Tuesday, December 27, 2011

The Astute 'Follow The Money' and Put [Global] Class Analysis In Command! The Rest Join Or Start A Non-Profit, Or A Church,...Or A Cult!


An Open Letter To All Those In Occupy/Decolonize Seattle
Who STILL Support This [Nonsense] Non-Violence Proposal.

The issue is NOT about "non-violence" per se, it is about adopting "non-violence" as a vague, quasi-religious political ideology, so that Occupy/Decolonize Seattle can recieve donations from liberal non-profit, governmental, and religious organizations. And pro-U.S./Demokkkratic Party forces and their most deeply committed supporters can, eventually, move in and take over.

First, let us review the history of "non-violence" in O/DS, based upon the ACTUAL practices and political moves made by those who today continue to support this twice defeated  proposal:

1. Some of the strongest supporters of this proposal are the very folks who, after losing a vote in the General Assembly, moved to City Hall anyway. As it turned out, the only real  consequence of that was for all to see what a sour clique of undemocratic, anti-revolutionary renegades looks like.

2. Some of the strongest supporters of this proposal are the very folks who threatened to "pull the plug" on the sound for  "Oct22" @ Westlake due to demokkkrat King County Councilman Larry Gossett not being allowed to show up late, and un-invited, and share the stage with someone he himself ordered the police to attack in July of 1999 at the longest building occupation in U.$. history.

3. Some of the strongest supporters of this proposal are the very folks who showed us their non-violence in PRACTICE, injuring several in the camp and later on at the Chase Bank action.

4.  Some of the strongest supporters of this proposal are the very folks who injured another camper with their demonstration of how they would handle a hypothetical attempted tent theft, "non-violently", during a Peace and Safety meeting.

5. Some of the strongest supporters of this proposal are the very folks who called upon the Anti-Fascist Working Group for help vs. a violent individual amongst the dictatorship of the self-medicated who invaded one woman's tent and shoved another. This group from within Peace and Safety then WOULD NOT ADMIT to asking for our help at the impromptu G.A. after the explusion event. They then had the nerve to send someone to summon us during our meeting, asking for help a month later. This time we video recorded him asking for our help, for our own protection from potential future false allegations and accusations.

6. Some of the strongest supporters of this proposal are the very folks who made threats to revolutionaries, specifically, during the G.A. Antifa was formed specifically as a protective alliance between the revolutionaries v.s. the dictatorship of the self-medicated and the "non-violent" Gandhian neo-fascists (refer back to #2) after we were ATTACKED PHYSICALLY BY BOTH SIDES at various times during the occupation at Seattle Central Community College. And all of these folks support this current proposal.

7. Some of the strongest supporters of this proposal are the very folks who show up FADED (i.e. drunk/high) to G.A.

8. Some of the strongest OPPONENTS of this proposal are the people of color in O/DS. I take careful note that ALL but 2 of the people of color present at the 2nd voting G.A. featuring this proposal, voted the proposal down. To be in denial of the underlying racial chauvanism and privilege being resisted so fiercely by such a wide majority, as evidenced by the overwhelming vote against this proposal; TWICE, especially from amongst us so-called 'minorities', is a form of amerikkkan social fascism.

9. Who will MATERIALLY benefit? Again, this aspect was NOT mentioned in either version of the proposal. In discussions with others, I see that this aspect, the monied aspect, remains the 800lb gorilla in the room, and that others that I spoke with at the Occupy Seattle/D24 Dinner event also bear witness.

Again, the issue is NOT about "non-violence", it is about adopting "non-violence" as a vague, quasi-religious political ideology, so that O/DS can recieve donations from liberal and religious organizations, as well as the demokkkrats. Need I remind you all of a very basic rule of capitalist-imperialism: he or she who controls the gold, makes the rules. This is the root and the essense of all other arguments against this piece of kkkrap proposal, its equally wicked and monsterous twin, or the mildly humorous "pro-violence" proposal brought forward by [fellow Occupier].

Next, there are also folks who seek to control the resources, and thus the guiding politics of O/DS.  [Fellow Occupier] was the first to attempt this.  [fellow Occupier] and  [fellow Occupier] are now part of a new breed of folks atttempting to use the promise of resources from bourgeois liberal sources as a political weapon against the revolutionary majority.

So silly is  [fellow Occupier] that he puts forward a PRO-violence proposal, knowing that it would be voted down, so as to mock the entire process and debate. Sure,  I added a 'friendly amendment' calling for naked jell-o wrestling to resolve inter-Occupy conflicts. I knew that it would be voted down; I did it to mock him and those who support the two kkkraptacular non-violence proposals and the "pro-violence" attempt at satire.

Now, [fellow Occupier] upholds my 'friendly amendment' to his sad attempt at satire as a violation of some cardinal principle or a personal afront. It is clear to me that he will use every tool at his disposal to attempt to destroy that which he views as a threat to his individual material interests, and thus his larger, more general political interests.

Thus, the call for a "transformative justice" meeting: he cannot win the line struggle with a weak and wicked, pro-kkkapitlaist, pro-imperialist, flagrantly undemocratic political line, so he will "tag" in an even more adversarial and reactionary liberal ideologue, since his liberal-amerikkkan populist 'puglism' cannot stand up to scientific, anti-kkkapitalist, dialetical 'jujitsu'!

If the St. Marks or Jams For Justice folks are no longer interested in funding us, due to our refusal to submit to what is essentiallly bourgeois, kkkapitalist ideology manifested as magical thinking on a rickety bed of patently false historical revisionism and imposed from above and from outside by God's self-appointed local representitives on earth, then why would the pastor at St. Mark's attempt to enter the ideological fray, with a letter full of mostly unsubstantiated dogma that only lightly touches on the crux of the issue: the monied aspect.

And why is it that there are others who support this proposal who are still speaking on it as a path to resources as recently as the Occupy dinner at Gasworks Park on December 24th?  Clearly, this is NOT a 'dead' issue, since the proposers and their supporters have yet to come all the way clean on why so little attention has been spent around the monied aspect of this proposal (or rather, set of proposals) and how this effects the larger ideological and philosophical questions posed by those who still advocate for this liberal-reactionary political direction.

Let me also address this fresh straw man from the camp of liberal reaction within O/DS. Newness to politics is NO EXCUSE for dishonesty and rank opportunism! If you understand the stories of "Cain Vs. Abel" and Jesus and Judas, then you are abundantly aware of what being unprincipled and irresponsible looks like.

Our desire for freedom is stronger than any individual's political ambitions. Therefore, you must be an 'honest broker' in front of the G.A.

