For reasons of state #6,322

Gaza Militants Kill 1 Israeli Soldier
Yaniv Zohar / AP
The Guardian
March 7, 2008

KISSUFIM CROSSING, Israel (AP) — Palestinian militants ambushed an Israeli army jeep patrolling the Gaza border, then attacked a rescue crew that rushed to the scene, killing one soldier and wounding three in a brazen cross-border attack, according to military and witness accounts.

The attack raised the possibility of a fresh round of violence in Gaza, just two days after Israel ended an offensive that killed more than 120 Palestinians. Senior Israeli military officers held an emergency meeting to plot a response, officials said…

Gaza’s ordeal ‘its worst in 40 years’
Tim Butcher
The Age (The Daily Telegraph)
March 7, 2008

GAZA’S humanitarian crisis is more acute now than at any time since Israel took control of the territory in the 1967 war, aid agencies have said. More Gazans are dependent on food aid than ever before, hospitals suffer the longest power cuts yet experienced, record levels of raw sewage are being pumped into the sea daily and the economy has never been worse… The data was collated before the recent escalation in Hamas rocket fire and Israel’s incursion, which killed 106 Palestinians, at least half of them civilians, in five days alone. One Israeli civilian and two Israeli soldiers were killed in the same period…

Israeli minister vows Palestinian ‘holocaust’
Tim Butcher
The Daily Telegraph
March 1, 2008

A senior Israeli politician provoked controversy today when he warned that Palestinians firing rockets from Gaza would be punished with a “bigger holocaust” from Israeli armed forces.

The use of the Hebrew word for holocaust, “shoah”, tends to be used exclusively in Israel to describe the Nazi persecution of Jews.

Palestinian activists routinely claim to be suffering a “shoah” at the hands of Israel, but the Jewish state normally denies any moral equivalence between the suffering of Palestinians today and European jewry under the Nazis.

Matan Vilnai, deputy defence minister, broke that taboo when he used the term “shoah” during interview on Army Radio.

“The more qassam fire intensifies and the rockets reach a longer range, they (the Palestinians) will bring upon themselves a bigger shoah because we will use all our might to defend ourselves,” he said…

    29.9.2000-31.1.2008

    Occupied Territories / Israel

    Palestinians killed by Israeli security forces 4419 / 66
    Palestinians killed by Israeli civilians 43
    Israeli civilians killed by Palestinians 234 / 471
    Israeli security force personnel killed by Palestinians 239 / 87
    Foreign citizens killed by Palestinians 17 / 37
    Foreign citizens killed by Israeli security forces 10
    Palestinians killed by Palestinians 575

Posted in State / Politics | 7 Comments

yeah

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Don’t know what i want, But i know how to get it

    Or, You don’t need a a dialectical-materialist philosopher and psychoanalyst, To know which way the wind blows.

    Or, What you mean ‘we’, paleface?

Resistance Is Surrender
Slavoj Žižek
London Review of Books
November 15, 2007

One of the clearest lessons of the last few decades is that capitalism is indestructible. Marx compared it to a vampire, and one of the salient points of comparison now appears to be that vampires always rise up again after being stabbed to death. Even Mao’s attempt, in the Cultural Revolution, to wipe out the traces of capitalism, ended up in its triumphant return.

Today’s Left reacts in a wide variety of ways to the hegemony of global capitalism and its political supplement, liberal democracy. It might, for example, accept the hegemony, but continue to fight for reform within its rules (this is Third Way social democracy).

Or, it accepts that the hegemony is here to stay, but should nonetheless be resisted from its ‘interstices’.

Or, it accepts the futility of all struggle, since the hegemony is so all-encompassing that nothing can really be done except wait for an outburst of ‘divine violence’ – a revolutionary version of Heidegger’s ‘only God can save us.’

Or, it recognises the temporary futility of the struggle. In today’s triumph of global capitalism, the argument goes, true resistance is not possible, so all we can do till the revolutionary spirit of the global working class is renewed is defend what remains of the welfare state, confronting those in power with demands we know they cannot fulfil, and otherwise withdraw into cultural studies, where one can quietly pursue the work of criticism.

Or, it emphasises the fact that the problem is a more fundamental one, that global capitalism is ultimately an effect of the underlying principles of technology or ‘instrumental reason’.

Or, it posits that one can undermine global capitalism and state power, not by directly attacking them, but by refocusing the field of struggle on everyday practices, where one can ‘build a new world’; in this way, the foundations of the power of capital and the state will be gradually undermined, and, at some point, the state will collapse (the exemplar of this approach is the Zapatista movement).

Or, it takes the ‘postmodern’ route, shifting the accent from anti-capitalist struggle to the multiple forms of politico-ideological struggle for hegemony, emphasising the importance of discursive re-articulation.

Or, it wagers that one can repeat at the postmodern level the classical Marxist gesture of enacting the ‘determinate negation’ of capitalism: with today’s rise of ‘cognitive work’, the contradiction between social production and capitalist relations has become starker than ever, rendering possible for the first time ‘absolute democracy’ (this would be Hardt and Negri’s position).

These positions are not presented as a way of avoiding some ‘true’ radical Left politics – what they are trying to get around is, indeed, the lack of such a position. This defeat of the Left is not the whole story of the last thirty years, however. There is another, no less surprising, lesson to be learned from the Chinese Communists’ presiding over arguably the most explosive development of capitalism in history, and from the growth of West European Third Way social democracy. It is, in short: we can do it better. In the UK, the Thatcher revolution was, at the time, chaotic and impulsive, marked by unpredictable contingencies. It was Tony Blair who was able to institutionalise it, or, in Hegel’s terms, to raise (what first appeared as) a contingency, a historical accident, into a necessity. Thatcher wasn’t a Thatcherite, she was merely herself; it was Blair (more than Major) who truly gave form to Thatcherism.

The response of some critics on the postmodern Left to this predicament is to call for a new politics of resistance. Those who still insist on fighting state power, let alone seizing it, are accused of remaining stuck within the ‘old paradigm’: the task today, their critics say, is to resist state power by withdrawing from its terrain and creating new spaces outside its control. This is, of course, the obverse of accepting the triumph of capitalism. The politics of resistance is nothing but the moralising supplement to a Third Way Left.

