asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Do some MLs create for profit businesses in capitalist countries? Is doing that anti-Marxist or not?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 weeks ago 100%
    1. Implying unions are inherently revolutionary. (Nearly all US unions are already giving money to the stock market to grow their pensions, them for personal benefit, you in this case for communal development geared for NatLib struggles).
    2. Implying unions develop communities outside of creating Imperialist communities in Imperialist states.
    3. Any money you take from the stock market would be accumulating wealth already accumulated by the Bourgeoisie. If you could somehow create a permanent syphon to 3W or 4W resistance groups from the market then that's cool.
    4. Purchase land and give it up to the nations it was stolen from == cool.
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  • askcomrades Ask Comrades Xi Jinping's daughter went to harvard?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 weeks ago 100%

    Xi also studied in the US and calls for more student exchanges. Relationship building.

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  • shitreactionariessay Shit Reactionaries Say Saw some guy out in public tell an indian guy to "stay away from our white women"
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 weeks ago 100%

    This was the type of language heard in the so-called "St. Louis Soviet" before white unionists started a lynch mob against the Black people burning down and stealing houses in 1917.

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Do some MLs create for profit businesses in capitalist countries? Is doing that anti-Marxist or not?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 weeks ago 100%
    1. It's not anti-Marxist, Engels was Bourgeois and allocated profit to fund revolution. If you can assist in communal development by hooking into the profit motive of the global economy, that's okay. (We should however, cross-reference someone's class interests with the politics they are espousing. Their class background could be the source of Revisionism.)

    2. In Imperialist countries there's very little difference between wage-laborers and the petty-bourgeoisie "proper" (as in, propertied), it mostly boils down to lifestyle choice (within similar opportunities), risks and gambles.

    3. In many economies, there are nationalities (or castes, religions - Pale of Settlement) that are gate-kept from the wage-work ladder, these are the small business (often immigrants) selling food at metro stations or outside stadiums, the (historically) Black windshield washers, shoe-shiners, and other such "hustler" work. These are indeed petty-Bourgeois relations but they are enforced in a semi-formal, lumpenized form. The bottom of the petty-Bourgeoisie can be lower economically than minimum-wage work, because even minimum-wage work can be turned into a privilege (Diploma, GED).

    4. Marxists need not be Proletarians, however, their overall life's work needs to be working toward the eventual emancipation of the Proletariat (exploited segment of the workforce).

    5. Most Imperialist countries, have little to no Proletariat "proper" (exploited laborers, realistically paid less than the global average value of labor or around less than $5-6 USD, min-wage in Haiti is 10% of this). Un-exploited wage-laborers, often referred to labor-aristocracy or (dated) "servants", make the bulk of an Imperialist country's workforce.

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  • genzedong GenZedong 90%, of labor driving the world economy are carried out by workers in the global South. Any political theory that neglects to center these workers as key agents of revolutionary change is misguided.
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 4 weeks ago 100%

    iPhone

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  • genzedong
    GenZedong ProbablyKaffe 4 weeks ago 97%
    CPUSA writer responds to my thread on Settler Colonialism in the US

    **Kaffe: The author of the CPUSA article I responded to the other day has issued a response, here it is with my in-between responses. I had to transcribe the response from an image with some software so there might be mistakes, please check the source first if something looks weird, it could be my mistake.** >Recently, a twitter user by the name of @probablykaffe released a criticism of my article "Questions of Settler-Colonialism in the U.S." on the party website (https://lemmygrad.ml/post/5450487). The criticism was posted on Lemmygrad, a Marxist-Leninist substitute for Reddit founded in 2019 in response to Reddit's crackdown on Marxist content on their platform. I don't plan to respond to all points made, as I do not believe that is productive and would lead to a back and forth conversation that I do not have the energy for. However, I do see this as an opportunity to elaborate on some points within the article a little further. This is not a formal response, nor is this representative of the Communist Party USA. > >It should be noted that my article is meant to be a sort of starter in the analysis of settler-colonialism in the U.S. I absolutely could have gone more in-depth and technical, however my main focus of this article was to be as accessible about this theory as possible while still giving enough theoretical substance. And 1 think 1 largely succeeded on that front considering all the positive reception the article has received online and within the party itself. > >With that said, let's get into the critique and address the most important points. Keep in mind that their criticism wlill be quoted at-length, as they did with my article, in order to keep full context when addressing arguments. >>The piece posits that "regular" Colonialism intends to exploit the Indigenous population, while settler-Colonialism intends to expropriate and remove them. That both of these behaviors exist in all colonial structures is ignored. The settlers of Rhodesia not only violently occupied land used by Africans, they also exploited African labor by continuing to deny them access to resources except through wage labor or zero-wage labor, slavery. Whether exploitation or expropriation is used is actually an evolution in the relations between Indigene and the Occupation. Under English colonization, the Pequot people were first exploited for their productive capacities, then removed from their lands where a significant portion of them were sold into slavery to be exploited away from their land-relations. Smashing the Pequot came about because they stood in the way of settler control over regional trade, a condition that developed from relations where Pequot and English traded in mutually beneficial relations. > >This is absolutely a fair criticism which I take full responsibility for. I should've been more clear in my article that, while settler-colonialism is distinct from franchise colonialism, it still does feature the aspect of exploitation of indigenous populations, especially in the monopoly capitalist context we exist in with the U.S. today. I will say, however, that they do make an interesting dichotomy between expropriation and exploitation of indigenous lands and peoples. It should be noted that the expropriation of indigenous lands, and the horrible structures of oppression and atrocities that result from this process,are an integral part to what makes settler-colonialism distinct from franchise colonialism. They do not choose and pick whatever at a whim, expropriation is a fundamental characteristic of settler-colonialism, and I feel that is negated with their statements. > **Kaffe: Agreed, though I do say exploitation and expropriation are relationships that *evolve* (as in, not *chosen* by a thinking entity) in a colonial context. I agree that the way I wrote about it made it seem like I think these are two distinct modes, rather than processes under constant expression of varying degrees.** >>The first part of this segment tries to answer the chicken-egg of Colonialism and Capitalism by putting one before the other, when only in certain situations is that apparent, and broadly, these are co-constitutive processes. > >No, no I don't. I clearly make it known in this section that these two processes happened simultaneously and fed into each other. **Kaffe: You said: "It must be stressed that settler-colonialism laid the basis for the further development of capitalism as a mode of primitive accumulation, and *settler-colonialism only came into existence due to the development of capitalism and the pursuit of profit.*" It's this latter part of the statement that I take issue with considering the English settlers in Ireland preceded capitalist relations in Ireland and were sent to police expropriated territory from the Irish. I want it clear that Settler-Colonialism does not need Capitalism, or vice-versa, but if your statement is directly about Turtle Island, I agree. This relates to all colonization that require hired policing (French in Vietnam, Kanaky). This means we have to piece out the difference between a Franchise Colony, a Settler-Colony, and a Settler-State. Permanence of settling pushes a colonial regime towards being dominated by settler interests, and potentially these interests imposing themselves over the sovereignty of their mother country, developing into a Settler-State with independently exercised interests (but tied generally to Imperialism, as with "Israel" and "Australia"). What makes a settler is the (continued) act of staying (including reproducing). In terms of studying the political economy of a colony, there is use in distinguishing frontier settlers and colonial police from others, but frontier settlers who are in it for the money or colonial expansion replace themselves spatially with new settlers who are there to stay. The Occupation's polity is subject to evolution but all of these moving parts remain settlers in the ongoing Occupation, outside of a new Colonialism (chattelization, apartheid) that distinguishes "arrivants", that population will be made of settler classes until the Occupation is abolished.** > >>Incorrectly posits that the class of settlers is distinctly those who have taken land. Says nothing about their relationship as continued occupiers, and says nothing about their relation to the broader network of property relations that is the Settler-Colonial Capitalist system. These frontier-persons are simply one way in which the Occupation came to control resources. The more common manner towards the "end of the frontier" (an event that was claimed by said entity, not found in reality) was sending the standing army, men such as the so-called "Buffalo Soldiers" or George "Hang Them All" Wright and his Military Division of the Pacific. In fact, nearly all of those who were profiting off of settler expansion were members of the colonial militias and later US standing army. > >I do mention in my article that indigenous land is occupied, but you are correct that I should've gone alittle more in-depth regarding that specific characteristic. Regarding your point, however, settlers, as I define in my article, are those who "[are] outside these land-relations, and plays an active role in negating them. This does not mean that one has to personally enforce colonial laws, rather it means that they directly benefit from the participation in the destruction of these land relations > >Indigenous struggles for landback and decolonization are all about rebuilding land relations on occupied land, and gaining sovereignty over the land they currently inhabit. This is something that I will go more in-depth over later in the article. The settler's job is to destroy these land relations, occupy the land that indigenous people inhabited, and stop indigenous people from their struggles to rebuild land relations. Occupation is an inherent characteristic of settler-colonialism. **Kaffe: "The settler's job is to destroy these land relations, occupy the land that indigenous people inhabited, and stop indigenous people from their struggles to rebuild land relations." Which is why *settlers* as a class continues into time as long as the occupation exists, they are expected to and primed to continuously reject Indigenous land-relations. One isn't a settler just because they *decide to act in that way*, it's not a choice, getting their reproductive resources from the settler-regime is enough for them to reflexively defend it. Anyone can *choose* to break out of their class relations (Class Suicide, Marooning), but only in so far as they are bound by a decolonizing community.** > >>It's extremely disingenuous to compare the estimated (by Ortiz) total population of the Americas in 1492 to the population of Indigenous people in the US in 1900. The founding of the US in 1776 is closer to us now in time than it was to Columbus's landing. The total native American population in 1900 was some 4-5M people, it is now up to some 45M people. In the US alone it went from some 240k to some 7 million-people today. It's estimated that over 100k Indigenous people in the US (claimed territory) died from 1860 to 1900 due to colonial policies such as boarding schools (40k children dead or missing from the start of the schools to today). Settler-Colonialism was not just the theft that causes death, but the continued exclusion that prevents populations from recovering to pre-disaster levels. This continued exclusion raised the white/settler population of the US by hundreds of millions over this period. > >This part just makes no sense. Columbus' voyage marked the start of settler-colonialism in the USA and the genocide of the indigenous population. Of course l'm going to show how disastrous settler-colonialism as a structure of oppression is to my people by showing how it's affected my people's population. This is such an absurd point. **Kaffe: My first issue was the comparing of two different population segments through time. The next issue is that for the disaster that was Columbus's landing, the peoples oppressed and imprisoned by the "13 Colonies" and later the US were free communities/nations until the English took land or otherwise subjugated them to the rule of England. That was the point at which they became Indigenous (a colonized population).** > >>Contradictions make the system living. There are classes of Indigenous and "arrivant" populations that can benefit from the motions of settler-colonial development. These are contradictions we well understand when we are talking about "regular" Colonialism and Neo-Colonialism, yet for some reason we have to revise such notions when speaking of Settler-Colonialism. The development of one's class can contradict the development of their nation. Though it is not wise to limit such notions to "race", which is a product of national antagonisms and not the source. Former slaves working to subjugate other Indigenous peoples including their own kin is one of many really existing contradictions that give Settler-Colonialism and Capitalism life > >Keep note of this. Though it should be noted that Kaffe is using contradictions incorrectly here. The context is that I am trying to find a solid way to define being a socio-political citizen of the U.S. and what a settler is. > >>Most of this segment of the article is correct, however, reduced. For fear of contradiction (that give life), they'd like to argue that Indigenous people with government jobs are settlers. They are however, not settlers, even though they are in class relations antagonistic to decolonization and ultimately to the liberation of their nations. This contradiction exists because of the under-development of their nations due to Settler-Colonialism. The US government onboarding more and more Indigenous people is also a contradiction for itself, as writers like Red Nation have access to means of production to facilitate revolutionary study and spread it amongst the population. So too, did Fanon have the bourgeois education and employment, partially colonizing his own continent, but contradictorily gaining skills that eventually helped his people overthrow their colonizers. > >In the previous quote, **Kaffe relishes on how contradictions give life to our system, yet seems to believe that going so far as to say that social relations such as settler and indigenous aren't static and can change is too far. Saying that an indigenous person participating in the destruction of their own land relations therefore makes them a settler is a contradiction that Kaffe doesn't seem to like.** **Kaffe: My opposition is with settler being applied to Indigenous people through splitting hairs in employment to avoid applying the label to all non-colonized people in a settler occupation. My position is that all of those Bordertown occupants are indeed settlers as reproducers of the settlement. Indigenous individuals still have national relations that tie them to Indigenous Liberation struggles, the contradiction of them being employed by the occupation could be described as dual Indigenous-settler relation, but since employment is situational and nations generally are not, it seems unnecessary to apply the term when economic class as a worker in the US describes enough. Especially since if we use Red Nation's definitions, even reservations are Bordertowns (history shows this to be quite literal in cases). If we are not to contradict RN, then we'd have to apply *settler* to all Indigenous people in the US. The other aspect is that limiting Indigeneity to essentially "social formations before colonization", makes it a lot easier to erase Indigeneity, for the colonizers to "write away" their problems by perpetually claiming the resistance illegitimate (which it already does).** > >>Land-relations are not confined to reservations whatsoever. If that were the case, the Bolt-Decision would not even exist. As well, continued land-relations exist for all Indigenous communities, threat from the settler-society for performing such relations is ongoing. The NoDAPL protest would not have occurred because it does not cross existing reservation lines. Yet, the Oceti Sakowin rallied by the thousands to protect the water. This is a very confused point, which again relies on events-thinking to comprehend. White workers (in fact, all USians) in this one example, would continue to benefit by having more control over the global value of the dollar with access to fuel provided by DAPL. This is again contradictory for even the Lakota people on the Standing Rock Reservation. This leads to the broader contradiction, that US Imperialism relies on the continued subjugation of Indigenous national interests to provide high wages and excessive consumption to the vast majority of US workers. But again, using the corrected definitions, the idea that Indigenous land-relations are marginal and "vanishing" ignores facts like the US nuclear capable submarine base lying directly in a former Pequot village (whose refugees are in a nearby reservation). Also, notice that Gaza's fighters are predominantly refugees, which "descendent" is one of the ways Palestinian refugees are defined by the UN. > >This point misunderstands what indigenous land-relations are, and confuses it for an indigenous connection to ancestral homeland. I will quote Nodrada at length here: > > "They do not understand the social relation of Indigenous peoples to their homelands, which extends into the aspects of ecology, history, spirituality, etc. That is, Indigeneity as itself a social relation. Indigenous peoples explicitly refer to their nations and homelands as relations. Their relation to land is not to land as an abstract thing, but to specific spaces that are inseparable from their specific communal lives. > >... > >Identity and mode of life in communalist societies is specific to spaces, because keeping in the 'rhythm' of these spaces is a basic guiding logic of life. Because land is a relative, there was and is significant resistance among Indigenous peoples to the settler seizure of land and commodification of their non-human relative. The European bourgeoisie, meanwhile, was more concerned with what value could be extracted from the land, their worldview being based in abstract concepts of Right, Justice, Liberty and so on. > >The faction in question does not understand setler-colonists as part of social relations which seek to negate that communal land social relation for concrete aims. They lack broad perspective, they only see society as a collection of atoms, falling into micro-categories, bundled together." > >Here, it is clear that indigenous land-relations refer to the relations that indigenous people build towards the land they inhabit through the building of communal society and a common mode of life. This is integral to the definition of indigeneity itself, which is "a social relation defined by the persistence of long-standing communal links and Indigenous identities in a specific place." > >The whole point of settler-colonialism is to destroy these land relations and drive the indigenous people off of their land. This is what happened when the indigenous people of the US were driven off of their lands and pushed into reservations. They were driven off of the land, their communal land links were destroyed and so too were the land relations. ***This is distinct from a connection to ancestral homelands, which is in essence the resistance to settler-colonialism, the struggle to rebuild land-relations in their ancestral homelands. If indigenous land relations were not vanishing and being destroyed, then there wouldn't be a struggle from indigenous communities against settler-colonialism.*** This is where occupation comes in. Occupation is about stealing and inhabiting indigenous land after the process of driving them off of their ancestral homeland, the exploitation of this land and indigenous labor, and the repression of indigenous peoples' attempts to rebuild their land-relations on this ancestral homeland. **Kaffe: Now here is something interesting. Land-relations are *internal* to a community. External factors, such a settlers, can only induce *evolution* within these communal relations. Land-relations are practices, the amount of time between practices of these relations is not relevant, as long as the community at some point can resume those relations. The reason they cannot resume is because of continued occupation. Rhythmic relations can be obstructed through non-human processes as well, the community then adapts according to their ongoing social processes, and such is the case with Colonization. While these aspects are components to how an Indigenous nation understands itself, it does not apply to their Indigeneity (status of being colonized). There should be no reason why Indigeneity is defined for Settler-Colonialism differently than other Colonial structures. The relationship of an imposed regime of one or many oppressor nations over oppressed nations. This definition allows for Indigenous nations to split (or merge) and form distinct communities during the duration of their colonization. Some of these communities are absorbed into the colony and put under a system of apartheid where they become vacillating "arrivants" in other Indigenous-Settler antagonisms (communities such as the so-called "Praying Indians" of 17th century New England). That is, *arrivants are Indigenous too, but dislocated and/or atomized.* We need definitions that account for many different social formations, and aren't limited to individual communities' systems of self-regulation. Communities have memories, and communities have lives larger than individuals, we must view these relations at the community level, ultimately.** **I also brought examples in the original thread (tbf, in a later edit) of concrete land-relations continuing by shared practice with an example using Randy Lewis (Wenatchi). That's not an abstract "homeland" connection, but a communal connection between elder and youth in a place at a specific rhythm. I of course recognize that the land is relative, which is fully accounted for in saying land-relations are internal to a community and subject to evolution, none of which negates Indigeneity unless an internal trend is liquidationist.** Rest of the response: > >As I said in the beginning of this response, I do not want to respond to all points made in the critique, as it would take forever and most of them come from a misunderstanding of my point, straight up lying about my positions, and a lack of reading comprehension. Most of these mistakes are almost obvious to most people. The ones that are not as obvious and require an elaboration of my arguments are the ones that I responded to here.

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    genzedong GenZedong Criticism of CPUSA published “Questions of Settler-Colonialism in the U.S.”
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 4 weeks ago 100%

    I'm assuming CPUSA authors must be using some abridged version whether they made it or found in material related to the Red Nation.

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  • genzedong GenZedong Criticism of CPUSA published “Questions of Settler-Colonialism in the U.S.”
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 4 weeks ago 100%

    It's actually a separate work from the Red Deal, it's in the book Red Nation Rising: From Bordertown Violence to Native Liberation. The latter book is a required reading in the CLN library, and the former is unorganized in there, though the Marx Madness season 8 on the Red Deal is a must listen.

    Actually though, after looking for the quote they used from Red Deal, I actually can't find it in the book. When I google'd it the only relevant link was their article.

    The definition in Red Deal is as follows, and I think, is so much more impactful than represented:

    Bordertowns emerged from the dispossession, relocation, and ethnic cleansing of Indigenous people. Borders manifest themselves outside of the common understanding of national boundaries marked by fences, walls, and checkpoints. They are also found within the settler nation itself, at the boundaries between Indigenous and settler communities.

    Bordertowns are those that surround Indigenous nations, often with significant populations of Native people, yet they are typically marked and policed as white spaces; in the same sense that suburbs were originally (and still are) perceived as spaces for whiteness. The function of a bordertown is to exploit the identity, labor, and death of Indigenous people. Indeed, often a bordertown’s economy relies on Native workers and white tourism to museums and stores that contain our art, ceremonial objects, and even the reinains of our ancestors. On one hand, settler occupation is always built on Indigenous death, and on the other, bordertowns trade in a narrative of an Indigenous “past” for tourism.

    Territories held by Indigenous nations came under settler control during the several centuries of European settlement and westward expansion through war, massacre, treaty negotiation, and privatization followed by forced selling, all of which forced Indigenous peoples off their homelands and onto reservations. The Homestead Act of 1862 and Dawes Act of 1887 served to divide entire nations into individual landholdings that, coupled with threats of violence and increased dependency on the European capitalist economy, could be transferred to private settler ownership. Many Indigenous people were forced to sell their parcels of land in order to settle debts, pay taxes, or feed themselves and their families.

    The Homestead Act gave large tracts of these lands as well as those recently secured by US Army violence to white settlers for very cheap and was repealed only in 1975, after transferring millions of acres of land to white settlers. As Indigenous nations became dislocated from their lands and forms of subsistence, they increasingly became forced into wage labor for the very settlers who stole their land. They also were forced to rely on nearby trading posts and mercantile stores to exchange rug weavings, pottery, and wool for everyday necessities. Settlers, on the other hand, were largely dependent on Indigenous labor in the early years of westward expansion and, to this day, bordertowns rely on Indigenous people to work, shop, and create products to sell in stores or markets that profit off of Native art and culture.

    Many of these lenders, pawnshops, and trading posts offer Indigenous people a small profit for family heirlooms or artwork while selling these items at a higher price to white collectors, museums, and wealthy individuals. Car dealerships, payday lenders, and other predatory businesses prey on Indigenous people on and off reservations by locking them in an endless cycle of debt. This relationship of capitalist exploitation in bordertowns continues the long history of colonial extraction from Indigenous peoples, lands, and labor. These bordertowns, like those along the southern border, are locations of extreme levels of surveillance, policing, and violence in order to contain the “threat” of Indigenous existence that contradicts the myth of settler society. The continued presence of Native people signifies the incompleteness of the settler project, which responds with anti-Indigenous violence. Violent interactions with the police are common, along with the enforcement of laws restricting Native peoples’ movement and behavior that proliferated as bordertowns arose across the West.

    In many cities, laws prohibited Indigenous people from living within the city limits unless they were servants to wealthy whites who agreed to house them on their property, out of sight. While these laws have since been repealed or evolved into anti-vagrancy laws that criminalize homelessness, panhandling, and even resting in public, bordertowns have a long history of violent anti-Indian sentiment. A common form of violence inflicted upon Indigenous people is “Indian rolling,” or the targeted assault, torture, and murder of Native people. The term was first used in 1974 to describe a gang of white teenagers’ murder of three unsheltered Diné men in the bordertown of Farmington, New Mexico. The history of anti-Indian violence is, of course, much older than this.

    In addition to the state violence enacted by the US military during the Indian Wars, private settlers, militias, and companies engaged in decades of unilateral violence against Indigenous people. State and federal governments paid these settlers for their service in volunteer militias that hunted, killed, and captured Indigenous people throughout the western states. They collected bounties for scalps and body parts and often took it upon themselves to organize and arm these militias to wage genocide against Native people.

    This anti-Indian violence has evolved over the centuries into the forms of bordertown violence we face today. For example, “Indian rolling” is an ongoing issue in bordertowns, where mostly white and Hispanic teenagers and men target Native people because of these deep, underlying logics of anti-Indianism. In 2014, three Hispanic teenagers attacked three Diné men in Albuquerque, New Mexico and bludgeoned two of them to death while one narrowly escaped. The three teenagers expressed no remorse and were described by the media as unmotivated by racial hate, yet as we have seen, they were practicing a long American tradition of anti-Indian violence.

    This violence also takes on a particular gendered form in bordertowns, especially in areas where resource extraction occurs. Indigenous women, nonmen, and trans and nonbinary people experience higher rates of violence—more than any other race—inflicted by white supremacy and heteropatriarchy. MMIWG2S, which will be described more thoroughly in Part II: Heal Our Bodies, is rarely framed as a form of bordertown violence and both are described as recent phenomena.

    Gendered violence and anti-Indian violence have long upheld the colonial project of resource exploitation, relocation, displacement, and genocide since the first military outposts and forts were constructed along the western “frontier” of the fledgling United States. Native women and girls were lured, sold, and kidnapped to be sex trafficked to soldiers and traders who manned these outposts and forts, and the same happens today in settler cities. Bordertowns are the original “man camps,” where men who work in extractive industries live while on the job in oil and gas, logging, and mining. One of the first lines of struggle to end bordertown violence is the MMIWGz2S campaign.

    Another front line against bordertown violence that needs urgent attention is unsheltered Native populations who face a large portion of settler violence, both state and private, yet rarely receive justice when they are targeted by police, Indian rollers, white supremacists, or white business owners. Unsheltered Indigenous people are criminalized for merely existing and are constantly forced to move from place to place to avoid arrest and harassment. White business owners respond violently to unsheltered Native people because of their disruption to the capitalist economy and to the image of bordertowns as tourist traps selling Native cultural items as trinkets. Therefore, we must move to organize unsheltered relatives into communities capable of defending themselves from settler violence and to directly advocate for their safety and well-being. Tent cities, which are autonomous communities of unsheltered people with communal services and their own forms of governance, have been successful in providing unsheltered people with safety in numbers, access to food, medical attention, and supplies, as well as a sense of community rather than social isolation. We call on everyone to defend tent cities from the frequent police raids and sweeps that have destroyed tent cities across the country.

    ...

    Whole thing won't fit but you get the idea.

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  • genzedong GenZedong Criticism of CPUSA published “Questions of Settler-Colonialism in the U.S.”
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 4 weeks ago 100%

    https://lemmygrad.ml/post/5309849/4833285

    A relevant comment I had last week:

    Some light class analysis of settlement eras.

    Pre and Early US Period (1620s - 1780): Averaging a 1000-10,000 settlers per year, mostly “Adventurers” (literally venture capitalists who sponsored colonies, merchant and/or soldier background), share-owners - people like the “Pilgrims” who signed onto a company of Adventurers’ plan to work the land and share profits with the company, the indentured servants of the above classes, contracted workers (mostly sailors or those hired onto the company for x many years), and a small amount of slaves (slavery picked up heavily in later years). Servants were outnumbered by the above classes, they did a lot of the heavy labor in the early years, but generally were wealthier and more privileged the more the colonies developed. Predominantly servants were obligated to shares of their master’s stake in the colony after completion of their contract, they are somewhat of an indirect “partner” in the colony itself. The colony would trade for goods with natives and traveling fishing ships and send the proceeds back to the companies/pay dividends to investors. The Cromwell Revolution and Colonization of Ireland would bring military veterans, later sons of the upper peasant and lower noble classes, to the colonies and they would be purchasing land from the share-owners. “Modern real-estate” is actually Anglo-America’s first big industry. Most of these people were English, Scot, Dutch, or perhaps protestant Irish upper class, religion was a big factor at this time. In the 1700s a lot of the settlers were actually already settlers in the Caribbean, like Alexander Hamilton. These people were leaving the Caribbean colonies because there were many slave revolts and the European population down there was outnumbered by African and native slaves 5-10x.

    “Antebellum” US (1780-1864): 10k-300k yearly ramping up over time. Just under half were from Ireland, mostly peasants (and some Scot/Anglo settlers) whose crops were blighted. The rest were largely from Germany, northern Europe, and Britain, again likely Bourgeois or wealthier peasants as many Germans had the wealth to immediately join the “frontiers” while most Irish were stuck in the port cities. This would be the time Marx was contemporary to. Workers in England were privileged from the wealth pouring in from the slave colonies, India, and Ireland, but Marx was still able to get many of them to fight their own direct interests by refusing to help the Confederacy (the slave colonies). [1]

    Pre Civil Rights US (1865-1965): Peak settlement occurred in the 1880s-1920s. It was at first uniformly from north and western Europe, during the peak they were mostly from southern and eastern Europe. Settlers hailing from the north and west were still of usually upper-class extraction, a continuation of the trend above, where many are immediately settling the “frontier” in so-called “Indian Territories”. Many of the southern and eastern settlers would have been expropriated peasants, or peasants who suffered from crop failure (a condition the USSR would finally solve). At this time though, many of these “immigrants” were not actually intending to settle, they were teen boys and young men who would work in the US for some years and send money back and usually later returned (we are talking more than half returned). So much of the workforce in the port cities was once again “indenture”-ish workers, this time as migrants, which would expand after 1965 when “immigration” came heavily from Asia and Latin America. Some plant a foothold with property or citizenship. There are still millions of these workers in the US from the high-earning H1-Bs to the low-earning produce workers. Even most US states are stocked by “internal” migrant workers from other states who are often paid to relocate.

    1. I'd like to call attention to this part, in particular, because even though his allies in the English working class would materially benefit from continued relations with the Confederacy, he was able to get them to organize against these interests recognizing that long term strategy necessitated the end of the "particular type of Colonialism" that developed in the American South, and that European capital was dependent on.
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  • genzedong GenZedong Criticism of CPUSA published “Questions of Settler-Colonialism in the U.S.”
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 4 weeks ago 100%

    On continued land-relations here's Randy Lewis (Wenatchi) showing Professor Nick Zentner of CWU the area he has collected roots in his entire life, and he had driven his grandparents 100s of miles from the reservation to continue the practice of gathering they learned before relocation. This land just happens to be open for them to continue because the area around the highway is state property. He's been getting more of his younger family members to start doing it, to maintain the patches. What blocks him from fully recovering the practice amongst his nation is settler-colonialism (and capitalism, but remember Set-Col is Imperialism), it makes no sense to define the magnitude of settler-colonialism by how little the patch is. We should measure it by the total opportunity cost loss from his kinship relations (nation and friends) from the state of being removed.

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  • genzedong
    GenZedong ProbablyKaffe 4 weeks ago 97%
    Criticism of CPUSA published “Questions of Settler-Colonialism in the U.S.”