Yes, you have to. Yes, you do. It's either full disclosure in front of the G.A. or get fully heckled at the G.A., by a majority of the G.A.! You know it's true. We've all seen it happen.



9. All kinds of forces are now coming out of the woodwork, working overtime, trying to convince me that co-optation of Occupy/Decolonize Seattle is not occuring.

This is bulls**t. The co-optation attempts started on DAY ONE. It is the radical self-activity of the astute amongst workers and revolutionaries that keeps Occupy/Decolonize Seattle moving forward generally and the co-opters stuck on the sidelines, trying to dictate the guidelines.

All they have are potential purse strings...maybe...and their public/private army of local, state, and federal law enforcement; also informants and 'good' amerikkkans, the 21st century updated and upgraded  'good German', like the folks who called the police on the 19th and Spruce house and reported the one at 12th and Jefferson before that. And what did they report? People going in and out who "didn't look like they were supposed to be there".

Similarly, there are voices within O/DS who say such things about myself, the PoC Caucus, the anarchists, and revolutionaries generally. To hear them tell it, their failure to pass these two ridiculous proposals is all due to "provacateurs", "people with hate in their hearts", "anarchists", etc, as opposed to the dishonesty, material interests, and ideological blindspots of both proposers and supporters, at last exposed for all to see.

10. This is why genuine people's movements find creative ways to seek out and sustain independent money! But this CANNOT happen until transparancy, process, and most importantly, CLASS, is put up front and center!

11. Genuine global equality is NOT in the MATERIAL interests of most amerikkkans (not yet, anyway), and thus not on their mind. This is a FACT. Most amerikkkans don't want to be broke, to be homeless, to see their kids killed overseas on another imperialist military adventure, or in their own neighborhood. Usually, they could careless about their neighbors next door, let alone their neighbors across the 3rd world.

Occupy/Decolonize Seattle has brought attention to this aspect, and many other aspects, of amerikkkan social fascism, in particular, the various Decolonize elements, including here in Seattle, have put this up front and center for the settler-nation majority across amerikkka to deal with in relationship to those of us in this country who some of you still consider your collective social property. I believe this is also the source of the belief by many of you that it is o.k. to jump into our personal space to scream at us, pet us, pat our heads, touch our hair, touch our children without asking, shush us as we are speaking, or simply assault us in the name of "Peace and Safety" or "non-violence".

Of course, if  we so-called 'minorties' speak or move in a direction of seriously addressing our collective self-interest as colonized people and as workers, and our parallel struggles in relationship to the larger global revolutionary project, and how the liberal politics of amerikkkan social fascism, like this non-violence proposal, and the most reactionary aspects of it, are an impediment to building the necessary global unity, then we are usually denounced and slandered....as being against "unity"!

We are against UNPRINCIPLED, oppressive, neo-colonial, master/slave, victim/victimizer, "unity"...with ANYONE, regardless of skin color!

12. Capitalism requires exploitation of one group to supply and enrichen another, especially in the relationship between the so-called global south and the imperialist countries, like amerikkka.  This is basic. Also required, are those who teach and train the exploited to enjoy and embrace their condition; or seek to mystify the idea(s) of genuine freedom, justice, and equality. This has been the historic role of the clergy, especially in amerikkka, with a few very notable exceptions. Indeed, many of those who teach this type of theology in the 3rd world often get their training in amerikkka.


13. There are two super-obvious general political paths in this movement at this moment:
   
a.  Reform: To seek concessions from the existing government, class structure, and economic system by way of protests, "non-violent" direct action,  begging bureaukkkrats, the occasional strike, and voting; so as to defend basic civil rights, as defined under this system, from the perspective of the political and economic elite of amerikkka; but at the same time, challenging those very same upper classes to 'trickle down' a little more as far as jobs, 'progressive' legislation, and the creation and funding of social programs.

b. Revolution: To seek and struggle for [revolutionary] regime change: the overthrow of amerikkka, specifically, so as to play our position aiding and assisting in the global overthrow of capitalism, imperialism, and oppression[s] generally, to create the political space for a radical restructuring of the world on the principles of genuine solidarity (NOT "charity", like liberals offer; plus the iron fist) and a global economy built upon the principles of  "from each according to ability, to each according to need"; by way of protests, "non-violent" direct actions such as, but not limited to, mic checking the rich and powerful (the most decidely awful, in particular) if they dare show there face anywhere in Seattle for any reason, seizing foreclosed properties, re-taking stolen native land, port shutdowns, general strikes, evolving workgroups into community-driven counter-institutions that can provide basic services and assist with day-to-day survival needs, and growing the G.A. into an institution of dual-power vs. the existing capitalist government(s); local, state, federal; and to encourage other G.A.s across amerikkka and the world to do the same, until we can effectively join with existing and future 3rd world revolutionary forces in forcing the global 1% and their lackeys to stop what they are doing and, hopefully, slow and /or repair the damage to the planet before we all go extinct; begining with our food sources and water becoming genuinely scarce, as opposed to scarcity due to market spectulation and unfair trade agreements.

Liberals tend to walk down path A. Anarchists, Marxists, revolutionary anti-colonialists/3rd worldist and/or indigenous national liberationists tend to walk down path B. See where I stand for yourself by reading the "What I Want, What I Believe" section of allpowertothepositive.blogspot.com

Conservatives, 'Objectivists'/Ayn Randists, Fascists/neo-nazis, and LaRouchists seek point C., as in CRUSH both sides; fascists/neo-nazis are especially adamant about that.

Opportunists claim to have no general affinity, but gravitate from one political 'extreme' (lol) to another based upon individual material interests and who, organizationally, seems more politically and numerically powerful for achieving their selfish goals at a given time.

Newbies are recruited by whoever can connect with that particular person. Not everyone is attracted by the spectacle of 'non-violence'. Many don't even initially come to O/DS on too deep of a political level, but more on a social one; showing up with friends, college class field trips, saw it on t.v./live stream/you tube/fb and came thru, etc.

Revolutionaries are not afraid to shake a hand and make a friend. We are also quick to do as Malcolm X taught us and "run the white man up and down the street all day with the truth." This is the open secret of our relative success, not vague, dogmatic, and ultimately empty promises to learn how to enjoy being beaten and pepper sprayed, plus how to die quickly and quietly if or when we succumb to our wounds.

Tell you what: if we revolutionaries become entirely too much and over-the-top at actions/demonstrations, we'll put ourselves in jail...but only if you liberals agree to self-emulate (i.e. - sit down and torch yourselves in public) if you and your crew become problematic.

