Black Flag Library & Distro

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An anarchist library on stolen Clackamas and Cowlitz land in so-called Portland, OR. We exist in the liminal space between the digital and physical worlds as both a protest against and victims of gentrification.

https://blackflaglibrary.librarika.com

The library has added some new books to our collection! We’ll be sharing them over the week.

First, we have Radius by Yasmin El-Rifae. @versobooks has this to say:

A haunting, intimate account of the women and men who built a feminist revolution in the middle of the Arab Spring.

In 2012, the joyful hopes of the democratic Egyptian Revolution were tempered by revelations of mass sexual assault in Tahrir Square in Cairo, the revolution’s symbolic birthplace.

This is the story of the women and men who formed Opantish—Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment—who deployed hundreds of volunteers, scouts rescue teams, and getaway drivers to intervene in the spiraling cases of sexual violence against women protesters in the square. Organized and led by women during 2012–2013—the final, chaotic months of Egypt’s revolution—teams of volunteers fought their way into circles of men to pull the woman at the center to safety. Often, they risked assault themselves.

Journalist Yasmin El-Rifae was one of Opantish’s organizers, and this is her evocative, aching account of their work, as they raced to develop new tactics, struggled with a revolution bleeding into counter-revolution, and dealt with the long aftermath of assault and devastation. Told in a daring, hybrid narrative style drawn from years of interviews and her own, intimate experience, it is a story of overlapping circles: the circles of male attackers activists had to break through, the ways sexual violence can be circled off as “irrelevant” to political struggle, and the endless repetitive loops of living with trauma.

Introducing a powerful new voice, a writer whose searchingly beautiful, spare prose cuts to the core of a story ever more urgent and relevant: of women’s resistance when all else has failed.

#library #books #reading #Community #feminism #egypt #MiddleEast

Here’s our morning coffee reflection: What are anarchists doing to advance the ideology of utopia?
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Neoliberalism as a theory began to be discussed in the wake of WWII. It took thirty years for the ideology to spread through the academies before it was mature enough for adoption by global politicians, beginning in Amerikkka with Ronald Reagan. Today it generally doesn’t matter which side of the aisle the politician sits on, they will almost always be advancing neoliberal policies.
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While neoliberal policies have shaped governance, the culture wars have shaped society. The right has been fighting for hegemonic control over Amerikkka ever since the revolutions of the 1960s/70s came close to toppling State power. We refer to this generally as “the culture wars.” In practice, extreme xenophobia has converged with fundamentalist Christianity and hyper-capitalist notions about wealth accumulation to create an assemblage that allows the broadest participation of seemingly opposing view points to coalesce for control of society.
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This is why Evangelical Christians can lobby behind Donald Trump and it’s why Nick Fuentes and Kanye West can become close associates. This hegemonic project has been largely successful. Christian activists succeeded in undermining Roe v. Wade through an extensive campaign of behind-the-scenes influence on Supreme Court justices that we are only now beginning to unravel. Nick Fuentes has direct access to millions of Americans’ living rooms by having his message diffused through Tucker Carlson on Fox News. Andy Ngo has the power to boot leftists from Twitter by calling on Elon Musk. The anxiety of thousands of Americans was successfully whipped up on social media into a fervor so great that an attempted coup happened on January 6.
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The left has several counter hegemonic projects like Sub.Media, Crimethinc, PM Press & AK Press, to name a few, but there is no project that even comes close to rivaling the scale of Twitter or Fox News. We know counter hegemonic projects take decades to succeed. We know that the stakes couldn’t be higher: those in power are actively stripping away civil rights for marginalized people; there is a campaign of violence against the queer community, and trans people especially, that has been endorsed by politicians; climate change is worsening by the minute, but leaders are impotent in doing anything at all to remedy the causes; wealth has become increasingly consolidated into the hands of a few elite who are then able to exert immense influence over our daily lives.
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All of this creates a daunting challenge, but it is not impossible. We cannot lose hope. We cannot simply accept the conditions as they are. The early success during the George Floyd Uprising in normalizing discussions about police abolition and the current wave of labor organizing offer footholds for anarchist counter hegemonic ideas to cling onto. As we’ve seen with police abolition, the State will wield the media to paint whatever narrative is necessary to undermine anti-State/anti-capitalist projects. It isn’t cause for abandoning our principles, or even softening them to make them more palatable (and therefore weaker and not actually what we want). Instead, we must push harder to expand the counter-hegemonic project into every aspect of daily life. It is only when we succeed in normalizing these ideas across society that we will have any hope in overturning the hegemonic rule of today.
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So we ask again, what are anarchists doing to advance the ideology of utopia? What projects need to emerge and what projects exist that could merge together? Where are the pressure points in society? How are we engaging with our neighbors and our community to advance our notions of the idealized society?
#theory #praxis #america #twitter #socialmedia #foxnews #neoliberalism #utopia #trans #transrights #climate #ClimateChange #supremecourt #anarchism #civilrights #capitalism
@sysop408 @Sheril Came here to say exactly this for the auditory learners out there!
@armonay @revoluciana @Openhuman @Sheril If you’re an auditory learner, NPR’s “Throughline” show did an in-depth episode about this in July of this year.
@freelunchcollective the fact that an individual experiencing homelessness, a person from the exact community PHP purports to be helping, felt like they had no recourse beyond legal action to get PHP to stop exploiting them is just….hard to put into words the feeling that comes to mind. This sort of co-opting of radical language and ideas without creating a foundational liberatory ideology to undergird the work is occurring in communities across the country as the State gets ever more creative in the ways it sustains itself at the expense of any imagined alternative.
@mrvapor mastodon feels like a shelter from mainstream social media, where the most vitriolic comments rise to the top. Truly love the level of genuine engagement here, even among people who disagree. Honestly fine with it taking people some time to figure that out, because the general consensus here seems to be that engagement begets more engagement and we appreciate that as a counter to the hot take mic drop marketplace of cringe ideas that is Twitter.

