It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 146
Episode Date: September 7, 2024All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. How DSA Politicians & the City of LA Betrayed a Tenant Movement The Anarchists of Chile feat. Andrew What Happe...ns When A US Volunteer Is Shot by the IDF? You can now listen to all Cool Zone Media shows, 100% ad-free through the Cooler Zone Media subscription, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts. So, open your Apple Podcasts app, search for “Cooler Zone Media” and subscribe today! http://apple.co/coolerzone See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, everybody.
Robert Evans here.
And I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode.
So every episode of the week that just happened is here in one convenient and with somewhat less ads package for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want.
If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week, there's going to be nothing new here for you, but you can make your own decisions.
Welcome to It Could Happen Here, a podcast about things falling apart and how to put them back together again.
This is an episode where both happen at the same time. I'm your host, Bia Wong, and we are returning to what I've realized
was, I think, one of the earliest things we ever covered on this show. In the sort of misty depths
of time, which is, I guess, three years ago now, we talked to some organizers and tenants from the
Hillside Villa Tenant Association, and a bunch of stuff has happened since then a lot of it is terrible some of it is cool
well okay the stuff the stuff you've been doing is cool the stuff everyone else in this situation
has been doing is terrible oh yeah and and with me to talk about this is janice you who's an
organizer from ccud and on a a tenant organizer at a hellside villa
or via jesus christ why am i doing villa oh i know more i know more spanish than this i i i i know
enough spanish that when people think that i'm spanish and start talking to me on the street i
can kind of communicate with them abject failure yeah welcome both to the show. Thank you. Thank you. It's both good and bad to be back.
Yeah.
I wish circumstances were better.
Yeah.
Thank you for having us and yeah, for staying in contact with us and trying to stay updated
with our fight at Hillside Villa.
Diana said, unfortunately, five, almost six years in, and we're still trying to find a solution to this epidemic of housing in Los Angeles.
Yeah, so let's start there. For people who don't remember this from many, many eons in the past, can you sort of remind people of what kind of organizing has been happening and the general situation of this building, of these landlords, and of the conditions of people who have to rent stuff in LA?
Yeah, I can kind of start with the bigger picture context and then, Ana, you definitely fill in
from your personal experience. But basically, Hillside Via is a building that was built in the
80s in Los Angeles, Chinatown. And it was meant to be affordable
housing. It had an affordable housing covenant for 30 years up until 2018. And as soon as that
expired, as would be expected, the landlord, Tom Botts, immediately tried to raise rent to market
rate, which for the low-income working class tenants that work
at Hillside Villa, it was a 200% rent increase, which is a de facto eviction. Folks who are paying
$800 in rent were now being asked to pay $2,500, which is literally impossible for some tenants who are
on fixed incomes. And so it was a huge issue for one of the largest buildings in LA Chinatown. It
has 124 units, multi-ethnic, multi-generational. And so as soon as that happened, I think one of
the tenants, Donya Luisa, who is no longer with us, called
the news channels and organizers got involved. And yeah, this was six years ago at this point.
And pretty early on in the fight, I think at the time we were working with the district one council member at the time, Gil Cedillo, who's an establishment Democrat.
And he had tried to negotiate a deal with Tom Botts, the landlord, for a 10-year extension
that ended up falling through because Botts reneged on it. And that was, I think, one of
the first moments where tenants realized we cannot trust these politicians
to liberate us, right, to actually solve the root issues. And so that's when tenants started
actually demanding to use eminent domain, which is the government's power to basically seize land
for public use, to actually use that power for affordable housing and to use
it as a long-term solution for all of these expiring covenants, which is a citywide issue.
It's not just a Chinatown thing. There's actually thousands of buildings where covenants are set to
expire in the next few years. So that was how this fight was going.
And we had actually successfully pressured our city council in 2021 in May, which was, I think,
the first time we came on the show to set aside the funding to actually do that and to actually
take bold action for housing. And yeah, I'll pass it
over to Anai to just share from your own experience. Thanks. I don't know how I could follow that,
but I'll try my best. Yeah. So like Janice was sharing, the covenant expired in 2018.
There was already an attempt to evict my family um as i shared in the previous episode so after
that is when we all started organizing and then shortly after uh the pandemic happened and
everything shut down during this time the landlord tom botts like wasn't stopping he was uh going full throttle into his mission of completely
evicting and displacing all the families living here in chinatown the multi-generational families
that have been in los angeles not known nowhere else you know this is this is our home los angeles
is our home so with this ev, it meant that we'd have to
first be houseless, be out on the street and be forced to like figure something out last minute
for ourselves and move to somewhere in the outskirts of Los Angeles to a place where we're
not familiar with. So these are some of the things that we were facing then during the pandemic and also facing continued rental increases, which were illegal during the pandemic.
And it's something that we've been dealing post pandemic and recently in a lot of our more current meetings. to light that these were illegal rental increases that had happened and that he actually asked the
city to pay back right yeah so we had applied to erap which is basically a rental relief program
to support tenants and what bots did was he asked the government to pay him the increased rent rates,
the 200% increased rates and the government fucking gave it to him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And yet he is still demanding that tenants themselves pay back their rent
debt fully.
And what happened with the recent deal that was made behind tenants back,
which is what we're going to get into, is that the government basically took the extra money back
and are not applying it to the tenants rent debt. So that's something that we're pretty pissed off
about because basically they took money that was supposed to be for tenants
and just gave it back to the city government which also doesn't even make sense because it
was federal funding so that's kind of one of the issues yeah so we have a situation where
the landlord has stolen this money and then the city has now stolen it from him, which they have stolen federal money for themselves.
Oh, Jesus Christ. Literally.
Oh, God. Yeah, it's all just like state-sanctioned
theft. You know what else is a structural problem that is
causing the mass evisceration of most of the population on Earth? It is the
products and services that support this podcast, and we're going to go to them briefly. We are back. So is there anything else from sort of, I guess,
like the background era of this that we want to get to before we move into like what's been happening now yeah i think maybe
some additional context we can share is that after that may 2021 council meeting we ended up
really supporting our current council member avanice's in her campaign to get elected. This was November of 2021. We hosted large forums in Chinatown. We really
mobilized our base in CCD to turn out to vote for her. And I think a powerful anecdote is that
Richard, one of the longest Vietnamese tenants at Hillside Villa, he's been there for over 30 years.
For him, this was the first vote that he ever cast in this country.
And I think that, you know, is not a unique story.
I think for a lot of our elders, it was only because of our efforts that they participated in this election.
So I think a lot of the statistics show that the Asian base, the Chinatown base, was really essential to getting Aeneas elected.
And in 2022, she officially got an office.
She was able to beat the incumbent Gil Cedillo
and was the first, quote-unquote, abolitionist DSA,
so Democratic Socialists of America,
kind of sponsored candidate to win an L.A. city council.
And since then, we've only seen her maybe two or three times to address the issues at Hosea Dia, even though during her campaign phase, she rhetorically supported our eminent domain struggle.
She rhetorically supported our eminent domain struggle.
She made a lot of promises, as politicians do, around housing in Chinatown.
And yeah, I think that kind of brings us up to where we are now.
Yeah.
So let's get into what is currently happening, because dear God, it's really, I don't know,
things are somehow getting worse. What's been happening in the last i guess
immediate period yeah so wow so much has happened and it's really hard to actually like keep track
of yeah all of the the big things whether they positive, mostly negative things happening, just so much has happened over the last three years.
We've been in the fight for six years.
city hall where there would be an evaluation of the building in order for the city to purchase a hillside villa or last resort would be expropriate through eminent domain although
that was never something that the people in power at lahd or that politicians really stood behind and like always wanted to try um something a little
less radical yeah therefore going into negotiations working with the landlord
and having these conversations with the landlord with, with us, somewhat in the picture, but mostly not in the picture,
and that was done on purpose on behalf of LAHD and Tom Botts and the politicians at CD1.
So because we were waiting for this evaluation to happen at Hosa de Villa, I believe
LAHD needed to do that evaluation. Well, the landlord, Tom Botts, didn't allow them to come
into the building to do that evaluation because it was private property and they needed some kind of court order like permit or paperwork
to allow the city lehd to come into the building to evaluate that actually halted the process of
evaluating um in order to purchase the building and actually had tenants waiting for this evaluation to happen for months
if not over a year and you can imagine how tenants felt like if they were like suffocating
under these circumstances of waiting for the city to act for tom bots to allow and there was always this resistance with the landlord and with getting
L.A.H.D. to get up off their ass and actually do something unfortunately the chair of L.A.H.D.
her name is Ann Sewell I'm sure a lot of people have heard her name by now.