I'll leave you with some seperate, yet related quotables that sum up some of the recurring themes in this writing. I believe passages are to be studied, not taken as gospel. Effectively praying to a particular theorist offends the religious, the atheistic, and the astute, so I don't do it . What I have underlined I view as important to emphasize in each.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Bourgeois Liberals/ Demokkkratic Party Hacks/Rank Opportunists Attempt to Seize Power Over Occupy Movement Nationally

Representatives from the 99% Declaration group were hoping to have a discussion which would lead to an endorsement from Occupy Philly for plans to hold a National General Assembly in Philadelphia on July 4th of 2012.  Instead, in an unusual display of collective assertiveness, the GA voted to unaffiliate themselves with the group and any of its future events.

On Tuesday’s General Assembly, representatives from the group, the 99% Declaration, presented plans to organize a National General Assembly in Philadelphia and hold an online election of 890 delegates from all over the US who would vote on a list of grievances the current government would be asked to redress. 

During the questions and concerns part of the conversation, OP members presented information detailing the backgrounds and comments of three board members of the organization.

In addition to these concerns, OP General Assembly attendees raised issues surrounding the selection of delegates and the current efforts to plan the national gathering.  OP quickly weighed the evidence, and as a result of the overwhelming concerns raised by the group, the GA voted “We do not support the 99% Declaration, its group, its website, its National GA and anything else associated with it.” 




Who exactly is the 99Percent Declaration?
The 99% Declaration is a national working group led by NY criminal defense attorney, Michael Pollok.  The story on their website says that Mr. Pollok was contacted for legal representation after the arrests of 700 OWS protesters on the Brooklyn Bridge in NYC. Of the protesters, 20 or so are students from a small liberal arts college in upstate NY where Pollok resides. 

After meeting with them, he agreed to represent them pro bono.  He then began drafting a list of grievances developed during conversations with them.  The document he subsequently posted online is now known as the 99% Declaration.  The website further states he later distributed about 400 copies of the declaration to Occupy Wall Street in Zuccotti Park.  While there he gathered some people to form a working group at OWS.  However, organizers from there have not acknowledged the group’s legitimacy, as noted in heated discussions posted on the NYC GA website.

Two days after his visit to Zuccotti Park, the story was picked up by the Huffington Post and the Global Grind after locating the draft document online.  Immediately, the story drew national attention.  The news reached Philly immediately, as OP was contacted  by reporters for comments on the matter. It seemed mysterious that an event like this was being coordinated without first consulting any of the key organizers at Occupy Philly. 

Similarly, the large scale media attention given to a presumed OWS group amid reports of a National General Assembly in Philly raised a lot of concerns from key organizers at OWS, especially from those working in the Demands Working Group.  A dispute ensued about the group’s authority to use the OWS name for a proposal that had not been passed in their GA. Shortly after, the 99% Declaration was deemed by OWS, not an official working group. This caused their leader, Pollok, to make the following statement,

“OWS is a failure and there is no backup plan.  it is antidemocratic and censors people outside of the narrow agenda of the small elite oligarchy that runs it; I have been down there and I saw them in action; they are a star chamber made up of anarchists and other antidemocratic movements who want everything and nothing. it cannot succeed; it has consumed it’s own oxygen and now the flame is out what a waste. we will press on with the nationwide election of delegates to a National General Assembly”

“this is an anti-democratic movement and we withdraw our support.”

Despite their tumultuous relationship with OWS, the group continued to develop its plans and formed its own nonprofit, The 99% Declaration Working Group, Ltd.  The board members include founder Michael Pollok, a former white collar crimes criminal defense attorney who ran for Congress in 2009; Nancy Marcus Newman, whose father Steve Newman was involved in a bribery scandal with Vince Fumo; Adeline Malone, a former VP at Goldman Sachs; and an unknown Kevin Archambault.   The comments made by Mr. Pollok, coupled with the background of the board members were enough to set off red flags in the beginning of the GA discussion.

The 99% Declaration claims they have over 10,000 fans on FB who vote on various things, help plan the event, and are coordinating the election of candidates. Though when asked, the representatives at the OP GA could not articulate how their FB voting works nor could they identify the people on the delegate selection committee. 

More Here.

In Seattle, a group calling itself the Non-Violence Working Group sent an email to Seattle City Councilman Nick Licata essentially declaring themselves the "legitimate leadership" of Occupy Seattle, without G.A. approval. Yet, they dare call revolutionaries (anarchists/Marxists/anti-colonial People of Color) "undemocratic"! They are mad because revolutionary ideas hold sway in Seattle's Occupy movement. Example: the shutdown of the Port recieved an overwhelmeing majority of support from the G.A. 

Tonight, at our Generally Assembly, these forces will exposed, once again, as the 1%'er wanna-bes and 1st worldist/neo-colonialist, petit-bourgoeis, economic parasites that they are.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Yes, We Are Shutting Down The Entire West Coast of Amerikkka. Believe it.



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE / PLEASE FORWARD WIDELY

December 13, 2011. CONTACT: Seattleportsolidarity@gmail.com


Occupy Seattle: A New Phase for the Workers’ Movement.

[Note: This article was written by several members of Occupy Seattle who were closely involved with organizing for the December 12th West Coast Port Shut Down. Any opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect all of Occupy Seattle.]
SEATTLE, Wash — Monday, December 12th, Occupy protesters and allies shut down several major ports along the West Coast. In Seattle, we stopped all evening work at Terminals 18 and 5, causing millions in profit loss to major corporations Stevedoring Services of America, American President Line, and Eagle Marine Services.

Yesterday’s actions drew a wide swath of the 99%. Protesters of all ages demonstrated, and people of color turned out in large numbers. The protests included a coordinated city-wide high school walkout, a rally emceed by Hip Hop Occupies, and a three mile march to the ports. The shutdown was organized by members of Occupy Seattle in solidarity with Occupy Oakland and with the struggles of LA, Oakland, and Seattle port truckers and Longview longshore workers. Occupy Seattle’s People of Color caucus produced need-to-know guides for the action.

The shutdown was solidly an Occupy action, funded by the heartfelt donations of occupiers and their supporters, and a hefty donation from Occupy Oakland. We received absolutely no material support from any union. This was a direct action in the truest sense of the term: it was rapid-fire, organized on a shoestring budget, bypassed stalling bureaucracy, and mobilized the energy of an inspired community united against economic injustice.

The actions were planned with special attention to the long tradition of democracy and direct action within the ILWU. We picketed Terminals 18 and 5 in light of the longstanding ILWU principle of respecting other pickets. Union policy dictates that if arbitrators rule that picket lines are too dangerous to cross, ILWU workers will be compensated for the work they missed.

