Tag Archive for 'resistance'

HAPPY SATURDAY!

DAY:

1) STREET PARTY May 19 | 1pm-7pm
2nd St at 2nd Ave
Fun bike games other fun events presented by TRACKSTAR.
Footdown, trackstands, and skids for all.
FBM hosts BUNNYHOP CHALLENGE w/ cash prizes. Performance by Ines Brunn.

and BIKE PARADE May 19 | 1pm
Meet at 33 W 17th St. near 5th Ave
Calling all tall bikes, short bikes, long bikes, regular bikes to the streets of New York. Show your colors! Ride your most fun bike: with your team, club or your biker friends. Dress yourself up and your bike.

Go see some films about bikes! Schedule/Tix here also bicyclefilmfestival.com
2) Dance Parade NYC

NYC will finally see, hear, and feel a massive mobile celebration of
dance music and culture in all its forms, from electronic beats to
drum and dance troupes. With 50-plus sound systems, 100s of crews,
over 6,000 registered dancers so far, from Herald Square all the way
to Washington Square Park — followed by a huge getdown in the park
with Kool Herc, Danny Tenaglia, and many many more — all making a
big noise to free the beat and the feet in New York already

Full listings online.

6th Avenue and 32nd Street, Manhattan
1p; $free
team@danceparade.org
http://www.danceparade.org

NOTE: Seems like a great idea — a protest that doesn’t look anything
like a protest.

NIGHT:

J & FLETCHER

COME OUT! COME OUT! SO MANY GOOD ART & POLITICS EVENTS!

Reblogged from Josh MacPhee! So many awesome things to do:

1) Thursday April 12th—- Graphic Work: Imaging Today’s Labor Movement
2) Saturday April 14th—- NYC Anarchist Bookfair
3) Sunday April 15th—- Realizing the Impossible Book Release
4) Monday April 16th—-Art and Anarchism Roundtable Discussion
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1) Graphic Work: Imaging Today’s Labor Movement
This is a show I [Josh MacPhee] co-curated with Zoeann Murphy of 40 new and exciting labor posters!
Opening: Thursday April 12th, 6pm to 9pm

Gallery 1199
310 W 43rd Street New York, NY 10036

The show will be open from April 5 to April 30

Open M-F: 9-5

For more information contact Zoeann Murphy: zoeann@wdiny.org

The US labor movement has created some of the most effective political graphics and images in history. However, work and workers, along with the labor movement are often depicted as experiences of the American past: photographs of children in factories in the early 1900s, paintings of historic strikes and Rosie the Riveter. Now the labor movement needs new images of the issues confronting workers today. Graphic Work, curated by Josh MacPhee and Zoeann Murphy is a collection of 40 posters aimed at representing the new fact of labor.

graphicworkcard

2) New York City Anarchist Bookfair!

Come hang out at the 1st ever NYC anarchist bookfair! I’ll be tabling all day for justseeds, it should be a great event!

Saturday April 14th, 11am-7PM

Judson Memorial Church, 55 Washington Square South, Manhattan

The 1st Annual, 1st Ever NYC Anarchist Book Fair, will host a one-day exposition of books, zines, pamphlets, art, film/video, and other cultural and very political productions of the anarchist scene worldwide, on Sat., Apr. 14, 2007 at Judson Memorial Church in Manhattan. The 1st Annual, 1st Ever NYC Anarchist Book Fair will feature over 40 tables as well as an art gallery. Panels, presentations, workshops, and skill shares will provide further opportunities to learn more and share your own experience and creativity.

for more info: http://www.anarchistbookfair.net/index.php?title=Announcement

here’s the poster my friend Kevin And I made for the event:

nycbookfair

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3) Realizing the Impossible Book Release!

My new book finally came out! Realizing the Impossible: Art Against Authority was just released on AK Press and my co-editor Erik Reuland and I are celebrating at Bluestockings Books. The book is a huge sprawling collection of 23 essays on the intersection of art and anarchism and has something for anyone even the slightest bit interested in art and politics.

