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Surviving Capitalism

@tzifron / tzifron.tumblr.com

Social Justice Necromancy
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reblogged

Canada’s ground-breaking, hamstrung repair and interop laws

If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

When the GOP trifecta assumes power in just a few months, they will pass laws, and those laws will be terrible, and they will cast long, long shadows.

This is the story of how another far-right conservative government used its bulletproof majority to pass a wildly unpopular law that continues to stymie progress to this day. It's the story of Canada's Harper Conservative government, and two of its key ministers: Tony Clement and James Moore.

Starting in 1998, the US Trade Rep embarked on a long campaign to force every country in the world to enact a new kind of IP law: an "anticircumvention" law that would criminalize the production and use of tools that allowed people to use their own property in ways that the manufacturer disliked.

This first entered the US statute books with the 1998 passage of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), whose Section 1201 established a new felony for circumventing an "access control." Crucially, DMCA 1201's prohibition on circumvention did not confine itself to protecting copyright.

Circumventing an access control is a felony, even if you never violate copyright law. For example, if you circumvent the access control on your own printer to disable the processes that check to make sure you're using an official HP cartridge, HP can come after you.

You haven't violated any copyright, but the ink-checking code is a copyrighted work, and you had to circumvent a block in order to reach it. Thus, if I provide you a tool to escape HP's ink racket, I commit a felony with penalties of five years in prison and a $500k fine, for a first offense. So it is that HP ink costs more per ounce than the semen of a Kentucky Derby-winning stallion.

This was clearly a bad idea in 1998, though it wasn't clear how bad an idea it was at the time. In 1998, chips were expensive and underpowered. By 2010, a chip that cost less than a dollar could easily implement a DMCA-triggering access control, and manufacturers of all kinds were adding superfluous chips to everything from engine parts to smart lightbulbs whose sole purpose was to transform modification into felonies. This is what Jay Freeman calls "felony contempt of business-model."

So when the Harper government set out to import US-style anticircumvention law to Canada, Canadians were furious. A consultation on the proposal received 6,138 responses opposing the law, and 54 in support:

And yet, James Moore and Tony Clement pressed on. When asked how they could advance such an unpopular bill, opposed by experts and the general public alike, Moore told the International Chamber of Commerce that every objector who responded to his consultation was a "radical extremist" with a "babyish" approach to copyright:

As is so often the case, history vindicated the babyish radical extremists. The DMCA actually has an official way to keep score on this one. Every three years, the US Copyright Office invites public submissions for exemptions to DMCA 1201, creating a detailed, evidence-backed record of all the legitimate activities that anticircumvention law interferes with.

Unfortunately, "a record" is all we get out of this proceeding. Even though the Copyright Office is allowed to grant "exemptions," these don't mean what you think they mean. The statute is very clear on this: the US Copyright Office is required to grant exemptions for the act of circumvention, but is forbidden from granting exemptions for tools needed to carry out these acts.

This is headspinningly and deliberately obscure, but there's one anecdote from my long crusade against this stupid law that lays it bare. As I mentioned, the US Trade Rep has made the passage of DMCA-like laws in other countries a top priority since the Clinton years. In 2001, the EU adopted the EU Copyright Directive, whose Article 6 copy-pastes the provisions of DMCA 1201.

In 2003, I found myself in Oslo, debating the minister who'd just completed Norway's EUCD implementation. The minister was very proud of his law, boasting that he'd researched the flaws in other countries' anticircumvention laws and addressed them in Norway's law. For example, Norway's law explicitly allowed blind people to bypass access controls on ebooks in order to feed them into text-to-speech engines, Braille printers and other accessibility tools.

I knew where this was going. I asked the minister how this would work in practice. Could someone sell a blind person a tool to break the DRM on their ebooks? Of course not, that's totally illegal. Could a nonprofit blind rights group make such a tool and give it away to blind people? No, that's illegal too. What about hobbyists, could they make the tool for their blind friends? No, not that either.

Conservatives just can’t stop fucking us over.

