Showing posts with label Anarchism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anarchism. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 05, 2013

Matt Duran & Katherine 'Kteeo' Olejnik released!




Thursday Matt Duran and Katherine "Kteeo" Olejnik were released from the Sea-Tac Federal Detention Center where they spent the last five months for refusing to testify before a Seattle grand jury investigating the anarchist movement. A third resister, Maddy Pfeiffer, remains in prison, but has been moved from solitary confinement to the general population.

Duran and Olejnik were greeted by friends and family as they left the detention center.  Their lawyers, Kim Gordon and Jenn Kaplan, had filed motions arguing that their confinement was punitive. Under the law, imprisonment for civil contempt is not supposed to punish witness but coerce them into testifying.

Duran and Olejnik had been sent to prison in September after refusing to testify before a federal grand jury investigating the anarchist movement.  While ostensibly investigating vandalism that occurred during a May Day protest last year, the grand jury has been widely criticized for conducting a witch-hunt targeting people for their political ideas and affiliation. For the past five months, supporters across the country have been continually pressuring Judge Jones and District Attorney Jenny Durkan to release the grand jury resisters. Yesterday's release was a victory for the resisters and all their supporters.


According to Judge Richard Jones' decision:

"Both Ms. Olejnik and Mr. Duran have provided extensive declarations explaining that although they wish to end their confinement, they will never end their confinement by testifying.  The court finds their declaration persuasive.  They have submitted to five months of confinement.  For a substantial portion of that confinement, they have been held in the special hosing unit of the Federal Detention Center at SeaTac, during which they have had no contact with other detainees, very little contact even with prison staff, and exceedingly limited ability to communicate with the outside world.  . . .  

[C]onfinement in the special housing unit entails 23 hours of solitary each day and an hour of solitary time alone in a larger room each day, a single fifteen minute phone call each month. . ., and exceedingly limited access to reading and writing material.  Their physical health has deteriorated sharply and their mental health has also suffered from the effects of solitary confinement.  Their confinement has cost them; they have suffered the loss of jobs, income, and important personal relationships. . . .  For these witnesses, however, their resolve appears to increase as their confinement continues."



"We're glad the courts have finally seen fit to stop torturing Matt and Kteeo in an effort to make them talk," said Chris of the Committee Against Political Repression.  "But of course they should never have been there to begin with, and Maddy Pfeiffer remains in prison for their refusal to cooperate with this political witch-hunt."

Friday, March 01, 2013

2 Grand Jury Resisters released

 
If you haven't already heard, two of the remaining three Grand Jury Resisters were released earlier this week.

According to the Seattle Times (here & here) and Salon (here), Matt Duran and Kteeo Olejnik were taken into custody (which I guess is different from being arrested?) September of last year, after refusing to testify against other activists in relation to last year's May Day protests (here). Maddy Pfeiffer, who was "taken into custody" in December, remains confined. None of them have been charged with any crime, though charges of "criminal contempt" are a future possibility. According to an affidavit signed by the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force (reports the Seattle Times), the Feds had been following them since April 2012.

Leah-Lynn Plante was also "taken into custody" last year, but was released shortly thereafter.

You might remember from elementary civics that the Sixth Amendment guarantees a speedy trial to the accused, so that they don't languish in jail indefinitely? Well, that protection doesn't apply to the unaccused.

The release order for Matt and Kteeo was written by the Honorable Dick Jones (here). It's an extraordinary document: Jones' reasoning is that A) the confinement was meant to "coerce" testimony from Matt and Kteeo, B) after five months confinement, it appears unlikely that either will break down and testify before the eighteen-month limit on their imprisonment passes; so, C) they should be released. That's right: because their imprisonment is unlikely to coerce them, they should be released. Without euphemism or trumped-up charges, the release order frankly acknowledges imprisonment without charge as a tactic of coercion by the government.

Monday, December 31, 2012

Daily Bleed for December 31st, the Final Day of 2012, A Radical Anarchist Daybook

Thanks, as always, to Recollection Books, for compiling and mailing out the Daily Bleed for all this time!



Cat Has Had the Time of His Life
thin line

Our Daily Bleed...


People always ask what
am i going to be
when i grow
up & i always
just think
i'd like to grow
up

      — Nikki Giovanni,
       "Poem for Rodney," from Spin a Soft Black Song



December 31, dingbat

                  DECEMBER 31
                JOHN WYCLIFFE
          Leader of the dangerous Lollards,
   13th-century English spiritual revolutionaries.


ANNUAL WORLD PEACE MEDITATION.
NEW YEAR'S EVE. In Germany prowling demons & spirits of darkness must be routed this night by mummery & lots of noise. People used to dress in straw clothing with deerskin masks of animals & run through the streets, clanging & dragging chains (Birt?).
Mobile, Alabama: COWBELLION HERD ESCAPADE & REVEL honors Michael Krafft, who founded mystic society, "Cowbellion de Rakin" in 1830, first of all the mystic societies & crewes which stage the Mardi gras extravaganza in Mobile & New Orleans.
Japan: NAMAHAGE. Men dressed as devils go door-to-door screaming,
"Any good-for-nothings here about?" (Birt?)
Cave entrance, source jargonbooks.com
Aztec Malinalli Day. A day for persevering against all odds & for creating alliances that will survive the test of time.
It is a good day for those who are suppressed, a bad day for their suppressors. 








