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Blogs are a familiar feature on the internet - where users post content in an accumulating manner, with comments, and search options, etc. They facilitate expression and exploration, and via attached comments, also debate and synthesis.


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Our blogs are quite powerful. Each writer can post, as is typically the case. Sustainers who have the option can also post, however. All Blogs appear in the blog system, and sometimes also in content boxes the top page of ZNet - and always via the left menu of the top page - and can be found via searches, etc.

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  • For example one can look at one writer's efforts - so one is seeing what is effectively a blog system for that one writer, or Sustainer.
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All this is easily done using the left menu. Searches allow even more variables and refinements.


Creating Blog Posts

If you are a Sustainer with permission, and are logged in, you will see a link in the left menu for you to post a blog - and you can use that to post one, and then tag it various ways (such as with a topic or place, or a group tag), and once you do, it is in the system with you as the author.

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Meanwhile, enjoy the blogs - and, by the way, if you are a Free Member or a Sustainer with a ZSpace page, of course you can put one or more content boxes on it, pulling blog links of any sort you may want to filter for, for example, by you or by your friends or by others - and by topic, about places, for groups, etc.

Blogs

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Judy Rebick's Blog

Web Address: http://www.zcommunications.org/zspace/judyrebick
Bio: Judy Rebick is a long-time feminist and social justice activist living in Toronto  who currently holds the CAW Sam Gindin Chair in Social Justice and Democracy at Ryerson University.  Jud... (More)

All Rebick Blogs

Throwing stones through windows is not a revolutionary tactic

By Judy Rebick at Feb 16, 2010


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The first time I ran into people who believed that breaking windows was a revolutionary act was in 1972.  We had just had 21 people arrested for occupying the campus at University of Toronto to set up a tent city for transient youth.  We called it Wachea, a place where everyone was welcome, or so we thought.  A radical new left group called Red Morning tried to convince the assembled masses that going back to the University and "trashing it," in the parlance of the day, was the best way to protest the arrests.  It was the moment I stepped into leadership, debating them for hours, saying that more violence was counter productive and would give more strength to the arguments against us.  Instead we should protest on the grounds of Queen's Park and demand that the government give us land for our transient community.   In those days we didn't have the notion of "diversity of tactics."  We believed in the group who was organizing the demonstration deciding democratically what to do.   Red Morning withdrew their proposal since they couldn't convince us.

I was in the my early twenties then, named in an injunction against the occupation, and risking prison, but still unwilling to see how deliberate vandalism furthers a cause.  It's almost forty years later, and protesting the Olympics is a much more important issue than setting up a tent city for transient youth, but breaking windows still risks derailing the important Indigenous rights, anti-poverty and anti-corporate messages of the thousands of protesters on the streets of Vancouver.

As anyone who follows my work knows, I think the youthful anti-globalization movement that became visible in Seattle in 1999 has been responsible for some wonderful innovations in organizing and protesting.  I am a big supporter of non-violent direct action, including, when needed, blockading streets and bridges to show the importance of an issue.  I support horizontal networked organizing so that particular groups can take responsibility for the issues and actions that mean the most to them.

But if diversity of tactics means that people who aim to commit vandalism and sometimes violence can come into the middle of a demonstration with black face masks and break up whatever takes their fancy when the vast majority of people involved don't want them to, then I draw a line.  It's true that violent action gets more publicity, but it's the wrong publicity that is about the violence itself, not about the issue. 

Protesting these Olympics is tricky ground.  VANOC has gotten the participation of four host First Nations, run the torch through communities that have never had that kind of attention before, embedded media sponsors so that it is practically impossible for them to write anything critical about the games, and promoted a level of patriotism rarely seen in these parts.  Nevertheless, groups in the Vancouver have done an outstanding job of crafting their protest in a way that has persuaded the  majority in BC that the Games are not good for the province.

International coverage of the protests has been excellent  Here is a slide show from Huffington Post.  But in Canada, the coverage has been underplayed, so the only thing a lot of Canadians have seen of the protest is the window breaking.  

When a spontaneous anger against the Black Bloc emerged on social media, people berated us for "dividing the movement." But it is the Black Bloc tactics that are creating these divisions.  Lots of new activists tell me they believe anyone who commits these violent acts are police agents.  That would be easy, but it's not true. 

There are agent provocateurs, particularly trying to infiltrate more militant actions and move them to violence as we saw a couple of years ago in Montebello.  False accusations have also been part of police over-reaction to demonstrations that get violent like the 600 arrests in Seattle in 1999 and the arrest of Jaggi Singh in Quebec City in 2001.  But there are people, and I have debated with them, who really believe that these tactics, by provoking a police over-reaction, reveal that the state is in essence an armed body of men, thus radicalizing people on the march.

The "diversity of tactics" approach does not allow us to debate these issues.  It is not whether to defend the people arrested in Vancouver who are. no doubt, in the majority peaceful protesters.  It is about whether a small group of people should be able to put thousands of people in jeopardy of being tear gassed, beaten and arrested without their consent.  Red zones don't work because if the police do over-react, they will find protesters in whatever zone they might be.  As the G8 and G20 plans are developing in Toronto, it is time to debate tactics before the event and if, as I suspect, the majority feels more or less like I do, to tell those enamoured of Black Bloc tactics to do it somewhere else, at a time where they don't put other people and the issues we are fighting for in jeopardy.

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punks acting anachronistically

By Addison, "R" at Feb 17, 2010 19:54 PM

 tO J. Rebick,

            You are a good purposeful correlation for "peace" and peace-Activism". That so many "punks" think they're "only-anarchists" always strikes me presciently, too! The punks are in two stats: aristocratic and communistic. That organizers do as you have stated "organize for non-Violence, and then to have to sit by and watch "stupidity" asserts that there is another way of manneristic-Exchange, not "violated peace-Polemics". The police-Brutality can make mishap into greater mistakes, has been proven in the two national conventions/u-S 2008--albeit the single-Party polarity that does not allow any, let alone all "political-Parties" full-Debate i oligarchic, anti-Democratic, and the epiphany of purveyance of "anti-Human: rights" atop the frequency of ohh-Weld, at least we have freedom-of-speech, that Libertarian polemic that "other people may not be good, but we won't say such" misallocation of "democracy-is-Peace"?

        I may add, however, that anti-war and anti-Arrests, must be better discussed in newsletters, inter-Nay networking, and that the demonstration-Speakers ought to have been heard by availability AGAiN and aGAIN, which has not been the case, yet? What is the cause, if unavailable to be resourced is the first question. Blatant "violence" makes police over-React, we've heard that times before...

              yours from the peace-Warrior,

                            "R" Addison

                             

                 

                   

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