Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 102
Episode Date: October 14, 2023All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file You can now listen to all Cool Zone Media shows, 100% ad-free through the Cooler Zone Media subscription, available e...xclusively on Apple Podcasts. So, open your Apple Podcasts app, search for “Cooler Zone Media” and subscribe today! http://apple.co/coolerzone See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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The system's broken. I said something's wrong here, you know, whenever a woman is allowed
to kill my two kids.
Unrestorable is a new true crime podcast that investigates the case of Catherine Hoggel,
a mother accused of murder. Despite signs that Catherine Hoggel took her tiny children
one by one into the night, never to come home again. She has yet to stand trial.
Listen to Unrestorable on the I Heart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You're going to die.
I guess I should have softened that a little.
Someday you're gonna die.
We all are.
I'm Kyle McMahon, and after my mom passed away,
I went on a journey to talk with the world's foremost experts
on Death and grief for my new series, Death, Grief, and other sh- we don't discuss. From conducting a say-outs
to talking with near-death experiencers and everything in between, I hope you'll join me
on that journey. And you should probably do it soon because, do knows how long you're
going to be around. Death, Grief, and other sh- we don't discuss. Available now on the I Heart
Radio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
911 what's your emergency?
It's a nightmare we could never have imagined.
And a killer who is still on the loose.
In the 1980s, we were in high school losing friends, teachers, and community members.
We weren't safe anywhere.
Would we be next?
It was getting harder and harder to live in Mompine.
Listen to the Murder Years on the I Heart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Coolza Media.
Hey everybody, Robert Evans here and I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode.
So every episode of the week that just happened is here in one
convenient and with somewhat less ads package for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want.
If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week, there's going to be nothing new
here for you, but you can make your own decisions. Hey everyone, Robert Evans here. Welcome to
it could happen here. As I'm sure you're aware, at this point over the weekend, somewhere between 500 and 1000
Hamas fighters, those numbers have a lot of flex in them.
It's really unclear at this moment that just kind of my guess, based on what I've seen
so far, carried out a successful infiltration in sneak attack across a wide swath of the
Israeli border.
Their methods were varied from motorized hang gliders and boats to mobile columns of
technicals and bulldozers which they used to breach fence lines.
Surprise seems to have been nearly total, in their worst intelligence failure since the
1970s.
Many IDF troops were caught literally in their underwear.
Casualties seem to have been highest among the police, who were
unprepared for militants armed with conventional military weapons. Casualty accounts remain
heavily in flux, so I will not labor over them here. Suffice to say that the best information at
the time that I'm writing this suggests at least a thousand dead in the first day or so of fighting.
It appears at the moment to be fairly evenly split between Israeli soldiers,
police and civilians, as well as Hamas fighters and Palestinian civilians. We can expect the death toll
among Palestinians to rise steadily in the near future as the bombing of Gaza escalates.
It is very clear that the Hamas did not strike only military targets, and Israeli-Sympatholistinians are not the only people killed.
Right now, there are reports coming in that a music festival, it was some sort of Cycodelia
festival in southern Israel on land that was possibly illegally occupied, was attacked
by Hamas militants.
Something like 260 people are confirmed to have been killed.
There's pretty hideous video of a young German woman
in her 20s, her corpse stripped,
being paraded around by fighters.
It's very ugly stuff.
There's also unclear videos of other killings.
I've seen one video of a man beating an other man's head in.
It's claimed to be a Hamas militant and civilian clothes
beating a Filipino guest worker and Israel to death.
There's no actual evidence that I've seen as to who either person in the video is, and
a lot of the videos of horrible things that are spreading right now are just that.
Videos that definitely show violence, but that are extremely unclear as to who is perpetrating
the violence and why.
We do of course know that Hamas targeted a number of civilians, a significant number
were killed, including people in their homes, and unknown numbers of people were kidnapped
and taken back across the border to be ransomed later for imprisoned fighters and Palestinian
civilians.
This has happened before, in previous escalations of conflict in the area.
It's not a new tactic, and the videos of it are,
of course, horrifying. The capturing and killing of civilians is by any definition of the term,
a war crime. Israel's response has been horrifying as well, and writ on a larger scale.
Significant chunks of Gaza have already been leveled in airstrikes. At least one hospital has
been targeted, killing a nurse. Israel has cut off power to Gaza, an active
collective punishment that also qualifies as a war crime. That term has less weight than
it used to these days. Many of us in the West grew up with illusions about a rules-based
international order. The crimes occurring now will continue to erode the idea that war
might ever have limits, like whitewater cutting a path through stone.
I try to stay plugged into such things, and I became aware of this most recent eruption
as it happened.
I spent several hours trying to understand the early open source intelligence watching
people that I trusted in the region post videos that they could verify, and then I went to
sleep.
When I woke up, I saw the expected river of bloodthirst on social media. This
is also nothing new. The internet has not created this behavior. You may have read when you
were in high school that early in the US Civil War, Pignicking civilians would show up to
ogle the Battle of Manassas. Certain aspects of online culture have, however, lent a deeper
ugliness to the affair. I noticed this for the first time during the fighting against
ISIS. I reported from Mosul several times and kept up with various telegram channels, WhatsApp
groups, and Twitter accounts that shared footage and updates from the field. A subculture
developed around this, fueled by a mix of professional seeking intel and amateurs, some of whom later
became experts and others of whom simply liked watching the violence. All of us experienced a degree of desensitization and gallows humor was common.
Researchers would share their favorite ISIS-Nashid's, effectively G-Hadi theme music,
and throw Arabic phrases that they'd read and issues of debate, ISIS's magazine,
into daily conversation. Lines of dialogue from different videos of combat became catchphrases.
The best known of these was probably a video released in April of 2016, which showed a group
before ISIS fighters battling Kurdish troops north of Mosul. These guys were not overly familiar
with their weaponry, much of which had recently been looted from Iraqi army stores. One of the
fighters in the video, Abu Hajar, fucks up constantly.
At one point, roasting his own men with the backblast of a rocket launcher, the timing
on it is pretty perfect and it's basically impossible not to laugh a little at this.
His comrades shouts a now infamous line at him, what is wrong with you, Abu Hajar?
The man who filmed the video dies of course, and so did a bunch of other people that day.
Now these guys are ISIS fighters, so it wasn't hard to laugh at the footage and move on.
I did, and so did many other people.
I still chuckle sometimes at it.
Of late though, I've come to find the laughter more unsettling.
This started after the expanded Russian invasion of Ukraine.
I began to see videos of wounded, dying, and dead Russian conscripts.
These were often close-in, gory shots,
devoid of broader information
and shot purely for entertainment.
One thing to watch combat videos in which people die,
if it gives you an understanding of the nature of combat
in that theater of war, the kinds of weapons used,
the efficacy of certain tactics,
it's another to just look at a bleeding teenager
as he slowly dies and joke about it. Now, some of the folks who were laughing are people I knew,
Ukrainian civilians and volunteers, and I cannot blame them and do not blame them for taking
satisfaction or even mirth in the death of an invader. That is how war works. That is how war has
always worked. It is foolish and cruel to ask for decorum from people under siege.
I'm sure many gossens feel the same about footage now flooding the internet from this
most recent attack.
But many of the people cheering at dead Russian conscripts were not soldiers and not civilians
who were being shell by that state, but were random Americans, middle class suburban war
officials, far from the danger, middle class suburban war officials far from
the danger, who spent time who took a moment from their day to joke about suffering soldiers
in a foreign country, a mirror of that behavior, proliferates as well.
It curdled my gut then, and it still does, but my feelings here are immaterial. I have come to
believe that this behavior is impossible to avoid or even mitigate
to a very substantial degree. It also appears to be nearly universal. Social media has made
barbarism easier than ever to monetize.
As the years have gone on, every new eruption of violence around the world brings with it
more footage, faster. Ocent, open source intelligence accounts have gone from a niche
obsession among reporters
and conflict nerds to mainstream entertainment.
Because views equal money, especially on Twitter, where Elon Musk pays people based on the
engagement they get, there is now a financial incentive to post videos that will be shared
widely, and as always the stuff that is shared most widely is the stuff that makes people
angry.
Videos need not be truthful to spread.
In some cases, this means reposting old footage as if it is new.
This is particularly easy with the conflict in Gaza, since Israel has launched so many
strikes against it over the years.
One video of a building crumbling into rubble after a missile strike is as good as another
to the rats scrambling for Elon Musk's pocket change.
Many viral disinformation videos are just clips from the Czech video game, ARMA 2, for roughly
a decade, footage of in-game combat has gone viral, netting followers and sometimes money
for all manner of shady figures.
If you see video that's claimed to be an Israeli helicopter, a Russian helicopter, an American
helicopter being shot down in some
erupting field, you should really double check that because there's always a very good
chance that it's a clip from this video game of a chopper going down or some other kind
of military vehicle being taken out.
In real warfare, it's quite rare to get footage at a good angle and close to that sort
of thing.
So anytime you see footage that seems like it might be too good to be real,
it probably is. Such disinformation is, of course, unsightly, but that's not all it is.
It can provoke violence as well. A recent New York Times article on social media disinformation
makes this clear. Quote, the Times found several pieces of misinformation that spread
out across Israeli and Palestinian neighborhood and activist WhatsApp groups this week, one which appeared as a block of Hebrew text or an audio file contained a warning that
Palestinian mobs were preparing to descend on Israeli civilians. Palestinians are coming. Parents
protect your children, read the message, which pointed specifically to several suburban areas north
of Tel Aviv. Thousands of people were in one of the telegram groups where the post was shared.
The post then appeared in several WhatsApp groups, which had dozens to hundreds of Eve. Thousands of people were in one of the telegram groups where the post was shared. The post then appeared in several WhatsApp groups which had dozens to hundreds of members.
Now, there were no reports of violence in the areas mentioned in this post. This kind of
thing happens all over the world and has been happening for years. And the fact that
it's untrue does not stop similar viral lies from inspiring and justifying mass violence
in places like India and Myanmar, in both
those countries, much of this targeted disinformation was posted at the direct behest of state security
agencies to further their efforts at genocide.
None of this is new, it all just works much faster thanks to social media.
The one truly significant change in recent months has been the addition of a direct profit
motive to sharing lies. The best recent example of this is a fellow named Mario Nafal. He's a con artist and a crypto
scammer who embezzled from his own company and has built a massive following retweeting out of
context videos, starting with the Vognore rebellion in Russia earlier this year. Elon Musk whose
ignorance of that conflict is unsurpassed, called NaFaul's messages,
the best coverage I've seen so far.
More recently, Mario NaFaul has been responsible for spreading fake news about the potential
capture of Nimrod Olone, who is the commander of Israel's southern forces in the region.
The video that he claimed was Nimrod Olone being taken into captivity was in fact a completely
different person.
It's actually unclear who Mario does not know anything about anything, and I think was
just lying because that would be the most salacious thing possible.
It's also worth noting that Elon Musk recently made a post highlighting a couple of
osin to counts that were his recommendations, his picks for credible people to report on
the conflict, and you should follow these folks. He then deleted part of that tweet and self-sensored
himself when one of the sources he had picked referred to dead homosfighters as martyrs,
which Elon had an issue with clearly what he's doing is attempting to pick and set his own
propaganda dispensers, you know, the people that for whatever reason he thinks are providing
the most convenient
narrative about what's happening, none of this should be mistaken for actual news.
It is likely that much, perhaps most of the footage on your timeline from the fighting
in Gaza and Israel is reposted video that is not current.
Obviously, there is a lot of current footage going out right now, too, but a significant
amount of it is not.
I find this exasperating, even as I wonder how much that really matters.
Is sharing old footage of civilian homes being leveled by Israeli missiles really an issue
when similar homes are being bombed at the same time?
I do still think so, but I'm no longer sure that my feelings on the matter are quite rational.
The most commonly accepted definition of intelligence, of intellect that you'll find, is the ability
to adapt to, change, and select environments, or the ability to deal with change in your
environment.
If that is truly the best measure of intelligence, then my disgust at disinformation makes me
kind of stupid.
Its purveyors have had blinding success in using it to push their own narratives and to
shape reality.
I used the word barbarism earlier to describe this, and it's a loaded word, but not nearly
so loaded as its synonym, savagery.
Savagery is a word that inspires powerful emotions.
For good reason, it was often used by white supremacist colonizers to paint whole peoples as backwards and less human, especially when they engaged in acts of resistance
that were, in reality, no bloodier or more violent than the acts being perpetrated against
them. The word predates European colonialism, though. It seems to date back to around 1300,
and it entered French, sovage, like the Cologne, Johnny Depp Hawks, from the Latin
Salvaticus, which literally means
of the woods.
Why this digression?
Because in 2004, an Islamist
strategist named Abu Bakr Nasi
published a book on the internet
titled, Management of Savadry.
In Nasi's conception,
Savadry was defined as terrorist
attacks against civilian infrastructure
and stuff like tourist facilities, which were meant to provoke violent escalations from superpowers.
That violence would radicalize more people against the West and lead to a progressive degradation
of social order and operational capacity in the nation's Najisah as enemies.
The management of savagery was a key text for the men who wound up creating the Islamic
state. Some will use this to argue that the tactics failed, since ISIS is not exactly thriving of savagery was a key text for the men who wound up creating the Islamic State.
Some will use this to argue that the tactics failed, since ISIS is not exactly thriving
at present.
To do so, would be to ignore the $6 trillion the United States lit on fire fighting a disastrous
war on terror, which supercharged much of the underlying instability in our country,
and may yet lead to a collapse in domestic order.
I would admit that I have found the framework of managing savagery useful in my interpretation
and understanding of conflict, both domestic and international.
In 2020, I got to watch the process up close over the course of dozens of protests.
The basic strategy of most Portland protests that year went like this.
You got a bunch of people to march up to a police building.
They would chant and yell until the police got angry and then gasped and or beat up
everybody.
After a while, this dynamic was widely understood and accepted by protesters.
They saw their suffering and the risk that they engaged in as an acceptable tradeoff,
because it revealed the violence and savagery inherent in policing as an institution.
This they hoped would radicalize others against it, people who watched clips of videos from
the protest or who attended themselves.
And for a time, this strategy worked quite well.
Many people who had been apolitical on the matter grew utterly hardened against the cops
after a few hours in the gas clouds.
People cannot endure violence, however, without being changed by it.
So as the weeks wore on, participants grew more and more comfortable with
not just property destruction, but with the use of things like Molotov cocktails.
One may consider a Molotov to be necessary sometimes, and throughout history they often have been.
But Savage is as good a term to describe fire bombs as any.
No one was killed by any Molotov that I ever saw used in Portland.
But of course, no protests come close to the savagery of warfare. The emotional dynamics at play are shades
of each other, though, and I thought it might be useful to mention. Perhaps a more illustrative
example would be my own experiences in Mosul, in the early summer of 2017. My team and I were
embedded with an Iraqi federal police unit in the old city, where the fighting was intense and
hideous. We came under fire from a sniper. Some of the shots were so close
that chipped concrete hit my helmet. The mortar team with us responded, and with the help of
a spotter, they dropped explosive shells on homes and shops until they hit and killed the sniper.
In that moment, I felt elation, I've seldom felt since. After we found better cover,
I began composing the scene in my head, laying out how I would write it. Then my fixer Sangar said something that interrupted my
train of thought, as remained with me ever since.
Did you count how many rounds they fired before they hit him? I told him I thought it was
six or seven maybe. Where do you think the others landed?
From his tone, it was clear what he meant. The old city was crowded. Many civilians had
not yet been able to escape the ISIS lines.
Their homes were often next door to fighting positions.
And the density of the city meant that in the honest hit still had a good chance of hitting
someone.
Later, I met a man whose house had been hit 20 times by mortar rounds and rockets before
he had a chance to escape with his family.
So the glee of the moment faded. My writing about that scene was more sober, more careful, and much better as a result.
Zangar's words have helped me shape both my coverage of war and my reactions to it ever
since.
This shouldn't matter to people being bombed out of their homes and losing loved ones
right now.
It might be helpful though to those of us watching Bloodshed from behind a screen, at
least, until we're the ones filming.
I noticed Jacob is not in his crib, so I look in and say, oh, she's not there, so I'm
like, okay, they're not there.
Unrestorable is a new true crime podcast
that investigates the case of Catherine Hoggel,
a mother accused of murder.
I'm thinking, you know, like, what's going on?
Like, this is insane. Like, where are my kids?
But despite signs that Catherine Hoggel took her tiny children
one by one into the night, never to come home again,
she has yet to stand trial. Because soon after her children went missing, her tiny children one by one into the night, never to come home again.
She has yet to stand trial.
Because soon after her children went missing, she was declared incompetent to stand trial.
You know, when I would ask her, her engagement was up in the body of the remaining
confidence.
And then I would say, well, who advised you should throw you know, I can't tell you that.
In Maryland, if the defendant is found incompetent and can't be restored to competency, their felony charges are dismissed after five years.
So as the clock counts down,
Catherine's charges on the verge of being dismissed
will a grieving dad ever get justice.
Listen to Unrestorable on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Penelope Sferas. I'm a film director. I want to tell you a story about a friend of mine.
Back in the 70s, Peter Ivers moved to LA to start his music career. He scored Ron Howard's
directorial debut. I didn't know one thing about Peter Ivers. I just said, okay, let's meet him.
And even hosted a late night cable TV show.
It showcased LA punk bands in all their glory.
The crowd started getting bigger and bigger,
and then there was Beverly Damzellon.
There was John Baloozy.
But then it all went to hell.
Peter was murdered.
Peter Ivers was murdered on March 3rd, 1983.
And it raised a question that 40 years later,
we still don't know the answer to.
Who killed Peter Ivers?
