Showing posts with label Upping the Anti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Upping the Anti. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 05, 2011


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT:
PARTY TIME FOR UPPING THE ANTI #11:
It's party time down in TO next Saturday as the Canadian libertarian socialist magazine Upping the Anti rolls out its 11th issue. Here's the notice.
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Issue 11 Launch
Upping the Anti in conjunction with the North American Anarchist Studies Network invites you to Upping the Anti's Issue 11 Launch

Saturday January 15, 8:30PM
TORONTO FREE GALLERY
(1277 Bloor Street West, at Lansdown)
Venue is Accessible

-[Featuring]-
• Musical Performances by LAL and Test Their Logik,
• Kick ass sets by DJs Nik Red and B#,
• Plus Refreshments, Raffle Prizes, and More.

-[Admission]-
• $10 (cover + Upping the Anti #11)
• $5 (cover)
• Free for UPPING THE ANTI Sustainers and Subscribers

-[UPPING THE ANTI #11 includes]-
• Interviews with Ladelle McWhorter, James Scott, and Raj Patel
• Articles by Lesley Wood on Toronto's G20 protests, John Clarke on the tenth anniversary of OCAP's famous march on Queen’s Park, and Stacy Douglas on anti-racism and queer organizing today
Roundtables on the 20th Anniversary of the Oka Crisis and on No One Is Illegal's Fight to build Sanctuary City
• Book reviews and much more....

Wednesday, December 01, 2010


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT/ANARCHIST PUBLICATIONS:
UPPING THE ANTI NOW OUT AND ABOUT:
The 11th edition of the Canadian libertarian socialist magazine Upping the Anti is now available. Here's what it's all about.
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--[[[BOOKS ARE WEAPONS]]]---

Arm yourself with Upping the Anti Issue 11!

For the past five years, Upping the Anti has provided sharp and acclaimed analysis of North American social movements.

Running articles, interviews, and roundtables covering a wide range of movement themes, we've carved out an important space for strategizing about next steps.

We are happy to keep the momentum going with the release of our 11th issue!

Issue contents include:

- Interviews with Ladelle McWhorter, James Scott, and Raj Patel

- Articles reflecting on Toronto's G20 protests, a retrospective on the tenth anniversary of the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty’s (OCAP) famous march on Queen’s Park, and an anti-racist analysis of queer activism in Britain.


- Roundtables on the 20th Anniversary of the Oka Crisis and on No One Is Illegal's Fight to build Sanctuary City

- Book reviews and much more....

To order your copy of Upping the Anti #11, become a sustainer or subscriber, please visit http://www.uppingtheanti.org



CHECK OUT THE INTRODUCTION TO ISSUE 11:


This issue was born in interesting times. As the first drafts rolled in, Toronto was shaken by the June mobilizations against the G20. When the dust settled and the charred shells of police cruisers had been scraped off the streets, hundreds of our comrades were behind bars and many were facing serious criminal charges. Most local activists spent the summer fundraising for legal defense, supporting the people in jail, organizing rallies, and countering the state’s PR machines. From en masse illegal searches and preemptive raids to conspiracy charges and draconian bail conditions repression was ubiquitous. In the media and the courts, the G20 Integrated Security Unit (ISU) used everything they could get their hands on as evidence against protestors. Including our books. A copy of Upping the Anti 5 appeared in a police display of “weapons” seized from activists during the protests, alongside ropes, goggles, gas masks, and props seized from an unsuspecting enthusiast en route to a live action role playing game. The ISU’s audacity made us snicker, but we agree on one thing: Upping the Anti is a weapon in the struggle.

The G20’s promise of an era of austerity has sparked debates about how radicals should orient to this moment. As we near the end of 2010 (a proclaimed year of resistance for activists in Canada), we’re confronted with a clear challenge: we lack a plan for a long-term, broad-based, sustained resistance. We’ve gotten the bill for the bailout of global capitalism; will it invigorate our movements or foster right-wing populism? In Toronto, we’re bracing ourselves for the mayoralty of newly elected conservative Rob Ford, a longstanding city councilor known for his xenophobic and homophobic outbursts. Whatever plan we choose, we’re in for a serious fight.

Fights are best prepared for with a dose of critical reflection. Issue 11 opens with our thoughts about violence. Focusing on the events of the anti-G20 convergence, we use our editorial pages to account for the two situations of violence that framed the protests: that of the OPP’s Integrated Security Unit, and the actions of the black bloc on June 26th. We analyze the strategic implications of these violences by locating social democrats’ denunciation of the black bloc in the history of organized labor. From where do current conceptions of violence derive, and how do they shape our political terrain? We turn to the idea of “non-violent direct action” - what is it, and in what ways does it necessitate specific forms of organization and production among activists? Strategically, to whom does non-violent direct action appeal? When and how do we come to terms with the violence implied and inherent in non-violent direct action?

Chandra Kumar kicks off our interviews section in conversation with food sovereigntist Raj Patel. Patel argues that food sovereignty is one in a series of “overlapping sovereignties” required by true democracy, and describes lessons that can be learned from decentralized, autonomous farmers’ movements in the global south. Next, Shelley Tremain interviews Ladelle McWhorter, an anti-racist feminist scholar and activist living in Virginia. McWhorter analyses the relationship between race, gender, and normalization, and argues that genealogy is an important tool for understanding modern power relations. In our final interview, Benjamin Holtzman and Craig Hughes speak with scholar James C. Scott about his research on everyday peasant politics. Scott contends that subtle forms of resistance, shaped into a shared culture among the oppressed, have significant implications for large-scale social change.

