free Mahmoud Khalil
from Instagram

5pm
City Hall
Bring signs and posters and remember to mask up!
Rallly coordinate by autonomous individuals not affiliate with any organization
FREE MAHMOUD, FREE ALL POLITICAL PRISONERS]
Admin note
from Never Sleep
There have been recent issues with the file upload webssite espiv â we received several file links that showed up as deleted. We received a suggestion from another counter-info site to use upload.disroot.org instead. We encourage you to reupload your files if you have recently submitted something that was not posted or was missing files.
Tariffs Divide Us â The Struggle Unites!
From Workers Solidarity Alliance, Labor Committee.
Revolutionary unionists have always stood for the solidarity of the global working class, rejecting every attempt by the ruling class to divide usâwhether through borders, race, gender, or any other means of exploitation. The idea that workers in any one country have interests in common with their bosses is a lie designed to keep us from recognizing our true power. The recent trade war policies of the fascist U.S. President Trump, which sought to pit U.S. workers against workers in other nations through tariffs, were just one example of how those in power manipulate workers for their own gain. When ruling classes in other countries retaliate, it is nothing more than a struggle between competing capitalistsânone of whom serve the interests of the working class. Meanwhile, their economic and political systems continue to brutalize migrant workers, exploit marginalized laborers, and uphold structures of oppression that harm all but the wealthiest few.
Any attempt to rally workers behind protectionist policiesâwhether by right-wing nationalists or union bureaucrats like United Auto Workers President Shawn Fainâis a betrayal of true working-class solidarity, operating within a system that assumes the permanence of exploitation, seeking only to negotiate for slightly better conditions rather than challenging the system itself. It is no surprise, then, that they accept the logic of capitalist competition, framing economic struggles as battles between nations rather than between workers and bosses. If our unions are led by those willing to collaborate with the ruling class, then workers must build new structures of powerâorganizing outside the limits imposed by hierarchical union leadership and embracing direct action, mutual aid, and truly democratic decision-making in our workplaces, communities, and beyond.
At the same time, we reject the myth of âfree tradeâ as a benevolent force. For centuries, imperialist powersâincluding the U.S., Russia, and China todayâhave used it as an ideological cover for the exploitation and plunder of workers in smaller, less powerful nations. The wealth hoarded by the ruling classes of imperialist nations is stolen from the labor and resources of the Global South, just as capitalism itself is built on the theft of Indigenous land, the unpaid labor of enslaved people, and the continued oppression of marginalized communities. Some workers in the imperial core may receive small material benefits from this exploitation, but we reject any suggestion that this justifies their complicity. The labor movement must refuse to be a tool of capitalist expansion, and those who try to convince workers that they share a common cause with their bossesâwhether through nationalism or reformismâare enemies of true workersâ liberation.
Rather than being trapped in the false choice between âfree tradeâ and protectionism, workers must demand a new worldâone where resources and wealth are shared equitably, and decisions about production and distribution are made democratically by those most affected. A movement for workersâ liberation must be rooted in feminism, anti-racism, disability justice, environmental justice, and the struggle against all forms of oppression. Only through solidarity that recognizes the full humanity of all workersâacross borders, genders, and identitiesâcan we create a future beyond capitalism, where our labor serves our communities, not the profits of the ruling class.
Book Release and Film Screening
from O.R.C.A.

For more info and copies/free pdfs after event, visit reekingthicketspress.noblogs.org
In Contempt #50: National Guard Sent in to New York Prisons, Leonard Peltier Comes Home
from It’s Going Down

In this column, we present our monthly roundup of political prisoner, prison rebel, and repression news, happenings, announcements, action and analysis. Packed in as always are updates, fundraisers, and birthdays.
Thereâs a lot happening, so letâs dive right in!
Vaughn 17
An event was held in February at the Black Workers Center in DC, celebrating the anniversary of the Vaughn prison uprising. The event also served as a soft release for Jarreau âRUKâ Ayersâ upcoming book.
Vaughn 17 prisoner Alejandro âAjayâ Rodriguez-Ortiz recently suffered the loss of his mother, and was unable to attend a wake for her due to being attacked by the CERT team and moved to isolation as revenge for giving an interview to a journalist. You can donate to help support the Ortiz family through this time here.
Uprising Defendants
See Uprising Support for more info, and check out the Antirepression PDX site for updates from Portland cases. You can also check With Whatever Weapons for regularly-updated zines listing current prisoners. To the best of our knowledge they currently include:
David Elmakayes 77782-066
FCI McKean
Federal Correctional Institution
P.O. Box 8000
Bradford, PA 16701
Khalif Miller #70042-066
USP Big Sandy
U.S. Penitentiary
P.O. Box 2068
Inez, KY 41224
Anarchist Primary Explosives Manual (February 2025)
from Never Sleep
PDF: APEM 2025-02
Anarchists are going to make explosives. In Greece and Russia it is regular, but a lot of the recipes easily available online are either quite dangerous (like TATP) or outdated (like most of the US Army Improvised Munitions Manual). The recipes I have compiled are found with a little bit of digging but are often garbled and not easy to understand due to a lot of tweaking happening on the forums they are posted in. My sources are primarily sciencemadness.org and various YouTube chemistry channels, as well as some rocketry sites and occasionally reddit. (With a little work you will be able to verify all the instructions I have put into this document.)
**It is my hope that by the compilation of this guide anarchists who are going to make explosives will at least make safer ones** that will not lead to injuries, arrests, or deaths.
Gay Anarcho Anti-Future Futurist Grimoire
Submission

