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GLOBAL GENERAL STRIKE

30

Sep
2012

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In Uncategorized

By strikeeverywhere.net

Free Radicals: Sharing as Political Organizing

On 30, Sep 2012 | No Comments | In Uncategorized | By strikeeverywhere.net

from: http://www.shareable.net/blog/free-radicals-sharing-as-political-organizing

Khalil Robinson and Elysa Lozano, founders of Brooklyn Base

With skyrocketing rents and rapid gentrification, it has been difficult for community organizations and political projects to make a foothold in New York City. But, as Occupy Wall Street has shown, having a space where people can gather, practice mutual aid and form new communities has a powerful political effect. To that end, Khalil Robinson and Elysa Lozano are opening a new community space, Brooklyn Base, which will hold classes, skill shares, a free store and much more. Khalil and Elysa hope to provide services through Brooklyn Base entirely for free, and have made a kickstarter to help support the project’s first year. I caught up with Khali and Elysa to talk about how to organize-ground up, community driven spaces, and how they hope Brooklyn Base can be a powerful tool in Bushwick, Brooklyn.

Willie: How did you get the idea for the space? What made you want to start Brooklyn Base? And how long have you been working on it?

Elysa: There have been a lot of political movements going on, a lot of organizing that’s been based around events, and that’s really great, but we wanted to pull everything into a centralized space, so it wouldn’t be so diffuse, so you wouldn’t have one event happen and then all that energy dissipate. You’d have somewhere people knew they could come for alternative resources, to build up something really consistent and strong in Brooklyn

Khalil: We’ve been working on the project about 7, 8 months now. We felt to actually have an inroad into neighborhoods where we’re living would be equally as important as protests and spectacular actions.

Elysa: There are a lot of people working in activist millieus and it’s really hard to connect with that if you don’t know the private space where they meet or you don’t know the people. With Brooklyn Base you’d have a gateway where anybody can wander in and get involved in a project they’re interested in. We really want to have a diversity of projects in there, so there isn’t just one type of organizing happening, but lots of different things that people can access in a lot of different ways.

Willie: What sort of projects do you have in mind? And what projects are you working on already?

Elysa: We’ve been doing pay-what-you-want/pay-what-you can boxing classes, and there’s a great amateur boxer whos been donating his time to that. It’s been in a couple different locations, it’s actually in our backyard right now, so now we’ll actually have a normal space where people wouldn’t feel awkward to join in. We did a free store, and that’s something we want to do much more consistently. But we want to have a free store that’s actually appealing. Sometimes I’ll go to one and it’ll be full of old clothes that are moth-ridden or dirty. We really want to show people a lot of respect with a free store, to have nice stuff, and display clothes as attractively as you would in a normal for-profit store. And that’s something that we could do much better in a long-term space. We’re also working on issues of renters’ rights, and hoping to have a lot of open, community organized classes and reading groups.

The storefront that could become Brooklyn Base

The storefront that could become Brooklyn Base

Willie: Renters’ rights advocacy is something I’m pretty interested in, and a very important issue in New York City right now. What sort of work have you been doing with renters’ rights, and what sort of work do you hope to do with the space?

Elysa: A friend hooked us up with a housing rights lawyer, who is offering her time for free which is really really cool. She put us onto some issues with rent controlled houses in Bushwick, because this area is rapidly gentrifying, becoming “East Williamsburg” really really quickly. She let us know that a lot of landlords are doing little tricky things: for example, taking a rent-stabilized house and not doing any repairs, so people will leave because it’s a really crap situation to live in. And once they leave, they’ll do a quick renovation job, bring in new people, and charge way more, ending the rent-stabilization. That’s something we really want to organize against in the space. The problem we’ve come up against is how to let people know they can access this resource. So we want to have a centralized location where we can advertise that people can get involved in the project. We’d love to have people to be able to take their case to court if they need to. But we also don’t want to go knocking on doors and making people’s living situations de-stabilized unneccesarily, so we want to have that as a resource people can elect to have if they want to.

To complement that, our friend Andy wants to run a program that will start off as a historical research into Bushwick, and then lead some workshops based off that, to bring people in to talk about how the neighborhood’s changing, and what’s happened in the past, and connect with this history of the neighborhood, so its not like this obliterating of the distinctive Bushwick issues with the broader topic of gentrification.

Willie: In terms of classes, what are some topics people have expressed interest in, and what sort of classes would you be interested in working on?