The protests were wildly successful. Truck drivers and port workers repeatedly expressed support for the protesters, waving and honking as they passed.

Terminal 18--the Port of Seattle’s largest and busiest terminal--was the first to be shut down. Protesters took the main intersection, swiftly forming a blockade of roadside debris to stop the incoming shift, while redirecting outgoing traffic onto one lane. This effectively blocked three gates, while the fourth had been shut down by the port in anticipation of the action. The Seattle Police Department, not protesters, temporarily stopped workers and truckers from leaving the port by forming a bike chain as protesters yelled at them to “let the trucks through.”

Under pressure from protesters, police backed away, but later stopped traffic once again, stating that they were trying to clear the road for police convoys to enter. In solidarity with the protesters, the truckers honked their horns loudly and persistently, and the frustrated calls of the crowd forced the cops back off the road. Occupiers then continued to direct traffic out of the port, delivering flyers of Scott Olsen’s statement to drivers as they passed (see below).

At 5pm, reports came through that the union arbitrator had ruled in favor of protesters, deeming the picket too dangerous to cross. The shipping company called off work at Terminal 18 for the evening. In accordance with union contract, dispatched longshore workers were nonetheless paid for their time.

Protesters then proceeded to Terminal 5, the location of the Port’s only other ship that day, chanting “Whose Ports / Our Ports.” Approximately one hundred protesters formed a human barricade and moving picket line at the terminal gate, while another hundred stood by in support.

Some protesters who remained at Terminal 18 were herded onto the sidewalk. When they tried to maintain the blockade, conflict escalated. The police used pepper spray and flash grenades to disperse protesters, in one case forcibly pulling back the head of a protester to spray him in the face. A few protesters flung road flares and a bag of paint at the police in retaliation. In the resulting chaos, a number of protesters were arrested.

The crowd of Terminal 18 dissipated and joined Terminal 5. After two hours of picketing, the union arbitrator once again ruled in favor of protesters, calling off work at the terminal.
The Occupy Movement Strikes Back

Many of us showed up to this action having learned from the experiences we’ve had in the short months since we began assembling together. Having previous engagements with the police, we knew to protect ourselves. Legal observers and medics were interspersed through the crowd, and the majority brought bandannas and scarves to cover their noses against flash bombs and other chemical weapons utilized by the police. Some of us sported the goggles that we learned to use after pepper spray incapacitated activists during the march on Chase Bank.

Occupy Seattle’s action was one of the last in the day, following successful port shutdowns in Longview, Portland, Oakland, and other places. A hundred of our friends in Bellingham continued to break the flow of capital by protesting on the railroads, some locking themselves to the tracks in defiance. Solidarity was extended to us even from Japan, where the International Labor Solidarity Committee of Doro-Chiba made a statement of support.

We send our sincere thanks to Oakland and Portland for extending their protests in response to the police aggression in Seattle that left several of our friends with stinging eyes and ringing ears. We extend our support and love to Houston and San Diego, where the police have used similarly aggressive tactics.

Today, we stand in solidarity with the unemployed, the underemployed, the incarcerated, and the 89% of the working class who don’t belong to unions. We stand in solidarity with students protesting education cutbacks and rising debts, with low-wage workers protesting union-busting, with those facing foreclosure, and with the unemployed. We believe that a workers’ movement does not merely belong to the unionized, nor does it recognize imposed political borders. This is the building of a new movement. We rise from our roots in the labor movement, the civil rights movement, and anticolonial struggles across the world.


For ongoing updates on the West Coast Port Shut Down action:

Truck Drivers Statement:


ILWU Guiding Principles (See in particular #4 regarding community picket lines):

A Message from ILWU-Longview, WA. local president:

Thursday, December 8, 2011

California Prison Hunger Strikers Propose 10 Core Demands For The National Occupy Wall Street Movement.

“The Constitution, then, illustrates the complexity of this American system: that it serves the interests of a wealthy elite, but also does enough for small property owners, for middle-income mechanics and farmers to build a broad base of support. The slightly prosperous people who make up this base of support are buffers against the Blacks, the Natives, the very poor Whites. They enable the elite to keep control with a minimum of coercion, a maximum of law – all made palatable by this fanfare of patriotism and unity.” – Howard Zinn.

Greetings, Brothers and Sisters. A firm, warm and solid embrace of revolutionary love is extended to you all. These words by Brother Howard Zinn are particularly relevant to the survival of the evolving Occupy Wall Street Movement, as these truths have been integral to the success of populist organizing in the U.S. historically and are central to the proposal we’re putting forward here.

Most of you, at this point, are familiar with the NARN Collective Think Tank (NCTT) from the many progressive programs and ideas that have come out of this body from both Pelican Bay SHU and here in Corcoran SHU, most recently our work in the Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity Coalition.

Like the Arab Spring, which is still rocking the Middle East, and our own struggle to abolish indefinite confinement in sensory deprivation SHU torture units (see the five core demands from Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity), the Occupy Wall Street Movement expresses a fundamental rule of materialist dialectics as they apply to social development – i.e., the transformation of quantity into quality – expressed eloquently by the Honorable Comrade George Lester Jackson some 40 years ago: “(C)onsciousness is directly proportional to oppression.”

The purpose of the NCTT primarily is to act as a clearinghouse for progressive and meaningful solutions to the ills of society from our unique and scientific perspective. As we have followed and supported the Occupy Wall Street Movement, discussing its great potential, analyzing its character, composition and socio-economic motive force, predicting the inevitable violent reactionary response of the fascist state in defense of its capitalist masters, the ruling 1 percent have never, nor will they ever, concede anything, surely not substantive changes, without struggle which requires unity of purpose, broad-based organization, fluid strategy and effective tactics.

Populist and progressive movements in this nation have succeeded or failed, lived or died, based on how effectively they understood and adapted to this reality. We learned this in the epoch following the Civil War as reconstruction gains were effectively repealed and Jim Crow law was introduced.

The populist movements that gave birth to the People Party, the power of organized labor and the Dorr Rebellion learned this very hard lesson on the heels of the Haymarket Massacre. The Civil Rights Movement taught us the necessity of broad-based organization and accurate agreement of the opposition’s center of gravity: their point of weakness. Only a few years later we learned not to underestimate the power of the ruling 1 percent and insidiousness of its state tools when the Counter-Intelligence Program (Cointelpro) dismantled the Black Liberation Movement, imprisoned many of us, and ushered in the world of individualistic pursuits, greed, corruption, gross inequality and mass incarceration you all have now inherited.
As we watched the National (International) Day of Action unfold and the days that have followed, witnessing the predictable brutal response of the tools of the 1 percent as they beat young men and women bloody, pepper sprayed and pummeled peaceful youth at UC Davis, destroyed the people’s property across the nation, and even peppersprayed and dragged away 68-year-old women and pregnant ladies alike, with great effort we detached from our rage and analyzed the comments, ideas, and responses of various political pundits, common people on the streets, agents of the state and our protestors themselves.