Zine Prep + Open Write
from O.R.C.A.

Earliest Days of This Trump Attack
By Philly Metro and Greater Chicago WSA
Among many reports and conversations at our November 40th Anniversary Congress, two that stand out are a renewed excitement about working-class journalism, and how our WSA Branches are trying to orient our work to our worksites and co-workers.
What this has meant in these early days of the Trump-Musk Attacks?
We canât speak for all WSA members, but many of us have felt depressed and in shock, aware that our families are directly vulnerable.
In contrast to 2016, where the resistance to Trump was immediately galvanizing, there has been a cultural sea-change. We certainly feel part of this âjust-getting-on-our-feet-nowâ period.
Speaking for only some in our branches, these early months have felt like a tornado watch. We keep looking out our window to see how close the danger is. There has been a noticeable pause on our public national level projects as this Trump-Musk attack is unfolding, but as we write this, we are getting back to our work!
As regards our worksites, one of the immediate responses has been to the scapegoating ICE raids some of our most at-risk families have been living in terror at the haphazard nature of these assaults.
Weâve been actively working on connecting our coworkers with community organizations, putting out flyers with contact info for immigrant rights hotlines, helping with outreach for multilingual trainings.
Locally, weâve also been helping to organize an upcoming protest in coalition with local activists. While we are not reformists, we bring our workforce concerns and syndicalist analysis as best we can, trying to build momentum for any public opportunity to say âNO!â to this time of crisis.
As anarcha-syndicalists we are clear as daylight that we use the word âdemocracyâ to mean not bourgeois democracy where the competing elites vie for our votes to get power. We will resist Trump and Musk, but this does not mean we were signed up to support what would have been a Biden-Harris regime of business as usual and genocide. We are clear that by standing up for democracy we mean a workerâs democracy, and the classless, non-hierarchical society which alone can make the word âdemocracyâ meaningful. But right now we are focusing on our commonality with at-risk co-workers and others, with Trump voters who suddenly realize their jobs & benefits are now in jeopardy.
While we are few and our branches are small, it feels the best way for us to cope is to stay engaged. While weâve been slow to get back to journalism, itâs time to do just that. Members are saying itâs time for us to have our WSA National Labor Committee soon, and we will!
As a way back to working-class journalism, today during work hours we did what we meant to do, which was to talk with WSA members and comrades, and try to get their thoughts into print.
As a start today, at 10 am, while on the clock, we talked on the phone with our comrade Greg Mcgee:
âWhat we should do is have a dialogue with our fellow workers, but make sure we use facts. Use radical websites talking about Russian deserters and Ukrainian deserters refusing to fight. Imagine together if they called the soldiers and no one showed up! The wars would stop.â
âWith all this rampant fascist nationalism happening now, the bigotry, anti-semitism, racism, right now, imagine replacing the word âimmigrantâ with âJewâ, and discuss the fascist past. We know that Mussolini and General Franco were fascists, we really donât know what Trump and Musk are. LThey may just be narcissists, but I think we need to draw our fellow workersâ attention to the historical past of fascism, how this is looking worse and worse. Again, the scapegoat is immigrants right now; remember what happened in Nazi Germany: Right now it is much much less far-fetched thinking it could happen here. We have to remember what happened to Japanese people in the U.S. in WWII, where people were rounded up and put in concentration camps.â
âThis is the time for meetings with our fellow workers at our places of employment; this is the time to work on our common ground, the threat thatâs facing us now.â
From Lana â by phone during work hours, an hour later:
âItâs so multi-faceted, this outright chainsaw to any social safety nets, and we absolutely know as the economy goes south, we in the working class are first in line for the economic consequences. Isnât this what weâve been saying all along? That capitalism is evil because it uses us as fodder in so-called good times, and uses us as frontline fodder in any disaster?
âI think this is the time for us as syndicalists to get on our feet and organize, to get our fellow workers involved as a group from our workplace in community resistance â itâs a wake-up call. Five-alarm fire, letâs get to it !â
###
Caught: Stories About Criminalization and Repression
from Making Worlds Books