Listen to Peter and the Asset King on the I Heart Radio app Apple Podcast
or wherever you get your
podcasts.
Our first call is Mary in Lexington, Kentucky.
Mary, welcome to the middle.
Hello, and thanks for having me.
If you really want to know what's going on in this country heading into the 2024 election,
you have to get away from the extremes and listen to the middle.
Hi, my name is Venkat, I'm calling you for Atlanta Georgia.
On the new podcast, The Middle with Jeremy Hobson, I'm live every week, taking your
calls and focusing on Americans in the middle, who are so important politically but are
often ignored by the media.
I did a lifetime democratic voter, however I was raised by moderate Republicans from Michigan.
Creating space for a simple conversation about the most contentious issues we face,
from climate change to artificial intelligence, from abortion rights to gun rights.
I consider myself to be conservative, cis-colleen, but politically independent.
Listen to the Middle with Jeremy Hobson on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to it could happen here. I'm Garrison Davis. This is the show where we talk about how everything is kind of falling apart and how we can sometimes put it back together.
Joining me is my dear collaborator and friend, James Stout.
Good morning, James.
Good morning, Garcin.
That's very kind of you.
Thank you.
And we got a very special episode here today.
We are talking with four people who have put together a new book by a.k.a. press called No
Parceran. We're going to have kind of a little bit of a group discussion about anti-fascist
history and this kind of this state of anti-fascism in the past few years. I know this is how
I kind of got started with radical politics growing up in Portland, Oregon. You see Nazis marching around in your street and you're like, oh, well, this is obviously
a problem.
Someone should probably do something about this.
And stuff has changed a lot the past few years.
I mean, like the anti-thadges movement that I got, that I kind of got into like 2018.
You know, it's very different now.
And it's, I don't know, there's, these types of
things live on through like oral histories, as well as, you know, books. And I think it's
really cool to have these types of conversations. So joining us today is Shane Burley, Emily
Gorkinski, Michael Novik and Darryl Lamont-Jakens. Greetings, everyone. I'm going to hand it over
to Shane and you can kind of talk about the book, I guess.
Yeah, thanks, Garrison.
Thanks, James, for having us on the whole crew of us.
Yeah, this book was something came out last year,
but we had been working on it for about four years.
I'm starting in 2018.
I was drunk with Kim Kelly in New York and we thought it'd be really
great to put together something with all of our friends. And what you do with a big group of people
it takes like four or five years to pull off. But really the idea was trying to do something that
was bigger than what had been written about anti-fascism at that point, which was shockingly narrow what people understood
of us, of just a few movements, mostly very recent history, and so much wasn't being included
in that conversation. So the idea was, how can we build out like a much bigger picture of
this, by including as many voices as possible? So we ended up getting a couple of dozen folks
together that had different takes on it.
Some talking about tech, some talking about deep history, some talking about antifascism
of their countries, of their continents.
And so in general, the idea was to make it feel like a discussion between people who either
know each other or should be like in some kind of comradeship with each other.
So that was sort of where it came together.
I think with this conversation, the way we were thinking about this is I wanted to,
I wanted the opportunity to talk with basically my friends about their history a little bit.
And so I asked three folks, I had a really long history with doing organizing work. And so I thought
it would be cool. Maybe if he goes through talking to them a little bit about their prehistory or their early history organizing.
And Michael, your history goes back the furthest
as you know where to.
So I thought we could kick off with you
and then talk with Emily and then Darrell
just kind of getting to the background.
So how did you get started in movement work?
Actually, I should say first,
when did you get started in movement work Actually, I should say first, when did you get started in November?
Well, yeah, so I sometimes felt a little bit of a dinosaur as born in 1947.
So the fascism and power was a fairly recent
reality in my life.
My father was an immigrant from Poland, came here in the
30s.
Most of his family was destroyed in Bialystok.
They had an uprising there similar to the Warsaw ghetto uprising.
And almost everybody was lipped dated in that process.
So there's a family history there for me.
Also obviously grew up in the shadow of the US atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Akasaki
and the US incarceration of Japanese Americans
and concentration camps.
So those realities in my life, I lived in a Orthodox Jewish immigrant working class family
in neighborhood in Brooklyn, which is now dominated by extremely right wing forces barra park. It's
one of the bastions of probably, you know, neo-fascist, street, public, and prosianist.
But somehow when I grew up there, that was not the case.
Anyway, I got involved in politics in the 60s, and student movement stuff, anti-war stuff.
And at Brooklyn College, which when I was there was
free public four-year college part
of the city university system in New York.
And I was actually a eventually elected student body president.
They had liquidated the student government earlier when people opposed the
Korean War and we had a struggle to get for student rights and anti-war stuff and so on.
And we succeeded in getting student body elections for offices for the first time in about about a dozen years. But I was part of all that anti-war and anti-police brutality and other
stuff that was going on, broken at the time. And then we raised the question of the fact that
Brook and College was 98% white or 99% white in a borough that even then was majority black and
Puerto Rican. And suddenly all the students support we had had
for all the other struggles,
cops off the campus and, you know,
Navy off the campus and so on.
We got, you know, a dean of students fired and all this stuff,
but as soon as we raise the question of opening the campus up
and having opened admissions to the CD University System
and a special admissions program
for black and Puerto Rican high school students,
most of our students support evaporated. And for me, that was an object lesson that,
unless you're consciously organizing about internalized and institutionalized racism,
everything else you do is, you know, progressive right time, periodist or anti-war,
it's kind of a house of cards, you know, Tesla may have seen. And in particular, and raising those issues, we discovered that there
was a fascist element down the campus. There were people who formed the early Jewish defense
league in Brooklyn who were primarily anti-black. And also, there was a group called the youths,
what is the young Americans for Vietnamese AF, which is like the youth wing of the national review,
we're right wing Republican formation,
and they were pretty openly fesistic in their politics.
So, you know, it became a question that if you were doing,
you know, anti-racist and anti-war and anti-capitalist
organizing, you were gonna face not just, you know,
a struggle against the force of the
state, but that there were reactionary elements within, particularly white society. And I
think because I've set the colonialism, you know, there's a mess base for that. And
it's struck by the title of the show, just say, I don't know if people are familiar with
the book. It can't happen here, but obviously your title is reflection could happen here.
I think it has happened here for one thing. I think the fashion has always been an element
of US political culture because of settler colonialism. I mean, Cesar, definition of fascism is
that it's bringing the methods of rule of the colonies into the Metropole, but the US is a settler colony,
and therefore there are colonized people inside this country, you know, always have been.
And so fascistic elements of slave labor, genocide, you know,
length, theft, all the rest of it, have always been part. And part of that is also creating that
mass base within the settler population, population that supports that leadership.
So anyway, I think that both those personal aspects and that consciousness,
so I came in contact with the very radical forces in the Black Freedom Circle, back then the Black Panther Party is very active. There was one of the people in the Black Student Union enjoying the Black Panther Party. You know, that was the period of very
fascist attacks and the Panthers had formed the National Committees to combat fascism and
had an analysis that, you know, the US was fascistic and, you know, George Jackson at that time said, you know, fascism is ready here. And I think he meant it, you know,
literally. And so that's part of the perspective I've carried through for, you know, I don't know what
that is, 60 years now, close to. Yeah, I mean, I think really quickly, I would like to hear kind of
what your experience was with forming John Brown. Where did the idea come
from? Because I think for a lot of a lot of people are thinking of recent anti-fascist
American anti-fascist history, that ends up being kind of a starting point for a certain
kind of no platform tactics. So how did you first kind of develop that? What brought
you in?
So yeah, just to say, I was, you know, coming out of the movement as I did, I moved from
New York to California because there was a strong, those in this paper called the movement,
which was the newspaper, basically, a friends of SNCC. It was the people who left SNCC,
went SNCC, adapted a black power analysis and said that white people who were involved should
go organize in the white community. And there was a, you know, kind of a, I've spotted
a working class organizing collective in Hayward, California. Eventually out of that, I got
connected with, you know, some of the people that lead a foreign prairie fire organized
committee. I was in the group in the Bay Area called the June 28 union was a gay men's pro-socialist
and imperialist pro-feminist collective.
Mostly people of European descent.
And we went to what was called the Hard Times Conference, which was put on by Prairie Far
Organizing Committee in Chicago.
And it turned out that there was secretly an effort by the weather underground to come up from underground and create a new communist party and they've serviced that at that conference, but there, felt that there was a sell out of the politics there. Anyway, out of that process, I was part
of, I joined a very fire organized committee eventually and let split. And then there was
a West Coast group, which kept the name very far. These coasts formed a group called
the main 19th Communist organization. And they launched the original
John Brown, Antichlan committee, an initiative from the prisons, the organized prisoners in
New York had discovered that there was an extensive network of clan, clavants that were based in the prison guards and some of the white prisoners.
And they asked for outside supporters to begin to expose that and deal with it and help them deal with it. And John Brandt of the Glenn committee was formed out of that,
separately, very far on the West Coast, had formed a group called Take a Stand Against the Clan.
There was a lot of, you know, that was the period at the beginning of the sort of not suffocation
of the clan was going on. So this is the 70s. And eventually, you know, under
a challenge from particularly the New African Independence movement, the Malcolm X grass
he was movement, the New African people's organization, which both prey fire on the West
coast and May 19th and East Coast were connected to. They pushed for a joint organization. So at that point, there
was a kind of reconstitution of the Javanite Clant Committee. And so I was part of that.
And we merged, you know, there were chapters in Atlanta, Chicago, the Bay Area, Los Angeles,
where I ended up in New York, I think, Olding Green, maybe the couple could etiquette. And so they were quite active in that period in, you know, street level confrontations
and, you know, other exposures of early neo-Nazi activity and clan activity.
And, but particularly from a perspective of conscious and active solidarity with the Black Freedom
struggle, particularly the New African Independence Movement, which is a very high level of unity.
And over a period of time, there was a struggle to broaden that out and try to be a more
all-embracing organization that could relate to the struggle.
There were a lot of different formations at that time.
There was the National White Day Clan Network, and there was a couple of others and there were differing politics
among all of them. And John Brennan, who came to me at that time, took more of a position of
broad direct action. And also, as I say, it kind of just solidar with the Black Freedom struggle.
As a basis for doing that work.
Anti-Clan Network, I think so, so people kind of know that's where the Southern Property Law Center eventually came out of another networks of these different groups
out here at Oregon, the rural organizing project was sort of like a down the line there.
I think it's interesting too about the founding story, most talking with our mutual friend
Lisa Roth, who is part of that, the founding
of that very first iteration of the John Brown committee, was they were doing a prison
organizing with Black Panthers in upstate New York, and they were writing these letters
saying, the prison guards are clan. And they thought, you mean they're really racist,
you know, obviously, they're prison guards. Yeah, yeah, and and when they went and looked it up,
no, the the president of the prison's guard union was the grand drag and of the state KKK.
And they were actually. You had a position within the prison system as the head of the sort of
education, you know, educational activities in the prison. So it was using his formal position
within the prison system to organize white prisoners along with the guards into clan clavines.
Which seems like a total,
that was sort of a validation.
But with the centerpiece of John Brown,
being that cops and clan have that kind of collaboration
because that was there kind of the founding
like lesson of that organizing.
Sure, the blue by the day, white by night,
and a lot of those slogans come out of that period.
And, you know, I think it is, you know, it's related to the later of the ARA line that,
you know, fascism is built from above and below that there's, you know, elements within the
state that are operating independently, but they're also state forces. And then they're, you know,
independent, yeah, so-called revolutionary fascists that claim to be opposing the state, but we're not
really.
Well, I think to fast forward a little bit, quite a bit.
Emily, I don't remember when we first met each other.
Obviously, it was probably shortly after Unite the Right happened, but how did you first
get drawn into organizing?
Did you have a long history before that happened, or were you just part of getting involved around the ramp up to that? No, I think, you know, compared to the other folks here,
I'm sort of the the summer child of the group, right? I don't have a super long history in organizing.
I think that you know, I came to anti-fascism before the United
Rights happened.
I work in the tech industry and sometimes around the
gamer gate era, I started noticing how white supremacists,
the tech industry, had become.
It was this nexus for a lot of this strongly libertarians,
strongly supremacist mindset.
It was sort of the worst of that meritocratic ideal that a lot of us had to experience
in university and in our workplaces and it just seemed like it was getting out of control.
And that was kind of at the same time that we were seeing a lot more women come into the
tech industry. We were starting to see a lot more women come into the tech industry,
we were starting to see a lot of changes in the space.
And then there was sort of like this vacuum left by Gamergate, as that all sort of died
down, a lot of this sort of energy needed to go somewhere.
And so I started speaking out against some white supremacist organizing that was happening
at conferences and things like that.
And I think the first wake-up call for me happened when some folks that are linked to Miloian Uplis put together a list of STW social justice warriors. And this was journalists and activists
and people who were speaking out and I somehow made that list. And I realized after looking at this and seeing what was going on, that being a political
being just somebody with an opinion wasn't, there was no way to be, that wasn't a defense
against what was coming.
And so I just looked inside and said, well, if this is the way it's going to be, like, I'm going to fight back, I'm going to, I'm going to figure out what
to do. I didn't really have a lot of organizing ties. I didn't really have a network. So like
every other person, I just, you know, shouted at Twitter and somehow that worked. The irony
of this all is that all of this was going on. I was starting to do digital activism using my tech skills
to try to shine light on things that were wrong
in the federal government and the Trump administration
and things like that.
And I really just wanted to step away from that.
I kind of had like, I went to Prague
after Trump was inaugurated. I wanted to like,
you know, clear the air a little bit. I didn't like the fact that I was on this hit list,
and that was put together by people who have like a couple of handshakes away from the
president's desk. So I went to Europe, I went to Prague, and I cleared my head when I came back,
I said, you know what, I'm going to just focus on local local activism. I'm gonna focus on the issues that are in my community.
I knew that we had things going on
with our local low-income housing space.
We had a lot of stuff around the statues
that was coming up in town.
And I didn't really expect,
like it was kind of random,
that Unite the Right was destined for Charlottesville.
All of the work, all of the organizing that I had started to do that spring, and I guess that winter
in that spring, started to pay off as Charlottesville became the target of all of the neo-nazis.
So I think it was sort of, I don't want to say it's, it's fortunate because it's not really the greatest like,
it's not a positive thing that that's what happened,
but I guess that I am lucky that as I came to this awakening,
it was happening, you know, before and not after.
And that I was able to use the network that I was building,
the audience I was building in order to help like that.
So yeah, I guess that's, that's sort of like, I don't know
that I would have been, you know, as much as dedicated as it was if it
wasn't for that very personal sort of experience. And I look back at
that and like, I'm kind of embarrassed by that. But, you know, we all
have our own paths.
Yeah, absolutely. And I think, you know, there's something
interesting about that year in advance of the United Right, where from, you know, we all have our own paths. Yeah, absolutely. And I think, you know, there's something interesting
about that year in advance of the United States,
where different groups were testing the waters a little bit
and how that was their ability to ramp up in the area.
But it was also, and the anti-fascist ability to ramp up,
you know, so talking with Mimi and other organizers there,
like those earlier events, like the earlier Clang Rally
that happened, like months earlier or kind of those that early flash mob, like those earlier events, like the earlier Clang Rally that happened,
like months earlier, or kind of those,
that early flash mob, that Richard Spencer led,
that gave people the opportunity to build up the base.
So how did you kind of shift to focusing on that?
First, I guess, how did you hear about United the Rye
as this big kind of like target event?
But what was the steps along the way there?
Yeah, I think one of the things that really
that I really tried to do that year was to use the experience I was having traveling to try to understand the history of
movements that were against
you know great state powers right when I was in Prague I spent a lot of time
great state powers, right? When I was in Prague, I spent a lot of time reading about and looking into and walking through the sites of where the Prague Spring took place and where the
Ville Revolution took place and how these groups of people were able to overcome this massive
amount of state violence and still be successful. And when Richard Spencer first came to town,
that first flash mob, what is now called Charlottesville 1.0. I was in Berlin at the time. I woke up to see what
was going on. And it was, you know, I think, again, just sort of these, you know, the universe
coming into alignment, as that was happening, there was also this big anti-Nazi demonstration
that was happening in Berlin. So I took that opportunity to go and learn about what anti-fascists
are doing in other countries and other localities, how they are organizing, how they spread their message.
And so I think that, you know, as I learned about all of this going on, what the first thing that
I tried to do is just look around and say, what can we learn from people who have been here before,
who have done this before,
and have this in their living memory? And that's what I tried to take back to Charlotte's film.
And then, I think it was after that trip, I was in Berlin in May. I came back for that trip. I
joined in the anti-fascist march almost as soon as I got back. And that's when we had heard,
we've learned about the two rallies, the July 8th, KKK rally and the August 12th United Right. And at that point, like from that moment,
it was just like every waking moment of of my day was spent organizing for this one,
for those rallies.
It's this sort of effect that just circumstance sort of speeds people's capacity to do it,
but maybe even maybe capacity is not the right word.
They're kind of understanding of like what it takes to do that work. So I was interviewing a
number of the rabbis in the area. And these were not super political folks. These were not people
who liked from some activists, synagogues, they were mainline synagogues, but they connected with
a number of faith leaders from the historically black churches,
both of which were saying, okay, we're both going to be targeted here.
And there's no institutions coming to help really.
There's no one we can count on here.
So they created those collaborative spaces and really pretty complicated and
effective organizing models,
having no experience doing it because of that hyper intense space,
which I think is in a way that's why those circumstances
have such an important effect on it. So how did you basically plan those couple of weeks in advance?