"A Canadian e-waste dump generates five low-paid jobs per ton of waste, and that waste itself will poison the land and water for centuries to come. A circumvention-enabled Canadian repair sector could generate 150 skilled, high-paid community jobs that saves gadgets and the Earth, all while saving Canadians millions." —emphasis mine

This inadvertently (maybe? I wouldn't be surprised if this was on Mr Doctorow's mind as he wrote the piece) highlights one of the fun "hypocrisies"* of conservative parties—they crow and crow about creating more domestic jobs and bringing back jobs from overseas, but they'll be damned if those jobs aren't paying slave wages to the employees while lining shareholder pockets and packing golden parachutes for the C-suite. And because the world is functionally a corpoligarchy, an emerging industry/market that might make the C-suite a ton of money, but might have to pay employees well to do it is gonna get wrenched from multiple directions to keep all the money for the 1%.

The Harper administration really fucked up a lot of things. That we are still detangling a decade later. Unfortunately it's not enough to just survive a crappy government you have to unfuck the stuff they fucked up. And it's way past time that we do it.

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finnglas

A quote from the article:

"Seeing that there were four open board seats but only two progressive candidates running, they organized a write-in campaign...It worked: Shipps was elected by a margin of just 67 votes, defeating a candidate who had tried to get the book Gender Queer banned from local schools."

It is so rare that a write-in campaign works, I am so impressed with the level on which these kids organized! I'm so proud!

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"why we build the wall" from hadestown is really gonna trip up future media analysis students. they'll be like "ah a piece of media from the 2010s referencing building a wall to keep out the poor, clearly this is a reference to the president of the united states from 2016-2020", and then their professor will have to be like "actually the concept album for this musical came out in 2010"

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gatherround

how i hope this conversation goes from there is like:

"actually the concept album for this musical came out in 2010 and the original song was written in 2006"

"so she knew about the wall 10 years before Trump proposed it be built?"

"well, let's talk about that...

...but that wasn't when the wall was first built...

...this shift in the '90s marked the start of an enforcement philosophy called Prevention Through Deterrence, which basically says that if crossing is made more deadly, fewer people will cross (fact check: it just means that more people die on the journey). From the start, the purpose of the wall was not to physically to stop people from crossing -- it was to make it more deadly to do so.

...and we can also look at the song metaphorically and expansively, as a reference to the policing of migration, to company towns, to gated communities, and the physical and metaphorical walls that throughout history have kept people in and out and defined who does and don't belong.

Sources: 1 & 2 / 3 / 4"

"...how did you just say a hyperlink?"

"why worry about that when you can use this show as an entry-point into a deeper understanding of capitalism's investment in coercive control over human migration, and its long history in the United States?"

"so the song only seems prophetic because the long history of policing and militarizing the border has been ignored, and treated as an outsider position by Trump rather than the continuation of bi-partisan policy dating back decades? and it can be seen to reflect larger patterns of capital controlling people's movement in order to extract land, labor, wealth, and ultimately life from them?"

"and the song slaps"

"....and the song slaps"

thank you so much for this well-researched response tho because, as a texan, the very concept that trump invented the idea of the border wall made me kinda. reboot. not mad at op! just surprised at the difference in our life experiences

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Fun fact for our international followers: If someone in Australia cuts down a tree on public land to improve the view from their house, the local government will install a sign to block that view again

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US CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY & GLOBAL TERRORISM

US Use of Weapons of Mass Destruction The indiscriminate use of bombs by the US, usually outside a declared war situation, for wanton destruction, for no military objectives, whose targets and victims are civilian populations, or what we now call “collateral damage.”

  • Japan (1945) 
  • China (1945-46) 
  • Korea & China (1950-53) 
  • Guatemala (1954, 1960, 1967-69) 
  • Indonesia (1958) 
  • Cuba (1959-61) 
  • Congo (1964) 
  • Peru (1965) 
  • Laos (1964-70) 
  • Vietnam (1961-1973) 
  • Cambodia (1969-70) 
  • Grenada (1983) 
  • Lebanon (1983-84) 
  • Libya (1986) 
  • El Salvador (1980s) 
  • Nicaragua (1980s) 
  • Iran (1987) 
  • Panama (1989) 
  • Iraq (1991-2000) 
  • Kuwait (1991) 
  • Somalia (1993) 
  • Bosnia (1994-95) 
  • Sudan (1998) 
  • Afghanistan (1998) 
  • Pakistan (1998) 
  • Yugoslavia (1999) 
  • Bulgaria (1999) 
  • Macedonia (1999)

US Use of Chemical & Biological Weapons The US has refused to sign Conventions against the development and use of chemical and biological weapons, and has either used or tested (without informing the civilian populations) these weapons in the following locations abroad:

  • Bahamas (late 1940s-mid-1950s) 
  • Canada (1953) 
  • China and Korea (1950-53) 
  • Korea (1967-69) 
  • Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia (1961-1970) 
  • Panama (1940s-1990s) 
  • Cuba (1962, 69, 70, 71, 81, 96)

And the US has tested such weapons on US civilian populations, without their knowledge, in the following locations:

  • Watertown, NY and US Virgin Islands (1950) 
  • SF Bay Area (1950, 1957-67) 
  • Minneapolis (1953) 
  • St. Louis (1953) 
  • Washington, DC Area (1953, 1967) 
  • Florida (1955) 
  • Savannah GA/Avon Park, FL (1956-58) 
  • New York City (1956, 1966) 
  • Chicago (1960)

And the US has encouraged the use of such weapons, and provided the technology to develop such weapons in various nations abroad, including:

  • Egypt 
  • South Africa 
  • Iraq

US Political and Military Interventions since 1945 The US has launched a series of military and political interventions since 1945, often to install puppet regimes, or alternatively to engage in political actions such as smear campaigns, sponsoring or targeting opposition political groups (depending on how they served US interests), undermining political parties, sabotage and terror campaigns, and so forth. It has done so in nations such as

  • China (1945-51) 
  • South Africa (1960s-1980s)
  • France (1947) 
  • Bolivia (1964-75)
  • Marshall Islands (1946-58) 
  • Australia (1972-75)
  • Italy (1947-1975) 
  • Iraq (1972-75)
  • Greece (1947-49) 
  • Portugal (1974-76)
  • Philippines (1945-53) 
  • East Timor (1975-99)
  • Korea (1945-53) 
  • Ecuador (1975)
  • Albania (1949-53) 
  • Argentina (1976)
  • Eastern Europe (1948-56) 
  • Pakistan (1977)
  • Germany (1950s) 
  • Angola (1975-1980s)
  • Iran (1953) 
  • Jamaica (1976)
  • Guatemala (1953-1990s) 
  • Honduras (1980s)
  • Costa Rica (mid-1950s, 1970-71) 
  • Nicaragua (1980s)
  • Middle East (1956-58) 
  • Philippines (1970s-90s)
  • Indonesia (1957-58) 
  • Seychelles (1979-81)
  • Haiti (1959) 
  • South Yemen (1979-84)
  • Western Europe (1950s-1960s) 
  • South Korea (1980)
  • Guyana (1953-64) 
  • Chad (1981-82)
  • Iraq (1958-63) 
  • Grenada (1979-83)
  • Vietnam (1945-53) 
  • Suriname (1982-84)
  • Cambodia (1955-73) 
  • Libya (1981-89)
  • Laos (1957-73) 
  • Fiji (1987)
  • Thailand (1965-73) 
  • Panama (1989)
  • Ecuador (1960-63) 
  • Afghanistan (1979-92)
  • Congo (1960-65, 1977-78) 
  • El Salvador (1980-92)
  • Algeria (1960s) 
  • Haiti (1987-94)
  • Brazil (1961-64) 
  • Bulgaria (1990-91)
  • Peru (1965) 
  • Albania (1991-92)
  • Dominican Republic (1963-65) 
  • Somalia (1993)
  • Cuba (1959-present) 
  • Iraq (1990s)
  • Indonesia (1965) 
  • Peru (1990-present)
  • Ghana (1966) 
  • Mexico (1990-present)
  • Uruguay (1969-72) 
  • Colombia (1990-present)
  • Chile (1964-73) 
  • Yugoslavia (1995-99)
  • Greece (1967-74)