    ### Criticism of "Questions of Settler-Colonialism in the U.S." The article in question: https://www.cpusa.org/article/questions-of-settler-colonialism-in-the-u-s/ This is a response to a CPUSA published article concerning the topic of Settler-Colonialism in the US. I quote the article at length so you cannot miss any points they have made. Wrote this right after reading, there's likely mistakes in here. Feel free to crit me and ask for sources and stuff. This is **not a formal response, and I do not represent any org here**, this is comradely crit for an article carrying theoretical mistakes. I'm criticizing from the angle of a New Afrikan. Emphasis is mine unless I reformat better and have to make the distinctions clear. To let the piece open itself: >The question of settler-colonialism and its place in the web of contradictions in the U.S. have resurfaced, and of the Communist Party’s position, so it bears addressing. Without a concrete answer to these questions, our party’s ability to help build a mass movement and unite the working class will be weakened significantly. The document provides its preferred definition of Settler-Colonialism: >Settler-colonialism is a form of colonialism that is different from regular, or franchise, colonialism. Rather than wanting to exploit the Indigenous population, like in franchise colonialism, settler-colonialism seeks to drive an indigenous population off their land by any means necessary and exploit it for the profit of the private owners of the means of production. The piece posits that "regular" Colonialism intends to exploit the Indigenous population, while settler-Colonialism intends to expropriate and remove them. That both of these behaviors exist in all colonial structures is ignored. The settlers of Rhodesia not only violently occupied land used by Africans, they also exploited African labor by continuing to deny them access to resources except through wage labor or zero-wage labor, slavery. Whether exploitation or expropriation is used is actually an evolution in the relations between Indigene and the Occupation. Under English colonization, the Pequot people were first exploited for their productive capacities, then removed from their lands where a significant portion of them were sold into slavery to be exploited away from their land-relations. Smashing the Pequot came about because they stood in the way of settler control over regional trade, a condition that *developed* from relations where Pequot and English traded in mutually beneficial relations. >The United States was formed on a settler-colonial basis. What is a more disputed question, however, is whether settler-colonialism still exists. It should be clear that setter-colonialism still exists in this country, exemplified by Indigenous communities’ constant and ongoing struggle against it and for their rights and sovereignty. Indigenous communities have to fight for recognition of their treaties, defend from environmental degradation by illegal pipelines, medical and police malpractice and racism, theft of community resources with legal rights totally disregarded. Indeed these are many ways Settler-Colonialism still exists, but these are each individual events and the article has not yet described the *structure*. Even within the definition of simply *removal*, the continued state of *removed* perpetuates the colonization. Indigenous people face hardships like disrespected treaties and police violence *because* they are continuously removed from their land-relations. They venture into *bordertowns* because they are deprived of sustenance. They are *exploited* if not *destroyed* because they were *expropriated*. >The trail of tears and the near extinction of the buffalo serve as examples of historical atrocities committed by settler-colonialism, though it should be stressed that settler-colonialism *is not an “event” but actually a structure of oppression.* ***Individual white settlers were incentivized to settle land based on price, entrepreneurship, and the competition with other sources of labor such as the influx of immigrants and slaves.*** We’re seeing the atrocities of settler-colonialism right now in Israel, with the settlements in the West Bank, the genocide in Gaza, the 76 years of occupation, and the constant violation of Palestinian rights within Israel itself as well as apartheid. Settlers without a direct connection to the state will steal homes, block aid trucks going into Gaza, or produce fabricated stories and videos for news and social media to justify the atrocities. If this represents contemporary settler-colonialism in Israel, how then does it appear in the U.S.? The article attempts to address the *structure*, and here acknowledges that settlers are incentivized (by labor conditions internal to the occupation) to settle new lands. Sure, but this is not a full picture. In locations where the settlements are already established, where land has been deprived from Indigenous people and settled, why then, would the standing army of the United States be [vanguarding the extermination of buffalo]? (hint, it might have to do with the resistance) Do settler interests fundamentally define the nature and behavior of the US state? Is the settler *civil-society* a component of statehood? Why does the IDF shoot to kill Palestinians who dare to fight back against the Israeli squatters? Why do these squatters burn fig orchards and pour concrete into wells? These settling interests must be intertwined with statehood on a deep level. These questions can be answered with another, why is Gaza bombed when these "settlement events" are taking place in distant regions of Palestine? The answer is resistance, Settler-Colonialism is a structure because its basis is perpetually questioned by resistance. If we look to the definition by Wolfe: >In short, elimination refers to more than the summary liquidation of Indigenous people, though it includes that. In its positive aspect, the logic of elimination marks a return whereby the native repressed continues to structure settler-colonial society. It is both as complex social formation and as continuity through time that I term settler colonization a structure rather than an event, and it is on this basis that I shall consider its relationship to genocide. The IDF defends people filling wells in arid regions (that they themselves could be using!) because Palestinians resist and pose a threat to *any settler*. The US military sponsored ecocide, and maintains a heavily armed population because Indigenous resistance remains, there is *something* to competing in land-relations to the US, perpetually altering the structure of US society. The article continues: >It must be stressed that settler-colonialism laid the basis for the further development of capitalism as a mode of primitive accumulation, and settler-colonialism only came into existence due to the development of capitalism and the pursuit of profit. Capitalism drove the process of settler-colonialism. However, as Lenin noted, American capitalism developed at a rate never seen before and ultimately, ***as settler-colonialism “closed the frontier” and Indigenous people were driven onto reservations and more of their land became occupied, settler-colonialism as a system began to shrink.(1)*** ***The amount of land-relations to be destroyed and exploited became increasingly small.(2)*** ***As monopoly capitalism developed within the U.S., settler-colonialism evolved within the context of this development. The enforcement of colonial law no longer was done by individual settlers, but by the capitalist class.(3)*** ***It became primarily driven not by the homesteader and the pioneer, the petty landowners of the 18th and 19th centuries, but the big landowners of agricultural and industrial capital.(4)*** ***Especially when putting into consideration the rapid industrialization of the country, the proletarianization of most of the population, and the shrinkage of the petty-bourgeoisie.(5)*** The first part of this segment tries to answer the chicken-egg of Colonialism and Capitalism by putting one before the other, when only in certain situations is that apparent, and broadly, these are co-constitutive processes. Then let's address the next five points: 1. Incorrectly posits that the class of settlers is distinctly those who have *taken* land. Says nothing about their relationship as continued occupiers, and says nothing about their relation to the broader network of property relations that is the Settler-Colonial Capitalist system. These frontier-persons are simply one way in which the Occupation came to control resources. The more common manner towards the "end of the frontier" (an event that was claimed by said entity, not found in reality) was sending the standing army, men such as the so-called "Buffalo Soldiers" or George "Hang Them All" Wright and his Military Division of the Pacific. In fact, nearly all of those who were profiting off of settler expansion were members of the colonial militias and later US standing army. 2. Land-relations here is seemingly referring to Indigenous individuals, by claiming the amount of land-relations and stolen labor had been decreasing. In the sense that there were less land to steal, because more and more land had been stolen, this somewhat makes sense. However, is it reasonable to define the structure of theft by how much left there is to steal, and ignoring the mountain of already stolen things? This is the problem with limiting definitions of Set-Col to land-theft and murder, because in this frame we can only describe individual events of stealing, failing to describe the structure. 3. All settler classes have relations as a *civil-society* to colonial law. Rarely has any capitalist themselves personally been the executor of state law. This point doesn't make sense. All settlers are in different contexts, executing Settler-Colonial law. 4. How did big landowners come into existence? Buying land from small landowners if they did not take it themselves. Accumulation of this property is a relation internal to the Settler Colony. The total wealth of the colony did not change unless resistance was able to remove that property from the settler occupation's grasp. 5. The petty-bourgeoisie has never shrunk. Land-ownership rates are at an all time high in the 2nd half of the 20th century and this first part of the 21st century. In fact, the PB has grown if we are including definitions of Labor Aristocracy (workers who are paid more than the global value of labor). In the 2008 (edit: previously 2010) the 210M landowners and business owners in the US owned more wealth than all publicly traded companies in the world combined. Such fantasies of a "disappearing middle-class" is just one revisionism Settlerism brings to the movement. [Point clarification found at the bottom] >This became evident by big companies taking over the role in exploiting Indigenous lands rather than individual settlers with the permission and helping of the capitalist state. There are many judicial cases concerning oil and land rights that could be looked at. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz writes about this in her book An Indigenous People’s History of the United States. US *civil-society* no longer exists on Indigenous lands, because Capitalism developed? >By the 20th century, settler-colonialism had done its dirty work by almost wiping out the Indigenous population, from a population of over 60 million before Columbus’ voyage in 1492 to 237,196 in 1900. The struggle against settler-colonialism and capitalism became increasingly intertwined, more so than ever before. It's extremely disingenuous to compare the estimated (by Ortiz) total population of the Americas in 1492 to the population of Indigenous people in the US in 1900. The founding of the US in 1776 is closer to us now in time than it was to Columbus's landing. The total native American population in 1900 was some 4-5M people, it is now up to some 45M people. In the US alone it went from some 240k to some 7 million people today. It's estimated that over 100k Indigenous people in the US (claimed territory) died from 1860 to 1900 due to colonial policies such as boarding schools (40k children dead or missing from th start of the schools to today). Settler-Colonialism was not just the theft that causes death, but the continued exclusion that prevents populations from recovering to pre-disaster levels. This continued exclusion raised the white/settler population of the US by hundreds of millions over this period. >This leads into the most controversial question, who constitutes a settler in the United States today? Are all white workers settlers like some believe? We first have to understand what it means to be Indigenous, and what it means to be a settler. As these two social relations are linked to each other through the dynamics of settler-colonialism. Nick Estes, a citizen of the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe, said in Our History is the Future regarding the history of our people: > >>“Next to the maintenance of good relations within the nation, an individual’s second duty was the protection of communal territory. In the east, the vast wild rice patties and seasonal farms that grew corn, beans, and squash demarcated Dakota territory. In the west, Lakota territory extended as far as the buffalo herds that traveled in the fertile Powder River country. For Dakotas, Lakotas, and Nakotas, territory was defined as any place where they cultivated relations with plant and animal life; this often overlaid, and was sometimes in conflict, with other Indigenous nations.” > >With this, we can conclude that Indigeneity is a social relation defined by the persistence of long-standing communal links and Indigenous identities in a specific place. The relationship to a specific homeland or territory is important, but the loss of direct ties to land does not rule out Indigeneity. Rather, the continuity of belonging to a particular mode of life and community is essential. Here is a conflation of the definition of nationhood as organized by the Oceti Sakowin, with a definition of Indigeneity. The quote is almost irrelevant to the conclusion drawn. Where the conclusion fails is the insistence that a "particular mode of life and community is essential" (which works better for *nations*, but not *Indigeneity*). This insistence posits that Indigeneity ends when a particular mode of living ends, say, if every time you go to collect your three-sisters, a settler shoots you. Rather, it's the continued threat of being shot by an occupier (or other forms of exclusion) that makes one's interrelations (nation, community, tribe, lands) *Indigenous*. It also insists that if a Dakota person starts growing Eurasian wheat or African rye, a practice learned from outside their internal national relations, they *cease being Indigenous*. What if the nations starts using *Dutch firearms*, or start to *grind their corn with water-mills?* Such definitions posit that Indigenous nations are only Indigenous if they are frozen in time, which is convenient towards events-thinking rather than systems-thinking. A structural relationship, like that between an oppressed people and an oppressor people, where both are subject to internal and external relational evolution, escapes the definitions pushed by the article. >A settler is a one who is outside these land-relations, and plays an active role in negating them. ***This does not mean that one has to personally enforce colonial laws, rather it means that they directly benefit from the participation in the destruction of these land relations.*** There are many factors to being a settler. ***An important factor of being a settler, though this is not the sole characteristic, is being a socio-political citizen of a settler-colonial society.*** This means that “in law and in social practice, one has the full rights of belonging to the settler-colonial nation, and is recognized as such in ideology.” Nowhere did the article define what a settler-colonial society is, we have to assume from what came before that they mean the interrelations internal to the occupation. They are defining a *nation* of settlers. So then, how does one fall *outside* of this *nation*, by not benefitting *directly*, apparently. However, the food one eats, the place one sleeps, all of this property was accumulated by the settler occupation, how are these not direct relationships to the total relationship between settler-colonial society and Indigenous societies? One must think Proletarians as a class did not benefit from the expropriations of peasant-lord relations, even if they were once peasants themselves. Directness is never defined. >The question arises: what does it mean to be a socio-political citizen in the US? What does that entail and what defines it? If we go based solely on race lines, arguing that being white is what makes one a socio-political citizen and therefore all white people are settlers, then we have to ask: what about the Black bourgeoisie? ***We could go based solely on class lines to define this, but that also carries contradictions.*** What about those who objectively enforce colonial laws but aren’t bourgeois? Like the police or the army? All these factors have varying weights, but none are the sole nor main characteristic of being a settler as they’re all important and interact with each other. Contradictions make the system *living*. There are classes of Indigenous and "arrivant" populations that can *benefit* from the motions of settler-colonial development. These are contradictions we well understand when we are talking about "regular" Colonialism and Neo-Colonialism, yet for some reason we have to revise such notions when speaking of Settler-Colonialism. The development of one's *class* can contradict the development of their *nation*. Though it is not wise to limit such notions to "race", which is a product of national antagonisms and not the source. Former slaves working to subjugate other Indigenous peoples including their own kin is one of many really existing contradictions that give Settler-Colonialism and Capitalism life. >Being a settler depends on actively exploiting a dominant population in active use of the land, expropriating their agriculture, and laboring them upon their soil. ***Even with the force of its armies, the capitalist class could not have completed the task of violence on its own since there was simply too much to be done.*** In that sense, being a settler played a unique role. As we witnessed later in Klan deputies and today’s armed West Bank settlers, it was an early manifestation of a fascist paramilitary that was de facto supported by the state. It has evolved in the current context of the development of monopoly capitalism in the US. The existence of an army, and of settlers (a form of army), is a definite sign that the Capitalist class cannot meet all ends by their own means. Class collaboration is always necessary for *Imperialism*, whether a joint venture from the start or by engaging in relations with expropriated property afterwards. At that point the Imperialism is *validated*. Any class of settler is capable of starting an Imperial venture (and they have), but all classes need to validate it eventually (there is room for struggle here). The average settler-worker does not put much effort into upholding settlerism, because their interests as a class are efficiently organized in the settler-state. >The capitalist class are very much settlers, as they directly profit from the destruction of Indigenous land relations and the violation of their sovereignty and drive settler-colonialism in the US. Those who are part of arms of the state, such as the army or police, are settlers as they are involved and work within a system which personally enforces colonial laws, and soldiers and officers harass tribal members daily and incarceration rates for Native American people are 4 times higher than the rate of white people. Native Women are particularly targeted. We also see those workers who work under companies who exploit Indigenous lands and engage directly in the destruction of these land-relations as settlers, as these workers directly benefit from it and participate in the destruction of these land-relations. ***We should also include those who gain residencies or employment at the expense of Indigenous land-relations, as well as those in bordertowns and engaged in bordertown violence. Bordertowns, as defined by The Red Nation in their book The Red Deal, are:*** > >>“…settlement[s] sitting outside of a Native reservation. Some examples include Gallup, New Mexico, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Winslow, Arizona, and Rapid City, South Dakota. Bordertowns emerged from the dispossession, relocation and ethnic cleansing of Indigenous people. The function of a bordertown is to exploit the identity, labor, and death of Indigenous people.” Most of this segment of the article is correct, however, reduced. For fear of contradiction (that give life), they'd like to argue that Indigenous people with government jobs are settlers. They are however, not settlers, even though they are in class relations antagonistic to decolonization and ultimately to the liberation of their *nations*. This contradiction exists because of the under-development of their nations due to Settler-Colonialism. The US government onboarding more and more Indigenous people is also a contradiction for itself, as writers like *Red Nation* have access to means of production to facilitate revolutionary study and spread it amongst the population. So too, did Fanon have the bourgeois education and employment, partially colonizing his own continent, but contradictorily gaining skills that eventually helped his people overthrow their colonizers. The last segment, defining *Bordertowns*, misses an extended manifesto by *Red Nation* that defines: > All land is Native, and all settler towns and cities are bordertowns. ***There is no "rural" or "urban," no "rez" or "city"; there is only the border­town. The border exists everywhere settler order confronts Native order.*** Everything in a settler world is a border. ***Our persistent survival is the primary contradiction and the unresolvable crisis of settler colonialism. Settlers enforce the logic of bordertowns to overcome this contradiction. This is their primary job and the essence of their existence as settlers.*** They are born vigilantes in the making, taught to fear Native people and to see Native society as a threat. ***These are the conditions that give life to the vio­lence of settler society.*** ***The Indian must be eliminated for no other reason than that we represent an alternative political order, one that precedes settler society and that holds within it the destruction of settler reality.*** All settlements within US claims are *Bordertowns*. All USians who are not Indigenous are *settlers*. Other Colonialisms, such as slavery and apartheid, are sometimes sources for a third, "Arrivant", population in the dynamic, but what is actually going on is the vacillation of this segment of classes between decolonization and colonization. This contradiction surfaces in reality such as when the Buffalo Soldiers, former slaves, were fighting Indigenous peoples on behalf of the Texan regime in the Texan "frontier", which was simultaneously practicing settler colonialism against Freed communities in East Texas. >***Most white workers do not see the benefits of settler-colonialism because it is no longer dominant or ubiquitous as it once was. Land relations have continuously been destroyed, confined to the land within reservations.*** ***Due to the dominance of capitalism, and the finiteness of these land relations in modern day, most white workers do not see the direct benefits of settler-colonialism and neither do they participate in the destruction of these relations.(1)*** ***White workers, of course, do benefit from the ideological superstructure of white supremacy which has maintained itself in a systemic form, defined by the dominance of capitalism*** ***However, while white supremacy is a tool used to oppress Native Americans, it is different from settler-colonialism, though both are connected.(2)*** ***Ultimately the working class has a material interest in ending capitalism and any system of oppression as it divides the working class and makes their collective power weaker.(3)*** A 3-point response: 1. Land-relations are not confined to reservations whatsoever. If that were the case, the Bolt-Decision would not even exist. As well, continued land-relations exist for all Indigenous communities, threat from the settler-society for performing such relations is ongoing. The NoDAPL protest would not have occurred because it does not cross existing reservation lines. Yet, the Oceti Sakowin rallied by the thousands to protect the water. This is a very confused point, which again relies on events-thinking to comprehend. White workers (in fact, all USians) in this one example, would continue to benefit by having more control over the global value of the dollar with access to fuel provided by DAPL. This is again contradictory for even the Lakota people on the Standing Rock Reservation. This leads to the broader contradiction, that US Imperialism relies on the continued subjugation of Indigenous national interests to provide high wages and excessive consumption to the vast majority of US workers. But again, using the corrected definitions, the idea that Indigenous land-relations are marginal and "vanishing" ignores facts like the US nuclear capable submarine base lying directly in a former Pequot village (whose refugees are in a nearby reservation). Also, notice that Gaza's fighters are predominantly refugees, which "descendent" is one of the ways Palestinian refugees are defined by the UN. 2. White-supremacy is an ideology, developed in to handle two simultaneous colonialisms, chattel-slavery and Settlerism, referring to Red Nation's work again: >The language of disparities depicts the logic of elimination at the heart of settler colonialism as a kind of historical or political accident or aberration that should be confronted not through decolonization strug­gles over land but, rather, through political reforms to existing systems and institutions. ***The "white supremacy as aberration" logic seeks to blunt Native resistance to the settler state. Liberalism, in other words, is offered as the solution to white supremacy.*** Among the solutions liberalism offers are assimilation and state recognition, which is to say that the solution to white supremacy is found in the expansion of the settler state, which is based on and can't exist beyond white supremacy. ***White supremacy, however, is better understood as an organiz­ing logic of settler and slave society-a logic that gives meaning and momentum to settler colonial violence.*** > >***White supremacy is not an aberration of the liberal capitalist state; it is its mirror image.*** After all, settler colonialism destroys to replace. The "disparities" that appear to describe white supremacy are not aberrations at all but, rather, reflect settler colonialism's unfinished and ongoing goal of the total dissolu­tion of Native society. The "solutions" the liberal capitalist state offers to white supremacy are the smallpox-infected blankets of ongoing settler colonialism. 3. Sure, but this is also reductive, because it ignores contradictions! The same questions as to why the German working class ended up on the side of Nazism is the same question why Israelis and Americans have yet to throw away their states and Bourgeois classes. What is missing from this, is a study of these contradictions and a strategy to parse friend from foe, change the conditions, and then again pick friend from foe! Missing from most of CPUSAs work on the subject is the realm of strategy. Questions such as how do we fracture the elements of the working class upholding Imperialism from the elements of the class seeking to destroy it? Some workers right now are enemies, but we can remove the conditions that reproduce enemies amongst that class through struggle. Trying to pick the biggest majority of allies is the stench of Trotskyism clouding the movement's vision. CPUSA tells us we are dividing the movement, but they have never gathered more than a few thousands "revolutionaries" at any given time, never bigger than what showed up to NoDAPL. Contradictions within the movement is what makes it weak. We must struggle through the most coherent relationships to change the base of society, to create more allies. >If white workers aren’t settlers, what are they? Some analysts of settler-colonialism use a third term, arrivants. Coined by Kamau Brathwaite and elaborated on by Jodi Byrd, the term is used to “signify those people forced into the Americas through the violence of European and Anglo-American colonialism and imperialism around the globe.” This is still, however, unsatisfactory because it still produces a non-answer when non-Native folks of white descent don’t actively exploit Native lands or play an active role in the negation of Indigenous land-relations as part of their social relation. > >All social relations, as Marx outlines in the German Ideology, depend upon one’s relations to the means of production. White people are only exposed to the ideology in the predominate quality and quantity determined by the material conditions to which they are subjected. Therefore, an individual’s “choice” regarding how they relate to the means of production is determined by their level of consciousness. This decision is a privilege. Regardless, this only indicates that, at best, their privileged opportunities expose them to a higher degree of bourgeois class entry (more often than not, this embodies them into the petty bourgeois in an attempt to attain that higher level). This still remains the basic concept of false consciousness that Engels categorized, even if there is a crumb of truth in factors of luck. Already addressed above, white workers are settlers (they also aren't the only settlers that are also workers), *Arrivants* are a vacillating set of classes dependent on the motions of the Indigenous-Settler relation. We are only confused here because we are afraid to have contradictions within our (attempted) Marxist definitions. The continued deprivation of the Indigenous land-relation is a definite part of the settler and arrivant state of being. Attempting to offload Settlerism onto property ownership fails to acknowledge that one's whole nation can rise on the backs of others, i.e. Imperialism and Labor Aristocracy, or even simply settler-workers. >There were settlers who oftentimes were promised their own land and homes in order to escape being poor. That’s what the ideological basis of settlerism was alongside the invention of racism, it has simply changed form today. Today, in an attempt to escape “the rat race,” white people can struggle with their other oppressed workers or adopt a false white supremacist consciousness, but they will always be workers until their class relations change. Settlerism is not an ideology, and ideologies that advance Settlerism were developed after settlement was underway. Settlerism is a form of Imperialism. >We can tweak the definition of arrivant to be something more broad to fit this analysis, such as those who are part of social structures which dissolve those land-relations, but lack the citizenship and agency of settlers, or we can coin a new term to define those who do not fit into any of the existing three categories such as descendant. A descendant is one who is a descendant of any of the other three categories, whether that be indigenous, settler, or arrivant, but do not fit into either of these three categories. This new term would take the definition of the former suggestion. That being, those who are part of social structures which dissolve those land-relations, but lack the citizenship and agency of settlers. However, this is not conclusive. Re: Palestinian refugees example. The rest of the article: >Therefore, I call on the party to continue discussing this issue to develop these theories through the process of democratic centralism, and applying theory to practice. I also call on the party to focus its sights on the development of an Indigenous Commission which would work on developing theories relating to settler-colonialism and indigenous liberation, as well as focusing on the work of indigenous struggles. > >We should recognize that these categories are not static. They can change and have done so. For example, there are historic examples of arrivants becoming settlers due to their participation in the destruction of indigenous land-relations. Like the Black buffalo soldiers who fought on the side of Manifest Destiny. >All of this ultimately leads us to the conclusion that to end settler-colonialism in the United States, realize self-determination for the Indigenous nations, and decolonize the U.S., capitalism itself must also be ended. Socialism cannot be realized without decolonization, without addressing the settler-colonial question. We must tear down the prison house of Indigenous nations. Landback and the restoration of Indigenous sovereignty is only the start of it, rather than the end. It is a part of the minimum program. As Joe Sims said in his Main Report to the 32nd National Convention: > >“And we know that a huge debt still has to be repaid to the victims of the genocide and slavery. And that repayment must include upholding Native peoples’ demand for Land Back, restoration of sovereignty and compensation for its violations, upholding treaty rights, harm reduction, and shared responsibility. I mean at a minimum. And that’s a beginning, not the end.” The one thing of importance to pick out here is the question of Buffalo Soldiers becoming settlers. I agree, that a segment of the Freed-Black (New Afrikan) nation joined in on Settler-Colonialism. The New Afrikan nation should have, and should, consider the Buffalo Soldiers internal enemies, subject to eradication. Ideologies that celebrate them should be rooted out and destroyed. Such is the power of nationhood, regulated kinship, and the internal struggle amongst classes in an oppressed nation. Same goes for the "Black Bourgeoisie" or any other classes we discover through practice, are too unreliable to be helpful. That being said, the "Black Bourgeoisie" can be brought closer or pushed away from New Afrikan Liberation in different contexts, we should at all times move like water and use the strongest contradictions to turn any situation in favor of Communist revolution. Clarification on the wealth calculation: the 2008 stat does not represent the lower 80% of USians, it was total real estate wealth (which the majority is owned by the bottom 80%). Total wealth owned by the bottom 80% in 2022 was over 50T dollars, with the setback of 10T (in 2008 dollars) from the financial crash. The market cap of the US in 2022 was estimated at 40T, so "regular USians" owned more wealth than the corporations. The total world market cap was 94T in 2022. These stats show that "regular USians" are significant wealth holders on the global stage, even with financial crises. This is also running with the idea that "regular USians" don't exist in the top 20% of incomes, since in 2022, you'd just need $150k household income to reach it, and 9% of households exist between 150k and 200k. The 99% (which predominantly still excludes capitalists, who are usually less than the 1%), easily dwarfs global corporate wealth holding around 110T dollars.

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    asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Is the Medicine Wheel symbol a misappropriation of the Indigenous traditions in Turtle Island?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 1 month ago 100%

    Yes

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Is the Medicine Wheel symbol a misappropriation of the Indigenous traditions in Turtle Island?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 1 month ago 100%

    It's a general statement about mass line practice but I mentioned it because the link post brought up AIMs flags.

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Is the Medicine Wheel symbol a misappropriation of the Indigenous traditions in Turtle Island?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 1 month ago 100%

    Look for the Indigenous peoples who or once were living in your immediate realm. Find their names, then search for their website.

    In my profile there's a mega link to the Chunka Luta Library, you can peruse that for texts but the required section should pass enough information to get an idea of the movement's past.

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Is the Medicine Wheel symbol a misappropriation of the Indigenous traditions in Turtle Island?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 1 month ago 100%

    Turtle Island is also a regional cultural concept alongside the Medicine Wheel, though Turtle Island is from a myth and the MW is a religious practice, and while generally respected, does not have meaning for most of the Indigenous peoples of TI. It's not very representative of a continental movement unless multiple cultural elements from many peoples are being represented (consensually).

    Perhaps when revolution comes and we give the Indigenous people and Blacks self-determination, maybe they would prefer to be represented as several separate nations/states.

    Nobody will be "giving" us anything, you just won't be able to tell us what to do anymore.

    Do the native peoples want to strive for Pan-Indianism? And if so, what does Pan-Indianism mean to the native peoples and what do they want (and/or not want) from being unified?

    Unity is a tool, a means to an end. It is not an end in itself. This question is too abstract to provide meaningful discussion unless you are attempting solve a specific issue, like defending a resource from exploitation or extirpation.

    Something like pan-Africanism can be spoken about more broadly because African states are mostly run by Africans themselves, unity would be a specific tool to prevent continued exploitation of the continent as a whole.

    So I guess the question is why are we trying to build an identity around a unity practice that does not exist? Detached from practice it comes off incoherent, at best. AIMs symbolism is also subject to criticism from the masses AIM operated in, and its successors seek to operate in. Inform yourself with the masses, test, criticize, change, cycle.

    I think that sub would do better focusing on the history of existing flags or editing flags of existing movements given their conditions.

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Why is it that Marx implies American settlers had proletarian backgrounds in Ch.33 of Capital, but Sakai asserts they were far from it?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 1 month ago 100%

    First, what does proletarian even mean when capitalism is still in the takeoff stage?

    You're right that workers in the domestic system at that time, the pre-cursor to the proletariat, would not have the means to settle the colonies unless a corporate sponsor really needed their specialties.

    Second, who is boarding a packed, disease-ridden sailing ship for a perilous months-long journey besides those with few other options?

    All ships were disease ridden then, they are still disease ridden today, look at cruise ship statistics. The deadliest route to California from the US was a boat to Panama, taking the train across the isthmus, then a boat to San Francisco, an expensive itinerary - because it was the fastest. Highest rates of death occurred in this route due to disease. It was the poor and cheap who took overland wagons (which still cost a lot).

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Why is it that Marx implies American settlers had proletarian backgrounds in Ch.33 of Capital, but Sakai asserts they were far from it?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 1 month ago 100%

    Some light class analysis of settlement eras.

    Pre and Early US Period (1620s - 1780): Averaging a 1000-10,000 settlers per year, mostly "Adventurers" (literally venture capitalists who sponsored colonies, merchant and/or soldier background), share-owners - people like the "Pilgrims" who signed onto a company of Adventurers' plan to work the land and share profits with the company, the indentured servants of the above classes, contracted workers (mostly sailors or those hired onto the company for x many years), and a small amount of slaves (slavery picked up heavily in later years). Servants were outnumbered by the above classes, they did a lot of the heavy labor in the early years, but generally were wealthier and more privileged the more the colonies developed. Predominantly servants were obligated to shares of their master's stake in the colony after completion of their contract, they are somewhat of an indirect "partner" in the colony itself. The colony would trade for goods with natives and traveling fishing ships and send the proceeds back to the companies/pay dividends to investors. The Cromwell Revolution and Colonization of Ireland would bring military veterans, later sons of the upper peasant and lower noble classes, to the colonies and they would be purchasing land from the share-owners. "Modern real-estate" is actually Anglo-America's first big industry. Most of these people were English, Scot, Dutch, or perhaps protestant Irish upper class, religion was a big factor at this time. In the 1700s a lot of the settlers were actually already settlers in the Caribbean, like Alexander Hamilton. These people were leaving the Caribbean colonies because there were many slave revolts and the European population down there was outnumbered by African and native slaves 5-10x.

    "Antebellum" US (1780-1864): 10k-300k yearly ramping up over time. Just under half were from Ireland, mostly peasants (and some Scot/Anglo settlers) whose crops were blighted. The rest were largely from Germany, northern Europe, and Britain, again likely Bourgeois or wealthier peasants as many Germans had the wealth to immediately join the "frontiers" while most Irish were stuck in the port cities. This would be the time Marx was contemporary to. Workers in England were privileged from the wealth pouring in from the slave colonies, India, and Ireland, but Marx was still able to get many of them to fight their own direct interests by refusing to help the Confederacy (the slave colonies).

    Pre Civil Rights US (1865-1965): Peak settlement occurred in the 1880s-1920s. It was at first uniformly from north and western Europe, during the peak they were mostly from southern and eastern Europe. Settlers hailing from the north and west were still of usually upper-class extraction, a continuation of the trend above, where many are immediately settling the "frontier" in so-called "Indian Territories". Many of the southern and eastern settlers would have been expropriated peasants, or peasants who suffered from crop failure (a condition the USSR would finally solve). At this time though, many of these "immigrants" were not actually intending to settle, they were teen boys and young men who would work in the US for some years and send money back and usually later returned (we are talking more than half returned). So much of the workforce in the port cities was once again "indenture"-ish workers, this time as migrants, which would expand after 1965 when "immigration" came heavily from Asia and Latin America. Some plant a foothold with property or citizenship. There are still millions of these workers in the US from the high-earning H1-Bs to the low-earning produce workers. Even most US states are stocked by "internal" migrant workers from other states who are often paid to relocate.