She is not our friend. She's wicked and in not a cool way. She actually has some conflict of
interest, in my opinion, that shouldn't have allowed her to even be in that position that
she's in and to have such power over a case like ours at hillside villa
where she was going into negotiations with tom bots and she's also a landlord and a white woman
oh jesus christ so it's a double whammy there and yeah she became really buddy-buddy friendly with Tombots. And that is when negotiations began between her and Tombots behind the lucha, the fight for housing, behind the organizers' backs, behind communities' back.
And so we rallied, we protested, we did phone banks for over a year and things were so stagnant.
Like I can't even express to you how, how that at least that one year was.
And, and that's part of like, since the last time we were here on this podcast was three
years ago, well, a year or more of that was us just waiting around for the city to actually
do their job and we can't get them to do their job yeah but we can protest and we can do direct
action and so we did and we pulled up to Ansel's house not once not twice we rallied the housing community to go protest at her home and to make her uncomfortable
because at any moment any of us can get kicked out of our home you know there's no sense of
security here and we're never there to cause harm you know to anyone no physical harm or anything
but we're there to also like kind of get her to understand how
uncomfortable it is and how like safe she is in in her own home right so she called cops on us
she targeted organizers by name it was really sloppy on their end and yeah so i think i'll
i'll stop there and um janice if you want to kind of add anything,
I'm sure you have a lot to add.
No, yeah, that was a really thorough summary.
I think all I want to add is that
while bots was denying the city access to the building,
which we questioned deeply
because why couldn't a tenant just give them access to the
building why do they need like special permission from the landlord it's all just smoke and mirrors
right delay tactics put on by this trifecta of lhd which is the la housing department so the
bureaucrats and then cd1 city council 1, the politicians and then bots, they're all completely aligned with each other in their end goal of essentially protecting capital, protecting landlords. He initiated the eviction process. He started evicting tenants,
the 35 plus families that are deeply involved in the tenants association.
He sent eviction papers to all of them.
So Anai, maybe you can speak to a little bit
of what that experience was like to get those papers
while the eminent domain process
wasn't moving forward like it was supposed to definitely well speaking on behalf of like
my mom who I live here with and who's lived here for over 12 years and speaking on behalf of other
tenants a lot of them are elders over 50 years old, have lived here for
over 20, 30 years. They definitely felt the burden of those eviction papers and the anxiety,
the heavy emotions that comes with being at fear of losing your home at any moment,
fear of like losing your home at any moment yeah the health issues that come up with that so they they definitely felt a lot of that and as much as much as we've been fighting as much
support as we have from the community like they still felt that insecurity of their housing for me For me, as someone in their 20s and where we've been in this fight for over six years or about six years, I felt like we've gone through the eviction process.
And I don't fear Tom Botts and I don't fear his tactics or his eviction papers.
So there's definitely a difference in the way that like a
lot of our elders feel, but I do have a lot of trust in the organizing that we're doing,
the solidarity, although things haven't necessarily been all like happy and like
we're still not really getting the things that we've been demanding for
i have a lot of trust that we're gonna be able to win those evictions and we know how weak
tom botts is his way of thinking and how weak their lawyers are so we must keep pushing there's no other way and and we will until this is over if
it is ever over unfortunately we need to go to ads then we will come back with not ads and instead
more incredibly beautiful stories to struggle we are back i guess i promised struggle and i didn't i should have added and also betrayal
because that's kind of the next part of this absolutely let's talk about that and the deals that are being cut yeah so at the beginning of this year uh we learned
that a deal had been negotiated between lhd and bots completely behind tenants backs and we had
frustrating meetings with anisa's our council member where she was not willing to take a public stance, you know,
against these backdoor negotiations. And so in April of this year, about four months ago,
there was another motion that was heard in LA City Council when the kind of details of this deal were actually revealed and they are just obscene.
Basically Tom bots is being paid $15 million by the LA government and
having a $5 million loan that he has owed the city for,
I think the 30 years,
um,
since he said via was first bill,
he's having that loan forgiven with
zero percent interest and all of that is just to extend the affordability covenant for a mere 10
years um which might sound like a lot to some folks but in reality is not a lot at all it just
means that the children who are in middle school now will be in college
and have to fight this fight another time. And so that happened for bots. Great for him.
Whereas tenants are being asked to pay back over $1.5 million collectively of back rent with three percent annual interest added on yeah and yeah their
eviction cases were not being dropped they were promised to get their eviction case dropped but
what happened was that this month one of our key tenant leaders, Adela, her case was moved forward in the courts by bots.
And we believe it was basically like a test case to basically pressure tenants to sign
the new contracts, threatening if you don't sign, this is what's going to happen to you
too.
And she is supposed to have a court date in September or October.
So the timing is very obvious, right?
You time this so that tenants would sign these new contracts that we were told would come out
last week. It ended up being that they didn't come out till a little bit later. And when we
actually received the details of the new lease, we were even further taken
aback because some of the details of this lease are just really wild.
You know, it's a complete regression from any kind of tenant law or tenant protection
against harassment.
Some of the things that this new lease includes is that there are behavioral stipulations
is what they're being called yeah just that term itself right is so cursed but the stipulations say
that if a tenant merely plays amplified sound in any of the public communal spaces of the building or records slash slanders slash
harasses the landlord or management they can be immediately evicted without a jury trial jesus
like that is yeah that is insane you know these are clearly anti-organizing policies because these are some of our tools are
to amplify sound and to and it's our right to be able to record landlord management when they are
usually the ones harassing us yeah they are always the ones harassing us right so that's one of the
key issues with the new lease also the eviction cases are not even being dropped after
tenants sign this new lease. They're merely being suspended and the court actually retains
jurisdiction for six years over the eviction cases, which is not something that any of the
tenant lawyers we have worked with have ever seen before. And what this means is that if the tenants are late just one day on the rent plus the debt repayment that bots is asking for, they can also be language saying that the tenants are responsible for
paying his lawyer fee which are up to oh my god are up to thirty thousand dollars and he is also
demanding that the tenants pay his lawyer fees with three percent interest jesus christ so he's Jesus Christ. we did at her house saying that she would recommend that one of her family members
signs this deal which essentially signs their rights away yeah and commits them to paying
an exorbitant amount of money to get evicted so yeah this is what we're dealing with yeah and i
want to kind of focus in on that last part because that is a dsa
elected like that is one of the people that she ran that was also very specifically was you know
like someone who was elected off of your organizing and is now instantly turned around and gone i i
would tell my own family to pay this guy's lawyer to evict you, which is nuts.
Yeah, hardly socialist, hardly progressive, hardly even liberal at this point, right?
It's just such naked, blatant protection of neoliberalism.
And she not only called this a good deal she when we brought up the behavioral
restrictions she referred to those as simply good neighbor policies that we all have to abide by
yeah which is ridiculous what
so just completely normalizing the landlord you know maximizing his power gaining more power than
any landlord has ever had in this city and completely restricting the tenants right to
organize and to fight against harassment yeah yeah and i think this raises a really important
question about what are we actually doing as a movement for people who aren't involved in this, like who aren't involved directly in the tenants organizing?
Like, if the thing that you're doing is putting people like this in power who get elected off a movement and immediately turn on them and side with landlords, what is your political project supposed to be doing, right?
landlords what is what is your political project supposed to be doing right and if this is something that you're okay with you need to sit down re-evaluate what you actually believe and it's
something that you're not okay with you need to sit down also and ask yourself how did it come to
this and why is this something that you think is acceptable yeah a thousand percent. So far, even though we protested Aionisa's last weekend, we haven't really heard from DSA folks in terms of actually publicly supporting us and publicly holding Aionisa's accountable. So that's something that we would like to see ideally yeah it's like like again like i know there are dsa people in la listening to this show like please come collect your trash like this is this is this is your problem and you also have
to be part of the solution to dealing with it because right now what you have is a situation
where a bunch of tenants and a bunch of tenant organizers are fighting your people at the same
time as they're also fighting the landlords and the rest of the city governments and the city bureaucracy
and this is this is a situation that i think is just absolutely unacceptable and that can be
intervened in by people who are supposed to be doing this and haven't been yeah speaking on that i have a lot of feelings around that and
as someone that has experienced a lot of displacement in echo park and now happening
in chinatown um it's something that's followed me my whole life and dealing directly with the
problem of like gentrification and the people coming into our neighborhoods or mostly liberal folks.
I know a lot of them benefit from the displacement and gentrification.