-46 -- Source=Robert Braunwart The last day of the Year of Confusion, a 445-day Roman year (OS). 
Ahhhhhh, the Good Ol' Days!




1320 -- John Wycliffe lives. Here...



1384 -- John Wycliffe dies. British radical clergyman, reformer, founder of "poor priest" movement, major influence on Lollards & later reformers. Dead & gone...



1646 -- Source=Robert Braunwart Corneille's "Le Cid" becomes the first play performed in Quebec, Canada.



1744 -- James Bradley announces discovery of Earth's nutation motion. The planet's a natural born "Wobbly."



1747 -- German poet, editor & translator Gottfried August Bürger lives. His ballads are among the finest in the German language. Bürger revived the sonnet form in German, & his experiments in it were praised as models by Schiller. 




1775 -- Canada: American attack on the city of Quebec is launched during a blinding snowstorm. General Montgomery, one of the two American leaders, is killed, & the second, General Benedict Arnold, is wounded during the opening encounter. The attack fails, the Canadians having killed or wounded fully half the American troops.



1777 -- Source=Robert Braunwart P.D.Q. Bach completes his "Gross Concerto," according to Schickele.



1817 -- James T. Fields lives, Portsmouth, New Hampshire. A partner in Ticknor & Fields, publishers, he will succeed James Russell Lowell as editor of the "Atlantic Monthly."



1830 -- Alexander Smith, Scottish poet/writer, lives, Kilmarnock.



1842 -- US: Yikes!? Alabama becomes first state to license dental surgeons. Creeping socialism!


Dutch anarchist Ferdinand Domela Nieuwenhuis


1846 -- Holland: Ferdinand Domela Nieuwenhuis lives (1846-1919), Amsterdam.
Pioneer of Dutch anarchism & the International Anti-Militarist Association. Born in Amsterdam, a preacher in Harlingen in 1870. Leader of a socialist union & first socialist senator (1891) in The Netherlands. He then abandoned politics for the anarchism of Mikhail Bakunin in 1897.



1860 --
Strange: December Fortean EventsSecond fall of reddish rain (see Dec. 28, 1860), exact same quarter of Siena (see also Jan. 1, 1860) [Year Book of Facts, 1861-273]
http://www.resologist.net/damn03.htm 



1863 -- Alfredo Panzini lives. Italian novelist, short story writer, essayist, who, in his lifetime, ranked with Carducci & D'Annunzio as a 'modern classicist', but is no longer held in such esteem. His style had similarities with the French writer Anatole France.



Matisse artwork


1869 -- Henri Matisse lives — Jazz, nice odalisques, goldfish, a wealth of choices...



1871 -- Ellen Horup, anti-militarist feminist, lives, Denmark.



1872 -- Can't Wait?: Though some of his work isn't recognized for almost another century, the creator of Finland's modern literature, Aleksis Kivi dies in Tuusula. His most widely read novel is Seitsemän veljestä (Seven Brothers). 




Courbet
1877 -- Gustave Courbet (1809-1877) dies. French painter, revolutionary socialist, man of independent character. Leader of the realist school.

Friday, November 23, 2012

Daily Bleed for November 23rd, A Radical Anarchist Daybook


Our Daily Bleed...

    In the very earliest time,
    when both people & animals lived on earth,
    a person could become an animal if he wanted to
    & an animal could become a human being.

    Sometimes they were people
    & sometimes animals
    & there was no difference.

    All spoke the same language.
    That was the time when words were like magic.

    The human mind had mysterious powers.

    A word spoken by chance
    might have strange consequences.

    It would suddenly come alive
    & what people wanted to happen could happen —
    all you had to do was say it.

    Nobody could explain this:
    That's the way it was.


        — Edward Field, "Magic Words,"
        translated from the Inuit (Eskimo)


    http://archive.ala.org/booklist/v95/youth/oc2/60field.html
    http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/696
    http://homepages.wmich.edu/~cooneys/poems/Field.unwanted.html



NOVEMBER 23
DANIEL DELEON
American radical, helped found the Wobblies.

ST. CLEMENTS DAY. Procession of blacksmiths & (mad) hatters.

Japan: NIINAME SAI, harvest festival.

Lee Harvey Oswald mug shot

I'M JUST A PATSY DAY.



INTERNATIONAL DAY TO END IMPUNITY.
http://daytoendimpunity.org/




1170 BC -- [BC] Pyramid Scheme?: First recorded strike for better working conditions & pay, takes place in Egypt, by pyramid laborers who are tired of belaboring the point.
"They say the Pharaohs built the pyramids. Do you think one Pharaoh dropped one bead of sweat?

We built the pyramids for the Pharaohs & we're building for them yet."

         — Anna Louise Strong



1760 -- French revolutionary Francois-Noel Babeuf lives, St. Quentin, France.
FRANCOIS-NOEL BABEUF 1997 PATRON SAINT
Communist leader in the French Revolution, member of the Conspiracy of Equals, until betrayed to the Directory, when he was captured & executed.


1828 -- US: William Silvus, American labor activist, lives (1828-1869).



Painting of Silk Workers Revolt in Lyon
1831 -- France: The Silk Workers' Revolt in Lyon continues. Workers occupy the Town Hall & an attempt at an insurrectionary government is made.
For lack of a clear politics, or by a trick of the authorities, the latter regain control of the city on December 2.