Book Release Party/Event

Sunday April 15th, 7PM

Bluestockings

Sunday April 15th, 7pm
Bluestockings Books
172 Allen St. (just below Houston)
Erik and I will be using the book as a jump off point to discuss the role of art and culture in radical social movements, and a number of contributors will talk about their work. Should be really fun and a nice collection of voices and images. Come check it out, hang out, and celebrate with us!!!
realizingtheimpossible_200px
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4) Monday April 16th—-Art and Anarchism Roundtable Discussion
What: Roundtable Discussion on Anarchist Aesthetics
When: Monday 04.16.07 @ 7:30
Where: 16Beaver Street, 4th Floor, Manhatten
Who: Free and open to all
Roundtable Discussion with Contributors to Realizing the Impossible.
Erika Biddle, Dara Greenwald, Josh MacPhee, Cindy Milstein
We would like to start the Roundtable promptly at 7:30, so please come early if possible, and bring your questions.
This event will be a dovetail to the 1st Annual New York Anarchist Bookfair. We are really hoping that this event together people that maybe haven’t been in dialogue yet but should be. And so, this is not a panel discussion in anyway, but an open forum.
For the complete contents of the book please go to
Presenter Bios:
Josh MacPhee is an artist, curator and activist currently living in Troy, NY, usa.  His work often revolves around themes of radical politics, privatization and public space.  His second book Realizing the Impossible: Art Against Authority (AK Press, co-edited with Erik Reuland) was just published. He also organizes the Celebrate People’s History Poster Series and is part of the political art collective www.justseeds.org.
Cindy Milstein is co-organizer of the Renewing the Anarchist Tradition conference and a board member with the Institute for Anarchist Studies. [ www.anarchiststudies.org] She’s also a
member of the Free Society Collective and Black Sheep Books Collective in Vermont. Her written work appears in periodicals and several recent anthologies, including Globalize Liberation (City Lights),
Confronting Capitalism (Soft Skull), and Only a Beginning (Arsenal Pulp).
Erika Biddle is a founding member of the collective Artists in Dialogue. She can often be found tweaking text  for Autonomedia [ www.autonomedia.org ] and for Perspectives, the biannual journal of the Institute for Anarchist Studies. [ www.anarchiststudies.org] She is also on the board of the IAS. One of these days she’s going to lose her mind, remember how to write, and become a full-time poet.
Dara Greenwald has participated in collaborative and collective cultural production and activism for many years. Participation includes the Pink Bloque, Ladyfest Midwest Chicago, Version>03, Pilot TV Chicago, and other groupings that resist being named. She worked as the distribution manager at the Video Data Bank from 1998-2005, where she distributed independent media and experimental video art and worked on the preservation of the Videofreex collection. She also writes, curates, and makes art. Her videos have screened widely, including at Images Festival(Toronto), New York Underground, Yerba Buena Center (SF), and Ocularis(NY). She is currently studying Electronic Arts at RPI in Troy, NY. [www.daragreenwald.com ]

OH WHAT A WEEKEND.

NYC->Philly to see Dark Dark Dark (missing them with all my heart, and not just because they took Todd away, I wince at the departure of Marshall and Nona and George) at Fancy House->DC for NCOR->Philly to drop Josh off at NotSquat, 2nd visit to Finley at Fancy House->NYC to Todd’s then biked up to my house. Whew! And a 3hr boat meeting I called into. Now trying to go to bed. I need to get better at tearing my eyes from the screen.

Here’s a pic of Marshall. I miss you guys so much already.

Marshall of Dark Dark Dark

WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH, AND SO FAR BEHIND WE ARE…

This month’s NOW below the belt column reveals some incredibly atrocious laws and their use:

Ancient Laws, Current Consequences

Below the Belt: A Biweekly Column by NOW President Kim Gandy

March 6, 2007

Happy Women’s History Month! And how nice to be celebrating with a female Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, and a female front-runner for president, Hillary Clinton.

But even with those important firsts, we’ve got a lot of ground to cover to rid our communities of entrenched sexism. The real herstory will be made not when a few women ascend, but when all women are freed from injustice and have equal rights, responsibilities and opportunities. Treatment of women in the courts is a good place to start.

NOW has forty fearless years of history with this country’s legal system. From arguing the first sex discrimination case appealed under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act in 1969 to years of action and litigation to get rid of sex-segregated employment ads and stop clinic violence, to decades of defending abortion rights and civil rights for all in state and federal courtrooms, NOW activists have demonstrated that the legal system can be a powerful conduit for the advancement of women’s rights.

But recent news shows how easily that same system can still force us backward, with lawyers, judges, and often juries combining forces to undercut justice for women.

You’d think that when it comes to laws that affect women’s rights and, more specifically, women’s bodies, prosecutors would think twice before relying on statutes that pre-date the Emancipation Proclamation.

Exhibit A) In Maryland, advocates are urging the state appeals court to consider a lower court ruling that has angered women across the country. Last fall, the Court of Special Appeals decided the concept of “deflowering” has a legitimate place in the contemporary U.S. legal system when it said that it’s not rape if a woman withdraws consent after penetration and the man continues. The court’s decision actually acknowledges that it’s referring (or rather, deferring), to “ancient” laws:

“The concept … rooted in ancient laws and adopted by the English common-law, views the initial ‘de-flowering’ of a woman as the real harm or insult which must be redressed by compensating, in legal contemplation, the injured party—the father or the husband. This initial violation of the victim also provided the basis for the criminal proceeding against the offender. But, to be sure, it was the act of penetration that was the essence of the crime of rape; after this initial infringement upon the responsible male’s interest in a woman’s sexual and reproductive functions, any further injury was considered to be less consequential. The damage was done.”