Three things immediately became obvious from that analysis: 1) The mass media and far too many of the various pundits were in essence counting on the national Occupy movements to just peter out and fizzle away. It was this message that those who own these mass media outlets – the 1 percent – want to be disseminated as broadly as possible to undermine mass support for the movement.

The mass media were counting on the national Occupy movements to just peter out and fizzle away. It was this message that those who own these mass media outlets – the 1 percent – want to be disseminated as broadly as possible to undermine mass support for the movement.

2) We, the 99 percent, have no intention of going anywhere until substantive change is realized, and though most in this nation not involved directly in the occupations themselves agree with our ideas in opposition to corporate greed and institutional inequality, there were no clearly articulated demands around which the movement could organize the broader masses. 3) This lack of clearly articulated demands and coherent strategic and tactical organization by the national Occupy Movement was undermining its intent, diluting its potential, and degrading its motive force.

As you read this, consider where the men who wrote it live: Here, in Corcoran State Prison, labeled the "worst of the worst," they've survived as long as decades in solitary confinement in the SHU (security housing unit), one of the worst hell holes on earth. Out of despair and unimaginable cruelty and brutality, they forge hope for the beloved community. These men were leaders in the hunger strikes this summer and fall that involved over 12,000 California prisoners.This state of affairs left unaddressed, as in most every similar movement in the U.S. historically, will lead to its isolation. This cannot be allowed. The first step in defeating an enemy as powerful, all-encompassing and organized as the ruling 1 percent is understanding the nature of struggle and the basis of their power. When you analyze opponents, you must see beyond the superficial for the origins of that power, the point of vulnerability upon which it is based. Striking this point of vulnerability will inflict disproportionate damage.

It must be understood that substantive, radical, progressive social change is no different than warfare and warfare is a form of power. Power systems, no matter their myriad manifestations, share the same basic structures. The most visible thing about them is their appearance, what is seen and felt.
Great power systems first try to ignore challenges to them, to dismiss them. When this fails, they opt to crush them. This is exactly what the Occupy Movement has experienced thus far. But all too often this outward display is a deceptive fabrication, a manifestation of insecurity, since power dares not expose its weaknesses.
The key lies in determining what their point of vulnerability is, and to do so you must understand the structure of the power system and the culture in which it operates. I began this discussion with a concise analysis of just this point by Howard Zinn.

The real point of vulnerability in American democracy is the social and political support of its citizens. Unfortunately, the key apparatus in influencing public opinion is the American mass media – yet, ironically, they are equally vulnerable to the power of the mass support of the people. The key factor thus far in failing to harness this mass support is the lack of broad-based, articulable demands around which the uncommitted people who may support our message but not our movement can be educated, organized and mobilized to join the movement and transform not only the nature and structure of U.S. society, but the WORLD.
The key factor thus far in failing to harness the mass support of the people is the lack of broad-based, articulable demands around which the uncommitted people who may support our message but not our movement can be educated, organized and mobilized to join the movement and transform not only the nature and structure of U.S. society, but the WORLD.

To that end the NCTT Corcoran SHU has made a comprehensive analysis of statements from participants of all the national Occupy movements and some of those abroad and compiled these ideas into 10 core demands of the Occupy Wall Street Movement national coalition. We call on you brothers and sisters to disseminate these 10 core demands to all the Occupy movements across the nation and the world, and we call on all the Occupy movements to convene a national forum – which can take place online or at a national convention – to discuss the adoption of these 10 core demands as the definitive goals and organizing points around which the movement is based and the next level of our struggle is to be waged. These 10 core demands can be modified, augmented or amended to take into account the broadest cross-section of the 99 percent possible and the collective will of the movement:

The 10 Core Demands of the Occupy Wall Street Movement National Coalition

1. We want full employment with a living wage for all people who will work, and for employment to be enforced as the right which it is. The U.S. Declaration of Independence states in part “that all men … are endowed … with certain inalienable Rights; that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.” “Life” is thus a right guaranteed by this nation and the means to live – work, making a living wage for all of those who will and can work – must be equally guaranteed as the right which it is – as must a guaranteed income for those who can’t work. This is the responsibility of the federal government. If the corporate U.S. businessmen will not provide full employment even as they sit on trillions of dollars in cash reserves fleeced from the surplus value of labor, then the means of production should be taken from them and placed in the community so the 99 percent of the people can organize and employ all the people, ensuring a quality standard of life for all.

2. We want an end to institutional racism and race- and class-based disparities in access to, and quality of, labor, education, health care, criminal defense, political empowerment, technology and healthy food. We recognize institutional racism – the U.S. race caste system – and systemic class disparities in the U.S. capitalist structure as not simply an obstacle to equitable educational opportunities, labor access, wage equality, proportionate rates of chronic disease management, access to quality and preventable health care services, non-predatory community policing, equitable treatment of criminal offenders, access to the political process for all, access to communications technology, the internet and fresh, unprocessed foods but as structural features of U.S. market capitalism primarily designed to prevent broad class cooperation between the 99 percent from various racial, ethnic and cultural backgrounds. We will no longer allow this divide and rule arrangement to govern the socio-economic relationships upon which the nature and structure of U.S. society is based.

3. We want decent and affordable housing for all people and for it to be enforced as the right which it is. We recognize that housing, like living wage employment, is a fundamental necessity of life and as such a right that we have invested this government with securing on our behalf. Instead, government has consistently sided with those on Wall Street, who are responsible for the single greatest loss of housing in the nation’s history, while federal, state and local officials have in essence criminalized homelessness and chronic poverty and made a practice of attacking, destroying the property of and displacing the homeless wherever they’ve tried to erect shelters in this locked, anti-poor society. Since it was corporate greed, government deregulation and financial speculators that led to the creation of exotic financial instruments like credit default swaps and sub-prime loan bundles which fleeced the 99 percent of much of their wealth and home equity, the government should mandate a “cost of living” readjustment to home equity debt on all U.S. homes so what the people owe actually reflects what these properties are now worth. This would eliminate “underwater” homeowners and bail out the 99 percent of the people for a change. Simultaneously, vacated and empty federal housing authority properties (FHA) should be made into cooperatives so that our communities, with government aid, can create and build decent housing for all.