Our articles section begins with Lesley Wood’s account of anti-capitalist struggle in Toronto, which she presents to contextualize and assess anti-G20 convergence organizing. She argues that the “reconfigured networks” of local community organizing in the past five years paved the way for the particular story anti-summit organizers told to fuel the recent mobilization – one with consequences they did not fully anticipate. Next, John Clarke provides a retrospective on the tenth anniversary of the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty’s (OCAP) famous march on Queen’s Park. Clarke offers a detailed account of mobilization during the reign of Ontario’s former neoliberal Premier Mike Harris, illuminating the similarities and key differences between then and now. Clarke concludes with assessment of current forms of resistance – specifically the Toronto Workers Assembly and OCAP – and their hopes for achieving victory against austerity.

In our final article, Stacy Douglas offers an anti-racist analysis of queer activism in Britain. Douglas examines radical UK publisher Raw Nerve Books’ decision not to reprint an anthology of queer essays that included a piece that critiqued prominent gay rights activist Peter Tatchell’s alleged Islamophobia. She argues that Raw Nerve’s decision, and its subsequent defense by white queer activists, can be seen as an instance of white solidarity building – a dangerous political agenda that builds “good feeling,” by drawing upon legacies of racism and white supremacy. Douglas goes on to identify anti-racist agonism as a radical framework that might effectively intervene in such cases, while remaining mindful of the practical difficulties that such a framework entails.

In the first of our two roundtables, Sarita Ahooja, Fred Burrill and Cleve Higgins interview indigenous activists Joe Doem, Laura Norton, and Walter David, and non-native solidarity activist Carole Boucher, on the 20th anniversary of the “Oka Crisis.” Our second roundtable, convened by Thomas Nail, features four members of No One is Illegal-Toronto, who discuss the history, trajectory, and intent of their current Solidarity/Sanctuary City campaign, and the success of some sub-campaigns.

We are also pleased to bring you three timely book reviews. First, Tim McCaskell relates his own history of queer struggle to Gary Kinsman and Patrizia Gentile’s The Canadian War on Queers. Next, Chandra Kumar reviews Michael Keefer’s edited collection Antisemitism Real and Imagined, in which contributors analyze the motivations behind the Canadian Parliamentary Coalition to Combat Anti-Semitism. Etienne Turpin then unpacks Tiqqun’s An Introduction to Civil War, a book that has made waves across North America and Europe.

On the administrative side of things, we would like to thank Chandra Kumar for his work on our editorial committee as he moves over to our advisory board. We would also like to welcome Robyn Letson, Adrie Naylor, and Simon Wallace to our editorial committee and Eton Harris, Brett Story, and Elise Thorburn to our advisory board. Finally, we would like to extend our most sincere thanks to Caelie Frampton, Krisztina Kun, Emily van der Meulen, and Jessica Peart for their work on our advisory board as they move on to other projects.

Our introductory remarks would not be complete without our customary call for financial support. As you may know, Upping the Anti receives no external support from any government or educational institution, and is entirely funded by subscriptions, sales, and donations from our readers. Over the course of our first 10 issues, we have been able to squeak by in raising the $7000 that it costs to print and distribute each issue of the journal. Today, however, the compounding challenges of sustaining a purely volunteer project have led us to contemplate hiring a staff person.


The only way that we could pay a staff salary is through increasing the number of our monthly sustainers – people who pay $10 or $20 a month through PayPal or pre-authorized debit payments in support of the project. We are still short of our goal of signing up 100 sustainers; if this project is to grow beyond its current limits we need you more than ever. Please visit www.uppingtheanti.org to sign up!

If you know other activists in your organization or community who would benefit from reading and contributing to UTA, please get in touch with us to receive bulk copies at a 50 percent discount. If you order ten or more (either back issues or the current issue) copies are only five dollars each. Get in touch at uppingtheantidistro@gmail.com if you’re interested.

Finally, we’re looking for pitches for our next two issues. The deadline for pitches for UTA 12 is December 1, 2010, and the deadline for first drafts is January 6, 2011. The deadline for pitches for UTA 13 is May 1, 2011 and the deadline for article drafts is June 1, 2011. For more information, please visit our website at www.uppingtheanti.org.

We hope this new issue stimulates conversation and action, and we look forward to reading your pitches and letters.


In solidarity and struggle,


Kelly Fritsch, David Hugill, Tom Keefer,
Sharmeen Khan, Clare O’Connor, Robyn Letson,
Adrie Naylor, AK Thompson, Simon Wallace
Toronto, November 2010
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UPPING THE ANTI : http://www.uppingtheanti.org
998 Bloor St. West
P.O. Box 10571
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6H 4H9

If the articles in Upping The Anti inspire or enrage you, if they have been useful (or not) in your organizing work, or if you have something to contribute to an argument on our pages, please consider writing us a letter. We print letters up to 1,000 words and reserve to the right to edit for clarity, spelling, and grammar. Email letters to uppingtheanti@gmail.com .

Thursday, September 30, 2010


ANARCHIST PUBLICATIONS:
NEWS FROM 'UPPING THE ANTI':


Yet more news from Toronto, this time from the libertarian socialist magazine Upping The Anti. Book launches and announcing their new issue.
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Toronto Book Launch‏
Dear Friends:


On Wednesday October 6th join UPPING THE ANTI as we celebrate the launch of two new books by UTA editors.

Come and check out:


David Hugill's “Missing Women, Missing News: Covering Crisis in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside

http://www.fernwoodpublishing.ca/Missing-Women-Missing-News-David-Hugill/

and

AK Thompson’s “Black Bloc, White Riot: Anti-Globalization and the Genealogy of Dissent”

http://www.akpress.org/2010/items/blackblocwhiteriot


Both books will be on sale for a special launch price. Refreshments will be served.

Mark your calendars:

Wednesday, October 6 at 7PM - All are welcome
The Imperial Pub
54 Dundas St. E.
Toronto, ON

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UPPING THE ANTI : http://uppingtheanti.org/
998 Bloor St. West
P.O. Box 10571
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6H 4H9
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Here also is the announcement of the latest issue of their journal.
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Issue 11 Coming Soon!‏

Upping the Anti is about to release its 11th issue!