Elysa: We wanted to start something where we could invite people in to participate in discussion groups that we’re excited about, that our friends are excited about, but once we do that to allow people who take part in the groups to organize their own. We can start off the discussion, but we want it to be able to take a lot of different trajectories based on what people want to talk about, how they want to organize themselves. And we mentioned the boxing, we want to have MMA and kung-fu and self-defense classes. Again, it’s dependent on what people want to share and what people want to see. I suspect people will come into the space and say “this is something I really need, this will help me a lot” and we’ll try and find someone in the community who can offer that. We definitely want to offer english and spanish classes, though, that would be amazing.

Willie: You want the space to be community driven and driven by the people who use it. That can be a difficult organizing task. What are some of the methods you’re thinking about using to make that a reality?

Khalil: That’s actually one of the trickiest questions, obviously. We’ve been talking about that a lot lately. Because one way we frame the project is we want it to be more outward looking. With Occupy, with most activist groups, it can turn into a very insular thing after a while. You have a big success, and then everyone ends up infighting and it becomes a very closed community. We’re trying to work around that, so everything is projected outwards as opposed to inwards.

Elysa: We really like the model of the Public School New York, their framework is organized around a website, people can just post a class up that they want to see or they want to teach. I like that model of self-organized skill-sharing education. But of course, there’s a built-in hierarchy in that, because at Public School classes get edited before they’re posted, so things don’t always pass, and that’s a little bit complicated.

Khalil: We’re also making sure that most of the people who want to be main collaboraters in the place just treat people decently. If someone doesn’t have a really honed political or social viewpoint, to still treat them with the respect you’d expect from a good friend.

Elysa: We’ve been talking about how to reach out beyond our circle of friends to neighbors and we think a lot of it will come really simply from talking to our neighbors, and inviting people to come to Brooklyn Base and do what they want to do. We think that’s how it will spread to start with. That’s the first step, and it will be a learning process too. We’ll have to see what people will get out of it, what they don’t get out of it, if it will spread or if it doesn’t spread.

Khalil: Seeing what they want to see and not imposing.

Willie: In your Kickstarter, you mention that it’s a space for creative economies. What do you mean by creative economies, and what do you hope for that to mean in practice?

Khalil: There are two different ideas. What we’d like to do is push forward the notion of sharing, and how that itself is a method of revolutionary practice. Like with the notion of the gift economy from Marcel Mauss, and the flipside of capitalism, that we can actually share amongst ourselves to create a better world. That’s how the free store comes into play, as well as self-programmed classes and workshops that are all based on sharing knowledge and resources, sharing all kinds of things as the basis for a better world.

Elysa: We also want to have a tool-lending library and a book-lending library as well. A lot of people have been coming to us already saying “I have something I’d like to put in to share with other people. I have a bunch of tools, I’d love to share with other folks in the neighborhood” We’d like to start with that, and then other people can donate when they feel comfortable in the situation, step into it and share. Want it to be somehwere where people can find their needs met by sharing rather than spending money. We’re trying to orchestrate a situation that’s safe for people to do that.

Willie: Why is it important that everything’s free? What does it mean to have a space where everything is free?

Elysa: Bascially, especially in New York City, where we have some of the highest rents in the world, a lot of people we talk with are spending a lot of time working more than one job just to pay for housing, transportaiton, basic necessities. Free services are something that we really feel is essential for this place right now, so people can cut back on that time spent working and devote it to other things that are better for the enivornments they live in.

Khalil: Also, we’re viewing this as a social and political kind of project. If we think that you can have an ethos of life based off of sharing, we’d like to keep the place as true to that ethos as possible, to not have the influx of money, and greed and competition that comes along with it.

Elysa: It also has to do with the motivation. If people come to do something for the space, they know its not because I’m trying to get some cultural capital, or looking at them with dollar signs like “please, come in!”

Khalil: Try not to be Scrooge McDuck swimming in a pile of gold coins.

Elysa: We want people to know if they come into the space we’re valuing that relationship, we’re not valuing them as a tool for us getting ahead in some way, eitehr monetarily or career wise or anything. And we’d like other people to function that way too.

Willie: Is there anything I missed that you’d really like to talk about?

Elysa: Well, actually, I’ve been reading Shareable for years, and it’s actually helped me come up with some of the ideas for the project.

Willie: Really?