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  • worldnews World News Is a high-profile critic of the Chinese Communist Party a con man? (spoiler: yes)
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    Literally US state media

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  • coolamericafacts Cool America Facts Investigation finds at least 973 Native American children died in US government boarding schools | CNN
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    That is an official undercount, as it is only having checked 65 of the 400 schools in existence.

    An academic estimates based on population losses and speaking to the families who have lost children, that over 40,000 perished in the system.

    This is also only graves found, as many children were lost in transit or got lost fleeing the schools. Here's David Swallow Jr. (Oglala Lakota) explaining his experience with the schools and running away. He was fortunate enough to know how to get home.

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  • shitreactionariessay Shit Reactionaries Say It's kinda funny how many Americans seem to be offended by the Olympic Shooting event
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    their stances are so swagged out

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Is China outsourcing labour to poorer countries?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    I don't have the book on hand but Jonathan Ross has calculations in the book China's Great Road that show China's labor terms of trade (how much labor-time does China give to trading partners vs how much does it receive, a ratio of 1 would mean equitable trade).

    China from the 50s to the early 2000s had terms of trade <1 (net exporting labor) with nearly all countries, as China started as the poorest on earth per capita. China was giving other global south countries more labor than it consumed from them.

    Starting in the 2000s China was taking in more labor from some countries in the GS than it received, but this can be due to the fact that China was able to keep a some of its own dead labor (MoP) due to its socialist economy (and socialist bloc trade), shifting more of its labor toward new domestic production because production in socially important sectors became less labor intense with automation. China is still net exploited by the Imperialist bloc.

    However, China is not comfortable with this relationship, which is why it has been exporting capital to the poorest countries to free labor-time in the GS in sectors like Cobalt and Lithium that are extremely labor intense unless an Imperialist corp has coerced state, or has been allowed private, security over investments, i.e. only western owned mines are allowed heavy machinery. China is rather selling the machinery to the country instead of purchasing the rights to consume the resources directly as the West does. Some will think "but capital exports (in this case machinery, loans) are Imperialist", but you'll actually see even in Lenin's time that Imperialist states invested predominantly in trade partners bound by military pacts, the US exports mostly to other Imperialists bound through NATO, OCED, and defense pacts in TW, ROK, Japan, or if it's in the GS they ensure they are able to exercise sovereignty over purchased land from them.

    This is not without contradictions. China's investments in the GS are often benefiting the existing anti-worker, anti-Indigenous, classes' interests. Such is the case in Latin America and many African states such as Congo. Again though, often the 3W state has to relocate people (not a pretty process, and is class warfare) to expropriate land because it is easier to take from their own citizens than from the Imperialist countries who bought or stole existing mines/factories/farms due to Colonialism.

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  • thoughts_on Thoughts on ...? Thoughts on why "leftists" get so angry/defensive when you criticize the Democratic Party?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    the dems represent their interests well enough

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  • shitreactionariessay Shit Reactionaries Say PatSocs just founded their own party
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    More like American Cracker Party

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  • worldnews World News How Ukrainian scouting culture thrives in the woods of western New York state
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    Bandera was in Plast, then he later recruited from it in forming the OUN-B. The Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church funded Plast, and also the SS Galicia Division having string ties with the OUN-B. Plast in the Diaspora remains connected the the UGCC and former SS members set up the scouts over in the US, CA, and AUS. Here they taught revisionist history and celebrated Bandera and whitewashing their actions. After the union fell, Plast veterans went back to Ukraine and took over main industries and state positions. After the coup in 2014 the state made Plast almost mandatory as an assimilation tool.

    Proud past

    The Ukrainian scouting movement known as Plast was formed in 1911 in Lviv. Throughout more than 100 years of its activity, Plast has endured various challenges: from world wars, when Plast scouts showed their endurance under extreme circumstances, to a period of underground activity when Plast was outlawed by the Polish state in 1930.

    When the Soviet Union took control of Ukraine it banned the organization, but the Ukrainian diaspora revived Plast after World War II in different parts of the world: Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, Argentina and others.

    Plast was to eventually renew its activity in Ukraine in 1989. This year marks the 30th anniversary of the restored movement in their homeland. Today Plast has 10,000 members in Ukraine and thousands in nearly 20 countries – which makes it the largest Ukrainian youth movement in the world.

    Among the famous Plast members were not only such historical figures as Stepan Bandera or Roman Shukhevych, recognized as heroes of the anti-Soviet nationalist uprising in Ukraine, but also economist and benefactor Bohdan Hawrylyshyn, former major archbishop of the Ukrainian Catholic Church Lubomyr Husar, and Canadian Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland.

    ...

    Active position

    Although Plast calls itself “non-political,” it has also never shied away from supporting Ukraine’s fight for independence or helping in its struggle to counter the Kremlin’s attempts to undermine Ukrainian sovereignty. Many Plast members took leading roles in the protests that became the 2014 EuroMaidan Revolution, and when ex-President Viktor Yanukovych’s special police forces shot and killed more than 100 protestors, Plast members were among the dead and wounded.

    They also were among those joining the armed volunteer battalions in spring 2014 that fought against Russian-backed separatists. But for the diaspora, Plast often serves as a bridge between modern life and Ukrainian tradition and between their countries and Ukraine.

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  • memes Memes Move over Putin
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    Once again I have a Chunka Luta book recommendation: Indigenous Paleolithic by Paulette Steeves

    Archeology as a discipline in the West functions as a Colonial tool to deny the history of Indigenous peoples. The biggest example is the "Clovis First Theory" (debunked) that posits all Indigenous peoples of the Americas descend from migrations across the Bering Strait during the last glacial maxim. Archeologists who made their careers on this study have bullied and physically harmed opponents to their hypothesis. US settlers over and over have destroyed archeological sites intentionally (and many unintentional as well) and this has been used to deny how long people have been living in the western continents. (Another example is the "genetic testing" and other racism that posits European settlers are "more indigenous" than Arabic-speaking Palestinians).

    This is once again, a projection onto China what the Whites have been doing all over the world.

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  • us_news US News Nearly *half* of Amazon's warehouse workers are injured during Prime Day.
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    Relevant snippet from Palo Alto:

    Safiyo Mohamed immigrated from Somalia only three months before she started as a stower at an Amazon warehouse in Minnesota. After three days of training (only in English), she began emptying incoming boxes from the conveyor belt into boxes from which the pickers picked. The system had a strict quota: 2,600 items sorted for every 10-hour shift, or a consistent average of less than 14 seconds per object. To fit in any kind of break you had to go faster, so as a beginner, Safiyo tried to avoid taking any breaks. Still, after her first week, her manager told her she was too slow and made more mistakes than the acceptable number: one per shift, an inhuman error rate of .04 percent. What help she got concerning strategies for improvement came from the other Somali workers who filled the warehouse. (As in the Hoover-era gold mines, white English-speaking managers boss groups of nonwhite workers, whose ethnic composition depends on the location; in Minnesota’s Twin Cities, a high proportion of them are East African immigrants.) “After my shift, I couldn’t even cook for myself. I barely had the energy to take a shower and often went to bed with an empty stomach,” Mohamed recalled in an essay about her experience for Sahan Journal. “I had nightmares about getting fired, disrupting the little sleep I was getting. They treated me and every other warehouse worker like a machine, not a human.” Feeling like she had no other way to support her family, Safiyo lasted longer than most, 30 months. In Amazon’s numbers, she turns up as an unqualified success. That’s how it’s supposed to work; that’s how Amazon came to dominate retail and how Jeff Bezos became the world’s richest man.

    A detailed 2020 investigation found that Amazon’s warehouse workers have a serious-injury rate nearly twice the warehouse industry average. And the more robotized the distribution center, the higher the injury rate. “If you’ve got robots that are moving product faster and workers have to then lift or move those products faster, there’ll be increased injuries,” an Occupational Safety and Health Administration inspecting physician with experience in the company’s facilities told reporters. Racing to catch up with machines rigged to run hot hurts people. Efficiency causes injuries, which is another way of saying that, for Amazon, injuries are efficient. Amazon’s delivery must be very efficient, because drivers get injured even more—a lot more. And unlike warehouse workers, Amazon delivery drivers don’t technically work for Amazon, even if they’re wearing Amazon uniforms delivering Amazon packages in their Amazon vans following Amazon’s directions to Amazon customers.

    For most of its existence, Amazon got its packages to customers’ doors just as everyone else does, contracting with the U.S. Postal Service or the big private shippers UPS and DHL for the dreaded “last mile” delivery. But as part of Operation Dragon Boat, the company planned to bring shipping inside the Amazon tent, or at least next to it. Driving trucks around is dangerous—for drivers, for the other people on the road, and for the legally liable employers. Trucks kill people, especially when you drive fast. Amazon drivers, unsurprisingly, have to drive fast if they want to keep their jobs, and their trucks do kill people. But when it comes time to hold someone responsible, Amazon is nowhere to be found. Patricia Callahan’s 2019 investigation for ProPublica and the New York Times couldn’t establish exactly how many deaths Amazon drivers were responsible for because they are all contractors, hired through the Delivery Service Partner program.

    Amazon has absurd injury rates while they get a lot of great press for their "automation", but what such "automation" is actually doing is setting a dangerous pace for the human bodies. With such high turnover and higher than local average wages, Amazon is able to pace workers at inhuman speeds, to their body's breaking point, because each individual worker is an expiring commodity to them.

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Comparing Party for Socialism & Liberation (PSL) and Freedom Road Socialist Organization (FRSO)
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    PSL is a departure of WWP which itself split from a formal Trotskyist sect. They don't drop Trotskyism in essence just that they are more open to advances made by Stalin.

    Trotskyist tendencies remain in PSL with a focus on majoritarianism, treating the "industrial proletariat" as the revolutionary vehicle in the Imperialist states, and placing "workers revolution" above national liberation movements.

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  • ecomaoism EcoMaoism: Animal Liberationist, Environmental Mao Zedong Thought Why Should We Care About Trump's Failed Assassination?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    Alt-right is dead (in the US) and they were just (petty) Bourgeois intelligentsia coat tailing Trump's settler populism. The most successful pivot from those politics are the christo-fash "groypers". In the end Alt-righters were just Liberal elites opportunistically trying gain leverage against their own class competition with Trump's populism but are dorky snobs who clearly despise Trump's poorer voters.

    I agree that both the settler-populist and Christo-Fash groups are going to be further agitated.

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  • us_news US News Shots fired at Donald Trump rally in Pennsylvania as former president is seen with blood across his face
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    puts on conspiracy hat: inb4 shooter is Uke agent

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  • comradeship Comradeship // Freechat Since when did the enshittification of the Western left start to happen and why?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    You're already underselling the level of crosstalk between US white labor unions and the KKK. The St Louis "Soviet" formed a lynch mob during WW1.

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  • latestageusempire Late Stage Anglo-American Empire Why Is College So Expensive?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    Yeah colleges were heavily subsidized and California had one of the largest public systems in the country. That system also gave Bobby Seale and Huey Newton an education so it's not a coincidence that 1969 was when college prices started to spiral.

    The colleges themselves are racketeers, I recommend Palo Alto by Malcolm Harris who writes about the creation of Stanford U and its subsequent role in Colonialism and Anti-Communism. Stanford's campus land houses all of the big weapon makers and it produced Herbert Hoover, the man responsible for mining gold during Australia's genocide, modernizing the March on Africa, and the modern semi-state food cartels and housing policy.

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  • latestageusempire Late Stage Anglo-American Empire Why Is College So Expensive?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    The supply and demand angle is only half-right. There's an intent to raise the costs to control the amount of people entering college as wages rise, it's supposed to be a class barrier. Combined with admissions tests (which literally started as "IQ" tests) having the scores to gain funding opportunities for education is a eugenic test. It's class-eugenicist poll-tests and poll-taxes performed nationally.

    Also much of these schools are funded directly by land thefts in the US: https://www.hcn.org/issues/52-4/indigenous-affairs-education-land-grab-universities/

    The University of Minnesota founders started a war to create the school (and the state): https://www.cam.ac.uk/stories/great-university-land-grab

    This was during the US Civil War. The Dakota uprising was punished by Lincoln with the largest mass execution in US history, of 38 Dakotas, down from the original 200 captured for execution.

    The endowments many of these schools have are predominantly funded from these land cessions. Washington State University's land cessions of PNW nations funded enough to fill its entire endowment with royalties from logging leases. Texas A&M and Arizona are funded by active subterranean oil drilling rights.

    The other reason is because the jobs college degrees provide are getting higher wages and the schools can charge that much and someone will take it, and the banks have the surplus funds from Imperialism and the housing racket.

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Why does the IMF want austerity when giving out loans? Is it part of imperialist destabilization or something?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 2 months ago 100%

    Weaken an economy until it's cheap and easy to purchase labor-power and mining/farming rights

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Why is class conciousness in the USA so low? Why has it not progressed in so many years? Will be in a forever "We are not ready for a revolution due to lack of class conciousness" stage?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 months ago 100%

    If I don't respond directly respond to a point I think they are fair. Inflation eats at the super-profits in wages and eats into the super-profits in greater proportion the smaller the wage. That being said I would put the limit of boojified to be the point where they cross into genuine exploitation (but this does need to be factor in time, segments with long breaks between sources of income would be falling fast into lumpen: unemployed, health/body reasons, discrimination, national oppression). In reality we generally skip over realizing an exploited proletariat due to moving straight from semi-proles to lumpen-proles, this is somewhat problematic for economic organizing and this relationship should be focused on rather than one of the loot share struggle between semi-proles and bourgs (petite and haute). Organizing as anti-inflation attracts strata with interests against national liberation and the bottom 20%, and these cannot be organized as a single mass without convincing the these strata to commit class suicide (challenge level extreme). So far the loot sharing struggle remains as no real exploited prole exists within citizenship standards (outside of some children), so we need to be careful who we are organizing, because just as quickly the balance can swing back towards the boojified workers if they are able to co-opt the energy for their own selfish reforms, (much of the bottom would like it too, pushing us further from agitating towards revolution and prole internat). I want to be clear that my disagreement with your original post is that this strata of people "losing" is growing. I don't think this is the case, "racial" and gender wealth gaps are increasing which points to privileges growing for white-men. Gender oppressed whites could be on the decline as it seems white-men are desperate to maintain monopoly on income streams "for the sake of the white nation". That's certainly a contradiction worth digging at to lop off the white gender-oppressor strata.

    White collar work rises over time in every country country as development occurs and the societal needs for social labor increase. That’s just a factor of development, it’s not a sign of bourgeoisification.

    Yes but ratios of physical commodities to services do matter globally (the nature of Imperialism). The US workforce is predominantly service facing. If the world was to be equalized, it would be noted that the US has too many of such workers than would be valued by equal exchange. The point is, radical change would happen in the economy if the economy was cut off from physical inputs, including much of the factory work. This would cause internal pressure in the US's near environment, heightening the settler relationship to the extreme. This is already the scenario Magacoms dream of, being able to "re-industrialize" with all all these natural resources "available to us". That being said the US white-collar industry has specific anti-communist goals as well. Growing a Labor Aristocracy encourages "brain drain" from all other states and forces even Communist ones to adopt this model of valuing labor, creating Semi-Proles if not LA classes in their countries. It is a sign of bourgeoisification when these workers are paid significantly higher wages than primary and secondary industries. I only mean to say lower wage office workers are pushed from their role as equal users of the MOP, as in paid the same for even less access to it, like in terms of proximity, when looking at the global context in a fair LTV world (e.g. it's not natural but policy that these workers maintain wages well above global standards). The bulk of office workers are being privileged with increased pay and benefits and this gives them interests that put them at odds with the global proletariat and in the case of Socialist countries with their own proletariat. China has been clamping down on housing speculation and tackling wages for white-collar workers to keep them in check and the current TikTok debacle has Chinese employees potentially benefiting from ByteDance entering the US exchange, likely to be the biggest IPO of all time and the workers own 20% of the company. This leads to the increased stock ownership of unions and unorganized white-collar work in that apparently some 72% of companies offer equity, most give bonuses (which shouldn't be directly compared yoy but happen often as carrot sticks), and some 19% of employees individually own their employer's stock. Now stock grants are simply a sleight of hand keep a share of an employee's wages, but that also means that total compensation is the more accurate number in terms of labor costs and carries with it some stake the employee has in the company. US wide stock ownership dipped in the early 2010s but has since raised back to over 60%. There are not many Capitalists in terms population points, and about 1/5th is considered petty business owners, so much of the stock owners are wage workers who do not own direct productive assets. More households own stocks than ever before. That being said, in general, the top 4/5ths of USian workers are gaining bigger shares of global production (though there might be tugs and pulls in the innards of this mass), the bottom 20% are (slowly) falling behind and here the bulk is oppressed nations. The value of the bottom mass has never been understated though its improvement directly contradicts the global proletariat and indirectly themselves with increased eugenics and increased incarceration.

    The colonial police are being transformed into colonial soldiers by the heightened contradictions, but yeah, they were always meant to keep the peace for settlers.

    But in Algeria the colonial police did, eventually, start torturing and killing white Algerians. Who gets to be a settler changes as conditions worsen for the empire.

    For example, I get to be a settler as long as I stay white passing and am not visibly trans. That goes away if I don’t do my makeup or get literally any Sun etc etc but soon enough that shit isn’t going to protect me because the knives are out for trans folk, and I blame imperial decline. Who gets to be a settler will be winnowed away.

    I would not premise Algeria as a model for WITBD in the Americas. The land relationship in the US is essentially one big "tourist sector" that would be visible in Algiers but gone from the rest of the country. Much of the land in the US is run by settler kulaks, and settler claims for domination of land are much greater in the US. The US settler regime has always harmed the bottom of settlers, it seems this does not matter much to the vast majority self interested mass, besides that they are given much lighter treatment if not loopholes to avoid punishment from civil society. Again I strongly put primary fear of oppressed nation led lumpen revolt in the cities, and Indigenous land protection all over, as the reason why police and settlers are getting more militant (only a continuing trend of the last 70 years of continued Jim Crow).

    That being said I agree that gender oppression is packaged into settler-nationalism through colonially imposed gender domination. Certainly there is a struggle as strata of settlers are more obsessed with the nation (settler-nationalist sexual politics, white anxiety) than others, the recycling of petty bourg settlers during the growth (and decline) of Imperialism I think holds contradictory seeds for gender liberation and increased gender oppression (combined form assimilation). So I think, motion in Imperialism whether up or down fans the flames of the gender struggle. I believe this also reflects in other eugenic regimes of social control ("ability", "race" -- which is obfuscated national character). Having an antagonized position in the gender structure certainly reduces national ties, often to the point where it's easy to sever, this is why it's more important to stress the nat-lib struggles who do not uniformly adopt settler gender norms (certain class-strata may) and are often antagonized by them as policy (ON lumpen "surplus males", state enforced "single-motherhood", forced adoptions, and gender oppression in the carceral system). We should not be scared of calling national and gender antagonisms, class antagonisms, and in that sense in certain contexts they can become primary antagonisms in a decisive moment, superseding other class identities including settler and bourgeois. All of these oppressed classes have interests to agitate and form lines on. The support we get at CLN from settlers is already showing strong correlation to certain gender and sexual demographics, regardless of "economic class" background, and our opponents are more often than not bigots towards them. Just as WITBD with the Feminism movement, Marxists must be able to slice the economic sources of Revisionism and solidify a line that is revolutionary even if that means being less "popular" than bourgeois lines, we don't need a majority.

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Why is class conciousness in the USA so low? Why has it not progressed in so many years? Will be in a forever "We are not ready for a revolution due to lack of class conciousness" stage?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 months ago 50%

    No, but you’ve as much said that you avoid agitating among settlers and are content to ignore them until they spontaneously join the anti-colonial struggle. You literally said " Wake me when they turn on themselves." How else am I to interpret that but you choosing only to react to spontaneous solidarity among settlers?

    None of them are acknowledging the need to give up their settler society, you're telling me to value the statements on Israel that don't mention settler-Colonialism. Settlers are national oppressors as a class. In a context with no Colonialism, we still wouldn't ally with the petty bourgs as a class and center their demands, we have to slice them up and pick friends from foe. We shouldn't care about the demands of an oppressor nation unless they are in line with ours: prisoners, the homeless, and people oppressed for their bodies are people we intend to work for. If you want science on the settler question hit the books sibling, become an expert on colonial history in your immediate realm. Chunka Luta library exists for free.

    No, but you’re saying they’re unproductive, even though they use their labor to produce a service.

    Why does it bother you so much? Does it change that these goods and services are being paid from value stolen overseas? Quit projecting workerism onto my line.

    The so-called War on Terror was a reaction to the decline of the empire and in response the police had to become more violent and more invasive and more lethal and more secretive etc etc in order to control the proles. The police became occupation soldiers to fight “terrorism” and this has been boiling over into more and more massive uprisings against them.

    Maybe you won’t wake up until the streets run red, but I think it’s worth trying to anticipate what comes next.

    The streets are already covered in my peoples' blood, quit playing with me. Read Blood in the Land, Fire this Time. You gotta be kidding me if you think my sense of urgency is lagging when y'all don't notice shit until you think it might be affecting you and your kin. Thinking the police presence is for you is absurd, the conditions for our oppression has already been here. The cops are killing us now, and most of us aren't Communists, square that.

    Btw lets zoom in on that wage chart, looking at median wage (where half of wage workers do better), It has been increasing in the recent decades with an unusual spike in 2020 due to pandemic stimmies. Why hadn't there been revolts of white workers and youth in the 90s like Black and Latino youth? Economically the situation was worse then. Again we are looking for declines in conditions, not stagnation, for some reason "class consciousness" spiked in spite of increased earnings during the pandemic, you posit inflation economistically, I blame eugenics and national oppression. Your chart enthusiastically removes supervisors, who are a fifth of the workforce (remember 20% of white men don't even participate in labor anymore). There's really no way to see a real decline in US workers if the median and average wages are at a 4 decade high (excluding 2020). It doesn't line up with your hypothesis. Inflation did not peak with wages in 2020, it peaked in 2022, after a spike in real earnings for USians.

    More police and settler-vigilante killings year over year since the 70s, police budgets expanding every year. For some reason these things occurred during "bourgeoisification", you never quite explained why that occurred.

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Why is class conciousness in the USA so low? Why has it not progressed in so many years? Will be in a forever "We are not ready for a revolution due to lack of class conciousness" stage?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 months ago 50%

    By failing to recognize the role that settlers always play in anti-colonial struggle, instead leaving them to organize themselves spontaneously and reacting to it as it happens.

    For sure but you seem to think we avoid working with settlers as a rule. It's worth agitating people genuinely interested in understanding reality and changing it, and people pushed to their limits where revolutionary change is the only thing they are satisfied with. What I'm saying is it's historically clear the base of settlers interested in our struggles has not seen significant motion through time (because they were just as reactionary during the height of exploitation against settler workers). That being said most settlers in Algeria fled, the ones that fought for Algeria earned their place. I expect in our conditions not many fleeing, but also not playing nice.

    My contention was you calling socially necessary labor unproductive, when it clearly produces a social commodity. What your proposing reads like a vulgar workerism, almost like Nixonian “hard hat” fetishism, which seeks to devalue socially necessary labor as not being real work and to alienate them from the workers’ struggle.

    Yeah this is no such case. I'm only using it insofar as it has been used in the literature. I'm not saying these workers are privileged above productive workers in the US, usually they are not since unions generally are paid significantly higher wages. If there's actually a group I think tends more reactionary, it's the production line workers in the AFL-CIO who practice Imperial workerism that obfuscates their relationship to their colleagues in Mexico and China. None of this is to dismiss or alienate US workers for their jobs, the system of their job economy is the problem. They must have some workerist thoughts if they think they are shunned from being Communists for their jobs.

    Furthermore, my hypothesis is that debourgeoisification is occurring due to imperial decline, and that’s the source of inflation and the so-called housing “shortage” and the militarization of police and the chipping away of compromises reached by the labor movement when they chose to become collaborators in exchange for concessions etc etc

    So-called shortage yes but remember that the overbuilt and expensive houses are already owned, and if Blackstone bought it, it means someone just profited of their speculation. It means somebody actually "owns" that value, and housing prices have always increased faster than inflation because Imperialists around the world (and 401ks, unions, and CPUSA) buy mortgage packages to park their money in investments outpacing inflation.

    Police militarization has always been increasing since the 60s. I've posted the pic elsewhere in the thread but police and carceral spending increases every year outpacing inflation. This is a pre-existing trend. It looks to be more prevalent due to the firepower readily available to would be fighters in the streets as seen in Dallas during the first round of BLM protests. Though the trend has already been there for the likes of LAPD and NYPD.

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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 months ago 66%

    Yes! If the chain of commodity production ended with dumping all commodities directly into the ocean then no value would be created.

    Then it's not socially necessary. The manner in which exchange occurs does not matter. Value is produced from the labor not the sales. The value being realized at exchange is not being argued with, but that doesn't mean it was created by exchange. These are two different phenomena.

    And as the empire enters decline, who gets to be a “settler” is winnowed away to preserve superprofits for a smaller and smaller cohort. That’s what the inflation is, that’s what the result of dedollarization will be, and instead of trying to analyze and predict where things are going you have consigned yourself purely to reacting to things after they happen.

    By building a Nat Lib struggle for oppressed nations? Lmao? Just because I don't seek to organize class enemies doesn't mean I'm sitting around waiting for nothing. And no, just because a settler became a lumpen does not mean their nation has stopped occupying another nation, still a settler. Their national ties form their reactionary tendencies.

    As you say, it is socially necessary labor and would still need to be done under Socialism.

    Socialism would turn it into necessary labor (socialist planning, as opposed to Capitalist anarchy, this is the fundamental transition away from the prod-unprod relationship in Capitalism). It is not socially necessary labor under capitalism. It's not making the economy bigger, it's redirecting the economy. That being said I doubt the world would like to continue trading US call support for their food stuffs as in the world's current arrangement.

    And what about the lowest paid call center workers? They use literal prison labor in call centers, for pennies an hour. Are they petty bourgeoisie too?

    Well the vast majority of them are not prisoners (but also prisoners are hired at minimum wage and the state steals the wages, so it's not directly comparable to 3W labor). I source MIM(prisons), a prison movement, who says they are generally not near the means of production in prison. Prisoners' interests are already being agitated for the national character of prison oppression. Prisoners receive 3W wages, so yes they are genuinely exploitated workers and agitating them for JDPON rule is much much easier than other wage workers in the US. I'm sure that MIM(p) considers themselves primarily lumpen-proletarians turned revolutionaries. Once again I have not claimed that call center workers or non-managerial unproductive work is petty Bourgeois, merely that it is semi-proletarian, which Lenin never really differentiates besides when he's picking apart the various parts of the "middle classes". Semi-proletarian only in the case that they are receiving super-profits in their wages (which all except prisoners, children, and migrant workers are), but they are not alone! Productive US minimum wage jobs in a global context are also super-profit spiked wages. If the aggregate worker has no internal or external super-exploitation, i.e. management and sales paid equal as individuals to production line workers, there would be no Semi-proletarians or labor aristocracy, and all would be Proletarian.

    Semi-proletarians bring Revisionism into the movement in their focus on Economism. In the case of an Imperial Semi-proletariat, a Labor Aristocracy, these economic demands are born reactionary and reformist. (wage struggles for the super-exploited would be progressive in that they put pressure back on the labor aristocracy).

    I need you to know that I'm calling all legal-wage productive and unproductive US labor a Semi-proletarian Labor Aristocracy. I'm not targeting call center workers particularly as opposed to any other US labor, but it's a fact that a nearly entirely (non-direct producing) Semi-proletarian working class is not producing nearly as much as it consumes and this is a problem for such an economy if the ports were subject to blockade. Amazon workers can't ship anything because barely any of it is made here. Call centers have no products to solicit and assist. This is not the same situation if China was blockaded. A sales team isn't going to be able to transition to growing food or mining ore very quickly.

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  • asklemmygrad Ask Lemmygrad Why is class conciousness in the USA so low? Why has it not progressed in so many years? Will be in a forever "We are not ready for a revolution due to lack of class conciousness" stage?
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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 months ago 66%

    So! What would you call someone who can’t work in a factory because those jobs don’t exist after de-industrialization, and so they’re forced to work in a call center sweatshop?

    Calling them sweatshops is certainly a stretch, averaging $17 compared to 60c in Haitian shops. De-industrialization is the reason why the US is becoming more bourg, its getting wealthier by simply buying more labor in the world.

    Value only exists after it has been realized, the realization of value is necessary in the chain of commodity production.

    Yes but is value created in exchange or socially necessary labor? These are definitions Marx used. The capitalists speculated on the productive labor, the unproductive labor helps the capitalist realize the profit, the products were already created. Shipping labor is productive in that it is necessary for products to be consumed. A corporation can't expand their products by hiring advertisers and support lines, it only helps them indirectly recover past speculation. Productive labor is the expansion of capital.

    There is certainly unproductive work being done in the US i.e. bullshit jobs, but to just relegate everyone who doesn’t work in the Sparks and Steam Factory as “unproductive” is mystification.

    You're applying an emotional or moral description to unproductive labor that does not exist in the literature. It's a scientific term.

    You are confusing the people who manage the exchange apparatus with the ones who they manage. No one operating the phone in the sweat shop manages anything.

    In the sense that there are contractor firms, who speculate on call center labor through contracts rather than them being hired directly alongside productive labor, are producing value for their employer, but this is due to increased Bourgeois cooperation. However, we can abstract conglomerate firms and realize the same productive-unproductive relations remain hidden under layers of Bourgeois contracts. Again this does not matter besides the war strategy that if the US majority is not producing products or components of products, then the real productive capacity of the US is weaker than it looks. This is not a condemnation of the type of labor, it's simply relaying how Capital treats such labor. Such work could definitely become socially necessary in a Socialist world system. Under Capitalism, it is labor that Capitalists do but now can pay it away, which distances them from the petty-bourgeoisie further.

    So you can only ever react to conditions as they change. There’s a word for that~

    An oppressed national who doesn't expect their oppressors to change their ways because they never have historically unless driven by the force of we oppressed, right in their face? Every revolution needs to slice friend from foe and take control in existing conditions. For now settler workers are enemies. If we are able to advance to a stage overthrowing the land regime, where new contradictions are opened as old ones close, these workers can be won en masse.

    When AIM and the Lakota radicals took over the hamlet town Wounded Knee in 1973, they declared the Independent Oglala Nation and held the town for 70 days. During this period they granted citizenship to anyone who wanted it, and most of the town stayed behind even after given the chance to flee, because they knew the army would create a bloodbath if all the settlers were out of the picture. This is the faith we have in settler workers, they will not initiate such acts but many will follow when placed in the middle of a revolutionary moment.

