Prose
by Russell Means:
For America to Live, Europe Must Die
-
Describes why as an American Indian, Marxism is just the "same old song,"
just like capitalism, and christianity, rooted in European industrialism and
false-religion that destroys Native people and their land.
by Kuwasi Balagoon:
Brinks Trial Opening Statement -
Kuwasi Balagoon, a member of the Black Liberation Army involved in an expropriation
of Brinks "security" (i.e. armored cars with money) company, describes
why he got involved, detailing the history of Black oppression and nationalism
in the U.$.
by Subcommandante Marcos, EZLN:
Dignity Can Not Be Studied:
"You live it or it dies." a beautiful and poetic account of the
situation in Chiapas, and how the EZLN fights for that undescribable international
homeland of the heart, dignity.
by C.L.R. James:
The Property -
Describes in graphic, often sarcastic, powerfully and beautifully worded
detail, the nature of the slave trade: from the thievery of Africa to the
transatlantic journey to the sale and insane life of overwork and underfeeding
in San Domingo.
by Arundhati Roy:
The End of Imagination -
A gripping piece of writing written in response to the creation
of nuclear bombs in India and Pakistan. As both nations define nuclear weaponry
as a nationalist victory, Roy pronounces her secession from the State of India.
The Greater Common Good -
Describes the process of constructing the 3,300 planned dams in India,
the millions of people that will be displaced and left to oblivion, the environmental
devestation, and the people's resistance that comes with them. Roy's writing
is so brilliant, so forceful, that it might well make you cry.
by Mary Ann Weathers:
Black Women's Liberation as a Revolutionary
Force -
Argues for Black women to struggle for their own liberation, to undo
the messaging of colonization and patriarchy and for everyone to recognize
the need for Black women's liberation to be seen as an integral part of an
over all pro-human revolutionary struggle.
by the folks at Race Traitor:
Abolish the White Race -
"By Any Means Necessary." A foundational piece of writing, outlining
the basic theory and goals of the New Abolitionist movement.
Abolitionism and Communism
-
A critical evaluation of the work of the New Abolitionist movement, describing
where they feel they have done well in building a revolutionary movement against
whiteness and where they've fallen short.
by Brian Dominick:
Abandoning the Anarchist Movement
-
"Or, Finding New Grounds for Radical Organizing." Critiquing the
white punk subcultural atmosphere of the anarchists in the U.$. Dominick calls
for Dual Power, community based radical struggle.
by Kevin Tucker:
What is the Totality? -
When we say that we need a movement against the totality of oppression and
for a totally new society, what are we really referring to?
by Taylor Sparrow:
to breathe together. -
"whiteness sickens me and fails to keep me alive, fails to give
me a space to speak and to breathe, particularly because whiteness asks me
to strangle and silence my peers who are not white."
inflicted -
A story written from the perspective of an indigent European in mexico city
around the beginning of the 18th century. talks about the sickness the Europeans
had come with in pandemic proportions and inflicted on everyone. ends with
a description of the insurrectionary energy of the multi-racial underclass.
Tzitzimes -
A piece about the "tzitzimes" or terrifying black birds that will
peck out the eyes of those who no longer know the teachings of their fathers.
Specifically about Christian missionizing and cultural genocide of Native
peoples.