This exciting issue features:

*Raj Patel on the politics of starving*

*Ladelle McWhorter on normalization and its discontents*

*James Scott on the art of not being governed*

*Lesley Wood on Anti-G20 Mobilization*

*John Clarke on opposing austerity today*

*Stacy Douglas on the queering of colonization*

*Roundtable on the 20th anniversary of OKA*

*Roundtable on No One Is Illegal's fight for Solidarity City*

*Book Reviews and more!*

Subscribe or become a monthly sustainer today to make sure that issue 11 hits your mailbox!

http://uppingtheanti.org

Subscribers and sustainers also get access to all our content online!

Are you already a subscriber but have moved? Send your new address to uppigntheantidistro@gmail.com

--
UPPING THE ANTI : http://uppingtheanti.org
998 Bloor St. West
P.O. Box 10571
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6H 4H9

Sunday, May 09, 2010


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT:
UPPING THE ANTI #10:
Upping The Anti is a libertarian socialist journal published out of Toronto. For five years now they have been bringing news, views and opinion about the radical movements in Canada and elsewhere. They're now at issue #10, due to be launched next Thursday. Here's their announcement.
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UTA #10 Launch Party—Toronto
Please join us on Thursday May 20th, 2010 at the Anitafrika Dub Theatre (62 Fraser Ave—Just East of Dufferin and South of King) at 8pm to celebrate the launch of Upping the Anti #10. $10 at the door (includes new issue) no one turned away for lack of funds. Subscribers get in free. For more information please contact uppingtheanti@gmail.com .

From the Introduction of Issue 10

Introduction

Five years isn’t a long time. In the history of struggle, it’s barely a blip. Radicals learn early that, if we’re not in it for the long haul, we’re not really in it at all. But for a radical grassroots publication like ours with no external funding, a volunteer editorial team, and an ambitious mandate of rigorous analysis and broad coverage, five years is quite an accomplishment. Although other radical publishing projects have recently fallen by the wayside, we’ve managed – incontrovertibly – to thrive. For this reason, we’re pleased to bring you Issue 10 of Upping the Anti.

When we started UTA in 2005, we could only guess at the resonance that a forum such as ours would have. We envisioned it as a space to critically assess the interwoven tendencies that define the politics of today’s radical left: anti-capitalism, anti-oppression, and anti-imperialism. We believed that, although they were inexact in their proclamations, these “antis” pointed toward a radical politics outside of the party-building exercises of the sectarian left and the dead end of social democracy. Judging from our growing subscription base and the increasing number of pitches and international inquiries we receive (not to mention the fruitfulness of our interactions with authors and readers), it seems that many others agree.

Because the current political period is fraught with difficulties, many radicals seem to recognize that it’s increasingly necessary to scrutinize our prevailing assumptions. And, while it’s never easy to step away from day-to-day activist work to engage in analysis, UTA has managed to become a dynamic space where organizers converge to discuss, debate, and devise movement strategies.

In Issue 10, contributors once again examine the vicissitudes of the current political moment. We begin with a series of letters submitted in response to the content of Issue 9. As always, these responses reveal gaps in analysis and illuminate the challenges of inter-movement dialogue. As editors, we have always conceived of this section of the journal as a unique space in which to develop habits of activist correspondence and analytic exchange, so please feel free to join the conversation!

In our Editorial, we highlight the opportunity for anti-capitalist mobilization that arose with the financial crisis of 2008 and ask the urgent question: did we miss it? As we watch capitalism reinvent itself, we’re forced to come to terms with the fact that the left has lost the initiative and, for the most part, has adopted defensive postures. For radicals who want more than the preservation of past gains, this conjuncture demands that we carefully consider both our priorities and our strategies. In order to orient to this question, we refer to the lessons of BC’s Solidarity movement in the 1980s and the Days of Action against the Ontario Tories in the mid-90s.

Kicking off our interviews section, Sharmeen Khan, David Hugill, and Tyler McCreary engage with well-known feminist activist and scholar Andrea Smith as she highlights the importance of “unlikely alliances” to movement building. Next, Chandra Kumar speaks with Patrick Bond about the challenges and possibilities confronting the climate justice movement. We conclude with Robyn Maynard’s discussion with Jessica Yee and Nandita Sharma as they consider sex work, migration, anti-trafficking, and Indigenous struggles.

In our articles section, AK Thompson assesses activist responses to Avatar and proposes that, rather than dismissing the film, our political objectives are better realized by highlighting the promise that mainstream audiences identified in it. Next, Tom Keefer critiques Frances Widdowson and Albert Howard’s claims in Disrobing the Aboriginal Industry and shows how Marxism and indigenism can mutually inform common struggles against capitalism. In our final article for this issue, Antonis Vradis and Dimitrios Dalakoglou explore the aftermath of the Greek revolt of 2008 and assess its impact and significance for ongoing struggles around the right to the city.

Our roundtables begin with Nicole Cohen’s discussion of the challenges of radical publishing with participants from Left Turn, Canadian Dimension, The Dominion, Briarpatch, and Z Communications. Next, Samir Shaheen-Hussain brings together a group of former police trainees and officers who have quit the force and are now engaged in working against police repression. Our final roundtable, convened by Kelly Fritsch, considers the new wave of student occupations on US campuses and their implications for how we understand social change.

In our reviews section, Jerome Klassen examines the relationship between imperialism and Canadian foreign policy in Yves Engler’s Black Book of Canadian Foreign Policy. Next, Pat Harewood tackles David Austin’s important collection You Don’t Play With Revolution: The Montreal lectures of C.L.R. James and Noaman Ali considers John Saul’s Revolutionary Traveler. In our final review, Sara Falconer discusses Safiya Bukhari’s The War Before.

As always, we hope you find this, our tenth issue, to be engrossing and provocative. Your readership inspires us. And your money sustains us! If you read UTA regularly, please consider joining our monthly sustainers program – go to http://www.uppingtheanti.org . We’re gradually nearing our goal of having 100 sustainers by the end of 2010. With your help, we’ll be able to focus less on fundraising and more on bringing you the radical commentary and debate that makes this project worthwhile. In addition to sustainers, we’re also always looking for people who are interested in distributing UTA. Bulk discounts are available. If you feel like you could take on distributing 10 or more copies per issue, please get in touch with us at uppingtheantidistro@gmail.com .

On the housekeeping front, we would like to extend our thanks to Christopher Dobbie, who helped to redesign our website at http://www.uppingtheanti.org . PDF versions of all our articles are online and available to all subscribers. The site has been re-organized so as to provide a better and more accessible archive of our content.

We would also like to welcome Thomas Nail, Shelley Tremain, and David Shulman to our advisory board, and thank Gary Kinsman and Danielle O’Hearn for their contributions to the project.

Finally, if you are interested in contributing to Issue 11 – scheduled to launch in November 2010 – please send a pitch (about 500 words) to uppingtheanti@gmail.com describing your proposed contribution. Pitches are due by June 13, 2010. The deadline for first drafts is July 20, 2010. For more information, please visit our website at www.uppingtheanti.org .

Enjoy the issue! We look forward to your letters, submissions, and support.

In solidarity and struggle,

Aidan Conway, Kelly Fritsch, David Hugill,
Tom Keefer, Chandra Kumar,
Clare O’Connor, AK Thompson
Toronto, May 2010

Wednesday, December 23, 2009


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-TORONTO:
UPPING THE ANTI NUMBER 9 NOW AVAILABLE:
Issue number 9 of the excellent libertarian socialist journal 'Upping The Anti' is now out. Quite a good magazine. Molly is herself a subscriber, and, of course, you can't get any higher recommendation than that. Here's the details.
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UTA issue #9 now available + holiday subscription deal!:‏
Please forward widely
Dear Friends and Comrades,
We are pleased to announce that the ninth issue of Upping the Anti, a journal of theory and action, is can now be ordered online or purchased at these fine booksellers.
UTA 9 includes:
Interviews with Eli Clare and Sherene Razack
◘Ben Saifer on Campus Israel advocacy and the politics of "dialogue"
◘Kate Milley on anti-Native organizing and the "Caledonia Crisis"
◘Chris Hurl and Kevin Walby on the rise and fall of the Canadian Union of Students
◘Roundtables on the ten year of anniversary of the "Battle of Seattle" and anti-Olympics organizing in British Columbia

Upping the Anti is a radical journal published twice a year by a pan-Canadian collective of activists and organizers. We are dedicated to publishing radical theory and analysis about struggles against capitalism, imperialism and all forms of oppression.

Since our debut in 2005, we’ve published articles by and interviews with renowned activists and intellectuals, including Aijaz Ahmad, Himani Bannerji, Grace Lee Boggs, Ward Churchill, Michael Hardt, John Holloway, Sunera Thobani, Deborah Gould, and Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz.We have covered a wide range of topics including Palestine solidarity activism, the strengths and weaknesses of the contemporary anti-war movement, trans politics and anti-capitalism, Indigenous solidarity, contemporary feminist organizing, activist burnout, the dynamics of the animal liberation movement, and the contradictions and challenges facing student organizing.
This holiday season, give the gift of revolutionary thought to your friends, family, coworkers or comrades. For a limited time, you can get Issues 8, 9 and 10 of Upping the Anti delivered right to your door, or to the door of your choosing for just $25 CAD or $35 USD. Canada - Holiday Promo
Issues 8, 9 and 10 of Upping the Anti delivered right to your door $25.00 - Login or Register to add this to your cart.USA - Holiday Promo Issues 8, 9 and 10 of Upping the Anti delivered right to your door $35.00 - Login or Register to add this to your cart.Order by December 30th and receive 3 issues of Upping the Anti for $25
!Happy holidays
The Upping the Anti Editorial Committee
-- UPPING THE ANTI :
A Journal of Theory and Action
If the articles in Upping The Anti inspire or enrage you, if they have been useful (or not) in your organizing work, or if you have something to contribute to an argument on our pages, please consider writing us a letter. We print letters up to 1,000 words and reserve to the right to edit for clarity, spelling, and grammar. Email letters to uppingtheanti@gmail.com.

Friday, October 30, 2009


ABORIGINAL AFFAIRS-BRANTFORD ONTARIO:
SOLIDARITY RALLY FOR SIX NATIONS LAND RIGHTS:
The following notice came Molly's way via the people around the libertarian socialist group Autonomy and Solidarity, publishers of the Upping The Anti journal. The area around Brantford Ontario, of course, has been the scene of a long standing land claims dispute, and the rally announced below is to show the Mohawk defenders of the land that they are not alone. It's quite heartening to see the number and variety of sponsoring organizations.
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Saturday Nov. 7th -- Rally in Solidarity With Six Nations Land Rights:‏
Upping the Anti has endorsed this event and encourages you to attend it if you're in the area or can make it.
*Saturday Nov. 7th -- Rally in Solidarity With Six Nations Land Rights!*
Rally at 1 PM, Victoria Park, (Corner of George St. and Darling St.,Brantford, ON).
Potluck dinner and social to follow at 5PM at the reclaimed Kanata Village site.
Down with the Brantford Injunction!
No Developments on Six Nations Land!
Drop all charges against Six Nations land defenders!
Meaningful negotiations now!
Speakers include:
Aaron Detlor (Lawyer for the Haudenosaunee Development Institute)
Bev Crawford (Haudenosaunee Hoskanigetah)
Bill Squires (Mohawk Workers)
Chris Harris (Black Action Defense Committee, Toronto)
Dawn Martin-Hill (Dept. of Indigenous Studies, McMaster)
Jan Watson (Co-founder of Community Friends in Caledonia, CAW 555)
Janie Jamieson (Former spokesperson for the DCE Reclamation)
Jim Windle (Brantford TRUE)
Missy Elliott (Young Onkwehonwe United)
Phil Monture (Six Nations Land Claim Expert)
Ruby and Floyd Monture (Six Nations Land Defenders)
Steve Watson (CAW Educational Department)
Tim Reynolds (Brantford TRUE)
Tom Keefer (CUPE 3903 First Nations Solidarity Working Group)
Vince Gilchrist (Haudenosaunee Hoskanigetah)
(Note: Group affiliation in the brackets is for informational purposes only and does not necessarily indicate that the speaker is speaking on behalf of their group).
Brantford, Ontario has become “ground zero” in the struggle over Indigenous rights in Ontario. Most of the city is under land claim, but instead of halting development until the status of the disputed land can be negotiated, Brantford city council is carrying out an aggressive policy of encouraging the criminalization of Six Nations land defenders.
Since 2006, when protests in nearby Caledonia erupted, over 60 people from Six Nations have faced more than 160 criminal charges as they have tried to peacefully stop illegal developments from taking place on their lands. It is time for allies and supporters of Six Nations to stand up and bring pressure to bear on our governments and institutions in order to demand that they respect and honor the treaties and agreements we have made with Indigenous nations.
The Six Nations Solidarity Network — a group made up of non-native activists from communities in and beside the Haldimand tract, is calling all supporters of Six Nations land rights to join us in a peaceful protest on Saturday, Nov 7th 2009, at 1pm in Brantford’s Victoria Park (corner of Market St. and DarlingSt.).
The demonstration will march through Brantford and stop at a variety of sites including:
* City Hall (where local politicians have criminalized Six Nations land rights through injunctions and arrests)
*MPP Dave Levac’s Office
* Harmony Square (where Six Nations land is being expropriated to make room for the new YMCA)
* Indian Affairs Office
* Brant’s Crossing (on the unceded Nathan Gage tract)
* Erie Ave at Birkett Lane (on the Eagles Nest tract and where Six Nations land defenders have most recently been charged).
At each of these stops, the demonstration will be addressed by speakers about the pressing issues relating to each stop. The demonstration will conclude with a potluck and social which will begin at 5:00pm at the reclaimed Kanata Village Museum. The space is being made available by the Mohawk Workers.
Bring food to share!
Buses and carpooling to Brantford are being organized from Paris, Guelph, Caledonia, Oshwegen, Kitchener-Waterloo, Hamilton, Toronto and other nearby cities and towns.
To endorse the demonstration or get in touch with the organizers, please email 6nsolnet@gmail.com or visit http://6nsolidarity.wordpress.com for more information.
This event is endorsed by Brantford TRUE, CUPE 3903 FNSWG, AW@L, CAIA York, Upping the Anti, and is being organized by the Six Nations Solidarity Network which includes local environmental activists and activists from a variety of union locals including the CAW, CUPE and the Steelworkers.
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Here's another story from the Toronto Star about a press conference held yesterday by four of Canada's major unions at the conclusion of their campaign to press the federal government to do more about the situation of native people in Canada, more beyond issuing effect less 'apologies'. Once more it is heartening to see unions taking up this important issue.
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'Sorry' not enough for natives, unions say:
'Disgraceful' conditions persist in native communities after residential schools apology
Richard J. Brennan OTTAWA BUREAU
Published On Thu Oct 29 2009
OTTAWA — Four of Canada's largest unions have joined together to urge the federal government to tackle the appalling conditions facing the country's native communities.

The labour movement's "sorry is not enough" campaign is pressing the Conservative government to get beyond last year's apology by Prime Minister Stephen Harper to Canada natives for the emotional and physical harm done to them by the residential school system.

"Sorry is not enough when aboriginal peoples in almost every measure are the most marginalized group in Canada," John Gordon, national president of the Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) told a press conference Thursday.

"Now we are to tell members of Parliament that the time has come to take the natural next step after an apology. Begin to make it right," Gordon said.

Besides PSAC, the group includes the United Steelworkers (USW), Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW), and the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), which together represents tens of thousands of unionized workers across the country.

The government can begin to address aboriginal poverty by implementing the Kelowna Accord, said the union leaders.

The accord, which withered and died, was an initiative by the former Paul Martin Liberal government to improve the education, employment, and living conditions for native communities.

Among the most pressing needs is the demand for clean water on native reserves, the unions agree. There are 108 communities across the country that must now boil their water before drinking.

"The fact that over 100 communities cannot drink their water is a national disgrace," national CUPE president Paul Moist told reporters.

"Water is a right for all people regardless of their race or their heritage, it is not a privilege," Moist said.

National CUPW president Denis Lemelin said Canadians are "expecting more than just words from the government. We want to see action."

Pat Van Horne, Steelworkers' national representative, said the government's apologize for abuse in the past "does not make up for the continuing abuse that now takes the form of gender discrimination, lack of housing and clean water and the barriers that still face First Nations in their quest for economic, social, land based and cultural rights."

"First Nations cannot wait another century for truth, reconciliation and progress," she said.
NDP MP Jean Crowder, the party's native affairs critics, urged all Canadians to write to Harper asking Canada to sign onto the United Nations Declaration of Indigenous Rights.

"We really do need that grassroots pressure to force the government of the day into making the right decision around human right facing aboriginal, Métis and Inuit," Crowder, the MP for Nanaimo-Cowichan, said.