4. We want affordable and equal access to higher education for all and access to education that teaches the true history of colonialism, chattel slavery, repression of organized labor, the use of police repression and imprisonment as tools of capitalist exploitation, and the perpetuation of imperialism in the development and maintenance of modern U.S. power systems and corporate financial markets. As current trends in the national unemployment rate indicate – for the 99 percent nationally, the rate is 14 percent for Latinos, 17 percent for New Afrikans (Blacks), yet only 4 percent for those with a college degree – higher education has a direct correlation to socio-economic opportunity and prosperity. Since equal opportunity is a fundamental right of U.S. citizenship, the 99 percent should have equal access to higher education without speculative corporate profiteering in industries related to higher education driving up tuition costs and student loan interest rates to usurious levels, leaving most in perpetual debt and simply pricing the very prospect of higher education out of reach for those in communities of color and the poor.

This is a Corcoran SHU cell. Notice how cramped it is with two guards inside. Imagine living here for months and years and decades, with no privacy and the lights on 24 hours a day.There should be a universal higher education system open to all based on their capacity to pay with tuitions set at that capacity level, while not barring anyone for an inability to pay. Simultaneously, the usurious debt incurred by students who clearly have no capacity to pay at a sustainable rate should have those debts forgiven in full. Our public education system should give all our people a knowledge of the true nature and structure of U.S. capitalist society and its legacy of injustice, genocide, exploitation, intentional underdevelopment, unjustifiable wars of imperialist aggression to secure new markets, resources and spheres of influence, bloody conquest, ecological mismanagement, slavery and murder in service to the development and maintenance of the molding of greed that is the 1 percent ruling elite.

5. We want an immediate end to police brutality and the murder of oppressed people in the U.S., particularly in the New Afrikan (Black), Latino, immigrant and underclass communities and among those protesting in this nation. We recognize the police and other state paramilitary agencies – sheriffs, FBI, correctional guards etc. – are, and have always been, the enforcement army of the ruling 1 percent. This was again proven when these fascist forces moved nationally, en masse, to attack, pepper spray, beat, destroy the property of, arrest and attempt to crush the national Occupy Movement and its supporters at the two-month anniversary of the worldwide action and every day since. We recognize such brutal and unwarranted treatment is the daily existence of New Afrikan (Black), Latino, immigrant and underclass communities and people in this nation now, and historically, all to ensure the 1 percent “keeps us in our place,” the unfortunate victims of the race/class arrangement.

We recognize the police and other state paramilitary agencies – sheriffs, FBI, correctional guards etc. – are, and have always been, the enforcement army of the ruling 1 percent.

Self-defense is a human right and both the action and means are guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution and state laws (see the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and California Penal Code Section 50). We believe community organized oversight and self-defense forces should be organized to monitor and record all police interactions with the people and defend them against ruling class directed and racist attacks when necessity dictates. The hypocrisy of the government and media is exposed as they criticize Syria, China and Iran for attacking peaceful protestors while they do the same across the U.S. daily. We will suffer no more attacks like those at UC Davis, no more Scott Olsens, Fly Benzos or Oscar Grants to be injured or killed at the hands of the tools of the 1 percent.

The hypocrisy of the government and media is exposed as they criticize Syria, China and Iran for attacking peaceful protestors while they do the same across the U.S. daily. We will suffer no more attacks like those at UC Davis, no more Scott Olsens, Fly Benzos or Oscar Grants to be injured or killed at the hands of the tools of the 1 percent.

6. We want an end to the expansion of the prison industrial complex, as a profit base – from our tax dollars – for the disposal of surplus labor and the poor. We want an end to the use of indefinite solitary confinement torture units in the U.S. as they are inhumane and illegal. The mass incarceration of people of color and the poor will no longer be tolerated as an acceptable alternative to enforcing socio-economic equality in America. The disproportionate distribution of wealth, privilege and opportunity in a society is the origin of all crime.

The U.S. has one of the greatest disparities between haves and have nots on earth. As a result, the U.S. has the largest prison population on the planet with some 2.7 million of our citizens in prison, 67 percent of them New Afrikans (Black) or Latinos, though they constitute only 26 percent of the nation’s population.
The prison population in the U.S. has exploded some 60 percent since 1981, with state and federal prison budgets in excess of 100 percent of billions of our tax dollars a year lining the pockets of corporate interests that build, supply and maintain these prisons, jails, courts and staff, not to mention the labor aristocrats like the CCPOA (California Correctional Peace Officers Association) guards union, who’ve created a socio-economic and political power base that guarantees their job security and ever increasing salaries and benefits, while maintaining a lobbying stranglehold on state politicians.

We recognize, in the face of such a corrupt cabal of government and business, the purpose of imprisonment in the U.S. now has little to do with public safety and rehabilitation and more to do with the development of a self-perpetuating, poverty-fueled, recession-proof industry and an accompanying socio-political accommodating labor aristocracy of prison guards, cops and staff as a support base for the interests of the ruling 1 percent.

Prison is a socially hostile microcosm of society’s contradictions, possessing the same race/class and state/class contradictions that currently define the socio-economic inequality that is capitalist Amerika. Prisons serve as warehouses for surplus labor, the poor and those who have been forced to the bottom rung of society. It is the systemic race/class disparities, intentional criminalization and underdevelopment of poor communities and social apathy which have forced most offenders into the underground economy as the only viable option to survive.

This is unacceptable and unsustainable, equally repugnant, fundamentally inhumane, and illegal as the continued gross violation of the U.N. Convention Against Torture – to which the U.S. is a signatory and we agree is the law of the land – which prohibits long-term solitary confinement for extracting information, political views or as punishment for any reason – which is the very purpose of SHU units – as torture, but it is being practiced in numerous U.S. prisons with government approval. The continued indefinite confinement of human beings in SHUs, SMUs and other supermax torture units must be abolished in the U.S., as they violate the basic tenets of human rights this nation has sworn to uphold. The basis of true rehabilitation, such as tech and computer-based vocational programs, access to higher education for prisoners and community-based parole boards must become the new order of the day. This is the only way to guarantee true justice in an unjust social arrangement and see our imprisoned citizens are capable of making a meaningful contribution to our society and prosperity.

The disproportionate distribution of wealth, privilege and opportunity in a society is the origin of all crime. The U.S. has one of the greatest disparities between haves and have nots on earth.