Simon Critchley’s recent book, Infinitely Demanding, is an almost perfect embodiment of this position.[*] For Critchley, the liberal-democratic state is here to stay. Attempts to abolish the state failed miserably; consequently, the new politics has to be located at a distance from it: anti-war movements, ecological organisations, groups protesting against racist or sexist abuses, and other forms of local self-organisation. It must be a politics of resistance to the state, of bombarding the state with impossible demands, of denouncing the limitations of state mechanisms. The main argument for conducting the politics of resistance at a distance from the state hinges on the ethical dimension of the ‘infinitely demanding’ call for justice: no state can heed this call, since its ultimate goal is the ‘real-political’ one of ensuring its own reproduction (its economic growth, public safety, etc). ‘Of course,’ Critchley writes,

    history is habitually written by the people with the guns and sticks and one cannot expect to defeat them with mocking satire and feather dusters. Yet, as the history of ultra-leftist active nihilism eloquently shows, one is lost the moment one picks up the guns and sticks. Anarchic political resistance should not seek to mimic and mirror the archic violent sovereignty it opposes.

So what should, say, the US Democrats do? Stop competing for state power and withdraw to the interstices of the state, leaving state power to the Republicans and start a campaign of anarchic resistance to it? And what would Critchley do if he were facing an adversary like Hitler? Surely in such a case one should ‘mimic and mirror the archic violent sovereignty’ one opposes? Shouldn’t the Left draw a distinction between the circumstances in which one would resort to violence in confronting the state, and those in which all one can and should do is use ‘mocking satire and feather dusters’? The ambiguity of Critchley’s position resides in a strange non sequitur: if the state is here to stay, if it is impossible to abolish it (or capitalism), why retreat from it? Why not act with(in) the state? Why not accept the basic premise of the Third Way? Why limit oneself to a politics which, as Critchley puts it, ‘calls the state into question and calls the established order to account, not in order to do away with the state, desirable though that might well be in some utopian sense, but in order to better it or attenuate its malicious effect’?

These words simply demonstrate that today’s liberal-democratic state and the dream of an ‘infinitely demanding’ anarchic politics exist in a relationship of mutual parasitism: anarchic agents do the ethical thinking, and the state does the work of running and regulating society. Critchley’s anarchic ethico-political agent acts like a superego, comfortably bombarding the state with demands; and the more the state tries to satisfy these demands, the more guilty it is seen to be. In compliance with this logic, the anarchic agents focus their protest not on open dictatorships, but on the hypocrisy of liberal democracies, who are accused of betraying their own professed principles.

The big demonstrations in London and Washington against the US attack on Iraq a few years ago offer an exemplary case of this strange symbiotic relationship between power and resistance. Their paradoxical outcome was that both sides were satisfied. The protesters saved their beautiful souls: they made it clear that they don’t agree with the government’s policy on Iraq. Those in power calmly accepted it, even profited from it: not only did the protests in no way prevent the already-made decision to attack Iraq; they also served to legitimise it. Thus George Bush’s reaction to mass demonstrations protesting his visit to London, in effect: ‘You see, this is what we are fighting for, so that what people are doing here – protesting against their government policy – will be possible also in Iraq!’

It is striking that the course on which Hugo Chávez has embarked since 2006 is the exact opposite of the one chosen by the postmodern Left: far from resisting state power, he grabbed it (first by an attempted coup, then democratically), ruthlessly using the Venezuelan state apparatuses to promote his goals. Furthermore, he is militarising the barrios, and organising the training of armed units there. And, the ultimate scare: now that he is feeling the economic effects of capital’s ‘resistance’ to his rule (temporary shortages of some goods in the state-subsidised supermarkets), he has announced plans to consolidate the 24 parties that support him into a single party. Even some of his allies are sceptical about this move: will it come at the expense of the popular movements that have given the Venezuelan revolution its élan? However, this choice, though risky, should be fully endorsed: the task is to make the new party function not as a typical state socialist (or Peronist) party, but as a vehicle for the mobilisation of new forms of politics (like the grass roots slum committees). What should we say to someone like Chávez? ‘No, do not grab state power, just withdraw, leave the state and the current situation in place’? Chávez is often dismissed as a clown – but wouldn’t such a withdrawal just reduce him to a version of Subcomandante Marcos, whom many Mexican leftists now refer to as ‘Subcomediante Marcos’? Today, it is the great capitalists – Bill Gates, corporate polluters, fox hunters – who ‘resist’ the state.

The lesson here is that the truly subversive thing is not to insist on ‘infinite’ demands we know those in power cannot fulfil. Since they know that we know it, such an ‘infinitely demanding’ attitude presents no problem for those in power: ‘So wonderful that, with your critical demands, you remind us what kind of world we would all like to live in. Unfortunately, we live in the real world, where we have to make do with what is possible.’ The thing to do is, on the contrary, to bombard those in power with strategically well-selected, precise, finite demands, which can’t be met with the same excuse.

See also : Lettuce to the Cabbage : TJ Clark: Chris Harman: André Bénichou (December 13, 2007) | David Graeber (January 3, 2008) | Slavoj Žižek (January 24, 2008) | Simon Critchley’s review of Violence by Slavoj Žižek

REFERENDUM ON ZIZEK?
David Graeber

Slavoj Žižek is a delightful provocateur and an extraordinarily gifted intellectual comedian. One day he’s denouncing do-gooder capitalists like George Soros by insisting capitalism is an irredeemable system of structural violence; a few weeks later, he’s informing the Left there’s no chance of ever overcoming capitalism, but they should take hope in the fact that “we can do it better”. One day he’s embracing Lenin as a man whose aim was to destroy all states forever, the next he’s arguing the state must be maintained as the only possible remaining bulwark against capitalism. To respond to such statements as if they educed a consistent political position seems slightly oafish. Still, if you choose someone like this as a book reviewer, your readers are unlikely to learn much about the book. Worse, “Resistance is Surrender,” which purports to be a review of Simon Critchley’s Infinitely Demanding, is clearly intended less as a review than as a political intervention aimed to head off any possibility that LRB’s readers might give serious consideration to its message.

That would be unfortunate.

Critchley’s book is important, it seems to me, because it is a kind of overture. It is almost unheard of for professional intellectuals—philosophers, no less—to engage seriously with radical social movements. The reason is simple enough: it requires listening. The last decade has seen a profound change in world politics, as social movements from Argentina to Japan increasingly reject the very idea of seizing state power, of creating freedom at the point of a gun, and began instead concentrating on the reinvention of new forms of democracy, sociality, and exchange. The intellectual classes have never known quite what [to] make of it. Most reacted with condescension when the global justice movement first appeared on the horizon around 2000; some soon switched to giddy enthusiasm, followed by a sense of hurt dismay on discovering the movement wasn’t looking for a vanguard. Over the last few years, as it has become apparent that revolutionary transformation of the sort the movement aims to achieve is going to take a great deal of time and patience, former intellectual allies have begun tumbling over each other to abandon ship, and find some “progressive capitalists” to whom to sell their souls (though so far, without a great deal of success).