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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 months ago 66%

    The first and most obvious is that it renders children and disabled people who can’t do “productive” work as bourgeois.

    Those that can't work are a strata of the lumpen-proletariat, what separates them is not having access to legal income and consumption (outside of social democracy crumbs). Disabled proletarians working unproductive roles still form an aggregate worker alongside their peers. Nothing in my statement disregards such individuals. Hellen Keller was a professional writer and lecturer, paid for her products, she was petty bourgeois.

    The second and more insidious is how you seem to consider customer-facing work as unproductive.

    Unproductive labor is all such labor that does not create surplus-value, but helps preserve or appropriate it. Marx:

    Since the direct purpose and the actual product of capitalist production is surplus value, only such labour is productive, and only such an exerter of labour capacity is a productive worker, as directly produces surplus value. Hence only such labour is productive as is consumed directly in the production process for the purpose of valorising capital.

    Call centers do not create surplus-value, they only help realize surplus-value, this is why they are unproductive. This is not a moral assessment, and it does not mean unproductive workers can't be exploited. Productive and Unproductive workers form an abstract Aggregate or Combined Laborer which must produce surplus-value to be exploited. If unproductive labor pool is paid more than productive labor pool, then there must be super-profits being realized, such is the case of the Aggregate US Worker and the global proletariat. Such a relationship creates Semi-Proletarians and is the start of a Labor Aristocracy or bourgeois-proletariat.

    The bourgeoisie are the owners of capital. They’re the investors, the proprietors, and the shareholders. In what world is someone in a call center sweatshop bourgeois?

    I didn't call them bourgeois, I said they are moving closer to the bourgeoisie than they are the proletariat and lumpen-proletariat, it's a function of direction. Those that manage bourgeois apparatuses in exchange for wages are also petty-bourgeois. They work directly towards maintaining Bourgeois Rule as a system. I didn't make this definition up. Nobody would ever deny that there are strata of workers wealthier than members of the bourgeoisie, this is due to decaying and rising strata as Capitalism develops.

    Never in my life have I seen so many Americans turn on Israel.

    I'm sure as much was said about the Apartheid Regime. Wake me when they turn on themselves.

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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 months ago 66%

    I doubt you’d say a factory worker that becomes a call center worker is in a particularly bourgeoisifying position.

    Much of our disagreement stems from the definition of petty Bourgeoisie (which is actually many different property relations).

    Going from factory to call center is being distanced from the MOP. More and more Americans are being distanced from the MOP (moreso as it leaves the country). This means that these wages are coming from someone else's proximity to the MOP as surplus value producers. This is a more intensely Bourgeois position (Bourgeois != Capitalist or productive property owners). Workers consuming surplus-value from other workers beyond their aggregate output (so we don't count out unproductive work that directly aids productive work) are not exploited, and are Semi-proletarian in character. The Semi-Proletariat and Petty Bourgeoisie form the "middle classes". While America has grown simultaneously to moving MOP outside of the borders, this means that the US population as a whole including the workforce is becoming "middle class" between the global south and the Imperialist Bourgeoisie (referred to by Putin as the "golden billion"). Moving away from laboring with the MOP but keeping the same wages is a move closer to the Bourgeoisie. Lenin and Mao both referred to teachers as petty Bourgeois even though there is no productive MOP involved, this is because they are paid with someone else's labor to facilitate Bourgeois rule. Look at the Middle Class in Britain paper I posted in the thread.

    The US absorbs more value than it produces, there is inflation if it does not consume it all at once (savings are a symptom of this). If anything is leftover, inflation. Which leads once again to the problem of Semi-proles valuing land speculation. Not all want to buy an inflating home, but the majority of them do, and this causes the rest to face that inflation through renting, or worse, buy into that system themselves to keep up. The problem is every union pension and retirement fund is speculating on that same system. Caught in the contradiction, the US workforce is reinforcing the settler land regime! Simple Economistic demands further reinforce that problem!

    This is why housing/asset inflation is higher than CPI. Economism is always a dead end within an Imperialist economy.

    This cycle has been in existence in this exact form since WW2, relative sizes and shares of the Imperial loot are changing but not qualitatively. Just because it crashes doesn't mean it's created qualitatively different class consciousness, because 99% of US workers don't even acknowledge the existence of Labor Aristocracy.

    Prices and Wages are products of class struggles. You are correct to point out that there are geo-political factors but then again, how many US workers are actively Russophobes, Sinophobes, and Zionists, the vast majority?

    The bottom fifth of US workers have the most potential for committing class suicide, rather than organize them around keeping up with the top 4/5ths, we need to point out to them that those demands are a dead end and can only lead to a shuffling around of who is in the bottom. Ending the colonial system through force is our only option. This is good though, since that bottom fifth represents most food workers and shipping workers, this means they are in position to starve out the fascist bastion and defend the Nat Lib struggles who will be seizing territory from the US. I want you to know that we are much agreement about the potential of the bottom of US workers, what I want to get away from is copium that this segment is growing, it's simply just not the case. Revolution will come from the minority of the minority. Don't fear, the US is selling us its noose.

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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 months ago 66%

    Wages have not significantly dropped. Staying in the $23 dollar range since the 70s including the tens of millions of immigrants since then + women working more and more (and men working less) and wages are still the same? What does that mean overall? As the white male workforce aged and retired, more white men were given high wage jobs that are nearly equivalent to 2 median incomes (like missile engineering) and women and POC took the old jobs (productive factory, shipping, teaching, nursing). Incomes for Americans overall stayed consistent. On a global level $20 dollars an hour is humongous! Cost of living is actually not the cause of these wages, as most Proletarian global South cities are just as expensive as American ones and some are more expensive than NYC. Mexico, Canada, and the US have a merged market due to NAFTA, but only dead labor can travel freely, living labor is blocked by the border. What does this create? A free trade zone where workers doing the same work make $3 one one side of a deadly border, and $20 on the other. Why should we expect that US workers should be getting $25 by the 90s, $35 by now? Maintaining wealth while costs of much of personal consumption is actually dropping in real dollars (compare Nintendo consoles or appliances to the 90s). In the graph you show wages were the lowest in the 90s, where was this debourging then? The fact is that if white men were able to continue segregating women and POC, average wages still would have climbed.

    But there is also the factor that average wage is being held down by immigrants, POC, and women (particularly immigrant women POC). Median white male wages have stagnated since the 70s, but the stratification is predominantly above the median, as in the rich got richer while the poor stayed the same.

    The problem with centering on wages like this is that US wages have maintained global dominance while even more are getting absurd incomes. Just because tech workers are so rich does not mean GM workers have suddenly become exploited.

    Again CoL is fairly comparable globally, US wages are rich everywhere, and US minimum wage is wealthier than most petty boojies in the global south, which is why they are willing to pack up and move here.

    The position of US workers is high, them getting knocked off their pedestal will look a lot more drastic than this, like for instance minimum wage getting outlawed or the border blowing wide open (good tbh), or perhaps anti-peonage laws getting ripped away. Then I'd be concerned with them, but likely more concerned of them if the movement is not already approaching statehood ala (Independent Oglala Nation, Neo-Zapatistas, Panther Oakland).

    The median wage of white men dropping because white women are working now does not upset me, and I would not run to white men and tell them they should be angry their monopoly on strong wages is ending. This however doesn't solve that USians in aggregate have a monopoly on high wages (as is the case of Imperialism). And if we look at that chart, let's say it dropped from 50k to 40k, this is not total compensation and benefits have increased since the 70s as the government props up housing speculation as a rule, retirement funds are growing in the stock market, and healthcare benefits are high. The real total compensation position of white men has not drastically changed since the 70s.

    This also ignores that over half of US labor is genuinely unproductive white-collar work. 16% of jobs are factory work, then there is shipping work, and food producing work. I would consider people going from overpaid factory workers to white-collar work a bourgeois-ifying transition (have you seen the noise of this so-called intelligentsia on online?). Graph ends in 2000 but apparently it is up to 62% in 2022.

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  • ProbablyKaffe ProbablyKaffe 3 months ago 50%

    “Savings savings savings” you say, and yet the rate of savings has been declining since the 60s and right now is on par with the period just before the 2008 financial crash. Savings are not an explanation for the inflation we are seeing and this is another contradiction to your claims: if savings are a source of inflation, and savings are down, where is the inflation coming from? Is it only coming from wage increases like is being claimed by bourgeois economists? I’m skeptical, and so I’m hypothesizing that the inflation is geopolitical.

    I already pointed out that inflation, the value of the dollar, compared to 2019 is due to pandemics slowing shipping down, you literally had to pay for more labor for the same amount of goods shipped --> increased costs of goods. Sanctions also increase shipping costs --> increased costs of goods. The bulk of American workers are getting wealthier, thus inflation for even things like apples and watermelon, because there are more people who will spend that money. The struggle between US workers and US petty bourgs over who gets a bigger share of Imperialism does nothing to advance Communism. Savings rate propaganda induced by bourgeois media promotes Economistic organizing, again 6 figure workers spending their full monthly paycheck, whether to rents, social security and retirement funds (savings but not called savings), student/mortgage/consumer loans (others' savings), gambling/gatcha/collecting, "investing" in bubbles (housing, crypto, Tesla stock, "retail" investment has been growing ala "roaring 20s"), or doordash for every meal does not mean these workers are going to be any more interested in proletarian revolution.

    And yet, the state is grappling with inflation despite being the least susceptible state to inflation. Does this not indicate a change?

    Inflation rates in the US have never been more stable than the last 3 decades.

    Do you think the bourgeois want a high interest rate environment? Do you think they want the global South to turn to other countries for loans?

    Interest rates are still historically low. Many loans were forgiven so the recent rise in interest rates seeks to slow down borrowing that the pandemic induced to absorb stimmy checks. It's all about inducing circulation or slowing it down when the bourgs want to.

    One thing that stood out to me was the demands for an end to understaffing, which necessarily means hiring more people. It’s not quite internationalism, no, but it does benefit the internally colonized people who could gain employment instead of being forced to fill the ranks of the gig economy and reserve army of unemployed workers.

    This is not a new demand, it's consistent with Imperialist union activity historically. This type of reform still works on behalf of Imperialism to delay national liberation, it's certainly a contradiction we intend to exploit where available to us, though this requires we have an even stronger anti-Colonial line since making more oppressed nation bourgs adds troubling revisionisms to the movement.

    they only call for Israelis to be released when they should be calling for a hostage exchange and acknowledge that the Zionists have been taking Palestinians hostage by the thousands into detention centers, but they aren’t just silently supporting Israel either.

    So it's a bourgeois humanist position, without a hint of Marxism, and covering the true nature of Zionism and US labor's role in occupation and genocide? Color me surprised, this is nothing to celebrate, we've seen it before:

    In fact, the ILWU has a long history of being interested in and supportive of Palestinian liberation going back decades because of their internationalist character that was cultivated during the anti-apartheid struggle against South Africa.

    Don't downplay the role of conditional solidarity in shaping the demands of a Decolonization struggle. The form of the ANC now can't be separated from the way in which Apartheid "ended" (who owns the land and bread?). The same goes for these "anti-Zionist"-but-nowhere-anti-Zionist gestures that push blame on the Resistance and deny the reality of settler-Colonialism in Palestine.

    Yet, you’re underestimating the importance of public demonstration and should recognize that even non-destructive acts still act as propaganda for further radical action.

    This must have been said during every US involved war ever. I think such acts result because such bloodshed exists, before the bloodshed, none of them cared. After the bloodshed, they'll return to not caring. Until white workers are climbing over each other to commit class-suicide on behalf of revolution, I'll have little reason to value their solidarity.

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    Fuck the Colonists ProbablyKaffe 4 months ago 100%
    Color-film video of Indigenous people fishing Celilo Falls on the Columbia River between Washington and Oregon prior to the falls being submerged in a dam reservoir youtu.be

    Fun fact, Oregon's name traces back to Iberian scouts referring to Celilo Falls "Very Loud Water" The largest fish migration in the world used to pass through these falls, including the nearly 100 pound "June Hog" strain of Chinook Salmon. That strain has been wiped out by the loss of environment due to damming and fish populations are in a downward spiral to this day The audio is from a radio show in the 90s covering salmon being added to the Endangered Species Act

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    genzedong
    GenZedong ProbablyKaffe 7 months ago 100%
    February 6th Effort Posting, Death of Wesley Bad Heart Bull and Riot in Custer, SD 1973 | Chunka Luta Network

    X-posting late, but in preparation of a post on Captain Cook incoming. CLN posts have been covering a narrative leading into the Occupation of the Wounded Knee hamlet by AIM in 1973. OG Post on Hexbear: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/3566703?scrollToComments=true From perspective of [@ChunkaLutaNetwork@hexbear.net](https://hexbear.net/u/ChunkaLutaNetwork): We last left you discussing the concept of the bordertown and the racialized violence enacted there through settler vigilantism, which is obvious through physical violence. In a new era, however, what about online discourse? This is one thing I’d like to introduce to our discourse and hopefully help settler allies understand when they might accidentally dawn a hood and cape for the state. I see settler vigilantism as synonymous with Kluxism, or at least they stem from the same psyche. The spirit of Manifest Destiny seemingly possesses these settlers to act out in monstrous ways, depriving us and themselves of humanity and life. There are no more bounties to collect for a scalp, so this shows these actions to murder Indians are deeper than just monetary gain. It is always about the land. Briefly we spoke on Raymond Yellow Thunder and Wesley Bad Heart Bull, both victims of settler vigilantism. Raymond died due to injuries sustained in a fight, and Wesley was stabbed in a fight at a bar. Both resulted in AIMs activism, and ultimately pushed them further to Wounded Knee. Raymond Yellow Thunder was killed before the Trail of Broken Treaties in 1972, and inspired the famous “AIM Song” which is actually the Raymond Yellow Thunder Song and should be respected as such.There is a great deal of controversy still surround Raymond’s death, but from every perspective I’ve heard one thing remains true; it is colonialism that murdered him. ![](https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/664d6616-8d11-459a-b7fe-ca363c457916.png) Colonialism’s claws come from many directions, and it brings death in a systemic, planned and targeted manner, contrary to Engels' view of social murder. In a colony that target gives a slight reprieve for the colonizing nation’s working classes, and seemingly at the root of every boot strap story, is a mystified deluge of the eldritch horrors of capitalism and colonialism. These horrors which possess, steal, and murder are often described as primitive accumulation by contemporary Marxists (or the motor of capitalism), the tongue-in-cheek humor often becomes lost. Primitive accumulation which once derided the ruling class's view of themselves, now it is used by chauvinists to be synonymous with pre-Columbian political-economy. In the case of the Oceti Sakowin, we remained primitive in the eyes of these chauvinists until 1868. The people who make these arguments don’t seem to realize the cloak and hood they have proudly proclaimed as their own, but to us the colonized, we see the same two mouths our white siblings have become known for. ![](https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/f3128966-64f4-47ec-931f-ec613a5b65d5.png) English is known for its one word with many meanings, or perhaps many words with the same sounds, but each uniquely specific. In the case of Wesley Bad Heart Bull we can see this most clearly in the settler’s courts, which proclaim law and order, but really only on behalf of the landowner. When there is no clear land owner, it's about which party most represents the landowners. In a settler-colony with a case of assault with prior consideration to ‘kill him an Indian’ it is of course manslaughter when you kill somebody who was fighting another person. This is of course sarcasm, generally speaking when you “accidentally” kill someone it is still a degree of murder especially with prior expression to want to kill an Indian, and when the assailant wasn’t involved in the fight. Murdered in the street like so many before and after, and that was a well known fact of life in South Dakota. You could be murdered and like Raymond or Wesley, your attackers might get charged with a small fine and manslaughter, but when you ask every settler when justice comes they all play innocent. This is why AIM went to the streets. When you ask Pine Ridge elders when AIM became a symbol, you are told the Gordon protest. When Russell Means took the Chief of Police’s hat and threw it, David Swallow Jr recounted his feelings as “we can do that?” This is where a fire was reborn that still carries on today, as my nation’s president banned Kristi Noem from our reservation after she tried to stoke xenophobic fears at a rally. We are standing once again, and it is time to stand with us and learn our revolutionary history. ![](https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/d61d5204-e27f-46ca-827b-47a012bcad74.png) So today on February 6th was the day of the Bad Heart Bull trial in Custer, South Dakota. To this day as landback grows more prominent and our elders and leaders move forward with decade old plans and conversations, the contradictions here grow. Because of this I’ve sought to see the perspective of various communities and generations, on the ‘Indian problem’ as it has always been called here. The Indigenous question is only the colonial question, and the communist movement has had a century, decade, and a year to discuss this since Stalin's publishing on the subject (1913, of course the conversation predates Stalin). One of Lenin’s last works was on this specific topic, and the question of who should be okay with having an autonomous region of their own in a larger state: is one that places great nations at the whim of the nations they oppressed. ![](https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/6e69a1e8-e20c-4eb3-ad20-0015ade34101.png) Because of the words Lenin has spoken on the subject, people like Ho Chi Minh froze all night just for a chance to see the great man’s body. The pan-African revolution, the third world movement, fourth world theory and so much more have a red light shining on them from the star that is Lenin streaking across the sky: calling us to revolution. We don’t know if that star was shining at the time the molotov was thrown, but when the court house went up in flames, it certainly caused a stir. Nobody knows who threw it either, I’ve talked to a considerable bulk of living participants, but it was thrown after the cops pushed Wesley’s mother down the stairs with a billy club. Only 3 people were going to be allowed into the courtroom, and when Dennis Banks, Russell Means, and David Hill entered the cops stood in the way of the mother of the victim, and brutalized her. David punched that pig-fucker in the face and the riot ensued. Custer is THE symbol of settlement in the Black Hills, it's one of the first towns, and to this day makes its money from exploiting the land and treating it like an amusement park. While people on my reservation don't have water, Rapid City has a water park. Custer had a literal amusement park that flew a replica of the 7th Calvary's flag; we already had the real one, so during the riot that replica flag was also taken. Cy Griffin was a film maker from the video freak movement that was there, he went back to New York and told his friends about everything happening there. A war in South Dakota is how he described it. We call it the Reign of Terror. See, it wasn’t just in the bordertown we were being murdered in the street, on Pine Ridge a seemingly innocuous man named Richard Wilson (only one parent was Lakota) became Tribal chairman. He employed his family (legal in our laws) , began embezzling money (not legal) and established a right-wing paramilitary called the GOONs (Guardians Of the Oglala Nation, questionably legal). The GOONs would enact violence on Dick Wilson’s political opponents by firebombing, drive-bys, and gunning people down in the street. This spurred the organization OSCRO (Oglala Sioux Civil Rights Organization) to form, and begin collecting signatures to impeach Wilson. They were successful in collecting the signatures, however Dick was the one who presided over the impeachment, and of course found himself not guilty. OSCRO is an often overlooked organization, and I believe this to be the goal of federal agents to remove the grassroots elements from these struggles and obfuscate the lessons we could learn. As mentioned in a previous post, Dick Wilson would oversee the equivalent amount in deaths to Pinochet’s first 3 years. This is in South Dakota, and nobody knows these facts, and pretend colonialism is some bygone era. Because of the fire lit in Custer, in Gordon, in the Pacific Northwest, in DC and so many more places, we see the modern land back movements stem. Those movements stemmed from the wars, those wars stemmed from the early capitalists accumulation of wealth to jump start global capital today. In these circles we see how yesterday is today, and only by understanding both can we move on to tomorrow. We must pull capitalism up from its roots which are soaked in the blood of the colonized, until we do that we are doomed to fail. We mentioned briefly how these concepts go beyond physical violence, and one way is the erasure and silencing of Indigenous and other marginalized voices. This might sound farfetched to the insensitive, but in a critical period of rupture, we have to make sure we don’t get bogged down in what is socially mainstream. If the mainstream is saying our talking points then we have failed to stay at the head of the movement, and are merely another voice consumed into the acceptable protest movement. We have to stand arm and arm with trans comrades as opportunists and state agents both turn their sights on them across the country, seeking to separate them from would-be allies who are worried they will lose mainstream support for daring to stand against the face of oppression. Those who can’t stand in solidarity with everyone, yet voice opposition to Israel in this critical moment, are capitalizing and being opportunists. This has to be combatted. People like Jackson Hinkle make Trans and Indigenous people their target for a reason and you should learn why. Especially if folks like Hinkle can sell stolen Palestinian Gold, and people give passes to communists defending him. The movement is in a critical moment where it has to struggle with the colonial contradictions, failure to do so, means failure to form a vanguard. In our next post we will discuss Captain Cook and his death on February 14th, my birthday is then next so y’know if you like these posts and the work we do I recommend supporting us! We have a linktr.ee/chunkalutanetwork with all of our social media, gofundme efforts we are engaged in, a liberapay and a patreon that all go to supporting the work CLN does. This post was short as it's mostly a timely bridge to send us on our way to the real Wounded Knee 1973 post at the end of the month, so lots of learning to do. I also recommend checking out the Indigenous Anti-Colonial Institute podcast and the CLN podcast for more education. Our patreon also has a ton of episodes, and there’s also Marx Madness where we read you theory. Right now we are reading a custom Gramsci Reader that you can check out in our library listed on the linktr.ee. I also want to stress, don't wait for us to learn about this stuff, start with Blood of the Land by Rex Weyler, read the Erdoes biographies, and then ask what a Marxist perspective on this stuff should be. I will be releasing a companion to the book later this month hopefully, of a stream of thought journal kept on my 3rd read through.

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    genzedong
    GenZedong ProbablyKaffe 9 months ago 100%
    Wounded Knee: The 1973 Part, well almost | Chunka Luta Network

    og on [hexbear](https://hexbear.net/post/1404350) Sungmanitu of Chunka Luta Network: Would it surprise you that I had more to say? Due to the character limit, this wonderful and relevant story had to be broken into 2; this one I called the 1973 part, well almost. The day I released the [first part](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/3007019)\[[hex](https://hexbear.net/post/1336560)\] was not on the massacre date, but instead the day they assassinated Tatanka Iyotake, Bull Who Sits on Hind-legs or Sitting Bull. This name is given to him by a Canadian Mountie officer ignoring the commands of his higher officers, to offer refuge to the radical band of Tatanka Iyotake who were waiting to rendezvous with Tasunka Witiko, Crazy Horse. This rendezvous never happens as they are able to trick him, arrest him, and then kill him on his way into the jail. If you believe our Medicine Men, he saw this, and on Bear Butte he did only 3 days of a traditionally 4 day vision quest called hembleycha, in hopes he would be spared to finish the ceremonies. Where we last left off was the aftermath of this assassination, where their brother-in-arms Unphan Gleske, Spotted Elk (or “Bigfoot”) then fled to seek refuge with Mahipya Luta, Red Cloud, at Pine Ridge agency. This brings us to the infamous massacre of 1890, but the blowback of this act wouldn’t be faced for another 80 years. Between then and 1973, we have several land grabs, the kidnapping of children into boarding schools, border towns rising off the exploitation of us and our lands, planned genocide through make-work programs of the New Deal like the Pick-Sloan plan, and so much more happen, that it makes sense why Cap. R. H. Pratt and the common sense of the time acknowledged the “students” openly as hostages. According to Ezra Hayt, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs from 1843–1893, “the children would be hostages for the good behavior of their people.” (To read more here is my former employer’s award winning article on the subject of bodies in boarding schools, years prior to the mainstream news of the fact at [High Country News](https://www.hcn.org/issues/51.17/indigenous-affairs-the-us-stole-generations-of-indigenous-children-to-open-the-west) and for the [full context to the quote](https://www.historycolorado.org/story/2023/10/31/obliterate-and-forget)) Even after the boarding school practices mostly ended (I say mostly as the recent federal report shows 90 of those schools still operate), this program of holding children hostage manifested itself in the selling of our children into what amounts to slavery. It cost only $10 to buy an Indian child as recently as 1952, and many who were bought were used as cleaning servants. Instead of this practice ending, it developed into the modern foster care and adoption system we know today. Even my brother has been enslaved in this system. On top of this, you have a continued mass incarceration and atrocious education statistics that all stem from their attempts to “save the man.” The tipping point came in the Termination era and essentially provided a liberally condonable means of genocide, via pen and paper. If it wasn’t bad enough to force different cultures and peoples into conglomerate nations for your convenience in managing our concentration camps, they began to declare nations non-existent or even completely eradicated with the case of the Ohlone and many California groups. The most famous case however is the Pacific Northwest's termination of fishing rights and Wisconsin's attempt to do something similar with the Menominee people, and an added land grab. In 1954 the Menominee Termination Act would be passed under Public Law 280, which would remove nations' rights to determine their affairs, let alone their futures. In 1963, three Menominee would be charged in violation of Wisconsin state laws, while hunting on land distinguished as Menominee land. They were found not guilty, only to have the case brought to the state’s supreme court, where they ruled that they no longer had hunting rights. The historiography available places the onus of the overturning of this decision in 1968, thanks to the efforts of Ada Deer, who should not go unmentioned. But reformism is hardly why I write and the hunting and fishing rights were not the end-all issue of the Termination of the Menominee (but we will continue in a minute). In the PNW as I mentioned, the hunting and fishing rights issue was rearing its head in the famous fish-in struggles led by Billy Frank Jr who was arrested over 400 times for fishing on the dock his family has lived on since time immemorial along the Nisqually River. “As long as the rivers run, as long as the tide flows, and as long as the sun shines, you will have land, fish, and game for your frying pans, and timber for your lodges.” -Washington Territorial Governor Isaac Stevens 1855 He wasn’t the only person the promise made was broken, and so it became a form of civil disobedience to fish, and fish they did. They were beaten, threatened, and even people like Leonard Peltier would be radicalized at these ‘fish-ins’. Peltier wasn’t the only one finding inspiration there either; in fact some Oceti Sakowin students attending Berkley at the time were so inspired that they staged an action on Alcatraz, symbolically reclaiming it under the 1868 Fort Laramie treaty. This was in 1965, and most people forget this initial inspiration for the later 1969 occupation on the island. The 1969 occupation utilized the same method of claim, only this time they refused to allow the coast guards removal to be the end. At first, organizers were only going to sail a boat near the Island and then give a press statement on land. But when the boat came close enough, a young Mohawk organizer named Richard Oaks leapt over the edge and swam to the prison. Generally speaking, most people swimming around Alcatraz were swimming away from the island towards their freedom; but to him and everyone who followed, freedom was the prison, so they swam. The coast guard quickly removed them and on land, Oakes read what is called The Proclamation to the Great White Father. I recommend everyone [read it for yourself](https://www.foundsf.org/index.php?title=ALCATRAZ_Proclamation#:~:text=The%20proclamation%20of%20the%20Indians,Indians%20by%20right%20of%20discovery) as there is a lot of clever phrasing. Or you can wait until the audio documentary we are making on this era fully releases. The part I’d like to highlight is why they saw this prison as freedom: >We feel that this so-called Alcatraz Island is more than suitable as an Indian Reservation, as determined by the white man's own standards. By this, we mean that this place resembles most Indian reservations, in that: > >1. It is isolated from modern facilities, and without adequate means of transportation. >2. It has no fresh running water. >3. The sanitation facilities are inadequate. >4. There are no oil or mineral rights. >5. There is no industry and so unemployment is very great. >6. There are no health care facilities. >7. The soil is rocky and non-productive and the land does not support game. >8. There are no educational facilities. >9. The population has always been held as prisoners and kept dependent upon others. > >Further, it would be fitting and symbolic that ships from all over the world, entering the Golden Gate, would first see Indian land, and thus be reminded of the true history of this nation. This tiny island would be a symbol of the great lands once ruled by free and noble Indians. This place has become a practical Mecca for us and it is no wonder, when we place this occupation in its full historical context, why 71 occupations happened between 1965 and 1973 (and many more after). However this isn’t a story about these 71 occupations; it’s about Wounded Knee specifically (for the 71 story, join the [patreon](https://www.patreon.com/ChunkaLutaNetwork)) and the overarching blowback that will be covered in more depth in our upcoming series; yes this is an ad, a 20k word ad. What we want to focus on however is the American Indian Movement. Jumping back to 1968 and over to Minneapolis, a meeting was held after several prison organizers were released from Stillwater prison. Each of them started in boarding school, and ended in prison, before being thrown to the wolves in the Twin Cities. At that time it was routine for the police to systematically arrest Indian bar patrons under drunk and disorderly charges; every Friday at 9pm- you could count on it. They would utilize kettling tactics, driving them from the front out the back, where the van was waiting for a mass booking. Over the weekend, they would be used as slave labor then, released on Monday without seeing the courtroom. This became routine, and must have been informed by some sick joke that we liked keeping the Earth clean. Editorializing aside, this was a systemic issue, and that's how AIM was formed. The night the meeting was held, Dennis Banks was speaking to a coalition of groups in the cities, when a familiar voice spoke up asking, ‘what do you plan to do about those cops?’ That night they formed the red car patrols, and began filming the cops actions, and before long they were at Alcatraz to make connections. Upon doing so, consecutive actions took place. A group known as United Native Americans, led by Lehman Brightman, would stage a takeover of “Mt. Rushmore'' renaming it Crazy Horse Mountain; the sentiment was okay, but really this site is known to my people as the Six Grandfathers. This term refers to the four directions, the sky, and wakan tanka (the great mystery, our closest approximation to a “god” which really collapses the expanse of the idea). In Minneapolis, you had the takeover of Ft. Snelling. In California, you have a take over of an electric company and enforcement of national sovereignty through the enforcement of tolls on the Pit River nations land. In Milwaukee however is where one of the more important (and ignored) events happen. Herb Powell was a visionary, who after Alcatraz seized an abandoned lighthouse in Milwaukee, which resulted not in eviction, but land back for the very first time in 1970. There they built the first ever Indigenous spirituality based alcohol treatment, that has since spread across the continent, and is the most successful form of rehab for Indian people. They did a breakfast program similar to the Black Panthers, which they learned in Oakland during solidarity trips from Alcatraz, and this is directly where the survival school concept was born. Herb’s wife claims prior to the Nixon admin ending the termination era Then when the occupants were finally removed from the island, a takeover of the Nike missile site was staged due to its closeness to Alcatraz. From 1969 to 1971, Alcatraz was ours. They kept this occupation alive through mailed envelopes of money, solidarity festivals hosted, barges donated by Creedence Clearwater Revival (the barge was then named The Clearwater), and from families who dedicated their time to caretaking the warriors on the island. The era of Red Power had officially begun, and that’s exactly why, despite in 1971 COINTELPRO and CHAOS were declared over, and the show commission of Church occurred, the program lived on and sought to focus on the growing Red Power movement. Black Power had been so thoroughly entrenched in combating the original forms, it was easily subsumed by the Black elites and whatever homunculus replaced the CIA, FBI, and NSA’s counterintelligence programs. We know for fact these programs merged thanks to the history of AIM. All these fires were being lit across Turtle Island, a national Indian organization, and it was quickly realized that now was the time for unified action, not just the basic call to consciousness (read more in Akwesasne Notes book Basic Call to Consciousness). The International Indian Brotherhood (led by George Manuel), National Congress of American Indians (led by Vine Deloria Jr and Hank Adams), and many other Indigenous led groups that were very wary of AIM joining. Despite being wary, they were allowed to join and it was common practice for them to send groups ahead to secure housing, food, etc for the children and elders who often came in the caravans with their younger family members engaged in direct action, as they offered support in a variety of ways including moral and inspiration to action. Despite these efforts the Nixon admin pressured the churches and people who agreed to deny us access, and forced elders and children into a dingy basement filled with rats (to read more see Behind the Trail of Broken Treaties by Vine Deloria Jr. Eventually they went to the BIA headquarters in DC, and just never left. It wasn’t supposed to be an occupation, it was supposed to be an airing of grievances that, due to the stonewalling and neglect of the US government, forced these families to occupy. This is obviously not about this story, but it should be noted the Black Panthers and AIM became even closer with offers of dynamite, infiltration of police lines by BPP, and as an alternative to the dynamite strategic pouring of gasoline around building while literal tons of documents about the stealing of land and resources were loaded into a Uhaul to Pine Ridge and sent with various groups they were relevant to. The government claims 700k in damages were done, mind you many of this is “theft” of things they stole from us originally, but with a suitcase full of cash- Nixon sent the Indians home. For us Lakota, and frankly any Indigenous people, home meant coming back to the same problems the US government just denied to help with (it took the a day to respond to the 20 points of the Trail of Broken Treaties which were all very milquetoast liberal demands, that any communist today should use as a bear minimum for what we should uphold). These problems are still relevant today if you read Red Nation Rising: Bordertown Violence in America by Melanie Yazzie and co. but beyond the explicit state violence, the overall superstructure is built on a phenomenon known as settler-vigilantism where settlers act on behalf of the state, to quell Indigenous resistance. At the center of the bordertown is this phenomenon, and the result is the bordertown becoming more than a place, but an idea. This idea being one that the bordertown arises anywhere settler order is confronted by Indigenous order to paraphrase a line from RNR:BVA. It's the violence the bordertown brings with things like starlight tours (where police in Canada bring Indigenous people who might be intoxicated into the wood to walk miles home during winter, usually dying to exposure) or Indianrolling. Indian is a legal term defining us based on a level of blood quantum, we use this word still as those laws still exist, Indianrolling is when settler vigilantes take it upon themselves to ruthlessly assault or kill Indigenous people in bordertowns or even on our reservations. The most famous cases relevant to this discussions would be Raymond Yellow Thunder (murdered 1971 prior to the Trail of Broken Treaties, chronology doesn't matter in oral histories, this is written to be an oral history) and Wesley Bad Heart Bull (murdered 1972 prior to the Wounded Knee Occupation). To go into these important events at the end of this effortpost would cause a disservice and dishonoring of these martyrs. In a time when Palestine is being butchered, I see constantly what happened in the 70s, and settlers here try to downplay the social murder, explicit genocide, and vigilantism (see the West Bank for Palestinian examples where settlers deny ongoing genocide). There is a book called The Death of Raymond Yellow Thunder which is named that because the conclusion is; it wasn’t murder. However, having read the book, his manuscripts, and listened to his cassette interviews which we plan to digitize and release with the help of my nation's college, I do not agree. We will address this in the actual 1973 part, as this is unfortunately the end of our story for now. However please go research this stuff yourself, there are so many sources like Blood of the Land by Rex Weyler, the various biographies of AIM leaders and activists, and so many other resources everyone who organizes in North America should be familiar with- and I would die on that hill gladly. You can find these resources and more in our developing public access library on our [linktree](https://linktr.ee/chunkalutanetwork), where I will also make the audio files and archive footage I’ve gathered over my 3 year, cross country, investigation of this exact story. A lot of the people we will discuss are family, there is a yearning for truth I have to demystify what is or isn't real, and so I pride myself with being able to openly criticize AIM in a principled way (I have yet to hear someone in the pod sphere actually offer worthwhile criticism beyond the errors of leaders, ya know, like strategy) because I have taken extreme care to meet the people. To hear their story for myself, to gather as much as I possibly can to help the movement advance. I want to see us overcome the great hurdle of American chauvinism, and see the end of settler-colonialism and the global project of Imperialism it helped birth. The real reason for this post besides more suspense towards the Wounded Knee documentary and actual post, is to talk about our [winter fundraiser](https://www.gofundme.com/f/deliver-wood-coats-supplies-to-pine-ridge) which the immediate needs have been handled! We were able to get our organizers who deliver and cut the wood a new vehicle after theirs broke down (and 1200 in repairs already this year we fundraised), secure a Uhaul to deliver a ton of wood, pallets, clothes, water barrels, cases of water bottles (water there will give you cancer in 10 years due to Uranium mines runoff, so its only good for washing stuff really. We got it shut down in 2018 but there's been no clean up besides us growing Hemp and Sunflowers) blankets, and whatever else we could gather that could be useful there. We were also able to pay for the cameraman to tag along and document the whole trip, so look forward to that content as it releases overtime. The best way to see these updates first would be our patreon but they take a big cut! So if you dont mind waiting for a public release, [liberapay](https://liberapay.com/ChunkaLutaNetwork/) is a much better way to support our efforts directly. Our plan with the money is to enable several organizers to work consistently on our fundraising through other means, and organizing the soft infrastructure to enable a mass org, functional steering cadre, and help grassroots organizers do their thing. We only need 1800/month in order to accomplish this and some peoples allyship is based on whether or not we don’t criticize their favorites; but here at Hexbear and Lemmygrad we seem to have found actual class traitors who see the principled nature of the stances we take. I am sure there is something I forgot to mention but you will hear from us more 2024 and beyond, especially once the 5 year plan is ready for publication.