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/R%C3%A9volte_des_Canuts
http://metiers.free.fr/dcanuts/canutsi29.html
 


1852 -- US: A Drop in the Bucket? Just past midnight, a sharp jolt causes Lake Merced to drop 30 feet (9m).
http://www.lmtf.org/FoLM/homepage.html



1859 -- US: Western outlaw, gunslinger, Billy the Kid (Bonney) lives.
Letter B
while i've been going on
the blood from my wrist
has travelled to my heart
& my fingers touch
this soft blue paper notebook
control a pencil that shifts up & sideways
mapping my thinking going its own way


— Michael Ondaatje, Collected Works of Billy the Kid


Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Daily Bleed Radical Anarchist Daybook for November 21st



thin line
Our Daily Bleed...


    I am turtle,
& death is not yet my robe,
for drums still throb the many
centers of my tribes, & a young
child smiles me of tomorrow,
    "& grandparent,"
another child whispers, "please
tell me again my clan's beginning."
    — Peter Blue Cloud (Aroniawenrate),
excerpt, "Turtle"




NOVEMBER 21
ALEXANDER BERKMAN
Lover of Emma Goldman, failed anarchist assassin, US deportee,
suicide following sorry Soviet heartbreaks.


NOSTALGIA FOR THE FUTURE DAY.

FALSE CONFESSIONS DAY.




479 BC -- Chinese philosopher Confucious dies.


1694 -- Voltaire (Francois Marie Arouet) lives, Paris. At 65 he spends all of three days writing Candide.
FRANCOIS VOLTAIRE

Daily Bleed Patron Saint 1998. "All is for the best in this best of all possible worlds." 
"The best is the enemy of the good."

http://www.reocities.com/Athens/7308/ 


1748 -- Source=Robert Braunwart John Clelland's Fanny Hill is advertised (volume 1).


1783 -- France: Jean Francois Pilatre de Rozier & the Marquis Francois Laurant d'Arlandes made the first flight in a balloon, becoming the first men to fly — period. They flew nearly six miles around Paris in 25 minutes reaching an altitude of about 300 feet. Benny Franklin was a spectator at the gaseous event.


1784 -- James Armistead is cited by French General Lafayette for his valuable service to the American forces in the Revolutionary War. Born into slavery 24 years earlier, he worked as a double agent for the Americans while supposedly employed as a servant of British General Cornwallis.


1794 -- Get This!, animated dingbatHonolulu Harbor discovered. The natives lament, "If only we'd seen it first!"


1801 -- US: "Federal Bonfire Number Two": a mysterious fire sweeps the offices of the Department of Treasury, destroying books & papers, after Republicans demanded proof that the expenditures of Timothy Pickering, the recently replaced Federalist Secretary of War, could be properly accounted for. (see November 8).


1817 -- US: Infuriated by Seminole resistance, Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader General Edmund Gaines orders 250 soldiers to attack & destroy the Seminole village of Fowltown.


Longfellow'
1820 -- Thirteen-year-old Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's first poem, "The Battle of Lovell's Pond" is published in the Portland, Maine, Gazette.
http://www.auburn.edu/~vestmon/gif/long2.jpg

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Daily Bleed for November 11th, A Radical Anarchist Daybook

Our Daily Bleed...

--

Remember that breakfast one November —
Cold black grapes smelling faintly
Of the cork they were packed in,
Hard rolls with hot, white flesh,
& thick, honey sweetened chocolate?
& the parties at night; the gin & the tangos?
The torn hair nets, the lost cuff links?

— Kenneth Rexroth,
excerpt, "Between Two Wars" (1944)





--
NOVEMBER 11
PAUL SIGNAC
French pointillist painter, anarchiste, contributor to the magazine Temps Nouveaux.



VINALIA: feast of the Graeco-Roman wine-&-wildness god, Bacchus.

MARTINMAS, one of four "quarter days" in Old England when rents were paid. As celebration there was feasting & drinking. Also called the "TEAR-STOMACH DAY."
Martin was the patron of beggars, tavern keepers & wine growers, probably because his day coincides with the ancient
"FEAST OF DIONYSUS."


Netherlands: ELEVEN ELEVEN ELEVEN DAY.
Tradition says 11 is the number of fools. On the 11th day of the 11th month a council of 11 begins organizing the next year's carnival, "so anyone can be as foolish as he or she cares to be for those three days."


REMEMBRANCE DAY. (Australia, Canada, etc).

US: VETERAN'S DAY.

{





"There is no flag large enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people."

— Howard Zinn



INTERNATIONAL ANARCHY DAY
(Anniversary of the execution of the Haymarket Martyrs).





380 -- Aristophanes dies (exact month & day unknown). Comedic dramatist, satirist whose play "The Clouds" savaged — brutally parodied — the anti-democratic Socrates.


1620 -- New Old World: Two days after sighting land, the Mayflower comes to anchor in what is today Provincetown Harbor in the Cape Cod region of Massachusetts. The same day, the Mayflower Compact is crafted & signed by the 41 male pilgrims on the ship.


1647 -- New Old World: First American compulsory school law passed, Massachusetts.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Daily Bleed for October 31st - Radical Anarchist Daybook


Cat Has Had the Time of His Life
thin line
Our Daily Bleed...