And it's really easy for them to look away or just kind of shrug their shoulders and just go have brunch at a new Echo Park or Highland
Park cafe. So definitely, thank you for calling that out. And yeah, we really need to like,
think radically and reimagine what it would look like to find a different solution where we're not relying on these politicians or yeah the city to to find
those solutions because it's evident that six years into our fight at hillside villa it's been
cyclical with their we're asking our council members to represent us and again and again they give us false promises and disappoint
us and there's complete hypocrisy and backstabbing um on behalf of the politicians and um you know
all these are tactics with the lahd making us wait for so long with Tom bots working with them. I think that's a tactic is
making the people, the community wait for so long that they get tired. They get tired of fighting.
They get tired of waiting. And unfortunately that has been a tactic that i've seen like has gotten to a lot of our elder folks
or people that are just fed up having to deal with the bureaucracy of it all that a lot of them kind
of not everyone for example me i'm still believe eminent domain could have been like a more radical
solution and a way for us to take that power back
from the city and the way that they use these laws to benefit them and that we could use like
eminent domain to help us for once but eminent domain was completely given up on on with like
certain tenants that were tired of fighting and wanted to reach an agreement and wanted to reach a deal.
So then we have this 15-year deal that is then turned into 10 years,
because those five years that we had been fighting is included into that 15 years.
included into that 15 years not only that but yeah he gets 15 million dollars plus his his debt to the city forgiven or extended i forget which one it is but this fool's a millionaire yeah he has
a bunch of houses in malibu he doesn't need any more money and it's just really disappointing that in a time like this
where we know that uh things aren't working anymore and that things needs to change that
again the city and the politicians are continuing to side with the landlords and continue the cyclical oppression of lack of
housing and lack of accessibility to housing that affected me as a child and that is gonna affect
the children that are around me now and the teenagers and the single parents so that's why we we need these uh
better solutions and yeah like um jenna said for the two or three years that unices has been around
in office we've only seen her two or three times she doesn't know what's going on half the time
and she is actively supporting shops here in
Chinatown that are gentrifying the community not only herself but her office is actively trying to
divide our organization and our tenant association yeah I think even during her initial
meetings with us she would kind of use this of, I don't want to hear from organizers, especially one of our most to hear from the tenants. And that dynamic actually like really got entrenched in our organizing where some tenants
then began to weaponize that. And so division, and she continues to use that as a talking point.
Like we saw during the most recent protest at her house, she continued to use that as a talking point like we saw during the most recent protest at her house she continued
to use both of these tactics weaponizing identity politics which was really ironic because as she
was saying that you know from one side of her mouth on the other side she's receiving advice
from this white hipster musician that she appointed to her office,
who's literally telling her every two minutes what is actually on this contract,
because she clearly has not read it.
So it was just really ironic to see that play out in real time.
She continued to say that she only wants to hear from tenants,
even though tenants are saying the same exact things that the organizers are,
but she's infantilizing them, right? By saying like, oh, you wouldn't believe these things
if these organizers weren't putting them into your brains. No, these tenants very much have
the ability to make their own decisions and their own critical thinking. And we're offering them information that they are then
taking in themselves. And then ultimately with the most recent protest, she just completely
gaslit us for demanding more than she's giving. The whole vibe was basically like, why aren't
you guys grateful for the 10-year extension? Why aren't you grateful to me for finding $250,000
to help you repay your debt?
Maybe we're not grateful
because when that $250,000 runs out,
tenants who are on fixed incomes
are immediately vulnerable to eviction.
And they're vulnerable to eviction
even before that,
if they even just blast their music
too loud in the patio
based on this lease
so yeah we we are very very pissed off at cd1 right now yeah yeah i think you know people people
listen to the show a lot like you should all recognize these tactics because these are all
incredibly standard union busting tactics like the whole like drag dragging out the first contract negotiation uh trying to do divide and conquer between the union and you know doing the oh these are outside
organizers like the union is an outside organizer this is all just straight up union busting 101
stuff exactly yeah i'm so glad you brought that word up because that's what we've been calling it
the past year um exactly like you said, third partying the union,
dragging out contract negotiations.
And I think the sad thing is that tenant organizing
has a lot less protections than labor organizing
or a lot less formalized law.
So we don't have things like the NLRB
that can maybe give us a little bit more teeth in fighting against unfair labor practices. So that could probably be a whole other conversation, a comparison between tenant and labor organizing, but so many promises and sweet talk so many of us and there's this like respectability
politics that a lot of even tenants became divided within our movement because they
put so much trust into her office and into the in their hands uh whereas other tenants were still very critical
and very hard on Eunice's anytime she was around we really questioned them and a lot of
the tenants didn't like that and they you know demanded that we not question them and that we behave in an educated manner. But look, look at what we have now. We have a contract that is completely has sold all of us out. and fooling the people into believing her,
into trusting those promises
or that she would actually have our best interest.
So here we are.
And these are some of the things
that we've also been dealing with in the association.
Yeah.
And just to quickly add on to the point
you were just making,
Anai, I think we've really
learned these past few years about the insidiousness of these so-called progressive
electeds, right, who come from some kind of left-leaning background. A.N. Euses comes from
La Defensa, which is a nonprofit thatprofit that has organized for you know certain kinds of
reforms within prison spaces and so she would constantly refer to herself as an organizer and
weaponize that right like as an organizer like i know what i'm doing and you guys can trust me
whereas with sadio the previous council member the
contradictions were just obvious like we knew this guy was bullshit um and you know we would just
be openly fighting him all the time but in a lot of ways us getting her elected i think made our
organizing harder because of the way that she would you know call us her fam which should have been a red flag
from the beginning right that's also another yeah yeah call your co-workers your family um
but yeah i think um that's definitely been a huge lesson the past few years
yeah and that's i think something is not very well understood about the way that sort of campaigns are destroyed is that, like, someone who is nominally on the same side of you is significantly more dangerous of an opponent than someone who isn't, right? in 1919-1920 there's this thing called the Benio Rosso this is the two red years the two red years
culminate in what becomes known as the occupation of the factories this is these mass sort of
workers movements sort of accumulating from all of the effects of the war and all of the sort of
oppression that's been happening for centuries in Italy and what happens is instead of calling
a conventional general strike in which you know workers leave the factories and allow bosses to
hold on to them workers instead just seize control and occupy the
factories they work in. This is why it's, you know, it's called the occupation of the factories.
And in this period, right, these workers have the capitalists on the ropes, right? Without control
of the factories, the bosses can't restart production with scabs. And more importantly,
it puts the workers in the position to simply drive the bosses out entirely and restart production under the control of the workers who work in these
places and who literally built the entire economic system that these capitalists have been profiting
from and this was the best chance any country in europe was ever going to get to defeat the
capitalists once and for all right this was this was the best they
were ever going to have but the workers oldest allies these are the socialists and social
democratic politicians in the socialist party opposed the occupations and these these socialist
party politicians these are their friends these are their comrades these are these are the people
who lead their unions i mean these are people who know, a lot of these people have spent 30 years organizing
with these people just to carve the workers movement out of sort of the stone of history.
These are the people, you know, who in a lot of cases, like they had gone to war with. So when
the social Democrats told them to mobilize and told them to go home and told them to, you know,
just give the fact the factories back to the capitalists and give up all of their leverage,
the workers listened. And once they've been totally demobilized there was no way for them to resist the fascists
mussolini marched on rome the next year and in the wake of the socialist betrayal the fascists
would rule italy for 25 years you have to be incredibly weary of of these people who
who take power from you know like the most personal example
to me is we have this with brandon johnson who was like a you know the the big he was the mayor
of chicago where i i guess technically now i don't live there but i lived there for ages
who was you know quote our quote-unquote movement mayor and then immediately started just fucking
putting migrants that had been like bust up in just like these
fucking horrible conditions in camps people were dying people were getting fucking terrible
diseases like buildings with mold in them like stuff that was been condemned like all of this
stuff happens and you know and it really kind of in a very similar way because this was you know
this was supposed to be one of us the The resistance to it has been really neutered.
And that's a dynamic that we haven't had as much in the US
because there hasn't been a left in this country
until really the last maybe decade.
And that's stretching it.
And now we need to actually get back to understanding
how this kind of stuff works.
