1. 16:27 13th Mar 2012

    Notes: 29

    Reblogged from anticapitalist

    Tags: politicswealth

    anticapitalist:

Incomes of top 1 percent in US skyrocket in wake of recession
From 2002 to 2007, the top 1 percent of households saw their real, inflation-adjusted income rise more than ten times faster than the income of the bottom 90 percent. This dramatic rise is mainly due to the income of the top 0.01 percent.
The average income of the top 1 percent of households rose nearly 12 percent from 2009 to 2010. For the richest households—the top 0.01 percent—the growth was even more dramatic. This super-wealthy mini-segment of the population saw its incomes rise by 21.5 percent.
While the vast majority of Americans continues to feel the impact of the recession—in the form of joblessness, wage cuts and deep attacks on living standards—the very wealthy are hauling in obscene amounts of income. The income spread within the top 1 percent is particularly significant.
[…]
As the graph below demonstrates, since 1979 the bottom 20 percent of households have seen their incomes rise by only 20 percent, while the top 1 percent have seen incomes shoot up by 277 percent. Both the CBPP report and the Piketty-Saez analysis indicate that this trend toward income concentration at the top will continue in the coming years.


neo-peasantry, I have two words for you:
bang bang

    anticapitalist:

    Incomes of top 1 percent in US skyrocket in wake of recession

    From 2002 to 2007, the top 1 percent of households saw their real, inflation-adjusted income rise more than ten times faster than the income of the bottom 90 percent. This dramatic rise is mainly due to the income of the top 0.01 percent.

    The average income of the top 1 percent of households rose nearly 12 percent from 2009 to 2010. For the richest households—the top 0.01 percent—the growth was even more dramatic. This super-wealthy mini-segment of the population saw its incomes rise by 21.5 percent.

    While the vast majority of Americans continues to feel the impact of the recession—in the form of joblessness, wage cuts and deep attacks on living standards—the very wealthy are hauling in obscene amounts of income. The income spread within the top 1 percent is particularly significant.

    […]

    As the graph below demonstrates, since 1979 the bottom 20 percent of households have seen their incomes rise by only 20 percent, while the top 1 percent have seen incomes shoot up by 277 percent. Both the CBPP report and the Piketty-Saez analysis indicate that this trend toward income concentration at the top will continue in the coming years.

    neo-peasantry, I have two words for you:

    bang bang

     
  2. Black Powder Press

    I just got my shipment of propaganda from Black Powder Press and Records.

    • Blackbird Raum patch (see above)
    • Hail Seizures t-shirt with a buzzard eating a body impaled on an inverted wooden cross
    • a zine about companion plants
    • a zine about compost bin design
    • five zines about anti-politics and a pin (they sent these gratis)

    The Santa Cruz outfit does small press publishing and distro for radical bands and authors. I can’t recommend buying from them more highly. They’re very helpful when it comes to helping out users and they keep a slim sales margin for upkeep. 

     
  3. image: Download

    If you weren’t already in arms about Monsanto’s gene patenting and other ethical violations, this is a graph of this monopolistic group’s numerous subsidiaries and corporate influences. Monsanto’s genes and products make their way into much of the food consumed in this country and around the world.
If you are able, say no to GMOs and pesticides.

    If you weren’t already in arms about Monsanto’s gene patenting and other ethical violations, this is a graph of this monopolistic group’s numerous subsidiaries and corporate influences. Monsanto’s genes and products make their way into much of the food consumed in this country and around the world.

    If you are able, say no to GMOs and pesticides.

     
  4. 11:12 24th Jan 2012

    Notes: 277

    Reblogged from anticapitalist

    Tags: good morningpolitics

    anticapitalist:

    Since the Second World War, the United States has:

    1) Attempted to overthrow more than 50 governments, most of them democratically elected.
    2) Attempted to suppress a populist or national movement in 20 countries.
    3) Grossly interfered in democratic elections in at least 30 countries.
    4) Dropped bombs on the people of more than 30 countries.
    5) Attempted to assassinate more than 50 foreign leaders.