"Ask her to wait a moment — 

I am almost done."

— Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855),
while working, when informed his wife is dying
October 31, dingbat
Glowing skullOCTOBER 31Glowing skull

STUDS TERKEL
American labor, oral historian, "common man" proponent.


Alternate Saint:

CAPTAIN MISSION
Founded famed pirate utopia "Libertaria" in Madagascar.

Ghost of Chance ...returns us to territory familiar from Burroughs' 'Cities of the Red Night' trilogy. We are in 'Libertatia', a utopian colony of ex-pirates set up 'on the west coast of Madagascar'. Here 'Captain Mission' has established a community of free spirits: 'There would be no capital punishment, no slavery, no imprisonment for debt, & no interference with religion or sexuality.'
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/1995/aug/11/fiction.williamburroughs
http://www.fotw.net/flags/pir-lib.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertatia
http://hybris_x.tripod.com/wsb.htm


HALLOWEEN. Pagan festival of fall during which the dead can be communicated with & set to rest. Appropriated, but not totally demolished, by the churches.

All Hallows' Eve / Hallowe'en: "The original reason for disguise tonight, it being Mischief Night, was to prevent lonely spirits recognising you & snatching you away to their between-the-worlds home; & it was an additional bonus that the costumes allowed you to lead a mini-riot without being recognised ..."
Witch flying across the face of the Moon, animated


THE WITCHES NEW YEAR.

Druid's SAMHAIN Autumn sun festival.

ANCIENT ROMAN FEAST TO POMONA.

Druids held human sacrifices & prayers...ALL HALLOW'S EVE, 10th century.

ALL SAINT'S EVE. Human sacrifice became cakes left out for the dead, thrown into the fire in the morning. In Brittany all wore black, etc.

OLD CELTIC NEW YEAR'S EVE. Struggle between old & new years.

FESTIVAL OF INNER WORLDS.




1517 -- Protestant Reformation begins as Martin Luther nails his 95 theses to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg.


1620 -- England: Diarist John Evelyn, a founder of the Royal Society, lives. In The Common Reader Virginia Woolf notes: "He writes [a diary] supremely well. Even as we drowse, somehow or other the bygone gentleman sets up, through three centuries, a perceptible tingle of communication, so that without laying stress on anything particular, we are yet taking notice all the time."


1632 -- Jan Vermeer lives, Holland. Painter (Procuress, The Astronomer).


1756 -- Giacomo Casanova, in prison on charges of being a magician, makes a spectacular escape & makes his way to Paris, where he introduces the lottery in 1757 & makes a name for himself among the aristocracy.

As versatile in his writing as he was in his career, Casanova writes occasional verse, criticism, a translation of the Iliad, & a satirical pamphlet on Venetian aristocracy, but he is best remembered for his vivid autobiography, first published after his death as Mémoires de J. Casanova de Seingalt, in 12 volumes.



1795 -- Book pages turning, animatedJohn Keats, renowned British lyric poet, lives (in a stable his father managed in Finsbury Pavement).
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/jkeats.htm

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Daily Bleed Anarchist Daybook for October 25th

thin line
Our Daily Bleed...



OCTOBER 25
MAX STIRNER

Young Hegelian individualist anarchist.


Alternate Saint from the Jubilee Saints Wall Calendar:
FRANK NORRIS
Premier American novelist of the capitalist expose.

Saissons, France: ST. CRISPIN'S DAY, patron saint of shoemakers, Cobbler's procession:
"The twenty-fifth of October, cursed be the cobbler who goes to bed sober."
Chadron, Nebraska: UGLY PICKUP TRUCK contest, & UGLY PICKUP QUEEN contest.

US: NATIONAL GREASY FOODS DAY.

US: PUNK-FOR-A-DAY DAY.

Uranus :( more or less :)
UP URANUS DAY.





1317 -- France: The University of Paris hears the confessions of Jacques de Molay & four Templar knights.


1400 -- British poet & commoner, Geoffrey Chaucer dies. His Canterbury Tales ranks as one of the greatest epic works in English.
http://www.luminarium.org/medlit/chaucer.htm
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/chaucer.htm



1415 -- Battle of Agincourt, where the Welsh longbow defeats the armored knight.


Wine bottles
1474 -- Berne under Niklaus von Diesbach declares war on Burgundy.
Der Schrank von benachbartem Cabernet, groß alarmiert, Aufträge zählen Grappa de Wino, um seine Truppen zu mobilisieren, um weg vom Weiß zu kämpfen.

Le coffret de Cabernet voisin, considérablement alarmé, ordres comptent Grappa de Wino pour mobiliser ses troupes pour combattre outre des blancs.
Wine...Not Gallo!! Leo!
[Rough Translation: The cabinet of neighboring Cabernet, greatly alarmed, orders Count Grappa de Wino to mobilize his troops to fight off the Whites. Troops everywhere get smashed.]
[Source: Robert Braunwart] [Hereafter noted with symbol: Source=Robert Braunwart]




1748 -- Author Henry Fielding is commissioned as a justice of the peace for Westminster.


1784 -- Canada: Gee, Thanks!?: Crown representative gives Mohawks some of their own land.


1800 -- Thomas Babington Macaulay, statesman/author of Lays of Ancient Rome & History of England, lives, Rothley Temple, Leicestershire.