How are you thinking about it and what was the kind of groups you were working with? It's like
networks that were coming together, formal organizations. Yeah, I think there were a bunch of organizations on the ground that I
connected with. Certainly, we had a local chapter of Surge showing up for racial justice and they
were doing a lot of organizing and there was the anarchist people of color, APOC. They were a great
group of people that we connected with and that I connected with.
And it also happened that I started dating somebody who is also connected to the local
antifascist scene at the time.
So I sort of brought into all of these circles through that relationship as well.
And so I think that sort of all of these things combined really made it clear that we had
a small but very knowledgeable base of people that could
organize.
And I think that one of the things that we did exceptionally well in the lead up is
because we had such a small core of people who didn't really have a breadth of experience
in doing this, we're able to compartmentalize really well.
Some people were focusing on,
what are we gonna do with the clergy collective,
and how are they going to organize?
What is their action going to be?
We had a media collective,
and that was where I put most of my energy.
And so I think that we had these different groups of people
that could focus on different things.
It helped us unblock ourselves from the grander, more theoretical,
more abstract way to respond.
We didn't have the time to debate over tactics.
We didn't have time to debate over the ideology of anti-fascism.
What the right thing to do was, or what the best thing to do was, we really had to focus
our time on what do we have
time to do? What can we achieve given the constraints that we have? And with those sort
of constraints, I think that maybe we left some good actions on the table, but what we
came up with, I think, was fairly effective.
Do you think that it carried those community folks together through and after the event?
Do you feel like those community ties are still there?
I think some of them are and some of them are not.
There are certainly community ties that have broken.
There was a lot of pressure that built up.
There were differences of opinions that we set aside and hope to resolve afterwards.
And those did not necessarily get resolved.
And in some cases, some interpersonal issues,
some inter organizational issues.
I remember at one point there was a decision
that was being made driven by a couple
of the organizing groups that they would not support anyone
that was going to be armed.
And this was a tension point between those groups and groups like Redneck Revolt that
were coming armed to help support anti-fascist rallies.
And that is something that still affected me pretty well because I was being targeted
because of how present I was in social media and Twitter and things like that, I needed to have an
armed security detail. And you know, that freed a lot of attention. I didn't have legal, like,
I had legal support pulled away from me. I didn't have legal support until, until November of that
year when noise of a lawsuit started happening. So I think that some of those things
did create some tension that led to fracturing of
community, but some things actually really did tie the community back together and kept
it close even as we have drifted apart and moved into different cities, different countries,
different states, whatever.
I think it's a bit of both.
You know, there's one of the founding members of Rose Hadean Thief, says something that kind of stuck with me, which is that a lot of people will look to
antifascism as a way to rebuild the left or as to build this big mass United
left, but that's not actually what's being demanded of the situation.
The situation is very pretty straightforward, it's to basically destroy this
opposition of people and how you do that, I mean, you can have considerations
about how to bring in the community
and try and align with other groups,
but in the end, there's other decisions are being made.
And so people often get disappointed when that ends up being
what those projects actually are.
Darryl, you were down there, are you, Knight, right?
Correct, that was there.
You're everywhere when we're there.
I try to be.
I try to be.
I think one of the things about Charlottesville,
that was really important is that we saw it coming
and we had seen it coming months,
probably even years before it even happened.
Hell, we saw it before.
In my case, because one of those everywhere places I had been
was in York, Pennsylvania, about 20 years prior,
where you had somebody from a group called the World Church
created, and he was a local from World Church to the Creator
that invited the leader of that group, Matt Hale, to hold
the public meeting at that local library. It was a tactic that that particular group had.
And what that resulted in was about 300 neo-naxes coming to York P.A. About 3, 400 anti-fascist coming out to oppose them.
And you pretty much saw a parallel of Charlottesville, as I said, up to and
including a, this was January 12, 2012, and up to and
including a someone driving into a group of people.
And no one died, no one was killed. Her pretty bad.
I think the only reason why he served two years
was because one of the people that he hit was a cop.
Now, we fast forward to Charlottesville.
And ironically, I saw the person
that organized things in New York
representing Vanguard America at Charlottesville.
And two days prior,
we, Mike for One People's Project,
had a little bit of a podcast where we basically said
that after everything that was going on in Charlottesville prior to,
Charlottesville 1.0, Charlottesville 2.0, and then this whole United Right thing was happening,
where it was just making a big production out of having this event. We pretty much were
resigned to the idea that this was going gonna be the so-called alt rights
ultimate in the sense that this was gonna be
what sent everybody realizing how bad things can get.
It's gonna be bad.
We expected it to be bad.
I went to Charlottesville, aren't.
And I think really it was one of the first times that I
ever did strap up when I went to one of these things. When everything went down, I mean prior to
everything going down, I was just basically doing, I think, videotaping everyone, cracking jokes. I was playing happy warrior because you know, you see this all before, up to and including
the fighting.
The fighting is there.
I mean, that happens all the time.
Even that massively, I'm used to it.
What I wasn't used to was when someone was murdered, when someone was killed, because
that's never happened.
And that actually freaked me out.
It actually got really pissed off when that went down.
And I think a lot of us did because if we recognize this ourselves,
if we have been on the front lines all these years,
recognize that this was the direction that was going in, we also recognize that we had
the ability to do something about it beforehand.
That's one of the reasons why the ACLU got into a lot of trouble, because they were busy
trying to protect the free speech of everybody in all the neo-nazis there
and insisting that they were going to be in that park because that's where they wanted to be.
And when everything went down, a lot of people just looked at the ACLU and said,
could you at least recognize just how dangerous they was trying to make the situation?
ACLU, I believe, will no longer represent groups that insist on holding armed rallies.
I think that was one of the things that they had said that they were one of the changeups.
And even with the whole discussion about their freedom of speech and saying it was a matter
of their freedom of speech, people's attitudes were just like, okay, fine, that's a given,
but couldn't you let them get their own attorneys?
Why do you have to keep defending the worst of society in the name of a free speech that
frankly, doesn't seem to be afforded the rest of us whenever we are opposing them.
That's the attitude that a lot of people had.
And it was really the last straw.
Charlottesville was really the last straw. And people really got on a different footing
at dealing with fascism. I was used to people trying to pull all the stops and trying to defend the
quote unquote, defend the freedom of speech of not just the fascists in our society, but
the right in general. So every time I would criticize somebody on the right, somebody
would try to say things ranging from we have to respect their freedom of speech
or we should just ignore them. You know and and I hated it whenever it was um and when it was
combined the best way to fight hate speeches with more speech you use the more speech but why don't
you just ignore them. That's not that the sharpest will. All of a sudden people started saying, okay, we need to start doing something about this group.
That's why you saw 40,000 people in Boston protesting
against the fascists up there when they tried to hold a rally,
maybe a week or two later.
That's why you saw websites like the Daily Stormer
get yanked out of them, yanked out of them, maybe a week or two later. That's why you saw websites like the Daily Storm
or get yanked out of the mainstream
and now they're sitting on the dark web.
That's why you saw people disowning their family members
because they went to this rally.
We are seeing people being not just James Fields,
but others being help legally accountable for what they did
in Charlottesville. And all of those individuals are fascists, all of the individuals are white
supremacists. We realized that we had the ability to do something and we started doing something.
And we started doing something. Unfortunately, we stopped after Trump lost.
And people tried to go back to that whole
just ignore them routine.
And within months, we got January 6th.
And that was when they ratchet it up again
about how we're going to really curtail the
right and all that.
But now that just became rhetoric.
We're here again because you're starting to see a lot of the rumblings with the attacks
on the trans community.
Basically conservatives across the country are primarily trying to essentially
do something to the rest of the country.
I mean, you heard that when you go to the CPAC meeting, the conservative political action
conference a couple of months ago, all they did was talk about things they wanted to do
to America, you know?
And this is what we have been fighting all our lives.
This is what we have been warning about all our lives.
And while anti-fascism has essentially become mainstream, there is still a lot more work that we have to do in order to basically see all that
work bare fruit.
And that's pretty much the deal.
Yeah.
That for that 40,000 person kind of responds to a Proudboi rally in Boston just a couple
of weeks after United the right.
It was one of the most common sense kind of moments
and it totally dwarfs them.
I mean, 40,000 people will do whatever they want, right?
40,000 people will stop any kind of small march,
even a large one.
And so the lesson was learned
and it seemed to be forgotten immediately.
And their perfect example loved that
because that group that they were protesting
went on to become super happy fun America. They're the group that are now pushing the straight pride rallies and they
are really in the forefront of all the anti trans anti LGBTQ plus activity and of course
some of them got arrested in January 6. So they pretty much built up their stock since then, but so did we.
And it's just a matter of using that stock who's going to use their stock more effectively.
Yeah.
I think it was really interesting how you centered this like this shift that happened among
people who weren't previously involved in anti-fascism
from this kind of neoliberal understanding
or maybe even liberal understanding
of the sort of struggle against fascism being one
that could take place in the open with free speech
being the most important thing that's at stake
and one that moved like in a moment, right,
where when Nazi killed
have a higher to, there's a ton more at stake than we thought.
And I think you're right that we've gone back,
like, right, we've gone back to the previous understanding,
which I think is what everyone kind of, a lot of people,
I guess they felt like they could vote for Joe Biden
and then it was done like it had disappeared. And I'd be interested to hear all of your insights with all your experience
in the movement. And like, what needs to be done, I guess, to keep that organizing going,
as wearing this kind of Nadeer rule, I know, Thermador of, like, Anti-Fast Organizing in the US.
If I could offer something from maybe a little bit of a longer view.
Yeah, please.
Yeah.
You know, Darrell talked about somebody being killed and that never happening before,
but of course it has happened before.
And so, 1979, there was a death of the clan rally in Greensboro, North Carolina, and
people were, you know, attacked and killed by an alliance of the clan and in Greensboro, North Carolina, and people were attacked and killed by an
alliance of the clan and the Nazis.
With the ATF, I had people in one and I forgot I think the FBI had people in the other and
we're instrumental in bringing the two forces together to attack the anti-cland group and several people were killed in that.
And then the same thing with ARA in Las Vegas, Lens, Newborn, Black tattoo artist, and
down in Shurstey, it was actually, I think, a sailor, active duty sailor who were in anti-racist
action in Las Vegas were executed and killed by neo-Nazis there.
And so I think there is a history of that that we need to be aware of, but also that there's ups and downs and lulls in both fascists organizing,
and that the fascist organize one of the things that happened after the 79 killings is that Ronald Reagan launched his campaign for president in
Phil Delphi, Mississippi, the scene of the killing of
Schroiner-Jane Goodman on a state-sites platform, and while he was president, you know,
brought in Pat Rob, Pat Buchanan, and you know, went to Bitburg.
So there's a long history of the state, you know, playing footsie with these people.
And I think we should recognize that.
But also that they're arguing to give me ups and downs in both fascists and anti-fascists
organizing.
And you know, just see that that I think the longer range perspective that is important
to understand.
The other thing I didn't want to take a little exception to is the idea that
the relevant a fascist is to destroy fascists. And I think that I don't completely agree
with that analysis. I think that it's critical that actually anti-fascist forces see themselves
as part of a revolutionary transformation of this society and its entirety and that the
ability to actually reach an organizing people has to do with making it clear that fascists are not
inviting an alternative to what's wrong with the society, although they claim to be.
And that we are that we're part of liberatory and self-determination elements,
anti-colonial elements, support for sovereignty, even digits people, you know, support for LGBTQ people's rights.
And all those things that have a positive aspect of a way to reorganize society in a different
way than the fascists are putting forward. And I think that that is critical to trying to
sustain a base and build a base by, you know, having a positive, you know, one of the things that
I have been doing for many years, I published during the tide, which started as a little zine.
We were sending it to other chapters of interracisection
and also into the prisons.
And eventually we changed the subtitle of that
to the Journal of Intercommunal Solidarity
in the sense of saying, okay,
it's not just interracisection,
it's not just interracisection,
but what do we for?
You have to have a positive.
You really want to organize people.
You have to have a positive sense of what is struggling for, not just what
is struggling against. Yeah, Michael's right. Greensboro did happen. I was really referring to
in recent time, it wasn't the first time for myself to be at a rally and not see anyone
and see somebody get murdered. But yes, Greensboro,
November 3rd, I believe, 1979 in North Carolina, that happened and all the clan members had
actually gotten away with it. They did not, they were found, they cleared them.
That's right. I mean, while the Korean state court and federal court both, their claim was that
they were not, they were brought up on civil rights charges in the federal court and they
claimed they weren't against black people. They were just against communists. And that
right there was something that even family members, when I first started to remember, I'm
a kid at this time. I'm sitting there listening to family members basically laugh about the
situation because all they saw were clan and communists
and they were just had the attitude of just let them kill each other.
And that was actually a line that was said,
I don't know which family member said it,
but that was a line that stuck with me since I was a kid.
And at the time I wasn't really politically astute.
I just, that's how I recall that situation.
And with Dan and Spitt, the Las Vegas murders,
that is a different situation, however,
because that was on the rally.
They sought them out.
That was basically on the off time, so to speak.
Yeah, that was an assassination.
Yes. And we've seen that before.
Most certainly, Luke Kronner from Portland. And we've seen that before. Yeah. Well, certainly Luke
Kroner from Portland. For example, I mean, he survived, but he's a quadriplegic because somebody
came after him. The German police intercepted one when Attenhamoff came to Germany to try to get
me. I don't know if you know that. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I think I think because I have been fairly public, I've been doxed and tracked down by
fascists and several different occasions in different places that I lived in, you know, we've had
armed patrols that, you know, at various points, you know, it's clearly, you know, they do try
to target people as well as, you know, attacking mass actions.
Emily, you've gotten as much as anyone I've ever seen in terms of doxing, harassment, targeted attacks, and threats like that.
No, wait, who are you referring to?
I think we've all gotten it bad.
I don't think that there's any, there's no competition here.
Contestants, who has, who has the most death threats on, uh,
on eight kilos? On this take a tally off. Contestants. Who has those death threats on eight kids?
Let's take a towel.
Yeah, it's controlled.
I did want to just jump back real quick to the thing that you were mentioning, Michael,
about building antifascism needs to be about building.
And I think that there's two sides to this.
I like to talk about the breaking work, which is what a lot of the street antifascism is about.
Sometimes Nazis come marching into your town and you have to break that.
You have to stop that, you have to confront that,
and you have to do things to make it so that they don't want to come back into your town
or any other towns like your town.
I think that's breaking work.
The work of fracking down Nazis, doxing them, exposing them I think that that's breaking work. You know, the work of fracking down Nazis,
doxing them, exposing them, whatever,
that's breaking work.
I think that in the last few years
has become more high profile for various reasons.
But I think that as we're looking at,
you know, what you were mentioning,
General, like the anti-trans legislation,
the rise of the political far right in government and
in power, we do need a different solution.
I'm not saying that you can't go out and like intercept Ron DeSantis's motorcade and like
punch him in the face, I am saying it will probably end very badly for you if you try to
do that, right?
Right.
So maybe what we actually also need is to try to
build those alternative structures that are not reliant on the state, right? You know,
when we see these these trans bands coming in, like it's a horrible thing, but the only thing that
actually comes through my mind is we have more tools, more resources now to create the networks of support than we've ever had in history.
A lot of our energy should be pouring into
supporting those networks, supporting that care,
supporting that mobility and that freedom of movement,
rather than just trying to run up against this brick wall
that is this Republican behemoth that is moving forward into all of our rights.
We're not going to face the down head on, we need to go around it in some way.
I think that going around it is going to require that building, that community,
that redevelopment of those alternative structures. It's so important to have that as well.
Big thanks to Shane Burley
for setting up this conversation.
The second half of our talk with Michael Novik,
Emily Gortzinski and Darryl Lamont Jenkins
will be coming out tomorrow.
We'll talk a bit more about the modern state
of anti-fascism and what things from the past
might help inform us in the anti-fascist struggle of today. See you on the other side.
I noticed Jacob is not in his crib, so I look in and say, oh, she's not there. So I'm like, OK, they're not there.
Unrestorable is a new true crime podcast
that investigates the case of Catherine Hoggel,
a mother accused of murder.
I'm thinking, you know, like, what's going on?
Like, this is insane.
Like, where are my kids?
But despite signs that Catherine Hoggel took her tiny children
one by one into the night,
never to come home again, she has yet to stand trial.
Because soon after her children went missing, she was declared incompetent to stand trial.
You know, when I would ask her her engagement was up in the body of the remaining compliment.
And then I would say, well, who advised you should throw you know, I can't tell you that.
In Maryland, if the defendant is found incompetent
and can't be restored to competency,
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So as the clock counts down,
Catherine's charges on the verge of being dismissed
will a grieving dad ever get justice.
Listen to Unrestorable on the I Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Penelope Spheras. I'm a film director. I want to tell you a story about a friend of mine.
Back in the 70s Peter Ivers moved to LA to start his music career. He scored Ron Howard's directorial debut.
I didn't know one thing about Peter Ivers. I just said, OK, let's meet him.
And even hosted a late night cable TV show.
It showcased LA punk bands in all their glory.
The crowd started getting bigger and bigger,
and then there was Beverly Danzola.
There was John Baloofer.
But then it all went to hell.
Peter Ivers was murdered on March 3rd, 1983.
And it raised a question that 40 years later,
we still don't know the answer to.
Who killed Peter Ivers?
Listen to Peter and the Asset King on the iHeart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you
get your podcasts.
Welcome back to It Could Happen Here, this is Garrison Davis.