Critchley is one of the few who has made a serious effort to listen, to entertain the possibility, in effect, that those who are actively engaged in fighting capitalism and its empires might themselves have something relevant to say, to try to understand what they are trying to achieve, and how the intellectual tools at his disposal might be helpful. The book does not simply propound a Levinasian ethics, understood as an infinite responsibility towards otherness, it is in itself an attempt to practice it. Žižek appears to object to this project on principle (rather oddly, considering he endorses the book in precisely these terms on his blurb on the back cover). When you shave away the posturing, his real message to LRB’s reviewers is simple: you are intellectuals. Intellectuals have always been, and always must be, whores to power in some form or another. Obviously, Žižek can’t quite out and say this: so he conveys it in the form of a series of rather dishonest rhetorical maneuvers, mostly revolving around deployment of the term “we”. “We” are intellectuals, “we” are the Left (since the Left apparently consists primarily of intellectuals), but we also seem to include anyone from Tony Blair and the Democratic Party to the current rulers of the People’s Republic of China. As a result “we” obviously cannot stand opposed on principle to cruise missiles and interrogation chambers because our real brothers and sisters are not those being blown up by or strung up in them, but rather, those pushing the buttons and calculating stress positions.

Well, of course we can make that choice if we like. For most of human history, those who made their livings by writing mostly have. Still, I’d offer two points readers might wish to consider:

First, capitalism will not really be around forever. An engine of infinite expansion and accumulation cannot, by definition, continue forever in a finite world. Now that India and China are buying in as full players, it seems reasonable to assume that within at most 50 years, the system will hit its physical limits. Whatever we end up with at that point, it will not be a system of infinite expansion. Therefore it will not be capitalism. It will be something else. However, there is no guarantee that this something will be better. It might be considerably worse. Might we not do well to at least consider what something better might be like? If nothing else it seems an odd moment to call off all speculation about alternatives. And if one does wish to think about alternatives to capitalism, how better to do this than to engage with those building such alternatives in the present?

Second, to be able to do this, we will probably have to learn to get over ourselves a little. This is the eventuality against which Žižek seems to be making his heroic stand. After all, why choose Chavez? Why not, say, Evo Morales, who unlike Chavez really was placed in power by, and remains answerable to, genuine social movements? Obviously: for that very reason. Could we really imagine someone like Žižek, even in his fantasies, patiently listening to the demands of the directly democratic assemblies of El Alto? Chavez, on the other hand, is precisely the political figure such an intellectual would wish himself to be: a virtuoso performer and political comedian holding power with no real responsibilities to anyone except the pleasure of his audience. Sure, it’s a seductive fantasy. But it’s precisely the fantasy we have to get past if we want to make a genuine difference in the world.

Check it out now! A funk soul rebel: BOOKSURFER : Books & Internet Resources | Scott McLemee, Zizek Watch, The Chronicle of Higher Education, February-July 2004

    Žižek

    “Yes, he’s married. His wife, the filmmaker and writer Astra Taylor, did a documentary about Slavoj Žižek. How cool is that?” (Ten Years Of In The Aeroplane Over The Sea, stereogum.com, February 8, 2008)
    “Since the deaths of Jacques Derrida in 2004 and Jean Baudrillard in 2007, the Slovenian critic Slavoj Žižek has quickly cemented his position as the world’s most prominent philosopher and cultural theorist.” (Heart of darkness, Matthew Taunton, New Statesman, January 31, 2008)
    “Žižek leaves no social or cultural phenomenon untheorized, and is master of the counterintuitive observation.” New Yorker
    “Unafraid of confrontation and with a near-limitless grasp of pop symbolism.” The Times
    “Žižek is one of the few living writers to combine theoretical rigor with compulsive readability.” Publishers Weekly
    “I prefer to think of myself as some[one] who, so as not to offend others, pretends that he is human. In fact, I am a monster.” Žižek

Posted in Anarchism | 14 Comments

Pssst. Wanna Manifesto? Awesome new front group for LM

For a dead parrot, the Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP) continues to display a great deal of life; the bizarros gotta new front group: Manifesto Club. It joins:

1) Africa Direct — genocide? What genocide? (defunct);
*Association of British Drivers — just say no to speed limits;
2) Audacity.org — “Let’s build!” (awesome);
3) Campaign Against Militarism (defunct — begat the London International Research Exchange);
3) Campaign for Internet Freedom (defunct);
4) Channel Cyberia (defunct);
5) Families for Freedom (defunct);
6) Feminists for Justice — date rape? (defunct);
7) Freedom & Law (defunct);
EIGHT) Future Cities Project (awesome);
Genetic Interest Group
9) Global Futures (defunct);
10) Institute of Ideas (awesome);
11) Irish Freedom Movement (defunct);
12) Libero! — established by (Doctor) Carlton Brick* as a support group for libertarian football fans / a weird-arse attempt at cornering the football market (defunct);
13) Litigious Society (defunct);
14) London International Research Exchange (defunct);
15) Parents Against the Charter ? (defunct);
Progress Educational Trust GM is cool!
Science Media Centre GM is cool!
16) Sense about Science (awesome);
17) Sp!ked Online (awesome);
18) Transport Research Group — cars are good (defunct — begat the Future Cities Project);
19) WORLDwrite (awesome);
20) (East London) Workers Against Racism (defunct);

and

21) the magazine NOVO (Germany).

*Links with but not established by.

Established in 1978 as a split from the IS, the RCP — according to James Heartfield (James Hughes) — was disbanded over a fairly long period. Thus the last time the RCP stood in an election was 1992, while the last public campaign it was involved in was the Campaign Against Militarism (1992–1995); the RCP sold LM to Helene Guldberg at the end of 1996.