US Perversions of Foreign Elections The US has specifically intervened to rig or distort the outcome of foreign elections, and sometimes engineered sham “demonstration” elections to ward off accusations of government repression in allied nations in the US sphere of influence. These sham elections have often installed or maintained in power repressive dictators who have victimized their populations. Such practices have occurred in nations such as:

  • Philippines (1950s) 
  • Italy (1948-1970s) 
  • Lebanon (1950s) 
  • Indonesia (1955) 
  • Vietnam (1955) 
  • Guyana (1953-64) 
  • Japan (1958-1970s) 
  • Nepal (1959) 
  • Laos (1960) 
  • Brazil (1962) 
  • Dominican Republic (1962) 
  • Guatemala (1963) 
  • Bolivia (1966) 
  • Chile (1964-70) 
  • Portugal (1974-75) 
  • Australia (1974-75) 
  • Jamaica (1976) 
  • El Salvador (1984) 
  • Panama (1984, 89) 
  • Nicaragua (1984, 90) 
  • Haiti (1987, 88) 
  • Bulgaria (1990-91) 
  • Albania (1991-92) 
  • Russia (1996) 
  • Mongolia (1996) 
  • Bosnia (1998)

US Versus World at the United Nations The US has repeatedly acted to undermine peace and human rights initiatives at the United Nations, routinely voting against hundreds of UN resolutions and treaties. The US easily has the worst record of any nation on not supporting UN treaties. In almost all of its hundreds of “no” votes, the US was the “sole” nation to vote no (among the 100-130 nations that usually vote), and among only 1 or 2 other nations voting no the rest of the time. Here’s a representative sample of US votes from 1978-1987:

  • US Is the Sole “No” Vote on Resolutions or Treaties
  • For aid to underdeveloped nations 
  • For the promotion of developing nation exports 
  • For UN promotion of human rights
  • For protecting developing nations in trade agreements
  • For New International Economic Order for underdeveloped nations
  • For development as a human right
  • Versus multinational corporate operations in South Africa
  • For cooperative models in developing nations
  • For right of nations to economic system of their choice
  • Versus chemical and biological weapons (at least 3 times)
  • Versus Namibian apartheid
  • For economic/standard of living rights as human rights
  • Versus apartheid South African aggression vs. neighboring states (2 times)
  • Versus foreign investments in apartheid South Africa
  • For world charter to protect ecology
  • For anti-apartheid convention
  • For anti-apartheid convention in international sports
  • For nuclear test ban treaty (at least 2 times)
  • For prevention of arms race in outer space
  • For UNESCO-sponsored new world information order (at least 2 times)
  • For international law to protect economic rights
  • For Transport & Communications Decade in Africa
  • Versus manufacture of new types of weapons of mass destruction 
  • Versus naval arms race 
  • For Independent Commission on Disarmament & Security Issues 
  • For UN response mechanism for natural disasters 
  • For the Right to Food 
  • For Report of Committee on Elimination of Racial Discrimination 
  • For UN study on military development 
  • For Commemoration of 25th anniversary of Independence for Colonial Countries 
  • For Industrial Development Decade in Africa 
  • For interdependence of economic and political rights 
  • For improved UN response to human rights abuses 
  • For protection of rights of migrant workers 
  • For protection against products harmful to health and the environment 
  • For a Convention on the Rights of the Child 
  • For training journalists in the developing world 
  • For international cooperation on third world debt 
  • For a UN Conference on Trade & Development
  • US Is 1 of Only 2 “No” Votes on Resolutions or Treaties 
  • For Palestinian living conditions/rights (at least 8 times) 
  • Versus foreign intervention into other nations 
  • For a UN Conference on Women 
  • Versus nuclear test explosions (at least 2 times) 
  • For the non-use of nuclear weapons vs. non-nuclear states 
  • For a Middle East nuclear free zone 
  • Versus Israeli nuclear weapons (at least 2 times) 
  • For a new world international economic order 
  • For a trade union conference on sanctions vs. South Africa 
  • For the Law of the Sea Treaty 
  • For economic assistance to Palestinians 
  • For UN measures against fascist activities and groups 
  • For international cooperation on money/finance/debt/trade/development 
  • For a Zone of Peace in the South Atlantic 
  • For compliance with Intl Court of Justice decision for Nicaragua vs. US. 
  • **For a conference and measures to prevent international terrorism (including its underlying causes) 
  • For ending the trade embargo vs. Nicaragua
  • US Is 1 of Only 3 “No” Votes on Resolutions and Treaties 
  • Versus Israeli human rights abuses (at least 6 times) 
  • Versus South African apartheid (at least 4 times) 
  • Versus return of refugees to Israel 
  • For ending nuclear arms race (at least 2 times) 
  • For an embargo on apartheid South Africa 
  • For South African liberation from apartheid (at least 3 times) 
  • For the independence of colonial nations 
  • For the UN Decade for Women 
  • Versus harmful foreign economic practices in colonial territories 
  • For a Middle East Peace Conference 
  • For ending the embargo of Cuba (at least 10 times)

