Monday, April 30, 2007

Sexual Violence Against Indigenous Women in the u$a

Quick heads up: last week Amnesty International released a report on sexual violence against Indigenous women in amerika. i have not had a chance to read Maze of Injustice: The failure to protect Indigenous women from sexual violence in the USA, but you all can do so as it's online.

Contemporary scholars on traditional Native American and Alaska Native cultures have found that prior to colonization women often held esteemed positions in society. Available evidence indicates that violence against women was rare and, when it occurred, was often severely punished. Colonization and its aftermath profoundly changed gender roles among Indigenous peoples. For example, settlers and government officials insisted on dealing only with men, while Christian missionaries exerted pressure on Indigenous peoples to assume what their churches considered proper gender roles. Gender-based violence against women by settlers was used in many infamous episodes, including during the Trail of Tears and the Long Walk. Such attacks were not random or individual; they were an integral part of conquest and colonization. Many scholars take the position that these and other historical acts amount to genocide.


Over the past decade, federal government studies have consistently shown that American Indian and Alaska Native women experience much higher levels of sexual violence than other women in the USA. Data gathered by the US Department of Justice indicates that Native American and Alaska Native women are more than 2.5 times more likely to be raped or sexually assaulted than women in the USA in general. A US Department of Justice study on violence against women concluded that 34.1 per cent of American Indian and Alaska Native women – or more than one in three – will be raped during their lifetime; the comparable figure for the USA as a whole is less than one in five. Shocking though these statistics are, it is widely believed that they do not accurately portray the extent of sexual violence against Native American and Alaska Native women.


According to the US Department of Justice, in at least 86 per cent of reported cases of rape or sexual assault against American Indian and Alaska Native women, survivors report that the perpetrators are non-Native men. The Department’s data on sexual violence against non-Native women, in contrast, shows that for non-Indigenous victims, sexual violence is usually committed within an individual’s own race.


Rape is always an act of violence, but there is evidence to suggest that sexual violence against American Indian and Alaska Native women involves a higher level of additional physical violence. Fifty per cent of American Indian and Alaska Native women reported that they suffered physical injuries in addition to the rape; the comparable figure for women in general in the USA is 30 per cent.



What Is Racial Profiling?




For the past month or more i have been putting off reviewing this book about racial profiling. i've spent today hammering out some thoughts, but am not there yet - but it did occur to me that it would be useful to have some sketched out description of what the term means before i get going.

So that's what this is.



Sunday, April 29, 2007

A Mayday Action in Downtown Montreal

There will be a Mayday action this Tuesday in downtown Montreal, organized by the Comité des Sans-Emploi, a radical working class anti-capitalist group in Montreal, one of the few which i would consider describing as "revolutionary". For those who don't know, the Comité was at the forefront of some very important and impressive anti-capitalist struggles in Montreal in the 1990s:

May 1st : Action and Demonstration
When?: Meet at 4pm, Tuesday, May 1st, 2007
Where?: Philips Square, corner of Ste-Catherine and Union, metro McGill


Every year, for the last 100 years, workers, the poor and oppressed across the world demonstrate their hatred of capitalism, the system by which a small minority profits by exploiting the vast majority of men, women, and children.

Humanity has never been as productive as it is now in all of its history. We produce much more than necessary, we have an extraordinary level of knowledge, and almost endless means. But still, there has never been as much misery, poverty, and destruction.

A few hundred thousand capitalists maintain a few million people, mainly in the West, in relative comfort, while the rest of the population lives in poverty. The strong growth of the global economy results in the unprecedented concentration of wealth in the hands of a few. In Canada, the annual average salary of the 100 most important CEOs is $9 million, while the average salary of workers is $38,000. The richest 20% of the population have raised their fortunes by 19% since 1999, and 64% since 1984. They now hold 75% of the wealth (according to Statistics Canada). In the U$A, 1% of the population keeps 40% of the wealth to itself. They want what’s ours, and they get it! Miserable work, horrible living conditions, the extreme commodification of women’s bodies, exacerbated racial and religious tensions, absurd over-consumption, wars, and the total destruction of nature : what a nice program! And they try to make us believe that sham elections can change anything. No, this isn’t what life is about! Life can, and must be better!