1806 -- Germany: Ego-philosopher Max Stirner lives. Theorist of individualist anarchism, currently a foundation for post-left anarchy, author of The Ego & It's Own (1844), opposed by Karl Marx.
"L'état n'a toujours qu'un but: borner, lier, subordonner l'individu, l'assujettir à la chose générale; il ne dure qu'autant que l'individu n'a pas sa plénitude et n'est que l'expression bornée de mon moi, ma limitation, mon esclavage."
— Max Stirner



1825 -- US: Erie Canal was opens, linking the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean.



Errol Flynn
1854 -- Alternately described as one of the most heroic episodes in British military history & one of the most disastrous, Lord James Cardigan leads a charge of light cavalry over open terrain against well-defended Russian artillery at Balaclava during the Crimean War. His brigade were mostly armed with swords. Of the 673 in Cardigan's disastrous charge, nearly half are killed.
"Forward, the Light Brigade!"
Was there a man dismayed?
Not tho' the soldiers knew
Someone had blundered:
Theirs was not to make reply,
Theirs was not to reason why,
Theirs was but to do & die:
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.



1860 -- US: Grizzly Adams dies, Charlton, Massachusetts.


book
1862 -- Ernest Coeurderoy dies, a suicide (or the 21st). Intern, writer, anarchistic Socialist forced into exile because of his radical positions. Wrote numerous books based on his experiences: Jours d'exil; De la révolution dans l'homme et dans la société; Hurrah! Ou la révolution par les Cosaques. Because of his suicide other books, planned & announced, were never published.book cover
"Pour faire passer la révolution, comme un fer rouge, à travers ce siècle, une seule chose est à faire : démolir l'Autorité. (...) Que chacun s'interroge et qu'il dise si c'est de gré ou de force qu'il supporte qu'un autre se proclame son maître et agisse comme tel."
— in Jours d'exil, 1853-1855
Good souls of the dominant language, it is you who incite to murder, hatred, pillage & civil war.
In the shadow of a cruel & ridiculous spectacle arises the old war of the poor against the rich, which today, masked & falsified by ideological refraction, is the war of the poor who want to stay poor & the poor who want to stop being poor.
— Raoul Vaneigem, 1972, Terrorism or Revolution, an introduction to Ernest Coeurderoy


http://www.ephemanar.net/janvier22.html
http://www.lelibraire.com/din/aut.php?Id=3028



1878 -- Spain: Juan Oliva Moncasi, a young worker in Tarragone, tries to shoot Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader King Alphonse XII, in Madrid, but is disarmed by crowd. Executed December 4, after rejecting a pardon.


Picasso sculpture, Chicago
1881 -- Pablo Diego Jose Francisco (etc.) Picasso, commie doodler, lives.
"Computers are useless. They can only give you answers."

— Pablo Picasso



1884 -- Chile: Author Eduardo Barrios lives. Wrote The Love-Crazed Boy.


1886 -- France: The episode which brings Clément Duval to his ruin, & a place in the iconography of the French regime, occurs.
The anarchist burglar Duval was arrested for breaking into a rich woman's apartment, stealing her jewels, & setting the place on fire (accidentally).

Clement Duval's trial was far from tranquil ...



1890 --
US: Earliest known reference to Emma Goldman in print: "An Eloquent Woman," Baltimore Critic, October 25, 1890.
pop1('trombi/personnes click for full news clip; anarchist Emma Goldman, source: www.jwa.org/
Click image for full article



1896 -- Source=Robert Braunwart US: NY Times begins using its slogan "All the News That's Fit to Print." More or less, of course.


1897 -- Emma Goldman, anarchist feministUS: Traveling for hours by train & wagon to learn about the plight of farmers, Emma Goldman speaks to well-attended meetings in Caplinger Mills, Mo., home of rural anarchist Kate Austin. Her lecture topics include "The Aim of Humanity," "Religion," "Anarchy," & "Free Love." 



1902 -- Source=Robert Braunwart Maksim Gorki play "The Petty Bourgeois" opens, Moskva.


1911 -- Death of Ida Lewis, lighthouse keeper, & Daily Bleed Patron Saint for February 25.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ida_Lewis_%28lighthouse_keeper%29


1913 -- Frederick Rolfe, better known as "Baron Corvo" (1860-1913) dies. Gay author with a penchant for young gondoliers. Wrote Hadrian the Seventh (1904), his most autobiographical novel, or rather, a fantasy autobiography in which an obscure literary Englishman is elected pope & moves forward with an ambitious & eccentric programme to remake the world in his image.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Rolfe


book
1914 -- Poet John Berryman lives, McAlester, Oklahoma.
http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/6
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Berryman



1918 -- Canadian steamship Princess Sophia hits a reef off Alaska, 398 die. They sent emergency distress calls. They begged, they pleaded, they cried, "Send the helicopters!" But they never came. There was no investigation.


1920 -- Greece: No More Monkeyeing Around? King Alexander dies from blood poisoning shortly after being bitten by a pet monkey. In 1917, Alexander became King of Greece when his father, Constantine, was forced by the Allies to abdicate because of his pro-German sympathies during World War I. After Alexander's death, Constantine is restored to the throne.


The Scream
1923 -- US: Teapot Dome scandal spouts. 



