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venezuela / colombia / antifascismo Friday May 11, 2012 02:42 byGrupo Libertario Vía Libre
En sus distintas labores como intelectual comprometido el profesor Renán ha participado en infinitas charlas, conferencias y seminarios ante estudiantes, trabajadoras, profesoras, en general miles de personas interesadas en el cambio social, contribuyendo enormemente al afianzamiento del pensamiento crítico en la academia en el país. Rechazamos decididamente las campañas difamatorias y las amenazas contra el profesor Renán, nos solidarizamos con él y todas las personas perseguidas por pensar en el territorio colombiano y llamamos a la defensa del pensamiento crítico, condición fundamental para el avance de un proceso de cambio social libertario en Colombia. Ver también:
venezuela / colombia / the left Tuesday May 08, 2012 04:44 byShawn Hattingh
For many people on the left, within and outside of Southern Africa, the ‘Bolivarian Revolution’ is seen as a beacon of socialist hope in a sea of capitalist despair. The reason why many leftists feel so strongly attached to this project, and promote it as an alternative, is because they have come to view it as a move by the Venezuelan state towards creating a genuine, free form of socialism or at the very least an experiment that profoundly breaks with the tenets of neo-liberalism.This article, however, questions the assumption that the Venezuelan state is embarking upon a path to create a truly egalitarian and free socialist society. It will, therefore, be argued that Venezuela is not in a transitional phase to socialism; rather it is a capitalist country where the private sector and important state-owned companies seek to maximise profits.It is argued that while some welfare is handed out by the State, this often sits side by side with other policies that are outright neo-liberal. In order to make the argument that Venezuela cannot be considered as heading in a socialist direction, this article engages and examines issues around the State’s nationalisation programme, its relations to multinational corporations, its community councils project and its social service programmes.
bolivia / peru / ecuador / chile / education Friday May 04, 2012 21:18 byFrente de Estudiantes Libertarios
north america / mexico / anarchist movement Tuesday May 01, 2012 06:59 byMiami Autonomy & Solidarity
Global Crisis; American NightmareA global economic crisis has brought a new Great Depression to the doorsteps of working class families. While the corporations, government officials, and bureaucracies are experiencing record profits and compensation, those who are least able to pay are expected to shoulder the majority of the burden. This collapse is placed upon the backs of workers, and even more to the most oppressed in working class communities, for example: working class women, immigrants, blacks, and latinos. Despite the promises of a Democratic congress and presidency, deportations of undocumented immigrants have dramatically increased since Obama took office, tearing communities apart and criminalizing whole populations. If we don’t fight back, the crisis may drive a permanent decline in our standard of living, deepen the domination over the oppressed, and widen the gaps in American society.But people are coming together and finding ways to support and struggle alongside each other in ways that haven’t been seen in generations. The potential of a mobilized, conscious, and active movement frightens those in power, and they are pouring money, resources, and repression into diverting potential movements. People all over the world are building new struggles: turning vacant foreclosures into homes, resisting tuition hikes and worsening education in universities, fighting cuts and injustice at work, resisting ICE deportations and challenging second class status for immigrants, launching fare strikes on transit against service cuts and fare hikes, and resisting racialized police brutality and violence against oppressed communities. Attempts to coopt these potential movements are coming out of the unions who fear changes in the comfortable relationships they have with management, from the NGOs who are funded by and keep their jobs through all those who profit off our suffering, and from the political machinery that wants to channel our anger into their careers. [Castellano]Other May Day statementsNorth America:
iberia / la izquierda Sunday April 22, 2012 23:16 byManu García
En los últimos meses se han sucedido los titulares relacionados con el País Vasco en los medios corporativos de todo el mundo. Sin embargo, tanto éstos como las grandes agencias de prensa de las que se nutren han tendido a transmitir una visión muy parcial y limitada, servil a los intereses capitalistas en juego, ocultando o tergiversando aspectos cruciales para entender dicha realidad.Es debido a este vacío y al gran interés y necesidad de información verídica y actualizada existente en la izquierda latinoamericana que decidimos ofrecerles a los lectores de Anarkismo.net, fundamentalmente a quienes nos leen desde estas latitudes, un punto de vista militante pero no por ello menos riguroso sobre la historia y la actualidad del País Vasco.Para ello hemos entrevistado a un compañero que conoce en profundidad las claves del conflicto y que gestiona un blog imprescindible para seguir la actualidad política vasca, “Borroka Garaia Da!”. |
Our main article listingTue 21 May, 02:22
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