struggle
Weaponising Workfare
Solidarity in ruins. A reflection on the Freedom bookshop bombing.
Much has been said on the coward aggression Freedom bookshop was victim of. Founded by Charlotte Wilson and Peter Kropotkin and based in Whitechapel since the 1970s, Freedom was the oldest anarchic bookshop in the English-speaking world, home of the renowned Freedom Press - which sent into print names such as Clifford Harper, Vernon Richards, Colin Ward and his 'Anarchy' magazine, Murray Bookchin, William Blake and Errico Malatesta. It was already attacked by fascists in 1993 and since then metal bars were installed on the windows and the entrance door.
All major publishers, bookshops and leftist groups promtly expressed their solidarity, especially because Freedom Bookshop wasn't exactly a steady market competitor, but - like many anarchic organisations - a volunteer-run entity, struggling to survive. A spontaneous 'clean-up' soon followed, and many sincere militants, armed with broom, took part in this Red Aid intervention.
Ironically, with all due respect to those affected by the bomb -no one was hurt-, we could look at the bombing as exciting news for anarchism: for once, radical literature wasn’t confined to the spider webs and dust of academia. Not just another talk, another conference of self-boosting egoes and parboiled lectures. Most importantly, not another publisher whining about censorship before billing their authors as 'dangerous' on the back cover of their books (dangerous for whom, and how?). It was, surprisingly, a physical target to be physically attacked.
La sconfitta dell’anti-Europa comincia in Italia
Suicidio e Lotta
Il Foglio di Via dello Scrittore NO TAV
Sabato 18 agosto avrebbe dovuto essere la seconda giornata delle nostre vacanze per me e Giustina, la mia compagna.
Assieme ad altre persone, ci si è organizzati per fare una passeggiata in Clarea: un pò per immergersi in quei magnifici boschi, un pò per osservare a distanza di sicurezza gli animali chiusi dentro lo zoo chiamato cantiere.
Molti partono a piedi dal campeggio, mentre tre auto partono per prendere il sentiero che prende avvio da Giaglione.
Lungo la strada, passando per Susa, l'ultima vettura della nostra micro-carovana viene fermata per un controllo: forse la più visibile tra le tre, se non altro per i suoi componenti. Tutti giovani e abbigliati in maniera comoda, mentre nelle due auto davanti c'erano bambini e chi non è più troppo giovane anagraficamente.
Decidiamo comunque di fermarci, a portare solidarietà ed accertarsi che non avvenga nulla di anomalo. La regola è sempre quella: si parte e si torna assieme.
Sembra che stia andando tutto regolare: non c'è nulla da segnalare nei loro confronti, e come di prassi chiedono i documenti anche a noi che ci siamo avvicinati.
"Due minuti e finisce tutto". Parole del maresciallo dei Carabinieri che ci aveva fermato.
Ma purtroppo il mio documento fa perdere troppi minuti.
The Republic of the 99%
A Reading List for #Occupy - Part II
Edited by Paolo Mossetti
After the Occupy Wall Street "People's Library" was brutally dismantled by the police, last November, I asked some of my favourite writers, activists, and academics to help me compile a list of books that would recreate, though only virtually, the library's shelves.
This is the second part of the answers I collected.
A Reading List for #Occupy - Part I
Edited by Paolo Mossetti

Cover by Kaf & Cyop. Image courtesy of the artist
While the Occupy Wall Street "People's Library" was being brutally dismantled by the police, last November, I asked some officers why they were seizing those books and throwing them into trash cans.
Only one of them replied by saying, simply, "I don't know."
Then I decided to ask some of my favourite writers, activists, and academics to help me compile a list of books that would recreate, though only virtually, the OWS library.