1925 -- US: Job Harriman, founder of Llano Colony & socialist mayoral candidate, dies in Los Angeles.
http://recollectionbooks.com/links.html


1925 -- US: The Big Fall? Former Interior Secretary Albert Fall convicted of accepting $100,000 bribe.


Harlem graphic by Aaron Douglas; source: www.si.umich.edu/CHICO/Harlem
1926 -- "Crisis" magazine, led by editor W.E.B. DuBois, awards its first prizes in literature & art. Among the winners are Arna Bontemps' poem "Nocturne at Bethesda," Countee Cullen's poem "Thoughts in a Zoo," Aaron Douglas' painting "African Chief" & a portrait by Hale Woodruff.




1929 -- US: Newspapers & businessmen spend Friday & the entire weekend trying to assure the public that the financial industry is still secure.
"S-T-E-A-D-Y Everybody! Calm thinking is in order. Heed the words of America's greatest bankers!"
— advertisement in the Wall Street Journal



1929 -- US: While the stock market is beginning to crash & the depression about to set in, The Casa Loma Orchestra, conducted by Glen Gray, records "Happy Days Are Here Again."


1930 -- Source=Robert Braunwart Picasso completes his etching "Loves of Jupiter & Semele."


Renau-RACIAL ORGASM
1933 -- US: Judge Horton removed from further participation in matters related to the Scottsboro trial, because of his decision granting Heywood Patterson, an African-American, a new trial.
The Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court Anderson & Attorney-General Knight, proving the triumph of American justice (blind to class or color & fair to all), replace Horton with Judge W. W. Callahan, a noted Ku Klux Klan (KKK) member.




lupin; source: www.dialogus2.org/
1936 -- France: Bernard Thomas lives. Libertarian journalist for Canard Enchaîné. Wrote Alexandre Marius Jacob (1970), Les provocations policières (1972) & Aurore ou la génération perdue (1984), Anarchism & Violence: Severino di Giovanni, etc.
The anarchiste 'Jacob' by Bernard Thomas, book cover
"…As I see things, I am not a robber. In creating man, Nature gave him the right to live & man has the duty to exercise that right in full. So if society fails to provide him with the wherewithal to survive, the human being is entitled to seize what he needs from wherever there is plenty."
See Jacob (Alexandre Marius, alias Escande, alias Attila, alias Georges, alias Bonnet, alias Féran, alias Georges, alias the Burglar), by Bernard Thomas, (Introduction Alfredo M. Bonanno),Elephant Editions



1937 -- US: It is revealed that a new drug, "Elixer of Sulfanilamide," accounts for more than 100 deaths during the first six weeks it was in circulation. The fatalities were caused by a toxic solvent in the drug, which inadequate tests failed to detect.


1938 -- Italy: Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader Il Duce Mussolini delivers a violent speech to the Consiglio nazionale del partito, attacking the bourgeoisie, declaring, "a million cowering bourgeois are still hiding in the country" ("mezzo milione di vigliacchi borghesi che ancora si annidano nel paese"). Buncha yellow-bellies.
Source: [Crimini e Misfatti]


1939 -- US: Convicted "trunk murderess" Winnie Ruth Judd escapes from the Arizona State Insane Hospital for the first time. She was recaptured five days later (see 16 October).
http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/notorious_murders/women/judd/1.html
http://jeff.scott.tripod.com/judd.html



1940 -- Morocco: In one of his last letters from a refugee camp in Casablanca Pierre Ramus today writes to an American comrade, "In a time where so many without a higher ideal must live & die, I suffer with my ideals & am ready to die with them."
Austrian writer, militant pacifist & anarchist, Ramus died in 1942 fleeing from Nazi-occupied Europe, aboard a ship to Veracruz, Mexico.


1941 -- Novelist & short story writer Anne Tyler lives, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Wrote Morgan's Passing; Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant. Her keen ear for dialogue & life-like characters garner critical acclaim. Several of Tyler's novels focus on loneliness, isolation, human interactions of eccentric middle-class people living in broken families.
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/atyler.htm


1947 -- US: National Conference for the Protection of Foreign Born is held in Cleveland, Oh. Oct 25-26, 1947.
312 organizations meet "to consider the widespread & serious attack on the democratic & consititutional rights of non-citizens..."



1947 -- Source=Robert Braunwart Heinrich Mann completes his last novel, Der Atem.


1950 -- Source=Robert Braunwart US: Chrysler Pres. Kaufman Keller is appointed US director of guided missiles. America is soon the only country whose missiles come with chrome grills, air-brakes & automatic transmissions.


1951 -- Source=Robert Braunwart US: Seattle Symphony conductor Manuel Rosenthal is fired for living with a woman (French singer Claudine Pillard Verneuil). Don't want to know what they would have done to him if he had been living with a man.
http://recollectionbooks.com/SeattleRadicalTimeLine.htm


Peace Park statue
1955 --


I will write peace

on your wings

& you will fly

all over the world

— Sadako Sasaki
See Sadako & the Thousand Paper Cranes, by Eleanor Coerr (1977)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadako_Sasaki


Sadako Sasaki dies. Classmates folded 356 paper cranes so that 1,000 were buried with her. In 1958 a statue of Sadako was unveiled at Hiroshima Peace Park. A Folded Crane Club was organized in her honor, & members still place thousands of paper cranes at her statue each August 6 — Peace Day. There is also now a statue in Seattle's tiny Peace Park, a few blocks from Recollection Used Books former location. 