Living Marxism, the monthly magazine of the RCP, was launched in 1988. It later (1996) changed its title to LM — which met polite titters — but what got the Godless Communists into heap ’em big trouble was an article by Thomas Deichmann, published in LM #97 (February 1997), and titled ‘The picture that fooled the world’. “This image of an emaciated Muslim caged behind Serb barbed wire, filmed by a British news team, became a worldwide symbol of the war in Bosnia. But the picture is not quite what it seems”, wrote Doubting Thomas (LM issued a press release at the time to ensure maximum publicity for his startling claims). Accused of manufacturing lies, Ed Vuillamy, one of the journalists responsible for producing the story, denied Deichmann’s allegations. A few years later, in March 2000, ITN won a libel case against LM, and it was forced to close. See David Campbell, Atrocity, memory, photography: imaging the concentration camps of Bosnia – the case of ITN versus Living Marxism | Also Alexander Cockburn, Guardian Fabricates Chomsky Quotes in Bid to Smear World’s Number One Intellectual: Storm Over Brockes’ Fakery, Counterpunch, November 5/6, 2005 | David Pallister, John Vidal and Kevin Maguire, Life after Living Marxism: Fighting for freedom – to offend, outrage and question everything, The Guardian, July 8 2000 | Dave Walker, Libertarian Humanism or Critical Utopianism? The Demise of the Revolutionary Communist Party, New Interventions, Vol.8, No.3, 1998 | George Monbiot, Far Left or Far Right?: Living Marxism’s interesting allegiances, November 1, 1998

*Three speakers focused on David Beckham, among them Carlton Brick, from the university [of Paisley, Scotland], whose address was intriguingly titled “Father, why hast thou forsaken me? Postmodernism, desire and dissatisfaction: a case study of David Beckham’s meaning”. Explaining how Beckham’s career has been littered with Christian symbolism, Brick said redemption, resurrection, and salvation “are the narratives that tell his story”. The footballer’s perception of himself seems to concur: he has appeared in magazines adopting a Christ-like pose, has a crucifix tattoo and named one of his sons Cruz, Spanish for cross. But Brick’s paper said reading Beckham as postmodern religious icon, a new god of the global consumer culture, was insufficient. “Rather, Beckham’s celebrity speaks to the paradoxical desire to attribute meaning in a culture which is increasingly defined as meaningless …” ~ Beyonce, Becks and me me me, Sydney Morning Herald, September 17, 2005

Also awesome : Revolutionary Communist Party of Britain (Marxist-Leninist) | Revolutionary Communist Party (USA) | Revolutionary Communist Party (Canada)

Posted in !nataS, Trot Guide | 8 Comments

Not-so-sustainable houses burn. Naughty Elves @ work in Seattle again?

“Built Green? Nope BLACK!” the sign said.

First with Faux News:

Suspicious Fire Burns Luxury Homes in Seattle Suburb; Explosives Found and ELF Suspected
(Monday) March 3, 2008

WOODINVILLE, Wash. — Explosive devices were found inside luxury houses set ablaze Monday morning outside of Seattle, and police suspected that a well-known eco-terrorism group ignited the fires. Meanwhile, a developers association offered a $100,000 reward for information leading to those who committed the apparent arson…

History repeats. In the weeks before Jeff Luers’ trial in 2001 — who, incidentally, has just won an appeal to reduce his original sentence from 22 years and eight months to 10 years — a fire broke out at the same Chevrolet dealer he was convicted of sabotaging, this time causing $1 million in damage. Now, with Briana Waters on trial, someone’s done gone and committed another arson. (See also Green Scare Update, July 14, 2007).

It’s terrorism says the government, media and developers: ‘$2 million homes burn in ‘act of terror,’ developer says’, CNN, March 3, 2008. “Fire engulfed five luxury homes Monday morning at a subdivision north of Seattle in what could be a case of ecoterrorism, officials said… Seattle’s Street of Dreams is “the most popular and highest attended single site luxury home and garden tour in the U.S.,” according to the event’s Web site.” “We are saddened by this senseless act. Such actions to destroy the property of others by this means are criminal and counterproductive” said the President.

The display homes, sold as clean and green, were built by Centex Homes, a little ol’ company from Texas:

Dallas-based Centex (NYSE: CTX), founded in 1950, is one of the nation’s leading home building companies. In addition to its home building operations, Centex’s related business lines include mortgage, title and insurance services and integrated pest defense systems. These businesses provide operational or financial support to the company’s home building operations and are leaders in their respective industries. Centex ranks No. 1 in its industry on FORTUNE magazine’s list of “America’s Most Admired Companies,” and leads the industry in customer satisfaction.

For the third quarter of fiscal year 2008 ended December 31, 2007, the company reported the following results: revenues for the quarter of $1.91 billion and a net loss of nearly $975 million, or $7.94 per diluted share.

For fiscal year 2007, Centex reported revenues of $12 billion, and net earnings of $268 million, or $2.23 per diluted share.

See also : Green radicals suspected in US luxury homes fire, AFP | Luxury Homes Burn in Apparent Eco-Attack, Elizabeth M. Gillespie, AP | Seattle fires may be linked to radical eco-group, Reuters

Video : FBI investigating ‘Street of Dreams’ fires, March 3, 2008, KING Staff and wire reports, King5

Watch out you might get what you’re after
Cool babies strange but not a stranger
I’m an ordinary guy
Burning down the house

Hold tight wait till the party’s over
Hold tight We’re in for nasty weather
There has got to be a way
Burning down the house

Here’s your ticket pack your bag: time for jumpin’ overboard
The transportation is here
Close enough but not too far, Maybe you know where you are
Fightin’ fire with fire

All wet hey you might need a raincoat
Shakedown dreams walking in broad daylight
Three hun-dred six-ty five de-grees
Burning down the house

It was once upon a place sometimes I listen to myself
Gonna come in first place
People on their way to work baby what did you except
Gonna burst into flame

My house S’out of the ordinary
That’s right Don’t want to hurt nobody
Some things sure can sweep me off my feet
Burning down the house

No visible means of support and you have not seen nuthin’ yet
Everything’s stuck together
I don’t know what you expect staring into the TV set
Fighting fire with fire

Posted in !nataS | Leave a comment

Wtf is it with Newcastle and !@#$%^& Nazis? Or: “Hello, my name is Nathan Clarke. You’re not Jewish, are you?”

Is it something in the water?

For a town its size (140,000+), Newcastle seems to have been blessed with more than its fair share of neo-Nazis — whether it’s Douglas Schott and the boys of Blood Red Eagle warbling Viking tunes at the Hamilton Hotel, teenage fascists (and their considerably older partners) organising BBQs for fellow members of teh Master Race, or Saleam’s mob pestering locals about the dangers of blackfellas doing what they do best (y’know… stealing jobs and women from under the nose of The White Man) — there appears to be no shortage of nutty racists in town. Now some real estate agent called Nathan Clarke has been exposed as being a net-Nazi: FDB! having just published the alleged profile of yet another user of the white supremacist Stormfront website, one using (although probably not for much longer) the pseudonym ‘nafe’. Ironically, this same person only recently denounced the Jew (sic) Joe Hildebrand for writing on the subject of a supposed plot for Race thugs to hijack Australia Day (January 9, 2008).