Because more and more, the people who are going to be arresting you now you know we need to actually get back to understanding how this kind of stuff works because
more and more the people who are going to be arresting you are people who you know you use
people you used to be organizing with people people who you used to know and people who
even when you put a mic in front of their face will claim to be on your side yeah no those are
some really great comparisons to draw to and yeah i think we've definitely learned to be more vigilant collectively this
year yeah is there anything else that you two wanted to say before you wrap up yeah i think
it's really important to hold people accountable always as much as they don't want to be held
accountable uh they had to be still they probably won't but they still have a
responsibility to the community and yeah i think we need to do stick to direct action and less
working alongside of politicians because at the end of the day the same thing will happen again
and again will be sold out and it'll be a big waste of time so i think the collective
power of community in doing direct action always will be the solution and that's something that
i've learned more recently and the way that things have kind of unfolded with hillside villa and um lastly i know there are some key demands uh for cd1
we can share too so yeah i think picking up on what you were saying anai direct action has always
been our bread and butter to actually get meaningful results and we're already seeing it
after this recent protest at a unices house where cd1 um the city
council district is now completely changing their tune and saying oh this this lease was just a
draft like you don't have to feel pressured to sign it you can put together a counter proposal
and that is completely not what they were saying at all before the protest. They were really, really pressuring us to sign the lease.
And even at the protest, right?
AUNICE is recommending that a family member would sign it.
So we're already seeing the results.
And in our counterproposal, we plan to really highlight a few demands.
First and foremost, that the rent debt is turned into consumer,
non-evictable debt, no behavior stipulations. Those are bullshit. The eviction cases actually get dismissed and not suspended in court for six years. And finally, no $15 million for bots until
a fair deal is reached. And that's a key point of leverage because CD1 is acting as the escrow of the 15 million,
meaning that they're supposed to, yeah,
see if both parties,
so us and bots, quote unquote,
like fulfill what we're supposed to with the deal
before giving bots the 15 million.
And so they have so much power over this situation.
They keep throwing their hands up and saying they don't have power, but they can withhold the 15
million from him until he actually responds to some of these demands. So that's what we really
want to highlight in this moment. And for folks who want to kind of stay updated on the struggle,
our handle on both Twitter and Instagram, I believe, is hillside underscore via.
So feel free to check us out there and stay updated.
Yeah, we'll put the link down in the description too.
And on that note, thank you two both so much for coming on.
And yeah, fuck them. fuck the dsa electeds fuck the landlords fuck the housing department
i hope you hope you crush them all absolutely fuck them all thank you so much for having us
and yeah definitely the city uh a lot needs to be dismantled and reimagined and reconstructed, starting with housing and so much more.
But thank you again.
Yeah. And I encourage everyone listening to the show.
Give them hell.
Whoever them is in this scenario, give them hell. Hey, I'm Jack Peace Thomas, the host of a brand new Black Effect original series, Black Lit, the podcast for diving deep into the rich world of
Black literature. I'm Jack Peace Thomas, and I'm inviting you to join me and a vibrant community
of literary enthusiasts dedicated to protecting and celebrating our stories. Black Lit is for the
page turners, for those who listen to audiobooks while commuting or running errands, for those who find themselves seeking solace, wisdom, and refuge between the chapters. From thought-provoking novels to
powerful poetry, we'll explore the stories that shape our culture. Together, we'll dissect classics
and contemporary works while uncovering the stories of the brilliant writers behind them.
Black Lit is here to amplify the voices of Black writers
and to bring their words to life.
Listen to Blacklit on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hola, mi gente.
It's Honey German, and I'm bringing you Gracias, Come Again,
the podcast where we dive deep into the world of Latin culture,
musica, peliculas, and entertainment
with some of the biggest names in the game.
If you love hearing real conversations with your
favorite Latin celebrities, artists, and culture
shifters, this is the podcast for you.
We're talking real conversations with
our Latin stars, from actors and
artists to musicians and creators, sharing
their stories, struggles, and successes.
You know it's going to be filled with chisme
laughs and all the vibes that you love.
Each week, we'll explore everything from music and pop culture to deeper topics like identity, community, and breaking down barriers in all sorts of industries.
Don't miss out on the fun, el té caliente, and life stories.
Join me for Gracias Come Again, a podcast by Honey German, where we get into todo lo actual y viral.
Listen to Gracias Come Again on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Ed Zitron, host of the Better Offline podcast,
and we're kicking off our second season
digging into how tech's elite has turned Silicon Valley
into a playground for billionaires.
From the chaotic world of generative AI
to the destruction of Google search,
Better Offline is your unvarnished and at times unhinged look at the underbelly of tech from an industry
veteran with nothing to lose. This season I'm going to be joined by everyone from Nobel-winning
economists to leading journalists in the field, and I'll be digging into why the products you
love keep getting worse and naming and shaming those responsible. Don't get me wrong though,
I love technology, I just hate the people in charge and want them to get back to building Thank you. Listen to Better Offline on the iHot Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever else you get your podcasts.
Check out betteroffline.com.
Welcome to It Could Happen Here.
I'm Andrew Sage of the YouTube channel Andrewism,
and I'm excited to discuss yet another facet of anarchist history from another part of the room.
This time, we're taking a look at the history of anarchism in Chile. In my discussion of Peruvian anarchist syndicalism, I mentioned the cross-border contacts
between Peruvian and Chilean syndicalists, particularly of the IWW variety. So what else
were they doing in that time? How did syndicalism get started in Chile? Let's find out. All credit due to the work of Larry Gambone's
Anarchism in Chile, and especially José Antonio Guterres Danton's 1872-1995 Anarchism in Chile.
Without further ado, nos comencemos. During the French Revolution of 1848 that founded the French
Second Republic, which was part of the so-called Springtime of the Peoples where revolutions swept through Europe,
two notable figures of Chilean liberal revolutionary history
happened to be at Paris at the time.
Santiago Arcos and Francisco Bilbao.
Santiago Arcos was a Chilean liberal who lived in exile in Paris
because of his father's involvement with the independence government.
There he rubbed shoulders with French socialists and and liberals alike and also met Francisco Bilbao. Upon his
family's return to Chile they tried and failed to start a bank due to government pressure so his
father returned to Europe but Arcos stayed in Chile and after his father died he got a hefty
inheritance and would go on to take part in various struggles around Latin America.
Arcos also famously wrote Frontiers and Indians, A Question of Indians, in which he advocated for killing off of the indigenous people because it was cheaper than maintaining a garrison to protect
the settlers from attacks. Bit of a record scratch moment, but unfortunately typical of the time.
Francisco Bilbao was another Chilean liberal who
lived in Paris. Prior to his migration, he published a rather controversial article
to Chilean sociability, La Sociabilidad Chilena, which was condemned by Chilean authorities as
blasphemous and immoral for its critiques of the church and state. After his condemnation,
he moved to Peru,
where he was condemned for criticizing the Peruvian president, so he left for Paris, and in Paris he met Arcos, and upon their return to Chile, together, Arcos and Bilbao founded
La Sociedad de la Igualdad, or the Equality Society, which was marginally influenced by
mutualist thought. You see, anarchism first came to Chile by way of the
mutualist strain. Unfortunately, it was quickly suppressed by the conservative government,
but not before the establishment of the country's first mutual aid society of as many as 100
artisans. Those artisans would take part in the 1851 Chilean revolution against the conservative
government, which unfortunately didn't succeed. After the failure of the revolution against the conservative government, which unfortunately didn't succeed.
After the failure of the revolution, the conservative government began a program of
political persecution against the instigators of the uprisings, which included arrests and
deportations. Bilbao and Arcos were among those exiled. Other mutualist societies were formed in
the late 1850s as mutualism was gaining influence
among artisans like printmakers, shoemakers, and tailors. In 1862, the mutual aid society La Union
was founded as a general mutual for all artists of all trades in Santiago and offered both workshops
and medical services and established a school for artisans and their children. By the early 1860s, there were some 70 cooperatives, both consumer and producer.
By 1870, there were 13 neutrals which served to alleviate misery in spite of economic depression.
La Union branched out to over a dozen cities,
and in addition to education, health, and welfare, it formed a philharmonic society.
So why do you think these orgs became influential?
It's probably because they were practicing what they preached,
showing the proof of concept of their ideas through practical application
of the principles of liberty, neutrality, solidarity and self-education.
In 1872, the Chilean section of the International Workingmen's Association
was established in Valparaiso, which was a major coastal city in Chile. 1872 was also the year the
anarchists were kicked out of the Internacional, so the Chilean section didn't last too long,
but it did plant a seed. Libertarian ideas were spreading, particularly among the nitrate miners.
Keep that in mind for later. Then boom 1879 Chile goes to
war with Bolivia and Peru and actually wins which makes Bolivia landlocked and that's why it's still
to this day. The war profited the Chilean and English nitrate mine bosses and the Chilean state
but of course the workers themselves suffered. By 1880, there were 39 mutual aid
societies responding to those needs. After the war, in 1887, the Unión Republicana del Pueblo,
or People's Republican Union, was formed, with an anarchist platform. Not long after,
with a series of strikes by rail workers, miners, and others, the workers launched the first national general strike in 1890,
and it was brutally crushed, and followed by further brutality, as in 1891, the president
Balmaceda tried to press through reforms against the wishes of both Congress and foreign capital
interests, which led to a civil war. The workers suffered, say more, say more, and Balmaceda was
defeated and deposed, and then committed suicide.
