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FAIR
- Problems at PBS, From Rose to Koch May 21, 2013
- Bum Rap: The U.S. Role in Guatemalan Genocide May 20, 2013
- You're to Blame for Factory Deaths. Well, You and Walmart May 17, 2013
- FAIR TV: The IRS & Obama's Scandal Trifecta, Matthews Praises Reagan, Newseum Scandal May 17, 2013
- Is There Really a 'Scandal Trifecta'? May 17, 2013
Glenn Greenwald on Security and Liberty
- Al Jazeera deletes its own controversial Op-Ed, then refuses to comment | Glenn Greenwald May 21, 2013 Glenn Greenwald
- Obama DOJ formally accuses journalist in leak case of committing crimes | Glenn Greenwald May 20, 2013 Glenn Greenwald
- Washington gets explicit: its 'war on terror' is permanent | Glenn Greenwald May 17, 2013 Glenn Greenwald
- The major sea change in media discussions of Obama and civil liberties | Glenn Greenwald May 15, 2013 Glenn Greenwald
- Justice Department's pursuit of AP's phone records is both extreme and dangerous | Glenn Greenwald May 14, 2013 Glenn Greenwald
Nation of Change
- “The Unimaginable has Happened”: Massive Tornado Kills Dozens, Flattens Suburb of Oklahoma City May 21, 2013 Amy Goodman
- Tea Party Rage: Nothing Fails Like Excess May 21, 2013 Froma Harrop
- Revenge of the Bear: Russia Strikes Back in Syria May 21, 2013 Juan Cole
RSN Reader Supported News
- FOCUS | The Militant American Empire May 21, 2013
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- A Word From Our Sponsor May 21, 2013
More RSN
- A Dark, Very Troubling Period in America’s History May 20, 2013
- NRA and lack of education May 20, 2013
- Nonsense May 20, 2013
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OEN OpEdNews Media
- Sweden, Russia, Nato, and the Military-Industrial Complex Show? May 9, 2013
- The Myth of Liberal Media Bias April 28, 2013
- Do We Give Too Much Attention to Terrorist Attacks? April 25, 2013
- Koch Brothers' Bid for Tribune Newspapers Should Be Blocked April 21, 2013
- Chained CPI: NPR "He-Said/She-Said Reporting Just Doesn't Cut It April 18, 2013
OEN OpEdNews
- Tales in a Kabul Restaurant May 21, 2013
- Letter to Angelina Jolie May 21, 2013
- This is Why We Fight May 21, 2013
- Little Free Libraries: A Community Builder for the Future? May 21, 2013
- It's Time to Get Real on Immigration May 21, 2013
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This has to be the worst piece of drivel ever produced by Hedges or any other writer purporting to be a progressive. This is exactly the kind of divisiveness the St. Paul Principles was successful in preventing during the RNC protests.
Let’s be clear:
1) Violence is being perpetrated by cops and other agents of the state, not the movement. There’s a huge difference between property damage (which has largely been minor to non-existent) and indiscriminately pepper-spraying a crowd of people, shooting a guy in the head with a concussion grenade, and bashing protesters with billy clubs–all of which has happened by the hired henchmen of the state.
2) While I do not identify as an anarchist and should probably not speak for them, the thrust of anarchism is anti-authoritarianism and resistance to the coercive relationships that dominate this society, which is at the core of the Occupy movement.
3) The 1% and their media have no issues with violence, as evidenced by their sycophantic celebrations of every war and military action this country has ever engaged in. What they are really frightened about is authentic resistance to their domination. It’s the reason they viciously condemned, attacked and killed the Black Panthers, AIM and every other liberation movement ever launched in this country. And they readied the public for these attacks by vilifying these movements in the media as “violent.” Anyone here see any parallels?
It is beyond me why the WAMM website and email newsletter would validate this backward and divisive attack on a core section of the Occupy movement. There have always been people claiming to be part of the movement who are willing to throw others under the bus to fulfill some twisted agenda. I’m just saddened and appalled that WAMM would provide space and validation for it.
Anarchy (from Greek: ἀναρχίᾱ anarchíā), has more than one definition. In the United States, the term “anarchy” typically is meant to refer to a society without a publicly enforced government or violently enforced political authority.[1][2] When used in this sense, anarchy may[3] or may not[4] be intended to imply political disorder or lawlessness within a society.
Outside of the US, and by most individuals that self-identify as anarchists, it implies a system of governance, mostly theoretical at a nation state level although there are a few successful historical examples,[5] that goes to lengths to avoid the use of coercion, violence, force and authority, while still producing a productive and desirable society.[6]
The definitions above are from Wikipedia and would define the current state of anarchy, not the historical state, which was popularly perceived only as being violent. Most interestingly, the Occupy movement is an anarchic movement that matches both definitions above, with much emphasis on the statement in the second definition that describes those who “self-identify as anarchists.” I have hesitated to name the Occupy movement and structure as anarchic, as I suppose have others, because of the stigma of violence and chaos, which in a way Hedges (perhaps unwittingly) reinforces by using the term “black block anarchists” more than once. The Occupy movement is international, and they communicate with each other easily in this day and age so that national borders become irrelevant and separate definitions for inside and outside the US become somewhat false. Occupy is an international nonviolent anarchic movement. Hedges is correct in pointing out that the Black Bloc anarchists, who are not nonviolent, can give the rest of the Occupy movement a bad reputation and name.
This is an important dialog. Sue Ann is correct in posting it. I believe anyone in a leadership role in the movement has a responsibility to everyone in their group to be totally upfront about strategy and tactics. It seems to me what the Black Bloc is doing is beyond what has been done but is not duplicitous. They are very clear about their strategy and tactics. Others are free to join them or not. Occupados elsewhere may use different methods. At a certain point it may become necessary to defend the revolution. I support Occupy Oakland, but, even more importantly, I support the dialog.