    In total, the United States has carried out one or more of these actions in 69 countries. In almost all cases, Britain has been a collaborator. The “enemy” changes in name - from communism to Islamism - but mostly it is the rise of democracy independent of western power, or a society occupying strategically useful territory and deemed expendable, like the Chagos Islands.

    The sheer scale of suffering, let alone criminality, is little known in the west, despite the presence of the world’s most advanced communications, nominally freest journalism and most admired academy. That the most numerous victims of terrorism - western terrorism - are Muslims is unsayable, if it is known. That half a million Iraqi infants died in the 1990s as a result of the embargo imposed by Britain and America is of no interest. That extreme jihadism, which led to the 11 September 2001 attacks, was nurtured as a weapon of western policy (in “Operation Cyclone”) is known to specialists, but otherwise suppressed.

    While popular culture in Britain and America immerses the Second World War in an ethical bath for the victors, the holocausts arising from Anglo-American dominance of resource-rich regions are consigned to oblivion. Under the Indonesian tyrant Suharto, anointed “our man” by Margaret Thatcher, more than a million people were slaughtered in what the CIA described as “the worst mass murder of the second half of the 20th century”. This estimate does not include the third of the population of East Timor who were starved or murdered with western connivance, British fighter-bombers and machine-guns.

    These true stories are told in declassified files in the Public Record Office, yet represent an entire dimension of politics and the exercise of power excluded from public consideration. This has been achieved by a regime of uncoercive information control, from the evangelical mantra of advertising to soundbites on BBC news and now the ephemera of social media.

    It is as if writers as watchdogs are extinct, or in thrall to a sociopathic zeitgeist, convinced they are too clever to be duped. Witness the stampede of sycophants eager to deify Christopher Hitchens, a war lover who longed to be allowed to justify the crimes of rapacious power. “For almost the first time in two centuries,” wrote Terry Eagleton, “there is no eminent British poet, playwright or novelist prepared to question the foundations of the western way of life.” No Orwell warns that we do not need to live in a totalitarian society to be corrupted by totalitarianism. No Shelley speaks for the poor, no Blake proffers a vision, no Wilde reminds us that “disobedience, in the eyes of anyone who has read history, is man’s original virtue”. And grievously no Pinter rages at the war machine, as in “American Football”:

    with this, good night.

    Good Morning America

     
  5. anticapitalist:

    The New York City headquarters of a group cooperating with the Occupy Wall Street movement was swarmed by the NYPD on Tuesday in a raid that left half a dozen people involved with the Globalrevolution.tv website in police custody.

    Cops entered the Bushwick studio used by Global Revolution on Tuesday after posting a notice on the door of the space occupied by the group the night before. According to authorities, the space at 13 Thames St in the Brooklyn, NY neighborhood hosted conditions “imminently perilous to life” and had to be vacated by all occupants, although failed to provide any details on what factors had led to such a case. When cops returned the next day and found a handful of people on the premises, they were arrested.

    Fuck. The. Police.

     
  6. 23:18 23rd Dec 2011

    Notes: 3

    Reblogged from peaceoneday

    Tags: anarchismpolitics

    peaceoneday:

    Hold on, shouldn’t you guys be attacking the system and not some bored blogger who said your ideals are a little bit askew?

    Politics are a war of information and journalism, we are attacking the system because you are moderate and a complacent part of the system. Complacency is exactly what Capitalists/Fascists want from their subjects. 

    You may not realize it, but you are participating in a contemporary form of journalism by blogging. You are injecting yourself into the dialogue, so don’t be surprised to see some letters to the editor, dig?

    If you’d like to understand us better, Emma Goldman would be a better guide than I.

     
  7. bethefoodoflove:

    peaceoneday:

    http://cultureofresistance.tumblr.com I am a capitalist in the sense that I study economics and I don’t believe that human nature is malleable to support the society that Marx envisioned.

    So you mean you’re a Capitalist in the sense that you’re a Capitalist. You mean…

    Schooling another soft liberal, Matt, everybody!

     
  8. 22:12

    Notes: 193

    Reblogged from socialuprooting

    Tags: anarchyProtestliberalismpolitics

    image: Download

    cultureofresistance:

peaceoneday:

cultureofresistance:

peaceoneday:

cultureofresistance:

If necessary, kill the president.