This panel event and discussion brings together several anarchists and other individuals whoâve caught charges in Philadelphia and beyond from 2017 to the present. Weâll go over the charges, legal process, and outcomes of each case; discuss how local support for the defendants worked; and reflect on the trauma and hardships incurred by repression and how we can continue to build a broader culture of anti-repression in Philadelphia.
Super Bowl Celebration â Philadelphia, PA
from Unravel
February 9, 2025
There were 10 arrests and 29 summons for disorderly conduct issued by Philadelphia Police during the raucous celebration of the Eagles’ Super Bowl win Sunday night, police said.
Six people were arrested for six assaults on police officers, said department spokesperson Sgt. Eric Gripp. There were four other arrests: one for reckless endangerment, two for aggravated assault, and one for misdemeanor disorderly conduct, he said.
There were also eight reports of vandalism, said Gripp.
Despite calls from Mayor Cherelle L. Parker to not climb poles or anything else and to celebrate safely, some of the massive crowds of people that took to the streets after the Eagles won their second Super Bowl, caused mayhem.
Multiple people climbed light poles along Broad Street. Crowds tried to flip a police vehicle at Broad and Chestnut Streets. More than a dozen people danced on top of a medic vehicle. A group of people took towels out from a truck at 12th and Market Streets and started setting them on fire.
Found on Mainstream Media
[Unmentioned in the article: graffiti in support of Palestine, against police, and for political prisoners.]
Against Smartphones, Social Media, and the Tech Dystopia: A Provocation and Discussion on Shifting Culture in Anarchist and Black Radical Spaces Away from Digital Technology
from Making Worlds Books