We can organize, we can struggle, and we can win! Let’s take the occasion on May 1st to join our voices to those across the world, to cry out loud and clear that we’ve had enough of this rotten system!

An initiative of the Comité des sans-emploi (“Committee of the unemployed”) Montreal-centre.



[Toronto] May 1st: Upping the Anti #4 Launch Party



*Please forward*
Upping the Anti Launch Party

*Celebrate MayDay with Upping the Anti! *

Join us to celebrate the release of Issue 4!
on Tuesday May 1
8:30PM
Smiling Buddha Bar
961 College Street (west of Dovercourt)

Admission: $7 with journal ($5 without journal)

  • Premier viewing of Shway Shway Video Excerpts from a Trip to Lebanon by Sarolta Camp.
  • With DJing from DJ Miss Ruckus and Big Eva Edna
  • And Speaker: Robin Isaacs: Robin Issacs is a long-time queer anarchist who has lived in Toronto for the past 30 years. He has been involved with activists projects such as the anarchist publication 'Kick It Over," the 1988 "Survival Gathering" in Toronto, Anti-Racist Action, Queer Nation, AIDS ACTION NOW!, Limp Fist and the Northeastern Federation of Anarchist Communists.

Come and celebrate the launch of the highly anticipated fourth issue of Upping the Anti: A Journal of Theory and Action.

The Contents of Issue 4 include:
  • Letters to the Editor
  • Editorial: Becoming the Enemy They Deserve - Organizational Questions for a New “New Left”
  • Interview with Robin Isaacs: Living my Life
  • Interview with John Holloway: Against and Beyond the State
  • Interview with Dan Irving: Trans Politics and Anti-Capitalism
  • Richard Day: Walking Away from Failure
  • Carmelle Wolfson & Lesley Wood: Two Dispatches from the World Social Forum
  • Tom Keefer: Six Nations and the Politics of Solidarity
  • Prison Abolition Roundtable with Peter Collins, Emily Aspinwall, Filis Iverson, Sonia Marino, Julia Sudbury, Kim Pate, and Patricia Monture
  • Vancouver Housing Roundtable with Kat Norris, Jill Chettiar, Anna Hunter, and Cecily Nicholson
  • Book Review by Erica Meiners on Angela Davis, Julia Sudbury, and Karlene Faith
  • Book Review by Kimiko Inouye on bell hooks and Amelia Mesa-Bains "Homegrown: Engaged Cultural Criticism".
  • Book Review by Scott Clarke on Sheila Wilmot's "Taking Responsibility Taking Direction: White Anti-Racism in Canada"

There will be drinks, dancing, speeches, raffles and good fun with local Toronto DJ's spinning some good tunes.

For more information about the journal and the launch, please go to http://auto_sol.tao.ca
To download the poster for this event, just click here!

See you there!



Canada: Not Worth Standing For, But Worth Fighting Against!



This is a follow-up on yesterday's post, about a Mi'kmaq high school student who refused to stand for Canada's national anthem and was subsequently kicked out of class, and later "roughed up" by other students.

Yesterday i didn't know the student in question was Mi'kmaq, because the media never mentioned this fact. Someone posted the information on my blog yesterday as a comment, and although i haven't found any other mention of this elsewhere, i find it entirely plausible.

Which does and doesn't change matters.



Saturday, April 28, 2007

Student Sits Through National Anthem, Gets Kicked out of Class and "Roughed Up"

From Moncton's 91.9FM radio station last Thursday:

Miramichi teacher suspended after student sent to office

April 26, 2007 - 5:43 pm

MIRAMICHI, NB - A teacher has been suspended after sending a student to the principal's office for refusing to stand during the Canadian anthem.

Eric Cameron, a Grade 9 teacher at Miramichi Valley High School, was disciplined following the incident last Thursday.

The superintendent of District 16 school board has declined comment, citing privacy issues.

The student who wouldn't stand was roughed up after the incident by others on a school bus.

He wasn't seriously hurt.

Supt. Randall Hansen of Miramichi Regional Police says they've spoken to a number of witnesses but charges haven't been laid.


