from Instagram
[INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY MARCH PHL LOGAN CIRCLE 5PM 3-08-2017]
from Instagram
[INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY MARCH PHL LOGAN CIRCLE 5PM 3-08-2017]
From Anathema
Volume 3 Issue 1 (PDF for printing 11 x 17)
Volume 3 Issue 1 (PDF for reading 8.5 x 11)
In this issue:
from Anarchadelphia
Bartolomeo Vanzetti banner drop at 13th and Gerritt that reads:
If it had not been for these things, I might have lived out my life talking at street corners to scorning men. I might have died, unmarked, unknown, a failure. Now we are not a failure. This is our career and our triumph. Never in our full life could we hope to do such work for tolerance, for justice, for man’s understanding of man as now we do by accident. Our words–our lives–our pains–nothing! The taking of our lives–lives of a good shoemaker and a poor fish-peddler–all! That last moment belongs to us–that agony is our triumph.
Angela Davis banner drop at the William Way Center which reads, “We have to talk about liberating minds as well as liberating society”
from Anathema
Volume 2 Issue 12 (PDF for printing 11 x 17)
Volume 2 Issue 12 (PDF for reading 8.5 x 11)
In this issue:
from Anathema
Volume 2 Issue 11 (PDF for printing 11 x 17)
Volume 2 Issue 11 (PDF for reading 8.5 x 11)
In this Issue:
Submission
Originally broadcast on December 14th from 7PM to 8PM.
Listen here: https://audio.cfrc.ca/archives/2016-12-14-19.mp3
CFRC Prison Radio:
Prison related news.
Guest Em speaks on anarchist prison support work and general prison things.
Interview with anarchists in Philadelphia who were supporting the September 9th USA Prisoner Strike.
Philadelphia interview starts at 41:30
from Anathema
Anathema welcomes submissions and aims to include a range of contributions from an anti-authoritarian perspective. The editors do not necessarily agree with the viewpoints published in this newspaper. We intend instead to provide space for internal dialogue, sharing information and analysis and feelings that are rarely legitimated by other forums. The paper’s content tends to be published anonymously, in order to provide a more secure space under the current conditions of state surveillance and repression.
We accept local news stories, poems, political analysis, letters to the editor, reportbacks, critiques of us, and any other style of writing you feel moved to contribute. You can email submissions to anathemaphl@riseup.net.
from Anathema
Volume 2 Issue 10 (PDF for printing 11×17)
Volume 2 Issue 10 (PDF for reading 8.5×11)
In this issue:
Submission
On Wednesday during rush hour a banner was hung over the Vine St Expressway in Philadelphia in solidarity with the prison strike.
from Instagram
Tell ur friends..open hours starting up again for informal organizing and zine distro..**starting not this wed but nxt 11/23**
[5PM to 8PM Wednesdays at LAVA 4134 Lancaster Ave]
from It’s Going Down
AGAINST ALL PIPELINES (A) #NODAPL
Submission
It hardly seems necessary to summarize what has gone down inside U.S. prisons since September 9th. Hunger strikes, work stoppages, and riots have spread throughout the country on a scale that we likely aren’t even fully aware of yet. Some uprisings appeared took us by surprise, such as in several Florida prisons, while others presumably grew from recent organizing endeavors on the inside, such as at Kinross in Michigan or Holman in Alabama. By rough estimates, over 20,000 prisoners were involved in some way. That’s huge.
On the outside, solidarity burned so brightly all over the world. Banner drops, graffiti slogans, noise demonstrations and more showed that we had the backs of all who would partake in the strike. It is worth noting however that the vast majority of this took place the first weekend of the strike. But this prison strike—and the struggle against prisons more broadly—is about more than a day or a week. It didn’t start on September 9th and it isn’t ending any time soon. Some prisoners may return to work while others decide to stop working for the first time. It’s easier when there is a definitive date to take action on, to build momentum towards, but that’s not going to be enough.
Therefore, we would like to offer a call for renewed actions in solidarity with the prison strike and the struggle against prison society. Right now many are organizing anti-repression campaigns for striking prisoners and that is of course very necessary and not nearly as exciting work. But it would be a mistake to conceive of this struggle in a linear fashion—that is to say, a single wave where we demonstrate as it crests and write letters as it crashes. How many prisoners hadn’t heard about the strike until after it had started? How many knew but didn’t think people would actually be there to support them? Three weeks after the start of the strike, inmates in Turbeville, South Carolina rebelled against a guard and took over their dorm. How can we stop while inmates are still risking their lives for freedom?
We propose the week of October 15th – 22nd for a concentration of actions to remind everyone locked up by the State that we will always have their back. Once again, it is important to take these dates with a grain of salt. No one’s going to judge you if you take action on October 23rd, or in November, or even in 2017. Neither should anyone sit on their hands waiting for the 15th to get going. New Year’s Eve should also be kept in mind, which has traditionally seen noise demonstrations outside of prisons every year, despite being an equally arbitrary date.
“When times seem slow and uneventful we let ourselves stagnate, but imagination and revolt are like muscles: the less we use them the weaker they become. We can push back the boredom of less eventful times and point towards insurrection. Solidarity actions and struggling on our own timelines is a way we can create momentum and tension when there isn’t much.”
– “Our Own Timelines” Anathema, Vol 2 Issue 6
It is undeniable that many comrades exist outside of realities where organizing a protest or noise demonstration is tenable. Many of us are still searching for a few like-minded comrades, let alone attempting to bring out a crowd. There are still opportunities to act, whether it is a one or two person team dropping a banner or putting up posters, or hosting a letter writing or informational event that can help connect future accomplices. It certainly can never be overstated how important writing letters of support and calling in to prisons is in and of itself, but why pass on an opportunity to build our capacity?
If nothing else, we should all feel ashamed that the most active city in terms of U.S. prison strike solidarity actions is Athens, Greece. They already have such a head start but we can at least give them a bit of challenge, can’t we?
– Some Restless Uncontrollables
Poster (11×17) https://itsgoingdown.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/o1522-tabloid-2.pdf
Poster (8.5×11) https://itsgoingdown.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/o1522-letter-1.pdf
Image https://itsgoingdown.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/o1522-sq.jpg
___
from https://itsgoingdown.org/call-renewed-actions-solidarity-prison-strike-october-15-22/
from Anathema
In this issue: