Wednesday, 30 October 2019

ELSEWHERE

In other parts of the world, people are waking up to the increasing stranglehold the imperialists have on the workers . I'm sure you can guess who's side the u.s.a. and kkkanada will be on.....

Chile’s people defy cops and army to demand gov’t resign

Oct. 28 — Indigenous Mapuche people, students, workers, retired workers, women, people from all but the most privileged sectors of Chilean society defied the state of emergency and curfew to come out in massive protest Oct. 25, after more than a week of violent confrontations with the authorities.
In retreat, the government ended the state of emergency starting Oct. 28, sending Army troops back to their barracks. On the other side, some 100 popular organizations called a general strike (paro nacional) for Oct. 30.
Santiago, Oct. 25. Banner reads, ‘Chile woke up! We are at war,’ mocking President Piñera’s unfortunate comment.
Estimates are that 1 to 3 million of Chile’s 19 million people filled the main squares of Santiago, the capital, and other cities of the long, narrow South American country on Oct. 25. The demonstrators knew that police and/or military had fired not only tear gas — which was everywhere in Santiago — but live ammunition at the young people demonstrating throughout the week. They knew that hundreds were injured, other hundreds arrested and some were tortured.
They knew that President Sebastián Piñera had called the protesters “bandits” and said that Chile was “at war” with them. They knew Chile’s army officers had been trained in brutality at the U.S. School of the Americas and had set up a military dictatorship in 1973 that lasted for nearly 20 years. If the people came out into the streets, it was with no illusions.
And still huge numbers came out, bringing not only a combative spirit — you can see it in the photographs and videos — but also their sense of humor while going into battle, knowing they were “the people united” and they “couldn’t be defeated.” 
Behind the crisis
Before the crisis blew up, Piñera had boasted of Chile’s stability and prosperity, which obscured rampant inequality and growing poverty. He unleashed the crisis by announcing a 3.75 percent increase in the Santiago subway fares, a tiny amount of 30 Chilean pesos (less than 5 U.S. cents). (tinyurl.com/y5t8ltm3) 
Young people, many of them high school students, stormed the subways and boarded trains without paying the fare. The government responded with police attacks. To the surprise of the authorities, the students fought back, and when they fought, they got the support of the Chilean working class.
Some subway stations were damaged, some buildings and vehicles burned. The president declared a curfew and a state of emergency, and police attacked the youths with water hoses, tear gas and bullets. Piñera and the pro-capitalist media demonized the demonstrators.  His Minister of Economy Juan Andrés Fontaine Talavera added insult to theft: “If you wake up earlier,” he told commuters, “you can have the benefit of the lower fare.”
The people just grew angrier and sided with the students. After a week of battles, Piñera was forced on Oct. 19 to rescind the fare increase. 
The Citizen Pulse survey of Activa Research “Crisis in Chile,” carried out Oct. 22-23, revealed the mobilizations have 83 percent popular approval, and 80 percent reject Piñera’s regime. 
People now chant, “It’s not 30 pesos, but 30 years,” meaning the period since the end of the Augusto Pinochet military dictatorship. Elected governments were then reintroduced, but they maintained free-market, pro-rich economic policies. While the Pentagon helped train Chile’s military officers, free-market guru Milton Friedman at the University of Chicago trained Chile’s economists to privatize everything and impose austerity to make sure Chile paid its debts to the imperialist banks.
What’s next
Piñera still commands the Army and the police and can order their use against the masses. According to most reports, there is no single party or organization, or even a coalition, directing the protests, which makes victory difficult. It also makes compromise difficult. The people are demanding that Piñera’s government resign and that the neoliberal inequalities end.
Chile’s elite have already shown they will resort to the most vicious repressive measures, when their theft of the workers’ labor and their pillage of the country’s natural resources are threatened.
One good sign, still only a small one, is that an ordinary soldier, David Veloso Codocedo, refused orders to go to Santiago to police the Oct. 25 demonstration. It’s a small start, but a start that at least some Chileans are encouraging by defending this soldier at his trial.
The size and energy of the demonstrations in Chile, which have reverberated throughout Latin America, have added a political crisis to the capitalist economic crisis that has begun to spread worldwide. This struggle, which is just beginning, is directed at neoliberalism — that is, the most unfettered, pro-rich capitalism. It will inevitably be directed against capitalism itself to resolve the desperate needs of the poorest workers in Chile.

Tuesday, 29 October 2019

QUIET IMPERIALISM , IGNORED REVOLT

How many people in kkkanada are aware of the repressive role their country is playing in Haiti? My guess is not many, as the media doesn't like to report widely on anything anti-kkkanadian imperialism. 
Read this illuminating article, assholes.

Remarkable Haitian revolt targets Canada

PROTESTS-HAIT
Haiti is the site of the most sustained popular uprising among many that are currently sweeping the globe. It’s also the most explicitly anti-imperialist, which is part of the reason why it has received the least coverage.
For six weeks much of Port-au-Prince has been shuttered in the longest in a series of strikes since the revolt began 15 months ago. There have been innumerable mass protests by diverse social sectors calling for president Jovenel Moïse to go.
Last week protesters reportedly threw rocks at the Canadian Embassy in Port-au-Prince. On Friday Radio Canada’s Luc Chartrand highlighted the widespread hostility towards the US and Canada: “The walls of Port-au-Prince are covered with graffiti against the UN and also against what everyone here knows as the ‘Core Group’, a group of donor countries, including Canada, the United States, European Union and the Organization of American States, without the support of which no Haitian president can remain in office long. During protests it is common to see people disparaging foreigners and symbols of their presence such as hotels.”
While Haitians have repeatedly criticized Canadian policy over the past 15 years, the Radio Canada report was a rare event in the dominant media. But the intensity of the popular uprising has been making it harder to ignore. The other reason is activism in Canada, an imperial centre. Solidarité Quebec-Haïti #Petrochallenge 2019 founder Marie Dimanche and I met Chartrand and a Radio Canada colleague before they left for Haiti and sent them critical information. They wanted to hear our point of view because Solidarité Quebec-Haïti has aggressively criticized Canada’s role in Haiti by among other means occupying Justin Trudeau’s electoral campaign office.
Since detailing some of Solidarité Québec-Haïti bold actions that generated coverage three weeks ago in “Canadian imperialism in Haiti in the spotlight” the group held a press conference covered by CTV and a rally at Trudeau’s office covered by Global, TVA and other news outlets. We also attempted to disrupt Trudeau’s final election rally, which prompted Radio Canada to describe 10 of us chanting “Canada out of Haiti”. At this point no Canadian journalist covering Haiti can reasonably claim to be unaware that there is criticism of Ottawa’s policy towards that country.
Adding weight to Solidarité Québec-Haïti’s criticism, 150 writers, musicians, professors and activists recently signed an “open letter calling on the Canadian government to stop backing a corrupt, repressive and illegitimate Haitian president”. The signatories include David Suzuki, Roger Waters, Linda McQuaig, Amir Khadir, Will Prosper, Tariq Ali, Michele Landsberg and Yann Martel.
In another sign of dissent, the Concertation pour Haïti, a collection of mostly government funded NGOs who were cheerleaders of Canada/Quebec’s important role in violently ousting Jean-Bertrand Aristide’s government in 2004, has called for a transitional government. Last week’s statement noted: “Haiti is at a pivotal moment. The current government is decried by the overwhelming majority of the population. Nearly all civil society groups have spoken out for the departure of Jovenel Moïse. …. However, the current government seems to have the full support of the international community … We invite Canada to make the right choice and use its influence in the international community to support” a presidential transition.
Despite growing challenges to its policy, Ottawa seems to be staying the course. On Wednesday a new Canadian ambassador was accredited at the national palace and reportedly “renewed Canada’s commitment to continue to accompany President Jovenel Moïse in his efforts to improve the living conditions of his people.” Earlier in the month the government put out an outrageous, if correct, travel advisory, warning Canadians that Haitian “police have used tear gas and live ammunition to disperse crowds.” Apart from this message to Canadians, the government has yet to directly criticize the killing of Haitian demonstrators by a police force that Canada has funded, trained and backed diplomatically since the 2004 coup. On October 15 the UN estimated at least 30 Haitians had been killed since mid-September. Most of them were likely killed by police.
Beyond its involvement with a repressive police force, Canada has provided financial and diplomatic backing to the neo-Duvalerist criminals subjugating Haiti’s impoverished masses. Two weeks ago Le Devoir reported that Canada has given $702 million in “aid” to Haiti since 2016. In February international development minister Marie-Claude Bibeau, who travelled to Haiti on multiple occasions, said “Haiti is one of the biggest development programs we have. Our ambassador in Port-au-Prince is in constant contact with the government.”
The Canadian Embassy has put out a stream of statements defending Moïse (though they are becoming softer). Amidst the general strike in February Bibeau was asked by TVA, “the demonstrators demand the resignation of the president. What is Canada’s position on this issue?” She responded by attacking the popular revolt: “The violence must stop; we will not come to a solution in this way.” But the violence is overwhelmingly meted it out by the Canadian backed regime.
At that time Canadian special forces were quietly deployed to the Port-au-Prince airport. The Haiti Information Project reported that they may have helped family members of President Moïse’s unpopular government flee the country.
Haitians are engaged in a remarkable popular revolt against Canadian policy. Solidarity activists across the country should try to amplify their message

Monday, 28 October 2019

WHO ARE THE REAL TERRORISTS ?

It doesn't matter whether it's the clintons, bush , obama, or fuckface trump, they all do the same shit. Invade other countries crossing borders at will, destroying those countries while claiming to "liberate" them , and then calling other people who haven't done one millionth of the damage they have done in the name of "freedom", terrorists.
Fuck amerikkkan imperialism.

The Bloodthirsty Braggadocio of Donald Trump, the Assassination of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi... and Who Rains Down the Most Terror

 | revcom.us

On Sunday morning, the world awoke to Donald Trump posturing and preening about how “we” killed Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, braying about al-Baghdadi’s cowardice and giving graphic descriptions of the killing.
From the standpoint of the interests of humanity, there is nothing to celebrate, nor is there anything to mourn, in the U.S. killing of ISIS (Islamic State) leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
ISIS is a totally reactionary force, most noted for its regimes of mass rape, forced conversion and forced ignorance, sadistic ritual executions, and Dark Ages terror wherever it ruled or touched. But for sheer oppression and human suffering, ISIS cannot come close to America and its decades-long reign of terror in the Middle East. This terror enforces the U.S. domination of the economies and political structures of the region.
From wars, coups, and subversion that it has carried out and/or fomented and supported—from Iraq to Lebanon, from Palestine-Israel to Iran, and right down today to the horrific American or American-backed wars in Yemen and Afghanistan—America is the Terrorist Supreme. Millions of human beings have been killed, millions more driven into exile, and literally hundreds of millions sentenced to lives of misery and humiliation because of America’s invasions, proxy wars, and support for brutal regimes. All this in service of a system of capitalism-imperialism, dominated by the U.S. (Go here to get sense of what this means for the people of that region.)
The conflict between the U.S., with its decades of domination and murder on the one hand, and the utterly reactionary brutal response it has called forth from the likes of ISIS on the other, is a true nightmare. Bob Avakian (BA) has characterized this as part of a conflict between “historically outmoded strata among colonized and oppressed humanity up against historically outmoded ruling strata of the imperialist system. These two reactionary poles reinforce each other, even while opposing each other.” And he goes on to say: “If you side with either of these ‘outmodeds,’ you end up strengthening both.” (BAsics 1:28)
Humanity needs another way—the way of the new communism developed by BA.
It must also be said here Trump’s glorying in the grisly description of the killing of al-Baghdadi, as well as the braggadocio he indulged in during the press conference after the official statement was done, was not just disgusting but part and parcel of the fascist mentality he promotes. The Trump/Pence regime—with its apocalyptic end-times worldview, its naked professions that American lives are more important than other people’s lives, along with the itchy Twitter finger of the lunatic-in-chief on the nuclear button—remains an extreme and present danger to the world’s people. It must be driven out, at the soonest possible time, by massive, sustained, nonviolent struggle. At a moment when Trump faces impeachment proceedings and accusations of sacrificing “national security” for his personal political gain, the regime will no doubt try to use this killing to seize political initiative, maintain and strengthen its grip on the state, and move closer to a fully consolidated fascist regime.
As for the Democrats—with their applause for this supposed triumph as well as their resentment at being left out of the planning—this whole spectacle shows that when it comes to basic aims, the Democrats are, as Obama once so infamously said, “on the same team” as Trump. For them the domination of their system over the masses of people, here and around the world, comes first. They have joined in on every ugly act carried out by the U.S. in the Middle East (see here for examples). Indeed, before Saturday they were castigating Trump for not being “tough enough.” All this shows that while the conflicts between the Democrats and the regime can potentially provide openings for the masses’ struggling “from below,” the Democrats can in no way be relied upon.
To step back to the whole picture: both these roads, U.S. imperialism and Islamic fundamentalism, are dead ends for humanity. To again quote BA, humanity has two choices: “either live with all this and condemn future generations to the same, or worse, if they have a future at all... or make revolution!” Few things bring the truth of that out as sharply as the horrendous situation in the Middle East.
The Republican Party Is Fascist
The Democratic Party Is Also a Machine of Massive War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity
This System CANNOT Be Reformed—It MUST Be Overthrown!
We Need an Actual Revolution

Thursday, 24 October 2019

GET THE FUCK OUT NOW

This shows that not all amerikkkans are assholes. In fact, there are many many good people there who stand on the side of justice against fascism.


Refuse Fascism Launches the #OUTNOW! Movement in LA & NYC to Demand The Trump/Pence Regime Must Go—NOW!

Cornel West Joins 200 in March from Union Square to Trump Tower

Los Angeles March Viciously Attacked by Fascist Thugs
For immediate release 11:00 pm October 19 2019
Contact: Refuse Fascism (917) 407-1286
RefuseFascism.org
Interviews Available

Two hundred people in New York City and another 100 in LA turned out for spirited demonstrations to announce the launch of the #OUTNOW! Movement. The Los Angeles protest was viciously attacked by MAGA fascist thugs.
These protests begin five weeks of protest to grow an unrelenting, nonviolent movement of mass protest that continues week after week to demand: The Trump/Pence Regime Must Go—NOW! that kicks off sustained protests until their demand is met.
In NYC Andy Zee, spokesperson for RefuseFascism.org, said that the “image of #OUTNOW that was in front of the Trump Tower has to be seen all over the world. This regime should not go on one day longer, 2020 is too late. We’re not here to follow that routine of assemble, march, go home and live your life. We have to get out and stay in the streets, disrupt business as usual, not only for ourselves but because humanity demands it.”
Cornel West, who kicked off the rally in Union Square, spoke after the march left Trump Tower: “We have culminated a magnificent march, we have initiated a historic anti-fascist coalition. I stand with those who are willing to put their bodies on the line and make their voices heard to make sure that there will never ever be a fascism in the United States of America.”
The New York rally was also addressed by Carl Dix; Sharonne Salaam—whose son Yusuf Salaam was one of the Central Park 5 attacked by Donald Trump at the time of his trial and who has continued to be attacked by Trump in the years since; as well as Juanita Young and Hawa Bah—whose sons were murdered by the NYPD. The New York Union Square rally marched 50 blocks to Trump Tower, where they spelled out #OUTNOW! in huge letters.
The rally in Los Angeles was attacked by a dozen fascist thugs wielding flag poles who targeted leaders of LA Refuse Fascism and pepper sprayed demonstrators in the eyes. Refuse Fascism was not deterred and marched forward, and vowed they would be back next week.
Both marches were marked by the presence of youth, many coming into protests against the Trump/Pence fascist regime for the first time, expressing a fierce determination to drive it out and fight for their future.

Puerto Rico and Hong Kong show us how: #TrumpPenceOutNOW!

In the Name of Humanity, We Refuse to Accept a Fascist America

Facebook, Twitter, Instagram: @RefuseFascism
RefuseFascism.org is a movement of people coming from diverse perspectives, united in our recognition that the Trump/Pence Regime poses a catastrophic danger to humanity and the planet, and that it is our responsibility to drive them from power through non-violent protests that grow every day until our demand is met. This Nightmare Must End: The Trump/Pence Regime Must Go!

Tuesday, 22 October 2019

HE DOESN'T GIVE A FUCK

Check this link about how trudeau doesn't give a fuck  about Indigenous rights .
Fucking smug piece of shit.

SMARMY LITTLE FUCK WINS AGAIN

"If you don't vote you don't have the right to complain, blah blah fucking blah ", shut the fuck up. How many other assholes running would have done anything differently ? Sure the conservative shithead is a total asshole , elizabeth may is a buffoon , and the ndp don't know what the fuck they're doing or where the fuck they're going.  The (white) people's party of kkkanada can just go fucking rot in their own filth somewhere . They all uphold the same shit.
trudeau is a privileged smug entitled fuck  who has never struggled for anything in his richie rich life. Read this, and enjoy your new "leader ". This is all I need to know about this fucking asshole. And take note,  he quickly fucking apologized knowing it was election year. 

Unacceptable and offensive’: Trudeau gets called out over sarcastic response to Grassy Narrows advocate

Willow Fiddler
APTN News
Indigenous organizations called out Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Thursday for a comment he made to a heckler advocating on behalf of Grassy Narrows First Nation at a Liberal fundraiser Wednesday night in Toronto.
Trudeau, who typically takes a let’s-talk approach when protesters approach, found himself delivering a sarcastic response to the person who interrupted his remarks.
“Thank you for your donation,” Trudeau told the woman as she was escorted out by security. “I really appreciate your donation to the Liberal Party of Canada.”
Liberals in attendance cheered as she was removed which was captured by cellphone cameras and quickly circulated on social media Wednesday night.
“Last night I lacked respect towards them and I apologize for that,” Trudeau told media at an event in Halifax. “It is obviously an issue that they feel very, take very seriously and now as I understand it involved a child possibly.
“As I think you all know, from time to time I’m in situations where people are expressing concerns or protesting a particular thing, and I always try to be respectful and always try to engage with them in a positive way.”
“That’s how I believe democracy should function, and I didn’t do that last night. Last night I lacked respect towards them and I apologize for that.”
Any funds that the protesters contributed in order to gain access to the event will be refunded, he added.
The video that was posted to twitter by user @freegrassy has gone viral.
It has close to 300,000 views by Thursday afternoon.
“The liberal party is filled with different perspectives and different opinions and we respect them all and our commitment to reconciliation continues to be strong and committed and we will continue to engage,” Trudeau said.
But many have since criticized the prime minister, calling his response smug to a situation that has affected First Nations communities for decades.
In a tweet, NDP MP Romeo Saganash said, “just another telling episode about how he really doesn’t…care about Indigenous rights and people.”
Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde called the comments unacceptable and offensive.
Grassy Narrows in Ontario has long argued to both the provincial and federal governments that they’ve suffered mercury poisoning from contaminated water.
In 2017 the Ontario government committed $85 million  to clean up the damage done by a paper mill in nearby Dryden during the 1960s and 70s.
Mercury contaminated the Wabigoon River that flows upstream to Grassy Narrows and Wabaseemoong, poisoning the fish they rely on for sustenance.
Earlier testing revealed about 90 per cent of the people living in the two communities have experienced symptoms of mercury poisoning.
Trudeau says he will instruct his Indigenous Services minister to work hard to find a solution.
“The situation in grassy narrows is one that we’ve been following for quite a while,” Trudeau said.
“It involves elements of provincial jurisdiction and federal responsibility.”
In a statement from First Nation leaders in Treaty 3, the chief of Grassy Narrows says, “we acknowledge the prime minister’s apology however, he must be reminded of the urgency of this matter and the ongoing struggle and threats to the health of First Nations citizens because of environmental contamination for over 50 years.

Monday, 21 October 2019

NOT IN THE NEWS

This is the sort of thing you won't hear about in the mainstream news, at least not in any great depth, but it's worth knowing about and worth supporting . Read, assholes...

An inside account of the Indigenous uprising in Ecuador

Oct. 16 — On Oct. 7, 4000 Indigenous people from towns in and around the same canton marched for four hours to Ibarra to present a manifesto to the governor of Imbabura. The governor refused to meet with them and later rejected their primary demands: Cease the military aggression against Indigenous communities and support their resistance to the “paquetazo” (economic package) ordered by the International Monetary Fund and Decree 883, which removed fuel subsidies. 
Our friend – we’ll call him K – decided to join the Paro Nacional (Great National Uprising) when he attended a people’s assembly on Oct. 8 organized in his community by the Federación Indígena y Campesina de Imbabura. FICI is affiliated with CONAIE, the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador. K said that FICI includes Indigenous communities from the following: the Otavalos, Caranquis and Natabuela people. 
K is Otavalao and a veteran of two decades of resistance led by the CONAIE against former presidents of Ecuador who were imposing the dictates of the Washington Consensus [the IMF, World Bank and U.S. Federal Reserve] on the people of Ecuador.
In July 1999, FICI marched to Quito, the capital, for a Paro Nacional called by CONAIE. The paro was a general strike which overthrew then President Jamil Mahuad. The manifesto of that insurrection reads as if it were written today.
In 1999, a three-day march of Indigenous women from Imbabura traversed 60 miles over arid terrain and poorly paved mountain roads reaching Quito on July 15. Brutal repression failed to stop that march even though the national police and the military dropped tear gas bombs from helicopters on the marchers. 
FICI was planning a similar three-day march on the capital city of Quito for the Paro Nacional that ended this past Sunday, Oct. 13. But last week, the people were spontaneously rising up, and to catch up with the uprising, FICI had to organize comuneros – Indigenous participants – to ride in big trucks and in double decker buses volunteered by a local bus company. The vehicles carried hundreds of comuneros back and forth between Imbabura and Quito during the uprising.
K said he joined the Paro for the sake of his daughters, his grandchildren and his extended family. The comuneros took children to Quito, not expecting that the repression would be an order of magnitude greater than anything they had ever experienced before.  
The mobilization itself was a huge and militant uprising of the Indigenous movement, with estimates of 50,000 Indigenous marchers in Quito. They were met in solidarity by hundreds of well-organized Quito residents, Afro-Ecuadorians, students and workers who joined them in the streets. 
Solidarity in Quito
Comuneros were housed in five universities in the center of the city. Residents of Quito provided more than enough food and water, mattresses, blankets and personal hygiene items for the out-of-town marchers. The staff in the Politechnical Catholic University, where K found refuge with about 700 people, maintained clean bathrooms and showers that were constantly in use. 
People could hardly rest for two straight nights in Quito as the cops kept firing tear gas and noise bombs in and around their campus shelters. The national police used up all their tear gas and sent ambulances to other cities to get more. The gas canisters were being used as bullets – shot at protesters’ heads and bodies, injuring hundreds of people.
In the midst of the chaos, cops called a truce and then double-crossed mothers with children. Cops advised the women that they would be safe in the House of Culture. After the women and children were inside, the police gassed the building. 
The Indigenous people were outraged. The well-reported repression was so brutal that the Indigenous forces devised guerrilla tactics for self-defense. K reported that he saw a huge explosion in Arbolito Park at 12:40 a.m. on Oct. 12 that rocked Quito. After being chased by mounted police, comuneros strung heavy steel wire between lamp posts on the streets where cops on motorcycles and horseback charged the protesters. Small groups coordinated to surround the police and pelt them with stones from all directions. 
No cops were seriously injured. Nor has the government taken responsibility for the deaths, injuries and disappearances among the demonstrators.
The general strike forced President Lenín Moreno to call for dialogue. Unfortunately, it was much too late to spare the lives of the eight people killed by the police – as reported by the Defensoria del Pueblo (the national organization for the defense of human rights in Ecuador), and too late to prevent grievous injuries to many hundreds more. The Defensoria del Pueblo did not report on the disappeared, which CONAIE estimated to be more than 100.
The joint commission of government and Indigenous representatives is meeting today, Oct. 16, to replace Decree 883, in accordance with the agreement in last Sunday’s dialogue. K was disappointed to learn that not all the items of the paquetazo were going to be placed on the table for discussion.
Lawfare feels like a police state
The persecutions and arrests of political leaders of Moreno’s main opposition party, the Revolución Ciudadana (Citizens’ Revolution) of former President Rafael Correa, have intensified. This repression occurs parallel with the dialogue and the work of the joint commission. 
Assembly member Gabriela Rivadeneira, former president of the National Assembly and former governor of Imbabura Province is now targeted. K witnessed her marching with the Indigenous people of Otavalo on Monday, Oct. 7. Today she is reported to be a political exile in Mexico with Ricardo Patiño who the minister closest to Rafael Correa. 
The arrest of the prefect [magistrate] of Pichincha Province, Paula Pabón, was recorded and the video has gone viral on social networks. Pabón’s recent election was considered to be a major victory for the Revolución Ciudadana. 
Several other leaders are exiled or being sought. Vice President Jorge Glas, a political prisoner for more than two years, was the first target of Moreno’s power grab after Glas exposed Moreno’s corruption in August 2017. 
Although few people believe him, Moreno has claimed that Correa was paying the Indigenous $45 a day to hold the general strike and charging that Nicolás Maduro, president of Venezuela,  and the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) were supporting the Indigenous movement. K said that the people knew that the whole world was watching. 
Today, the CONAIE are calling on CIDH – Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos (tinyurl.com/y225fp5f/ in Spanish) – to investigate claims of human rights violations against the general strike participants.
K had not yet learned as of yesterday, Oct. 15, that only Decree 883 was on the table of the joint commission. When informed of the current situation, K said that he went into the streets to fight the IMF paquetazo of neoliberal reforms and to get Moreno out, not just to repeal 883. Many people here in Ibarra are disappointed that the CONAIE has agreed to limit negotiations. 
The class struggle has only begun in Ecuador. ¡Hasta la victoria siempre! Until victory!

Sunday, 20 October 2019

HAPPY TO BE WRONG

Arriving at the show last night around 8:30 , I thought it was going to be a dead night. There was almost no one there even though there was a daytime show also, and the people who were there didn't seem too interested in what was going on onstage.

Well I suppose with an all day event like this there are bound to be some ebbs and flows in crowd traffic, which is no reflection on whatever bands happen to be playing. The venue is just not going to stay packed all day . 

That being said, it ended up being a killer night, with excellent crowd enthusiasm and great playing from the bands. I was interested in seeing Mass Distraction, another band that Hoon is in, and even though their drummer quit very recently, the one they had last night who had only practiced three times with them (!) , pulled it off perfectly competently. Crusty heavy anarcho punk/thrash . Get into it.
Safe Decisions rocked the place with their fast tight melodic sound , we played next and it was so much fun, and then The Gnar Gnars got the place crazy . It helped that they were wearing their 80s hair band Halloween costumes. Good times to be sure .
SonDoobiest closed off the night with some smooth flowing hip-hop , making for a varied and fantastic evening . Unfortunately, most of the crowd had left by then, but he was into it just the same.
If you weren't there, you shoulda been .
Good day to you.

Saturday, 19 October 2019

ALSO...

And we're playing this tonight. It's for a good cause , so see you there.

 No photo description available.

MORE HEARTBREAK

I very recently found out that an old friend has passed away due to complications associated with his lifestyle. I don't need to go into details here .

Ryan was a drummer, and played in bands like Laffing Stock and Shiner , who were an integral part of '90s Victoria punk rock. Basement shows, rented halls , house parties, they were there , and had a core of dedicated followers. A band I played in , Nothing To Lose , covered a song off of their first cassette release , called "Coffee Tea Or Me ?" The song was "Needed Reality" .
A group of us would drink pots of coffee and go skateboarding on Sunday nights after watching Get A Life . It was tremendously stupid good times, and I will never forget those days.

I know people always say that the newly passed had a huge heart , but in this case it was true, no matter what state he was in . He'd managed to be healthy at times, but would slip back into old habits, like so many people do . 
The last time I saw him was in the spring, and he had that trademarked huge smile he'd have on when he saw someone he was happy to see. We'd made plans to have coffee, but he didn't make it . He might not have been in the state of mind to remember such a thing , but that's okay. Shit happens.
I am going to miss him .

Friday, 18 October 2019

HISTORY AND THE BIG PICTURE

I know I've written before about people saying vacuous one dimensional shit like " america has lost it's way", whatever the fuck that's supposed to mean.
Actually, amerikkka has not lost it's way, because it's entire history right to the present day shows otherwise. There has NEVER been another way. This is the way it is.
Read:

