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Eastside Revolt
3rd July 2010, 22:19
G20: Shut Doors = Broken Windows

On June 26, 2010, thousands of anarchists and other protesters gathered outside the G20 summit in Toronto (http://2010.mediacoop.ca/), facing off against more than 19,000 security officials with a budget of nearly one billion dollars (http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jDF_205MqoAsFPFodDEdtYmQBUJAD9GKISS80). The riots (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDEfOJT6HZQ) that followed have provoked outrage from public officials and commentators in the corporate media. We salute the courage of those who put themselves at tremendous risk to shatter the illusion of social consensus and reveal the depth of outrage against the G20 leaders and the capitalist system they defend. If you put your freedom on the line in Toronto—thank you.

Shut Doors . . .

As anarchists, we do not simply oppose specific policies of the G20—though the program drafted at the Toronto summit (http://vancouver.mediacoop.ca/story/g-20-nations-race-bottom-will-continue/3899) looks dire indeed—but also its basic structure. Be it G7, G8, G20, or G1000, any structure that empowers heads of state to decide the fates of millions is fundamentally exclusive and coercive. We oppose the G20 summits because we believe that only horizontal initiatives can solve the problems facing us today.
Financial crisis, ecological catastrophe, and repression of dissent are the necessary consequences of capitalist economics and hierarchical political systems that concentrate power in the hands of the most ruthless few. When all are forced to compete for resources and power at any cost rather than being free to develop ways of life based on sharing and peaceful coexistence, neither oil spills nor wars based on false pretexts should surprise us.

The kind of world our rulers are trying to build was reflected in the security apparatus set up to protect the summit from the populace that has to deal with its consequences. A part of downtown Toronto was fenced off, with “secret laws” (http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/torontog20summit/article/828896--first-secret-law-arrestee-plans-charter-challenge?bn=1) giving police additional powers in the area. The preemptive raids (http://toronto.mediacoop.ca/story/house-raids-warrants-and-arrests/3823) directed at protest organizers were not an anomaly—similar raids took place before the Republican National Convention (http://www.crimethinc.com/texts/atoz/rncdnc.php) in 2008, for example. In making over 900 arrests (http://www.edmontonsun.com/news/g20/2010/06/28/14542396.html) of largely law-abiding citizens over the course of the weekend, security personnel were not overreacting but utilizing the criminal justice system for its implicit purpose: the containment of possible threats to the status quo.
If this is the first time police have used tear gas in Toronto (http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jDF_205MqoAsFPFodDEdtYmQBUJAD9GKISS80), it only shows how tight their control has been over Toronto’s poor and dispossessed until now. Likewise, the petulant reactions of politicians and corporate media reveal that, for once, protests went beyond anything they could co-opt into their own agendas.

. . . Broken Windows

Although initial reports implied smaller numbers, Toronto police chief Bill Blair eventually acknowledged that “as many as a thousand people” (http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jDF_205MqoAsFPFodDEdtYmQBUJAD9GKISS80) participated in militant actions on Saturday—what Premier Dalton McGuinty called “mindless destruction and violence.” (http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/g8-g20/toronto/police-demonstrators-gather-for-huge-g20-protest/article1619460/)
This kind of rhetoric is always the first response to a group stepping forcefully outside the permitted discourse; later, of course, there come movie adaptations (http://www.crimethinc.com/blog/2008/09/19/fun-with-battle-in-seattle/) and overtures to “be part of the process.” It’s important not to panic at moments like this when our enemies hope to scare us out of sticking to our guns. By standing proudly by militant action, we can help to legitimize structural opposition to capitalism; if we act ashamed or conciliatory, we enable our enemies to determine what counts as acceptable. Ironically, the only way to cease appearing “extremist” to the general public is to affirm the necessity of militant action until it is eventually normalized as a valid option.

