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Mar 03

Croatia's anti-fascist football club battles far right -

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wwprice1:

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The Crow by Joshua Hixson.

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The Limits and Possibilities of Anti-Fascism - It's Going Down -

(via cornbread21actual)

mrkimball:

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workingclasshistory:
“On this day, 3 March 1985, after a year on strike and some of the most bitter and open class warfare in British history, the National Union of Mineworkers voted to end their stoppage. A turning point in the fortunes of the...

workingclasshistory:

On this day, 3 March 1985, after a year on strike and some of the most bitter and open class warfare in British history, the National Union of Mineworkers voted to end their stoppage. A turning point in the fortunes of the working class in Britain, this iconic strike, with its pitched battles and militarisation of mining communities, came to define the decade.
Episode 13 of our podcast is about the crucial role played by women in the strike: https://ift.tt/2C1wkfD
And coming soon we have an episode about how the LGBT community support of the strike, so subscribe today to make sure you don’t miss it https://ift.tt/2IM0Hg0

nonalimmen:
“© Nona Limmen
Webshop / Instagram
”

nonalimmen:

© Nona Limmen
Webshop / Instagram

(via 3koz)

This Is Not a Dialogue -

anarchistcommunism:

Anarchists have defended freedom of speech for centuries now. This is important in principle: in an anarchist vision of society, neither the state nor any other entity should be able to determine what we can and cannot say. It’s also important in practice: as a revolutionary minority frequently targeted for repression, we’ve consistently had our speeches, newspapers, websites, and marches attacked.

But we aren’t the only ones who have taken up the banner of free speech. More recently, the right wing in the US has begun to allege that a supposed failure to give conservative views an equal hearing alongside liberal views constitutes a suppression of their free speech. By accusing “liberal” universities and media of suppressing conservative views—a laughable assertion, given the massive structures of power and funding advancing those views—they use First Amendment discourse to promote reactionary agendas. Supposedly progressive campuses reveal their true colors as they mobilize institutional power to defend right-wing territory in the marketplace of ideas, going so far as to censor and intimidate opposition.

Extreme right and fascist organizations have jumped onto the free speech bandwagon as well. Fascists rely on the state to protect them, claiming that racist, anti-immigrant, and anti-gay organizing constitutes a form of legally protected speech. Fascist groups that are prevented from publishing their material in most other industrialized democracies by laws restricting hate speech frequently publish it in the United States, where no such laws exist, and distribute it worldwide from here. In practice, state protection of the right to free expression aids fascist organizing.

If defending free speech has come to mean sponsoring wealthy right-wing politicians and enabling fascist recruiting, it’s time to scrutinize what is hidden behind this principle.

(Source: crimethinc.com)