Saturday, October 10, 2009


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-TORONTO/HAMILTON:
BOOK LAUNCHES OF 'ANARCHY ALIVE' IN ONTARIO:
Following the launch of Uri Gordon's 'Anarchy Alive' in Montréal (see previous on this blog) the book will also be presented in Toronto (tonight) and Hamilton (tomorrow) Ontario. These book launches are co-sponsored by the platformist Common Cause and the libertarian socialist Upping the Anti. Here's the announcement from the latter outfit.
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TONIGHT! Toronto Book launch of Anarchy Alive!:‏
Toronto: Book launch of Anarchy Alive!
Featuring author Uri Gordon, speaking about Anarchists Against the Wall and the Joint Struggle in Palestine / Israel
Saturday October 10th, 7pm
Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE)
252 Bloor St. West, Room 5-250
OISE is an accessible location
Co-Sponsored by:
Upping the Anti: A Journal of Theory and Action
Common Cause - Toronto branch
Anarchists Against the Wall (http://www.awalls.org/) is an Israeli action group supporting the popular Palestinian struggle against segregation and land confiscation in the West Bank. Uri Gordon, a participant in the group and author of the book Anarchy Alive!, will discuss the group’s activities and examine the achievements and limitations of the joint struggle, as well as anarchist perspectives on national liberation and the future of Palestine/Israel.
About Anarchy Alive!
Anarchist politics are at the heart of today’s most vibrant and radical social movements. From squatted social centres and community gardens to acts of sabotage and raucous summit blockades, anarchist groups and networks are spreading an ethos of direct action, non-hierarchical organizing and self- liberation that has redefined revolutionary struggle for the 21st century.
Anarchy Alive! is a fascinating, in-depth look at the practice and theory of contemporary anarchism. This is the ideal book for anyone looking for a fresh, informed and critical engagement with anarchism, as a mature and dynamic political force in the age of globalization.
Uri Gordon is an Israeli anarchist theorist and activist. He is a lecturer at the Arava Institute for Environmental Studies in Ketura, Israel. One of several anarchist theorists to come of age during the anti-globalization movement at the turn of the twenty-first century, he has worked with anarchist and radical movements including Indymedia, Peoples' Global Action, and Anarchists Against the Wall. Active primarily in Britain and Israel, Gordon has participated in protests at international summits across Europe.
For more information about this event, please e-mail uppingtheanti@gmail.com
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And then from the Common Cause people, the announcement about Hamilton.
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Uri Gordon on Anarchism and the Politics of Technology, Hamilton:
Start: 10/11/2009 - 19:00
End: 10/11/2009 - 21:00
Timezone: Etc/GMT-4
Anarchism and the Politics of Technology
Contemporary anarchism displays a strong ambivalence toward technology, with active resistance residing alongside extensive use and development. In this talk, Israeli activist and author Uri Gordon presents the discussion of technology in his new book "Anarchy Alive!". Criticizing both Promethean and primitivist approaches, he offers an alternative analysis that focuses on technology's reproduction of power relations, and points to directions for its reconstruction along decentralist principles.
Talk followed by open discussion.
October 11, 7pm
SkyDragon Centre
27 King William Street
Hamilton

Tuesday, May 05, 2009


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT/ANARCHIST MAGAZINES:
UPPING THE ANTI NUMBER 8:
It's going to be party time this Friday night down Toronto way as the folks behind the theoretical journal 'Upping the Anti' celebrate the launch of issue number 8 of their magazine. here's their announcement. Go to their website for more details about what the mag is all about.
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digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Upping the Anti #8 Launch Party - Concord Cafe, Toronto(Upping the Anti) ----------------------------------------------------------------------
[[[UPPING THE ANTI #8 LAUNCH PARTY]]]:
On Friday, May 8th, join UPPING THE ANTI and DJs Saira Chhibber and Nik Red as we celebrate the launch of UPPING THE ANTI NUMBER EIGHT
Friday May 8, 8pm
The Concord Cafe
(937 Bloor Street West)
- DJs Saira Chhibber and Nik Red
-- Raffle, Dancing, Politics, Fun
- Admission: $10 (includes new issue).
No one turned away for lack of funds.
Subscribers get in free.
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UPPING THE ANTI NUMBER EIGHT includes:
- Interviews with David McNally, Sam Gindin, and Leo Panitch on the economic crisis
- Interview with Deborah Gould on the legacy of ACT UP
- Interview with Helen Hudson on building sustainable movements
- John Clarke on anti-poverty organizing during the economic crisis
- Shourideh Molavi on Palestine solidarity organizing after the assault on Gaza
- Shiri Pasternak on the struggle at Barriere Lake
- Roundtable with members of the Student Liberation Action Movement (SLAM)
- Roundtable on activist study groups
- And More...
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For more information, email uppingtheanti@gmail.com or visit www.uppingtheanti.org