Mr Clarke said (October 17, 2007):

We are delighted to be joining Australia’s fastest growing real estate group. Harcourts are a modern and progressive company who place great emphasis on training and systems and we feel these will be of great benefit to our clients.

Mr Clarke also said (January 10, 2008):

Just a little misrepresentation. He [deliberately] misquoted the man. He [blatantly] lied to the whole of The Daily Telegraph [readership]. He has not [substantiated] the [article] and it would be tough to find anything truthful in the whole ****ing article.

Joe [you’re] … scum, [you’re] a typical [J]ew, [you] try and stand over anything that doesn’t fit your agenda. Trying to ruin a man[‘]s life, career, friends, family is a low act.

If you were [truly] wanting to write a piece on white “nationalism” with some truth, come here and discuss [it] with us, not write your hate filled [J]ew[ish] bull****.

I’m going to stop right here before [I] take my coments [too] far… misquote that you scum ****.

So if you’re in the market for real estate in Newcastle, be sure and contact Nathan Clarke on 0402 674 815 or Harcourts New South Wales State Office, Level 11, 100 Williams Street, East Sydney, New South Wales on (02) 9380 8665.

Just don’t be a bullying, hate-filled scumbag Jew, because Jews are bad, mmmkay?

Posted in !nataS, Anti-fascism, Media | 44 Comments

Media Alert Transmission Hub Advanced Broadcast Application // Mathaba.Net // What The Fuck

Media Alert Transmission Hub Advanced Broadcast Application What The Fuck

The word ‘mathaba’ apparently means ‘centre’; ‘Al Mathaba’ was the name given to Libya’s spy network. Mathaba.net is also the name of an ‘independent news agency’, based in the UK. Just recently, the ‘news agency’ published an interview, ‘Doing the New Right thing by people’, with a local fascist, Welf Herfurth. Although the article fails to mention it, Herfurth is one of the handful of regular contributors to the site. It does inform the reader, however, that “This interview was [originally] published by Destiny magazine, a leading Australian nationalist magazine”, published by the fascist Australian Protectionist Party, a recent (September 2007) split from the Australia First Party, led by Doctor James Saleam.

Obtaining details of the origins and purposes of the mathaba.net site has proven to be a little difficult. Alexa states that the address for the ‘Mathaba News Network’ is BCM Mathaba, 27 Old Gloucester St, London, England WC1N 3XX, UK, the location of a number of other businesses and groups of one sort or another. It also states that the site has been online since October 19, 1999; it was apparently designed by GreenNet, which describes it as “a Pan African and Alternative News portal”, and which is also designated as being the African Mathaba Network. According to another source:

At Mathaba we provide an example that people can be united in their goals while maintaining healthy differences of culture, nationality and opinion. We encourage the search for alternative solutions to realize human rights and freedom, and evolve those ideas into concrete living works that benefit our world…

Uh-huh.

In addition to Herfurth, among the other regular contributors to Mathaba are:

    Sahib Mustaqim Bleher (UK);
    Walter M. Brasch (USA);
    Harris Brio (USA);
    Karen Dabrowska (UK);
    Deborah Gabriel (UK);
    Flávio Gonçalves (Portugal);
    Diana Lee (USA);
    Stephen Lendman (USA);
    Nicola Nasser (Isratine);
    Kuumba Chi Nia (USA);
    Ardeshir Ommani (USA);
    Tony Ryan (Australia) and;
    Satya Sagar (India).

Brio is “a non follower of the Holocoustian faith” according to one blog comment, while Karen Dabrowska is the author of a travel guide to Iraq(!). Deborah Gabriel is a journalist, the author of a book called Layers of Blackness: Colourism in the African Diaspora (2007), and a Pan-Africanist.

Flávio Gonçalves, on the other hand, is another member of the New Right, and like Herfurth maintains a blog. Kuumba Chi Nia is a sometime member of the All-African People’s Revolutionary Party, a Pan-Africanist micro-sect established by Ghanian politician (Prime Minister and President) Kwame Nkrumah (1909–1972), allegedly described as the ‘Lenin of Africa’ by CLR James. Ardeshir Ommani is a co-founder of the American-Iranian Friendship Committee, and has written extensively on Iran/US relations.

Tony Ryan is the other Australian, in addition to Herfurth, who contributes to mathaba.net; at one point, Ryan was a member of something called ‘Australia Independent’s Alliance’, apparently a creature closing resembling the ‘Save Australia Alliance’, one of right-wing maverick Tony Pitt’s innumerable political projects. On the site of Israel Shamir, Satya Sagar is described as ‘our friend’. Preliminary investigation would seem to suggest that what unites the regular contributors to Mathaba is anti-Semitism and/or some form of anti-US imperialism.

Or perhaps not.

Sahib Mustaqim Bleher is an interesting bloke; he refers to the Holocult on his blog, and doesn’t appear to be particularly well-disposed towards Jews or their presumably exaggerated claims to persecution by the Nazis. A German-born Muslim convert, Bleher lives in England, and until recently was General Secretary of The Islamic Party of Britain, when in June 2003 the Party suspended its activities. The Islamic Party was founded by Bleher and another convert, David Musa Pidcock, in the wake of the Rushdie affair of 1989.

Both The Party and Bleher get a mention in the February 2007 edition of Searchlight in an article by Gerry Gable about Troy Southgate’s “New Right Group”:

…Not only did [the audience at a New Right meeting] listen dutifully to [Michele] Renouf’s usual ranting but, with only a slight ripple of resentment, they sat through another anti-Jewish tirade from Dr Sahib Mustaqim Bleher, the German-born convert to Islam who is now the general secretary of the Islamic Party of Britain. He supported Renouf’s views of Jews, saying that Muslims were not the root of the world’s problems, Jews were.

Bleher, who describes himself as a “flying Imam” has his own blog in which he describes the Holocaust as the Holocult and the recent Holocaust denial conference in Iran as “the most important milestone in their [the Iranians’] history since the Islamic Revolution under Khomeini”…

A Good Muslim, (like Dazza the Good Christian), neither Bleher nor his Party like homosexuality much either:

Question Forum : Islamic View On Homosexuality (March 9, 2002)

Would an Islamic nation in Britain tolerate homosexuality? By tolerate I mean allow people to live their lives this way without state interference. Christianity does not tolerate homosexuality but it is not punishable by death. Would an Islamic state therefore ‘condemn to death’ Britain’s 6.6 million homosexuals?