This episode is part two of a conversation
that myself and James Stout had with some of the contributors to a book by AK Press titled
No Posseron. It's an anti-fascist anthology that talks about the modern anti-fascist movement
and some of the writers own experiences with anti-fascism. So we'll pick up our conversation basically right where we left off
talking about the modern state of anti-fascism. Anti-fascists and like, you know, the left,
quote, unquote, in general right now is kind of in a weird place. You know, like a lot of people were,
you know, extremely kind of catalyzed after after Charlottesville and that led to a massive resurgence of anti-racist action,
anti-fascist action. And I think the Courougout, like, antifa movement of the 20 teens,
abs, like, was probably one of the largest, like, politically radicalizing forces for people,
especially people, my age, people a little bit older. It's, you know, it's very influential in what the modern anarchist or left scene is.
And there's a lot of positive parts of that.
There's also some drawbacks for that as well.
One recurring thing is that when you're only tool as a hammer, then everything is a nail. And there's certain elements of like, and
this like antifa notion or like people who like grew up with like anti-fascism being
their primary kind of motive practice, then it can be very easily turned horizontally.
But you know, it's after after J6 after after Bines been inaugurated, we have had this very weird
lol.
But there's still been a lot of fascist mobilization.
But the sort of response to it that was very normalized in 2018 has definitely shifted.
We've seen like, you know, the one thing that's been new is like you mentioned regarding,
you know, Charlottesville, there's a lot of debate around if people should show
up armed. We now have the drag time story hour, the armed defenses with John Brown gun clubs becoming
more popular. But one of the recurring things that everyone's been talking about, I've been hearing
like, there's so many parallels for what we've been going through the past like five, 10 years to other kind of things in the past.
Like all of the John Brown anti-clin committee stuff, there's just a lot of cyclical notions.
I mean, even I'm here in Atlanta right now, there's this Rico grand jury indictment, if
everyone's thinking about like a green scare stuff, even even John Brown anti-clin committee
did grand jury resistance back in the 80s.
These things have happened before.
And I think one thing that the quote unquote laughter, anti-fascists, sometimes they're
kind of bad at is actually passing down the history.
There's this tendency that when people get involved, we're kind of forced to reinvent the
wheel every time, but it's like completely unnecessary.
But we tend to just keep trying the same things over and over again.
So there's even people younger than me who weren't even old enough to get involved in anti-fascist
stuff in like 2017, 2018.
And they're now kind of growing up.
They're still with fascist mobilization.
Liberals are kind of passive because they have their guy in the White House.
And we're going to be reaching a really interesting tipping point in 2024.
So for these types of people who are either wanting to get involved
or who are just starting to realize that,
hey, maybe we should actually do something about all this stuff,
especially as, you know, trans-existences,
one of the main things under attack right now.
What is kind of some like lessons from the passage you would like to be passed down to people.
A couple of things, it come to mind.
I was reminded because James is in San Diego about, you know, one of the things we haven't
talked about at all is the border.
And that's been a recurrent theme of the, and of the state, both in terms of building,
you know, repressive apparatus.
Very, very.
So going back to, you know to the early days of people against racist
terror, which is the group that I had in LA after John
Brandt and anti-Clancon may left.
One of the first actions we did was there was something
called the American Spring at the Mexican border, which
was a neo-fascist element.
It kind of grew out of the previous clan
border watch that
that David Duke had done. And they were trying to build up a base of support for
they closed the borders. And so we did bring people from LA and joined up with people
saying they go and actually at one of those rallies somebody somebody drove a car at a newly hit someone from the,
the, you know, the anti-fascist forces. So I think that's an important piece of,
we should be thinking about the other thing in terms of killings and shootings. You know, somebody from the Red Nation was just shot in albacurkey. And, you know, I think that,
again, the question of indigenous sovereignty and indigenous rights is a leading
edge of struggle.
A lot of the struggles around missing and murdered indigenous women have to do with the
fossil fuel industry and the back and other places where women have disappeared and been
killed by people in the fossil fuel industry, basically.
And I think bringing all that to bear
is really critical to have the breadth of consciousness
and the understanding that there is
a global struggle that's going on
and indigenous people in particular,
part of that about the survival of humanity
and of the planet in a sense.
And to situate anti-fazestruggling in that context,
I think is really, really important.
And relates to who are our allies, who are our leadership, where is the struggle being led by? And so, you know, one of the things we uncovered here in LA is that
people involved in the militia movement started their operations by supporting Christian militias in Guatemala and the Philippines attacking left forces in those countries and indigenous forces in those countries.
And, you know, having that global perspective, I think that's one of the really great strengths
of the book, by the way, that I thought was really amazing is the coverage of anti-fascist
movements all around the world and, you know, anti-fascist and Indian, and so on.
And, having that sense that it's not just people if you're paying decent or African Americans
in the United States who are opposed to fascism, but there's a very, very broad movement around
the world. And inside this country of people who are experiencing fascism literally all the time
that gives a strength to anti-fascism.
that gives a strength to anti-fascism. There is an exceptionalism that exists even in the left,
an American exceptionalism that exists even in the American left.
When it comes to how bad things are,
how good we are at organizing or whatever.
And I think that a lot of the time is one of the things that
we often forget is that we are not the only people going through this.
Both in time and space, right?
There's movements that are going on elsewhere,
that are facing a much deeper sort of repression
than what we see in the United States,
and they are still finding ways to organize.
I like to do, when we, when we talk about like the attack on clear rights
and, you know, things like all of these hateful laws that are being passed
which will almost certainly be thrown out in the courts and that's, you know,
it's going to be a couple of years but, you know, people are saying, well,
this is going to make pride illegal and this is, you know, this is the worst thing.
This is like, you know, a step towards genocide and all of that stuff.
And I think it's actually important for us
to put things in perspective.
Istanbul has a much stricter set of restrictions
on queer organizing, queer-get demonstrations.
Pride happens every year.
Pride is attacked by cops every year.
They still continue to persist.
What can we learn as Americans from that movement? I think that's a really important thing for
the American anti-fascist scene to really start to think around and try to take this moment,
as you mentioned, there's a law that is happening now, both in the organizing and in the popular support.
We need to take that moment to reflect on what is working, what is not, to regroup, and to buy new
approaches, new tactics. This is something that I write about in the chapter I wrote on
transientity fascism, right? We need to, like, we need to absolutely bring in historical contexts and comparative analyses
into our, into what we're doing, but that does not mean that we need to say that everything
is literally the Holocaust.
What we need to do is look at what are the factors, what are the causes, what are the root
causes of the things that are happening, and how can we strategically organize to disrupt and to bypass
those forces. So I think it's really important to have that multifaceted perspective.
I think that Emily is touched on something that is really important when we say that the police are are being or attacking pride events, pride marches and such. That suggests that somebody
initiated something on our side. That speaks to what it is we have to do. We have to initiate
certain actions. We cannot keep waiting for the fascists. We can't keep waiting. We can't
keep being reactive. We do have to go on the offense. We can't keep waiting, we can't keep being reactive.
We do have to go on the offense.
I mean, that's one of the reasons why myself and me and others have been so successful
is because we don't wait for the fascists to do something.
We do something to them before they make a move. And we know when to do it,
because they basically send a signals
out courtesy of their free speech,
that they want to do something.
And we just take those cues and say,
okay, here's how we are going to go forward.
We're going to let people know about you.
We're gonna let people know how to keep you at bay. I mean, that's
the kinds of things that we need to do. We need to just basically say, we are establishing
this institution, we are establishing the security around this institution and you are
not gonna be able to breach this institution. The other thing that we do need to do in that
while we build that is also make it clear
to some of those that for lack of a better term or wishy-washy on the subject are more or
mainstreamers and liberals and such who are quick to defend the fashes that they say they don't
believe in before they defend us. We got to start telling them to chill. And we got to start telling
them to pick a side and stop getting in everybody's way. Stop being a bullwark because you're too
cowardly to put up this fight. Or you're too interested in protecting your other interests,
as opposed to being concerned about what's coming down the pike. The book starts off with a discussion about a three-way fight.
We definitely are in one.
Do you want to explain what a three-way fight is?
Well, a three-way fight is not only you're dealing with the obvious enemies, so to speak,
but you're also dealing with those that are hesitant to do something about that enemy to the point that they will fight you more.
To the point that they will fight you more. And frankly, it's frustrating. It is a frustrating thing, but it is there. And it has been there throughout history.
And I mean, even the, I mean, I'm surprised I'm actually referencing a Mel Gibson movie,
but even the movie Braveheart brought that up.
Now, I don't, I don't think that we need to smack people upside the head with a mace,
but by the same token, we do have to let people know that we do have to be a little bit
more, I should say, assertive in our efforts as we go forward and basically try
to route this particular fascist element. And assertive means blowing past those that
are supposed to be on our side. I mean, because I was thinking about the fact that this
is now the 12th anniversary of Occupy, right?
And Occupy was trying to do that.
Occupy is still trying to do that in many respects.
The folks that were in Occupy, but some of the folks,
because what you also saw at Occupy
were a lot of folks who thought that they will be able
to take advantage of the progress
that we were making in this effort and turn it into a more fascist thing. I mean, I was just
looking a lot of the characters that come out of Occupy that went to the fascist side.
And when you look at who they are, you realize that you had a whole bunch of
opportunities that were within
our ranks that were looking for something totally different than what the rest of us.
We were looking out for each other and I could buy the true people that were dealing with
Occupy, Washington, we were looking out for each other in our communities.
These guys just start, hey, perfect opportunity to just say that we're one with them and drag
them over here to the right.
That's racism. That's rasterism.
That's straight up strassivism.
But when you look at it even further,
it's just a bunch of people that only care about themselves ultimately.
And we've seen it at the year after year in this fight.
So I think that is going to be very important to build and protect our institutions
and recognize what it is we are protecting
them from. And it's not hard. We have shown over and over and over again that we are prepared
to weigh that kind of war. We just have to basically recognize it within ourselves when we have
to do it. And that's just and do not wait for people to die. I mean, have the hire did not have to do it. And that's just and and do not wait for people to die. I mean, have the
hire did not have to die. No one in January 6, regardless of how I feel about any of them
had to die. That should not be the thing that we should respond to. We already know what
to do. We just need to do it. Yeah, I think picking up on a lot of what everyone said, especially Michael,
I think part of what gets out here is having a place for like broad social movements where
they're able to interact with one another and support one another. So anti-fascist movements
as the defensive movements have often been essential to actually operating other kinds of organizing.
You know, so like when I was working with houseless encampments and we were doing
a food and not bombs and stuff,
you get attacked by far right groups.
You had to have a defense development.
There was no other choice.
Same thing I've been at union offices
that were attacked by the far right.
You have to have that defense development.
And then on the same token,
we're talking about mass actions against far right demonstrations.
It requires people that are coming probably from all kinds of
political backgrounds, but they've gotten involved from different kinds of practices. We're having
mutual aid networks that support people getting there, sustaining themselves there, medical care,
all kinds of component pieces. So those things require that kind of back and forth. And I think that
also begs to how do you get people in. There's like, we're talking about a lot of problems
with people on like the moderate left,
not kind of taking those next steps,
those defensive steps that are necessary,
but also how do we find a pathway for them in?
For talking about mass participation and something,
if we're talking about like a revolution
to be able to do with huge masses of people,
we have to figure out what those pathways for people are
and giving them access to them. And I think also moving past what we've thought of as the far right before,
I mean, people have talked about this a little bit, you know, a lot of what we think of as
recent antifascism was built around fighting the alt-right and other kind of recent short-term
projects. And what we have now is just radically different, just like it will be in a few years. And so having a deep kind of intersectional understanding of how that works, because when you do that,
you have that kind of natural understanding of where this is going to show up again,
how it might interact with different communities, and what role it places for you,
how are you able to interact with it as this person coming into a social movement?
Yeah, I mean, especially considering something I've been kind of watching,
and we're seeing a little bit of it with this, with this set of Republican primaries is that
we have an incoming new wave of kind of Gen Z and Millennial Republicans who grew up in
the alt-right era, who are now bringing that sort of like alt-right street politics to
electoralism. And how that's going to be opposed is going to be, you know, I, I, I,
I was just talking about before how we shouldn't just try to like retread the same ground over and
over and without learning the history from the past. But like this, for a lot of people who,
who have just been doing like street politics the past few years, figuring out how they're going
to oppose like fascism in this much more like electoral setting, it's going to be an interesting
shift. Because yeah, you can like punch Richard Spencer and no one really cares too much. But if you punch someone like, you know,
DeSantis, that is going to be a different thing to kind of sort through. And so yeah, that is kind
of one of these shifts that, you know, maybe coming up here soon and whatever kind of evolves
on the anti-fascist site to kind of meet that
is going to be interesting to watch and take part in.
Yeah, I think that, you know, part of the ARA analysis has always been that fascism is
built from above and below.
And I think we really have to understand that that the fascism is not only the factor of
the street politics and the people who declare themselves be fascists, but
that there are fascist elements in the structure of this society and there are fascist elements
in power in this government right now.
And the fascism has come to power in quite a number of Italy, the Leo fascists as the
prime minister in United States, Matt Gaetz and that element has a clear, you know,
they're in power within the Republican Party.
They control the House for representatives in a way.
And I think that that's a critical understanding, but also it speaks
to the fact that fascist practices and elements exist in a lot of different places.
And I think one of the things I
always try to put out to people is that this is an aspect of the nature of imperialism,
set of colonialism, and I want to emphasize that because I think it does a fractal character
to what we're dealing with or holographic. And now there's any element of this society that you
attempt to deal with. You're actually facing the entirety of imperialism and fascism. They are so, if you look at the labor movement
right now, labor is a big resurgence, particularly here in Southern California, there just been
you know, the hotel workers in restaurant workers on strike, the screen actors on strike,
the writers, you'll learn strike. And the fact that there is a fascist element to the employment structure
and trying to organize it, if you look what happened with the Amazon union or just the fact that
again, going back in history, the TAF Hartley Act was written to criminalize communists and
also solidarity with the labor boom then outlaw, you know, solidarity strikes and that's fascist.
That is, yeah, I understand that.
And, you know, one of the reasons that the Puerto Rican depends who been the tact congress was that the US attempted to put the taft hardly acting to practice against the labor boom in Puerto Rico.
And the nationalist party said, no, we're going
to counter attack. So I think that's really critical understanding. We started out talking
about the prisons. And, you know, there's nothing more fascist that's been prison. And one of
the things they do in prison is they use privilege to try to divide the prisoners, you know, and
we haven't talked much about privilege and how it operates in the society. But, you know, and we haven't talked much about privilege and how it operates in the society.
But, you know, it's a key factor in how people are organized by the system to collaborate
to, you know, get along by going along.
And so, but even inside the prisons we've seen here in California, and elsewhere in Alabama, Georgia,
elsewhere, prisoners are able to organize under conditions
of fascism that exist in the prisons.
They have ways to communicate with each other.
They've built interracial solidarity in many cases.
So I think those are examples of anti-fascism
that we need to embrace and understand
the same way that people,, you know, if you're organizing
a union, you're operating on a certain level clandestinely because if you're open about it,
you're going to get fired. And they're going to retaliate and they're going to, anybody you talk to
is going to get fired. So we need to have an understanding of ways to organize that are not always,
I'm not talking about arm struggle. I'm saying that people have to organize below the radar
when you do the fascism, especially when it's in power.
And fascism is in power in a lot of sectors
that society right now and people are dealing with it.
As Emily said about Istanbul and Pride marches.
So I think we need to make those connections
into the labor movement, into the prison movement,
into the formerly incarcerated people's movement, the solidarity with indigenous struggles
that are going on against fascistic colonization of their lands and struggles.
I think that if we understand that that's an aspect of anti-fascism, I think it actually
strengthens what we're engaged in.
Definitely. I think it's also important just to like, I guess, if people are thinking about they're organizing, and it's always important to hear from those struggles as well as, you know,
to include them, but to really include them in a sense of like listening and learning from,
rather than sort of telling and saying this is like a cis-hate white guy. It's definitely a thing
that I've perceived in the movement in the last few years. It is a desire to speak a little more
and listen a little less. And one thing I enjoyed about your book is that when we talk about
fascism and we've already mentioned, Michael's mentioned, the border as a sort of a location for
fascist experiments within the United States, which I think it's very hard to argue against living on the border.
Like if you protested in 2020 against police violence, you were surveilled using technology
that has been used for years where I live and against migrants and citizens who live here.
But I really liked your perspective on looking at global fascisms because fascism is very easy
to spend too much time defining fascism, especially as anti-fascists. This is extremely easy to
be. It's not fascism unless it comes from the fascist region of Italy, like this cheese
or champagne definition of fascism. But the focused on the focused on for instance fascism in India, like
if I go to the border, I was at the border a couple of days ago, right, there are tons
of point job-y sick people camped out in the desert right now because border patrol are
holding them in an open air concentration camp essentially because of what's happening
in India that they turn up here, right? And it's well as bringing sort of migrant detention
resistance and migrant mutilated into anti-fascism. I think it's important that anti-fascists
also, like, we can take concrete action to protect and like, to care for victim survivors
of fascism, I guess, people who have fled fascism. And like, when I think about what my
background is in the study of the Spanish Civil War,
that's what my PhDs about, the thing that radicalized young, often Jewish men growing up in the
same part of New York that you did, was often seeing people fleeing fascism coming to their communities and then being like
We can't allow that not only to not happen here
But the crucial step that like we can't allow that to happen anywhere and that being what kind of motivated them
to
To travel to Spain and many of many of them died fighting in the Spanish Civil War, right?
But I think we could do better to do that as well, like now.
And not all of us are living in the United States right now,
but sometimes, like Emily said, American anti-fascists
can be very exceptionalist or whatever,
but I think that we have so much to learn from anti-fascists
in my sort of formative experiences
who are in Catalonia and Spain, but also in India,
also in Russia, right?
And I wonder if anyone could share
like sort of, I guess, concrete ways that people listening
can help to expand that solidarity
into an international anti-fascism.