This is a presentation based discussion about the necessity of radical circles to move away from digital technology in our current political moment. We argue that social media, cell phones and digital technology play an active role in harming our movements and capacities for resistance. Digital technology surveils us, de-skills us, and inhibits our social abilities. Furthermore, these technologies are controlled and developed by fascist enemies of Silicon Valley. Our discussion will focus upon ways to divest from social media, personal devices and digital technologies to create new forms of comradeship away from the gaze of the State and tech over-lords. There will be a brief presentation then a discussion about the topic.
`The Unexpected Guest and a Section of Palestine, Mon Amourâ Book Release Event and Screening of ÂĄG.A.R.I! (2013) â March 16
Join us on March 16th at 6:15pm at ORCA for the release of the book `The Unexpected Guest and a Section of Palestine, Mon Amourâ, the pamphlet âA Mano Armata (Excerpts)â, and a screening of the film ÂĄG.A.R.I! (2013, 1h 23 min, French with English subtitles), by Nicolas RĂ©glat, followed by a discussion if the mood strikes us. For location and accessibility info, email orca.philly@protonmail.com (note that ORCA is not wheelchair accessible and heating in the space can be spotty). There will be free books (somewhat limited quantity, somewhat crudely printed and bound) and pamphlets and the event is also free, with no RSVP necessary. Masking is encouraged and expected, and there will be an air filter running. There will be a box you can drop contributions to Reeking Thickets and ORCA in, but only if you really feel like it. After the event the full reading and printing pdfs will be uploaded, and a somewhat limited further quantity of physical copies will be available (email reekingthickets@proton.me) for $5 each to cover some of the costs of production, or, possibly, for slightly more at local radical bookstores.
`The Unexpected Guest and a Section of Palestine, Mon Amourâ is a 266pg. book from Reeking Thickets Press bringing together a new, rough translation of the 2010 book LâOspite Inattesso by influential Sicilian insurrectionary anarchist, robber, poet, and philosopher Alfredo Bonanno (and as he reminds us, former motorcycle racer, professional poker player, and business executive) with similar, mostly previously untranslated sections from another book of his, Palestina, Mon Amour, and some relevant excerpts from his essay, âE noi saremo sempre pronti a impadronirci unâaltra volta del cielo: Contro lâamnistiaâ (trans. â âAnd we will always be ready to storm the heavens again: Against the amnestyâ).
An accompanying 51pg. pamphlet, âA Mano Armata (Excerpts)â collects more topical sections from that book of his (the title of which translates as `with armed handâ, or `at gunpointâ and is part of the Italian legal name of offenses analogous to armed robbery or assault with a deadly weapon, with `a manoâ also having the sense of a tool ready and available for use, or of `hand-madeâ, `manuallyâ).
To our knowledge, The Unexpected Guest, A Mano Armata, and many of the included sections of Palestine, Mon Amour havenât been properly translated into English, and this primarily machine-based translation â though we feel is sufficient for some purposes â certainly canât be considered as such. Translation was carried out by Nim Thorn, a non-speaker of Italian, using various translation programs with the results then checked for apparent mistakes or divergences and the offending passages re-translated in context with dictionaries and using other translation programs. Short stanzas (such as the section âUntitledâ in Palestine, Mon Amour) or metered sections (such as the Faust excerpts in The Unexpected Guest) were also translated word by word using comparisons of multiple tools. The introduction to the second edition of A Mano Armata is a particularly bad translation, of a difficult text in the first place, though some parts of it still shine through quite clearly, and the subject matter â in part about the desire to engage with the word backwards by constructing semio-cognitive labyrinths to reflect absence and help bypass the recuperating tendency of the will and language â feels ironically relevant.
Footnotes, selections, typesetting, back cover text for the book (the back cover text of the A Mano Armata pamphlet is taken from excerpts of the text), and cover designs are also by Nim Thorn. No authorization was sought for this project and, for our part, further printing or distribution is welcomed.
The sharply echoing, often numbered and diary-like stanzas that make up much of the book are a remembrance of the deadly, pro-liberatory armed struggle Bonanno took part in during the `60s and following decades, including alongside Palestinians in the Levant (relating also his experience of torture for this by Mossad in 1972), in Greece against the junta, in Ireland, Algeria, Uganda, and Italy. Written mostly during various later-life prison stints in Italy and Greece for robberies and seditions (both real and fabricated), these poetic, searingly honest tracings of formative, difficult memories grapple with suffering, monstrosity, humanity, and ghostly normality, the silent, irreversible and all-transfiguring singularities of death and of ending the lives of others, and the irresolvable tension between the quantitative and qualitative. The paradoxical, messy engagements with the often deeply flawed, recuperative, and quixotic but sometimes critical aspects of clandestine revolutionary warfare come deeply into play, alongside those with the projects of memory, theoretical and personal understanding, and the word itself. He refuses to shy away from the stark insights and puzzling question marks born of having closely shadowed and struck at torturers, informers, provocateurs, traitors, cops, and soldiers, and does so without hiding behind either moralism or trite anti-moralist cliches. Reaching us like an esoteric, late medieval folk heretic, Bonanno in these texts feels perfectly attuned to apprehend his and our current moments (in particular their real incomprehensibility), even through such unlikely lenses as his highly ambivalent exegeses of Saint Augustine or Goetheâs Faust.
ÂĄG.A.R.I! (2013) by Nicolas RĂ©glat is a documentary about the affinity groups of French and Spanish anarchists who briefly gathered under that acronym (trans. â `Revolutionary Internationalist Action Groupsâ) in France from 1973-1974 for revolt and to join with Spanish anarchist and autonomous rebels in combat with the far-right dictatorship of Franco and the broader capitalist, authoritarian order, who were then under real threat of judicial or extra-judicial execution. It included the participation, alleged in some cases, of many influential figures including Jean Weir, Lucio Urtubia, FlorĂ©al Cuadrado, Jean-Marc Rouillan, and Octavio Alberola. Operating between various regions of France, Belgium, and the Netherlands, and coordinating with rebels in or exiled from Spain, and with groups across Europe, GARI carried out a kidnapping of a Spanish banker and numerous non-lethal arsons, bombings, acts of infrastructure sabotage, machine-gunnings, robberies and fraud, while carrying out creative counter-information and aiding in the smuggling of arms and fighters to and from Spain. In the ambit of groups like the Angry Brigade or the First of May Group, GARI embraced an aggressive and strategic transnational armed struggle while remaining in touch with the spark of situationism and the autonomous movements, and resisting the vanguardism, organizational fetishization, and authoritarian variants of anti-imperialism so prevalent then and now. Though only existing as such for a short period before diffracting in countless directions across the constellation of struggle in Europe (including some arguably non-anarchist directions, such as the later path of Action Directe) which they contributed to spreading, GARI was an important node and precedent in the experimenting millieu from which contemporary insurrectionary anarchism was then emerging. Taking as point of departure a never-published comic book created by the GARI kidnappers in 1976, RĂ©glat sets out to `save from the dustbin of historyâ the stories of those involved, which includes that of some of his own family members. Consisting of archival footage and present day conversations with people involved in the events, and made possible by the expiration of statute of limitations, the film is a refreshingly human look into complex experiences from a chapter often glossed over, yet the consequences of which still ripple strongly in our struggles today.