Friday, May 02, 2008


ANARCHIST MOVEMENT:
THE POLITICS OF HIP-HOP:
The libertarian socialist group Autonomy and Solidarity are bringing out issue # 6 of their journal 'Upping the Anti', and they are planning various launch activities across the province of Ontario. One will be in Sudbury on May 14, and it will focus on "the politics of hip-hop". here's their announcement.
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The Politics of Hip Hop: A Sudbury Launch Event for Upping the Anti # 6.
Wednesday, May 14th at 7pm sharp.
Laurentian University, Class Room Building (between the Library and the Arts Building), Room C-304. This is a wheel-chair accessible location.
A discussion of hip hop sparked by the "It’s Bigger Than Hip Hop" interview with Mutula Olugbala ( M-1) from the revolutionary hip hop duo Dead Prez in Upping the Anti 6. This event will include speakers, discussion, and music videos. Copies of Upping the Anti 6 will be available for $5 each.
Speakers:
*Shana Calixte -- "Your Revolution Will not Happen Between these Thighs": Forwarding a Hip Hop Feminist Pedagogy.Shana, queer mom/black feminist/academic is a lecturer in the Women's Studies department at Laurentian University. She has recently reconnected with her love of Hip Hop music, and currently teaches a course entitled: Theorizing Hip Hop Feminisms: Race, Gender and Sexuality at York University. She lives with her partner and son Dré in Sudbury.
*Kaili Beck -- Music and the Movement: Using music as pedagogy for social change.Kaili is a professor of Sociology and Labour Studies at Laurentian University and a consummate music fan. She volunteered for many years in Campus and Community Radio and the Northern Lights Festival Boreal, along with being a part of presenting many of the early all-ages shows of underground music in Sudbury through the early to mid 1990's. Kaili has spent much of her spare time actively participating in cultural events in the community, ranging from presenting underground concerts to organizing the Sudbury chapter of the Radical Cheerleaders, to bring entertainment and social activism together.
*Robin Desmeules -- Who May Play? Investigating Hip Hop and Identity Robin is a musician from the Sudbury area with a passionate interest in the ways that music and politics intersect. She will complete her undergraduate degree in Music and Political Science at Laurentian University this spring, and begins graduate studies in Music and Culture at Carleton University in the fall.
*Alex-Rev -- Visions of Hip Hop: Striking a Balance Facilitated discussion of the complexities and contradictions of native hip hop produced in Canada. Looking at both the revolutionary potential and the oppressive aspects of the music. Alex-Rev is an original guerrilla - with Common Cause, Sudbury Against War and Occupation. Fan of RGB Hip-Hop. Helping Hand with Indigenous Rebellion.
For travel and childcare subsidization, of if you need a ride from downtown to the event and back, call Gary at 523-2205 or email gkinsman@laurentian.ca
Upping the Anti is a radical journal of theory and action which provides a space to address and discuss unresolved questions and dynamics within the anti-capitalist, anti-oppression, and anti-imperialist politics of today’s radical left in Canada. For more information on Upping the Anti go to http://uppingtheanti.org/

Sunday, April 20, 2008


ANARCHIST MAGAZINES:
UPPING THE ANTI- MAGAZINE LAUNCH THIS COMING MAY:
Way down east, in that throbbing pulsating centre of the universe called Toronto, the libertarian socialist magazine 'Upping the Anti' has been putting their efforts forward for some time now. they are now on issue # 6, and the launch date is may 8, 2008. Here is their announcement....
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Issue #6 of Upping the Anti is being launched in Toronto on May 8th, 2008.
If you would like to receive a hard copy of the journal or to distribute the journal in your community or organizations, please email uppingtheanti@gmail.com so that we can add you to our list of local distributors. This issue of the journal is 204 pages long and we are selling single copies for $10 including postage. If you want 5 or more copies for distribution, the journal is $5 per copy, and we'll cover the postage. Journal articles and PDF files will be uploaded to the website in a staggered process over the next few months.

Our mailing address where you can send your $10 in well concealed cash to for a copy of the journal is: Upping the Anti, 998 Bloor St. West, P.O. Box 10571, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6H 4H9. If you live in the US or elsewhere, please order our journal through AK Press as it costs us too much to mail it to you from Canada. Please continue reading this post for the full table of contents of this issue and the introduction to this issue.
Introduction
Interviews
*Mutulu Olugbala: It’s Bigger Than Hip Hop
*Roxanna Dunbar-Ortiz: The Opposite of Truth is Forgetting
*George Katsiaficas: Remembering May 1968
Articles
*Joshua Kahn Russell & Brian Kelly: Giving Form to a Stampede: The First Two Years of the New SDS
*Eric Newstadt: Accounting for the Student Movement
*Caelie Frampton: Response to Newstadt
*Jeff Monagham & Kevin Walby: The Green Scare is Everywhere
Roundtables
*Kriss Sol: Organizing Against the G8 with Hanne Jobst, Sabu and Go, Miranda and Jaggi Singh.
*Alex Khasnabish: Anti-Poverty Organizing in Halifax with Jill Ratcliffe, Capp Larsen, Angela Weal, Susan Lefort, Cole Webber, and James Babbitt.
Book Reviews
*David Calnitsky: Naomi Klein, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism.
*Alexis Shotwell: Color of Violence: the INCITE! Anthology.
*Chris Keefer: The Revolution Will Not Be Funded: Beyond the Non-Profit Industrial Complex. INCITE! (ed.).
*Scott Neigh Grace-Edward Galabuzi, Canada’s Economic Apartheid.

Thursday, March 13, 2008


MAGAZINES:
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS- UPPING THE ANTI # 7:
The Ontario libertarian socialist magazine 'Upping the Anti' is now preparing to produce its seventh edition. Published by the Autonomy and Solidarity group, this magazine often features some fine writing. here is their callout....

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS >> UPPING THE ANTI #7

UPPING THE ANTI: A JOURNAL OF THEORY AND ACTION is a radical journal published twice a year by a pan-Canadian collective of activists and organizers. We are dedicated to publishing radical theory and analysis about struggles against capitalism, imperialism, and all forms of oppression.

We are currently looking for story ideas for ISSUE SEVEN, which will be released in October of 2008. If you have an idea for a story you would like to see published in our journal, please send us a one page pitch by Monday, April 14, 2007. In addition to the pitch, please submit a short writing sample (max 1,000 words).

In your pitch, please provide a brief description of the topic of your investigation, your main questions, an account of how you will address these questions, as well as a brief biographical note.

Before submitting a pitch, we encourage you to read back issues in order to familiarize yourself with the kind of writing that we publish. We also encourage you to have a look at the UPPING THE ANTI writer's guide, which can be downloaded at http://uppingtheanti.org.
Pitches should be for original stories that have not been submitted or published elsewhere. We discourage simultaneous submissions. Please do not send us a pitch that you have simultaneously sent to another publication.