I think there's an interesting example,. It gets to what Michael was stressing about fascism being
kind of colonial rule brought back to homeland. A lot of the methods that were used against kind of
mid-century anti-fascist organizers, for example, the anti-Nottu-Lieger,
later anti-fascist action in the UK were basically test run against Irish
Republicans in Northern Ireland. So those uprisings, different kind of methods of crowd control,
use of quote unquote non-lethal weapons, different kinds of forms of incarceration,
then used later against the anti-Nautilig. So there's sort of a step they're taking this colonial
rule back home, that's the testing testing ground and then using it domestically.
And I think what that actually does is create a certain bridge between two communities
that there is now a point of connection where they can relate.
It doesn't mean they're in the same situation, right?
Like it doesn't mean that like someone protesting in the United States is in the same situation.
Someone in the call of my space, but having that shared system that actually binds us
together in that sense of solidarity,
that's a new model of safety,
that's a new model of community.
So it's now seeing my strength in that alignment
with someone else,
of connecting with communities internationally,
learning from what they're doing,
but making real connections between them,
ones that have a real sense of weight between them,
where someone that's a success in of weight between them, where someone's
success in international social movement has real effect on their lives and back and forth,
I think committing to that is actually the kind of biggest thing we can do that creates an
international movement and it makes everyone stronger, everyone more effective.
Yeah. Yeah. I think one of the strengths of anti-racist action was that it was always an
international organization. It was US and Canada and there were a lot of chapters in Canada and
that really helped break some of the, you know, US exceptionalism understanding. But you also had
a corresponding organization. So it was resistance, you know, Redskin in Columbia in Bogota and
a couple of like Kali, I think.
And I think that that really is an important element.
And again, what I said is that we need to understand
that similar to what Lenin said about the so,
Russian Empire that is a prison house of nations,
that there are captive nations inside the borders
in the United States and that indigenous sovereignty
and Puerto Rican independence and Hawaii and sovereignty and put a reacon independence and Hawaiian sovereignty
and a lot of other issues. And I think those are things that the fascists try to exploit also.
They present themselves, fascism presents itself in the third world as a strategy for
international independence within the Japanese empire. But it's still forward. It was the, they presented themselves as being opposing British and US imperialist
invasion. They were imposing their own imperialism, but that internationalist element,
I think, is really critical. I think the same thing in labor. I think that the labor movement in this country
needs to think about prison struggles
as part of the labor movement needs to think about
the international solidarity with labor struggles elsewhere.
One of the things I raised in relation
to the screen actors guild and writers guild here
is that they raised this whole thing
about artificial intelligence. I don't know if people are aware, but artificial intelligence
depends on tens of thousands of people in the Philippines and elsewhere that are working
as gig workers processing stuff to put it into artificial intelligence. And the same thing you're saying about the border, the technology of self-driving
vehicles is based on the same technology using for motion detection on the border. And
the reason they're doing that is also because the people driving self-driving vehicles is
not just Google and Uber,
but it's the US Army Tank Division,
which wants to have automated self-driving tanks
the same way they have drones.
And having that understanding that it is
up against the global system and the fascists
are a piece of that,
but they're not the only piece of that.
I think is really, really critical
of understanding what we have to deal with.
We talk about, you know, what would a fascist government
look like if it was in control, you know,
full control with no opposition?
I think there are plenty of examples of that.
There's a fascist where we're happening right now
in Ukraine.
And I think that there's so much that we can learn
from what is going on there that oftentimes, I think that as anti-fascists,
we find ourselves wanting to be with the left that we get into a political situation that
gets muddled.
I went to the border twice in Ukraine when the war broke out.
I would relive Unite to Write 100 times before I had to go back to that again.
We don't understand scales until you have seen it.
Until you've seen the 100 or the thousand yard stare from hundreds of people, you know,
pouring over the border.
I'm sure James, you're very familiar with this, with the border work that you're doing
there. These things are so often
distant and abstract to us that we lose sight that we think that we can influence things
within our own spaces that will then have an impact on these bigger systems and we can't, right?
So I think that, you know, to go back to, you know,
what would be the call of action?
You know, what would I want the listener
to take away from this?
I think that this is about,
as somebody said earlier, listen,
listen more and speak less, right?
Try to read, try to see what people elsewhere
are doing, how they are organizing, what their needs are.
How do we do mutual aid in earthquake
and flood stricken areas?
How do we do mutual aid for refugees
who are fleeing a war and things like that?
There's just so much out there that we need to
to bring into perspective.
And if you think that you can fix any of it,
or even just a small part of it,
simply through speaking up or awareness campaigns, I think that you're in this lead.
So I think my call in action is, go out, read books, meet people, get off of Twitter,
scratch for me to say it, but the Master's Tools, Cantist, Mental, the Master's House,
right? We can't keep this pattern of outreach cycles up in order to move
the issue forward. We have to come up with something new. My challenge to people is to put
your brains together and figure out what that year's going to look like.
Maybe that's where we could end. Actually, it's with each of you suggesting something
like Emily has just done, right? Something to read, something to do,
and an action to take that could concretely help us oppose and rebut and push back against fascism.
I think it was pretty much going back to what I was saying earlier that it will begin when we
take the bull by the horns. It will begin whenever we decide
that we are going to establish this.
I mean, it goes back, you know, I grew up with hip hop.
I was in the punk scene.
Both those, both those genres, both those cultures
were created by people who,
by those who didn't see, say, the mainstream listening
to them.
So they said, you know what?
We don't need them.
We need to just go ahead and do what we need to do.
So we can benefit what it is we want to do.
And that's the attitude that we got to have.
We got to have that hip-hop attitude, got to have that punk attitude. And we just simply got to build the institutions that will address the situation. And I will say it
again, that's what I keep I was about. I think we need to continue to learn the lessons
from I keep high in order to go forward. And once we start doing that, first of all, when we do that, we're going to see, again,
people are trying to either co-op or take it down.
And we got to also protect ourselves from that as well.
I mean, I know I'm repeating what I had said earlier, but I think that the solutions,
and you know what I didn't say, I I think that the solutions, and I don't, you know what, what I didn't say,
I think the solutions are already being implemented. I think that we all have been working and doing this.
Folks that aren't on this, folks that aren't on this podcast, folks that would never be on any
podcast are just basically putting their time in to make sure that the things are done properly. I just got,
I just saw on the news that they had a in Delaware, they just passed the law against,
I guess what they call panic, panic killings in regards to the LGBTQ community,
you know, what they used to call call back in the day to gay panic
things.
They actually panic defense.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Delaware became the 17th state, I believe yesterday to make that illegal.
It should have been illegal in the first place.
But they basically, and for those who don't know what that means it generally means you cannot
kill somebody because you're freaked out over someone being gay.
I mean, that's just basically what it is.
Concern for it happened after Jenny Jones, somebody expressed their feelings towards another
man.
And that person after the Jenny Jones show had murdered that person.
And the killer, instead of getting first degree murder,
got second degree murder because he used
the gay panic defense.
So people initially, that was where everything started
and everybody was saying that we gotta do something
about that.
If it was not for us putting together
the mechanisms and the institutions to basically,
basically voice our concerns, voice our issues and say we got to do something about this.
Today without a fact, it should not be 17 states, by the way, it should be all 50.
But that's the kind of things that we need to do.
These are the things that it's all going to depend on us and how we act to things that
is going to make all the difference in the world. So when everybody's ready, let's rock and roll.
I think I'm really interested in getting people connected to social movements for their entire
lives and seeing things through being really connected to communities,
I think that's about looking about where people fit in,
where they feel comfortable building those relationships,
because it happens both at the kind of local
and national international scale.
So finding a piece of pathway for folks,
I mean, right now, I think, considering what we're dealing
with climate and economic collapse mutual aid networks
or a natural essential piece of that
so it's labor movement.
And going where the far right is having their front lines
making our defensive front lines.
So for example, in defense of trans healthcare
against that trans-less resolution
and defensive queer events like Greg Wayne's story hour,
that's absolutely important.
And we have those relationships now.
So it's about sort of finding a place to be able to reproduce the social movements and
grow them.
And again, like Darrell said, people are doing that.
And I think like as there are shifts, people have to kind of redefine that a little bit.
But having that adaptability is what we've kind of learned over this rapidly changing environment
the last few years.
Yeah.
I'll second again to give people
a little bit of sense of the longer view.
I think the rise of the Christian right in this country
has a lot to do with the disrupts of the labor movement.
And the collapse of organized labor
was that vacuum was filled by the Christian right
because the labor movement at one point
did touch people throughout their lives
and their culture and and was not just in your workplace but it was a community organization
and I think that we have to rebuild that you know from the bottom up and it is happening there's a lot of you know you know people involved in labor organizing. I think that
again what I said earlier about the fractal nature of the system. I think one of the things people
left in the name is anything they're trying to do, they have an enemy. It's not just a problem
that they're trying to face. There is an enemy out there that is trying to enforce the system
that we have as it collapses. And I think that that's critical. So yes, the mutual aid and the
kind of things Emily was talking about, I think, are critical. I think people are working on people's assemblies.
I was at this dual power gathering in the Midwest and there was just one up in Portland recently.
And I think that the understanding that all the power and all the wealth that this system possesses
is actually stolen from the people that it oppresses and exploits and that it's our power
and it's our power to take it back. We have the creative power. I think that's critical. And that their power is exploitive
and power over an hour is the power to create. I think that understanding and that concept
of solidarity. And I do think that, you know, again, Stephen Biko, part of the black
conscious movement in South Africa said, the greatest weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the minds of the oppressed.
And I think to the extent that we can wage a struggle for a different consciousness that is not
based on privilege and is not based on getting along by going along is not based on individualism,
you know, but is based on collective solidarity.
That actually disempowers the people that we're dealing with and threatens them in ways that
they're freaked out. They understand better than we do the
tenuous nature of their power. The reason for fascism, the term for fascism is that they want to try to intimidate people and break people's solidarity up.
And I think that we need to understand there's a dialectic there and to the extent that we can create those connections between people that actually disempowers them, the fascists and the state.
connections between people that actually disempowers them, the fascists and the state. I have a different perspective on the three-way fight.
I think the three-way fight is versus the fascists, the Celtic-Claire fascists and against
the state and the capitalist of which was the, and they're not identical.
They have contradictions with each other.
We can exploit those and drive wages of our own.
I think we have to find wedge issues that
appeal people off from their identification with the oppressor, with white supremacy and with
imperialism and pull people together and then who have been separated from that identification
with the state and with white power and bring them into solidarity with the global majority of people who are struggling
survival in a better world. Does anyone have anything to plug besides the book? Yeah, we explicitly
plug the books. I don't think we did like what where can you buy it? What's he called? Yeah, I can
plug in and do the self-promotion. So the book is No Pass Iran, anti-fascist dispatches from a world in crisis.
So we all have chapters in it.
I edited it.
It's with AK Press, who listeners are probably familiar with.
So you can get it at AK Press.
I always recommend folks go to AK Press and buy it directly if they can, but you can get
it pretty much anywhere.
And it's a hefty read.
It's about 500 pages, about 25 chapters. And it really
covers the gamut. Some stuff we talked about, some stuff we didn't get to. So it's a really good
overview of some of the different conversations happening in the anti-fascist movement. And hopefully
where it goes in the future. Yeah, I'll second that. I think the chapter in anti-fascism with the
black middle scene was really fascinating and worth the price of the book all by itself.
Honestly, the stuff at India.
I did want to talk to other books I've been involved in.
One is called the Blue Agave Revolution.
It's self-published myself and also Blanco, Indigenous political prisoner.
Contact the anti-racist action at anti-racist.org or email me at the racist on the square
late. Yeah, we've also involved with although it did not edit or anything but I could do a lot of
material too. We go where they go which is from P.M. Press, it's the history of ARA and it's
chock full of incredible material about, you know, specific, specificity. One of the things we didn't
talk about ARA is involved in was cop watch, but you know,
just a lot of, you know, cultural material. I know this stuff there that's well worth reading.
Well, I guess I'll chime in. I see I have a lot of stuff out there right now. One of the things
that you can look for it with me is a documentary that was put out in 2018 called Alt Write Age of Rage.
It's somewhere online I believe it's on 2B right now. What was on Netflix, I found out that the
reason why it's not on Netflix and it was because Netflix has deemed it too political.
So, but you can still find it out there. It's a really good
grammar on basically what it is we're fighting in this current time.
good, grammar on basically what it is we're fighting in this current time. We don't walk in fear is the latest documentary that I've been involved with some students
in Villanova University wanted to do a documentary about me.
And it's not exactly available to the public.
What I've been, you can probably find it at film festivals and things like that but what I've been doing is
Showing it at various events that I've been invited to whether it's some sort of speaking engagement or what have you
So it's only a half hour long, but if anybody is in a university or in a bookstore
But however and would like me to come out and
show up show the documentary to folks and talk about it later. Please feel free to give me, hit me up over at our website
OnePeopleSproject.com. We also have a newsline that's idavox.com. Both are on threads and on IG.
IdaVox.com both are on threads and on IG. We also have also the last thing that I would like to hype is also in 2018 there are there
was the movie Skin where Mike Coulter who played Luke Cage and it's in the TV show Evil.
He plays me.
It's about a neo-Nazi, someone from the Vellander social club, one of the
Nazis and forces who got out thanks to myself and others. And it's a beautiful
story. And it's been out since 2018. The short film is a different story. I'm not
going to say too much about it because I, you need to watch it. You can find it on YouTube.
Oh, you can find a feature on Amazon Prime, but you can find the,
you find a short film on YouTube. It actually won an Oscar in 2019. And I'm
listening as a consultant producer, so I guess I have an Oscar.
And that's about it. I mean, if you want me to come to your
colleges or whatever to speak or show the mean, if you want me to come to your colleges or whatever,
to speak or show the documentary,
we don't want to confer, feel free to give me a ring.
I'll be happy to see you.
I love traveling.
Like I mentioned, one other thing actually,
we talked earlier,
I'm the internal manager of KPFK, 90.7 FM in Los Angeles.
It's one of the Pacifica radio stations. So it's kpfk.org. We have
a stop LABD spying on the radio. We have it's going down on the radio. We have society of native
nations and American Indian airwaves on the radio. We have Larasa radio. A lot of other very
worthwhile. It's kpfk.org and we're in that current membership drive for October.
Everyone wants to join the station.
They don't have to live in LA.
And anti-racist.org has about 35 years of turning the tide and a bunch of stuff
actually from earlier.
I put some of this stuff from brother reform from England, sexism, but I worked
down in the 70s up there, including a letter from Michelle McGee, which is recently released
finally after I think 48 years in prison,
survivor of the Marin-Cord House Rebellion.
I don't have anything to plug.
I have a book that I'm working on getting representation for,
but that's still a little bit too early for me to plug.
So I'll just maybe plug a little bit of what
is continuing to happen in Charlottesville before we end. So
some of you may not be aware that criminal cases are still being brought against the Nioh Nazis
who marched with the Diki torches. We have sort of successfully convinced the local prosecutor
to do something about these fascists who have obviously
terrorized the community and continued to do it
in their other communities.
And whether or not you agree with that approach,
the community in Charlottesville,
and Alpenville still needs that support
and that witnessing as this all heads to trial,
this winter, we're expecting some renewed fascist attention.
So I'll just give a shout out for the community and ask for your awareness.
Great. Well, thank you very much for time everyone. I think that was really
instructive and interesting. And yeah, everyone should read the book. I read it much before we started today. It's great, it's very interesting.
Yeah, thank you very much.
I noticed Jacob is not in his crib.
So I look in and say,
oh, she's not there,
so I'm like, OK, they're not there.
Unrestorable is a new true crime podcast
that investigates the case of Catherine Hoggel,
a mother accused of murder.
I'm thinking, you know, like, what's going on?
Like, this is insane.
Like, where are my kids?
But despite signs that Catherine Hoggel took her tiny children one by one
into the night, never to come home again. She has yet to stand trial. Because soon
after her children went missing, she was declared incompetent to stand trial.
You know, when I would ask her her engagement was up in the bodies of remaining
confident. And then I would say, well, who advised you should throw you know I can't
tell you that. In Maryland, if a defendant is found incompetent and can't be restored to competency,
their felony charges are dismissed after five years.
So as the clock counts down,
Catherine's charges on the verge of being dismissed
will a grieving dad ever get justice.
Listen to Unrestorable on the I Heart RadioRadio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your
podcasts.
I'm Penelope Sferas.
I'm a film director.
I want to tell you a story about a friend of mine.
Back in the 70s Peter Ivers moved to LA to start his music career.
He scored Ron Howard's directorial debut.
I didn't know one thing about Peter
Ivers. I just said, okay, let's meet him. And even hosted a late night cable TV show.
It showcased LA punk bands in all their glory. The crowd started getting bigger and bigger
and then there was Beverly Danzola. There was John John Balucci. But then it all went to hell.
Peter was murdered.
Peter Ivers was murdered on March 3, 1983.
And it raised a question that 40 years later,
we still don't know the answer to.
Who killed Peter Ivers?
Listen to Peter and the Asset King on the I Heart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Our first call is Mary in Lexington, Kentucky. Mary, welcome to the middle.
Hello, and thanks for having me.
If you really want to know what's going on in this country,
heading into the 2024 election,
you have to get away from the extremes
and listen to the middle.
Hi, my name is Venkat.
I'm calling you for Atlanta Georgia.
On the new podcast, The Middle with Jeremy Hobson,
I'm live every week, taking your calls
and focusing on Americans in the middle,
who are so important politically,
but are often ignored by the media.
I did a lifetime democratic voter, however I was raised by moderate Republicans from Michigan.
Creating space for a civil conversation about the most contentious issues we face
from climate change to artificial intelligence from abortion rights to gun rights.
