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gla22
31st July 2008, 02:52
http://www.nornc.org/


On September 1-4 of 2008, the Republican Party is coming to Minnesota to celebrate their latest conquests in global domination and exploitation. We of the RNC Welcoming Committee want to make sure that this time the fear-mongers will be met with their own biggest fear: people mobilized, organized, and taking the future back into their own hands.
For those of you who abhor the rapid growth of racist militarized borders across stolen lands, the raids and deportations, destruction and commodification of our shared and living earth, police brutality and prison industry, fear propaganda and subjugation, exploitation and robbery of peoples worldwide, and all forms of injustice and oppression - we ask you to be prepared for 2008. This will require new alliances, strong networks, the awakening of those who’ve given up, as well as the mobilization of those who’ve never before taken action. Let’s use this opportunity to make the changes we thirst for manifest and take root before us, making the Republicans/Democrats (whatever you want to call them) obsolete.
Labor Day weekend of 2007, anarchists and anti-authoritarians from across the country gathered in the Twin Cities to develop goals and plans for the RNC 2008. This is what we’ve come up with:

What we want (the goals):
1. Build Our Capacity – A new reality will not emerge by simply stopping the 4 day spectacle of the RNC. We need folks with an alternative vision to come to the Twin Cities and turn their dreams into reality. Start something new, be creative, and come ready to build sustainable alternatives worth fighting for and defending. The new skills that we teach, learn, and put into practice here will allow us to return to our communities stronger, smarter, and more empowered.
2. Crash the Convention – We didn’t get an invitation, but we’re showing up anyway. This party will be what we make of it. We don’t want to confine our potential by imposing a single vision of what success will look like. We recognize that there will be a lot of people coming with their own agendas and carefully laid plans and want to be open to the diverse tactics that will be necessary to accomplish our many goals. Together, we can derail the purely ceremonial show of this repressive system and remake it with our own hands and according to our own visions.
How we get there (the strategy):
1. Start Strong – Throw all of our energy into the first day. We’ll kick this off right and stretch the militarized police state out so far that it can no longer contain and suppress our voices and desires.
2. Transportation Troubles – This includes blockades downtown (at key intersections), on bridges (10 bridges over the Mississippi River in the metro area), and other sporadic and strategic targets (busses, hotel and airport shuttles etc). (http://www.nornc.org/156)
3. Respect, defend, and be prepared for autonomous self-sustaining alternatives – Lasting projects and spaces will be born out of our actions and will need to be protected. We also won’t knowingly bring the hammer down on existing long-term community projects. It doesn’t matter if we win the RNC battle, if the war for our lives is lost.
4. Be inclusive of local communities and respect alliances – We are all on the same side of the barricades and are trying to build lasting bonds for future mutual aid. We may not agree with each other on all of our tactics, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t venues for us to work together and build on the trust and community that already exists.

What the Welcoming Committee is doing:
1. Logistical support – We will organize legal support, housing, food, transportation, and a convergence space as well as anything else you may need to make our collective actions successful.
2. Framework coordinating – We will map out key points and layouts and gather intelligence to help you plug into the bigger picture. Let us know your needs, desires, and capacities.
3. Local outreach – We are building alliances with local groups and communities to help build our collective support. We encourage you to do the same.
4. Networking – We’re hooking y’all up with each-other so that you can work with people you might not already know, strategize, and share a glass of some good old mutual aid.
What we are calling for:
1. Get it together – Have regional consultas, organize in your communities, and form your affinity groups. We are expecting people to come with concrete plans for action that they have devised and the capacity to carry them through.
2. Lead up actions – Practice makes perfect. Use this entire year leading up to the RNC to develop and practice your own tactics and strategies that step things up a notch and build true alternatives. Resistance doesn’t start and end at ‘the next big protest’; it is a way of life.
3. Fundraising – We’re not saying to let your community projects flounder, but we’re going to need some serious cash to help arrange legal support (we’re still looking for a lawyer dumpster), a convergence space, and a thousand other logistical puzzles. Pass the hat at every regional consulta and meeting you attend, hold fundraisers, and send a chunk of it in our direction!
4. Communicate – Maintain strong security-culture values, but let us know your capacities and what you will need. If you want a single point person to communicate with, we can arrange it. What you say you can do and will need shapes the course that we take.
5. Come to the Twin Cities – Come early and come often! Take advantage of that “Minnesota Nice” and come long before the convention to help make things happen. Also, put May Day weekend (May 1st - 4th 2008) on your calendars to send a representative or two from your group to the Twin Cities for our next networking and strategizing event (more info TBA).
September 1st, 2008, we, the RNC Welcoming Committee, invite all anarchists and anti-authoritarians, all radicals and rabble-rousers, all those who are fed up with government lies and spectacles to show up ready for action and ensure that we leave no place for these expired politicians. What we create here will send the convention crashing off course into insignificance.