7. We want an end to all corporate and financial influences in the political process in the U.S. We recognize, since its inception, the nature and structure of U.S. society has been one of the rich, for the rich and by the rich, in which the 99 percent have served as a source of exploited labor and a consumer market for the goods and services of those who own the means of production. This pattern of usurpations has evolved into a political process in which public policies and elected officials are more often than not determined by lobbying dollars, manipulation of public opinion by corporate-controlled mass media, and the overwhelming influence of financial markets and industries on policies and policymakers, effectively marginalizing the people, their interests and their will, reducing them to pawns in a game of corporate pandering. This will stop now. The U.S. will finally become a nation of the people, for the people and by the people, where only individual citizens may have any influence in the nature and structure of the democratic process in the U.S. This means banning all lobbyists, donors, financial market proxies, strategic advisers and special interest groups from local, state and federal electoral and legislative processes in the U.S. We are sick of this “legalized” corruption.

8. We want an end to imperialist wars of aggression and sending our youth off to kill and die to enforce the economic interests of big oil and other corporate concerns seeking new resources to exploit, new markets to open for sale of their goods and services and as an impetus to keep from addressing domestic ills. We recognize, as Bolton Hall said, “If there is a war, you will furnish the corpses and the taxes and others will get this glory. Speculators will make money out of it, that is, out of you (us).” Thousands of our young men and women died in Iraq and across the Middle East and caused the deaths, either intentionally or unintentionally, of many thousands more Third World people, all based on the lies of greedy and bloodthirsty politicians with multiple ties to big oil and corporate interests. The current administration has only slightly modified this same imperialist tendency by shifting it to a more palatable target at the cost of billions of our tax dollars and thousands of our youth that could have been contributing to the prosperity of the nation and its people. We support our young men and women, but we do not support imperialism.

9. We want a bottoms-up approach to economic development and labor-capital relations in the U.S. This nation is empowered by “we the people,” the 99 percent, to secure our rights to life, liberty, and prosperity; yet we recognize the state has aligned itself so intimately for so long with the exclusive interest of the ruling 1 percent that it has become enamored exclusively to a top-down approach to socio-economic and political solutions which always favors the rich first and everyone else when or if possible. This has resulted in a 281 percent increase in the growth of wealth in the top 1 percent of this nation, while the bottom 90 percent have seen their incomes flat over the past 20 years. We recognize that this fascist alliance between corporate capital and government has become obstructive to the ends of securing the rights of life and prosperity to the 99 percent of this nation’s people and will now come to an end. Socio-economic and political policy must now uplift the quality of life from the bottom rung up – empowering the disenfranchised, providing opportunities for those with no options and directing bailouts and subsidies to the people, not banks and billionaires. We recognize the state has thus far been a tool to guarantee the dominance of one class over others, of the 1 percent over the 99 percent, and that arrangement will now come to an end.
Socio-economic and political policy must now uplift the quality of life from the bottom rung up – empowering the disenfranchised, providing opportunities for those with no options and directing bailouts and subsidies to the people, not banks and billionaires.

10. We want a more equitable distribution of wealth, justice and opportunity at every level of society, reflecting the objective reality that it’s the socio-economic, political, intellectual and cultural contributions of the 99 percent upon which this society stands. We recognize that there is enough food in this nation that no one need be hungry, enough unoccupied structures in this nation that no one need be homeless, enough educators, institutions, knowledge and technology in this nation that no one need be without a degree or skilled trade, enough work to be done that no one needs to be without a job; and it is only due to the insistence of an entrenched, super-rich 1 percent and their stranglehold on every institution and apparatus of this nation’s infrastructure from the government to the mass media that their opulence and privilege be maintained at the expense of the 99 percent. We recognize that this is not our national reality, the ruling class has mismanaged our society – woefully and criminally mismanaged – and those in power at every level are either unable or unwilling to change the nature and structure of capitalist society. So it falls to us, the 99 percent, to forge a new basis upon which socio-economic relationships will be based, ushering in a new social order in Amerika and around the world, that serves the interests of all the people and not simply the privileged few.

For an hour a few times a week, prisoners in the Corcoran SHU are allowed to "exercise" in these yard cages. It is our request that all of you please send a copy of this proposal to each individual Occupy Movement coalition, which includes but is not limited to Occupy Wall Street (New York City), Occupy Oakland, Occupy NOLA (New Orleans), Occupy San Francisco, Occupy Boston, Occupy L.A. (Los Angeles), Occupy Seattle, Occupy UC Davis, Occupy Phoenix, Occupy Fresno, Occupy Cleveland, Occupy Chicago et al. Post a copy of this proposal online at as many sites for the Occupy movement as possible. Post it on Facebook, blog sites and wherever social commentary is held.

In addition, we call on each individual Occupy Movement to begin organizing in and with the underclass communities in your city or town and for all my brothers and sisters in the ghettos, projects, barrios and trailer parks across this nation to begin organizing with Occupy Movement coalition reps around collective programs that can serve to begin realizing these 10 core demands by our unity and contributions alone. The NCTT, both here in Corcoran SHU and Pelican Bay SHU are committed to making meaningful contributions to the development of such community action programs, which we will outline in our next communication.
We call on each individual Occupy Movement to begin organizing in and with the underclass communities in your city or town and for all my brothers and sisters in the ghettos, projects, barrios and trailer parks across this nation to begin organizing with Occupy Movement coalition reps around collective programs that can serve to begin realizing these 10 core demands by our unity and contributions alone.


But what must be understood is social movements of this nature are supported only to the degree that their ideas find resonance in the psychological structures of the masses, but even this is not enough. To ensure the realization of any substantive change in the nature and structure of U.S. capitalist society and to prevent this movement from being isolated and neutralized by the forces of repression, it must be firmly embedded in as broad a cross-section of this population as possible.

There are some 47 million people in Amerika living below the poverty line, another 150 million or so barely getting by – two thirds of this nation’s population, all of them part of the 99 percent. It is here that we will find our most lasting support, and thus it is here that you must begin forging meaningful ties. These are overwhelmingly New Afrikan (Black), Latino, immigrant and poor communities.

You champion us all with your ideas and the courage of your convictions, just as we continue to support you with our sacrifices and insight. It is now time to take the movement to its next evolution and ultimately to its inevitable conclusion: victorious revolutionary change.

Your greatest power lies in your unity and cooperation and ultimately your organizational ability. The power of the people far surpasses all the repressive violence of the Babylons attacking you/us or the wealth of the 1 percent, who will stop at nothing to silence us all.

The power of the people far surpasses all the repressive violence of the Babylons attacking you/us or the wealth of the 1 percent, who will stop at nothing to silence us all.