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    genzedong
    GenZedong ProbablyKaffe 9 months ago 94%
    OFFICIAL LAUNCH OF THE CHUNKA LUTA PODCAST (A BANDS OF TURTLE ISLAND REBOOT)

    "x-posted" from https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/62e0ddcf-3213-47d5-8200-c8845ac3faef.png since x-posts don't seem to show up on front pages. Today we launch the official feed for the Chunka Luta Podcast https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/chunka-luta-network/episodes/Ep-1-New-Directions-e2d11rb/a-aaneqt5 that is replacing the former Bands of Turtle Island pod. BOTI was started to tell the story of AIM, then I got paid to tell that story so why would I keep posting it free if Im posting it free down the line and actually well produced? The last few episodes on the feed will be that story completing a circle I started at 19, and we will start this circle with that same story; the story of Wounded Knee 1973. While documenting this story, somehow I ended up forming an International collective of Decolonial Marxists (MLs to be more correct, as to mean the scientists of Liberation) we have plenty in the pipeline for this podcast so I highly recommend following it and staying up-to-date. You can find all the links at our linktr.ee/chunkalutanetwork and find the patreon where you can gain access to content earlier than others, or the liberpay which yknow I can email the content or something early? Idk trying to figure out a work around but they dont take cuts so are urging people support there. On the linktr.ee is also a GFM to help our comrade Juche Gang, or Leaping Larry on Twitch, we already raised 3k before launching the GFM but he still needs help recovering from several storms. Supporting us monthly helps us help Indigenous families like Larry's easier, and enables professional organizing of very successful project so far; so who knows what the future will hold. The elevator pitch is this: For only 1800 a month we would have 2 full time organizers (paid a stipend of 500 USD/month) and a transcriptionist paid at 2 USD/raw transcription audio minute to the extent their groceries and rent are paid, usually 360-400 USD, and they are always willing to help with admin tasks which has been invaluable behind the scenes this year. The last 400 is for our Media Teams needs, that is $35/month in web hosting, $35/month for a proposed newsletter and zine email thing, $105 for streamyard including taxes (im bad at math though), $100 a month for a constant stream of high quality b-roll, and another $100 for the 1 podcast a month promise we are aiming for, and all extra will be just done by me as time frees up and more of the organization is taken off my shoulders. All extra fund then gained after that go directly into organizing as they have been since restarting the patreon, and this disclaimer is a public accounting of our plans for the money and our current goals. By enable 2 full time organizers you allow another person to pursue the level of organizing capabilities as I have shown is possible over this last year. I will be taking on a second job to supplement the 1100 still needed, but I really hope people recognize how much we have accomplished as a network in a year. The podcast covers the project briefly, and of course we plan to explain more in a episode coming out next year about everything we accomplished from the 2022 Winter Fundraiser to this current one you can also find at the linktr.ee (the Uhaul part is already paid for so now we are raising for a car, and then a storage container, and then more land to bring into trust and help an elder build a house) theres a lot of moving pieces, and so I am hoping this year in review episode will help explain things better; until then, here I will try to not mess up formatting normally Nikolai helps. ![](https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/c0071ded-581c-48dc-a0b9-9b00d0283702.png) For those unaware the org and year began as I arrived home in the uhaul I raised in response to a devastating blizzard that swept the continent, literally arriving in time to celebrate New Years as we brought my son up to bed. Since then the org has grown to include over a hundred direct organizers, over a thousand associated organizers, and more sympathizers then I care to actually count as I know the number will only grow. In total we estimate around 70k to have been raised and will be hiring an accountant to handle everything that will be posted to the website for public view, bearing in mind the anonymity of individuals and censure of doxxing information. From providing the funds for a traditional ceremony, moving a house for the headsmen of the nation as well as the logs for another home, and are designing a community center we will begin actual construction of next year from which we will build a buffalo prairie to provide food FREELY to the people, and to give them away for ceremony. We will also be building food forests and community gardens to address the food insecurity, and developing a textile mill to process the 40 acres of self seeding hemp already on the land. A lot is happening beyond that but lets wait til things are more presentable before counting our chickens. However til then expect lots of photos and videos, also sorry the website is taking so long we will have update photos soon! Lastly we have a library on our linktr.ee even including the required reading for our organizers and cadre. I look forward to showing you just what we are and that we have a road to follow, thats wide enough for us all to walk to the next world together. We need only build the bridge there, and we have to do it together. As Ngugi Wa'Thiongo says "decolonization is colonizer and colonized..." we must work together to become human again, and it is by landback by which we can reclaim our humanity and dignity

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    genzedong
    GenZedong ProbablyKaffe 9 months ago 100%
    How did settlers get to California through all those mountains? A thread from comrade Sungmanitu

    "x-posted" from [@Nakoichi@hexbear.net](https://hexbear.net/u/Nakoichi) Original twitter thread: https://twitter.com/DecolonialMarx/status/1736248614035272113 There's a lot of misleading things about this presentation; for one only the poorest of people were crossing the plains and Mountains. Instead those who could afford it preferred to sail to Nicaragua and walk across the isthmus, to then sail up to the West Coast. Yes the mountains were tough to pass, but not because they are mountains, but because the easiest paths are controlled by, and tolls are enforce by Indigenous nations across the west. Meaning it was not the Mountains that discouraged them, but instead the idea of following Indigenous laws; i.e. it's a political barrier. This barrier prevents a western expansion preferring instead almost a Roman style, build a fort around your enemy, style of invasion. >Palo Alto was further from the White House than it was from Mexico City. Frémont felt safe massacring unarmed indigenous groups in 1846, but the Anglo settlers were vastly outnumbered, and the tables could turn fast -never mind the European powers and wildcards like Russia and the Chinese. In the West, the United States was out on a limb. What the United States needed was for a bunch of people to go to California and stay there, anchor the territory, and ready it for statehood. The problem was that there were not a whole lot of reasons for settlers to try it. The sea routes around the Cape of Good Hope or down to British Nicaragua and up the West Coast after an overland trek were long, dangerous, and expensive; the Oregon Trail across the continent was even worse. When they got to the California territory, settlers found unsurpassed natural beauty and unbelievable biodiversity, but the pecuniary prospects the only thing that could lure them in large numbers were not all that great at first. There was plenty of land but no one was especially enthusiastic about working it for profit. Indians comprised the vast majority of laborers (as they comprised the vast majority of the population), but their connection to the land always left them an exit if the contracted terms were insufficiently remunerative. So while people like Leland and William Randolph Hearst's dad fled the eastern side of the Mississippi after ending slavery cut into prophets, it became clear it was very easy to rip people off in California; and anti-slavery laws didn't apply to Indigenous workers who were disregarded as people, so remained a cheap if not free source of labor. A lot of folks then assume the railroad was made to cheapen the costs of traveling to the west, but in reality that was more of a marketing ploy by a group known as the Combine, or 'the Associates' that Leland Stanford would be made a de facto face of, hell he was even made the de facto governor. According to the eugenics science that was pioneered in Stanford University later in Leland's life, he was a great man because of great genetics. In reality it is birth lottery, as is always the case, and a uncanny ability to somehow take credit for everyone else's work making him the best of the capitalists. He couldn't even pretend to be self made. Even his associates often made jokes about how all of his money is made for him, he doesn't have to do anything. At any rate it was land speculation by which this profit was made, just as George Washington's was made before him, this business was the American dream; the get rich quick scheme. One that practically presents itself to him after squandering the perfect opportunity he had on the Erie Canal. These excerpts come from Palo Alto a must read for movement members today. >After an apprenticeship, he opened his own law office, which suffered from his total lack of German-language proficiency, given that German immigrants formed the bulk of the settler population. A run for district attorney on the progressive Whig line flopped. In 1850 he briefly returned to Albany to marry Jane Lathrop, a merchant's daughter from his hometown milieu. Back in Port Washington, Leland's office burned down, taking with it his law books and legal career, such as it was. Leland's life to that point - he was in his mid-twenties - was a total loss. Despite the cosmic luck of being born alongside the Erie Canal, he'd squandered the little he put together. What he did have left was family, including four surviving brothers. He (scandalously) deposited his new wife back home, and set out to join the rest of the Stanford boys in California. With his family's support, he took the ritziest of the three routes west: a ship down to British-occupied Nicaragua, an overland trek, and another boat up the continent's flank. > >Born at the edge of a commercial frontier, Leland was a restless young man, moving from mediocre school to mediocre school, performing in accordance with his surroundings. Leland liked reading more than he liked working, and he didn't like reading all that much. He decided on a career in law, perhaps with a quick transition to politics, a professional path forever beloved by ambitious slackers. A politician needs a good name, and so Leland dropped the biblical Hebrew Amasa, which, fittingly, means "burden." The frontier had lower standards than New York did, so he took the law books his father bought him and in 1848 moved to Port Washington. Most people didn’t see the value in California 'til after 1848, but those who did saw the same vision the Combine had, and with a very small initial investment of 20k the transcontinental railroad was underway and heavily subsidized to drive the land speculation markets. Because of the rails maneuvering their way into prominence through clever marketing (as it remains cheaper to ship by sea just as it was back then) and began to sell land along the rails to settlers moving across the west. >The next morning the first passenger car passed from the Union Pacific to the Central Pacific tracks, and the inaugural batch of imported tea departed for the East, linking West Coast international trade to the nation’s financial centers via rail. This was more branding than anything else-goods from the East were just as easy to send to New York by boat, especially with the Suez Canal up and running-but the settler nation celebrated nonetheless. In 1862 is when this happened, and this disregard (or most likely contempt) for Indigenous nations was an obvious underpinning of a long standing California and American history, of working class people organizing genocide campaigns for low wages and poor compensation. By 1866 the wanton murder and economic turmoil brought by the railroads, and the mining oligarchs funding them, are similar to the oil man camp issues we see today. Destruction of land, stealing of resources, rape and murder of women, children and elders; would lead to Red Cloud’s War and the 1868 Treaty of Ft. Laramie which established our nation on the basis of the Missouri and Montana River’s watershed. This was done by extensive multi-year survey but to this day we have Lakota people who are Asian because of Chinese workers who fled to our communities after being sold to white trading posts by their family if debt got to high. A sad reality, but one people forget when they think Indigenous is a race, and that you can homogenize all of us. It was only the year before the treaty was signed, that Marx wrote his famous Das Kapital, meanwhile the Oceti Sakowin had won a war and wrote the treaty demanding communal ownership of land, continued self-determination, continue denial of the use of the money form in our economy, infrastructure like blacksmiths to create pig iron, and so much more it is no wonder our later leaders like Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull presented a People’s War. Their guerilla tactics being as well studied as anything Che did. In reality the railroads primary purpose was the destruction of the Plains nations, this railroad wasn’t economically useful UNTIL the genocide and displacement of our nations. This is most exemplified by the fact the 60 million strong continent traversing herd was split by these rail roads, and a Army sponsored campaign (whose motto was ‘one dead buffalo is a dead Indian’) that provided bullets and guns to wantonly murder buffalo to ease the boredom on passenger trains. This is also the history the term ‘removed’ comes from where buffalo hides were valued at the same price as our scalps and were interchangeable, again because ‘one dead buffalo is a dead Indian’. This railroad was the long standing dream of Indian killers that founded the US, so it should be no surprised when someone like Grant Shows us perfectly the extent that liberalism would never have been enough even if reconstruction went perfectly; and perhaps the words of Harvard fellows and graduates shouldn’t be as valued as they are by Marxists (looking Cornel West as well as pre-Marxist Du Bois being cited by ‘patsocs’ to deny Indigenous sovereignty, or famous NDNs who had fellowships there and now love to let billionaires and actors tokenize them without standing up) This is to say genocide is normal in liberalism and waiting for genocide to begin calling liberalism fascism, misses an important fact, that MANIFEST DESTINY INSPIRED ZIONISM, FASCISM, NAZISM and whatever else you want to call it; America is its origins. So anyway the mountains in the way were the people, the people of the Oceti Sakowin resisting class society being forced on them after already overcoming these contradictions multiple times before.

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    genzedong
    GenZedong ProbablyKaffe 9 months ago 90%
    Wounded Knee from 1890 to 1973

    cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/3005738 > cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1336560 > > > From comrade Sungmanitu: > > > > Last thread we dispelled some major misconceptions of Indigenous people and the founding of America, but what about Western Expansion? How much do you honestly know as a historical materialist? One of the most common misnomers I hear in educating people is “why should we care about something that happened hundreds and hundreds of years ago?” Capital was written 1867, the same time we signed our first treaty. When I say we I do not mean some homogenized conception of Indigenous people, but rather I am speaking specifically about the Oceti Sakowin and the ending of Mahpiya Luta’s (Red Cloud’s) War. Classically the story goes that as the US moved westward they conquered and erased nations in their wake, a seemingly unstoppable machine of capitalist expansion. In reality, the US lost many wars and only won the ones they started by surprise. In our classic conception of manifest destiny, we assume a wave of red, white and blue moving across the continent. In reality the situation was far more complex than what Marx simplified in Capital, and reality shows that the US and Canada (although wanting to) could not move across as a wave due to the level of military and political cohesion among Indigenous nations of the plains. > > > > Instead what we actually see is the coasts be settled first (with some Mexican and Spanish settling occurring in the SW and West Coast, but it's not until the Anglos that we see the full extent of settler barbarity against an “other”- even other settler populations that weren’t Anglo) while the California gold rush starts in 1848, the Trail of Tears had been going on since 1830 and wouldn’t end until 1850. The land was not yet settled and they already were in such precarious positions they sought land across the continent, and worse through the plains. The Oregon trail of course is how we imagine everyone moving west, and that is certainly how worse off settlers would be, the reality showed most people preferred to safely sail to Mexico, walk across, and then sail to California or Vancouver (See Palo Alto by Malcolm Harris for more details). > > > > Famously the “mighty Sioux” as Thomas Jefferson described us, exacted tolls and were expert scouts. Those “sioux” (a Anishinaabe slur adopted by the French) are us, the Oceti Sakowin, and when Louis and Clark set out westward they were told to make sure to become our friends. Instead they chose to try and avoid the toll, only to be caught a few days into our territory. Since then we watched and enacted our toll, and enacted our justice when it was avoided, against settlers passing through. The only issue is nobody who went west ever came back the same way. Muhpiya Luta saw that we were being surrounded, and so he went to the Big White Mountains where the mouths of the Missouri and Montana Rivers. There while they camped they had council and made the decision to make a long journey to pray on what needed to be done. They then went on to follow the watershed of these rivers deeply understanding the bioregion, only we had no way of explaining the science behind these decisions then. They crossed to the south side of the Platte River and followed it east to what is now Council Bluffs in Omaha, and crossed at the trading post that was there to the East River which is a small creek compared to all these others. There is where they began to complete their circle, following the watershed back to the headwaters, and when they arrived back they knew we must go to war. > > > > The Civil War had only ended 2 years prior, and the US would seek to reunite North and South (and incorporate freedmen) by genociding Natives and giving people more “living space” or “living room” to solve tensions and economic hardship. This was also a large driver (as well as the economic turmoil leading up to the Civil War) in the move all the way to California, but some brave patriots would take up the call to fight in the Indian Wars. We get the famous Buffalo Soldiers from this era, and from there a slew of contradictions we face today wrt anti-blackness in Indigenous communities. By 1868 instead of being conquered and forced to sign a treaty as the common myth goes; Grant who was now president would urge the Army to make peace and “give the Indians whatever they want” so we won and wrote the treaty. This is why our oral histories to this day hold up as legal arguments in court, and why the US would renege on the treaty, it was a symbol of how badly they lost. This is our famous Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868, and with this treaty the watershed was turned into the Great Sioux Reservation, cutting us off from our siblings on Canada’s side of the line. This of course isn't the first misconception of the treaty settlers tend to have, another is clearly seen by assuming its about only land, which I have demonstrated the selection of land was based on the watershed of two rivers. This wasn’t just some arbitrarily chosen land, but an entire bioregion, and we can see that by the treaty’s stipulation that the border extended to the far side of the River where the tide rises. Along with this very specific border, this was not just a treaty between the US Nation and Oceti Sakowin Oyate (our concept of Nation), but we negotiated on behalf of the other-than-human nations on this bioregion. Most specifically, the buffalo. > > > > Because of this close bond with other-than-human life, there have been a plethora of racist policies enacted against various nations, as well as vigilante actions. In Canada the federal government began relocation of bears to Indigenous land because “we thought you were kin”, and unfortunately they were lying, and in fact that they were being allies. Another example is the infamous “one dead buffalo, is a dead Indian” folklore, that resulted in the transcontinental railroad selling bullets to passengers to wantonly massacre Buffalo. Along with systemic ecocide campaigns, the term ecocide has always been synonymous with the murder of Indigenous peoples and cultures. My favorite is during the 1965 ‘Fish-ins' in the Pacific Northwest, ‘Back to the Land’ liberals and socialists counter protest with signs saying ‘save the fish, spear an Indian’ a slogan paraphrase around the Termination period of the Menominee nation. The only difference was these were conservative “rednecks”, whose bumpers read “save a deer, shoot an Indian” one fact remained the same however- settlers wanted Indians gone. > > > > This fact was well known, the federal government had been powerless to stop settlers from organically organizing themselves into militias, and lynch mobs to kill Indigenous and Black folks. To this day Indian rolling remains a popular pastime in reservation border towns (see Red Nation Rising for more details), but we will return to this idea. In the treaty the US insisted on building first around the territory to assure whites would not enter, and illegally extract resources. This lofty goal was admirable of Grant, as should be expected for a champion of reconstruction, but like all well-meaning liberals- admirable goals of the bourgeoisie does not appeal to an emerging settler-worker. Settler-workers had only one way to achieve success, steal the land and money of those less fortunate, or even just less than you. In a white supremacist society it is easy to find your targets, especially with helpful charts race scientists had made by then. So for white workers in the plains they set their sights on finding gold somewhere closer than California, and folks like John Gordon, would be remembered and revered by their fellow workers for leading them illegally past the forts into Indigenous territory. > > > > This is where the bordertown Gordon Nebraska gets its name, another detail we must remember for later, but it is this citizen organizing themselves to break the treaty without the aid of the federal government that leads to the conclusion that it is not enough to be a worker when claiming to want to liberate all. You must demonstrate an actual desire to liberate all peoples, and not just stop when your life has marginal gains. This lesson we did not learn from the communist movement, but instead we learned it from our own mistakes. > > > > Muhpiya Luta’s War was filled with many atrocities, and so Oceti Sakowin on the Great Sioux reservation were happy to be at peace and have their own nation. What they did not realize was this was a prison disguised as what we wanted. We became an island nation suddenly, only there were no vast oceans. Horses were our vessels, the stars our GPS, and we knew the land better. Because settlers kept illegally entering our lands, the US military eventually decided they were no longer going to uphold the treaty, and congress decided in 1871 they would no longer deal directly with the Great Sioux, but instead introduced the Indian agents. These agents would become the Bureau of Indian Affairs when the department of War becomes the Department of Interior, and Indians to this day would be managed as national parks and wild game is. From there slowly one aspect of the treaty after another was repealed, and when Col George A Custer announced there was gold in the Black Hills officially, a renewed interest in war with the Oceti Sakowin was ignited. The Black Hills War is what it has become known as today, and it is this war where we find the infamous Tasunka Witiko (Crazy Horse) and Tatanka Iyotake (Bull Bison who sits on hindlegs, or Sitting Bull). Tatanka Iyotake was Hunkpapa Lakota, Tasunka Witiko was Oglala Lakota, and they led the radical faction to war by 1976 after a failed summit the previous year with more moderate chiefs (these chiefs would refuse to join the war still). Because these chiefs lacked the foresight to see the word of the wasicu would not be kept, we stopped at only liberating ourselves. It is by embracing the liberation of the Arapho, Cheyenne and others that Tatanka Iyotake was able to bring together a large coalition of bands by the Battle at Greasy Grass (Little Bighorn), and Custers folly would be realized as thousands of warriors road into put an end to the genocidaire. > > > > For his defeat he was granted the rank of General, and now another myth has entered the American psyche, Custer’s Last Stand. The strategy would severely target women and children from that point onward (more than they already were) and after the slaughter of women, children and elders in obscene ways (like using infants as skeets for target practice) peace would be made and the railroad companies interests would continue to dominate, despite overseas shipping being cheaper than ever investing in the transcontinental- but that sure was a great ad campaign. Eventually the Great Sioux would lose its portions in Montana being and Nebraska being reduced to only the Dakotas, until the General Allotment Act of 1887 which helped divide us further into the reservations we see today. The first to be assassinated was Crazy Horse and it was by another Indian working for the BIA on Pine Ridge, my family is rode in his band, then they went after Sitting Bull (by this time that was actually his name as he gets it while running from the calvary in Blackfoot territory in Canada) when that new reached the Mniconjou chief Unphan Gleske (Spotted Elk) who was Tatanka Iyotake’s half-brother, they sought refuge with Red Cloud at Pine Ridge knowing he was one of the last leaders of the Black Hills War. > > > > This wasn’t the only factor at play, but it's an undeniable one, the other two critical elements we must be aware of in telling this history are: the Ghost Dance Movement, and yellow-journalism of a young William Randolph Hearst. > > > > For those unaware of the Ghost Dance Movement, it was a spiritual pan-Indian movement started by a Paiute man named Wovoka who had a vision that stemmed from an earlier vision that his father presumably taught him. This vision was about a violent end to the wasicu’s world, and a return to an Indigenous way of life, but this wasn’t some decolonial movement. It was instead a cultural reaction movement that was the result of the church’s influence on Indigenous communities, and although it dreamed of a future without oppression, it did so through idealized means of a Messiah figure. The Ghost Dance told this history and vision, and was easily adapted into nations beliefs across the US despite Wovoka never leaving his home in Nevada, but much like Marxism, each nation would develop it for their conditions and incorporate it with their other beliefs. > > By the time the Ghost Dance came around the Lakota people had already had many visions in much the same way, but there was no Messiah who would save us. It is instead the Oyate, the people, who must save themselves. The Ghost Dance particularly focused on the removal of white people from the land, some suggested divine intervention as if judgment day would take away the Christians leaving us heathens to enjoy our lives. The Lakota took our other visions from our leaders like Tatanka Iyotake, Tasunka Witiko, etc and we identified our enemy as the Indian agents. With an increase in hostilities, the US banned the movement and began repressing it along with other things like Sundances. This emergent liberation theology is the primary reason the 1890 massacre happened, but the lesser part of the story is the notorious anti-communist and nazi sympathizer, and media mogul; Hearst. > > > > The Hearst name lasts into this century, and is because of specifically Williams yellow journalism, that helped expand the US empire. Most famously he is remembered for his reporting on Spanish occupation of Cuba, the issues were of course not the practical slavery, colonial violence, or anything real frankly. Instead much like our reactionaries today, he invented fake issues from real contradictions. One of the most offensive was the report of Spanish soldiers molesting Anglo women during inspections of boats, but there were also claims of feeding people to sharks and more. Before Bernays, we had Hearst. Through this journalism the drumbeat of war became louder, and because he was friends with the likes of Teddy Roosevelt (at the time the assistant secretary to the Navy) and the larger ruling class that craved a trans-oceanic Empire instead of one confined to the continent. > > > > So when Teddy’s boss went on a trip leaving him in charge of operations, the USS Maine was stationed in Guantanamo Bay (before the US leased it), and ordered a fleet to begin sailing to the Philippines where the US was funding guerilla’s to destabilize Spanish holdings in the region. All of this without anyone’s approval but his own, as they were conspiring to manufacture consent for the war. The USS Maine caught fire and was blamed on Spain, historians suggest it was actually an engine fire, I suggest it was purposely destroyed to push the goals of the Empire. We get the War and America becomes a global power, betraying Cuban and Filipino “allies” who were really only pawns. This they accomplished with laws dictating the US has final say over decisions in Cuba, and by BUYING the Philippines from under the revolutionaries feet who they used for cannon fodder, as they shelled from warships. Once again this is a longer story for another time, but what I want to stress is this was not the first time Hearst fueled murder to undermine liberation of colonized peoples, nor would it be the last. > > After the fall of Custer, the General Allotment Act, and around when the Ghost Dance Movement reached the Lakota, we had already mentioned the lust for gold that made the wasicu lose more humanity. The people reporting this to the nation were capitalists like Hearst, who knew the foot soldiers for their accumulation were settlers breaking the law. However it wasn’t enough to have settlers move in, as the goal was to start another war, and take the rest of the land in my educated opinion. Most people are not well educated on the Hearst’s and so we limit our understanding to only the media campaigns that helped build the Imperial order. How many would argue this is an over prescription? But no, when you realize where Moribund capitalism crystalizes, Palo Alto, we have to ask what are the social and material conditions the San Francisco born William Randolph would be shaped by. > > > > This is when all of our stories meet together, the book An American Genocide by Benjamin Hadley was covered by the Citations Needed podcast, highlighting just how common and blaise genocide apologia and support has been in the United States, but focuses on California. Similarly Palo Alto by Malcolm Harris (discussed only briefly really on Upstream podcast) lays out the policies in California, and frankly the crystallization of the banking cartel Lenin imagined, that inclined working class settlers toward organizing militias to kill Indians, of course at the behest of budding industrial titans that lay the folklore for the silicon valley geniuses like Elon Musk and companies like Apple, Bank of America, and much more. One of these budding capitalists was George Hearst, born in Missouri, found his way to California at the start of the Civil War. In Missouri he was already known for prospecting and land surveying, and brought those skills to California where he would become a gold mine owner (he would not do the mining himself of course, just owned the land he let people work) and ranch owner. > > If you can’t see the easily applicable theme here to the Black Hills, but gold and ranches were the original reason our land was stolen; the oil and uranium discoveries came later. This placed Hearst not only as a part of a family invested in the dispossession of natives from their land, but made his reporting on mining to encourage illegal excursion, as more of a favor to his father’s business instead of some pursuit of reporting the news (an exploration of Hearst’s reporting to come later on the Chunka Luta Podcast). This is of course because like most nepo babies, William’s dad gave him the job after acquiring the San Francisco Examiner. One of the most fascinating aspects of this dialectical relationship comes from the Hooverism that fueled Hearst’s anti-communism, and we would see some of the first examples of red coating happen when he suggest Lakota were all communists (a line we would here nearly a century later at the re-occupation of Wounded Knee) and reported on an ever looming threat on western civilization from a possible national liberation movement. A story as old as time really. > > > > This increased the number of calvary members in the area, many young who had been propagandized by the latest myth of Custer’s Last Stand, and of course many of whom were rebuilding the US through the time tested tactic of Indian genocide. So we return to the band of Mniconjou fleeing Cheyenne River Reservation to Pine Ridge Reservation. This trail is memorialized today as BIA 27- The Chief Bigfoot Memorial Highway, or Bigfoot Trail. This is also the road the organization's land is on. > > It was the end of December, and considering it was only last year we saw dozens of people freeze to death, that spurred the need for this organization to exist; it comes to no surprise the conditions they fled in were dire. When discussing this topic it takes a great deal of tact, and you should learn about it so you don't post pictures of the mass grave to score clout points or whatever possesses people to ignore the wishes of the survivors and their children and grandchildren who survive them.Politics of Hallowed Ground is where you should begin, but needless to say we will only be brief. The trail took them through the Badlands which to this day are still bad. Jokes aside, Unphan Gleska (Chief Bigfoot) was walking in his too small shoes and caught pneumonia along the trail, succumbing to it before they reached Pine Ridge. The group continued on to the Agency, but before they arrived the calvary intercepted them and brought them to Wounded Knee Creek. > > > > Separating the men from the women, they confiscated the guns and destroyed them, and while camped under a peace flag; they began to dance. Wovoka by the band Redbone captures the feeling a bit as to why, and their song We Were All Wounded at Wounded Knee tells the story. I highly recommend you listen to it before we continue. Ghost Dances are very sacred and very serious affairs, people have died continuing them to this day, but the dance simply requires special shirts, a round dance, and tossing dirt into the air. A symbolic gesture, a living history, call it what you will; it wasn’t threatening in the immediate. Nonetheless the reason the shooting started has many claims, some say it must have been one of the men when they confiscated the guns and hid one, some place the massacres start at the confiscation. In reality it was obviously the people who still had the guns. This would be the equivalent of claiming the group you control their access to food, water, medicine, and access to the outside world are at fault for retaliating after the kidnapping of countless children is at fault for resisting your oppression. > > > > Even if we did fire first, the resulting battle (as the government framed it) was certainly an overreaction to what could've been at most one gun- we do see this same tactic again last century during Yellow Thunder Camp led by Russell Means, and again only last decade during the #NoDAPL protests arresting a close family friend through a honey trap (Red Fawn). Instead we call it what it is, a massacre of mostyle women, children, and elderly. There are plenty of accounts of the aftermath you can find elsewhere, but one of the most gruesome scenes is described by my ancestor Tasunka Wasicu (American Horse). > > > > “...When the firing began, of course the people who were standing immediately around the young man who fired the first shot were killed right together, and then they turned their guns, Hotchkill guns, etc., upon the women who were in the lodges standing there under a flag of truce, and of course as soon as they were fired upon they fled, the men fleeing in one direction and the women running in two different directions. So that there were three general directions in which they took flight. > > > > There was a woman with an infant in her arms who was killed as she almost touched the flag of truce, and the women and children of course were strewn all along the circular village until they were dispatched. Right near the flag of truce a mother was shot down with her infant; the child not knowing that its mother was dead was still nursing, and that especially was a very sad sight. The women as they were fleeing with their babes were killed together, shot right through, and the women who were very heavy with child were also killed. All the Indians fled in these three directions, and after most all of them had been killed a cry was made that all those who were not killed wounded should come forth and they would be safe. Little boys who were not wounded came out of their places of refuge, and as soon as they came in sight a number of soldiers surrounded them and butchered them there…” > > > > That very child lived a long time, and many of our leaders today knew her very well. At this time the official history I came to tell, but history doesn’t stop after the moment an event happens. Instead there is a great deal of blowback. Of course the podcast won’t do a season about Wounded Knee, so we will be discussing the blowback on an audio documentary I have been writing for the last 3 years, this piece will be a podcast episode as well, but I wanted to focus on the long history leading up to the massacre as that’s what this anniversary is about. The assassination of our leaders that our org and movement was born from, and the long road it took to get there. If you remember the last effort post was about the real Thanksgiving story, well now we see where that eventually led. There is plenty to the story we have left out, but I think you can see a beautiful mosaic I hope to create to tell the real history here. > > > > The next post will cover the conditions between 1890 and 1973 on Pine Ridge, and settle on the Wounded Knee Occupation History which by that time our audio documentary series should be releasing. The best way to stay informed on its release and to here it early would be the patreon found on linktr.ee/chunkalutanetwork but I understand a lot of people here prefer https://liberapay.com/ChunkaLutaNetwork/ which I dont understand well enough, so if you have ideas how to keep ya’ll better informed. Part of my goals next year is to become more active in this space and lemmygrad, but obviously the real life stuff and mainstream social media take up so much time. We do have several organizers engaging here, but we all have lives y’know? When our website launches we will announce on all our social medias, but the public podcast finally launches the 20th, and early releases again will be on the patreon so listening there or the Marx Madness podcast will probably be the quickest ways to hear from us, besides patreon AND Marx Madness is free and educational. So why another post? Well this really about the harshness of winter and our genocide, that continues today both by gun, and through social murder. We are also doing a Winter Drive to help keep folks alive until we can start establishing more permanent changes to ease the struggle there. This would be things like poplar trees for pollarding, preparing dry material in the summer into heating bricks that will help start fires easier but also supplement the wood usage, and of course gather a larger stockpile this year. https://www.gofundme.com/f/deliver-wood-coats-supplies-to-pine-ridge it will only take 4-5k to send 2 organizers in a Uhaul to pick up the gathered supplies and bring it to the reservation. It will take several days so lodging will need to be paid for, gas, and food. A large portion of that (2k) is for more agitprop and paying the camera guy. Plus extra money to support our organizers family as they usually are the childcare, so without them their partner cant work unless they can afford childcare while one of the parents are gone therefore not losing a week of income.