From the occupied territories of Minnesota,
The RNC Welcoming Committee
nornc.org



Looks like it will be a pretty big thing and it has had alot of organization. The way people are talking about it it sounds like 1999 Seattle. i wish I could make it.

LiberaCHE
31st July 2008, 03:19
Let it Burn !

Comrade Rage
1st August 2008, 01:45
i wish I could make it.
Same here.

Comrade B
2nd August 2008, 01:13
hmmm... lets see if I can persuade my family to go there for this, or get enough friends to come with me to make guess not too expensive...
Sounds fun...

bcbm
2nd August 2008, 01:32
I'm going to be there.:ninja:

LiberaCHE
2nd August 2008, 05:53
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/policy/army/fm/3-06-11/image1395.jpg

:)

gla22
2nd August 2008, 06:07
Yeah i will be eagerly watching the news to see how this turns out.

cameron222
9th August 2008, 20:10
I personally would contemplate doing some things OUTSIDE the sectors, a few blocks away, while the cops are preoccupied with the convention. this would take only a few people. perhaps there are walmart supercenters nearby that would like to be vandalized?
I'd do it myself, by myself, but i can't afford the plane ticket and my car is a pos.

https://lists.riseup.net/www/d_read/rnc08/WCSite/sectormap.jpg

midnight marauder
9th August 2008, 22:49
Please don't talk about that sort of thing on the boards.

I'll be attending as well.

gla22
10th August 2008, 02:40
anyone know what the most intense section will be?

leftspot
10th August 2008, 05:20
There will be a mass, legally permitted march on the opening day of the RNC, September 1, which starts at 11:00 am at the MN State Capitol and marches from there to the XCel Center, where the RNC will take place. Info on that is at marchonrnc.org

There will be a militant anti-war march on Day 4 (Sep 4) initiaited by the Anti-War Committee, which is the day the repubs will nominate McCain as their candidate. That march has the theme "No peace for the war makers".

Also some great activities and actions on Day 2 and 3, including a great concert at the capitol on day 2. And Rage Against the Machine is playing on the night of Day 3 at the Target Center! For overview of many activities and contingents check out protestrnc2008.org

That covers the mass activities. It should be said that while there are many permitted actions, recent history of police reaction to these conventions makes clear that mass arrests and roundups are certainly possible. There has been a huge and protracted battle between activists and St Paul officials over even getting a real permit to march to the XCel Center. So it's possible that cops could incite conflict at any time. But the legally permitted activities are supposed to stay that way.

The anarchists are saying they'll do blockades and that kind of stuff. Info on that at nornc.org An important agreement was reached among all forces in Minnesota organizing against the RNC to respect diversity of tactics, called the "St Paul Principles". You can see them at marchonrnc.org and nornc.org. The basic deal is having a separation of time or space between legal activities and, um, other stuff. Also noone will publicly denounce other forces in the movement. It's quite an important breakthrough.

John Lenin
10th August 2008, 09:38
A city ablaze would be nice to see.

Mindtoaster
10th August 2008, 18:52
Gaaaaaaaaaah I want to go so bad. :crying:

Heres to hoping for another Seattle

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tk0_WTsAiY4&feature=related

Comrade Castro
11th August 2008, 06:12
AHHHHH! I wish I could be there! Just wait till they have their convention in Miami! Anyways, all who are going there, good luck and kick some ass!

rocker935
11th August 2008, 06:55
I WANT TO GO SOOO BAD!!!! BUT IM ONLY 16!!!! There is no way I will be able to ditch school for a week...
:(:(:(:(


:thumbup:RAISE HELL COMRADES!!!:thumbup:

bcbm
11th August 2008, 17:12
anyone know what the most intense section will be?

The midwest cluster and bash back! have both claimed sector 5 and since those groups have the largest numbers, I would suspect 5 will be the place to be. Or whatever section the delegates end up coming through.

cameron222
12th August 2008, 19:47
i can't find WHERE the main republican activities are... at the xcel energy center? i did some checking at indymedia and stuff, i know they're using many different convention centers and public places in the area, but there's got to be a main one, where most of the media will be focused, right? anyone know where it is?

rampantuprising
12th August 2008, 20:45
Please don't talk about that sort of thing on the boards.

I'll be attending as well.

pick me up in iowa!

hekmatista
12th August 2008, 22:50
I'll be at both conventions. At 55 mobile tactics are not my forte, but I can still take and hold.

RHIZOMES
13th August 2008, 02:59
Gaaaaaaaaaah I want to go so bad. :crying:

Heres to hoping for another Seattle

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tk0_WTsAiY4&feature=related

That video kicked ass. :thumbup1::thumbup1:

leftspot
13th August 2008, 03:52
i can't find WHERE the main republican activities are... at the xcel energy center? i did some checking at indymedia and stuff, i know they're using many different convention centers and public places in the area, but there's got to be a main one, where most of the media will be focused, right? anyone know where it is?

The RNC is taking place at the Xcel Center in downtown St Paul.

Republican Delegates are staying at hotels all over St Paul and Minneapolis. And RNC-related activities will happen lots of places.

But the epicenter is the Xcel Center.

See ya in the streets!

leftspot
13th August 2008, 03:55
pick me up in iowa!

There is transportation information from various places on the March On RNC website:

marchonrnc.org/transportation

If you can't find one near you, then you could be the contact for your area, rent or borrow a van or bus, get some other interested people together, and head to St Paul!

freakazoid
15th August 2008, 19:01
I hope to be able to make it up there, if I can find someone to get a ride with.

Abluegreen7
16th August 2008, 06:17
Lets protest those damn Republicans. Lets riot. Then when those damn Riot police come to stop us we will fight for our lives. I hate those right wing nut jobs so bad.:p

freakazoid
16th August 2008, 19:30
Lets protest those damn Republicans. Lets riot. Then when those damn Riot police come to stop us we will fight for our lives. I hate those right wing nut jobs so bad.http://www.revleft.com/vb/../revleft/smilies/001_tongue.gif

Viva la revolution!
:ninja:

Abluegreen7
16th August 2008, 20:56
Lets start some war on the republicans by Hacking and Spamming the Rush forum.

Abluegreen7
16th August 2008, 20:57
Im going to start spamming the Rush Liamburg forum. Thatll get them where it hurts.

cameron222
17th August 2008, 23:07
' a city in flames would be nice to see'
i see a lot of maoist, leninist types going for black bloc type tactics. yet i thought it was only some anarchists in support of this sort of direct action. Are there really any marxist parties in the u.s. in favor of this sort of thing? just curious.

Abluegreen7
18th August 2008, 05:04
I thought that too. Its evolution comrade.

freakazoid
27th August 2008, 08:46
Since the RNC hasn't even started yet I thought those who are planning to go, or just those interested, might be interested in reading and contributing in this thread I made on tactics for when a protest becomes less than peaceful, http://www.revleft.com/vb/some-ideas-tactics-t87646/index.html?p=1227671#post1227671

Miss Mindfuck.
29th August 2008, 05:39
I'm definitely wishing life circumstances hadn't left me sans technology, with no way to keep up with the haps on these boards; it probably would've made ridesharing a damn sight easier.

freakazoid
29th August 2008, 15:30
:( Now I can't go. I was hoping to be able to carpool with another person to keep the cost down but now he is unable to go. Maybe next time.
Kick some ass for me, :thumbup1:

hekmatista
29th August 2008, 21:11
OK, I'm here. IWW is here. IVAW is nearby in Minneapolis. So where is World Can't Wait?

redwinter
11th September 2008, 07:20
Revolution reporters were on the scene at the RNC and there are several new articles at www.revcom.us (http://www.revcom.us) with coverage and analysis, including of the repression of the protesters and the dynamics among the ruling class that shaped the events inside the convention...here's one by Alan Goodman:

RNC ’08: Pit Bulls On Parade

by Alan Goodman
If you thought, in the wake of the nightmare of the Bush years, and the euphoria of the Democratic Convention, that the political pendulum in the USA was swinging to the “left”…
If you thought that the Bush regime was so widely and bitterly hated that a repackaged version couldn’t seriously contend for the presidency…
If you thought that the Christian fundamentalist theocrats were passé…
Then you got a shocking wake up call from the Republican National Convention.
As the RNC opened in St. Paul, it appeared in danger of being a dud, or even a fiasco. There was the awkward issue of a widely and deeply hated incumbent president whose name is synonymous with lies, endless war, and torture. Then there was Hurricane Gustav, threatening to remind the world of, and perhaps even provoke a rerun of, the hell that the people of New Orleans and the Gulf region were put through by the arrogant neglect of the government before and after Hurricane Katrina. On top of all this, the “Evangelical Community,” (read: fundamentalist Christian theocrats) were threatening to sit things out, unsatisfied with their role in a potential John McCain presidency.
But in a stunning turn-around, the Republicans came out at the RNC with big guns blasting. The sparkplug was the selection of Sarah Palin as the vice presidential candidate. But the whole event was a coordinated barrage of venomous attacks on liberals, crude pandering to and promotion of “resentment” of the white middle class, and calls for unquestioned support for endless war. And as a defining subtext, the convention marked the insertion of the Christian fascists much more deeply into the '08 election.
Christian Fascists Pick a V.P.

The run-up to the convention took a startling turn with the announcement that Sarah Palin would be McCain’s running mate. The announcement was a shocker because there had been no indication that Palin was being seriously considered by McCain. The New York Times wrote that “Ms. Palin had no strong advocates” among McCain’s advisors.
And there are other clear indications that McCain was not seriously considering Palin. She did not go through the kind of serious vetting process and investigation that all the other candidates on McCain’s list of possible running mates went through. The Washington Post reported that “Palin was not subjected to a lengthy in-person background interview with the head of Sen. John McCain’s vice presidential vetting team until last Wednesday in Arizona, the day before McCain asked her to be his running mate” (our emphasis). And McCain officials told the Washington Post that they were not even informed of the potential scandal involving Palin’s pregnant unmarried daughter until that last-second background interview, even though this is the kind of thing that would normally be revealed well in advance during the usual protracted vetting process for a vice presidential candidate.
In fact, McCain wanted Joseph Lieberman, his co-cheerleader for “staying the course” in Iraq, or former Pennsylvania Governor Tom Ridge to be his vice presidential candidate. But the nominally pro-choice Lieberman and Ridge were deal-breakers for powerful forces of the Christian right. James Dobson (of Focus on the Family) announced before the convention that he “cannot and will not vote for Senator John McCain.” And, speaking after the Palin announcement, Dobson said that if McCain would have “come up with Lieberman or Tom Ridge or somebody like that, we’d be back in a hole again.”
Dobson and those he represents essentially made McCain an offer he couldn’t refuse. While all the channels are not clear, Richard Land, president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, told Christianity Today that he had “recommended” Palin to McCain’s people. And after the announcement of Palin as the VP candidate, Dobson said in a radio interview, “If I went into the polling booth today, I would pull the lever for John McCain.” He added, “When I look at the choices that are ahead and what the implications are for this country, and now especially with this selection, with just an outstanding V.P. candidate as a running mate, I tell you what I am relieved and very excited.” (Dennis Prager show, 8/29/08)
And so, as it turned out, Senator “Maverick,” the guy who supposedly listens only to his independent set of values, had to bow down and take a vice presidential candidate he had not selected, and hardly knew, in order to feed the Christian fascists.
Palin herself is both a Christian fundamentalist and a product of the Christian fascist political machine. She aims to ban all abortion, even in the case of rape or incest. She believes in “young earth” creationism, a literalist reading of the Bible’s mythology of the history of the planet that claims the earth is thousands of years old in opposition to the scientific fact that it is billions of years old, and has argued that this theocratic dogma should be taught as an “alternative” in public school science classes. As mayor, she tried to ban books from the library and fire the librarian when she opposed that. In a video available at YouTube, Palin tells a youth group at an Alaska church that not only is the Iraq war “a task that is from God,” but even declared that a potential gas pipeline she wants built from Alaska to the lower 48 states is “God’s will.”
Coming on the heels of the pilgrimage by McCain and Barack Obama to Christian fundamentalist Rick Warren’s church for what was essentially the first debate between the two, the vetting and selection of the vice presidential candidate by religious fundamentalists—in a manner not that different from the way the Islamic theocrats in Iran approve political candidates—was a chilling exercise of, and strengthening of, the power of Christian theocrats in the United States. And the promotion of Palin to the status of “political superstar”—by the same media that the Republicans accuse of being biased against them(!)—alone amounts to a major advance for these fundamentalist fascists.
Giuliani and Palin’s One-Two Sucker Punch

While the insertion of Palin pumped energy into the RNC, the whole event was a synchronized and bellicose call for unquestioning loyalty to aggressive, endless war, to hyper-chauvinism, and for the social base of the Republicans, a call to prepare to tough out hard times. All accompanied by incessant bashing of Hollywood liberals, “the mainstream media,” and others who are served up to the angry middle class as scapegoats for their problems.
That message was delivered as a one-two punch from Rudoph Giuliani and Palin.
“Senator McCain was the candidate most associated with the surge,” declared Giuliani, who attacked the Democrats for having “given up on Iraq.” And, Giuliani continued, “ladies and gentlemen, when they gave up on Iraq, they had given up on America.”
Giuliani, who invokes 9/11 every time he speaks, lashed out at “the left-wing media” and the “Hollywood celebrities.” He skewered Obama for his “Ivy League education” (never mind that Bush went to Yale) and his background as a community organizer. And the former Mayor of New York City lashed out at those who think the small Alaska town that Sarah Palin came from “isn’t cosmopolitan enough.”
Palin saluted McCain as the man who “refused to break faith with those troops in Iraq who now have brought victory within sight.” And she derided Obama as someone who “can give an entire speech about the wars America is fighting and never use the word ‘victory,’ except when he’s talking about his own campaign.”
The angry “hockey mom,” the self-described “pit bull with lipstick,” also lashed out at the very idea that being a “community organizer” was a legitimate thing. She pandered to and promoted small-town narrow-mindedness, and resentment of any enlightened ideas: “[I]n small towns, we don’t quite know what to make of a candidate who lavishes praise on working people when they’re listening and then talks about how bitterly they cling to their religion and guns when those people aren’t listening. No, we tend to prefer candidates who don’t talk about us one way in Scranton and another way in San Francisco.”
Both speeches had the smug, bullying tone of an episode of the O’Reilly Factor on Fox—lashing out at the “cosmopolitans,” the “Hollywood liberals,” those who are concerned about whether detainees get “read…their rights.”
When Adolf Hitler rallied the angry “volk”—the “common people” in Germany—against the “cosmopolitans”—(which in Germany, at that time, took extreme concentration in his attacks on the Jews)—it was called fascism.
What do you call it in the USA?
McCain’s Message of Sacrifice for Empire

While Palin and Giuliani provided the drama and dynamism at the RNC, McCain’s speech concentrated a key element of the Republicans' message. It might have appeared that the finale of McCain’s speech was simply one more self-serving installment of his endlessly invoked experience as a prisoner of war (McCain was shot down while flying high above Vietnam, part of an air war that contributed to killing millions of Vietnamese people in the Vietnam war). But there was a specific message here, concentrated in McCain’s self-described evolution from someone who “didn’t think there was a cause that was more important than me,” to someone who learned to “fight again for my country….” Someone who “fell in love with my country”—and, he pointedly added, “not just for the many comforts of life here.”
McCain’s speech was a call to rally around and fight for traditional American values, even through hard times, military challenges, and personal sacrifice. And it converged with the elevated role of the Christian fascists, who provide a coherent morality and organization for just such mobilization.
Bushism without Bush

