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Commons 2012 – Radical Squares 2 – George Caffentzis

“Uploaded by on Jan 24, 2012

George Caffentzis speaks on the Radical Squares: Reflections on the Global Indignant Moment panel at the Tragedy of the Market: from Crisis to Commons conference in January 2012 in Burnaby BC Canada.

Radical Squares: Reflections on the Global Indignant Moment – The spreading scope of systemic crisis (economic, ecological, social) has been met with an intensifying circulation of struggles around the world. How can we analyze the public eruption of recent struggles beginning in the Middle East and spreading across the globe? What does this moment mean? What are people indignant about? Is this a moment of both cultural transformation as well political upheaval? Presenters: Nefertiti Altán, George Caffentzis”

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“It Came From Below” Poster: MayDay 2012

Download 11×17 Printable Version (PDF)

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What to Do If You Are Stopped by the Police

If you are arrested at an Occupy Event, call the National Lawyers Guild:

New York City: (212) 679-6018
Los Angeles: (323) 696-2299
Washington, DC: (202) 957 2445
Chicago: (773) 309-1198
San Francisco: (415) 285-1011
New Orleans: (504) 875-0019
Baltimore: (410) 205-2850
Minnesota: (612) 656-9108
Michigan: (313) 963-0843
Portland: (503) 902-5340
Boston: (617) 227-7335
Pennsylvania & Delaware: (267) 702-4654
Idaho: (208) 991-4324

Be very sure to write the applicable phone number in PERMANENT marker somewhere concealed on your body, protected from the elements. Do NOT assume you will be able to retrieve the number from a phone or a notebook. It is very likely you will be stripped of all your belongings.

(thanks to Joni Spigler)

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Communiqués

Report: Mass Default

Recently, the spectre of mass default has been raised in a number of publications and forums.

From BayofRage.com, an online “anti-capitalist clearinghouse”, the Oakland Commune declares:

THE TIME HAS COME FOR MASS DEFAULT. Every debtor an Iceland! This is in some sense already happening as if by accident, as lives shudder under the unsustainable burden. It’s time for default as an organized, general strategy of self-defense and war on the owners of our present and future misery — a form of solidarity with strikes, sabotages, squats. It will require the organizing of communities to provide basic needs for the garnished, the liened, the excluded. This is both strategy and a renewed social order. This will be the practical meaning of a politics of friendship.

The website MassDefault.org offers a list of possible actions:

  • If you are a student, spend on your credit card and default.
  • Take out a bank loan and default.
  • Start or join a credit union.
  • Take out as much credit as you can, then when necessary declare bankruptcy (its not as bad as you think)
  • Form groups, stick together, this type of action in the world we live in can create isolation and anxiety. (Student food banks, markets, book swaps, car share, etc etc..)
  • Declare bankruptcy, if you are struggling try not to deceive yourself, its ok… its not shameful, these are tough times, don’t beat yourself up, you are actually doing some good!
  • Engage in direct action against mega banks.

In case the notion of choosing default seems like petit-bourgeois tantrum-throwing, there are those for whom default is the only option — and their numbers are rising.

From The Department of Education (September 12, 2011):

The U.S. Department of Education today released the official FY 2009 national student loan cohort default rate, which has risen to 8.8 percent, up from 7.0 percent in FY 2008. The cohort default rates increased for all sectors: from 6.0 percent to 7.2 percent for public institutions, from 4.0 percent to 4.6 percent for private institutions, and from 11.6 percent to 15 percent at for-profit schools.

Reclamations Journal has just produced an excellent resource for the coming default — a pamphlet called “Generation of Debt: The University in Default and the Undoing of Campus Life”.

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A User’s Guide to Demanding the Impossible

This is a short theoretical, strategic critical essay written in December 2010 during the student protests in London, and distributed at several occupied art schools in the city, reflecting on and trying to encourage new forms of political/symbolic action amongst art students and others in the current struggles against auesterity in the UK. The authors are theorist, art historian and activist Gavin Grindon, whose research focuses on the history of art-activism, and the artist-activist John Jordan, a founder of the Laboratory of Insurrectionary Imagination:

users-guide-to-the-impossible-web-version.pdf