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    anti_colonialism
    Fuck the Colonists ProbablyKaffe 9 months ago 94%
    Wounded Knee from 1890 to 1973

    cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1336560 > From comrade Sungmanitu: > > Last thread we dispelled some major misconceptions of Indigenous people and the founding of America, but what about Western Expansion? How much do you honestly know as a historical materialist? One of the most common misnomers I hear in educating people is “why should we care about something that happened hundreds and hundreds of years ago?” Capital was written 1867, the same time we signed our first treaty. When I say we I do not mean some homogenized conception of Indigenous people, but rather I am speaking specifically about the Oceti Sakowin and the ending of Mahpiya Luta’s (Red Cloud’s) War. Classically the story goes that as the US moved westward they conquered and erased nations in their wake, a seemingly unstoppable machine of capitalist expansion. In reality, the US lost many wars and only won the ones they started by surprise. In our classic conception of manifest destiny, we assume a wave of red, white and blue moving across the continent. In reality the situation was far more complex than what Marx simplified in Capital, and reality shows that the US and Canada (although wanting to) could not move across as a wave due to the level of military and political cohesion among Indigenous nations of the plains. > > Instead what we actually see is the coasts be settled first (with some Mexican and Spanish settling occurring in the SW and West Coast, but it's not until the Anglos that we see the full extent of settler barbarity against an “other”- even other settler populations that weren’t Anglo) while the California gold rush starts in 1848, the Trail of Tears had been going on since 1830 and wouldn’t end until 1850. The land was not yet settled and they already were in such precarious positions they sought land across the continent, and worse through the plains. The Oregon trail of course is how we imagine everyone moving west, and that is certainly how worse off settlers would be, the reality showed most people preferred to safely sail to Mexico, walk across, and then sail to California or Vancouver (See Palo Alto by Malcolm Harris for more details). > > Famously the “mighty Sioux” as Thomas Jefferson described us, exacted tolls and were expert scouts. Those “sioux” (a Anishinaabe slur adopted by the French) are us, the Oceti Sakowin, and when Louis and Clark set out westward they were told to make sure to become our friends. Instead they chose to try and avoid the toll, only to be caught a few days into our territory. Since then we watched and enacted our toll, and enacted our justice when it was avoided, against settlers passing through. The only issue is nobody who went west ever came back the same way. Muhpiya Luta saw that we were being surrounded, and so he went to the Big White Mountains where the mouths of the Missouri and Montana Rivers. There while they camped they had council and made the decision to make a long journey to pray on what needed to be done. They then went on to follow the watershed of these rivers deeply understanding the bioregion, only we had no way of explaining the science behind these decisions then. They crossed to the south side of the Platte River and followed it east to what is now Council Bluffs in Omaha, and crossed at the trading post that was there to the East River which is a small creek compared to all these others. There is where they began to complete their circle, following the watershed back to the headwaters, and when they arrived back they knew we must go to war. > > The Civil War had only ended 2 years prior, and the US would seek to reunite North and South (and incorporate freedmen) by genociding Natives and giving people more “living space” or “living room” to solve tensions and economic hardship. This was also a large driver (as well as the economic turmoil leading up to the Civil War) in the move all the way to California, but some brave patriots would take up the call to fight in the Indian Wars. We get the famous Buffalo Soldiers from this era, and from there a slew of contradictions we face today wrt anti-blackness in Indigenous communities. By 1868 instead of being conquered and forced to sign a treaty as the common myth goes; Grant who was now president would urge the Army to make peace and “give the Indians whatever they want” so we won and wrote the treaty. This is why our oral histories to this day hold up as legal arguments in court, and why the US would renege on the treaty, it was a symbol of how badly they lost. This is our famous Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868, and with this treaty the watershed was turned into the Great Sioux Reservation, cutting us off from our siblings on Canada’s side of the line. This of course isn't the first misconception of the treaty settlers tend to have, another is clearly seen by assuming its about only land, which I have demonstrated the selection of land was based on the watershed of two rivers. This wasn’t just some arbitrarily chosen land, but an entire bioregion, and we can see that by the treaty’s stipulation that the border extended to the far side of the River where the tide rises. Along with this very specific border, this was not just a treaty between the US Nation and Oceti Sakowin Oyate (our concept of Nation), but we negotiated on behalf of the other-than-human nations on this bioregion. Most specifically, the buffalo. > > Because of this close bond with other-than-human life, there have been a plethora of racist policies enacted against various nations, as well as vigilante actions. In Canada the federal government began relocation of bears to Indigenous land because “we thought you were kin”, and unfortunately they were lying, and in fact that they were being allies. Another example is the infamous “one dead buffalo, is a dead Indian” folklore, that resulted in the transcontinental railroad selling bullets to passengers to wantonly massacre Buffalo. Along with systemic ecocide campaigns, the term ecocide has always been synonymous with the murder of Indigenous peoples and cultures. My favorite is during the 1965 ‘Fish-ins' in the Pacific Northwest, ‘Back to the Land’ liberals and socialists counter protest with signs saying ‘save the fish, spear an Indian’ a slogan paraphrase around the Termination period of the Menominee nation. The only difference was these were conservative “rednecks”, whose bumpers read “save a deer, shoot an Indian” one fact remained the same however- settlers wanted Indians gone. > > This fact was well known, the federal government had been powerless to stop settlers from organically organizing themselves into militias, and lynch mobs to kill Indigenous and Black folks. To this day Indian rolling remains a popular pastime in reservation border towns (see Red Nation Rising for more details), but we will return to this idea. In the treaty the US insisted on building first around the territory to assure whites would not enter, and illegally extract resources. This lofty goal was admirable of Grant, as should be expected for a champion of reconstruction, but like all well-meaning liberals- admirable goals of the bourgeoisie does not appeal to an emerging settler-worker. Settler-workers had only one way to achieve success, steal the land and money of those less fortunate, or even just less than you. In a white supremacist society it is easy to find your targets, especially with helpful charts race scientists had made by then. So for white workers in the plains they set their sights on finding gold somewhere closer than California, and folks like John Gordon, would be remembered and revered by their fellow workers for leading them illegally past the forts into Indigenous territory. > > This is where the bordertown Gordon Nebraska gets its name, another detail we must remember for later, but it is this citizen organizing themselves to break the treaty without the aid of the federal government that leads to the conclusion that it is not enough to be a worker when claiming to want to liberate all. You must demonstrate an actual desire to liberate all peoples, and not just stop when your life has marginal gains. This lesson we did not learn from the communist movement, but instead we learned it from our own mistakes. > > Muhpiya Luta’s War was filled with many atrocities, and so Oceti Sakowin on the Great Sioux reservation were happy to be at peace and have their own nation. What they did not realize was this was a prison disguised as what we wanted. We became an island nation suddenly, only there were no vast oceans. Horses were our vessels, the stars our GPS, and we knew the land better. Because settlers kept illegally entering our lands, the US military eventually decided they were no longer going to uphold the treaty, and congress decided in 1871 they would no longer deal directly with the Great Sioux, but instead introduced the Indian agents. These agents would become the Bureau of Indian Affairs when the department of War becomes the Department of Interior, and Indians to this day would be managed as national parks and wild game is. From there slowly one aspect of the treaty after another was repealed, and when Col George A Custer announced there was gold in the Black Hills officially, a renewed interest in war with the Oceti Sakowin was ignited. The Black Hills War is what it has become known as today, and it is this war where we find the infamous Tasunka Witiko (Crazy Horse) and Tatanka Iyotake (Bull Bison who sits on hindlegs, or Sitting Bull). Tatanka Iyotake was Hunkpapa Lakota, Tasunka Witiko was Oglala Lakota, and they led the radical faction to war by 1976 after a failed summit the previous year with more moderate chiefs (these chiefs would refuse to join the war still). Because these chiefs lacked the foresight to see the word of the wasicu would not be kept, we stopped at only liberating ourselves. It is by embracing the liberation of the Arapho, Cheyenne and others that Tatanka Iyotake was able to bring together a large coalition of bands by the Battle at Greasy Grass (Little Bighorn), and Custers folly would be realized as thousands of warriors road into put an end to the genocidaire. > > For his defeat he was granted the rank of General, and now another myth has entered the American psyche, Custer’s Last Stand. The strategy would severely target women and children from that point onward (more than they already were) and after the slaughter of women, children and elders in obscene ways (like using infants as skeets for target practice) peace would be made and the railroad companies interests would continue to dominate, despite overseas shipping being cheaper than ever investing in the transcontinental- but that sure was a great ad campaign. Eventually the Great Sioux would lose its portions in Montana being and Nebraska being reduced to only the Dakotas, until the General Allotment Act of 1887 which helped divide us further into the reservations we see today. The first to be assassinated was Crazy Horse and it was by another Indian working for the BIA on Pine Ridge, my family is rode in his band, then they went after Sitting Bull (by this time that was actually his name as he gets it while running from the calvary in Blackfoot territory in Canada) when that new reached the Mniconjou chief Unphan Gleske (Spotted Elk) who was Tatanka Iyotake’s half-brother, they sought refuge with Red Cloud at Pine Ridge knowing he was one of the last leaders of the Black Hills War. > > This wasn’t the only factor at play, but it's an undeniable one, the other two critical elements we must be aware of in telling this history are: the Ghost Dance Movement, and yellow-journalism of a young William Randolph Hearst. > > For those unaware of the Ghost Dance Movement, it was a spiritual pan-Indian movement started by a Paiute man named Wovoka who had a vision that stemmed from an earlier vision that his father presumably taught him. This vision was about a violent end to the wasicu’s world, and a return to an Indigenous way of life, but this wasn’t some decolonial movement. It was instead a cultural reaction movement that was the result of the church’s influence on Indigenous communities, and although it dreamed of a future without oppression, it did so through idealized means of a Messiah figure. The Ghost Dance told this history and vision, and was easily adapted into nations beliefs across the US despite Wovoka never leaving his home in Nevada, but much like Marxism, each nation would develop it for their conditions and incorporate it with their other beliefs. > By the time the Ghost Dance came around the Lakota people had already had many visions in much the same way, but there was no Messiah who would save us. It is instead the Oyate, the people, who must save themselves. The Ghost Dance particularly focused on the removal of white people from the land, some suggested divine intervention as if judgment day would take away the Christians leaving us heathens to enjoy our lives. The Lakota took our other visions from our leaders like Tatanka Iyotake, Tasunka Witiko, etc and we identified our enemy as the Indian agents. With an increase in hostilities, the US banned the movement and began repressing it along with other things like Sundances. This emergent liberation theology is the primary reason the 1890 massacre happened, but the lesser part of the story is the notorious anti-communist and nazi sympathizer, and media mogul; Hearst. > > The Hearst name lasts into this century, and is because of specifically Williams yellow journalism, that helped expand the US empire. Most famously he is remembered for his reporting on Spanish occupation of Cuba, the issues were of course not the practical slavery, colonial violence, or anything real frankly. Instead much like our reactionaries today, he invented fake issues from real contradictions. One of the most offensive was the report of Spanish soldiers molesting Anglo women during inspections of boats, but there were also claims of feeding people to sharks and more. Before Bernays, we had Hearst. Through this journalism the drumbeat of war became louder, and because he was friends with the likes of Teddy Roosevelt (at the time the assistant secretary to the Navy) and the larger ruling class that craved a trans-oceanic Empire instead of one confined to the continent. > > So when Teddy’s boss went on a trip leaving him in charge of operations, the USS Maine was stationed in Guantanamo Bay (before the US leased it), and ordered a fleet to begin sailing to the Philippines where the US was funding guerilla’s to destabilize Spanish holdings in the region. All of this without anyone’s approval but his own, as they were conspiring to manufacture consent for the war. The USS Maine caught fire and was blamed on Spain, historians suggest it was actually an engine fire, I suggest it was purposely destroyed to push the goals of the Empire. We get the War and America becomes a global power, betraying Cuban and Filipino “allies” who were really only pawns. This they accomplished with laws dictating the US has final say over decisions in Cuba, and by BUYING the Philippines from under the revolutionaries feet who they used for cannon fodder, as they shelled from warships. Once again this is a longer story for another time, but what I want to stress is this was not the first time Hearst fueled murder to undermine liberation of colonized peoples, nor would it be the last. > After the fall of Custer, the General Allotment Act, and around when the Ghost Dance Movement reached the Lakota, we had already mentioned the lust for gold that made the wasicu lose more humanity. The people reporting this to the nation were capitalists like Hearst, who knew the foot soldiers for their accumulation were settlers breaking the law. However it wasn’t enough to have settlers move in, as the goal was to start another war, and take the rest of the land in my educated opinion. Most people are not well educated on the Hearst’s and so we limit our understanding to only the media campaigns that helped build the Imperial order. How many would argue this is an over prescription? But no, when you realize where Moribund capitalism crystalizes, Palo Alto, we have to ask what are the social and material conditions the San Francisco born William Randolph would be shaped by. > > This is when all of our stories meet together, the book An American Genocide by Benjamin Hadley was covered by the Citations Needed podcast, highlighting just how common and blaise genocide apologia and support has been in the United States, but focuses on California. Similarly Palo Alto by Malcolm Harris (discussed only briefly really on Upstream podcast) lays out the policies in California, and frankly the crystallization of the banking cartel Lenin imagined, that inclined working class settlers toward organizing militias to kill Indians, of course at the behest of budding industrial titans that lay the folklore for the silicon valley geniuses like Elon Musk and companies like Apple, Bank of America, and much more. One of these budding capitalists was George Hearst, born in Missouri, found his way to California at the start of the Civil War. In Missouri he was already known for prospecting and land surveying, and brought those skills to California where he would become a gold mine owner (he would not do the mining himself of course, just owned the land he let people work) and ranch owner. > If you can’t see the easily applicable theme here to the Black Hills, but gold and ranches were the original reason our land was stolen; the oil and uranium discoveries came later. This placed Hearst not only as a part of a family invested in the dispossession of natives from their land, but made his reporting on mining to encourage illegal excursion, as more of a favor to his father’s business instead of some pursuit of reporting the news (an exploration of Hearst’s reporting to come later on the Chunka Luta Podcast). This is of course because like most nepo babies, William’s dad gave him the job after acquiring the San Francisco Examiner. One of the most fascinating aspects of this dialectical relationship comes from the Hooverism that fueled Hearst’s anti-communism, and we would see some of the first examples of red coating happen when he suggest Lakota were all communists (a line we would here nearly a century later at the re-occupation of Wounded Knee) and reported on an ever looming threat on western civilization from a possible national liberation movement. A story as old as time really. > > This increased the number of calvary members in the area, many young who had been propagandized by the latest myth of Custer’s Last Stand, and of course many of whom were rebuilding the US through the time tested tactic of Indian genocide. So we return to the band of Mniconjou fleeing Cheyenne River Reservation to Pine Ridge Reservation. This trail is memorialized today as BIA 27- The Chief Bigfoot Memorial Highway, or Bigfoot Trail. This is also the road the organization's land is on. > It was the end of December, and considering it was only last year we saw dozens of people freeze to death, that spurred the need for this organization to exist; it comes to no surprise the conditions they fled in were dire. When discussing this topic it takes a great deal of tact, and you should learn about it so you don't post pictures of the mass grave to score clout points or whatever possesses people to ignore the wishes of the survivors and their children and grandchildren who survive them.Politics of Hallowed Ground is where you should begin, but needless to say we will only be brief. The trail took them through the Badlands which to this day are still bad. Jokes aside, Unphan Gleska (Chief Bigfoot) was walking in his too small shoes and caught pneumonia along the trail, succumbing to it before they reached Pine Ridge. The group continued on to the Agency, but before they arrived the calvary intercepted them and brought them to Wounded Knee Creek. > > Separating the men from the women, they confiscated the guns and destroyed them, and while camped under a peace flag; they began to dance. Wovoka by the band Redbone captures the feeling a bit as to why, and their song We Were All Wounded at Wounded Knee tells the story. I highly recommend you listen to it before we continue. Ghost Dances are very sacred and very serious affairs, people have died continuing them to this day, but the dance simply requires special shirts, a round dance, and tossing dirt into the air. A symbolic gesture, a living history, call it what you will; it wasn’t threatening in the immediate. Nonetheless the reason the shooting started has many claims, some say it must have been one of the men when they confiscated the guns and hid one, some place the massacres start at the confiscation. In reality it was obviously the people who still had the guns. This would be the equivalent of claiming the group you control their access to food, water, medicine, and access to the outside world are at fault for retaliating after the kidnapping of countless children is at fault for resisting your oppression. > > Even if we did fire first, the resulting battle (as the government framed it) was certainly an overreaction to what could've been at most one gun- we do see this same tactic again last century during Yellow Thunder Camp led by Russell Means, and again only last decade during the #NoDAPL protests arresting a close family friend through a honey trap (Red Fawn). Instead we call it what it is, a massacre of mostyle women, children, and elderly. There are plenty of accounts of the aftermath you can find elsewhere, but one of the most gruesome scenes is described by my ancestor Tasunka Wasicu (American Horse). > > “...When the firing began, of course the people who were standing immediately around the young man who fired the first shot were killed right together, and then they turned their guns, Hotchkill guns, etc., upon the women who were in the lodges standing there under a flag of truce, and of course as soon as they were fired upon they fled, the men fleeing in one direction and the women running in two different directions. So that there were three general directions in which they took flight. > > There was a woman with an infant in her arms who was killed as she almost touched the flag of truce, and the women and children of course were strewn all along the circular village until they were dispatched. Right near the flag of truce a mother was shot down with her infant; the child not knowing that its mother was dead was still nursing, and that especially was a very sad sight. The women as they were fleeing with their babes were killed together, shot right through, and the women who were very heavy with child were also killed. All the Indians fled in these three directions, and after most all of them had been killed a cry was made that all those who were not killed wounded should come forth and they would be safe. Little boys who were not wounded came out of their places of refuge, and as soon as they came in sight a number of soldiers surrounded them and butchered them there…” > > That very child lived a long time, and many of our leaders today knew her very well. At this time the official history I came to tell, but history doesn’t stop after the moment an event happens. Instead there is a great deal of blowback. Of course the podcast won’t do a season about Wounded Knee, so we will be discussing the blowback on an audio documentary I have been writing for the last 3 years, this piece will be a podcast episode as well, but I wanted to focus on the long history leading up to the massacre as that’s what this anniversary is about. The assassination of our leaders that our org and movement was born from, and the long road it took to get there. If you remember the last effort post was about the real Thanksgiving story, well now we see where that eventually led. There is plenty to the story we have left out, but I think you can see a beautiful mosaic I hope to create to tell the real history here. > > The next post will cover the conditions between 1890 and 1973 on Pine Ridge, and settle on the Wounded Knee Occupation History which by that time our audio documentary series should be releasing. The best way to stay informed on its release and to here it early would be the patreon found on linktr.ee/chunkalutanetwork but I understand a lot of people here prefer https://liberapay.com/ChunkaLutaNetwork/ which I dont understand well enough, so if you have ideas how to keep ya’ll better informed. Part of my goals next year is to become more active in this space and lemmygrad, but obviously the real life stuff and mainstream social media take up so much time. We do have several organizers engaging here, but we all have lives y’know? When our website launches we will announce on all our social medias, but the public podcast finally launches the 20th, and early releases again will be on the patreon so listening there or the Marx Madness podcast will probably be the quickest ways to hear from us, besides patreon AND Marx Madness is free and educational. So why another post? Well this really about the harshness of winter and our genocide, that continues today both by gun, and through social murder. We are also doing a Winter Drive to help keep folks alive until we can start establishing more permanent changes to ease the struggle there. This would be things like poplar trees for pollarding, preparing dry material in the summer into heating bricks that will help start fires easier but also supplement the wood usage, and of course gather a larger stockpile this year. https://www.gofundme.com/f/deliver-wood-coats-supplies-to-pine-ridge it will only take 4-5k to send 2 organizers in a Uhaul to pick up the gathered supplies and bring it to the reservation. It will take several days so lodging will need to be paid for, gas, and food. A large portion of that (2k) is for more agitprop and paying the camera guy. Plus extra money to support our organizers family as they usually are the childcare, so without them their partner cant work unless they can afford childcare while one of the parents are gone therefore not losing a week of income.

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    Fuck the Colonists ProbablyKaffe 9 months ago 100%
    The Conditions of the Lakota Working Class - 2024 Winter Drive Fundraiser m.youtube.com

    cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1289451 > >Aho! Hello relatives, allies and comrades. We are the Chunka Luta Network, this is both our official channel launch video AND our 2024 Winter Fundraiser Drive. We already completed a winter drive for 2023 that somebody else ran, this one came about because our organizers in Oklahoma gather a uhauls worth of wood and winter supplies without us knowing; and suddenly were telling us they're ready to transport. You can learn more at our linktr.ee/chunkalutanetwork because YT won't let us post links directly until we are older or hand them a valid ID. So please take the time to copy and paste this, or donate to $ZitkatosTinCan on CA or @zitkato on ven. > > >In this video we introduce you to Vanessa and Alfred, aunt and uncle of our founder, but more importantly they are leaders in their community who help the people when no one else will. This has been the case for decades now with their family, and the list of accomplishments and great deeds they've done for the people are long and unrewarded. Our organization formed to support leaders like them across Reservations and weld the rural struggle to that of the urban working class. To us this potent combination of knowledge and forces, so long as they treat each other as equals, will help bring about the necessary conditions for liberation. If you enjoyed this be sure to check our podcast or appearances on our own stream and others. Wopila!