It is the politicians and police who should be ashamed. It is particularly cowardly for those who have never faced police violence to insult young people who are willing to stand up to a billion dollars worth of security personnel; it is particularly mindless for men whose privileges just so happen to rest on a complete acceptance of the values of the prevailing order to defame individuals who have the integrity to question those values. If anything qualifies as “mindless destruction and violence,” it is the unquestioning obedience of the police who attack noncombatants whenever ordered.
We are shocked by the hypocrisy of those who benefit from hundreds of years of colonization, genocide, and exploitation but prefer to focus on a few broken windows. We abhor the duplicity of police who can cite “public safety” as a pretext for any outrage (http://toronto.mediacoop.ca/story/readers-stories-2-house-raid/3915), including gross violations of the laws they supposedly exist to enforce, while callously and indiscriminately attacking the public. We deplore the deceitfulness of media outlets that miss no opportunity to slander anarchists: for example, implying that the police murder of Ian Tomlinson at the 2009 G20 summit in London (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Ian_Tomlinson) was a result of the demonstrations there and not the senseless, unprovoked atrocity that it was.

On the other hand, we are deeply inspired by our comrades in Toronto. It is astonishing that anarchists managed to achieve so much despite the forces arrayed against them. Although we fear a serious wave of repression is on the way, the events of June 26 did a lot to dispel the illusion that our rulers are invincible.
This is not to say we should stop at summit rioting. If it is possible for anarchists outnumbered twenty to one to trash a shopping district and set a few police cars on fire, think how much more possible—and more important—it is to fight on the terrain of our everyday lives. Anti-summit rioting is a powerful symbolic gesture of refusal, signifying a willingness to go all the way—but it will be in vain unless we actually succeed in passing beyond gestures into material transformation. Pundits and politicos should count themselves lucky when anarchists limit themselves to symbolic gestures, rather than setting about the serious business of overthrowing capitalism once and for all.

As economic and ecological conditions continue to worsen, social conflict will also intensify; one day the challenge will not be to provoke riots but to accomplish anything besides them. If anarchists do not establish ourselves as the foremost opponents of the ruling order, fascists and fundamentalists surely will. In view of this, it may be important that we distinguish ourselves in summit protests. Yet in the long run we will win or lose according to whether we are able to utilize these opportunities to make our case to others, and to seize spaces and resources with which to demonstrate our alternative.
May sirens mingle in the air with the crisp scent of smoke. May projectiles rain down upon the spectacles of consumer culture. May we seize every chance to strike our oppressors and inspire our friends, neighbors, and coworkers to do the same. Now the question is how we can seize back our own communities and creative potential with the same fierceness we saw in Toronto.

http://crimethinc.com/texts/recentfeatures/toronto.php

Adi Shankara
3rd July 2010, 22:32
so in other words, the "anarchists" at the G-20 are giving us all on the left a bad name by indiscriminately robbing/looting, breaking things, and treating it like a wild street party in Cancun, rather than actually doing anything that helps fight the G-20, which was the original focus of the protests in the first place...

...But it's justified, because they are so-called "comrades" facing off against the capitalists at G-20, even though they are being part of the problem instead of the solution, since it turned into an excuse to break things.

with friends like these...:(


On the other hand, we are deeply inspired by our comrades in Toronto. It is astonishing that anarchists managed to achieve so much despite the forces arrayed against them.What did they even achieve? the G-20 is still holding the conference, the media is having a field day with blaming us on the left as the bad guys, those in Toronto have lost sight of the original goals of the G-20 protests...and yet this is an "achievement"? I'd hate to see what a loss is, then.


That means Canadian taxpayers had to pay $13 million an hour for 72 hours at summits where security was provided by protective fences and an estimated 19,000 law-enforcement officers drawn from across Canada. http://www.cbc.ca/politics/story/2010/05/26/g8-g20-security-summit-toews.html?ref=rss

great, so not only that, but now the Canadian public views anarchists as menaces because the actions of a few...there HAS to be some planted saboteurs at play...

Adi Shankara
3rd July 2010, 22:38
We in North America need to take lessons from the Greeks on how to hold a serious protest of government....

Tablo
3rd July 2010, 22:48
I don't really know how to feel about these kinds of protests, but it sure as hell looks like fun.

Adi Shankara
3rd July 2010, 22:53
I don't really know how to feel about these kinds of protests, but it sure as hell looks like fun.

lol they do...but that's the problem; they're no longer about the serious issues, but rather just looting and indiscriminately burning and breaking things.