1955 -- Italy: Ettore Cropalti (b.1900) dies. Shoemaker, anarchico, anti-fascist militant.


1956 -- Hungary: Councils continue to form, despite Russian crackdown, opposing the "dictatorship of the proletariat" & Russian intervention.
For Castoriadis, future revolutions would necessarily strive for the takeover of the management of all production by the workers, themselves organized into workers' councils; the federation of the councils into a central assembly; the expropriation of the capitalists; the dissolution of the police & the army, & the arming of the proletariat; & the issuance of what Castoriadis refers to as a "call on the workers of other countries . . . [that would] explain to them the content & meaning of these measures," which "contain all that is essential to the process of building socialism." Otherwise, these revolutions would be doomed to failure, precisely because they were partial or restricted in their fields of action.
— "Workers' Councils, Cornelius Castoriadis & the SI" (Not Bored!, #26, 1996)

"Of the tendencies toward regroupment that have appeared over the last few years among various minorities in the workers movement in Europe," an unsigned text pronounces, "only the most radical current is worth preserving: that centered on the program of workers councils."
— Internationale Situationiste #6 (August 1961).
http://www.bopsecrets.org/SI/6.insurrection.htm


1956 -- Source=Robert Braunwart Spanish-born Puerto Rican poet Juan Ramón Jiménez wins Nobel Literature Prize.
http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1956/
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/jimenez.htm



1958 -- Source=Robert Braunwart Lebanon: The last US troops are withdrawn after a three month occupation (for now).


1960 -- US: Martin Luther King, Jr. jailed in Decatur, Georgia. Held over on old traffic ticket charges, denied bail & sentenced to four months hard labor (see 26 October).


1960 -- Italy: Carmelo Spagnuolo, procuratore della repubblica di Milano, fa sequestrare il film di Michelangelo Antonioni "L'avventura" con l'accusa di oscenità.
Source: [Crimini e Misfatti]


Grapes of Wrath, book cover
1962 -- American author John Steinbeck awarded Nobel Prize in literature.


1966 -- US: UCLA Teach-in. Teach your children well.


1966 -- US: Black Panther Party founded.


1968 -- US: Chicago recognizes Jean Baptiste Pointe de Sable as its first settler.


music staff
1973 -- John Lennon sues the US government, maintaining wiretaps & surveillance were employed against him & his lawyer, Leon Wildes. Lennon claims that, as a result, his appeal applications in his fight against deportation were prejudiced by US officials. Screw the Indians.


1973 -- Source=Robert Braunwart UN peacekeeping force is sent to the Middle East to prevent fighting between Israel & Arab nations. Solves that problem!


1973 -- Source=Robert Braunwart US: Makin' the Cantaloupe Nervous?: A farmer interrupts a meeting between space aliens & sasquatches near Uniontown, Pa., & shoots one of the sasquatches. [Apparently the beasties are not on any "endangered species" act.]


Renau-RACIAL ORGASM
1976 -- US: Clarence "Willie" Norris, the last surviving member of the Scottsboro Boys, is pardoned by Governor George Wallace. Norris spent 15 years in prison for allegedly raping a white woman & had been a fugitive fleeing parole in Alabama in 1946. See above.
[Context / Details]


1980 -- Source=Robert Braunwart US: 225 newspapers drop the week-long "Reagan's Brain" sequence of the "Doonesbury" cartoon strip. Against all proof contrariwise, the US press foolishly think Beloved & Respected Comrade Acting President Ronnie Reagan has a brain. Able to adhere to such fantasy, this proves, in the face of all proof contrariwise, there is a free press in America. See for yourself at,
http://recollectionbooks.com/siml/library/reagan.htm


1981 -- England: 150,000 in anti-nuke protest, London. 



1983 -- Grenada: American troops invade following the death of Maurice Bishop. A country 1/2,000 its population (Surprize! US Wins! 5,000-0). Erases the humiliations of Vietnam, proving America can whup 5th-world countries if they are tiny enough.
Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader White House spokesman Larry Speakes says a US invasion of Grenada is "preposterous".

Meanwhile, in real life, 5,000 US Marines & Rangers & a small force from six Caribbean nations invaded in response to a request from the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States on the pretext of saving "endangered" American lives, & diverting attention from the Lebanon bombing & European anti-nuclear protests.

After a few days, the Grenadian militia was overcome, hundreds of US citizens evacuated, & the Marxist regime deposed. The US Congress applied the War Powers Resolution, requiring US troops to leave Grenada by 24 December. Installation of a pro-US government quickly crippled their economy.



1983 -- US: Mary Francis Berry, professor of history & law at Howard University, & two other members of the Civil Rights Commission are fired by Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader Acting President Ronald Reagan. Considered a champion of minority concerns on the Commission, Berry charges the administration with attempting to "shut up" criticism. Berry sues & is reinstated.