Truly revolutionary anarchism came to Chile in the 1890s through an anarchist immigrant from Spain named Manuel Chinchilla.
Chilean anarchist Carlos Horquera was influenced by Chinchilla,
and together they formed the Centro de Estudios Sociales, or Center for Social Studies, in 1892,
and published the paper El Oprimido,
The Oppressed. Another group of anarchists from El Centro Social de Trabajadores, or Workers'
Social Center, founded the journal El Grito del Pueblo, The People's Scream. Among the other
societies and papers forming during this period included Sociedad de Protección al Trabajador y
Mutuo Apoyo, or Society for Workers' Protection and Mutual Aid,
and El Proletario, the Proletariat.
In 1894, the Chilean mutualists formed the Federación de Trabajadores de Chile,
or Workers' Confederation, the FDCH,
which was the first national federation of workers in Chilean history.
It wasn't all that radical, outside the context of conservative government, that is,
as it fought for social reform, as well as the usual activities of education and health insurance.
But it was influential.
By 1925, it had more than 100,000 members.
In 1898, there was a general strike in the coastal city of Iquique,
and new societies were formed like Partido Obrero Francisco Bilbao,
which became an
anarchist group in 1899, and resistance societies were also formed for railway workers and carpenters,
which would go on to play a major role in the Santiago general strike of 1907.
Magazines, as always, were also founded, like La Tromba, El Rebelle, and La Antorcha.
We also got to see the first demonstrations
against military service and the army in Chilean history. Under the slogan,
the army is the academy of crime. From 1900 to 1910, anarchists were the best organized of all
the radical groups, according to Larry Gambone, particularly in printmaking, baking, shoemaking, and the docks.
In 1900, there were 30 resistance societies, concentrated in central Chile among industrial workers.
The resistance societies were decentralized, rotated positions, acted autonomously, and were active in strikes.
By 1910, there were 433 resistance societies, with a total membership of 55,000.
The year 1900 also marked the establishment of mancomunales, or brotherhoods, within the movement, which fused the mutual aid societies with trade unions. The first mancomunale,
organized in Iquique, ballooned into a movement of 6,000 members, which was the majority of the nitrate and maritime workers in northern Chile.
The Mancomunale movement favored direct action and a much greater level of organization and solidarity than the resistance societies.
The resistance societies were local.
Mancomunales spanned large territories, uniting different trades on a city, then provincial,
then national level.
One of the accomplishments of these movements was the growing presence of worker strikes
empowered by solidarity.
In 1902, harbour workers staged a 60-day strike and in 1903 there was a general strike in
the port city Valparaiso, resulting in the murder of more than 100 workers by the state.
That rebellion spread to the cities of Antofagasta, Iota, and Coronel, and lasted for 43 days.
When the Mancomunales federated in 1904 as the Gran Mancomunal de Obreras, they brought together
20,000 members. A year after their federation was the red week of 1905. Tired of the inhuman
conditions, the cost of living, the high taxes, a workers' committee known as Centro de Estudia
Sociedad Ateneo Obrero called all workers to join the strike and to support the cause.
By October 22nd of 1905, 30,000 people had joined the uprising,
including bushers, shoemakers, tanners, cigar makers, truckmen, tapestry makers,
typographers, telegraphers, blacksmiths, tinsmiths, bakers, and railway workers.
The mere 1,800 police officers tried to kill the energy on the streets,
as did the ruling class-funded White Guard,
but despite their massacre of 250 workers, the movement continued to grow.
By 1906, workers were active in the Federación de Trabajadores de Chile, or the FDCH,
and students had organized the Federación de Estudiantes de Chile, or FECH. Unfortunately,
the Mancomunale movement almost died after the 1907 depression
and severe military repression, the worst instance of which was the Santa Maria massacre of Iquique,
where over 3,000 nitrate miners and their supporters were killed by machine gun fire
after going on strike for better living conditions than the company towns built around the mines.
The company towns were run by the mine
owners, who owned the workers' housing, owned the company store, monopolized all commerce,
employed a private police force, and paid workers in tokens instead of money. The strikers were
joined by their wives, children, and other workers in the city of Iquique, and had set up strike
headquarters at the Santa Maria school. They were given an hour to disband
or be fired upon. When they stood firm, a certain General Silva Renard, known as the Butcher of
Iquique, gave his troops the order to fire upon the strikers, their wives, and their children.
One eyewitness said, quote, on the central balcony stood 30 or so men in the prime of their life,
quite calm, beneath a great Chilean flag, and surrounded by the flags of other nations.
They were the strike committee. All eyes were fixed on them, just as all the guns were directed at them.
Standing, they received the shots, as though struck by lightning they fell, and the great flag fluttered down over their bodies.
and the great flag fluttered down over their bodies.
There was a moment of silence,
as the machine guns were lowered to aim at the schoolyard and the hall,
occupied by a compact mass of people who spilled over into the main square.
There was a sound like thunder as they fired.
Then the gunfire ceased, and the foot soldiers went into the school by the side doors,
firing as men and women fled in all directions.
End quote.
Estimates vary,
with conservative estimates placing the death toll at over
2,000, while José Antonio Guterres
Danton's account reckons as many as
3,600.
In any case, if all 3,000
of those miners were members of the
Gran Man Comunal de Obreras,
that'd mean roughly 15%
of the movement was slaughtered
in one massacre.
A significant tragedy for sure.
Following the massacre, the movement formed the Federación Obrera de Chile, or FOCH,
which aimed to pull together all the organizations involved in the struggle,
whether anarchists, Marxists, or liberals.
It was co-created by the once-vulterant Mancomunales and grew in militancy until it had fully adopted anarchist-syndicalist principles.
Even the trade unions outside of the FOCH were anarchist-syndicalist.
But eventually, the syndicalists and FOCH would be overtaken by the Marxists, following the rise of the Soviet Union and the deepening tensions between anarchists and Marxists.
between anarchists and Marxists. Also in the 1910s, the famous Chilean poet Pablo Neruda was rubbing shoulders with the anarchists, though he eventually became a communist of the Marxist
variety. Meanwhile, the student org FUCH established a popular university to link workers and students
and develop popular education. In 1912, the Federación Obrera Regional de Chile,
1912, the Federación Obrera Regional de Chile, FORCH, was formed,
while 1919 marked the launch of the Chilean IWW,
which expanded to 19 cities and a 10,000-strong membership.
All the while, the strikes continued.
1919 marked yet another general strike.
The nitrate mines weren't as profitable as they once were,
creating more tension as workers were laid off.
The state was in debt, and with domestic disarray, it needed a distraction, so it tried to spark yet another war with Peru.
Thankfully, the war never happened, but when it looked like it would be, it was roundly condemned by the FECH, as they should.
But 1919 was also the year that reactionaries broke into the FECHS headquarters and burned down the building, while anarchist workers were being jailed,
tortured, and murdered, all the way into the 1920s. Still, by 1925, there were 214 syndicates
in Chile, boasting the active participation of more than 200,000 people. And it was the
first year where a Chilean delegation of the IWW
was able to participate in an IWA congress.
Santiago had a rent strike,
and yet still, worker blood was being spilled and tortured.
And then a coup happened in 1925.
Colonel Carlos Ibanez took power,
and by 1927 sought to fully abolish the labor movement. Union offices were
raided, anarchist groups disbanded, and journals shut down. The labor movement persisted, the ideas
lived on, but the anarchists were hit particularly hard. Next, we'll find out what happens in the
rest of the 20th century for the anarchist movement in Chile.
We're back talking about the history of anarchism in Chile. We have to talk about the history of anarchism in Chile.
Let's see what they get up to for the rest of the 20th century.
In 1930, the industry that Chile had been relying on for years, the one that had caused so
much strife for workers across the country, had suffered a major blow. German scientists discovered
a synthetic nitrate that was far cheaper than the natural one. Nitrate is used in both fertilizer
production and munitions manufacturing. So with a cheap alternative to the form found in the ground,
the meagre livelihoods of thousands of workers
was now under threat.
The mine owners may have had to reshuffle
their finances a bit to recover from the loss
of the booming industry,
but it was the workers who dealt with the worst of
such a crisis. They faced
famine, mass migration, and
overcrowding, compounded by the existing
economic pressures of the worldwide recession. The 1930s crisis hit the population hard, but they kept striking
regardless. The dictatorship of Colonel Carlos Ibañez fell in 1931 due to all that popular unrest.