Elysa: Yeah! I should’ve warned you. Basically I’ve got a lot of inspiration from Shareable. I think there’s a lot of things that have a lot of potential to run out of the space once we get a little more developed. I’m hoping that that idea of sharing and creating common use of items is something that can keep pushing and pushing into more and more aspects of people’s lives, and that will become the underlying fabric rather than work and money exchange, competition and exhaustion. We’re hoping to get more ideas from other people who are sharing things around the country and around the world so that we can bring that here.

 

Help support Brooklyn Base’s project by donating to their Kickstarter

Learn more about the space: http://strikeeverywhere.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/the-base-pr.pdf

24

Sep
2012

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In COMMUNIQUE

By strikeeverywhere.net

Running Across the Night of the World, We Shall Spread Strikes All Over: Welcome-IMF!

On 24, Sep 2012 | No Comments | In COMMUNIQUE | By strikeeverywhere.net

Manifesto 2012.9.16 – From CATASTROPHE

The world led to its ruins by IMF is now leading IMF and global capitalism to their ruins.

 

IMF has been turning the entire world into its debtors. Everywhere we are observing apocalyptic features of the planet, ruinous states of societies – this is the outcome. Their extreme manifestations are the Fukushima Daiichi Power Plants continuing to release radioactivity and the Ohi Plants that have been restarted. In place of Cairo, where popular uprising is continuing, the IMF has chosen Tokyo Japan, for its own endurance by way of clinging to nuclear power, the ultimate Debt imposed upon the entire populace.

 

Haunted by colonialist delusions, the nation-state called Japan is not able to confront the on-going calamity of radiation; this perverted regime is most suitable to be the graveyard of the IMF. The capital crowned by the Fascist mayor is most ideal for its coffin.

 

Nuclear power and territorialized land are two faces of today’s rising Fascists. And their collapse will begin by a Civil War in a broad sense. For the ruins of the world are telling of the process that has already been initiated. This October Tokyo will welcome the IMF with the new phase of CATASTROPHE, that is, but ourselves.

 

The uprisings against the global financial system led by IMF have long continued across the world. Running across the night of the world, we shall spread strikes all over.

And ‘Tokyo October 2012’ will announce a new phase for the process of decomposition and recomposition of Japan and the world in the post-Fukushima era.

 

われわれは世界の夜を走り抜け、ストライキをまきちらすだろう

IMF宣言 2012・9・16

 

IMFよ、おまえによって破滅させられた世界が今度はおまえを破滅させるだろう。

 

IMFは世界のすべてを負債と化してきた。いま、われわれが目にしている終末的な世界の様相、この社会の破滅的なすがたはその結果である。その最も醜悪にして極限的な姿こそ壊滅した福島第一原発であり、再稼働させられた大飯原発である。IMFは民衆が蜂起するエジプトでの開催をあきらめ、そのかわりにこの日本/東京を選んだ。原発という負債をさらに増殖させることで自分たちが生きのびるために。

 

しかし放射能がまきちらかされながら、それを直視することもできぬまま、植民地主義的妄想にとりつかれた、この恥辱にみちた国はIMFの墓場にこそふさわしく、ファシストを首長とするこの首都はその棺桶にふさわしい。原発と領土は今日のファシストのふたつの顔だ。かれらの崩壊は内戦とともにはじまるだろう。現在の破局的な世界はその過程の開始を告げている。10月の東京はIMFを新たな破局——これはわれわれ自身に他ならない——によって歓迎するだろう。

 

すでにあらゆるところからIMFを頂点とする世界金融システムへ反攻の烽火はあげられている。われわれは世界の夜を走り抜け、ストライキをまきちらすだろう。

そして2012年10月の東京は、福島以降の日本と世界の長期にわたる崩壊/再編過程の一つの節目となるだろう。

 

 

06

Aug
2012

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In Uncategorized

By strikeeverywhere.net

Todos Somos Japon

On 06, Aug 2012 | No Comments | In Uncategorized | By strikeeverywhere.net

 Todos Somos Japon is an international coordination and solidarity project in the post-3/11 world (3/11/2011: the day of massive earthquake that triggered Fukushima nuclear meltdown in Japan).

Since the Fukushima crisis, the social and political situation in the far eastern archipelago have been developing. We have been following the ways in which the people are struggling for survival against radioactive contamination and policies of the pro-nuclear state. Publishing writings on this subject has been one of our works since the disaster.

<www.jfissures.org>

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