In addition, the US has: 

  • Repeatedly withheld its dues from the UN 
  • Twice left UNESCO because of its human rights initiatives 
  • Twice left the International Labor Organization for its workers rights initiatives 
  • Refused to renew the Antiballistic Missile Treaty 
  • Refused to sign the Kyoto Treaty on global warming 
  • Refused to back the World Health Organization’s ban on infant formula abuses 
  • Refused to sign the Anti-Biological Weapons Convention 
  • Refused to sign the Convention against the use of land mines 
  • Refused to participate in the UN Conference Against Racism in Durban 
  • Been one of the last nations in the world to sign the UN Covenant on 
  • Political & Civil Rights (30 years after its creation) 
  • Refused to sign the UN Covenant on Economic & Social Rights 
  • Opposed the emerging new UN Covenant on the Rights to Peace, Development & Environmental Protection

Sampling of Deaths >From US Military Interventions & Propping Up Corrupt Dictators (using the most conservative estimates)

  • Nicaragua – 30,000 dead
  • Brazil  – 100,000 dead
  • Korea – 4 million dead
  • Guatemala – 200,000 dead
  • Honduras – 20,000 dead
  • El Salvador – 63,000 dead
  • Argentina – 40,000 dead
  • Bolivia – 10,000 dead
  • Uruguay – 10,000 dead
  • Ecuador – 10,000 dead
  • Peru – 10,000 dead
  • Iraq – 1.3 million dead
  • Iran – 30,000 dead
  • Sudan – 8-10,000 dead
  • Colombia – 50,000 dead
  • Panama – 5,000 dead
  • Japan – 140,000 dead
  • Afghanistan – 10,000 dead
  • Somalia – 5000 dead
  • Philippines – 150,000 dead
  • Haiti – 100,000 dead
  • Dominican Republic – 10,000 dead
  • Libya – 500 dead
  • Macedonia – 1000 dead
  • South Africa – 10,000 dead
  • Pakistan – 10,000 dead
  • Palestine – 40,000 dead
  • Indonesia – 1 million dead
  • East Timor – 1/3-½ of total population
  • Greece – 10,000 dead
  • Laos – 600,000 dead
  • Cambodia – 1 million dead
  • Angola – 300,000 dead
  • Grenada – 500 dead
  • Congo  – 2 million dead
  • Egypt – 10,000 dead
  • Vietnam – 1.5 million dead
  • Chile – 50,000 dead

Other Lethal US Interventions CIA Terror Training Manuals Development and distribution of training manuals for foreign military personnel or foreign nationals, including instructions on assassination, subversion, sabotage, population control, torture, repression, psychological torture, death squads, etc.