Then things went from bad to worse. The center of Workers' Struggle in the city of Santiago,
the headquarters of the Federación Obrera de Chile, or FOCH,
where organizations of all flavors had worked together,
came under attack in April 1934.
The police and the White Guards, which were a group of capitalist-funded meatheads, opened fire on the compound, killing seven workers and a child,
while badly injuring around 200 others.
In June of that same year, 1934, 477 peasants were slain in Alto Biobio,
Ranquil, and Lonquime, all fairly small towns in the countryside of Chile.
Two years later, in December 1936, the Federación Obrera Regional de Chile, or FORCH, and the Chilean IWW worked
together to form the Confederación General de Trabajadores, or CGT. It was their anarchist
alternative to the communist and socialist-founded Workers' Confederation of Chile, or CTCH,
which they saw as more reformist. Together, they fought to achieve the eight-hour workday,
Sundays off, indemnity for accidented work, monetary recognition for years of service,
the right to retirement, and the right to an old-age pension. Meanwhile, the Chilean Anarchist
Federation, or FACH, got active and sent some brigades to support their comrades in the Spanish
Civil War. During the Civil War period,
anarchism had another upswing of popularity in Chile. But since the reformist union had legal
and institutional backing, since the anarchists were being heavily repressed, and since there
was some disorganization among them, the anarchists had started to lose their popularity.
Anarchist syndicalism had declined significantly going into the 1940s, while reformist syndicalism stayed strong,
under the control of the socialists, communists, and Christian Democrats.
In 1946, eight workers were murdered and many more were seriously injured
by the police dogs at Pulmes Square in Santiago.
The persecution of workers, and particularly anarchist workers, continued into 1947,
The persecution of workers, and particularly anarchist workers, continued into 1947,
as Pisagua, a notorious internment camp once used to detain gay folks during the Carlos Ibañez dictatorship,
was transformed into a concentration camp for socialists, communists, anarchists,
under President Gabriel González Fidela.
The notorious Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet had a stint running the camp in that time as well.
So of course,
fearing for their lives, anarchist organizations had to go underground. Yet even underground, they were able to accomplish some radical work. For example, the Louisa Michel Cultural Center,
renamed in 1953 the Louisa Michel Libertarian School, which sought to educate female workers and later children as well. It had, at a
time, over 70 students. It was able to last for a decade, up until 1957, despite authoritarian
repression. In 1950, the anarchist syndicalist Ernesto Miranda brought together 12 federations
and several syndicates into the Movimiento Unitario Nacional de Trabajadores, or MUNT,
or Movement for Workers' Unity.
Prior to the formation of the MUNT, Miranda got started in the workers' movement at the
age of 20, way back in 1932, while working in the shoe industry.
He fought local Nazis and the police while taking part in various unions and unitary
committees.
Following the formation of MUND, 1953 saw the
formation of the Central Unitaria de Trabajadores, or CUT, Chile's United Labour Centre. The initial
aims and principles of CUT were drawn up by members of the Confederación General de Trabajadores,
or CGT, and anarchist-syndicalists filled the shoe worker, printer, and maritime unions.
In the CUT's declaration, the workers proclaimed that the emancipation of the workers
is the work of the workers themselves, and that
the present capitalist system, based on private ownership of land, instruments, and means of production,
and exploitation of man by man, which divides society into antagonistic classes,
exploited and exploiters, must be replaced by a social
economic system that abolishes private property until a classless society is reached in which
man and humanity are assured of their full development. The Central Workers' Union will
carry out a re-vindicative action within the principles and methods of the class struggle,
maintaining its full independence from all governments and partisan political sectarianism.
However, the Central Workers' Union is not an apolitical union.
On the contrary, representing the conjunctions of all sectors of the working masses,
its emancipatory action will be derived above the political parties
in order to maintain its organic cohesion.
The trade union struggle is an integral part of the general class movement,
the proletariat, and the exploited masses,
and as such it cannot and must not remain neutral in the social struggle and must assume its proper
leadership role. Consequently, it declares that all trade unions are organizations for the defense
of the interests and goals of the workers within the capitalist system. But at the same time,
they are organizations of class struggle that points to the economic emancipation of the workers
as their goal. That is, the socialist transformation of society, the abolition of classes, and the organization of human life
through the abolition of the oppressive state. End quote. The Cut tried and failed to call a
general strike in 1955, partially because, unbeknownst to them, the communist and socialist
groups within the Cut had reached their own agreement with the government. By 1957, the CUT was severely split. The anarcho-syndicalists abandoned it in
protest of its involvement in an electoral pact with the FRP, the Frente Amplio Popular,
a left-wing party, during the lead-up to the presidential election in 1958.
The anarcho-syndicalists rightfully believed that the cut getting involved
with the political party would compromise working class independence. However, that act of protest
would also diminish the influence of the anarchists in the union movement. 1957 also marked the rise
of El Movimiento Libertario 7 de Julio, or the 7th of July Libertarian Movement, that brought together the anarchists
and trade unionists from Osorno, Temuco, Concepcion, Linares, and Talca, who were disposed after
leaving the cult. It unfortunately dissolved a decade later as its participants got involved
in other organizations. Ernesto Miranda, one of the co-creators of MUNT, went on to create the Comité de Defensa de la Revolución Cubana, although by 1960 the Anarchist Federation, FACH, was already warning of the Cuban Revolution's involvement with Russia.
the revolutionary left-wing movement, in 1965, alongside anarchist-syndicalist Clotario Blest and Trotskyist Enrique Sepulveda. Clotario Blest had previously visited Cuba, which had impressed
upon him the need for insurrectionary action. Upon his return to Chile, Blest formed the 3rd
of November movement, M3N, to promote revolution and unite the revolutionary left against
M3N, to promote revolution and unite the revolutionary left against electoralism.
Before the MIR was founded, there was the MFR, the Movement of Revolutionary Forces, in 1961,
which brought together non-aligned anarchists, Trotskyists, Maoists, Socialists, and Communists in the trade union world. With the growing involvement of Communist parties that eventually
took over, the anarchists were eventually sidelined in the MIR and it was quickly known as a fully ML org. The MIR persists to this day.
Another organization was also founded in this time, the VOP, Ovantgardia Organizada del Pueblo,
which rejected the authoritarianism of the MIR with an ideological blend of anarchism and anti-authoritarian Marxism.
Both MIR and VOP were doing their thing in workplace struggles and getting their financing through bank robberies.
But this wouldn't last, and both groups would also face repression
and reaction from the authorities. Then came 1970, with the election of popular unity candidate
Salvador Allende to the presidency. Allende was considered a democratic socialist, the first
Marxist democratically elected in Latin America. Allende declared an amnesty for all political prisoners and even took on
members of VOP as part of his personal guard or Grupo de Amigos Personales, GAP. By 1971,
they already warned the president that the right was plotting to overthrow the government.
But the president didn't take them on, so they took matters into their own hands
and executed one of the key plotters in the coal plants. For that,
they were punished. In 1972, workers began to take over their workplaces, as the U.S. had imposed a
trade and credits embargo in retaliation for the nationalization of U.S.-owned copper mines.
Neighborhood committees took goods from the worker-controlled factories and distributed them
amongst the communities. The FDR, or Frente de
Trabajadores Revolucionarios, or Revolutionary Workers Front, played a major role in this process,
proving that workers were quite capable of running a factory by themselves, and that government and
bosses were no longer necessary. But for all his alleged socialist credits, Allende couldn't
believe this was possible, so he sent observers to give orders within the affected factories. Meanwhile, peasants were taken over land and
organized into the MCR or Movimiento de Campesinos Revolucionarios or Revolutionary Peasants Movement.
The government was feeling the pressure, applied from without and within. By 1973, Henry Kissinger
and the other demons of the US did a test run coup,
but the people barricaded the neighborhoods and factories from the police and army.
Being the first elected Marxist president of Latin America, Allende was patient zero for a
pattern of interventions that would plague the region for years to come. After his three years
of presidency and a second coup attempt, Augusto Pinochet took power in a US-backed coup.
In 1973, a few months after the first coup attempt,
tanks rolled down the streets of Santiago.
Thousands were tortured, raped and murdered.
Anarchists were disappeared.
Those that escaped death found themselves in concentration camps,
many of which were ironically established on the remains of the old nitrate mine villages.
All political parties and trade unions were banned.
Some courses at universities were closed down, denounced as the home of revolutionary sentiment.
The secret police, Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional, called folks in fear.