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearMA
    Marxism-Leninism ProbablyKaffe 9 months ago 100%
    Chunka Luta is hosting a Twitter space reading of Decolonial Marxism by Walter Rodney at 9:30 EST about an hour from now https://twitter.com/ChunkaLutaOrg/status/1735088785174798790?t=ZSgnorP8ti3g-038X0PZUA&s=19

    Teaser ![](https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/f8420af2-e143-4e1c-8426-58b61777b1ad.jpeg) Chunka Luta Library, where you can find the reading material: https://mega.nz/folder/cuMwjRyK#eDPayQSdYFwaCh9qr8zzPw

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearIN
    Indigenous ProbablyKaffe 10 months ago 100%
    Thanksgiving - Chunka Luta Network

    cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2778930 > cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1157520 > > > When studying the US or Canada, we are not studying a nation, but rather a prison house of nations bent on replacing the native or totally assimilating. Like Israel, this is the stated goal of the US project and it is no wonder why ‘manifest destiny’ bears barely any discernible differences from ‘lebensraum’ or ‘Zionism’. The most important aspect to these projects is the myth making that underlies their so-called rights to the land, and none of them are particularly unique. Instead all find themselves firmly justifying and creating the “white” identity, ever fluid, they pick and choose who constitutes ‘white’ and define it based on exclusion of an ‘other’. This is a trend we see manifest itself in medieval antisemitism which lies at the root of the story of the Zionist entity's creation. We also see the beginnings of whiteness form in the crusades and Spanish Reconquista, which sought to reclaim land they believed to be rightfully theirs. During this Reconquista we would see the same brutality Columbus would import to the “New World” on behalf of Spain, only adding to the rhyming. > > > > This is the prologue to the story of Thanksgiving, and it's a very poignant history as settlers call a ceasefire to celebrate their genocidal Thanksgivings as they always have. Here I plan to cover three major topics, the true history of Thanksgiving, only the surface of the true extent and face of colonial occupation, and the current movement settler-Marxists are alienated from due to one reason or another. It will not have any order and we will revisit topics as I like in a real tradish way, it's gonna be fun. This of course could be a book but we will have to settle for an effort post until I have more time. This prison house of nations of course finds its foundations not in Spanish colonialism, but English, although the Spanish did have to supply what amounts to a venture capitalist endeavor to send Columbus west where most people assumed they’d find another continent or find a path to Asia. > > > > Our first myth we will dispel is the term Indian, commonly we are told Columbus was confused and thought we were in the East Indies or India and therefore the name Indian is just the result of a doddering fool. In reality the term is far more insidious and not the result of ignorance, no, instead it is the result of the settlers dehumanization of themselves as they begin to feed on the blood of the colonized. Russel Means (anti-communist and former leader of AIM) in a speech given in 1980, that would be problematic by today's standards, said: “did we really know what it meant to be Indian?” This question has a lot of layers, you have what does it mean to be a second class citizen? To be actively genocided? What is the origin of the term? “I got a letter while I was in prison last year, from a professor at the University of Turin in Turin, Italy. He said ‘you probably already know this, but I… got to tell you anyway.’ He said Columbus was not looking for India, or the Indies. He wasn’t looking for the far east, but India had not yet been colonized by Britain and there was no such country called India or the Indies, in 1492. India was then known as Hindustan so if he was looking for Hindustan we would be called Hindus, if that is the truth of what the white man has been telling us and the world. But this professor, and I have since got the correct translation from other Italian people, but when Columbus first encountered the red people in the Caribbean he saw them and he wrote in his journals that we were ‘generous to a fault’. That we would ‘share everything’ every one of our possessions, even the clothes off our body, and because we were so generous we would ‘make excellent slaves’. He did take back 500 of us to Spain as slaves. Another tidbit of history did you know that the majority of slaves in America were Indians up to and including the year 1715? Something else they don’t tell anybody else, but we were not a ‘good’ economic risk. Number one we died from all their diseases, or else we’d split for the woods. Economics is whats pressured them into bringing in the African people as their slaves, but up until 1715 we were the majority of the slaves in the United States alone. Getting back to Columbus he called us ‘Indios’ and the correct translation from Italian into English; ‘Dio’ in Italian means ‘God’. ‘In-’ and ‘-s’ with it, put together means ‘people in with God’. That’s the correct translation of ‘Indios’ ‘people in with God’” > > > > There is plenty we skipped, plenty to criticize, but what we have here is a very surface level examination of what being Indian actually meant in full historical context. Russell Means is hardly somebody I endorse, but I will not he is Oglala and is my Great Uncle, and for that I am responsible for demystifying his achievements and must inform people that for one reason or another any good he did, he severely out weighed with bad. My favorite story is about these warriors' courageous efforts to stop a Thanksgiving feeding happening only a few miles down the road. See the land our org acquired with help from donors here, is where this exact scene took place, and is that close to the Means ranch and the LIbertarian project “Republic of Lakotah”. My uncle David Swallow Jr. who we actually do support, was feeding people under the thought “the churches are the only group feeding people today and they lie to us and brainwash us” so he provided a Lakota feed with Lakota spirituality, and an oral history. Russell and company destroyed the feast in protest, I wonder why they couldn’t go to a church instead? He also ran guns to the Contras, but this is a story for another time, the Thanksgiving story makes it in here because of the theme, and because I need a way to talk about the Contra thing despite its brief mention we are just clearly off course. > > > > That brings us to a discussion on the Colonial land divides, which all come once again from the Pope (see there is a theme here in why I claim Reconquista and Crusades as first iterations) and the infamous ‘Doctrine of Discovery’ established over several Papal Bulls meant to settle the squabbles of Empire. First the world is divided between Spain and Portugal, then France and England insert themselves into the equation. This led to a crisis of irreconcilable economic based conflict, that was eased through the idea of terra nullius, nobody owns the land if Christian’s do not own the land. This left the majority of the world conveniently vacant and to be tamed. When there were what appeared to be people “discovered” on these lands, they simply were not people until they accepted Christ, and even then their treatment would make one wonder what the Spanish thought Jesus meant when he said “treat others as you would want to be treated”. Now this seems so far away it's a wonder why I am insisting knowing this is so important, I must refer to the Marshall Trilogy and Ruth Bader Ginsburg's rulings with regard to NoDAPL. What these cases establish is the Doctrine of Discovery is the very basis of not only “International Law” but US Law. > > > > This brought the original settlers of Anglo-America here first with the colony of Roanoke, which ended in the strange disappearance of the settlers as the story goes. In reality this common folklore of the events that occurred comes to hide the failures of English rule, for how could Europeans die but savages be so successful that the settlers starving to make profit for merchant guilds in Europe, would abandon the colony and integrate into the Croatoan Island community. This forced England to launch Jamestown which enabled the cartography necessary for the Mayflower to make its famous journey. The map they used brought them to the Cape Cod area, and yet another piece of mythology comes about. Instead of Plymouth Rock being the first place they landed, in reality, it was first encounter beach where the first interaction they had with Indigenous people would be by the Nausett whose food stores the religious zealots stole, resulting in the chasing of the settlers back to their ship and forcing them to sail to Plymouth Rock. > > > > On their map was the town Pawtuxet, an Indian town with significant population and agriculture. They expected to find people when they came into the town but what they found was an apocalypse unfolding as people had died of disease leaving the town essentially empty with enough room for the settlers to move in. This came after a harsh winter where out of paranoia they turned their fellow pilgrims who died to illness or starvation, into scarecrows armed with muskets to make the Mayflower appear to be well guarded and armed. In their letters they pretend to have dignified them with burials, but when they finally moved into the town apparently emptied by an act of God; the lifeless towns now life filled smoke stacks let neighbors know someone had moved in. > > “Hello Englishman” was the first words heard by the puritans establishing Plymouth Rock, or more so squatting on existing Indigenous infrastructure. The look on their faces must’ve been one of wonder and fear, but overall it convinced them they were meant to be here. > > > > Thomas Morten wrote in his description of the Indians of New England, 1637; "The Hand of God fell heavily upon them, with such a mortal stroke that they died in heaps as they lay in their houses; and the living, that were able to shift for themselves, would run away and let them die, and let their carcasses lie above the ground without burial. For in a place where many inhabited, there hath been but one left alive to tell what became of the rest; the living being not able to bury the dead, they were left to crows, kites, and vermin to pray upon..." This was Patuxet, and the mandate from God the pilgrims were meant to be there, just look at the timing. The Indian who said “Hello Englishman” was named Samoset, an Abanaki sagamore (a type of sachem or minor ‘chief’) who learned English not from God, but the sadistic acts of a “forward thinking” colonizer named Sir Ferdinando Gorges who routinely kidnapped populations England wanted to colonize, taught them English and transplanted back in their homes to act as translators for future colonizers. This is how he earned his name “The Grandfather of Anglo Colonialism” and also how Tisquantum (often called Squanto) also learned English. > > > > After explaining where they were, and what had happened in Patuxet, Samoset would leave to talk to the nearby Grand Sachem, or Massasoit. As you might notice there are quite a few myths in the making at this point in our story, and one of the oddest ones is the renaming of a man to his title by settlers. A Massasoit was an inter-tribal Chief in charge of settling disputes of a larger federation, and handling redistribution of their tributary system. Even his descendents wrongly name him this due to the profound effects of colonialism on education, but Ousemequin is his true name. They returned with 60 men and signed a treaty formally ceding Patuxet to the settlers. This is then the first treaty, which means it's the first of many to be broken, however the terms were one of mutual defense, and that if an Indian hurt a white man that they should be turned over for justice. This is also where Tisquantum finally meets the pilgrims, he is placed here to act as their interpreter as he was from Patuxet. Unfortunately by the time Sir Ferdinando sends him home to fulfill his destiny, the angel of death passed over Patuxet and smallpox ravaged them. The myth became, “the single most perfect human being on the continent to help the pilgrims” by PragerU and a “...special instrument sent of God...” by Plymouth governor William Bradford. > > > > The spring after the Mayflower returns to Europe, the pilgrims try to pay for looting the graves and food stores of the Nauset people who attacked them on First Encounter Beach, as it is known today. It would then be that fall, prior to the arrival of the next ship the Fortune, that the classically depicted idea of “Thanksgiving” happened. That is a harvest party where Indians and Pilgrims come together in the first ever melting pot! In reality our only written account of the event comes from Edward Winslow who wrote in a letter, “Our harvest being gotten in, our governor sent four men fowling, that so we might after a special manner rejoice together after we had gathered the fruit of our labors. They four in one day killed as much fowl as, with a little help beside, served the company almost a week. At which time, among other recreations, we exercised our arms, many of the Indians coming amongst us, and among the rest their greatest king Massosoit, with some ninety men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted, and they went out and killed five deer, which they brought to the plantation and bestowed on our governor, and upon the captain and others…” Despite common belief, this wasn’t upon invitation but instead it was Ousemequin upholding their end of the treaty because he believed the settlers were under attack, when in fact they just loved to shoot guns when they partied. Thanksgiving however would be something entirely else, where the devout would spend their day in church giving thanks to God, and was a fast. After this point relations between the settler and the Wampanoag would worsen. > > > > This was primarily because Tisquantum used the English to usurp power from Ousamequin, and collect tributes from other sachem in place of the Massasoit. When the settler found out they switched translators, Tisquantum would die disgraced within a year of that first so-called Thanksgiving. In the summer of 1622, the Merchant Adventurers sent a third ship and established a new colony north of Plymouth named Wessagusset in Massachusett territory (that is the people from whom the state takes its name.) Ousemequin falls ill and is brought back to health by a settler from Plymouth, and then tells the settlers about a plan the Massachusetts had to destroy Wessagusset and Plymouth due to the poor relations that capitalist greed in Wessagusset was causing. Then while Wessagusset was besieged, Plymouth colonists are informed by a survivor who escaped the siege of the situation and a group of men are sent to “negotiate” resulting in the execution of the Masschusette sachems under the guise of peace talks. This then resulted in a power vacuum that Ousemequin used to gain more influence in the region, as in his eyes he was the ruler of these lands and the pilgrims were now part of his people. However the treaty they signed would claim the Womponoag people as subjects of King James. The Merchant Adventurers go bankrupt in 1626, and their debt is then shifted onto the settlers who had yet to turn a profit. The following year the Anglo-French War of 1627-1629 was declared and due to the French domination of the beaver market, and English high society losing their source, the pilgrims then capitalized on this market by expanding extraction into Maine. It would be due to King Charles I’s decision to disband parliament, due to Puritans within voicing discontent over his marriage to a Catholic, that would send 80k Puritans leaving England in the Great Migration between 1629-1640. A thousand of whom would go to New England to establish the Massachusetts Bay Colony next to Plymouth. Here John Winthrop, who was the captain of the ship, said the famous line “For we must consider that we shall be as a city upon a hill. The eyes of all people are upon us. So that if we shall deal falsely with our God in this work we have undertaken, and so cause him to withdraw his present help from us, we shall be made a story and a byword through the world.” > > > > This of course is the real version of the story we tell children in kindergarten as they craft hand turkeys, but in reality the first day of Thanksgiving celebrated by the pilgrims came only a few years after the massacre of Massachusetts' sachems. 1637 during the “Battle” of Ft. Mystic, at the end of the Great Migration, our proto-Zionist found themselves looking more and more to replace the natives instead of living alongside them. It was the Green Corn festival in what is now Groton, CT that Dutch and English settlers surrounded the celebration and ordered everyone leave the Fort Mystic stronghold (at the time one of the largest forts in the world equivalent in military technology to the Europeans besides the guns) and then subsequently massacred them and burned the fort down. After the murder of 700 unarmed women, children, and men the settlers would begin murdering villages wantonly stealing land. Those who survived were sold into slavery, and for a long time ships of up to 500 Indian slaves would leave New England's ports regularly. After a raid in Stamford, CT the Wampanoags had lost, and Metacomet and his people were beheaded, their heads mounted on spikes for decades and at the time kicked down the road like a soccer ball. > > > > That brings us to today. The National Day of Mourning for Indigenous activists, which is a yearly event that's been ongoing since the 1970 Occupation of the Mayflower II by United American Indians of New England (UAINE) and AIM (American Indian Movement) which was one of 71 Red Power occupations that occurred from 1965 to 1973. This event stems from a very specific person named Wamsutta, or Frank B. James, a Wampanoag (you might recall them from Trumps recent attempt to bring back the Termination Era) and is continued by his granddaughter Kisha James (Oglala, Wampanoag) and her parent Mahtowin (Oglala). I will quote heavily from their website, but this began because Wamsutta was asked to write a speech for the 350th anniversary of the landing at Plymouth: > > > > “Three hundred fifty years after the Pilgrims began their invasion of the land of the Wampanoag, their "American" descendants planned an anniversary celebration. Still clinging to the white schoolbook myth of friendly relations between their forefathers and the Wampanoag, the anniversary planners thought it would be nice to have an Indian make an appreciative and complimentary speech at their state dinner. Frank James was asked to speak at the celebration. He accepted. The planners, however , asked to see his speech in advance of the occasion, and it turned out that Frank James' views — based on history rather than mythology — were not what the Pilgrims' descendants wanted to hear. Frank James refused to deliver a speech written by a public relations person. Frank James did not speak at the anniversary celebration.” > > > > Instead the grassroots organizers got in contact with the just budding American Indian Movement, who by this time were regularly doing demonstrations as well as combating police brutality with their Red Car Patrol. From an optics standpoint they even looked like “real life Indians from the movies” to quote my super traditional uncle, and so when AIM came the news focused on them. Now when we remember this moment in time we remember the red paint thrown by AIM onto the sail, even though this was the idea of the grassroots organizers, and the later burying of Plymouth Rock by AIM. That is why I’ve gone around the country the last 3 years investigating the on-the-ground conditions of the current US, while deep diving the radical history hidden from view, and interviewing veterans of the movement as well as current day organizers in 53 reservation communities so far. I want people to hear about the uncommon history of the movement, because I believe it is this hidden history that we will find the answers to overcome our current roadblocks as we recognize how many wheels are being reinvented and lessons we are not learning. > > > > This post is about the true history of Thanksgiving, yes, and that is settler-colonialism. So as settlers everywhere gorge themselves in thankfulness their bombs don’t fall on them, take the time to educate yourselves about this history. Because this genocide didn’t stop, it isn’t 350 years old either. For my people these stories and these celebrations happen much more recently at the end of the 19th century, and as Marx was just about to pen his first sentences of Capital; my people were already waging national liberation against it. This is the project we support that has continued to this day, and we want to bring the communist movement to the head instead of watching as we can’t even find the tail to follow. Right now the western left thinks painting the claws of the Beast is heroic, as they ignore real revolutionaries who have stood and fought the government, while the communists of the time ran when the guns started shooting. It was the BPP who gave us hope the communists might have something to offer and when they were neutralized, the feds turned their scopes on us. I could go on and on and never end, but then you wouldn’t need another post from me. So be sure to follow our other social medias all found under linktr.ee/chunkalutanetwork and learn more about our project and program as more details become public. > > > > We really want to encourage people who are unable to organize regularly to donate $5 a month on our patreon.com/chunkalutanetwork or donate to $ZitkatosTinCan on cashapp or @zitkato on venmo. Lastly we were recommended we start one of these https://liberapay.com/ChunkaLutaNetwork/ so please if you have a lot of money and don't know where it will be best used, I highly recommend it come to us. We are building a community center to house 9 people, provide the first ever laundromat to the Pine Ridge reservation, re-establish the former AIM Survival School in Porcupine, building food forests, community gardens and a buffalo prairie to decommodify our ceremonies that ranchers currently profiteer on, we already have provided 2 house for families there, and have kept countless people alive. There are plenty of reasons to support so please ask questions, please come look, and if you don't believe us we can raise money for you to come visit the land base yourself and see first hand what we can publicly do. We don't post much about anything besides our Pine Ridge operations as that is backed with a lot of organic gun ownership due to the people we support suffering under a reign of Terror in the 70s. You see the government installed a dictator and armed his right wing militia with armor piercing rounds on the Pine Ridge reservation, who went on to murder a per capita number of people similar to Pinochet the first 3 years after his coup. This is in your backyard and you ignore it, dont anymore, we will remember. > > > > **Megathreads and spaces to hang out:** > > - ❤️ Come listen to music and Watch movies with your fellow [Hexbears nerd, in Cy.tube](https://live.hexbear.net/c/movies) > > - 💖 Come talk in the [New Weekly Queer thread](https://hexbear.net/post/1149995) > > - 💛 Read and talk about a current topics in the [News Megathread](https://hexbear.net/post/851674) > > - 💚 Come and talk in the [Daily Bloomer Thread](https://hexbear.net/post/1109740) > > - ⭐️ [September Movie Nominations](https://hexbear.net/post/451216) ⭐️ > > > > **reminders:** > > - 💚 You nerds can join specific comms to see posts about all sorts of topics > > - 💙 Hexbear’s algorithm prioritizes comments over upbears > > - 💜 Sorting by new you nerd > > - 🌈 If you ever want to make your own megathread, you can reserve a spot [here nerd](https://hexbear.net/post/261657) > > - 🐶 Join the unofficial Hexbear-adjacent Mastodon [instance toots.matapacos.dog](https://toots.matapacos.dog/explore) > > > > **Links To Resources (Aid and Theory):** > > > > **Aid:** > > - 🌈 [LGBTQ+ Resource Post](https://hexbear.net/post/279079) > > - 💚 [Resources for Palestine](https://buildpalestine.com/2021/05/15/trusted-organizations-to-donate-to-palestine/) > > - [🐌☕ Zapatista Coffee](https://schoolsforchiapas.org/store/coffee-corn-and-agricultural/zapatista-coffee/) > > > > **Theory:** > > - ❤️[Foundations of Leninism](https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1924/foundations-leninism/index.htm) > > - ❤️[Anarchism and Other Essays](https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/emma-goldman-anarchism-and-other-essays)

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    Fuck the Colonists ProbablyKaffe 10 months ago 95%
    Thanksgiving - Chunka Luta Network

    cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1157520 > When studying the US or Canada, we are not studying a nation, but rather a prison house of nations bent on replacing the native or totally assimilating. Like Israel, this is the stated goal of the US project and it is no wonder why ‘manifest destiny’ bears barely any discernible differences from ‘lebensraum’ or ‘Zionism’. The most important aspect to these projects is the myth making that underlies their so-called rights to the land, and none of them are particularly unique. Instead all find themselves firmly justifying and creating the “white” identity, ever fluid, they pick and choose who constitutes ‘white’ and define it based on exclusion of an ‘other’. This is a trend we see manifest itself in medieval antisemitism which lies at the root of the story of the Zionist entity's creation. We also see the beginnings of whiteness form in the crusades and Spanish Reconquista, which sought to reclaim land they believed to be rightfully theirs. During this Reconquista we would see the same brutality Columbus would import to the “New World” on behalf of Spain, only adding to the rhyming. > > This is the prologue to the story of Thanksgiving, and it's a very poignant history as settlers call a ceasefire to celebrate their genocidal Thanksgivings as they always have. Here I plan to cover three major topics, the true history of Thanksgiving, only the surface of the true extent and face of colonial occupation, and the current movement settler-Marxists are alienated from due to one reason or another. It will not have any order and we will revisit topics as I like in a real tradish way, it's gonna be fun. This of course could be a book but we will have to settle for an effort post until I have more time. This prison house of nations of course finds its foundations not in Spanish colonialism, but English, although the Spanish did have to supply what amounts to a venture capitalist endeavor to send Columbus west where most people assumed they’d find another continent or find a path to Asia. > > Our first myth we will dispel is the term Indian, commonly we are told Columbus was confused and thought we were in the East Indies or India and therefore the name Indian is just the result of a doddering fool. In reality the term is far more insidious and not the result of ignorance, no, instead it is the result of the settlers dehumanization of themselves as they begin to feed on the blood of the colonized. Russel Means (anti-communist and former leader of AIM) in a speech given in 1980, that would be problematic by today's standards, said: “did we really know what it meant to be Indian?” This question has a lot of layers, you have what does it mean to be a second class citizen? To be actively genocided? What is the origin of the term? “I got a letter while I was in prison last year, from a professor at the University of Turin in Turin, Italy. He said ‘you probably already know this, but I… got to tell you anyway.’ He said Columbus was not looking for India, or the Indies. He wasn’t looking for the far east, but India had not yet been colonized by Britain and there was no such country called India or the Indies, in 1492. India was then known as Hindustan so if he was looking for Hindustan we would be called Hindus, if that is the truth of what the white man has been telling us and the world. But this professor, and I have since got the correct translation from other Italian people, but when Columbus first encountered the red people in the Caribbean he saw them and he wrote in his journals that we were ‘generous to a fault’. That we would ‘share everything’ every one of our possessions, even the clothes off our body, and because we were so generous we would ‘make excellent slaves’. He did take back 500 of us to Spain as slaves. Another tidbit of history did you know that the majority of slaves in America were Indians up to and including the year 1715? Something else they don’t tell anybody else, but we were not a ‘good’ economic risk. Number one we died from all their diseases, or else we’d split for the woods. Economics is whats pressured them into bringing in the African people as their slaves, but up until 1715 we were the majority of the slaves in the United States alone. Getting back to Columbus he called us ‘Indios’ and the correct translation from Italian into English; ‘Dio’ in Italian means ‘God’. ‘In-’ and ‘-s’ with it, put together means ‘people in with God’. That’s the correct translation of ‘Indios’ ‘people in with God’” > > There is plenty we skipped, plenty to criticize, but what we have here is a very surface level examination of what being Indian actually meant in full historical context. Russell Means is hardly somebody I endorse, but I will not he is Oglala and is my Great Uncle, and for that I am responsible for demystifying his achievements and must inform people that for one reason or another any good he did, he severely out weighed with bad. My favorite story is about these warriors' courageous efforts to stop a Thanksgiving feeding happening only a few miles down the road. See the land our org acquired with help from donors here, is where this exact scene took place, and is that close to the Means ranch and the LIbertarian project “Republic of Lakotah”. My uncle David Swallow Jr. who we actually do support, was feeding people under the thought “the churches are the only group feeding people today and they lie to us and brainwash us” so he provided a Lakota feed with Lakota spirituality, and an oral history. Russell and company destroyed the feast in protest, I wonder why they couldn’t go to a church instead? He also ran guns to the Contras, but this is a story for another time, the Thanksgiving story makes it in here because of the theme, and because I need a way to talk about the Contra thing despite its brief mention we are just clearly off course. > > That brings us to a discussion on the Colonial land divides, which all come once again from the Pope (see there is a theme here in why I claim Reconquista and Crusades as first iterations) and the infamous ‘Doctrine of Discovery’ established over several Papal Bulls meant to settle the squabbles of Empire. First the world is divided between Spain and Portugal, then France and England insert themselves into the equation. This led to a crisis of irreconcilable economic based conflict, that was eased through the idea of terra nullius, nobody owns the land if Christian’s do not own the land. This left the majority of the world conveniently vacant and to be tamed. When there were what appeared to be people “discovered” on these lands, they simply were not people until they accepted Christ, and even then their treatment would make one wonder what the Spanish thought Jesus meant when he said “treat others as you would want to be treated”. Now this seems so far away it's a wonder why I am insisting knowing this is so important, I must refer to the Marshall Trilogy and Ruth Bader Ginsburg's rulings with regard to NoDAPL. What these cases establish is the Doctrine of Discovery is the very basis of not only “International Law” but US Law. > > This brought the original settlers of Anglo-America here first with the colony of Roanoke, which ended in the strange disappearance of the settlers as the story goes. In reality this common folklore of the events that occurred comes to hide the failures of English rule, for how could Europeans die but savages be so successful that the settlers starving to make profit for merchant guilds in Europe, would abandon the colony and integrate into the Croatoan Island community. This forced England to launch Jamestown which enabled the cartography necessary for the Mayflower to make its famous journey. The map they used brought them to the Cape Cod area, and yet another piece of mythology comes about. Instead of Plymouth Rock being the first place they landed, in reality, it was first encounter beach where the first interaction they had with Indigenous people would be by the Nausett whose food stores the religious zealots stole, resulting in the chasing of the settlers back to their ship and forcing them to sail to Plymouth Rock. > > On their map was the town Pawtuxet, an Indian town with significant population and agriculture. They expected to find people when they came into the town but what they found was an apocalypse unfolding as people had died of disease leaving the town essentially empty with enough room for the settlers to move in. This came after a harsh winter where out of paranoia they turned their fellow pilgrims who died to illness or starvation, into scarecrows armed with muskets to make the Mayflower appear to be well guarded and armed. In their letters they pretend to have dignified them with burials, but when they finally moved into the town apparently emptied by an act of God; the lifeless towns now life filled smoke stacks let neighbors know someone had moved in. > “Hello Englishman” was the first words heard by the puritans establishing Plymouth Rock, or more so squatting on existing Indigenous infrastructure. The look on their faces must’ve been one of wonder and fear, but overall it convinced them they were meant to be here. > > Thomas Morten wrote in his description of the Indians of New England, 1637; "The Hand of God fell heavily upon them, with such a mortal stroke that they died in heaps as they lay in their houses; and the living, that were able to shift for themselves, would run away and let them die, and let their carcasses lie above the ground without burial. For in a place where many inhabited, there hath been but one left alive to tell what became of the rest; the living being not able to bury the dead, they were left to crows, kites, and vermin to pray upon..." This was Patuxet, and the mandate from God the pilgrims were meant to be there, just look at the timing. The Indian who said “Hello Englishman” was named Samoset, an Abanaki sagamore (a type of sachem or minor ‘chief’) who learned English not from God, but the sadistic acts of a “forward thinking” colonizer named Sir Ferdinando Gorges who routinely kidnapped populations England wanted to colonize, taught them English and transplanted back in their homes to act as translators for future colonizers. This is how he earned his name “The Grandfather of Anglo Colonialism” and also how Tisquantum (often called Squanto) also learned English. > > After explaining where they were, and what had happened in Patuxet, Samoset would leave to talk to the nearby Grand Sachem, or Massasoit. As you might notice there are quite a few myths in the making at this point in our story, and one of the oddest ones is the renaming of a man to his title by settlers. A Massasoit was an inter-tribal Chief in charge of settling disputes of a larger federation, and handling redistribution of their tributary system. Even his descendents wrongly name him this due to the profound effects of colonialism on education, but Ousemequin is his true name. They returned with 60 men and signed a treaty formally ceding Patuxet to the settlers. This is then the first treaty, which means it's the first of many to be broken, however the terms were one of mutual defense, and that if an Indian hurt a white man that they should be turned over for justice. This is also where Tisquantum finally meets the pilgrims, he is placed here to act as their interpreter as he was from Patuxet. Unfortunately by the time Sir Ferdinando sends him home to fulfill his destiny, the angel of death passed over Patuxet and smallpox ravaged them. The myth became, “the single most perfect human being on the continent to help the pilgrims” by PragerU and a “...special instrument sent of God...” by Plymouth governor William Bradford. > > The spring after the Mayflower returns to Europe, the pilgrims try to pay for looting the graves and food stores of the Nauset people who attacked them on First Encounter Beach, as it is known today. It would then be that fall, prior to the arrival of the next ship the Fortune, that the classically depicted idea of “Thanksgiving” happened. That is a harvest party where Indians and Pilgrims come together in the first ever melting pot! In reality our only written account of the event comes from Edward Winslow who wrote in a letter, “Our harvest being gotten in, our governor sent four men fowling, that so we might after a special manner rejoice together after we had gathered the fruit of our labors. They four in one day killed as much fowl as, with a little help beside, served the company almost a week. At which time, among other recreations, we exercised our arms, many of the Indians coming amongst us, and among the rest their greatest king Massosoit, with some ninety men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted, and they went out and killed five deer, which they brought to the plantation and bestowed on our governor, and upon the captain and others…” Despite common belief, this wasn’t upon invitation but instead it was Ousemequin upholding their end of the treaty because he believed the settlers were under attack, when in fact they just loved to shoot guns when they partied. Thanksgiving however would be something entirely else, where the devout would spend their day in church giving thanks to God, and was a fast. After this point relations between the settler and the Wampanoag would worsen. > > This was primarily because Tisquantum used the English to usurp power from Ousamequin, and collect tributes from other sachem in place of the Massasoit. When the settler found out they switched translators, Tisquantum would die disgraced within a year of that first so-called Thanksgiving. In the summer of 1622, the Merchant Adventurers sent a third ship and established a new colony north of Plymouth named Wessagusset in Massachusett territory (that is the people from whom the state takes its name.) Ousemequin falls ill and is brought back to health by a settler from Plymouth, and then tells the settlers about a plan the Massachusetts had to destroy Wessagusset and Plymouth due to the poor relations that capitalist greed in Wessagusset was causing. Then while Wessagusset was besieged, Plymouth colonists are informed by a survivor who escaped the siege of the situation and a group of men are sent to “negotiate” resulting in the execution of the Masschusette sachems under the guise of peace talks. This then resulted in a power vacuum that Ousemequin used to gain more influence in the region, as in his eyes he was the ruler of these lands and the pilgrims were now part of his people. However the treaty they signed would claim the Womponoag people as subjects of King James. The Merchant Adventurers go bankrupt in 1626, and their debt is then shifted onto the settlers who had yet to turn a profit. The following year the Anglo-French War of 1627-1629 was declared and due to the French domination of the beaver market, and English high society losing their source, the pilgrims then capitalized on this market by expanding extraction into Maine. It would be due to King Charles I’s decision to disband parliament, due to Puritans within voicing discontent over his marriage to a Catholic, that would send 80k Puritans leaving England in the Great Migration between 1629-1640. A thousand of whom would go to New England to establish the Massachusetts Bay Colony next to Plymouth. Here John Winthrop, who was the captain of the ship, said the famous line “For we must consider that we shall be as a city upon a hill. The eyes of all people are upon us. So that if we shall deal falsely with our God in this work we have undertaken, and so cause him to withdraw his present help from us, we shall be made a story and a byword through the world.” > > This of course is the real version of the story we tell children in kindergarten as they craft hand turkeys, but in reality the first day of Thanksgiving celebrated by the pilgrims came only a few years after the massacre of Massachusetts' sachems. 1637 during the “Battle” of Ft. Mystic, at the end of the Great Migration, our proto-Zionist found themselves looking more and more to replace the natives instead of living alongside them. It was the Green Corn festival in what is now Groton, CT that Dutch and English settlers surrounded the celebration and ordered everyone leave the Fort Mystic stronghold (at the time one of the largest forts in the world equivalent in military technology to the Europeans besides the guns) and then subsequently massacred them and burned the fort down. After the murder of 700 unarmed women, children, and men the settlers would begin murdering villages wantonly stealing land. Those who survived were sold into slavery, and for a long time ships of up to 500 Indian slaves would leave New England's ports regularly. After a raid in Stamford, CT the Wampanoags had lost, and Metacomet and his people were beheaded, their heads mounted on spikes for decades and at the time kicked down the road like a soccer ball. > > That brings us to today. The National Day of Mourning for Indigenous activists, which is a yearly event that's been ongoing since the 1970 Occupation of the Mayflower II by United American Indians of New England (UAINE) and AIM (American Indian Movement) which was one of 71 Red Power occupations that occurred from 1965 to 1973. This event stems from a very specific person named Wamsutta, or Frank B. James, a Wampanoag (you might recall them from Trumps recent attempt to bring back the Termination Era) and is continued by his granddaughter Kisha James (Oglala, Wampanoag) and her parent Mahtowin (Oglala). I will quote heavily from their website, but this began because Wamsutta was asked to write a speech for the 350th anniversary of the landing at Plymouth: > > “Three hundred fifty years after the Pilgrims began their invasion of the land of the Wampanoag, their "American" descendants planned an anniversary celebration. Still clinging to the white schoolbook myth of friendly relations between their forefathers and the Wampanoag, the anniversary planners thought it would be nice to have an Indian make an appreciative and complimentary speech at their state dinner. Frank James was asked to speak at the celebration. He accepted. The planners, however , asked to see his speech in advance of the occasion, and it turned out that Frank James' views — based on history rather than mythology — were not what the Pilgrims' descendants wanted to hear. Frank James refused to deliver a speech written by a public relations person. Frank James did not speak at the anniversary celebration.” > > Instead the grassroots organizers got in contact with the just budding American Indian Movement, who by this time were regularly doing demonstrations as well as combating police brutality with their Red Car Patrol. From an optics standpoint they even looked like “real life Indians from the movies” to quote my super traditional uncle, and so when AIM came the news focused on them. Now when we remember this moment in time we remember the red paint thrown by AIM onto the sail, even though this was the idea of the grassroots organizers, and the later burying of Plymouth Rock by AIM. That is why I’ve gone around the country the last 3 years investigating the on-the-ground conditions of the current US, while deep diving the radical history hidden from view, and interviewing veterans of the movement as well as current day organizers in 53 reservation communities so far. I want people to hear about the uncommon history of the movement, because I believe it is this hidden history that we will find the answers to overcome our current roadblocks as we recognize how many wheels are being reinvented and lessons we are not learning. > > This post is about the true history of Thanksgiving, yes, and that is settler-colonialism. So as settlers everywhere gorge themselves in thankfulness their bombs don’t fall on them, take the time to educate yourselves about this history. Because this genocide didn’t stop, it isn’t 350 years old either. For my people these stories and these celebrations happen much more recently at the end of the 19th century, and as Marx was just about to pen his first sentences of Capital; my people were already waging national liberation against it. This is the project we support that has continued to this day, and we want to bring the communist movement to the head instead of watching as we can’t even find the tail to follow. Right now the western left thinks painting the claws of the Beast is heroic, as they ignore real revolutionaries who have stood and fought the government, while the communists of the time ran when the guns started shooting. It was the BPP who gave us hope the communists might have something to offer and when they were neutralized, the feds turned their scopes on us. I could go on and on and never end, but then you wouldn’t need another post from me. So be sure to follow our other social medias all found under linktr.ee/chunkalutanetwork and learn more about our project and program as more details become public. > > We really want to encourage people who are unable to organize regularly to donate $5 a month on our patreon.com/chunkalutanetwork or donate to $ZitkatosTinCan on cashapp or @zitkato on venmo. Lastly we were recommended we start one of these https://liberapay.com/ChunkaLutaNetwork/ so please if you have a lot of money and don't know where it will be best used, I highly recommend it come to us. We are building a community center to house 9 people, provide the first ever laundromat to the Pine Ridge reservation, re-establish the former AIM Survival School in Porcupine, building food forests, community gardens and a buffalo prairie to decommodify our ceremonies that ranchers currently profiteer on, we already have provided 2 house for families there, and have kept countless people alive. There are plenty of reasons to support so please ask questions, please come look, and if you don't believe us we can raise money for you to come visit the land base yourself and see first hand what we can publicly do. We don't post much about anything besides our Pine Ridge operations as that is backed with a lot of organic gun ownership due to the people we support suffering under a reign of Terror in the 70s. You see the government installed a dictator and armed his right wing militia with armor piercing rounds on the Pine Ridge reservation, who went on to murder a per capita number of people similar to Pinochet the first 3 years after his coup. This is in your backyard and you ignore it, dont anymore, we will remember. > > **Megathreads and spaces to hang out:** > - ❤️ Come listen to music and Watch movies with your fellow [Hexbears nerd, in Cy.tube](https://live.hexbear.net/c/movies) > - 💖 Come talk in the [New Weekly Queer thread](https://hexbear.net/post/1149995) > - 💛 Read and talk about a current topics in the [News Megathread](https://hexbear.net/post/851674) > - 💚 Come and talk in the [Daily Bloomer Thread](https://hexbear.net/post/1109740) > - ⭐️ [September Movie Nominations](https://hexbear.net/post/451216) ⭐️ > > **reminders:** > - 💚 You nerds can join specific comms to see posts about all sorts of topics > - 💙 Hexbear’s algorithm prioritizes comments over upbears > - 💜 Sorting by new you nerd > - 🌈 If you ever want to make your own megathread, you can reserve a spot [here nerd](https://hexbear.net/post/261657) > - 🐶 Join the unofficial Hexbear-adjacent Mastodon [instance toots.matapacos.dog](https://toots.matapacos.dog/explore) > > **Links To Resources (Aid and Theory):** > > **Aid:** > - 🌈 [LGBTQ+ Resource Post](https://hexbear.net/post/279079) > - 💚 [Resources for Palestine](https://buildpalestine.com/2021/05/15/trusted-organizations-to-donate-to-palestine/) > - [🐌☕ Zapatista Coffee](https://schoolsforchiapas.org/store/coffee-corn-and-agricultural/zapatista-coffee/) > > **Theory:** > - ❤️[Foundations of Leninism](https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1924/foundations-leninism/index.htm) > - ❤️[Anarchism and Other Essays](https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/emma-goldman-anarchism-and-other-essays)