To start with, the figure of 6.6 million (or more than 10% of the population) sounds propagandistic. Whilst few dare speak out against the practice of homosexuality due to the pressure exerted by gay rights groups and echoed in the media, the majority of the population do not regard it as an acceptable way of life. Islam condemns and outlaws homosexuality. As far as Islamic law is concerned, the rules are that the state does not interfere in the privacy of people’s homes, but it would need to safeguard public decency by preventing any public advocacy for homosexuality. Such activity would come under the heading of public incitement. The death penalty the questioner mentions only applies to a public display of lewdness witnessed by several people.

The best account of the bizarro current represented by Herfurth, Gonçalves and chief national anarchist ideologue Troy Southgate remains that of Graham D. Macklin, ‘Co-opting the counter culture: Troy Southgate and the National Revolutionary Faction’, Patterns of Prejudice, Vol.39, No.3, 2005 [PDF]. Also of relevance is Alan Wolfe, ‘A Fascist Philosopher Helps Us Understand Contemporary Politcs’, The Chronicle of Higher Education, April 2, 2004 [PDF]. More generally, Kevin Coogan’s Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International (Autonomedia, New York, 1999) remains the definitive account of the post-war fascist politics which inform Southgate and others in their wanderings in the political wilderness. In Australia, the tendency’s enormous weakness is perhaps best symbolised by the involvement of individuals such as Darrin Hodges, aka the Anglo-Australian National Community Council.

Although Southgate’s impact on left-wing counter-cultural concerns has been completely negligible, this case study of the NRF’s wanton intellectual cannibalism shows that groupuscular fascism poses a clear danger, particularly for ecological subcultures whose values are profoundly different from the ecological agenda mooted by the far right. The increasing ability of groupuscules like the NRF to absorb and mirror left-wing and environmental causes, effortlessly refracting their concerns about globalization and liberal democracy through their own antisemitic and racist framework, creates a dangerous conflation between ecology and anti-immigration as a way of restoring the ‘organic balance’ of nature. If this article is anything to go by, then anarchist, ecological and global justice movements need to remain on their guard in order to ensure that the revolution will not be national-Bolshevized.

See also : APEC : New Reich / “National Anarchists” (September 8, 2007) | APEC : Neo-Nazis (September 14, 2007) | All Heil the New Reich* (September 18, 2007) | Anarchist statement on the New Right (October 21, 2007) | “Pathetic Australian anarchist statement on the New Reich” (January 16, 2008)

Posted in !nataS, Media | 15 Comments

“Taxi!” I mean: “Seig Heil!” Fascist twats in Tirso de Molina, Madrid

On Friday evening, February 29, in Tirso de Molina, a few hundred metres from Madrid’s main square, fascist dingbats de los grupos nazis Nación y Revolución y Combat España (Nation & Revolution and Combat Spain) safely seig heil from behind police lines, part of a small contingent of racist nutters protected from an estimated 1,000 antifa by a large contingent of police. Having been authorised by local authorities, police tried to ensure a safe presence for the rallying neo-Nazis through the use of tear gas and rubber bullets. Accounts vary, with English-language corporate/state media claiming few casualties, Reuters noting that “A spokesman for Madrid’s ambulance service said nobody had been injured though left-wing media said one protester had been blinded in one eye”. The same or similar “left-wing” sources claim at least two youths were injured and required hospital treatment.

Fascist groups in Madrid and elsewhere in Spain are mobilising in anticipation of national elections, due to be held on March 9. The election will pit Spain’s ruling party, the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE), led by José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, against the (less) right-wing People’s Party (PP) of Mariano Rajoy. One of the key election issues will be immigration. Over the last decade, the immigrant population in Spain has grown significantly, and there exists obvious scope for using this fact to boost the popularity of anti-immigrant forces among the right-wing and lower middle classes. According to a recent report in The Guardian:

…10% of the 45 million inhabitants are foreign-born. Rajoy accused Zapatero of ignoring the rising phenomenon: “You are not interested in talking about immigration, but I am … 34% of prisoners in jail are foreign. We have to establish some order and control and your party does not want to.” Rajoy has made this a central plank in the PP’s campaign, targeting lower and middle class families worried about competing for increasingly scarce jobs with Spain’s immigrant population. Zapatero retorted that when he came to power in 2004 there were 700,000 illegal immigrants. “We have given them contracts, with the agreement of companies and unions, while all your party did was give them a bus pass,” he said.

The same journalist adds that “…as the economy starts to slow down, particularly in the construction industry, where so many immigrants have found work, there are concerns about social unrest. There are now more than 400,000 unemployed foreigners in Spain – a cause of concern to those who fear ghettoisation. Rajoy has chosen to make this issue a key part of his electoral campaign, arguing that new immigrants should sign a pledge to respect Spanish customs and values, and that they should be forcibly removed from the country if they fail to find work within a year.”

As if to reinforce the point the Spanish fascists, upon leaving Tirso de Molina, attempted to enter the neighbouring area of Lavapiés, an area with a relatively high concentration (approximately 1/3) of immigrant workers. Despite the best efforts of police reinforcements, the few barricades thrown up by antifascist counter-demonstrators seemed to have kept the area relatively clean. El País claims there were five injuries and seven antifa arrested, indicating that the fascists got away without injury or arrest.

Perhaps the police, in addition to acting as bodyguards, also drove the fascists home?

Ellos se enteraron de la protesta por carteles en el barrio, aunque páginas web como nodo50.org, kaosenlared.net y otromadrid.org suelen publicitar las convocatorias. La del viernes la organizaba la plataforma Madrid Antifascista. “Los disturbios no estaban organizados”, repetía Raúl. “Pero es normal que reaccione si empiezan a lanzarme pelotas de goma”. Empezó la policía, asegura. Ayer quedaron en libertad los dos menores, de 14 y 17 años, detenidos tras los altercados. Los otros cinco pasan hoy a disposición judicial.

Fotos la Plataforma | Fotos de Agencias

As an aside — and because, in case you hadn’t already guessed, this blog frequently functions as my scrapbook — in Mother Russia, Andrew Meier has written an interesting account of Eduard Limonov, the leader of the National Bolshevik Party cum personality cult, and his failed attempt at the Russian Presidency, currently occupied by one of Putin’s numerous puppets (Maverick populist is enlivening opposition to Putin, International Herald Tribune, March 1, 2008).