The executed would be thrown into the sea, and Pinochet would go on to rule for
nearly 17 years. In 1975, Anarchist Clotario Blest and Ernesto Miranda would activate the
Committee of Defense of Human Rights, the CODE, which would become of vital importance for those
persecuted by the dictatorship. They would record the rights violations and rescue
and help escape those being persecuted. In 1977 and 78, the Codex managed to organize the first
event during the dictatorship to commemorate International Workers' Day, which helped to
disrupt the fair people had of the dictatorship. Six years after the coup, heading into the 80s,
despite the repression, the anarchists were starting to reorganize,
alongside libertarian-leaning members of the former Popular Unity Coalition.
They created the Umbrella Group, Socialist Ideas and Action, PAS, and took part in the struggles against the dictatorship in the 80s.
In 1980, syndicates affiliated with Norway's IWA was able to secure the freedom of
UOP members who had been imprisoned for nearly a decade, exchanging their imprisonment for exile,
while the Marxist MIR managed to assassinate the chief of army intelligence Roger Vergara Campos
and a few other significant military figures, as well as bombing US-affiliated corporations.
In 1982, textile workers went on strike,
despite the risk of repression,
and they were joined by a solidarity strike by 1983,
when children and teachers wouldn't attend school,
people wouldn't buy anything,
and workers would stay home.
The police tried to disrupt the marches of the people.
Two were killed as a result,
and hundreds were arrested or wounded.
But between 1983 and 1984
mass protests became more frequent and the people defended themselves against the police with
molotovs stones and barricades while anarchists were involved in these struggles anarchist ideas
weren't the focus the focus was on toppling the, by 1984, you had a libertarian magazine called La Voz del
Laterismo circulating. In 1987, the anarchist black flags reappeared in Santiago, Concepción,
and Osorno. Social centers were also established with an anarchist streak, such as the Center for
Social Studies, El Duende, the ELF in Santiago, and the Colectiva Anarquista Liberación, CAL in
Concepción, both under the umbrella of the Taller de Analystsista Liberación, CAL in Concepción,
both under the umbrella of the Taller de Análisis Sindical y Social, the Studio for Social Studies and Analysis,
which was created with the aim of broadening the space for the oppressed.
A newspaper called Acrata, Anarchist,
was published by Colectivo Anarquista Concepción
and the Bulletin Liberación by the CAL.
Acción Directa was published by anarchist comrades in Santiago.
By 1989, Pinochet had to accept defeat and step down by 1990.
Liberal democracy had returned, somewhat, to Chile.
In the 90s, several anarchist groups formed, disappeared, and regrouped,
and several anarchist publications were printed and
spread. The Adianticus Intercities Federation, Federación Anarquista Interciudadana,
Dajam o Juventudes Antimilitaristas, D'Amalo de Movimiento Anarquistas Luis Olé,
the FAI Concepción, Colectivo Cultural Libertario Manatesta en Concepción, Red Anarquista, and various other groups in
Villa Alemana, Osorno, Tinuco, Concepción, Valparaíso, Santiago, etc.
José Antonio Gutiérrez Danton, the author of one of the historical accounts I referenced,
took part in several of these orgs, as well as their own collective, Arbol Negro, which
entered delegations to the IWA Congress in Spain in December of 1994 and took over the work of the IWW in Chile.
As of the 21st century, several collectives and individuals are disseminating anarchist
ideas and practices.
Anarchist book fairs have been hosted in Santiago, and the Anarchist Federation Santiago has
been working in organizing an anarchist platform.
Anarchist-inspired or adjacent movements
have lit the streets against the government,
protest formations refuse central authorities,
and indigenous Mapuche activists
carry on their decolonial struggle
against the state by various means,
sometimes bordering on anarchic.
And the Mapuche struggle in Chile, by the way,
is a fascinating story
that really deserves its own episodes, which I hope to explore in the future.
Anarchist activists have also continued to be killed by the police or other reactionaries following the return of democracy,
such as Claudia López Menachez in 1998 and Jani Cariqueo Yanez and Juan Cruz Magna in 2008.
and Jani Cariqueo Yanez and Juan Cruz Magna in 2008. Chilean anarchists have also allegedly been setting bombs around the country, meant to cause damage to law enforcement, security forces,
banks and transnational corporations' property, but also causing occasional injury or death
to people. Gambone also writes the mutual aid societies still function, and in a society where
the welfare state is practically non-existent, mutual aid plays a much greater role than
elsewhere. Cooperatives, both agricultural and consumer, are found in Chile, although they don't
have the same level of economic influence that similar movements have in Western Europe or Canada,
and there are other libertarian-oriented developments as well. Left-wing Christians
and ex-Marxist Leninists who rejected the vanguard party formed local base committees working in
poblaciones. They function as mutual aid societies and centers to organize local issues. End quote.
I hope that the people of Chile, like everywhere else, can find true freedom. After over a century
of anarchist struggle, I hope they can find revolutionary success.
Until that day,
this has been Andrew Sage of
Androism. It could happen here.
Given the historical context of anarchism
in Chile. Where am I to go
next? Hopefully far.
All power
to all people. Peace.
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Hi, everyone. Welcome to It Could Happen Here.
It's me, James, today, and I'm joined by Shireen,
and also Amado, who was a volunteer with Faza,
a nonviolent protective presence volunteer in Palestine. How are you doing today i'm good thank you yeah thanks so much
for being here yeah yeah we appreciate it so we met through a mutual friend who was also a volunteer
with you and the reason that that friend contacted me was that unfortunately uh the idf shot you and it's obviously a pretty
shitty situation and would you be okay with just beginning by recounting the incident i don't if
that's something you're okay going back to you yeah just because i think the fucking wantonness
of the violence it is so stark that i think it might help people to hear it.
Yeah.
So I volunteered with Faza and we go to a demonstration in Beita every Friday.
The aim is to go back to their land that was stolen from them.
I think there's a settlement called Avatar on the Palestinian land.
And their aim is just to go back to it and plant the Palestinian flag.
So we get there and they're doing Jummah prayer.
And then after Jummah prayer is when they start chanting.
So like not even, it was like between five to ten minutes when they started shooting tear gas at us.
During the prayer? After the prayer. Okay. shooting tear gas at us. During the prayer?
After the prayer.
Okay.
After the prayer.
Yeah.
So the prayer went without incident.
Okay.
And then afterwards was when they shot tear gas at us, multiple tear gas canisters.
And then once they started firing live rounds, we hid behind a concrete wall.
Tear gas still being shot at us, and then live rounds as well.
You could see the dust coming off
of the concrete walls as they shot and then once it seemed like they were coming down from the tower
i think palestinians were running because they thought they were coming so we ran and we went
over a concrete wall we ran for I don't even know how long,
but once we got to a clearing and they thought it was safe,
we regrouped with everyone.
So the road going up to where we were,
there were Palestinians still running down.
There's Palestinians running to the right.
And we just waited maybe 30 seconds.
And then someone told us to go. So we ran with them. And then we got to rest for like five minutes, had a quick smoke,
coffee, some people had tea. But then some Palestinians were moving towards the street
to our right. So we followed them, a couple of us, and some of them stayed. And as as we were approaching there this was the road that
went straight up to the watchtower we saw them on before so there was still some tear gas shot at us
and some live rounds as well but we saw them actually coming down from the tower this time
and before you know they even drove down there was pal was Palestinians to our left that were running.
So whenever we see them running, we know that it's a threat they think may be fatal.
So we're running.
We actually run to the olive groves behind us.
And as we were running, just making sure all my comrades were good, I hear a loud bang, and then I feel a pain in my leg.
I thought it was like a tear gas canister that hit my leg because it just felt like a blunt force.
But I've never felt that pain before.
And one of my comrades were helping me up while I was still running and limping.
And then finally, once we got to a clearing,
that's when all the Palestinians ran to me and carried me away.
So the pickup truck, which then went to the health clinic
or the emergency clinic in Beita.
And then after that, the army trucks blocked our way
while I was in the ambulance when I was transferred.
And then there was two checkpoints afterwards.
And the two checkpoints, they demanded to see who was inside,
which delayed my care further.
And then finally getting to a raffinia hospital.
Jeez, the swept.
Fucking hell.
Classic of them to block the ambulance.
I've heard that so many times.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm really glad that it wasn't like an arterial bleed or something
when that time would have been a life and death in those minutes, right?
That's a really good point.
Yeah, I was smiling because I was like,
I don't know what just happened to me, but I hope I'm okay.
And also, I know I'm here for Falistine, so, you know.
Yeah.
I kept smiling, but I didn't know what was happening.
And thankfully, it was no artery or bone. So, I was very lucky. Yeah. Do you know what rifle smiling but i didn't know what was happening and thankfully it was no artery or
bone so i was very lucky yeah um do you know what rifle you were shot with because i know they
sometimes use like smaller calibers for crowd control yeah from what i heard was um m16
american made yeah so yeah they're just really going for it unbelievable i'm glad you're okay
i know like just we spoke about this before but just so listeners, you're healing up.