It can take guts to stand up for your beliefs and not stand up for the national anthem. Especially when you're a high school student disobeying a teacher's orders. Especially when you live in a conservative small town, where not standing for the anthem can mean - as it did in this case - getting "roughed up" by your jingoistic "peers".

Now, subsequent to the above story getting in the news, the school principal issued a statement saying that the teacher was not suspended for kicking the kid out of class, but for some other reason. Right-wing bloggers, for their part, vented their indignation that the teacher might be suspended. For his part, anarchist Duane Rousselle (who had gone to the same high school as a youth) wrote an open letter to the principal calling on them to not rescind the suspension.

Miramichi, from what i understand, is a very white and relatively poor town in New Brunswick. People there have been fucked over by capitalism, but for all that there is not a lot of anti-capitalist sentiment. Rather, people are either blamed for their own difficulties - or else the blame is projected onto a convenient scapegoat, most usually the Mi'kmmaq who recently had some of their national rights to regulate their own lobster trapping in the Miramichi Bay recognized.

Indeed, from what i have heard, the surprise is not that the student got roughed up, but that he dared to take his stand (so to speak) in the first place. Most young radicals leave, going to places like Fredericton or Moncton the first chance they get.

It is a necessary part of our building a movement that we link up with people in places like Miramichi, help them break through their isolation, supporting them to the degree that we can. How to do that may not be obvious, but it should be on our agenda.



[Montreal] Event Tomorow about Nepal



i'm kind of annoyed that i only just learned about this - i'm not sure if i can make it at such late notice - but tomorrow there seems to be a promising event at the South Asian Women’s Community Centre about developments in Nepal:

“The Dreams and Realities of New NEPAL”

A year ago the people of Nepal successfully forced the monarchy to accept their desire for a democratic government. Since 2006, when the king acceded to many of the demands of the Nepali people about democratization, revolutionary groups have entered the Nepali parliament. This is a time of exciting change but also of hot debate about the direction in which the revolution is going.

Come hear

Shahrzad Arshadi, Montreal filmmaker and photo journalist who recently returned from a trip to Nepal at the invitation of All-Nepal Women’s Association

Pramod Dhakal, Executive Director, Canada Forum for Nepal; former faculty member Tribhuvan University Nepal

Sunday 29 April 2 – 4 pm [please note time change—it is 2pm and NOT 3pm]
Venue: South Asian Women’s Community Centre
1035 Rachel est (between Boyer and Christophe-Colomb)
Metro Mt-Royal and bus # 11




The event, it would seem, is one of a monthly series of educational get togethers organized by CERAS (centre sur l’asie du sud/south asia centre).



Friday, April 27, 2007

Nation of Sheep, Owned by Pigs, Ruled by Wolves



The young guy above is a refugee from Liberia. The photo, i recently learned, is in the latest issue of Adbusters magazine, the artsy self-styled "journal of the mental environment". And the t-shirt he's wearing, if you didn't know it, is one of mine.

The Nation of Sheep t-shirt has always had a broad appeal, i just never sent many of them outside of North America.

Funny how things get around!

(i checked and it was shot by photojournalist Natalie Behring - you can view it on her Flickr thingie here - i'm not sure where, but it is in her "Chinapix" section).

If you'd like to order one of these shirts - it seems lots of people do now - you can use the Paypal system below, or else email me:



(You will notice that my graphic is not as nice as Adbusters' photo!)

Available on white and black, sizes Small to XXL.
Also on grey in sizes Small to XL.
This shirt costs $25 US, postage included (air mail in North America, surface mail elsewhere).



Size

Colour




Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Making Resistance to Antisemitism Part of All of Our Movements: The Past Didn't Go Anywhere

Another notice i'm passing along. The pamphlet in question, a very accessible look at antisemitism and the radical left, is going to be one of the new titles in the upcoming Kersplebedeb catalog, so if you'd like a hardcopy you can get in touch.

THE PAST DIDN'T GO ANYWHERE
Making Resistance to Antisemitism Part of All of Our Movements

A 32-page pamphlet for progressives and radicals, to support our social justice movements in combating anti-Jewish oppression from a perspective of liberation for all people.