Richard Brautigan, photo by Erik Weber
1984 -- No More Trout¿: "Hippie" novelist Richard Brautigan suicides himself, Bolinas, California.
Daily Bleed Saint 2003-04
Patron saint of sixties drop-out culture.
Poet & novelist born in Tacoma, Washington. He was a cult figure & literary idol of the 1960s. In 1955, he moved to Frisco & became part of the Beat movement. He published several books of poetry, which he often handed out free on the streets of Haight-Ashbury. His following began in 1967, with the publication of his novel, Trout Fishing in America.
"At 1:30 in the morning a fart smells like a marriage between an avocado & a fish head." Revenge of the Lawn, book cover
The Final Ride

The act of dying
is like hitch-hiking
into a strange town
late at night
where it is cold
& raining,
& you are alone
again


1985 -- Hans Kok dies in his jail cell under the ever watchful eye of the benevolent police.

  • Friday October 26, 1985. 5:00 news came on reporting that one of the arrested squatters had died in the police cell. The police had known of the death since 12:00 & were present en masse in the Staatslieden district.
  • Around 4:00, 200 squatters outfitted with helmets, clubs & leather jackets advances from the Sewer Rat to resquat the Schaepmanstraat (on October 24 the storefront "Schaepmanstraat 59«I" was evicted).
  • After Hans Kok died the squatters' symbol appropriately appeared on his grave, which meant that squatting would go on to the bitter end. But after that it also lost its impact for good; it had become a memorial.
  • One year after his death, on October 25, 1986, a memorial procession traveled from the Haarlemmerplein through the Schaepmanstraat to Police Headquarters. If the demonstration itself is rather quiet, before Headquarters a total silence suddenly falls. For minutes, everyone stands, says nothing, does nothing; a drum beats a slow rhythm, & then it too falls silent. After two minutes the street lights go on.
  • When people further down start to smash in the windows of the police station, the sound comes as a relief: the situation is normal again...

  • November 23, 1978, clearance of the Nicholas Beetstraat-Jacob van Lennepstraat corner house in the Kinker district of Amsterdam is praised in current creation narratives as the step up to a squatters' movement which in 1980 no longer steered clear of violent resistance. The pictures on film show it. On that day, squatters, who stood three rows deep with arms linked to passively stop the eviction, were beaten up with batons while shouting, »No violence, no violence!« It was clear that this would not happen again: »In answer to the senseless provocations of the authorities it's difficult to stay a bit reasonable yourself. A crowd stirred up has such an unheard-of energy, if that's unleashed the professional brawlers will be nowhere,« stated the nonviolent activists afterwards.




    1988 -- US: Two units of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) & 11 individuals are ordered to pay $1 million to African-Americans who were attacked during a brotherhood rally in predominately white Forsythe County, Georgia.


    1988 -- US: ABC News reports on potbellied pygmy porkers' popularity as pets.


    1988 -- " ... Drinking blood ... grave robbing ... mutilated animals ... drinking her 15 year-old victim's blood ... gouged out his victim's eyes ... butchered his mother ... cut the ears off ... drinking his own blood ... The acts ... are so horrible that the question could be fairly raised again: why are we doing this broadcast?"
    — Geraldo Rivera, important journalist, credit to his profession



    1989 -- Mary McCarthy, novelist & critic, (wrote The Group, books on Vietnam War, etc.) dies.
    http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/marymcc.htm
    http://www.pbs.org/arguing/nyintellectuals_geneology.html



    1991 -- Bill Graham, rock concert promoter, killed in a helicopter crash.


    1992 -- Source=Robert Braunwart Germany: Salman Rushdie visits; the Bundestag passes a resolution holding Iran responsible for his safety.


    1992 -- Source=Robert Braunwart Mexican dramatist Victor Hugo Rascón Banda wins Premio Juan Rulfo for his novel Contrabando.
    http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/V%C3%ADctor_Hugo_Rasc%C3%B3n_Banda


    1993 -- Source=Robert Braunwart South Korea: Writer Hwang Suk Young is sentenced to eight years for visiting North Korea.


    1994 -- Source=Robert Braunwart Ethiopia: 73 officials of the Mengistu regime are charged with genocide.


    1994 -- Source=Robert Braunwart US: Anti-Viagra?? Kentucky University, drooping under pressure, agrees to redesign its logo so it looks less like a penis.


    1997 -- Source=Robert Braunwart Italy: 200,000 Communists demonstrate for a 35-hour work week, Roma. Meanwhile over in America workers continue increasing their working hours, adding nearly a week of work to their yearly total between 1990 & 2001. Workers in France & Belgium, working a 35-hours week, also prove more efficient than their American counterparts.
    "Workers in the United States are putting in more hours than anyone else in the industrialized world."

    — United Nations' International Labor Organization (ILO)

    http://archives.cnn.com/2001/CAREER/trends/08/30/ilo.study/ 


    2001 -- Source=Robert Braunwart US: Congress gives police sweeping new powers to search homes & business records secretly & eavesdrop on phone & computer conversations. Odd how those conservatives who "hate big government" & its intrusions always make it bigger & more intrusive, & how liberals who claim to "defend" civil rights are so quick to give them up.


    anarchist bookfair photo; source: freespace.virgin.net/anarchist.bookfair
    2003 -- England: The 22nd Anarchist Bookfair. The very first Anarchist Bookfair was in 1983. It's happened every year since then...



    3500 --

    "The glittering treasure you are hunting for day & night lies buried on the other side of that hill yonder."

    — B. TravenThe Treasure of the Sierra Madre





    Killgore Trout
    4500 --

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurt_Vonnegut
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus_on_the_Half-Shell
     


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