Although we will consider all pitches, we are especially interested in stories about contemporary labour organizing, feminism and women's struggles, dis/ability, international solidarity work, mobilization strategies, Marxism and anarchism in the 21st Century, activist interventions in art and culture, and struggles around questions of sex and sexuality.

We will review your pitch and provide you with feedback. After a pitch has been approved, writers are expected to submit their story by deadline. Deadline for first drafts for ISSUE SEVEN is July 1, 2008.

Please submit all pitches and direct all queries to uppingtheanti@gmail.com

For more information about UPPING THE ANTI, visit http://uppingtheanti.org

Sunday, October 07, 2007



AUTONOMY AND SOLIDARITY:

NEW ISSUE OF 'UPPING THE ANTI': MAGAZINE LAUNCH:

Speaking of 'Autonomy and Solidarity', an Ontario libertarian communist organization that Molly has frequently mentioned on this blog, they are having a "launch party" on October 18th for the latest issue of their journal 'Upping the Anti'. This will happen at 8:00 pm Thursday, October 18th at the Smiling Buddha Bar, 961 College St, Toronto, ON. Some articles in the new Upping the Anti:

*Anti-Racism and the Women's Movement- Sunera Thobani

*Indigenous Anti-Colonialism- Gord Hill

*The Multitude and New Social Movements- Michael Hardt

*Resistance and the Tar Sands- Macdonald Stainsby Empire

*Students Movements and the CFS-Caslie Frampton

*The Three Way Fight- M. Staudenmaier

*Islam and the Left:A Reply to Staudenmaier-Rami Elamine

*Political Prisoner Roundtable-Ashanti Alston, Seth Hayes, Susan Tipograph, Sara Falconer

*Book Reviews of 'Black Power From the Inside', 'Pacifism as Pathology' and 'The Past didn't Go Anywhere'.
Please see the Autonomy and Solidarity site for more details.
MOLLY NOTES:
First of all I have to say that the ex-Trotskyites of the 'Autonomy and Solidarity' group are in the same "political field" as Molly is. This is important for understanding what I will say below because I will say it in the, perhaps hopeless, desire that such people may listen. I recognize that there is a "generational perception" problem here. Those of us of my generation who became anarchists did it in "opposition" to ALL of leftism. Those who have moved towards anarchism in the last two decades have done so in a situation where the deep connections between "identity politics" and Stalinism have not been so obvious as they were 40 years ago. In actual fact the situation has obviously changed. Identity politics is no longer a matter of manipulation of would be elites from another country. Today it is a matter of "class struggle" between the majority of our ruling class and those who hope to carve out petty empires by claiming to "represent" an "oppressed" minority. There is little doubt that this is a VERY minor thing in the class struggles of our society today, but it exists. Unfortunately it has its echo in so-called "radical politics".
Molly has her own idea of what should be presented to the general population. It would be a positive vision of hope, an inclusive vision, that would appeal to the vast majority. It would be an "activist" vision as opposed to a "reactivist" vision". It would propose to DO something rather than oppose something. Beyond all things it would speak, or try to speak, to a majority and NOT to disaffected minorities.
THIS is where Molly sees that well meaning comrades such as Autonomy and Solidarity go so wrong. They trade a long term vision of movement building for a tiny emotional desire for popularity amongst a VERY restricted section of the population. By doing this trade they close their opportunities for the greater good off as long as they persist in their beliefs. Nobody(at least amongst anarchists) doubts that say 'native communities" should have a right to self-determination. What fashionable leftism says, however, is that ONLY native communities should have such rights, that other non-native struggles for such should be ignored and that "indigenous rights" is something over and beyond the struggle for local community democracy. Molly sees it as ONLY one aspect of same, and she believes that THIS is a much firmer basis for alliances than the silly leftism that says "native issues are holy". If for NO other reason than if a RATIONAL people's movement decides to align itself with natives that the natives could be assured that they did so because of realism and NOT because of an ideology that can be easily abandoned.
Molly has said a lot about "native issues" because they are particularly important in Canada. Other issues are more important elsewhere.She sees the Autonomy and Solidarity people as surrendering to the sort of "political correctness" in a Canadian context that has come to DEFINE the American far left. She OPPOSES this because the Canadian context-and perhaps the American one to a lesser extent- has a "political vacuum" that leaves the way open to a libertarian socialist option. This option will NEVER be taken up if its proponents restrict themselves to defending sectoral interests.
Molly believes in a "politics of hope", not a "politics of resentment". Her whole vision of libertarian socialism is to build cooperation- NOT privilege. There are more than enough "hopeful signs" of such a politics today. Campaigns for sectoral privilege don't count, but campaigns for community empowerment DO. There is a great difference which I don't think the comrades of Autonomy and Solidarity understand.

Thursday, December 14, 2006


NEW EDITION OF UPPING THE ANTI:
The latest edition of 'Upping the Anti', a libertarian socialist journal produced in Toronto is now available. See http://auto_sol.tao.ca or Autonomy and Solidarity in the contacts list below. This issue goes for $5 plus $2 postage. If you live outside of Canada the editors request that you order the journal through AK Press (see contacts under 'Anarchist Publishers and Distributors) as the cost of postage is prohibitive. The editors have put previous issues of the journal in a pdf format at their website.
  • This issue contains:
  • The Anti Imperialism of Our Times by Aijaz Ahmad
  • Latin America vs. Global Capitalism by William Robinson
  • Making Friends With Failure by AK Thompson
  • Haiti:Adventures in Colonialism by Isabel McDonald
  • The Zapatistas: Enter The Intergalactic by RJ Marconi
  • How To Keep On Keeping On by Jen Plyler
  • A Round Table On the Six Nations

Much, much more

Check it out,

Molly