I consider myself to be conservative, cis-clade, but politically independent.
Listen to the Middle of Jeremy Hobson on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to I could happen here, I'm Garrison Davis.
This is the show where we talk about how everything kind of feels like it's falling apart and how
we can perhaps sometimes put some of that back together.
In about a month's time, there's going to be what's being labeled a quote unquote
mass non-violent direct action converging on the cop city construction site in Atlanta,
Georgia.
Now, a few weeks ago, I interviewed the two people
going around the country giving the block Copsity
speaking tour in preparation for this upcoming action
next month in Atlanta.
Like always, the opinions of those interviewed on the show
don't necessarily reflect the views of the show or myself.
And with this action in particular,
there has been quite the variety of opinions regarding or myself. And with this action in particular, there has been quite
the variety of opinions regarding its risk level and its ideological and tactical validity.
But the action is going to happen. It is going to take place on November 13th, no matter,
you know, some people disagreeing with aspects of it or having concerns about aspects of it.
It is going to take place. So my interest in putting out this episode
is to have a very open and clear discussion
regarding some of the questions people have
about this quote unquote non-violent action
and also provide enough information
so that people can make their own informed decision
regarding what's gonna happen next November.
So with that here is my conversation with Sam and Jamie
from the BlockCop City speaking tour. Joining me today is Sam from BlockCop City and Jamie
Peck. Both of you have been going around the country. I think it's around 70 cities right
now doing a speaking tour to talk about this upcoming action in November to BlockCops City. Thanks for coming on, guys.
No problem. Thanks for having us. So I assume anyone who's listening to this is already
familiar with Cops City, whether through their own, their own keeping up with the news, or even
if they're just, even if they just listened to the show, yeah, Covered Coffs City quite extensively the past like two years
So let's talk about this this kind of upcoming action because it's very
Different than kind of the previous mobilizations that we've seen which have taken form as like weeks of action
We had one last last June we had one the previous March
So what's different about this new upcoming
three day kind of mobilization?
So yeah, obviously it's taking place on one day
instead of a whole week.
And there's gonna be two days
of nonviolent direct action training
leading up to the day of,
which would be really important to make sure
that everybody feels prepared for what we're about to do.
It's different in a few different ways. I feel like this is a Passover, answering the four questions.
How is this actually different from all other actions?
Well, it's going to be like a real centralization of efforts, right?
Because other weeks of action have been a little more
diffuse, a little more spread out.
And here we're sort of bringing to bear the full power
of all the people coming from all over the country
in the same place at the same time
because there's safety in numbers
and there's power in numbers.
And I feel like the June week of action,
people were kind of going all over the place,
not really sure what to do when.
And I talked to a lot of people who were like, just tell us what to do. Tell us what the move is
on this particular day and will be there. And there was no one to do that, which you know,
is sometimes a hazard of sort of anarchistic movements, right? Nobody's in charge.
And we're not in charge right now either, I should say Everybody is going to have a chance to have input on the final plan in a thing called spokes councils that we're doing
The weekend before the action
but
Yeah, I think we're picking a lane and we're doing a thing and this particular lane has been chosen for a number of different reasons
right
The movement is in an interesting place right now
where more people than ever know about cop city,
more people than ever are opposed to cop city
as evidenced by the 120,000 petition signatures
that the referendum campaign was able to collect
to actually get a referendum on the ballot
to let the people of Atlanta actually vote
and whether or not they want this thing built.
Of course, the city is throwing every trick
in the book at them because they do not want
to let the people vote.
But on the other hand, lots of people know about it,
lots of people oppose it.
But the number of people who are willing and able
to show up in due direct action against it has dwindled.
And that's for a few different reasons.
Right, there's been so much
repression of the movement. A hundred people at least are now facing charges. We've got people
facing domestic terrorism charges. We've got people facing Rico charges, just like an absurd
overreach of the state, even according to mainstream legal scholars. So we really need a way
for people to feel empowered doing direct action again.
And this is what we've settled upon as the solution.
And maybe Sam can take it from there.
Sure. Thanks. Yeah. To build upon that, I suppose.
Right. You were sort of asking why is it that less people than ever are taking embodied action in the forest.
And one of those reasons also is people have been directing attention to other initiatives, right? So the 120,000 petition signatures was gathered by something
like 3,000 volunteers. There's all sorts of different parties throughout the movement who have been
trying just another diverse tactic. This movement has seen incredibly diverse tactics over the
last two years,
all sort of moving in unison with one another, and we sort of see BlockCop City as just another
type of tactic in a larger repertoire of a toolkit. You know, we haven't actually had an instance of over a thousand people doing embodied direct action in the forest, like that's never occurred in this campaign.
We've had a lot of people during some weeks of action,
but this is a little bit different in scope.
It's a little bit different in flavor.
I liked what you were saying, Jamie,
about the sort of like a lot of other sort of convergences
in Atlanta that were called weeks of action.
We're distributed, we're very autonomously organized,
and we're sort of trading a line between
like the main sort of organizing style,
we're on tour right now, right?
Calling in from Vancouver and you're over in Maine,
vast continental wide tour.
One of the primary functions of this tour
is the activation of affinity groups
to sort of catalyze and come down to Atlanta.
So that crews can sort of have the confidence of flexibility,
the warmth and the revelry that comes with moving through space
with your homies, with your comrades.
While at the same time, there's a very large cohort
of various logistical teams trying to figure out
various programming events, the locations of these trainings,
how to feed people, how to house people,
how to keep people entertained, things like that. So I think this scope is larger, potentially
hitting 80 cities if we can finalize a few final requests. And the action itself, so as Jamie
was saying, is confined to one day, but it's a four-day convergence., the action itself, right? So as Jamie was saying, is sort of confined to one day, right?
But it's a four day convergence.
So the action itself is being, our goal is to sort of carve out a space.
That day of on the morning of Monday, November 13th,
which thousands of people can take embodied action together in the forest again.
When you say like embodied action,
I know this thing has been advertised
as using quote unquote strategic nonviolence
as opposed to like moralistic nonviolence
like where you like oppose violent direction on principle.
Instead, this has been trying to employ nonviolence
as a strategic action.
Do you wanna talk a little bit about kind of
how that's being envisioned?
Because I know there's certainly even in Atlanta,
there's a lot of people who are either skeptical
or confused or fear that there's other safety issues
with an action as public as this, right?
Because you're trying to get thousands of people
to show up.
So this is this very publicly announced thing,
which also gives the police a big heads up.
So I know there's been a lot of questions
and I feel like,
you know, this aspect of nonviolence
is a very interesting one because
the Defense of the Atlanta Forest Movement
has been, I think, very historically defined
by, you know, very spontaneous, fiery acts of sabotage.
So I guess, yeah, just, let's, I wanna kind of,
I'm interested in this kind of strategic non-violence aspect.
Well, I don't know that it's been defined by the Strategic Act of Sabotage, which, by the way,
I don't consider violence against private property to be violence. Sure, sure.
I tend to apply that to human beings only, but yeah, we certainly, we don't disavow violence,
we don't disavow any, we don't disadap-
about any tactics in this fight.
I mean, the highest level of violence that any activists
have even been accused of is probably about the same level
that you'd find if you've ever had a Roman candle fight
with your friends, right?
You're shooting fireworks in each other's general direction.
Obviously, that wasn't happening for fun
when folks did it in the activism world,
but yeah, why nonviolence?
Why now?
It's a great question.
And I think a lot of it has to do with responding
to the charges on the table.
A lot of it has to do with wanting
to create an easier on ramp for people
and something that can be openly promoted.
Because, you know, for better or for worse,
the media has at times portrayed certain corners
of the movement as these like scary eco terrorists.
And, you know, when people are doing a higher risk action,
it's inherently something that you can't really go
around the country talking about
and engaging groups of people that you don't know.
So, you know, we
wanted to strike this balance, right? And what are we doing? Well, yes, technically it's a crime.
So it was what Martin Luther King did in the 1960s. And we wanted to draw on that legacy, right?
Because the Civil Rights Movement has a deep, deep legacy in Atlanta itself. So like we've had
rallies at the MLK Center. And now, so okay, we're doing a
thing, right? There's a thousand people there. There's children, there's clergy. It's in broad daylight.
The state is sort of caught in a bind now because okay, it could arrest a thousand people in broad
daylight and charge them with domestic terrorism,
that would create a political crisis
and that would be an international outrage.
And I think it would also be fairly unprecedented.
It's possible that that would happen,
although I don't think that's what's gonna happen.
There was recently a similar kind of direct action
on the construction site that the faith coalition
against Cops City did, actually five people chain themselves to the
construction equipment and they were arrested. They're all
out on misdemeanors now, which is what you usually get
charged with for a protest of that nature. Right. So, yeah,
the state could hypothetically arrest a thousand people and
charge them with terrorism. That would be an international
outrage. That would be a political right crisis. On the other hand, the state could do, and there are signs that it's been pulling back,
right, because what I just said, if the state charges people with misdemeanors for doing the
exact same thing that people were recently charged with terrorism or hit with Rico charges for doing,
that will also serve to further delegitimize these charges
for the people already facing them.
Mass arrests are certainly a pretty big concern for people when they're deciding if they
want to go to such an action.
And I mean, because this action is happening and, you know, one of the most, I would say
it's probably in like the top five most police areas of the country right
now is in the South River Forest.
Specifically the Copsney Construction site.
It's certainly a concern a lot of people have, especially when you know, we're talking
about possibly police arresting hundreds of people trying to kettle them in the site.
It's certainly a very, very valid concern to have.
I'll also add a little bit to that. So for me, the question of like mass arrest
is actually maybe not even in the top five reasons
why I'm interested in doing this campaign.
I think it obviously is a possibility, right?
I would say the goal of this action for me at least
is not to get arrested.
Obviously like, you know, many civil disobedience campaigns, like that's an explicit part of their
understanding of the world's games, right?
Yeah, a lot of like the extinction rebellion kind of tactics, even some of the more kind
of earth first tactics kind of revolve around being arrested as a part of the tactic itself.
And there's certainly been a lot of pushback towards that type
of self-sacrificial tactic here in Atlanta
the past few years.
And kind of in the general kind of anarchist milieu
that's kind of been like stewing, that is this kind
of self-sacrifice of being arrested actually useful in any way.
And I'm sure that as part of some people's thought process going into this is,
you know, if there's a decent chance I am going to get arrested just for walking onto a site,
is it worth it? But I'm sorry, you were, I realized I was, I didn't know if it would
you and went on a short rant. No, that's okay. It's a very important issue to a lot of us, right?
No, that's okay. It's a very important issue to a lot of us.
So, yeah, like sort of as I was saying, the goal of this act-ish action is not to get arrested, but obviously as you were saying, we're waltzing onto the fucking, sorry, cops to deconstruction site.
It's a very good chance to say the least.
But for me, the other interesting parts about this is, right, is embodied action in the
forest has just not felt possible for months and months and months.
There hasn't been an occupation of the forest since the cops killed Tort in January of this
year, except for a couple days during the March's week of action.
But largely speaking, the forest has been held by big scary men
with big scary guns for many months now.
And the horizons feel incredibly obscured.
It's very unclear what the movement could do right now
that could jumpstart our energies,
that could serve as a container for the thousands and thousands
and thousands of disillusioned and disenfranchised
folks who have been working tirelessly at other methods of change as well, right?
So our sort of theory is the most powerful action that we can do is one that's sort of defined
by our power in numbers, by our power in our unity, by our power in sticking together
in order. So for me, the interesting question
isn't even necessarily what happens on November 13th of this year, the day of the action.
For me, the interesting question is like, what new horizons does this open up in the movement?
How we can reactivate and recatalyze our energy and understand and prove to ourselves in a collective
fashion that embodied action in the forest is indeed possible at a mass level. And this actually sort of seeks to advance the energy and the movement to a new
height that hasn't actually occurred, right? What's going to happen is more people than
ever will be in the forest together at the same time. And that right now is precisely what's
needed in this moment. And the only way to do that as we're doing this publicly and above
ground, one, to help aid in that sort of facilitation of just a numbers game, right? And then two,
is like, we want people to be able to make an informed and consensual decision on how they want to
engage. And the only way that they can do that is for them to actually know what the heck is going
to happen, right? So we're going around and being incredibly clear about what the plan is and how the finalized version of the plan will be as Jamie
sort of opened with, discussed democratically and horizontally at these in-person outdoor COVID-safe
spokesperson council meetings on Saturday, November 11th and Sunday, November 12th,
down there in Atlanta, where all these affinity groups from around the country around the state
and around the city of Atlanta will sort of elect one of their homies to go to this larger
general assembly type thing that will then sort of democratically and horizontally determine
what the actual specifics of Monday's plan will be. Are there any sort of community agreements
that we want to uplift and highlight so that we can all sort of know and be on the
same page and move in a similar way together. And those could be, I, I don't want to speak for
it there because those would be determined in the spokesperson council. Yeah. But the sort of like,
there's been questions, I guess lastly, there's been questions about, well, what does that actually
look like to, um, maintain a level of non-violence, whatever that might actually mean in a space, right? So like, I'm sure
a lot of folks listening and myself include probably all of us here have witnessed,
you know, for lack of a better word, peace policing or something like that, right?
Our wager with this, our goal with this is the activation of affinity groups of crews that
roll up together who enter into this sort of like
consensual horizontal decision-making space where community agreements are explicitly laid out
in the days leading up to the action. Those specific affinity groups can hold each other accountable
to those norms in whatever way that they want, right? You and your homies holding it down for one
another in like what we're calling for right is non-violence.
Like that, that we can debate, we can have a head-e-political debate about like the the
meaning of violence and the meaning of non-violence, but like the language of non-violence has
a rich history in American social justice movements, right? Like that term has meaning to a lot
of people and that's actually what's being advocated for on this day. But only on that day,
right? Like, so what we're talking about is like in this specific space that we're going to like
create together, this is what we're doing, what we're calling for in this moment in time, in
this specific geography. If people have other ways to engage in other spaces or in other times,
one of the hallmarks of the movement is that by all means they should, right? That's what's kept this movement strong. And this is no different.
Yeah, I'd like to add that there's definitely a precedent for this within the movement.
There were probably a number of events like this, but this was the one that I was there for.
There was a march, a rally and a march at the MLK center during the March week of action.
a rally into March at the MLK center during the March week of action. And it was put on by community movement builders, which is a great group, all black group, organizing in specifically black
working class communities in Atlanta, led by Kamal Franklin. And he put out a statement before this rally in March saying,
you know, attention comrades, this particular event
is going to be a low risk event.
We've decided that is what we need today.
We've done a lot of work in the community getting community
members to come out to this who maybe haven't been that involved
in the past. A lot of older working class black people are going to be there.
Please don't do anything that's going to attract extra attention from the cops.
Don't do anything spicy. Don't break windows. If they tell you to stay on the sidewalk,
stay on the sidewalk. Not that there's anything wrong with those tactics. In general,
and he went out of his way to say, we do not announce these tactics in general. It is just not the right
thing to do today at this particular thing. And everybody
pretty much listened and everybody bathed themselves. And I
thought it was a really cool example of, you know, the respect,
the mutual respect across different different corners of this
movement.
Yeah, I've definitely been thinking about that action in relation to this upcoming kind
of event.
The thing was on the Thursday of the fifth week of action a few days after there was
like the mass arrests at the music festival.
Because I mean, they're in the lead up to that community movement built in its march.
There were very similar questions around like, yeah, like, who's going to enforce nonviolence, which is kind of a silly question. And there
is, you know, there is precedent, absolutely, of people like peace policing and even turning
over people to the cops. That is a precedent. But in this case, you know, these specific people
and community movement builders have been pretty down with
the more militant aspects of this movement for years.
And in the hours before that action, people sought and gained more clarification.
I'm like, no, we're not going to fuck you over, but like, hey, we're trying to bring our
grandmas and our kids to this.
And not that the police need any excuse to attack people.
But this is the thing that we're planning.
This is what we're trying to do.
You don't have to come if you don't want to.
It is that type of mutual understanding and agreement that actions like this kind of
rest on.
Because I certainly know that there's probably a good deal of forest defenders who would like to jump at the opportunity to do spicy stuff on the site.
Because that's a, from their perspective, that's a very attractive proposal, which also has precedents in these types of big mass mobilizations.
There's certainly aspects of that that are kind of intersect with this, especially one concern people may have is that this is being pushed as like, hey, we're, you
know, we're going to all these cities for trying to mobilize all these
people, get a thousand people, we're all planning this thing together.
There's, there's a certain risk that that type of language could be turned
against any of the possibly hundreds of people arrested on March 13th, and
it rule these into and we'll have that rule in tocoacharge and set people they're facing in Georgia.
Now I also kind of, from my understanding, part of this action is to kind of showcase
the kind of absurdity of these re-coacharge by demonstrating the killing.
This is like a very typical civil rights kind of, you know, social movement organizing. But I think those two things,
I think, can actually coexist. Where yes, this is very typical civil rights organizing. And also,
the state, specifically, you know, the state that, you know, in Atlanta have been, have not
cared at all. And it is very, is very willing to use these,
to use charges like this as a chilling tactic
to suppress any future, like protest or mobilization
against copsity.
So this is like, I think one other dynamic
that people are certainly thinking about
in terms of, you know,
would decide if they want to participate
in something like this.
Sure, yeah.
Above all, one of the primary functions of
repression, right, is to scare us into inaction, right?
And in the face of that, the worst thing that we can do is
cower away and shrink.
And precisely this type of mass mobilization is the
ultimate show of solidarity with all people who have been swept up into
various trumped up legal charges related to this movement.