Stunning. So as long as she initially consents, even if she regrets it right away and tries to get away from him — he’s within his rights to pin her down, kicking and screaming and sobbing, and take as long as he wants until he decides he’s done with her. Somebody wake me up.

Unbelievably, the appeals court found this ancient sexist precedent compelling. As a result of its decision, first-degree rape convictions were reversed. It’s just bone-chilling to know there are some people — even judges — who believe that consent can never be revoked once given, and would follow a precedent that identifies the “father or the husband” as the real victim in a rape of a woman.

Thankfully, women’s rights advocates in Maryland have been and are still fighting to have this decision reviewed by a higher court, and women legislators are considering a new law. Check out your own state’s rape law, and take action to change it if you find that it is as archaic as Maryland’s.

Exhibit B) Maybe Massachusetts state attorneys were taking their cues from Maryland’s Court of Special Appeals judges when they whipped out an obscure 1840 law to charge a teenage Dominican immigrant with “procuring an illegal miscarriage.”

Amber Abreu was unable to afford a legal abortion, so she did something common in her home country — she took Cytotec, an anti-ulcer medicine, to induce a miscarriage. The drug induced labor, and she delivered a 20 oz. fetus that was not viable, even after four days of extraordinary medical intervention. She was immediately sent to a maximum-security prison, and it took her family several days to raise bail money from the community. Now she may face murder charges as well, for doing something herself that an English-speaking 18-year-old with money could have obtained safely and legally.

“What is clear is that an inner-city teenager who is still studying English made a desperate choice when a safe and legal one proved inaccessible,” said Eileen McNamara in a Boston Globe column.

Of course, little is being made of the fact that Abreu — and many young women like her–face considerable linguistic, cultural, and economic barriers to reproductive health education and care. No, what’s more important is “Abreu’s irresponsibility,” says one editorial in the Massachusetts Eagle-Tribune.

Archaic attitudes, an archaic charge — today’s news. And one more reason that we can’t stop working toward equal justice for women.

Exhibit C) A woman we only know as Lucy from Orange County, California, is another example of the archaic attitudes that threaten women even today. Lucy was stalked and sexually assaulted by a police officer, and then was further victimized by that police officer’s unabashedly sexist lawyer. According to news reports, one night when Lucy left her job at a strip club, a police officer waited for her on a secluded section of highway outside of his jurisdiction, pulled her over and propositioned her, and sexually assaulted her when she refused. No one, not even the defense, disputes that he ejaculated on Lucy — the DNA tests proved it — and the prosecutor (who called him a “predator”) presented a mountain of evidence that he had previously stalked and harassed her.

After Lucy reported what happened and the case went to court, the officer’s attorneys argued that she “got what she wanted. She’s an overtly sexual person.” A jury of 11 men and one woman found the officer not guilty.

Evidently, if you are a stripper, you deserve to be violated and victimized by the very people whose job it is to protect you. It’s not just one beastly police officer who thinks so — but his defense lawyer and a so-called “jury of her peers.”

While it’s scary to contemplate, just imagine: if this kind of unmitigated sexism can happen in California, Massachusetts, and Maryland, what is happening to women in less “enlightened” states? Think about it.

As long as police officers, lawyers, judges and juries take their cues from the nineteenth century, we’ve got to stand on the shoulders of countless women before us who didn’t hesitate to fight for ideals that were far ahead of the curve.

Women’s History Month isn’t just about remembering, it’s about recognizing and making the connections. We have to identify today’s sexists, call them out, and fight them just like our feminist foremothers did.

NYC GIRLS: RIGHTRIDES NEEDS YOUR VIDEO!

We want to see your homemade video recording your walk home from public transportation at night. We’re looking for raw footage so no worries about having video editing skills. We’re hoping to receive this by March 15, 2007, please see below for submission info. Here’s the regs:

1) you identify as a woman, transgender (m or f identified) or gender-queer individual.

2) you must live in the NYC area, in one of our current or upcoming service areas*

3) you have access to a digital video recorder - we have limited availability to lend equipment.

4) at the beginning of the video, please have the camera focused on you in a well-lit place (be sure you’re not back-lit!) for 30 seconds while you say your first name, the neighborhood you live in, and the station/subway or bus line you are walking from. please describe your walk home and any safety issues (i.e. “I live 8 blocks from the 6 train at Brook Ave. I do not feel safe walking down the quickest route home late at night because of X, Y, Z so I take a longer route home”, etc.)

5) be with a friend to record the route that might be not the safest if you were by yourself, especially late at night. if your walk home is poorly-lit, feels unsafe/questionable, please record this. We’re looking for the stark reality of what you face getting home at night.