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    anti_colonialism
    Fuck the Colonists ProbablyKaffe 11 months ago 86%
    Brief summary of the Israel-Occupied-Palestine political-economy and the myths of Colonialist "success" https://www.guancha.cn/YinZhiGuang/2023_10_20_712711_s.shtml

    Article is written in Chinese so the auto translate is kinda wonky. This website belongs to Eric Li. The author is Yin Zhiguang of Fudan University.

    11
    0
    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearIN
    Informed Tankie ProbablyKaffe 12 months ago 83%
    Good thread on Canada's colony structure and the ongoing genocide of First Nations https://x.com/bidetmarxman/status/1708143932813787258?s=20
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    3
    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearIN
    Informed Tankie ProbablyKaffe 12 months ago 78%
    Hawaiian Nationality: Who Comprises the Hawaiian citizenry hawaiiankingdom.org

    The Nation of Hawaii details their plan for citizenship for when the American occupation leaves the territory. For those who don't know, the Nation of Hawaii is the reformation of the deposed state occupied by the US in 1898. They are fighting for the complete independence of Hawaii and an end to the illegal US annexation.

    11
    0
    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearIN
    Informed Tankie ProbablyKaffe 1 year ago 95%
    Resisting Internal Neo-Colonialism and Fascist Dictatorships inside the United States | Wounded Knee Occupation socialistworker.org

    One aspect of the Reservation system within the United States skipped over by common Marxists (and the American public in general) is that of the Neo-Colonial relationships between the US and Indigenous nations. In the 1970s on the Pine Ridge Reservation, the poorest community in the United States and home of the Oglala Lakota people, ruled a dictator by the name of Dick Wilson. Wilson funneled federal funds into his own wealth and to pay for a paramilitary to hunt down members of the American Indian Movement (AIM), a party of Indigenous radicals keen on fighting American encroachment and occupation of their lands and communities. The struggle between AIM and Wilson and his Fed backers, peaked in tension in the Wounded Knee Occupation. The occupation by AIM was called off after Wilson's army with the US special forces (disputed by the US government) and AIM reached a gun battle. Wilson remained in power even having been caught rigging an election, but a Federal judge interfered on his behalf, and many of his Lakota opponents died violently over the following years until his defeat in another election. Since Wilson's departure, the Pine Ridge Indian Reorganization Act (forced American governance) leadership has been centrist/liberal as the main radicals of the Reservation had been killed violently and many more imprisoned. Pine Ridge remains the poorest community in the country.

    21
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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearIN
    Indigenous ProbablyKaffe 1 year ago 100%
    Red Road Construction Drive and Wheelchair Pls, organized by Sungmanitu Bluebird www.gofundme.com

    cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/379642 > >Hello relatives, comrades, and allies. My name is Sungmanitu. I formed this collective of activists last winter in order to fundraise and bring out wood to keep elderly alive during the winter. This was a great accomplishment for us, and so this summer we helped put on a traditional ceremony known as Sundance that is historically one of the longest standing Sundances that was continued in the Badlands during the period of history they were outlawed. > > > >The way of life the Sundance helps preserve is called “the Red Road” or Chunka Luta which is where our name comes from. It is a message of hope and an offer of direction to those who lack direction, but know it is time to do something to build the world we want to see for the next generation. This traditional seat of power has withstood the test of time against US Imperialism, and therefore I think is worth investing our time and energy in. So we hope to raise a grand total of 30k-35k USD, based on costs incurred at Sundance and the multiplication of available hands, and skilled trades people with tools for their use building the house before winter, moving the roof, feeding people etc. > > > >We also wanted to try and raise money for a comrades wheelchair (10k), and help with a down payment on a car and a cheap trailer to cheapen rental costs of moving trucks (2.5-3k). We are set to launch our website after the webmaster is out of the hospital, and there we will be posting the receipts from the projects, and various updates and newsletter, as well as paying a professional camera person to help us film quality videos of the land and showcase just how much we accomplished in less than a year, with all extra fund we would buy wood to haul and chop there, as well as lay the foundations of the steel distribution center which will also serve as a meeting hall for the Oceti Sakowin traditional headsmen. Along with this will be finishing a four day interview process with my Uncle David Swallow Jr to write his memoir before he dies, and preserve the wisdom and stories that helped me grow, and helped inform the movement we carry forward. > > > >But our goal is so large for this fundraising cycle due to the unique opportunities presented to us; namely the purchasing of 150+ acres of land that has hosted the longest continuing Sundance at these grounds since 82. This is when my uncle took it over from Fools Crow, who continued it from his teacher even while it was illegal to Sundance, and thus it remains a center of power and community, as well as a symbol of resilience. My uncle being the headsmen of the Oceti Sakowin places the cadre in a unique position in the community, where other Indigenous nations like the Crow and Ponca come to us to reclaim their traditions. > > > >The Crow do not hold their national flag, and so when doing ceremony they come to us to retrieve their national flag in shame, for the crimes committed on behalf of the US against us. The Ponca use our Sundance grounds for the Sundance now, and so it is even more important to use this place of international unity to its fullest. To place the movement in the nexus of so many peoples from around the globe who come there to pray, will only legitimize and strengthen our ties to my community there. Not only are we reclaiming sovereignty, but we are preserving dignity, dignity we gain by the land. It is not only construction, but preserving what has withstood the test of time.

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    1
    anti_colonialism
    Fuck the Colonists ProbablyKaffe 1 year ago 92%
    The Complications of Colonialism for Gentrification Theory and Marxist Geography https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/jlsp/vol27/iss1/4/

    Link is downloadable for free, but lmk if you can't get a copy through this portal. I thought this paper was a fascinating read on the colonial ignorance and euro-centrism found in not only Liberal theories of Gentrification, but Marxist Geography as well. This paper seeks to expose the gap between Marxist Geography and struggles against gentrification from the perspective of Indigenous communities while using a Toronto neighborhood as a case study. I'll try to post some good blurbs out of this but I read and post it on the go so I'll have to come back. While approaching from the perspective of dissecting Gentrification, this paper ends up attacking the heart of Settler Colonialism through criticizing the Bourgeois/Settler production of space.

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    anti_colonialism
    Fuck the Colonists ProbablyKaffe 1 year ago 92%
    The Fish Wars youtu.be

    Video covering the (very recent) colonization and enclosure of the waterways of the PNW, specifically Washington. The Indigenous struggle over fishing rights and environmentalism culminated into "The Fish Wars" of the 60s-70s. It also covers the settler State governments seeking to redefine indigenous such that none to very few indigenous people were "actually indigenous" and therefore unprotected by treaties. This comes after decades of boarding schools and institutions like the Child Protective Services and fostering (modern boarding schools) seeking to force assimilate the indigenous population.

    11
    1
    genzedong
    GenZedong ProbablyKaffe 1 year ago 98%
    Greens in Germany kill nuclear power, replace it with LNG, and celebrate.

    The anti-nuclear movement must be a big oil operation.

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    ukraine_war_news
    Death to NATO ProbablyKaffe 1 year ago 87%
    Pentagon-Ukraine war plan leaks, Pentagon says leaks are true but claims casualty estimates are doctored www.nytimes.com

    Archive Link: https://archive.ph/3mAVd *emphasis* [mine] >WASHINGTON — Classified war documents detailing secret American and NATO plans for building up the Ukrainian military ahead of a planned offensive against Russia were posted this week on social media channels, *senior Biden administration officials said.* > >*The Pentagon is investigating who may have been behind the leak* of the documents [find the snitch], which appeared on Twitter and on Telegram, a platform with more than half a billion users that is widely available in Russia. So these leaks are real, and the Pentagon is looking for the mole. >Military analysts said *the documents appear to have been modified* in certain parts from their original format, *overstating American estimates of Ukrainian war dead and understating estimates of Russian troops killed*. > >The modifications could point to an effort of disinformation by Moscow, the analysts said. *But the disclosures in the original documents*, which appear as photographs of charts of anticipated weapons deliveries, troop and battalion strengths, and plans, *represents a significant breach of American intelligence in the effort to aid Ukraine.* > >Biden officials were *working to get them deleted* but had not, as of Thursday evening, succeeded. So the only part they claim to be doctored is the estimates for the casualties in the conflict. They say the documents being leaked are significant, so much so that the Biden team is trying to get them scraped off the internet. >To the trained eye of a Russian war planner, field general or intelligence analyst, however, the documents no doubt offer many tantalizing clues. *The documents mention, for instance, the expenditure rate of HIMARS* — American-supplied high mobility artillery rocket systems, which can launch attacks against targets like ammunition dumps, infrastructure and concentrations of troops, from a distance. *The Pentagon has not said publicly how fast Ukrainian troops are using the HIMARs munitions; the documents do*. One aspect of the pro-Ukraine casualty estimates that never made sense was how so many Russians could be dying from Ukraine's lack of artillery, to maintain this narrative the Pentagon never talked about how many shells Ukraine launches per day. >*One of the slides said 16,000 to 17,500 Russian soldiers had been killed while Ukraine had suffered as many as 71,500 troop deaths. The Pentagon and other analysts have estimated that Russia has suffered far more casualties, and that closer to 200,000 soldiers on each side had been killed or wounded.* > >Nonetheless, *analysts said parts of the documents appeared authentic and provide Russia with valuable information* such as the timetables for the delivery of weapons and troops, Ukrainian troop buildup numbers and other military details. These estimates seem a little low balled, analysts such as Col Macgregor put Russian dead in the 20-25k range and Uke dead in the six digits. This seems more like the values pre-Bakmut siege. BBC calculated around 16k from Russian obituaries so maybe they were closer to reality than given credit for, or the numbers in the document are confirmed KIA only and MIA is not included. The [document in question.](https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/34ae53e0-cc33-4732-9e62-f39df7740fa6.jpeg) More from: https://twitter.com/AZgeopolitics/status/1644122549909848070?t=J87R-_jIb11q9sFMfcB-XQ&s=19 >The leak is the first Russian intelligence breakthrough that has been made public since the war began. *Throughout the war, the United States has provided Ukraine with information on command posts, ammunition depots and other key nodes in the Russian military lines.* Such real-time intelligence has *allowed the Ukrainians to target Russian forces, kill senior generals* and force ammunition supplies to be moved farther from the Russian front lines, *though U.S. officials say Ukraine has played the decisive role in planning and execution of those strikes.* ["plausible" deniability] > >But *early on during the war, Ukrainian officials were hesitant about sharing their battle plans with the United States, for fear of leaks*, American and European officials said. As recently as last summer, American intelligence officials said they often had a better understanding of Russia’s military plans than of Ukraine’s. > >*The intelligence sharing between Ukraine and the United States loosened up considerably last fall*, and the two countries have been **working closely** on options for a Ukrainian offensive. So now the US is running the show. I wonder if the mole is related to Sy Hersh's source on Nord Stream?

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    ukraine_war_news
    Death to NATO ProbablyKaffe 1 year ago 83%
    Are they projecting the recent Azov revival on Russia now?

    Azov got destroyed in Mariupol and this last week the Imperialist rags have been talking about Azov building up for an offensive.

    25
    7
    latestagecapitalism
    Late Stage Capitalism ProbablyKaffe 1 year ago 100%
    Scholar who advocates increasing unemployment is shocked that Americans are dying early due to poverty https://twitter.com/PatBlanchfield/status/1642123533860978689?s=20

    It's actually worse than that, this guy served as Treasury Secretary in 1999-2001 under Clinton and director of the National Economic Council under Obama. He is literally the man responsible for the austerity measures imposed on the working class of the US and many other countries, dubbed the Great Recession, in response to the bank collapse. He was also the President of Harvard, in charge of reproducing Bourgeois ideology.

    28
    4
    comradeship
    Found a copy of Capital Vol 1, apparently from 1906.

    It's the first American edition. Found it while browsing a local used bookstore. It seems to be in good shape. ![](https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/c48702dc-eaf7-46e8-b826-b39aa99d64a7.jpeg) ![](https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/5b2b0af3-d9fa-419d-a5df-177f3dfee3b8.jpeg) ![](https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/83e4297e-e183-41fa-bc65-f6e339a8b008.jpeg) ![](https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/587aff61-bc7a-4b9a-a50f-cbb1e3c820eb.jpeg)

    35
    12
    genzedong
    GenZedong ProbablyKaffe 1 year ago 100%
    ChatGPT on the allegations of TikTok Spying

    A common idea in the Western world, especially the United States, is that TikTok is spying on American (and others) citizens for the PRC. I decided to ask ChatGPT to gather some information about this allegation for me, because I'd rather not search through a bunch of MSM articles with shallow sourcing. Q: What evidence is there to suggest that TikTok is sharing data with the Chinese government? >There have been concerns raised by various governments and organizations about TikTok's data practices and whether they are sharing user data with the Chinese government. **However, it is important to note that TikTok has repeatedly denied these claims and has stated that it stores all US user data in the United States and Singapore, with backups in the United States and other countries.** > >**Here are some pieces of evidence that have been cited to support the claim that TikTok is sharing data with the Chinese government:** > >1. Chinese ownership: TikTok is owned by ByteDance, a company based in China. This has raised concerns that the Chinese government could have access to user data through ByteDance. > >2. Chinese laws: Chinese national security laws require companies to provide access to data to Chinese authorities upon request. **Critics argue that this could apply to TikTok and that the Chinese government could potentially use TikTok to access user data.** > >3. Data collection practices: TikTok collects a large amount of data on its users, including their location, device information, and search history. **Critics argue that this data could be used to create detailed profiles of TikTok users, which could be of interest to the Chinese government.** > >4. TikTok's response to government requests: There have been reports that TikTok has complied with government requests for user data. For example, in 2019, TikTok was fined by the US Federal Trade Commission for violating child privacy laws, **and there have been reports that TikTok has provided data to the Chinese government in response to censorship requests.** > >**It is important to note that while these pieces of evidence have raised concerns about TikTok's data practices, there is no definitive proof that TikTok is sharing user data with the Chinese government.** TikTok has repeatedly denied these claims and has stated that it stores all US user data in the United States and Singapore, with backups in the United States and other countries. So there's no evidence that alleges TikTok has ever shared data with the Chinese government. A lot of weight is being placed on the natsec laws in China "potentially" giving China access to data. Q: Where does TikTok store user data, and why would the Chinese government be able to access it? >TikTok stores user data in various locations depending on the region where the user is located. For example, **in the United States, TikTok stores user data in the United States and Singapore, with backups in the United States and other countries. In Europe, TikTok stores user data in Ireland and Singapore.** > >The concern is that TikTok is owned by a Chinese company, ByteDance, and that the Chinese government has a history of using its national security laws to access data from Chinese companies. **This has raised concerns that the Chinese government could potentially access user data collected by TikTok.** > >**Although TikTok has repeatedly stated that it does not provide user data to the Chinese government and that it stores user data outside of China, critics have argued that the Chinese government could still access the data through ByteDance or other means.** > >It is worth noting that TikTok has faced scrutiny and legal challenges over its data practices in various countries, including the United States, **where it has faced accusations of collecting and sharing user data with the Chinese government. TikTok has denied these allegations and has taken steps to address these concerns, such as hiring a Chief Information Security Officer and establishing a transparency center to allow external audits of its data practices.** So the data is stored between the EU, Singapore, and the US. This leads me to two questions: Q: Has Bytedance accessed data from TikTok before? >**There is no evidence to suggest that ByteDance, the Chinese parent company of TikTok, has accessed user data from TikTok. TikTok has stated that it stores user data outside of China, and that its data practices are separate from those of ByteDance.** > >However, there have been concerns raised about the potential for ByteDance to access user data from TikTok. **Some critics argue** that ByteDance could potentially access user data through its ownership of TikTok or through other means, **despite TikTok's claims that user data is stored separately from ByteDance.** > >To address these concerns, TikTok has established a transparency center to allow external audits of its data practices, and has hired a Chief Information Security Officer to oversee its data security practices. TikTok has also stated that it does not provide user data to the Chinese government, and that it would refuse any such request if it were made. > >Overall, while concerns remain about the potential for ByteDance to access user data from TikTok, there is no evidence to suggest that this has actually occurred. TikTok has taken steps to address these concerns and to assure users that their data is being stored and protected appropriately. So no, there is no evidence to suggest this. TikTok doesn't share data storage processes with its parent company (which is the norm within the social media industry). TikTok also bent to pressure to open more transparency into their data collecting processes. Q: Has China ever asked for user data from companies outside of China? >There have been cases where the Chinese government has requested data from companies outside of China, **although the extent and nature of these requests are not entirely clear.** [Kaffe: so no evidence...] Chinese national security laws require companies operating in China to provide access to data to Chinese authorities upon request, and this has raised concerns about the potential for Chinese authorities to access data from Chinese-owned companies operating outside of China. > >One well-known example of China requesting data from a company outside of China is the case of Apple and its iCloud service in China. **In 2018, Apple announced that it would be partnering with a Chinese company to store Chinese iCloud users' data on servers located in China, in compliance with Chinese regulations.** This **raised concerns** that the Chinese government could potentially access user data stored on these servers. > >Another example is the case of LinkedIn, which was temporarily blocked in China in 2017 after the company refused to comply with requests to censor content on its platform. **LinkedIn had previously agreed to censor content in compliance with Chinese regulations, but the Chinese government reportedly requested that LinkedIn censor additional content that was deemed politically sensitive.** > >**It is worth noting that the extent of the Chinese government's requests for data from companies outside of China is not entirely clear, as these requests are often confidential and not publicly disclosed.** However, the concerns around data privacy and the potential for the Chinese government to access user data from Chinese-owned companies operating outside of China remain a point of contention. So China has *allegedly* asked for data stored *within* China, evidence for such requests has not surfaced. It has raised questions, but no answers, to whether China can use these laws to access any data outside of China. Apple stored Chinese user data in China, because it was required to by Chinese regulation, but there is no evidence to suggest that China has requested to access this data. China asked LinkedIn to censor content (publicly available) according to Chinese regulation. Q: What Chinese law allows the government to access user data held within China? >The Chinese law that allows the government to access user data held within China is the **National Intelligence Law of the People's Republic of China, which was enacted in 2017.** > >**Article 7 of the National Intelligence Law states that "any organization or citizen shall support, assist, and cooperate with the state intelligence work in accordance with the law, and keep the secrets of the national intelligence work known to the public."** This means that any Chinese organization, including internet companies, may be required to provide assistance and cooperation to national intelligence agencies. > >Additionally, the **Cybersecurity Law of the People's Republic of China**, which was enacted in 2016, requires network operators in China to cooperate with the government on matters related to national security and public safety. **This law also requires network operators to store certain types of data within China.** > >These laws have raised concerns among foreign companies and governments about the potential for the Chinese government to access sensitive data held by these companies within China. **The Chinese government has stated that its laws are necessary for national security and that they are not intended to target foreign companies or individuals.** So internet companies have to work with Chinese authorities on matters of natsec and public safety. There is still no evidence that any of this includes accessing user data that isn't already available through the public interface of these services. We do know of a case of Facebook within China where the government asked for [FB to censor information about riots](https://techcrunch.com/2009/07/07/china-blocks-access-to-twitter-facebook-after-riots/) occurring in the Xinjiang province. So Facebook refused to work with the Chinese government on matters of public safety and natsec, so it was suspended. Q: Is Facebook required to work with American intelligence agencies? >**Yes, Facebook, as a company based in the United States, is required to work with American intelligence agencies when requested to do so. Like all US-based companies, Facebook is subject to US laws, including those related to national security and surveillance.** > >**The US government has the legal authority to compel Facebook and other companies to provide access to user data under certain circumstances, such as when investigating national security threats or when conducting criminal investigations. The USA PATRIOT Act, which was enacted after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, expanded the government's surveillance powers and gave it broader authority to obtain user data from companies.** > >Additionally, **Facebook and other companies are required to comply with court orders and warrants issued by the US government, which may require them to provide access to user data.** > >It's worth noting that **Facebook has publicly stated that it carefully scrutinizes all government data requests and only complies with those that are legally valid and within the scope of the law.** The company also publishes transparency reports detailing the number and types of government requests for user data that it receives. Heh... So following Patriot Act regulation, companies based in America like Facebook are required to share data with the US government. Does this apply to companies *operating* in the US but that are not *owned* by US firms? Q: Has TikTok shared user data with the US government? >**TikTok has shared user data with the US government in response to lawful requests made under US law.** > >In September 2020, the US Department of Commerce issued an order that would have effectively banned TikTok from operating in the United States over concerns about national security and the potential for the Chinese government to access user data. **However, this order was put on hold after TikTok filed a lawsuit challenging its legality.** > >As part of the legal proceedings, **TikTok has provided user data to the US government in response to lawful requests made under US law.** In a court filing in October 2020, **TikTok disclosed that it had received over 150 million user data requests from US law enforcement agencies, and that it had provided data in response to approximately 91% of these requests.** > >It's worth noting that TikTok has stated that it stores US user data in the United States, and that it has implemented technical measures to prevent the Chinese government from accessing this data. Additionally, TikTok has announced plans to establish a transparency center in the United States to allow external audits of its data practices. > >**Overall, while TikTok has shared user data with the US government in response to lawful requests, the company has stated that it takes the privacy and security of user data seriously and has implemented measures to protect user data from unauthorized access.** Okay so there is no evidence that TikTok has shared any data with the Chinese government, but it has provided access to 91% of the 150 million data requests from the US government. There's very little evidence suggesting that China is spying on users around the world through TikTok, not even evidence that TikTok shared data with Chinese authorities voluntarily, **but it is a fact that TikTok has shared data with the US government.** In fact, the reason why TikTok is storing data in the EU is due to EU regulations that require user data to be stored in the EU. TikTok has also complied with Irish authorities by allowing them access to TikTok's data collecting practices and even shared data with them. This is the evidence (or lack thereof) that the US is using to justify the [Restrict Act](https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2023/03/29/tik-tok-bills-could-dangerously-expand-national-security-state/) which according to the Responsible Statecraft (Liberal think tank): >The bill would grant the executive branch **unprecedented new national security powers over commerce in information and communication technologies, and by extension, speech**. Where: >Domestically, Section 11 of the bill **establishes draconian penalties for American citizens who violate it by attempting to evade or help others to evade new restrictions** on foreign-owned information and communications technologies. While it is somewhat ambiguous how far this could go, it could lead to American citizens being prosecuted for accessing information on foreign-owned technology platforms such as WeChat. And: >The ACLU has already stated its **opposition to the bill on freedom of expression grounds.**

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    ukraine_war_news
    Death to NATO ProbablyKaffe 1 year ago 96%
    Fascist Ukraine State is evicting the Ukrainian Orthodox Church from its historic location within Kiev https://twitter.com/RueDaungier/status/1639965004303593472?s=20

    The Ukrainian Orthodox Church used to be in a union with the Russian Orthodox Church in Moscow. It broke ties due to the war, which the Russian branch supported. However, this isn't enough to escape persecution from the Fascists in Kiev. The church is still under assault: https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20230325-monks-at-historic-kyiv-monastery-defy-eviction-order There is a religious war underneath the civil war in Ukraine. The Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, which collaborated with the OUN-B, the Plast organization, and the Nazis, is well represented within the Ultra-Nationalist movement and is attempting to solidify a national-religious Ukrainian identity centered on the church. The assault on this church is part of the De-Russification campaign of the Maidan regime.

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    ukraine_war_news
    Death to NATO ProbablyKaffe 2 years ago 86%
    The NATO flag looks really sus

    Peep the documentary too: https://youtu.be/wwVUp4IWEKw

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    ukraine_war_news
    Death to NATO ProbablyKaffe 2 years ago 100%
    Imperialist Propaganda Outlet Kyiv Independent doing a reddit AMA www.reddit.com

    Someday I hope to go over how critical this "news" outlet is to the current Ukraine narrative, and their involvement in the Maidan. Today they are on reddit whipping Imperialist support to their favorite audience.

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    latestagecapitalism
    Late Stage Capitalism ProbablyKaffe 2 years ago 100%
    Europe's plan to cap energy prices will gift billions to the providers at the states' expense diem25.org

    Video form with Yanis: https://youtu.be/NicE0-N9ux0?t=130 TL;DR: Europe may copy Greece's energy cap solution. In energy markets where auctions are held in a *pay-as-clear* structure, meaning the highest price required to provide the necessary energy output is the price paid to all selected providers regardless of their bid price, renewables are being sold at the same price as gas. In example, this means that if 1/2 of your energy needs are provided for at 50 euros in renewables, and the other half is in gas at 100 euros, then you will pay all providers the highest price accepted (known as the *marginal clearing price*) at 100 euros. You will pay 100 euros to the renewables providers as well, meaning they get an extra 50 euros in profit. The alternative auction structure is known as *pay-as-bid*, where each accepted bid is paid at their respective bid prices, i.e. you only pay 50 euros for the renewables, no extra revenue is made. Energy producers (make power) and energy retailers (sell and deliver power) are different companies, but often owned by the same parent. This model was implemented by Thatcher in the UK, and has been adopted in almost every privatized energy system in Europe. So, in Greece the government implemented a price cap to this process, which on the surface sounds like a benefit for the consumers. However, the price caps formula still include the energy market auctions, so in *pay-as-clear* auctions, the price cap is set at the inflated price of gas, so you will still be paying extra money to the cheaper competitors to gas. The way the caps deal with this is by paying the full *marginal clearing price* to all providers, and then ask for the difference between the cost of renewables and the cost of gas. Then, they give it to the energy retailers, instead of returning it to the people (through the state). In cases where a company is both a retailer and a producer, the state gives the money right back to them. The states will have to borrow this money, collect it in taxes, or cut spending to cover this. A new front has opened in the class war.

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