And also there's, you know, throughout the history of American social movements, there's
precedent after precedent after precedent of people organizing their communities and
their friends up to Carabach to travel to a place of injustice
and stand in solidarity together.
This is a classic organizing tactic.
It's nothing particularly new.
It's the first time that I've been involved
in this scale of organizing and this specific flavor.
I think with any action, just because we call it non-violence doesn't mean that violence
won't occur on the site, specifically maybe at the hands of the police or other law enforcement
agencies, just because we call it non-violence doesn't mean that there isn't risk involved
with any action that we go to, there's risk involved.
But our understanding is that the risk of inaction
far outweighs the risk of action in this moment.
Yeah, because they're going to build that thing if nobody does anything.
They're trying to build it right now.
And what's going to happen after that?
Well, there's going to be hundreds and hundreds more cops on the streets
trained in all the latest militarized technological ways to, you know, oppress and
terrorize civilian populations and put down the next big popular uprising, which they've
connected it with very explicitly, so we should be thinking about it in that way too.
And you know, we're a generation without victories, right?
It just sort of feels like we,
I don't wanna minimize the real tangible wins
that do indeed happen, but largely speaking,
it feels like we're a generation without victories.
We need to win social struggles
and tens of thousands of people from around the world
are watching the defense, the Atlanta Forest movement,
hoping that it wins.
So I sort of asked myself, what would have happened
if Standing Rock would have won?
Like Standing Rock raised the bar for what it means
to resist the pipeline in camp
and unseated indigenous territory in this country.
It raised the bar for that.
So the next time that invariably rolls around,
hopefully we can begin from that point.
But the pipeline is built, right?
Oil is flowing through it.
Oil is leaking through it.
It didn't win that element of the work.
And that's why it's important that we have victories.
And that's why there's so many people pouring so much energy
into the Defend the Atlanta Forest stock cops
that he know Hollywood, dystopia campaign,
because we know it's winnable.
But we need to ratchet up. And this is precisely
the sort of level of accessible, but also drastically heightened level of ratcheting up
of our intensity of our collective power together. That's possible in this moment.
One thing that Sam, you kind of mentioned earlier in this conversation, is that this
plan is really just one spear in the many that's trying to put cracks in the facade of the
Copsity project.
And this action is really just being put in relation to a whole bunch of other things
that could happen that would eventually lead to Copsity being stopped.
I think that's a really important aspect to kind of clarify because there are some detractors
who are framing this action as being, like the only path forward that organizers
are wanting to do. And I know this movement's been very, very based on people taking their
own spontaneous action and they're being not just one strategy, not just one plan. There's always
a big, a big, you know, litany of things that could be going on, which all kind of starts to put
pressure on this pressure on this house
of cards, so to speak. There's a political crisis, a ruin in Atlanta, that has been for a very long
time, right? Andre Dickens, for some reason, has put all of his chips into this thing, and he is
like, hated for it, right? The Atlanta Police Foundation has taken out millions and millions and millions of dollars
of loans to build this thing.
If they fail to build cop city, which they will, then they will default on those loans and
they might go bankrupt.
So this entire project is essentially a house of cards.
And it doesn't really feel that way because it's being buttressed on all sides by corporations,
by crony politicians, by big men with big guns, you know, but they're doing so precisely
because it's fragile, precisely because it's a house of cards and there's zero buy-in
from the community and from people and standing in solidarity around the world for this project.
What could be a fatal death blow to this movement is a mass quantitative
uptick and the number of people taking action in the forest. And that would be a new and novel
blow to this thing that it hasn't really seen. There really is a battle happening over the,
like who gets to use this language of social justice and who gets to
draw on the legacy of the civil rights movement, right? And there are two really competing narratives
right now. You have the StopCop City movement, which has a pretty complete analysis, I would say,
of the ways that racial oppression and class exploitation power American capitalism, right?
And the ways that cop city feed into and enable those things with the help of the bourgeois state.
And then you have the cynical take from the city of Atlanta and from the political class.
I'm looking at a post that just I think just was posted by the city of Atlanta
Twitter account. It says, Mayor Andre for Atlanta welcomed guests to the march on Washington's
60th dream youth panel at North Atlanta high school. Mayor Dickens highlighted the significance of
MLK's non-violence movement and shared his hopes that our youth will work together to fulfill MLK's dream hashtag MOW60. So there we have a cynical attempt to harness the legacy of the civil rights
movement, right? Because what the fuck is he even talking about? Like how are you just going to work together to fulfill MLK's dream of, you know, freedom,
equality, not just in terms of who gets to buy things at a particular store, but like true
economic power and equality for everyone, especially black proletarians who have served a very
specific and important role in American
capitalism.
Right.
What is he talking about if not like we're doing exactly what MLK used to do.
This is a nonviolent act of civil disobedience.
So what could he, what else could he mean by that?
Does he mean voting for Democrats?
Does he mean, you know, working for NGOs?
Does he mean joining this political
class? Because I think like it actually makes me feel better that the people of Atlanta
seem to know that this is bullshit, despite all of the propaganda that's been coming out
from from the state and from the, you know, the Bush-Dwa media and the mainstream press
that just kind of uncritically reports the things
that the mayor says, the things that the cops say, the propaganda isn't working. 120,000 people
signed this petition in a city of 500,000. I mean, I think they can clearly see who's really
carrying on this project of social justice and equality.
Great.
I always love checking up on the city of Atlanta Twitter account
because at least once a day they post some
absolutely absurd thing.
I guess the last thing I think it's probably worth mentioning
is that a big part of this plan is trying to catalyze
affinity groups to come to the city, specifically with the idea of them participating in this action
on November 13th. But nothing is stopping affinity groups from pursuing other forms of direct
action during the four or so days they might be in town. I think it's a big, a large part of this movement
has been very based on self-determination and radical autonomy, whether that includes your ability
to participate in big collective mass actions or just having fun with your friends around the
city. Like what happened near the end of the last week of action, where eight motorcycles mysteriously vanished from the material plane. So that's...
We're about a month away from this. If people are interested in want to kind of learn more
information about this proposal, where can people find said information?
Yeah, thanks for that.
We're currently in the middle of our Wielande Worldwide Math Action Speaking tour.
80 cities from Portland, Maine to Portland, Oregon, Vancouver to Tijuana and everywhere
in between.
Jamie and I will also be co-hosting a Zane Toursop on on Saturday October 14th at 3pm Eastern time. Check out
lockcopcity.org for information on those tour stops including the ones on Zoom.
There's also going to be a schedule for the weekends festivities that is coming up quite soon,
which could include several cultural events, welcoming ceremonies,
two in-person spokesperson council meetings, general direct action, nonviolent
direct action trainings, as well as other ways to spend time, quality time together down
in the forest, leading up to the mass action on the morning of Monday, November 13th.
If people have resources, they would like to donate to the movement, whether that be in the
form of in-person housing, it's help with transportation,
help with collective cooking processes,
help with social media outreach,
journalistic outreach,
help with just thinking through this thing, right?
And how we can make it as empowering
and successful as possible
and help sort of allow this to once again raise the bar
for what it means to fight against deforestation,
to fight against over policing in black and brown communities around the country, to fight
against economic injustice and the attack and dignified forms of life, cross social movements
and regions.
You can contact us via our contact form on the web page, which you can find on blockcopcity.org slash contact.
And there's a contact form to fill out. There's also a Gmail blockcopcityaGmail.com. So if any of
those things are, if you want to figure out how to plug in, feel free to direct your correspondence
to one of those channels. Yeah, blockcopcity.org. You can watch our hype video. You can read our
invitation to action. You can, well, the tour might be mostly over by then video, you can read our invitation to action.
You can, well, the tour might be mostly over by then, but you can look at where the tour has been.
Lots of good information on that website, and there's also lots of ways to get in touch. So yeah,
hope to see you all in November.
Yeah, you're cordially invited to activate an affinity group, come down to November between Friday, Veterans Day, November 10th to Monday, November 13th. And then also, it's important
to note that probably on the 14th and the 15th, there'll be collective days of healing and
anti-repression work that will be happening citywide as well. That does it for us today on the show.
Once again, thanks to Sam and Jamie for talking with me about this action.
Hopefully, you have a little bit more information about this than you had going into it.
You can certainly find more information about this action and a variety of other opinions
on the scenes.
No blogs website and other kind of anarchist news websites if you want to go seeking out
those other opinions.
See you on the other side.
I noticed Jacob is not in his crib, so I look in and say, oh she's not there so I'm like,
okay, they're not there. Unrestorable is a new true crime podcast
that investigates the case of Catherine Hoggel,
a mother accused of murder.
I'm thinking, you know, like, what's going on?
Like, this is insane.
Like, where are my kids?
But despite signs that Catherine Hoggel took her tiny children
one by one into the night, never to come
home again.
She has yet to stand trial.
Because soon after her children went missing, she was declared incompetent to stand trial.
You know, when I would ask her her engagement was I've been invited to remain incompetent.
And then I would say, well, who advised you should throw you know I can't tell you that.
In Maryland, if the defendant is found incompetent and can't be restored to competency,
their felony charges are dismissed after five years.
So as the clock counts down,
Catherine's charges on the verge of being dismissed
will a grieving dad ever get justice.
Listen to Unrestorable on the I Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Penelope Sferas. I'm a film director. I want to tell you a story about a friend of mine.
Back in the 70s, Peter Ivers moved to LA to start his music career. He scored Ron Howard's
directorial debut. I didn't know one thing about Peter Ivers. I just said, okay,
to Rectorial debut. I didn't know one thing about Peter Ivers.
I just said, OK, let's meet him.
And even hosted a late night cable TV show.
It showcased LA punk bands in all their glory.
The crowd started getting bigger and bigger,
and then there was Beverly Danza.
There was John Baloozy.
But then, it all went to hell.
Peter was murdered on March 3rd, 1983.
And it raised a question that 40 years later, we still
don't know the answer to.
Who killed Peter Ivers?
Listen to Peter and the Asset King on the I Heart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Our first call is Mary in Lexington, Kentucky. Mary, welcome to the middle.
Hello, and thanks for having me.
If you really want to know what's going on in this country heading into the 2024 election,
you have to get away from the extremes and listen to the middle.
Hi, my name is Venkat.
I'm calling you for Atlanta Georgia.
On the new podcast, The Middle with Jeremy Hobson, I'm live every week, taking your calls
and focusing on Americans in the middle, who are so important politically but are often
ignored by the media.
I did a lifetime Democratic voter,
however I was raised by moderate Republicans from Michigan.
Creating space for a simple conversation
about the most contentious issues we face
from climate change to artificial intelligence
from abortion rights to gun rights.
I consider myself to be conservative, cis-glee,
but politically independent.
Listen to the Middle with Jeremy Hobson
on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO everybody and welcome to Itchwood Happen here. My name is Shereen and a lot has
happened recently and we definitely need to talk about it. There's a lot to
cover and things are changing every day. I can't possibly talk about everything in
a 30-minute podcast episode but just for, I'm recording the bulk of this on Wednesday,
October 11th. There are many different things that we should get into, and we'll probably
get into them in other episodes. So look forward to those. But today, I want to talk about
why exactly this attack from Hamas is so different and so unprecedented for many reasons. And why the response by Israel is also extremely unprecedented.
There has been a lot of violence, a lot of death.
And I thought a better way to start to learn about this
might be with something really specific.
Like learning about the border fence
that has been caging in Gaza for years.
Why Israel thought it was so impermeable,
and how they were wrong. So let's begin. The video and images going around on social media of a
bulldozer breaking through a portion of the fence that has long enclosed the Gaza Strip for years,
this cage that surrounds that territory. The image of a bulldozer is running straight through it
and Palestinians running to the other side.
I don't think you can find anything better
to represent the long history of Israeli-Palestinian tensions,
the decades of brutal Israeli occupation,
the recurrent Hamas bombings and rocket strikes
and the political deterioration on both sides than this image.
No one thought this was going to happen.
Professor Clive Jones, Director of Institute for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at Jura University said, 1948 that any Palestinian militant movement has taken territory in Israel proper,
that symbolic victory and defeat for Israel will resonate across the region.
So on the morning of October 7th, there was a surprise attack from Hamas against Israel.
What happened was a colossal failure of Israeli intelligence as well as the Israeli government.
I'll go into this in more detail in a bit, but in this surprise attack resistance fighters
were entering up to 29 different locations outside the Gaza Strip.
Most significantly, fighters tore through the border fence, which has also been called
the Iron Wall.
They knocked it aside with bulldozers, drove right through it with jeeps and motorcycles.
Other homospiders sailed right over it with fan-powered gliders, and others hopped on
boats to try to reach the other side by sea.
A crucial component of Israel's defense from an attack like this, or at least it was supposed
to be, was this sophisticated border fence.
I want to talk about how exactly Israel came to build this fence.
Because throughout most of its history, the IDF did not want much to do with defensive measures.
Its traditional security concept rested on three complementary pillars, deterrence, early warning,
and decisive battlefield victory. Guided by this concept, the IDF built offensive power
designed to deter its enemies from attacking and intelligence erased in order to detect when
that deterrence had eroded. If it was unable to convince the other side that it was better off
avoiding conflict, the IDF would bring the full might of its offensive capabilities in search
of a rapid and decisive quote-unquote
victory, which just means they would end up killing a lot of people. They would fly in cities
and mask her hundreds of people in order to essentially make the other side lose all hope
and not fight back. And if they did, to tell them never to fight back again. This would,
according to this concept initially, strengthen deterrence. The idea of defense, for Israel, began
sneaking into the conversation in the 1960s as Israel considered purchasing the
hawk surface-to-air missile system from the US. This idea had some opposition
at the highest level of the IDF. Air Force Commander Ezra Weizmann opposed the idea on the grounds
that it would give Israel's political chiefs an excuse to avoid the bold offensive operations.
In this case, surprise airstrikes that would take out entire buildings, which he viewed
as necessary to win a war. In the end, though, five hawk missile batteries were purchased just before the 1967 Six-Day War
for $30 million.
The first makings of the present-day security fence began in 1994 after the signing of
the interim agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip when Israel constructed a 40-mile
fence along its boundary with Eastern Palestine. The construction was completed in 1996, though it didn't necessarily represent a hard border.
In 2005, under former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, Israel carried out a disengagement from
Gaza, which included, among other things, pulling out its troops.
This meant that the 1 kilometer buffer zone that the Israeli Defense Forces maintained
after the first fence was torn down by Gossens in 2000
was no longer a possibility.
A plan for an alternate fortified fence,
a few dozen meters east of the original fence,
entirely on Israeli land, was then developed.
The present day, 40 mile long barricade,
has several sections, a 20-foot high smart fence,
which is the over-the-ground fence, with a maritime section manned by sensors to detect
incursions from the water, and an underground wall of classified depth and thickness, with
sensors to detect any digging.
The over-ground barrier, which makes up 81% of the fence, is supported by a complex network of cameras, radar systems, as well as command and control rooms.
140,000 tons of iron and steel were used in the construction of the underground wall, which took 3.5 years to complete.
The total cost of the project is estimated at $1.11 billion.
The project of the quote unquote smart fence
was publicly announced in 2016 and in 2021,
Israel announced the completion of the smart fence,
which included an underground concrete barrier.
This addition, which I feel like is important to mention,
was because Hamas used underground tunnels
to blindside Israeli forces in 2014. Access near the fence on the Gaza side was
limited to farmers who were on foot. On the Israeli side, observation towers and
sand dunes were put in place to monitor threats and slow intruders. With the
announcement of its completion in 2021, the then-defense minister Benny Gans
said the barrier placed a quote, iron wall between Hamas and southern Israel.
But, on October 7th, as we saw, the wall failed massively, and a surprise series of coordinated
efforts enabled Hamas to get past the wall.
The fence was breached at 29 points according to the IDF. There
were also Israeli guard towers positioned at every 500 feet along the perimeter of the
wall at some certain points, and the Hamas fighters there appeared to encounter very little
resistance. It soon became apparent that the border was minimally staffed, with much
of Israel's military diverted to focus on the unrest
in the West Bank. Matthew Levitt is the director of the Counterterrorism Program at the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy. He said, the most compelling parts of the system were the ones that
provided indicators and warnings. But you don't see in advance that someone is masked at the fence. It's still just a fence.
A big fence, but just a fence.
Still, he says, the idea of a bulldozer getting that close to the fence at all just boggles
the mind.
The attack has been documented as the following.
To put it very simply.
Using commercial drones, Hamas bombed Israeli observation towers,
communications infrastructure,
and weapons systems along the border.
Israel said Hamas fired more than 3,000 rockets
into a territory,
with some reaching as far as Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.
Militants also use explosives
to blow up sections of the barrier,
and men and motorbikes drove through the gaps.
And then the bulldozers did the rest, and this allowed for enough space for their larger vehicles to drive through.
Experts said an attack of this magnitude with all of these elements would have required weeks at least of preparation and subtrafuge.
But maybe you're asking, well why now? Why did Hamas now decide to launch
an attack of this magnitude? There are some clues in the name that Hamas gave the attack.
They named it Operation El-Ukza-Flood. Just days before the attack, hundreds of Israeli
settlers, with the protection of the Israeli forces, stormed El- and occupied Easter Rosalim. I've talked about this
before, but this compound is a very important and contested religious site. And it's often, very
often, a target by Israeli settlers and the IDF. And Hamas said it launched its attack in response
to the desecration of Alexa. Muhammad Dief., the Khassam Brigade's commander, said,
we have decided that the time has come to draw the line
for the enemy to understand their time is up
and they can't keep going without consequences.
But again, an expert said this plan would have taken weeks to plan.
I'm sure the attacks on an Alexa mosque played a role in the attack, but it was probably
being worked on for quite some time before that.
And Hamas also said the attack was a response to decades of Israeli violence and occupation.