It makes us look bad; only police stations and related type buildings, and large corporations should be attacked, not the small mom and pop shop or the tourist curio store.

Os Cangaceiros
3rd July 2010, 22:53
I don't really know how to feel about these kinds of protests, but it sure as hell looks like fun.

They do look like fun, but you wouldn't want to put the left in disrepute now would you?

There are literally millions of people who were just about to join into their local Marxist-Leninist-Whateverist party before turning on the TV and witnessing these shenanigans.

Tablo
3rd July 2010, 23:18
lol they do...but that's the problem; they're no longer about the serious issues, but rather just looting and indiscriminately burning and breaking things.

It makes us look bad; only police stations and related type buildings, and large corporations should be attacked, not the small mom and pop shop or the tourist curio store.
I agree.

mcg
4th July 2010, 02:28
Though I disagree theoretically with the anarchists, I support their bravery in standing up to and fighting the police. They made the capitalists look like the cowards and bullies they are. They made the capitalists spend millions in security. Most importantly they expressed the revolutionary spirit of the left as it should be.

meow
4th July 2010, 03:13
fuck capitalism.

bcbm
4th July 2010, 03:19
seriously, how many fucking threads do we need to have about this shit? the collective memory on this board must be like... a day, because these exact same conversations have happened after the dnc/rnc in 08, pittsburgh g20, vancouver olympics and probably a shit ton of others that i forget. and, big surprise, by this point (a week later) the only ones who really still care a lot are leftists looking to gain political points and shit on each other. in a month nobody will even remember, aside from those dealing with legal cases.


what do the greeks do that wasnt done at g20? occupy territory.

Ele'ill
4th July 2010, 03:21
seriously, how many fucking threads do we need to have about this shit? the collective memory on this board must be like... a day, because these exact same conversations have happened after the dnc/rnc in 08, pittsburgh g20, vancouver olympics and probably a shit ton of others that i forget. and, big surprise, by this point (a week later) the only ones who really still care a lot are leftists looking to gain political points and shit on each other. in a month nobody will even remember, aside from those dealing with legal cases.




What we need are more Animal/Planetary rights threads :thumbup1:



occupy territory.


I like this.

meow
4th July 2010, 03:31
occupy territory.
thank you.

bcbm
4th July 2010, 03:34
thank you. i didnt know. do you have further information about this? or could you point me to place i could find that information?

teach me to get my news from the capitalist media i guess.

i'm too lazy to wade through all of these interviews/statements but there should be something about it in here (http://www.revolutionbythebook.akpress.org/new-ak-press-book-on-the-dec-2008-greek-uprisings/#more-307) (or if you can get a copy of the book, do that).

Fietsketting
4th July 2010, 23:05
This sort of reminds me of the movie scene in Spartacus with Kirk Douglas...


I am an armed, black-clad, balaclava wearing anarcho criminal! :laugh:

Blackscare
4th July 2010, 23:12
seriously, how many fucking threads do we need to have about this shit? the collective memory on this board must be like... a day, because these exact same conversations have happened after the dnc/rnc in 08, pittsburgh g20, vancouver olympics and probably a shit ton of others that i forget. and, big surprise, by this point (a week later) the only ones who really still care a lot are leftists looking to gain political points and shit on each other. in a month nobody will even remember, aside from those dealing with legal cases.Fucking EXACTLY.

Also, on a side note, what is this committed user majigger that you have under your name? You and some others I should say. Does it mean you donated?

Fietsketting
4th July 2010, 23:14
seriously, how many fucking threads do we need to have about this shit? the collective memory on this board must be like... a day, because these exact same conversations have happened after the dnc/rnc in 08, pittsburgh g20, vancouver olympics and probably a shit ton of others that i forget. and, big surprise, by this point (a week later) the only ones who really still care a lot are leftists looking to gain political points and shit on each other. in a month nobody will even remember, aside from those dealing with legal cases.

occupy territory.

There is no war like the tendecy war afterall. :blushing:

Os Cangaceiros
5th July 2010, 00:13
Fucking EXACTLY.

Also, on a side note, what is this committed user majigger that you have under your name? You and some others I should say. Does it mean you donated?

It means that you have a certain number of posts on the site (I think it's 1,500?)