Barack Obama has positioned himself as the candidate to “bring us together.” And there are ruling class voices arguing that Obama would be the best possible “face” on all the things that will have to be done in the service of American empire. As Revolution analyzed last week: “Obama would not rule in precisely the same way as McCain. That is not our point. What IS essential is that he would serve the same fundamental interests, and obey the same fundamental imperatives, as McCain. In line with that, Obama is also making the case to these rulers that his particular mix of aggression and negotiations, combined with his ability to ‘appeal to’ people internationally and pacify the political scene at home, would be more effective than that of McCain in serving those interests and imperatives.”
Obama and McCain do not differ over the basic direction of society. Nor do their differences arise in any fundamental way from competing “interest groups” that tend to be aligned with the Republicans or the Democrats. The sharply contending programs they are bringing forward both start from the overall interests of U.S. imperialism. They both agree on the terms set by the so-called “war on terror,” with all the terrible suffering and death that is bringing to the world. But the differences they do have represent contending forces and agendas within the ruling class over how to navigate through the minefield of contradictions confronting the U.S. rulers. Through the RNC, the Republicans, with their slogan “Country First,” put forward their solution to reforging national unity and charging forward globally in troubled times.
Bush himself was hardly mentioned and only spoke to the convention by video, where he himself promoted McCain as an “independent” agent of change. The fact that the RNC had to go to great lengths to distance the Republican Party and McCain (who, after all, are the dominant force in the “status quo” right now) from Bush reveals the sense among the ruling class of how deep and wide is the anger at Bush and the sharpness of the challenges they face in the period ahead.
In the face of real centrifugal pulls tearing U.S. society apart, and real global challenges to the U.S. empire, the message from the RNC was an unapologetic appeal to traditional “small-town” American values—ignorant arrogance, intolerance, hyperpatriotism, and old time religion. The Republicans maneuvered to trump Obama’s calls for “change” with their own version of “change”: a reactionary populist rebellion against the “elite,” the “Washington insiders,” and the “mainstream media,” led by a supposed maverick senator and a crusading, anti-insider hockey mom from Alaska. Representative Marsha Blackburn pretty much summed it up when she told the crowd, “We are the gun totin’, God fearin,’ flag wavin’ Americans who are excited to see two crack shots on the ticket with the status quo in their sights.”
This message from the RNC was ominous. It was a call to the faithful to rally behind, and be ready to sacrifice for, the USA in its global wars for empire. It whipped up a section of society to support domestic repression and tough out and blame people with less for economic hard times already here and down the road. And the undertones and overtones in all this represented a continuation of the outlook of the Bushites: that they represent the only legitimate path for this country, and that any opposition to what they are doing, and how they are doing it—even from other ruling class forces who share their basic outlook but differ on approaches—is unacceptable and illegitimate.
The RNC presented a message of Bushism without Bush. Still here was the openly aggressive, “go it alone” if necessary foreign policy in service of empire; heavy on force, and at least publicly disdainful of diplomacy. And still here but ramped up, a promise of a powerful place at the White House table and throughout society for Christian fascists. What was new was the populist edge, foreshadowed by the Huckabee candidacy, and a call to “suck it up,” like McCain did in a Vietnamese prison, and put the country ahead of personal comforts.
In addition to what happened inside the convention, the extreme, fascistic repression against dissenters and the attacks on independent and even mainstream reporters unleashed in St. Paul in the period up to and outside the convention, were another dimension to the message from the RNC—the intolerance of opposition, dissent, or even uncomfortable questions (see "The RNC’S Outrageous Assault on Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!, and Alternative Media...This is What Imperialist Democracy Looks Like" (http://www.revcom.us/a/142online/RNC_Repression-en.html) at revcom.us.
The Challenges Facing Them…and Us

A sober look at the RNC should be a wakeup call. But it should not be cause for passivity or despair, including in the form of adapting oneself to the “politics of the possible.” The so-called “alternative” posed by Obama is one of “conciliation” with these bloodthirsty, uber-chauvinistic, dark ages, self-proclaimed pit bulls (with or without lipstick), who are politely referred to by the mainstream media as the “neocons” and the “Christian right.” Obama’s calls to “bring us all together” are, in essence, calls for capitulation to the reactionary agenda that has been brought forward by Bush and revitalized and updated at the RNC.
Instead of accepting the “politics of the possible,” what is very urgently needed is a completely different polarization of society, based not on accommodation to or acceptance of the current terms of “acceptable debate,” but on the basis of bringing forward and fighting for the real needs and aims of the great majority of people in this country, and around the world. That is the standard by which every person of conscience should judge who and what they support, and by which they should judge their own actions. There is a great need, now, for political resistance that is not bound to, and is independent of, the terms of “choosing” between the fascistic agenda of the RNC and conciliation to that represented by Obama.
In tumultuous and politically charged times like this, people look for answers. Even if they enter into political life on the terms of one or another ruling class agenda, they can be open to radical solutions—solutions that get to the root of the problem. Through all the confusion and challenges of the election season, and through whatever path events take, Revolution newspaper will continue to expose those roots. And Revolution will connect people with Bob Avakian’s re-envisioning of communist revolution—a source of real hope and daring for all who refuse to accept the “choices” this system offers.
There are a million ways to hook up with, and contribute to this revolutionary movement, even as you check it out. Drop in at the Revolution Books location in your area (http://revcom.us/revbooks/index.html), or write or email Revolution, c/o RCP Publications, Box 3486 Merchandise Mart, Chicago, IL 60654, [email protected]