Posted in Anti-fascism, State / Politics | Leave a comment

Fuck Shit Up / Friends Stand United / Finance Sector Union

    Update (November 1, 2008) : Three men convicted in 2006 beating death of Corona man, Sonja Bjelland, The Press-Enterprise, October 27, 2008: Three Corona men were convicted of second-degree murder Monday in a beating death connected to a national gang. Richard James Dugan, 27, Jonathan Richard Morgan, 24, and Travis Daniel Westly, 25, face sentencing Dec. 12 after the jury found all three guilty of second-degree murder for the benefit of a street gang. Sean Gardhouse, 19, of Corona, was beaten June 23, 2006, in the parking lot of the Jack in the Box on Ontario Avenue in Corona and died five days later. His death focused attention on two gangs, Friends Stand United and El Cerrito Boys. Friends Stand United, a national gang, was written about in Rolling Stone in 2007. The group attracted attention with a DVD called “Boston Beatdown,” featuring footage of fights and music from hard-core punk bands…

Yeah so anyway. Anti-racists, thugs, or both, I dunno.

But so much for the Finance Sector Union.

*boom–tish*

FSU is “a fairly new phenomenon here and we’re still in the beginning stages of figuring out what these guys are all about,” Seattle police spokeswoman Debra Brown said. I say: following on from a string of other incidents (Friends Stand Charged: FSU Members Arrested for Weapons, Drugs Outside Local Club by Megan Seling, The Stranger, March 2–8, 2006, details one such incident), news that someone, allegedly a member of FSU, was charged with manslaughter back in January last year triggered a small amount of reflection on the gang’s (crew’s) past and present. Its past is fairly clear: the crew (gang) emerged as a response to the desire to rid Boston hardcore of boneheads and other racists; presently, the name has been adopted by a large range of others, in and outside of Boston, whether affiliated in some way to the original crew or not. Despite the overtly-hostile title, ‘Violent group spoils party for segment of music scene’ by Sara Jean Green (Seattle Times, March 7, 2006) provides a useful overview of the history of FSU, noting that the handful of arrests detailed in Seling’s report was more likely to have been of SHARPs than it was the Seattle FSU crew. Interestingly, Green notes that some of the friction in the scene is:

A matter of economics

The schism that’s occurring in the hardcore scene is at least partially due to economics, with a growing number of middle-class suburban kids getting involved in hardcore… Many don’t understand the etiquette or history of the scene, which has always had violent undercurrents, Collins said.

“I grew up in a trailer park with no money. A lot of guys in my crew, we grew up hard,” said Collins, originally from a rural area near Bremerton. Kids who grew up in places like Bellevue or Redmond “had to deal with tennis practice — we had to deal with not getting beat up on the way home from the [school] bus,” he said.

Though police have characterized FSU assaults as “random acts of violence,” Collins said that’s not the case. If FSU gets into a fight, there’s always a reason, he said.

“We’re civil people — we just don’t beat people ’til we can’t beat them anymore,” he said. “If I fight them, I’m going to fight them ’til I think they got what they deserved.”

But others worry that violence associated with FSU members could have a lasting impact beyond bruises and bloodied noses.

David Meinert, a former president of the Northwest chapter of the Recording Academy who manages the Seattle band Presidents of the United States of America, said FSU’s propensity for violence “is a negative black mark” on Seattle’s otherwise healthy hardcore scene. Meinert, who spent 10 years working to have the city’s Teen Dance Ordinance rescinded, worries that FSU’s reputation could prompt more police attention at all all-ages shows.

Speaking of economics, the producers of hardcore DVD Boston Breakdown offer an unnecessarily laboured response to accusations they unfairly profit from violence associated with the scene in Boston on their website. A not very posi review of the documentary is here; David King reflects on some hardcore issues here. Good, bad or indifferent, Alexander J. Franklin, the person charged with committing manslaughter in January 2007, has been acquitted.

Charges dropped in fatal fight at Asbury club
APP.com
February 29, 2008

FREEHOLD — A Monmouth County grand jury on Wednesday refused to indict a Brooklyn man on manslaughter charges that had been lodged against him in the death of a Bass River man last year, the Prosecutor’s Office said.

Alexander J. Franklin, 34, a tattoo artist with reputed gang affiliations, had been accused in the beating death of James Morrison, 25, on Jan. 14, 2007.

Morrison died of blunt force trauma after an altercation at Club Deep, an Asbury Park nightclub, where he was allegedly punched in the head and later died of his injuries.

“A very thorough investigation was conducted at the time this crime occurred,” Monmouth County First Assistant Prosecutor Peter E. Warshaw said. “That information was presented to the grand jury in a thorough and comprehensive manner, and the grand jury declined to return any indictments.”

The grand jury’s vote means the police charges against Franklin are now dismissed, prosecutors said.

Franklin was initially arrested three weeks after the fight. At the time, police said Morrison hit his head on concrete after being felled by a blow to the head.

Morrison and his friends had allegedly been involved in an altercation inside the club over a T-shirt worn by one of Morrison’s friends. Show attendees said someone took offense that the shirt depicted a Confederate flag.

Prosecutors said Franklin was associated with the FSU gang — an acronym standing for Friends Stand United or two profanities followed by the word “up.” The group is reported to be responsible for driving neo-Nazi elements out of the Boston hard-core punk scene in the mid-1980s.

Warshaw said he could not comment further on the matter because of court rules that require grand jury proceedings to be kept secret.

Staff writer Matt Pais contributed to this story.

Posted in Anti-fascism, Music, State / Politics | 103 Comments

Jeff Luers: Now with more Free!

    Check it out now: Green Scared? Preliminary Lessons of the Green Scare: “…What we know of the early Backfire investigation points to a strategy of generalized monitoring and infiltration. While investigators used increasingly focused tools and strategies as the investigation gained steam—for example, sending “cooperating witnesses” wearing body wires to talk to specific targets—they started out by sifting through a whole demographic of counter-cultural types. Activist and punk houses as well as gathering spots such as bars were placed under surveillance—anarchists who drink should be careful about the way alcohol can loosen lips. Infiltrators and informants targeted not only the most visibly committed anarchists, but also bohemians who inhabited similar cultural and social spheres. Police accumulated tremendous amounts of background information even while failing to penetrate the circles in which direct action was organized. The approximately 30,000 pages of discovery in the Oregon cases contain a vast amount of gossip and background information on quite a few from the Eugene community…” Et cetera et cetera et cetera. Neat article.