Specific Torture Campaigns Creation and launching of direct US campaigns to support torture as an instrument of terror and social control for governments in Greece, Iran, Vietnam, Bolivia, Uruguay, Brazil, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and Panama

Supporting and Harboring Terrorists The promotion, protection, arming or equipping of terrorists such as:

  • Klaus Barbie and other German Nazis, and Italian and Japanese fascists, after WW II
  • Manual Noriega (Panama), Saddam Hussein (Iraq), Rafael Trujillo (Dominican Republic), Osama bin Laden (Afghanistan), and others whose terrorism has come back to haunt us
  • Running the Higher War College (Brazil) and first School of the Americas (Panama), which gave US training to repressors, death squad members, and torturers (the second School of the Americas is still running at Ft. Benning GA)
  • Providing asylum for Cuban, Salvadoran, Guatemalan, Haitian, Chilean, Argentinian, Iranian, South Vietnamese and other terrorists, dictators, and torturers

Assassinating World Leaders Using assassination as a tool of foreign policy, wherein the CIA has initiated assassination attempts against at least 40 foreign heads of state (some several times) in the last 50 years, a number of which have been successful, such as: Patrice Lumumba (Congo), Rafael Trujillo (Dominican Republic), Ngo Dihn Diem (Vietnam) Salvador Allende (Chile)

Arms Trade & US Military Presence

  • The US is the world’s largest seller of weapons abroad, arming dictators, militaries, and terrorists that repress or victimize their populations, and fueling scores of violent conflicts around the globe
  • The US is the world’s largest provider of live land mines which, even in peacetime, kill or injure at least several people around the world each day
  • The US has military bases in at least 50 nations around the world, which have led to frequent victimization of local populations.
  • The US military has been bombing one Middle Eastern or Muslim nation or another almost continuously since 1983, including Lebanon, Libya, Syria, Iran, the Sudan, Afghanistan, and Iraq (almost daily bombings since 1991)

This, then, is a sampling of American foreign policies over the last 50 years. The FBI uses the following definition for Terrorism: “The unlawful use of force or violence committed by a group or individual, who has some connection to a foreign power or whose activities transcend national boundaries, against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a government, the civilian population or any segment thereof, in furtherance of political or social objectives.” This sounds like the terrorism we just experienced. It also sounds a lot like the US policies and actions since 1945 that I’ve just described.

This is a version of an an original page atributed to Robert Elias, a US Professor of Political Science , a list which, like so many others,  has otherwise ‘disappered’

US Perversions of Foreign Elections” should also include 2018 Brazil, now that it is confirmed that the FBI directly intervened to have the frontrunner jailed, resulting in the election of Jair Messias Bolsonaro

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When I think of care and pleasure I think of:
Me and my partner hanging out in bed during a “bed day,” constantly communicating about what hurts and what positions our bodies need to be in, offering to make each other tea or bringing over the chips. Spooning, reading, telling stories, making out and napping, in the middle of a massive pillow pile. We aren’t trying to cram ourselves into an able-bodied vision of what sexy or a relationship is; it’s totally okay for us to rest, chill, care for ourselves and each other. Our care needs are not some gross secret walled off from date night.

-Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, “Care as Pleasure” in Pleasure Activism

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traycakes

This happens all over the world, because the US government (like other empires before it) rewards charities whose "food aid" involves shipping American crops and food to a country, rather than helping that countries agriculture sector grow so it can sustain itself. In fact, the large amounts of "free" food donated by charities can destroy local agriculture because they cannot sell their crops, forcing them to find new jobs or start growing cash crops to sell instead.

Empires actively work against trying to "teach people how to fish," because they want countries dependent on "charity" from the empire and exploitative international trade. Bill and Hillary Clinton's actions in Haiti are despicable, but not unique.

"Charity" under capitalism is rarely done for the long-term benefit of those given "aid," and that is by design.

Thomas Sankara

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First, is the legitimization of hatred. Hatred is a force that can be fuelled and used for any number of purposes. People will vote against their own interests if it means they can vilify some other group of people and feel superior. And let me be explicit: this is the hatred of white supremacy. I hadn’t fully comprehended just how potent such hatred still can be. It’s truly amazing, in the most frightening way.

Second, from my own little corner of the world, from something I know a little about, I see a failure of journalism. The failures go back further than that, but I remember how in 2016 CNN and other news media organizations played hours upon hours of Trump rallies live, without fact-checking him, without pointing out where that would all inevitably lead. It was like he was a circus act, ha-ha. It was good for ratings, I suppose.