This is a protracted struggle; there will be no 90-day revolution here. Victory will require sacrifice, tenacity and competent strategic insight. The question you must ask is, Are you prepared to do what is necessary to win this struggle? If you answer in the affirmative, commit to victory and accept no other alternative. The people, as we are, are with you. Until we win or don’t lose, our love and solidarity to all those who love freedom and fear only failures.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Hip Hop Occupies Call-To-Action for West Coast Port Shutdown.

hiphopoccupies.com
Hip Hop Occupies is calling upon youth and artists in Seattle and beyond to come out in full force December 12th in support and solidarity for the West Coast Port Shutdown.

HHO endorses this day of direct action as not only an opportunity to make a political statement against budget cuts and on-going police brutality, but also to create astrategic profit loss within the toxic capitalist economic system.

From Seattle to San Diego, oppressed peoples of all backgrounds are mobilizing to shut down the power of the 1% in this coordinated national effort.

We choose to occupy capital, not capitol buildings, because we are no longer waiting to have our voices validated at the whim of elected officials.

It is the fact that the Port Shutdown is pushing the Occupy Movement in a more active, coordinated direction that Hip Hop Occupies stands in solidarity.

It has historically been a West Coast tradition to push the envelope of culture and struggle in this way. From the Black Panthers to Freestyle Fellowship, from NWA to the 1919 Seattle General Strike, the West Coast stays innovating.

Following in the footsteps of these West Coast innovators in both Hip Hop and Revolutionary struggle, Hip Hop Occupies to Decolonize Seattle is helping to coordinate rallies at 1pm, 3pm, and 6pm on Monday, December 12th. We are asking all our allies in the artist community to come MC, paint, dance, and create in the name of freedom and self-determination.

 Monday, December 12th, 2011. Westlake Park and Port of Seattle.

Event Schedule:
*12:00pm: Hip Hop Occupies Artist Check-In at Westlake Park (4th and Pine)
*1:00pm: Rally and Performances at Westlake Center
*3:00pm: Rally and Performances at Port of Seattle (Spokane Street)
*6:00pm: Rally and Performances at Spokane Street Fishing Area

To participate, perform, speak and/or share at any of the D12 rallies in

Seattle, call (425) 223-7787, email HipHopOccupies@gmail

*Video of Support for D12 featuring Boots Riley of the Coup: http://youtu.be/OGqncu3wlEI
*For more info on the West Coast Port Shutdown visit: http://www.westcoastportshutdown.org/
*For more Info on Hip Hop Occupies to Decolonize visit: http://www.hiphopoccupies.com/

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Occupy Seattle Militants Seize Building at 10th and E. Union St. For A Hot Second.



From 6pm ish to 3am ish, the space featured in the video above was held peacefully, even with the presence of a few dumb liberals and a few remnants from the dictatorship of the self-medicated. 

We had impromptu food, general assembly, live music, and more.  Sadly, but not unexpectedly, Seattle Police SWAT came in through the roof. Most of us escaped via the main exit, plus additional "secret" exits we made ourselves. 15 people were arrested when they decided to lock arms and "go down with the ship", so to speak. They are out now. 

Big up to the revolutionary anarchist, Marxist, and [inter]national liberation/PoC organizations involved in this effort. We have shown that we can come together and make it happen. December 12th is right around the corner (lol)...

Wake Up, God Dammit! Decolonize/Occupy it all!

Thursday, December 1, 2011

The 14 Characteristics Of Fascism.

Dr. Lawrence Britt. Free Inquiry magazine, Spring 2003

[Dr. Britt, a political scientist, studied the fascist regimes of Hitler (Germany), Mussolini (Italy), Franco (Spain), Suharto (Indonesia), and Pinochet (Chile). He found the regimes all had 14 things in common, and he calls these the identifying characteristics of fascism.]


1. Powerful and Continuing Nationalism -- Fascist regimes tend to make constant use of patriotic mottos, slogans, symbols, songs, and other paraphernalia. Flags are seen everywhere, as are flag symbols on clothing and in public displays.

2. Disdain for the Recognition of Human Rights -- Because of fear of enemies and the need for security, the people in fascist regimes are persuaded that human rights can be ignored in certain cases because of "need." The people tend to 'look the other way' or even approve of torture, summary executions, assassinations, long incarcerations of prisoners, etc.

3. Identification of Enemies/Scapegoats as a Unifying Cause -- The people are rallied into a unifying patriotic frenzy over the need to eliminate a perceived common threat or foe: racial, ethnic or religious minorities; liberals; communists; socialists, terrorists, etc.

4. Supremacy of the Military -- Even when there are widespread domestic problems, the military is given a disproportionate amount of government funding, and the domestic agenda is neglected. Soldiers and military service are glamorized.

5. Rampant Sexism -- The governments of fascist nations tend to be almost exclusively male-dominated. Under fascist regimes, traditional gender roles are made more rigid. Opposition to abortion is high, as is homophobia and antigay legislation and national policy.

6. Controlled Mass Media -- Sometimes the media is directly controlled by the government, but in other cases, the media is indirectly controlled by government regulation, or through sympathetic media spokespeople and executives. Censorship, especially in wartime, is very common.

7. Obsession with National Security -- Fear is used as a motivational tool by the government over the masses.

8. Religion and Government are Intertwined -- Governments in fascist nations tend to use the most common religion in the nation as a tool to manipulate public opinion. Religious rhetoric and terminology is common from government leaders, even when the major tenets of the religion are diametrically opposed to the government's policies or actions.

9. Corporate Power is Protected -- The industrial and business aristocracy of a fascist nation often are the ones who put the government leaders into power, creating a mutually beneficial business/government relationship and power elite.

10. Labor Power is Suppressed -- Because the organizing power of labor is the only real threat to a fascist government, labor unions are either eliminated entirely or are severely suppressed.

11. Disdain for Intellectuals and the Arts -- Fascist nations tend to promote and tolerate open hostility to higher education, and academia. It is not uncommon for professors and other academics to be censored or even arrested. Free expression in the arts is openly attacked, and governments often refuse to fund the arts.

12. Obsession with Crime and Punishment -- Under fascist regimes, the police are given almost limitless power to enforce laws. The people are often willing to overlook police abuses, and even forego civil liberties, in the name of patriotism. There is often a national police force with virtually unlimited power in fascist nations.

13. Rampant Cronyism and Corruption -- Fascist regimes almost always are governed by groups of friends and associates who appoint each other to government positions, and who use governmental power and authority to protect their friends from accountability. It is not uncommon in fascist regimes for national resources and even treasures to be appropriated or even outright stolen by government leaders.

14. Fraudulent Elections -- Sometimes elections in fascist nations are a complete sham. Other times elections are manipulated by smear campaigns against (or even the assassination of) opposition candidates, the use of legislation to control voting numbers or political district boundaries, and the manipulation of the media. Fascist nations also typically use their judiciaries to manipulate or control elections.