Free downloads at www.thepast.info

"In order to build powerful movements we must take on antisemitism as what it is: a divide-and-rule strategy that has served to maintain ruling classes, conceal who actually has power, and confuse us about the real systems of oppression that pit us against one another. ...Rosenblum's pamphlet needs to be studied and the lessons applied."

- Chris Crass, organizer, The Catalyst Project: a center for political education and movement building



*You are invited to use and share this resource: Permission is given to copy freely.*



About the author:

April Rosenblum, 27, was born and raised in activist movements in Philadelphia. She became politicized herself by government attempts in 1995 to execute U.S. political prisoner and Philadelphia journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal. Over time she has also worked on issues including police brutality, political prisoners and prisoners' rights, womens' reproductive freedom, immigrants' rights, poverty, anti-racist education and Palestinian self-determination. She graduated with a B.A. in History from Temple University.

She writes, "My work to create 'The Past' was inspired by noticing how afraid I was to speak up when I noticed instances of anti-Jewish oppression in the movements I called home. I realized that my activist friends were, like me, staying silent not out of antisemitism, but because they needed basic tools to confront it. I hope it will be a resource for Jewish and non-Jewish organizers, activists, and other people passionate about building movements that can win."

She can be reached at reachpast@gmail.com.



All Queer Black Punk Line Up!

Just thought i'd pass this on:

AN ALL QUEER BLACK PUNK LINE-UP!

THE NEW BLOODS
PURPLE RHINESTONE EAGLE
ANNA DIALLO

STE EMILIE SKILLSHARE 3942 STE.EMILIE (Metro St. Henri)
Friday May 4th doors at 8pm
SUGGESTED DONATION 5$

For every of colour punk kid who couldn't connect with riot grrrl.
For every of colour punk kid who got caught being queer in bathroom stalls.
For every punk kid who got made fun of for rockin' neon pink mini skirts, hoop earrings and hairwraps.

For every punk kid who is brown, black, mixed race, yellow, red, desi, African, Indigenous, First Nations, Inuit, Métis, Caribbean, Latin American, Asian, East Asian, Middle Eastern, South Asian, Aboriginal, non-white, non-European, (e)raced, (in)visible minority.

For every of colour punk kid who got told that they were doin' some white shit…cuz we know that tattoos, piercings, dreadlocks, mohalks and hardcore belong to people of colour.

For every of colour X-punk kid who can't fkkn deal with going to punk shows anymore cuz of racism, homophobia, transphobia, fatphobia, Adbuster style classim/sexism.

Cuz WE WANT OUR MUSIC BACK!!! PLAY THAT PUNK RAGGAE

(this show is open to people of colour only please)



Monday, April 23, 2007

Lebanon: Open Skies of Struggle



A logo for the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine [DFLP] spray-painted on the wall within the Burj el Barajneh refugee camp in southern Beirut. Photo by stefan Christoff.

Montreal Exhibition from Photojournalist Stefan Christoff at Sablo Kafé
Announcement for Exhibition Opening Event!

--------------------------------
FRIDAY, APRIL 27th, 7pm
Sablo Kafé,
50 St. Zotique East
[metro St. Laurent & Bus 55 North]
FREE,
--------------------------------



Thursday, April 19, 2007

Two Arrested in Montreal for Carrying Out Racist Anti-Jewish Attacks



Azim Ibragimov, left, and Omar Bulphred face nine charges for carrying out anti-Semitic attacks in Montreal over the past six months

i missed this news item when i was out of town last week: two men have been arrested for carrying out anti-Semitic attacks in Snowdon/Cote-des-Neiges area in Montreal.

Here is the article:



Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Back From NYC

Just a quick note to let you all know that i am back from NYC, where i was tabling at that city's first anarchist bookfair.

i met lots of nice people, stayed with some great comrades and their kids... i'd like to regale you all with tales of how well the tabling went, as Judson Memorial Church was full-up with people for most of the day (over 1,000 i would say), but unfortunately our car got broken into and most of the Kersplebedeb stock i had brought got stolen the night before! (Yes, dumb-ass that i am, i left it all in the car...)