Here’s a quick how-to for checking out books:

1. Once you are a member of Black Flag Library on Librarika (see previous how-to), you can browse our catalogue. When you found a book you want to check out, click on the title and then scroll down on the new page until you see a red button that says “request.” Click “submit” on the pop-up menu. Do not worry about the dates, as the librarian will assign check-out dates once you receive your book.

2. Pickups are available every Tuesday, once in the afternoon and once in the evening. You will receive an email from Black Flag notifying you of the locations and times for pickups. These will remain consistent, unless unforeseen circumstances come up.

3. We request a one-time $5 donation (cash or Venmo) to support the acquisition and replacement of titles as necessary. This donation is voluntary, it just goes to support the ongoing project. No one will be turned away for lack of funds. Additionally, there are no late fees. Members can check out up to two books at a time. You will not be able to check out new books until all overdue books are returned, but you can always request more time to finish a book.

If you live in so-called Portland and you want to check out books from us, here’s a quick how-to on setting up your free Librarika account:

1. Go to librarika.com or download their app, then select “sign up” from the main page.
2. Once you have signed up and activated your account, navigate to “my libraries.” It should automatically redirect you, but if it doesn’t you can get there by first clicking on the downward arrow next to your avatar in the top right corner and then selecting “my libraries” from the drop down menu.
3. From “my libraries,” click “request member access” and type https://blackflaglibrary.librarika.com in the URL box.
4. Once the librarian accepts your request, Black Flag Library will appear as one of your libraries. You can browse the catalogue by clicking on the library’s name.

Librarika: Black Flag Library & Distro

Tuesday is the first official day to pick up books from Black Flag Library. You can browse our catalog by following the link in our bio. If you live in Portland, OR and want to check out one of our books, we’ll be resharing the steps to create a Librarika account above this post. We just ask that you reserve your book before 5 P.M. today so that we have time to get everything together.

#library #books #reading #anarchism #theory #MutualAid #Portland #PortlandOregon

@milkman76 another great example, thanks for bring it up. Our true revolutionary power is in envisioning another world and taking steps to create it. Mutual aid networks developed in response to the covid pandemic, for example. Yet, as time has gone on, even many of these have been co-opted and absorbed into the State via the non-profit industrial complex. Another alternative that comes to mind is micro grids, where a cluster of neighbors share energy produced via solar or other sustainable individual systems of power creation, which would collectivize the electric grid in a way that would make it resistant to the kinds of fascist attacks on infrastructure we’re currently witnessing in North Carolina.