Jeffrey “Free” Luers Sentence Reduced to 10 Years
Source : Civil Rights Outreach Committee Press Release [PDF] c/o @-Infos

This morning at 9:00am in Lane County Circuit Court the re-sentencing hearing for Jeffrey Luers took place in front of Judge Billings. This followed an Oregon court of appeals ruling in February 2007 that Luers original sentence of 22 years 8 months by Judge Lyle Velure was illegal, and the appeals court remanded the case back to Lane County Circuit Court for re-sentencing. Following the appeals court decision, negotiations have resulted in the decision today to reduce Luers sentence to 10 years, bringing his release date to late December 2009.

In June 2001, then 23 year-old Jeffrey “Free” Luers was arrested for the burning of three trucks at a Eugene car dealership. His stated purpose was to raise awareness about global warming and the role that SUVs and trucks play in that process. Despite the fact that this action hurt no one, caused only $28,000 in damages and the cars were later resold, Luers received the draconian sentence imposed by Velure.

Luers gained support locally as well as all over the world as a political prisoner. It is widely believed that Luers received such a drastic sentence because of the political nature of the action he took. Following his original sentence, Amnesty International and the Eugene Human Rights Commission (EHRC) issued letters of support citing that the sentence appeared to be politically motivated. During the course of his trial, statements were made by the police and prosecuting attorney that indicated it was Luers’ political views on trial, not merely his actions. His defense successfully proved that evidence had been tampered with, officers had lied and that the prosecutor had manipulated evidence to get a legal search warrant at his residence. Luers was given a sentence that attempted to send the message to environmental and social justice activists that even a merely symbolic act of property destruction could be punished more harshly than many crimes against persons.

Prior to his imprisonment, Luers was a very well respected community activist in Eugene, Oregon involved with forest defense and cooking free food for the city’s homeless population. He has remained active from prison, often writing news articles and monthly dispatches to his growing list of supporters. With a release date on the horizon, Luers future is bright and he plans to pursue courses and looks forward to sharing quality time with his family and loved ones.

Statement from Jeffrey Luers [PDF]:

“Today I feel a great weight lifted off of me, and my loved ones. While I believe my new sentence is still more of a reflection of my activism and my dissent than my actual crimes; I am looking forward to my much closer release date.

I am proud of the many things I have accomplished while incarcerated, including reaching beyond oceans and borders to help raise awareness about global warming and to help combat social injustice.

I am thankful of my family, friends and the thousands of supporters and fellow activists from around the world who have stood by me since day one. And I’d especially like to thank my attorneys, and friends. Lauren Regan, Misha Dunlap and Shawn Wiley for never giving up on getting me out sooner than 22 years.

I am happy to say this journey is almost over and I’ll be coming home soon.”

For more information, go to: Civil Liberties Defence Center | Free Jeff Luers! | See also : Green Scare Update

Sentence cut in half for Oregon environmental activist
William McCall / The Associated Press
February 28, 2008

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — The only environmental activist sentenced in state court after a series of arson fires around the West could be released from prison next year after a judge reduced his sentence by more than half. Jeffrey “Free” Luers, 29, was resentenced to 10 years of his original sentence of nearly 23 years for burning three SUVs at a car dealership and trying to set fire to an oil company in Eugene in 2000.

The Oregon Supreme Court ordered the resentencing after Luers won his appeal of the sentence imposed by Lane County Circuit Judge Lyle Velure, who recently retired. Luers could be released by December 2009, with credit for time served.

In a statement to Lane County Circuit Judge Jack Billings during his resentencing on Thursday, Luers said he remains committed to political activism but will pursue it through legal means. “I can now say with all honesty that I was wrong to think that arson would inspire social change,” Luers said.

He said he is looking forward to his release, continuing his education and working on environmental issues, including global warming, offering a warning about potential ecological disaster and urging cooperation to prevent it.

“We are all in this together, whether we are labeled radical, conservative or liberal,” Luers said. “And together is the only way we are going to solve this problem.”

Ten other radical environmentalists were sentenced to various terms last year in federal court in Eugene for their role in a series of arsons that caused $40 million in damage across five Western states from 1996 to 2001.

The longest sentence imposed in those cases was 13 years.

Those now serving federal prison sentences were involved with a secretive Earth Liberation Front cell known as “The Family.” One of the arsons by ELF members was another attack on the same Eugene car dealership where Luers burned the SUVs. They said it was carried out as revenge for the long sentence originally imposed on him. Luers expressed support for those activists from the Oregon State Penitentiary, saying he considered them political prisoners, like himself.

Lauren Regan, executive director of the Civil Liberties Defense Center in Eugene and one of the attorneys for Luers, said supporters were pleased with the resentencing despite unsuccessful efforts to negotiate an immediate release for time served. Regan said the original sentence took “into account politics rather than the law and the facts of the case.”

Another environmental activist associated with the Earth Liberation Front, Briana Waters, is on trial in federal court in Seattle on charges of serving as a lookout while her friends planted a fire bomb at the University of Washington in 2001.

On Briana Waters’ case, see also Accused Arsonist Denies Wash. Fire Role, Gene Johnson/AP, February 28, 2008. Note that one of Waters’ lawyers, Robert Bloom, “said prosecutors are pinning their case on the testimony of [Lacey] Phillabaum and Jennifer Kolar, who are expected to receive more lenient sentences in exchange for their cooperation. Waters claimed on the witness stand that the two are trying to frame her: Phillabaum because she had a relationship with Waters’ boyfriend at the time, and Kolar because Waters spurned her sexual advances. The former boyfriend, Justin Solondz, is a fugitive in the case. William “Avalon” Rodgers, who also was indicted, committed suicide in jail. Waters’ defense attorneys rested their case Wednesday. Closing arguments are expected by the end of the week”. Phillabaum is due for sentencing on March 21, 2008. Other co-operating defendants in the so-called Green Scare trials are Chelsea Gerlach, Stanislas Meyerhoff, Suzanne Savoie, Kendall Tankersley, Darren Thurston and Kevin Tubbs, all of whom have been sentenced to various terms in jail. Non-cooperating defendants Nathan Block, Daniel McGowan, Johnathan Paul and Joyanna Zacher received sentences of 7 years and 8 months (Block), 7 years (McGowan), 4 years and 3 months — subject to further legal negotiation (Paul) and 7 years and 8 months (Zacher). Another Green Scare victim, Eric McDavid, is being sentenced on March 13.

Note that none of these cases (with one exception — Jeff Luers, by SBS Dateline‘s Olivia Rousset) has been covered by Australian state or corporate media.

Posted in Anarchism, State / Politics, War on Terror | Leave a comment