Over the years since, the large commercial media (and public broadcasters like NPR and the CBC) played a game of bothsiderism, equating on the one side the villainous, corrupt, ignorant, and hateful with on the other side old fashioned tepid liberalism. We’ve all seen the headlines, or even lack of headlines, about Trump saying just the most terrible things in the world — he’s going to sic the military on dissidents and so on — next to headlines declaring Harris is having trouble articulating what section 24 of her trade policy will mean for Midwestern farmers.

A fascist movement arose and grew and until the very final days, the media failed to even name it. Over the course of years, the news media mostly failed to clearly explicate the movement. It was just some dumb game.

What to do?

[click on the link]

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reblogged

I am making this post for no apparent reason, Americans

Resources for immigration to Canada:

Articles on moving to Canada from the USA:

Studying in Canada:

For knowing basic Canadian politics:

I know this isn’t viable for all Americans and in general I wouldn’t recommend it (given how difficult it can be) but I know a lot of vulnerable people are desperate and feeling very unsafe in the USA right now. I’m not judging anyone, which is why I am providing this information with no bias what so ever.

Americans should also know that Canada has every single systemic social issue that the USA does, so moving here is not going to necessarily get rid of these issues. They may be less severe in some ways, more severe in others but there are serious issues here, so if you are considering this please don’t uphold Canada as some kind of utopia.

I am also available anytime to answer any questions.

Posting this again for obvious reasons.

This isn’t going to be a solution for everyone, but for Trans people, People Of Colour, Immigrants and many other marginalized groups may no longer feel safe after tonight’s election result, so I’m just offering whatever help I can.

Here’s some updated information as some of the information above is now outdated:

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radicalgraff

"Friends don't let friends support genocide"

Spotted on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway

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reblogged

hi, i sent an ask ages ago asking you to not platform certain transphobic genocidal bloggers as if they are in good faith. and i've never seen a response but you've reblogged the post in question multiple times since. so i'm just wondering what's up w that

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Yes, I remember you, you were on anon before, nice to see you again! If I am correct what you are refering to is me answering a question that came from someone who was a zionist asking about my stance on Palestine. Well here is the thing, I try to approach most questions asked of me in this project as if they were in good faith.

I knew it was unlikely to change anyones position, but a part of being an educational resource is trying not to write off anyone.

The question being referred to was from a zionist, which I knew upon trying to check for the context as the question itself confused me a little in its phrasing. I also am aware that engaging with zionists is not always the right choice. I don't know that it was the right choice this time, but I can walk you through my thought process and you can make your own judgement.

I specifically decided to answer that question on that day because it had been sitting on my heart for a minute. When it came in, it immediately made me uncomfortable.

I knew it might cause a bit of a backlash (which it did), but I realized that it was an opportunity to make clear my stance on free Palestine. I have made a couple of posts, but because I try to stay in my lane they had not been as direct as I wanted to be on here (though other social medias had more obvious moments), and I had not had such a direct question yet. I knew for me it was important to clarify that from everything I have learned and explored in both history and current events, a free Palestine is a necessary and urgent call. I also wanted to take a second to reframe the question.

I had gotten backlash for posting some amazing Jewish people because they are pro-Palestine, and I wanted to take a moment to make it clear that I learned to love and dedicate my time to free Palestine from Jewish people. In all the intentional obfuscating it is often portrayed as if Jewishness is synonomous with zionism which is a dangerous claim and an untrue one.

It's also necessary for me to say, I did not know that persons entire past. I knew that they were a zionist from a cursory look on their blog, but I learned after posting that they were rather notorious. If I had known their reputation before, I may have chosen not to answer. But I also think there is worth in answering a question honestly, no matter the asker.

If you still disagree with my choice, I understand and respect that. I am still not sure I made the right choice, but if I am being truthful, I have seen the impact of the answer I gave and it seems to be quite positive. Most people were glad to hear a clear stance from me, and the person in question got added to many blocklists on that day.

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radicalgraff

"We out here humanizing robots and dehumanizing trans people"

Seen in Edmonton, Alberta

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