So that was a bit of a downer.

i haven't been blogging much as of late; been too busy with a lot of different things. That's hopefully going to change now, and writing about several things is actually close to the top of my "to-do list".

So more soon...



Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Phone Jacques Dupuis and Tell Him To STOP Covering Up Murder



The following from the Justice For Anas Coalition, the Montreal group organizing around the police murder of Mohamed Anas Bennis a year and a half ago.

Reminder: the picket is happening tomorrow from 10am til 1pm, at 10 St Antoine East (in front of the Palais de l'Injustice).

If you can't make it, they are asking people to phone Jacques Dupuis, Minister of "Public Security". This guy is a fucker, the turd who refused to even release the police or coroner's reports to the victim's family, but people seem to think it'll be more effective if we are "polite" when calling... so i guess that's what we should do.



Sunday, April 08, 2007

A Statement from Jalil Muntaqim



The following is a statement by Jalil Muntaqim, a man who has withstood decades of brutal repression from the united states government. Arrested at the age of 19 and framed for the BLA assassination of two police officers in New York City, Jalil Muntaqim has spent over thirty years behind bars. (Along with Herman Bell and the late Albert Nuh Washington, he is one of the New York Three.)

Today, the State - whose arrogance we must use against it - is once again trying to frame this man!



Friday, April 06, 2007

[Montreal] Picket Next Wednesday for Mohamed Anas Bennis




If you're in Montreal next Wednesday, drop by this picket being organized by the Justice For Anas Coalition in front of the palais de justice. It looks like it's best to come by as close t the beginning as possible, as there is a press conference at 10:30.

Mohamed Anas Bennis was the young Muslim man who was murdered by police on December 1st 2005. The ridiculous police story - that Anas had jumped out of some bushes and tried to attack them with a knife - is contradicted by many facts (i.e. they never produced a knife; there are no bushes where the incident occurred, the autopsy showed bullets entering Anas' body from the top down which implies he was kneeling, sitting or crouching when he was killed; and must damningly of all: security videos shot from across the street were confiscated but never released to the public.)

According to initial news reports, the police were in the area on a multi-agency raid on an "Algerian fraud ring" which "had possible ties to terrorism". This has lead many observers to suggest that Mohamed Anas Bennis - who "looked Muslim" and was shot outside of a prayer room (completely unconnected to the police raid) - might, like Jean Charles de Menezes and Rigoberto Alpizar, have been killed by a trigger happy cop whose head had been filled with stories of suicide bombers and scary immigrants.

There is a PDF flier for this event online here (print on legal paper, double-sided, short edge binding, if you want it in French and English).

Solidarity Picket : JUSTICE FOR ANAS!

FOR ACCESS TO ALL INFORMATION REGARDING MOHAMED ANAS BENNIS' DEATH, A PUBLIC INQUIRY INTO THE EVENTS OF DECEMBER 1ST 2005, AND AN END TO POLICE BRUTALITY AND IMPUNITY.

OVER A YEAR OF SILENCE AND SECRECY, THAT'S ENOUGH!

********************************************************
Wednesday April 11th, 10 am - 1pm
Quebec Ministry of Public Security,
10, Saint-Antoine East, Montreal
(Metro: Champ-de-Mars)
**Press Conference at 10:30 am : Be there to show your solidarity!**
********************************************************

Come support the Bennis family in their struggle for justice in Anas' death.
Speak out against the secrecy and contempt surrounding this case and protest police impunity!
Child-friendly picket.



Thursday, April 05, 2007

Concordia Community Solidarity Co-Op Bookstore Now Stocks Kersplebedeb Publications



As many of you know, besides blogging i also publish and distribute a variety of revolutionary left-wing pamphlets and books, and also enjoy making buttons of all sorts.

i'm happy to say that at long last much of my literature and a selection of my buttons and t-shirts are available in Montreal.

As of now, the Concordia Community Solidairty Co-Op Bookstore is carrying Kersplebedeb pamphlets and books and buttons and shirts!

The Co-Op Bookstore is a non-profit, student run store, on the same block at the Sir George Williams building,at 2150 Bishop (Guy-Concordia metro), between de Maisonneuve and Sherbrooke.