The daily impact of the occupation on the lives of Palestinians and Gaza and other occupied
territories like the West Bank is a huge part of this story.
Let's take our first break before I forget.
No clever segue here.
Just listen to these ads.
And we're back.
Analysts and experts have been warning for months
that the reality on the ground in Palestine and Israel
was leading up to this.
Nor Uday, a political analyst and former Palestinian authority spokeswoman, said,
the record number of Palestinians killed, dispossessed, injured, and traumatized by Israeli forces
and settlers across the occupied West Bank, the continued siege on Gaza, the relentless
attacks on Alexa Mosque, they were all pushing the situation towards this moment.
I don't think anybody imagined the particulars of this moment, but I think everybody with
a sense of what was going on knew that this quote-unquote calm was deceiving, and that something
was going to happen, something big. And it did happen. The wall came down.
But for the 2.3 million Palestinians who have been virtually
trapped for 15 years, as well as the Palestinians on the West Bank, who have been constantly
surveilled, having their movement restricted, and have experienced growing military violence,
bulldozing through this fence means something else. While the Israeli response was fed by
the failure of this system, making the future of all
Palestinians even more precarious, the impact of Saturday's attack for Palestinians is hugely
significant, psychologically and symbolically.
It shatters the idea of Israel's military superiority.
It's a physical symbol of breaking out of the open air prison they've been held
captive in, letting them step onto the land they've been forced out of, some of them for their entire lives.
Most of the Palestinians and Gaza are children, and they have only ever known life within
the confines of that fence.
So bulldozing a hole right through this fence to the other side will obviously have ripples
in more ways than one.
I want to mention something here that I'm thinking about,
is that Gaza is often referred to as the world's
biggest open-air prison, which is true.
But I was thinking about it, and prison implies that they did a crime.
They did not do a crime. The Palestinians are innocent.
They're stuck in a cage against their will,
and they have no way out. I think a better way to describe Gaza might be an open-air concentration
camp. The biggest open-air concentration camp period, there's just something I've been thinking
about because I feel like open-air prison implies they're all criminals, and they're not.
So just something to think about when it comes to semantics and the power of words,
I suppose, even if it's subconscious.
Gaza has been under a land, sea, and air blockade since 2007.
More than 2.3 million Palestinians live there, all crammed in, and they cannot leave without
Israeli permission, which very
few people get.
Hamas is a political and armed group that took control of 2006, and there hasn't been
an election since.
It's part of a regional alliance, which also includes Iran and the armed group Hezbollah
and Lebanon.
Hamas has been designated a terrorist organization by Israel, the US, and the EU,
among many others. We'll be doing a history more in depth about Hamas soon, but it's important
to note that Israel basically helped create it. More details will be in that episode, obviously,
but just to summarize very briefly, Israel bolstered Hamas' creation and funded its expansion because it wanted to divide the Palestinians amongst themselves
and they viewed the leftist PLO, the Palestinian liberation organization, which was the governing party at the time as a threat.
And so they encouraged Hamas to flourish and thrive, which leads us to now.
Again, that will be a separate episode. There's so much to
cover, and I can't do it all today. Although the PLO used to be the dominant party decades ago,
in recent years, the PLO and the secular Fata Party, which the PLO was centered around,
is often criticized for being ineffective. And so many Palestinians see Hamas as the most
active group when it comes to resistance against the violent Israeli occupation.
Palestinians have lived in violent occupation for 76 years, and the world has largely done
nothing.
Palestinians have no outside support whatsoever, and no one is coming to their aid or rescue. The
unfortunately only have this militant group because of this. And also just a
reminder that Palestine has actually tried everything and that violence is not
their first resort. Many Palestinians don't even support Hamas. Let's not forget
about BDS, which is a Palestinian non-violent movement
which costs for boycott divestment and sanctions for Israel. BDS is now deemed illegal. In 2021,
35 states passed anti-BDS laws. So even boycotting Israeli products is suddenly illegal. So that was BDS.
People are obviously still engaged in BDS,
and I encourage everyone to read more about it,
because divestment and sanctions work.
It worked in South Africa, but here we are.
And then in 2018, Palestinians and Gaza
mounted the great march of return
to show the world their plight. Day after day,
they walked unarmed to Israeli military fences around Gaza. How did Israel respond to this
non-violent protest? They shot 8,000 Palestinians with live ammunition, killed 220 people and wounded 36,143.
Palestinians are getting killed regardless of the existence of Hamas, because Israel bombing
Gaza isn't actually about Hamas, but occupation and ethnic cleansing.
Israel and Hamas have fought many on and off quote-unquote wars.
I say quote-un unquote because it's not a
war if only one side has an army and I personally really hate when it's referred to as a war
because it's falsely portraying an occupation as an equal fight when there's actually
an oppressor and an oppressed. But regardless, the last big war Israel had had with Hamas
was in 2021. In the past, it's usually been an exchange
of fire across the Gaza border. Hamas launches rockets into Israel, Israel drops more bombs
on Gaza, Hamas launches rockets into Israel, Israel drops more bombs on Gaza, and so on.
Usually this results in a huge civilian death toll in Gaza, with Israel bombing entire
residential buildings and killing entire families and hundreds of children.
And just a reminder here that Gaza does not have an iron dome to defend itself. When Israel bombs Gaza, it does so knowing it is very densely populated and filled with hundreds of innocent people that have nothing to do with Hamas.
They drop bombs on buildings, hospitals, schools,
nothing is off limits.
I don't have to remind you or maybe I do
that they've also killed members of the press,
clearly wearing press desks,
but I guess that's another topic for another day.
What happened this time around
with the attack that Hamas launched on October
7th, was very different, though. It's repeatedly been called unprecedented, and this is true
for a few reasons, one, because of the scale of the attack that Hamas launched, and two, because
nobody really saw it coming. As of this recording, more than 1,200 Israelis and foreign nationals, the majority of whom
were civilians, were killed, and more than 3,000 were wounded.
Hamas also said that it captured more than 100 Israelis, including some senior military
officers.
Nothing like this, especially at this magnitude, has happened since 2006, when Hamas captured
one Israeli soldier, Galat Shilit, and held him in Gaza for five years.
And three days after Hamas launched this attack on October 7, there were still gun battles
going on between Hamas fighters and Israeli forces in the three main areas in southern
Israel.
And despite verified footage and reporting from Gaza
that indisputably shows countless Palestinian children
who Israel has killed so far,
Israel's murder of Palestinian children
is receiving little to no media attention in the US or globally.
But they create the worst possible enemy
so the world supports the destruction of an entire people.
And as an Arab, I want to mention that it's really hard to see all of this play out.
And if you have any Arab friends, I'm sure they're going through it too, especially if they're Palestinian.
Because it's almost like deja vu of what happened after 9-11.
And what happened after 9-11 didn't really stop, to be honest.
It's not like a summer phobia took a break and then came back.
It's always been there.
But now it's very shameless and disgusting.
And it makes no attempt to cover itself
because it's not only ignored but encouraged
in order to validate the actions of the US military
and the Israeli military.
Another reason for this all being so unprecedented is Israel's failure to stop it from happening.
The Israeli army is one of the world's most sophisticated military and intelligence organizations,
as well as one of the most powerful armies in the world because of the United States' support
and billions of dollars in funding.
Any kind of communication going in and out of Gaza, at least in theory,
would be listened to by Israel's intelligence units, and again, the fence is heavily militarized.
But still, it collapsed. I think another significant result of this, which I kind of touched
on earlier, is that the successful attack from Hamas completely undermines the never-endingly talked about power of Israel and the power of their army and military, especially their capability and the region.
It kind of disrupts their entire image in a way.
I also want to quickly mention that the claim that Hamas' attack was unprovoked is ignoring the years of brutal occupation and exactly why they attacked the first place.
It was a surprise, yes, but I would never say it was unprovoked because you can't keep
someone in captivity their entire lifetime and expect them to hug it out.
And maybe what I'm saying sounds radical to you, especially by the standards of American
media. But here is this award-winning Israeli journalist and writer, Gideon Levy.
He wrote an incredible piece about what's happening right now.
He writes opinion pieces in a weekly column for Herits, and he focuses particularly on the
Israeli occupation of Palestine, and he has won awards for his articles on human rights.
He wrote an incredibly moving, powerful piece called
Israel can't imprison two million gossens
without paying a cruel price.
I want to read excerpts from this
because he is speaking as an Israeli,
and I think it's extremely important
to hear what he has to say.
Behind all this lies Israeli arrogance, the idea that we can do whatever we like, that
we'll never pay the price and never be punished for it, will carry on undisturbed.
Will arrest, kill, harass, dispossess, and protect the settlers busy with their pogroms?
Will fire at innocent people, take out people's eyes and smash their faces, expel, confiscate
rob, grab people from their beds, carry out ethnic cleansing, and of course, continue with
the unbelievable siege of the Gaza Strip, and everything will be alright.
We'll build a terrifying obstacle around Gaza, and we'll be safe.
We'll rely on the geniuses of the
Army's 8200 Cyber Intelligence Unit and on the Shunbec Security Service agents who know everything.
They'll warn us in time. It turns out that even the world's most sophisticated and expensive
obstacle can be breached with a smoky old bulldozer when the motivation is great.
This arrogant barrier can be crossed by bicycle
and mo-ped, despite the billions poured into it and all the famous experts and fat cat
contractors.
We thought we'd continue to go down to Gaza, scatter a few crumbs in the form of tens
of thousands of Israeli work permits, always contingent on good behavior, and still keep
them in prison. We'll make peace with Saudi Arabia and the United Emirates,
and the Palestinians will be forgotten until they're erased,
as quite a few Israelis would like.
We'll keep holding thousands of Palestinian prisoners,
some without trial, most of them political prisoners,
and we won't agree to discuss their release even after they've been in prison for decades.
We'll tell them that only by force will their prisoners see freedom.
We thought we would arrogantly keep rejecting any attempt at a diplomatic solution, only
because we don't want to deal with all that, and everything will continue that way forever.
Once again, it was proved that this isn't how it is.
A few hundred armed Palestinians breached the barrier and invaded Israel in a way no
Israeli imagined possible.
A few hundred people proved that it's impossible to imprison two million people forever without
paying a cruel price.
Just as the smoky old Palestinian bulldozer tore through the world's smartest barrier, it tore
away at Israel's arrogance and complacency. And that's also how it tore away at the idea
that it's enough to occasionally attack Gaza with suicide drones and sell them to half
the world to maintain security. On Saturday, Israel saw pictures it has never seen before.
Palestinian vehicles patrol like its cities,
bike riders entering through the Gaza gates.
These pictures tear away at that arrogance.
The Gaza Palestinians have decided
they're willing to pay any price for a moment of freedom.
Is there any hope in that?
No.
Well, Israel learned its lesson.
No.
On Saturday, they were already talking about wiping out entire neighborhoods in Gaza, about
occupying the strip and punishing Gaza, quote, as it has never been punished before.
But Israel hasn't stopped punishing Gaza since 1948, not for a moment.
After 75 years of abuse, the worst possible scenario awaits it once again.
The threat of flattening Gaza proves only one thing.
We haven't learned a thing.
The arrogance is here to stay, even though Israel is paying a high price once again.
Prime Minister Benjamin Yanyahu bears a very great responsibility for what happened, and
he must pay that price.
But it didn't start with him and it won't end after he goes.
We now have to cry bitterly for the Israeli victims, but we should also cry for Gaza.
Gaza, most of whose residents are refugees created by Israel, Gaza, which has never known
a single day, a freedom.
I just think that peace is very powerful and I know I read a good chunk of it, but I think
it's important to hear, especially from in Israel.
As he mentioned, Israel, because of this, has responded to the attack with extreme force.
Prime Minister Lil Bichna and Yahoo said, the enemy will pay an unprecedented price.
Israel has bombed Gaza for days,
hitting Gaza with air strikes,
targeting hospitals, mosques,
entire residential buildings,
and calling Palestinians animals to the media.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Golan said,
we are fighting animals and acting accordingly.
Israel also said that it wants to wipe out Hamas' military capability and end its control
of Gaza, which doesn't really make sense because they're kind of targeting anything and
anything they can hitch, including civilians, and at the end they want control themselves.
So I think a lot of right-wing Israeli politicians, which was most of them these days say empty
stupid shit.
And it also looks like amidst all this that a ground invasion is likely going to happen because the IDF has been
retaking tanks and military jeeps.
It sucks that I have to like say this out loud, but peace should not come at the expense and the brutal
oppression of others. There was no peace before this attack. The violence of the Israeli occupation
has been there since the state was established in 1948. Hamas is a direct result of that violence.
There has never been peace in Israel because it was created in violence.
There has never been peace in Israel because it was created in violence.
And this clearly does not justify Hamas killing innocent people.
That is never okay.
But Israel also can't justify killing thousands of people because of that.
Abby Martin, who is the creator and host of the Empire Files, she also made the film Gaza Fights for Freedom, which I highly recommend. She posted this exchange on her Twitter between her and one of their field producers in Gaza.
And he says, I'm scared, Abby.
I feel I could die any second.
Most of the people here lost power and internet connection so we don't know where they hit.
Entire neighborhoods are being erased. They killed 1200 of us so far and destroyed massively,
and yet they say they have not started yet. We know massacres are coming, and we're sure they
got the green light from the US to kill us all. So that is a perspective of someone standing in Gaza,
all. So that is a perspective of someone standing in Gaza, living in fear, which isn't entirely new as far as living in fear goes, because that's been the reality for Gaza's for decades.
But this time it's different, because it's very clear that Israel is committing a purposeful
genocide. But they're in the dark with no one to help them and I can only imagine how helpless and hopeless it feels
It just it breaks my heart
I just wanted to give a update an unfortunate update because
things are just fucked and
People keep dying, but I'm recording this update on the afternoon of October 12
But I'm recording this update on the afternoon of October 12th, like a day after I reported the original stuff, and Israel has killed 500 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip since this
morning.
500 in the last six hours, 12 hours.
Gaza's health ministry said that 1,537 Palestinians, including 500 children and 276 women, have been killed.
And there are almost 7,000 others wounded because of these Israeli air strikes.
Loss of this magnitude is unsettling and overwhelming, and I also want to mention, this is something
I just learned, Israel has bombed the international
airports of Aleppo and Damascus in Syria and this has forced them out of service. So not only
are they mass occurring in entire families in Gaza, but they're also dropping bombs on civilian
airports in Syria. And the Western media still wants you to think that Israel is the victim.
Syria. And the Western media still wants you to think that Israel is the victim.
It bears repeating that Gaza is very densely populated, with 2.3 million people trapped in a very small space, unable to leave with nowhere to escape to. An example of this empty, stupid rhetoric
that Israeli politicians are saying is when Netanyahu said that civilians
should leave and evacuate Gaza. He said that knowing full well that that is impossible
because his government forbids it. He said that to the media so the world can see that he is
just and not trying to attack any civilians. It's all a fucking show like I guess all politics are,
but it's still really infuriating,
and I hate it so much.
And in Gaza, before all of this,
before the thousands that have already died,
there was already a blockade.
They were trapped for 15 years.
And now, in addition to this blockade,
Israel has imposed a total siege on Gaza, inflicting
collective punishment, which is illegal under international law.
But Israel routinely commits war crimes and goes about its business unchecked.
Why would it be any different this time?
Remember that half of Gaza's population are under 18.
Hundreds of children have been murdered and horrific videos have been circulating of
the destruction of Gaza, of bodies, and babies, and innocent people being pulled out of the
rubble.
I had a breakdown last night because I saw a video of a Palestinian father holding his
dead child's corpse and hugging it for the very last time. And I'm
very privileged to be sitting here recording this. And if I have difficulty
processing it, I cannot imagine what Palestinians are going through. Israel
controls everything in Gaza. They've cut off electricity, food, water, and gas
for an entire population. Israel is massacring Palestinians in a blackout
on purpose so they're unable to connect with anyone from the outside. No electricity
also means that hospitals have no way of the already limited machines they have available
to them so they can save lives. Before this, the water in Gaza was already 97% undrinkable, and now it's completely
gone. This will lead to dehydration deaths among many, many other deaths. Israel is starving
an entire population live on your television, openly committing genocide, as the world
watches on, as it always does.
Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now until the heat death of
the universe.
It could happen here as a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more podcasts from Cool Zone Media, visit our website CoolZoneMedia.com or check
us out on the I Heart radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts. You can find sources for it could happen here, updated monthly at CoolZoneMedia.com
slash sources. Thanks for listening.
The system's broken, I said something's wrong here, you know, whenever a woman is allowed
to kill my two kids.
Unrestorable is a new true crime podcast that investigates the case of Catherine Hoggel,
a mother accused of murder.
Despite signs that Catherine Hoggel took her tiny children one by one into the night,
never to come home again, she has yet to stand trial.
Listen to Unrestorable on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcast.
You're going to die!
I guess I should have softened that a little.
Someday you're gonna die.
We all are.
I'm Kyle McMahon, and after my mom passed away, I went on a journey to talk with the world's
foremost experts on death and grief for my new series, Death, Grief, and other sh- we
don't discuss.
From conducting a say-outs, to talking with near-death experiences, and everything in
between, I hope you'll join me on that journey.
And you should probably do it soon because
who knows how long you're gonna be around.
Death, grief, and others, we don't discuss.
Available now on the I Heart Radio app
or wherever you get your podcasts.
911, what's your emergency?
You should have.
It's a nightmare we could never have imagined.
And a killer who is still on the loose.
In the 1980s, we were in high school losing friends, teachers, and community members.
We weren't safe anywhere.
Would we be next?
It was getting harder and harder to live in Mompine.
Listen to the Murder Years on the iHeart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
on the iHeart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.