I’m sorry, but this is just unacceptable.  I totally understand people wanting a revolution and I agree things are pretty fucked up, but to target a figurehead like that is just taking it too far.  not to mention you shouldn’t use senseless violence to get your message across.  It’s radical crap like this that makes me question my support for civil movements

 Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi was killed, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was overthrown. You’re saying killing tyrants is an act of “senseless violence”? This folks, is why I am not an ineffective liberal pacifist. 

If the president is a crazy authoritarian dictator that’s ruining the country, yes it’s necessary to remove him from power (whatever way possible) in order to change things. I believe the world is better off without those people and I’m not disagreeing with what happened.  I’m just saying something like this can be scary and unnecessary depending on the situation.  It’s important to know what the root of the problem is, and if it’s not the president himself, this would lessen the integrity of the movement.

Well, if it’s not the president itself, it is the state and the capitalist class that is perpetuating the oppression, and they should be opposed. The people are oppressed to the extent that they learn to accept their oppression as a given, we should be promoting, not discouraging opposition to oppression, in any form that is necessary in the strategy of the resistance movement’s goals. 

couldn’t have said it better myself

    cultureofresistance:

    peaceoneday:

    cultureofresistance:

    peaceoneday:

    cultureofresistance:

    If necessary, kill the president.

    I’m sorry, but this is just unacceptable.  I totally understand people wanting a revolution and I agree things are pretty fucked up, but to target a figurehead like that is just taking it too far.  not to mention you shouldn’t use senseless violence to get your message across.  It’s radical crap like this that makes me question my support for civil movements

     Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi was killed, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was overthrown. You’re saying killing tyrants is an act of “senseless violence”? This folks, is why I am not an ineffective liberal pacifist. 

    If the president is a crazy authoritarian dictator that’s ruining the country, yes it’s necessary to remove him from power (whatever way possible) in order to change things. I believe the world is better off without those people and I’m not disagreeing with what happened.  I’m just saying something like this can be scary and unnecessary depending on the situation.  It’s important to know what the root of the problem is, and if it’s not the president himself, this would lessen the integrity of the movement.

    Well, if it’s not the president itself, it is the state and the capitalist class that is perpetuating the oppression, and they should be opposed. The people are oppressed to the extent that they learn to accept their oppression as a given, we should be promoting, not discouraging opposition to oppression, in any form that is necessary in the strategy of the resistance movement’s goals. 

    couldn’t have said it better myself

    (Source: elkkmpusupla)

     
  9. What I Want

    If the corporate plutocracy sends their police goons after me in pursuit of financial restitution regarding illegal usage of their media, I don’t want to go quietly. My few dollars could disappear into a metaphoric mattress, I’d like to live quietly until they come. I’d turn the repo men away with a few threatening words and a shotgun.

    I want to wait in whatever home I have until they come to take me away for unpaid fines. I want to tell them to leave the premises. I want to go about my daily business in the face of their regressive orders. I want to dare them to beat the hell out of me. I want to call them corporate thugs to their faces.

    I want to do all these things, but I’m not a brave man. My life is precious to me and imprisonment is a hilarious concept. Throw me in a big cement building with a bunch of books and fascists? I could think of worse places to spread black words.

    Remember, my friends, they can beat you, they can impoverish you, they can kill you, but they can’t kill an idea! This is our land, where we take our stand! Stop SOPA now!

     
  10. bethefoodoflove:

These are the trending tags for New York on Twitter for today, September 17th. Notice anything missing? #sep17, #occupywallst, and #occupywallstreet have all been censored from appearing despite mentions in over 10,000 tweets today.
The NYPD is out in full force today attempting to prevent people from peacefully gathering on Wall Street, and social media has (once again) taken their side by stifling the buzz about the event.

    bethefoodoflove:

    These are the trending tags for New York on Twitter for today, September 17th. Notice anything missing? #sep17, #occupywallst, and #occupywallstreet have all been censored from appearing despite mentions in over 10,000 tweets today.

    The NYPD is out in full force today attempting to prevent people from peacefully gathering on Wall Street, and social media has (once again) taken their side by stifling the buzz about the event.