Why You Should—and Should NOT—Feel Ashamed of America—and What You Can Do About It

 | revcom.us

A lot of people say that the way in which Trump hung the Kurds in Syria out to dry makes them ashamed to be an American. And in fact the way in which America has played the Kurds—and not just this time, but over many decades—is shameful. (See this piece on revcom.us.)
But if you’re ashamed because America “broke its word,” do you think this is something new, or somehow unusual? Then you need to think about America’s whole history with the Native American Indians, in which treaty after treaty after treaty was broken when it suited white America’s interests. 
If you’re ashamed because you somehow think the U.S. is on the side of right in Syria, then no. Forget it. The U.S. "special forces"1 were there as part of America’s imperialist project to dominate the region of the Middle East—and if you think that’s been good for the people of that region, you should look into the history of Palestine, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Afghanistan, and on down the line, where the toll of those killed, wounded, exiled, imprisoned or otherwise destroyed and ground up in the service of one U.S. “effort” or another easily mounts into the tens of millions and beyond. If you identify with this country and want something to be ashamed about? Then be ashamed of the way the U.S. under both Obama and Trump has supported the Saudi Arabian war against Yemen, in which the American ally has used U.S. military and intelligence support to kill thousands of Yemeni children, create the worst cholera epidemic in recent history, and put over a million people on the edge of starvation.
The particular troops removed from Syria were pulled because one faction of your rulers thought that removing them would better serve that project and those imperialist interests, and other very powerful factions did not. Now they’re having a fierce argument over that, and you’re being marshaled on one side of it. Don’t be.
Those crimes in the Middle East are just one part of the towering crimes committed in every corner of the planet by “the shining city on a hill.” We challenge you to go to the series American Crime, which goes into just one part of all this. 
But go further. Stop identifying with this country and take the step to identify with humanity. As Bob Avakian has said,
If you can conceive of a world without America—without everything America stands for and everything it does in the world—then you’ve already taken great strides and begun to get at least a glimpse of a whole new world. If you can envision a world without any imperialism, exploitation, oppression—and the whole philosophy that rationalizes it—a world without division into classes or even different nations, and all the narrow-minded, selfish, outmoded ideas that uphold this; if you can envision all this, then you have the basis for proletarian internationalism. And once you have raised your sights to all this, how could you not feel compelled to take an active part in the world historic struggle to realize it; why would you want to lower your sights to anything less? (BAsics 1:31)


1. So-called special forces refer to a corps of highly trained killers not subject to the discipline of even ordinary U.S. troops in their freedom to inflict mayhem and horror on anyone in their way, whether soldier or civilian

Thursday, 17 October 2019

PIGS & TEXAS

More fucking cops killing innocent people, and surprise of all surprises, it's in texas.

Fort Worth:

For the “Crime” of Being Black, Playing Video Games with Your Nephew, Open Doors: Immediate Execution by Police

 | revcom.us

Atatiana Koquice Jefferson, known as Tay, was a “cool auntie.” In the wee hours, of Saturday, October 12, she was playing video games with her 8-year-old nephew. Tay was only 28-years-old with her whole life in front of her. She had moved in to take care of her ailing mother. After getting a BA degree in biology she was studying to apply for medical school. But these dreams were horrifically slammed shut when a murdering cop shot through the window, killing Atatiana.
A neighbor had called the Fort Worth police, concerned because the doors of Atatiana’s home were open. Cops arrive and start slinking around the house. One white cop, Aaron Dean, without identifying himself, looks into a window, gun drawn, and yells, “Put up your hands up! Show me your hands!" Two seconds later, he fires. 
2019 isn’t even over and the Fort Worth police have now already shot and killed seven people. Hundreds have come out to protest this particularly outrageous police murder. Many drawing parallels to how a Botham Jean was murdered by a white Dallas cop who entered Jean’s apartment by mistake.
Such cold-blooded police murders happen all the time because of this system – a system that criminalizes Black and Brown people, unjustly arrests and locks up so many, and allows the pigs to wantonly kill with no punishment.
Killer cop Dean resigned after he was initially put on “administrative leave.” Then late on Monday, after this cold-blooded murder became a national news story, and after outrage around the country, Dean was arrested, charged with murder, and put in jail.
Cops recorded this with a body cam. Lots of good that did! They claim a legally owned gun was somewhere in the house. But even if true, so what? There is absolutely no evidence that this legally owned gun had anything to do with what happened. This cop says he felt “threatened” – which is the routine justification that allows pigs to get away with murder by simply saying they encountered a Black person and felt in danger.
Ask yourself this, if you haven't already asked yourself hundreds of times:
What kind of system executes people for playing a video game with their nephew late at night?