6) you can be walking (and your friend recording you, as you are walking) or you can be the one recording the video as you are walking. Be sure to walk slow enough that the camera is steady/doesn’t bounce too much and feel free to talk about how you feel about the safety in your neighborhood, getting home late at night, the cost of living in NYC etc.

7) the video should be 2 - 10 minutes in length and submitted to us in mpeg4 format**

…so WHY are we doing this? We are looking to create a composite video based on what our Riders experience and how they feel at night as they make their way home. Because YOUR physical safety is an issue we care about. Because limited funds mean that many can’t always afford a taxi home and walking from public transport isn’t always a safe option. Because RightRides is trying to expand to serve more neighborhoods and YOUR VIDEO will make a profound, visual impact on potential funders who are interested in supporting this program. We need money to expand and your participation and video can go a long way!

Please email us with the subject: VIDEO to let us know you are participating and we’ll help answer any questions you may have.

Please feel free to forward to anyone interested. Thank you for helping us make RightRides possible!
________________________________________________________________________

*RightRides currently serves:

Brooklyn: Bedford-Stuyvesant, Boerum Hill, Bushwick, Carroll Gardens, Clinton Hill, Cobble Hill, Crown Heights, Downtown Brooklyn, Fort Greene, Gowanus Canal, Greenpoint, Park Slope, Prospect Heights, Red Hook, Williamsburg

Manhattan: Chinatown, East Village, Lower East Side

Queens: Long Island City

RightRides would like to expand in 2007 to these neighborhoods:

Bronx: Melrose, Mott Haven, Port Morris, The Hub

Brooklyn: Sunset Park

Manhattan: East Harlem, Harlem, West Harlem, plus all neighborhoods 23rd Street and south.

**Please email us for specific instructions on how to get the file to us. We can also accept DVD’s of your video, but please email us with the subject: VIDEO for more info.

OKAY SO I’M ACTUALLY HOME.

So I’m home. I know I didn’t mention it. Having some serious post-partum with the raft and life on the river. Here’s a pic I took of the story booth Todd and I made with Callie and David Ellis to do our oral history project in. That part was amazing. When I put my 2900 pictures on my computer and go through them I’ll do a long post about how I just lived on a raft made of trash that we made for 6 weeks.

For now, here’s our booth. And there’s always our blog.

Oh. And also, today is September 11, the 5th anniversary. A lot of people have asked me about the political meaning of the trip, or if there was any political significance. I’ve been the first to say that it was perhaps a little bit of pre-figurative politics, or “being the change you want to see,” but it was a world I might like to live in for a while, but would never preach as a sustainable solution for others. It was an experiment in sustainable technology–wind turbines and biodiesel, creating 1 bag of trash per week for 30 people, composting, dumpstering food and all that. But come on! Seriously! I don’t think people with kids or people without the resources and luxuries we had to go into this trip would have been able to pick up and jump on the river so easily. That kind of cultural imperialism is silly as hell.

But here’s what the trip did do. I live in a world where I work in an office, in midtown, where I struggle to pay rent and spend so much money on food and rent because I work hard and I don’t have time to cook and I want to live closer to work so I pay more rent, and I cool off by blowing money on beer or whatever I blow money on to reward myself for working so hard and it’s one big vicious cycle. Argh! Stopping the cycle and running off to learn how to build things and live off of dumpsters and good will wrought by inspiration was pretty fucking inspiring. Making a giant floating sculpture–a 110 foot raft made out of garbage–was pretty amazing. And how will I ever be able to imagine a life I want to live if I never take a moment to step outside of the one I live in for fear of not having enough money to get off this hamster-wheel? How can we ever make big changes if we can’t imagine what the outcomes and goals ought to look like? I’m not advocating an end to the hard political work so many of us are doing, but I am advocating for more inspiration and joy. The corporate model of working and living, participating willfully in an economic system that has only profit by any means necessary at its bottom line, is at best unhealthy. How can we live like this? It is not sustainable if we are to imagine a world with less injustice gnashing its teeth and striking dull blows moment by moment. There’s more to say about poverty and shame and change, but I feel so inspired by the trip and doing what we did, what a lot of folks are still doing out on the Miss Rockaway.

So today, five years ago this city groaned and grieved and I saw things I will never ever forget; people watching loved ones die, a sense of fear anywhere we went, the most open-hearted sense of human kindness I have ever witnessed. My friend Jordan stretched all these brown paper rolls on Union Square and people wrote all kinds of things, sometimes leaking their hearts onto the paper. What a privilege it is for us not to have bombings and fear of war at home be a daily reality for us. That day launched us into five years of uncontrollable war, a maniac president and a complete sense of powerlessness over the actions of the government. What despair and resistance that has caused. Today I feel somewhat renewed, like my brain is exploring its capacity to be inspired again even though it’s hard to be back. Maybe doing something wild that only creates beauty has practical effects.