You feel like you're on the path to at least physical recovery.
Yeah, absolutely.
So I got shot, and one week later, I went from wheelchair to crutches to cane.
I'm still on the cane, but I can move around pretty well indoors.
When I'm outside, I have to use the cane because my leg buckles.
And the hole in the front, the exit wound, is still healing.
It's not fully closed yet, but a lot better.
Did the bullet go straight through?
Yeah, it went straight through.
No fragments, I believe.
They had to do surgery to stitch me up, but also to take the dead tissue out.
And I think they had to put together some muscles as well.
Yeah.
Jesus.
So like, I want to talk about a couple of things regarding this.
First of all, I think, are you a US citizen?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So like a foreign military shot a US citizen, right?
Has your, I don't know, your no senator representative any of these people who
are supposed to give a single fuck about this like reached out to you no um so it was just the embassy
the embassy did contact us maybe the same day i was shot just a little bit later but no representatives
here in the united states have reached out to me yeah that's pretty reprehensible yeah do you want to give people a rough sense of who those might be because i don't want to like dox
you and where you live but i'm in jersey city there is um a vacancy actually for one of the
representatives so that is one reason why but the other ones yeah jersey senators local politicians
nobody has reached out yeah nobody's reached out yeah and i think like
we said this again before but like it's not that your leg is more important than someone's
child's life in gaza right like that's i don't want to imply that for a second but like yeah
you know the system of states as it is today works in a certain way and in theory those people should
care about you and like i think it really gets us to something else i wanted to talk
about which is that like the existence of palestine like as as it is today and as it wishes to be in
the future much like you know other places i've worked in kurdistan and the you know liberated
parts of myanmar is a threat to the system of states and governments as it exists
today and like at some point you decided that the government and writing to your senator or whatever
tweeting people do wasn't enough or wasn't going to work and you decided that like you wanted to
put your body in between the people trying to kill the people and the people trying to survive.
Can you talk us through that journey?
Have you always been invested in the Palestinian cause?
Is it something that you became aware of at some point?
Yeah, so I'm part of the Philippine movement, Anak Bayan.
I'm part of Bayan and the National Democratic Movement in the Philippines.
So through them, I was in contact and collaboration with Palestinians.
And that's when I started to understand the Palestinian struggle.
And actually, I was at a protest in New York recently,
and it came full circle because Nurdine of Within Our Lifetime
stated that she actually started it because of the national democratic
movement and our work together and our studies so because I also saw Palestinians standing for
the liberation of the Philippines we always had that connection or I had that connection
with Palestinians and it grew over time and the escalation of October 7th really had me just
dysregulated because I'm a teacher in Jersey. And for the first few months, it was so hard for me to
teach. It was like, I was just going on autopilot because how could we, you know, just go on with our daily lives seeing these atrocities happening every day?
And once it was the end of the year, it was hot.
I was smoking a cigarette.
I put my keffiyeh on the gate outside of our school.
And then I came out because I had to bring the snacks in for my students for the last week of school.
And it was gone.
So I had to buy another one.
And when I did, it came with a really beautiful
handwritten postcard from Palestine.
And it was just talking about,
thank you for supporting us through these difficult times.
And then it said invitation to visit.
So that was what prompted me to like research
and ask other friends in the movement.
And then they told me about FASA.
And then I took the orientation and training,
and I went over during my summer break.
Yeah, it's a great easier summer.
We'll just stop for some advertisements here,
and then come back.
We are back. Unfortunately, you've had to listen to some adverts so hopefully you've skipped them so i wanted to ask about like that journey the journey to palestine now i imagine it's very
difficult and like how did it feel i guess like this is a cause you've been invested in for some
time right and then you've seen these horrific things
and then suddenly you're on the ground.
Was to be in solidarity with people,
I know my experience at the border has been that
I would much rather be in it, even if it's terrible,
than at home seeing pictures of it.
I wonder how it was for you.
Yeah.
For me, I've always just wanted to visit Palestine
and I want to be in
solidarity with the palestinian people as a filipino american i've seen palestinians there
to support filipinos i've been there in the streets with them you know when they supported
americans black americans you know against police brutality so it just felt like a duty as a organizer as a revolutionary to you know show the same solidarity
back as well as knowing that i'll be in a beautiful place with beautiful people under
horrible circumstances yeah i wish more people and it's not just palestine right we have these
revolutions that we talk about these causes that we talk about like and i understand it's not always easy people have commitments financial and interpersonal and
yeah but like if you can go you should go yeah do you feel like your solidarity grew because you
experienced solidarity in return right like somebody ran towards a gunfire to pick you up
at some point do you feel like a more profound sense of solidarity after that experience having
also experienced like settler colonial violence, I guess?
Absolutely.
It's like, you know, before I'm talking about it, we talk about it in circles.
And I did have the privilege to be able to go.
You know, not a lot of people have the financial ability, mental ability, physical capabilities.
So I'm lucky on that end as well.
mental ability, physical capabilities.
So I'm lucky on that end as well.
But if one is willing and able in all those different aspects,
they should go if they can,
especially during all of the harvest right now,
which is an escalation of settler violence that we've seen recently and even the Israeli army.
So I get updates from Kusva right now,
and I just see everything that's
happening still and i know olive harvest is a huge economic thing for the palestinians so yeah it
would be great for anyone that's able to go yeah leading up to you getting shot and maybe after
can you describe maybe what the environment was like like what on the ground how people were
living your experiences with the IDF maybe before that like can you just walk us through
what that was like on the ground yeah so my first day there I was in Kusra and we were just getting
the money that we need we got some groceries I believe believe. I only had like two pairs of clothes I packed like.
And then we had dinner with the Palestinian family. Very beautiful, collective dinner.
And when you have lunch or dinner there, you know, it's not like a quick 30 minutes and you're gone.
You're there for like three hours. Even if we have different language barriers,
it's just very beautiful culture and people.
And then I get shot the second day.
The second day?
Good God.
I didn't know that.
Yeah.
So second full day.
And so I think I was the first person shot at a demonstration there.
So people were ready for, I guess guess the usual tear gas and live rounds
but i don't think anyone is expecting anyone to get shot that day including me um but yeah so i
was healing in the hospital i heard the israeli army came into khusra and you know we had the
amount of people we had on the ground and one person had to kind of stay around me,
so I was scared and feared for my people over there.
And then another day goes by.
The next day after that, I'm back in town,
and then there was reports of a settler that was killed,
and then we heard that all the settlements,
there was a call to attack Kusra.
So right when I get back, we're already on high alert.
We're watching, making sure nothing was happening.
Thankfully, nothing did happen that day.
But then, yeah, it happens like every other day where either the Israeli army comes in or settlers attack.
In Kusra, we also tried to open the gate between the town
because the Israeli army put a gate between the town
so people can't travel within the town.
And we tried opening it, but they have the key.
And a peaceful demonstration turned into the IDF or the IOF
coming with like 12 soldiers.
I'm intimidating folks, loading up some kind of automatic weapon, pointing tear gas at us.
A few days after that, they came into town at night, shot up the town a few days after that the israeli army was guarding settlers really close to town
or actually in town and then a couple days after that too i think one of the last days i was there
they raided the town they shot like 12 tear gas canisters like two to three like flash bangs, and then like three live rounds,
and they shot a boy in the back. Thankfully, he's also okay. And then after I left,
settlers attacked international volunteers, US citizens as well, with rocks, and the IOF shot
like five other Palestinians as well. So it was just continual violence.
You know, what I faced that one day is what they face every day.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
And they don't get to go home like it is at home.
Can you explain for people who aren't familiar, right?
I think a lot of people have come into solidarity with Palestine in the last last 11 months which is fine right you don't have
to know like textbooks of history to be like genocide is bad yeah so like you're in the west
bank right can you explain where that lies in relation to gaza and what is happening
in the west bank especially like right now in the last few days and weeks that is extremely concerning and i know
it's very like terrible yeah so the decimation of gaza on israel's end is a response to october
7th escalation even though october 7th was a response to however many decades of oppression that they faced. So Gaza is being decimated, but Israel wants more land,
the greater Israel that they've been advertising. Settlers want to move into Gaza. Settlers want to
continue to move into West Bank. The West Bank also, from reports, Israel gave authority or
something of being able to get more land, which is Palestinian land.
So what kind of authority do they have over that?
All the legal settlements.
But they're trying to just take all the land that they can get, whether it's in Gaza, whether it's in West Bank.
So they're obviously connected because it is Palestine.
But now they're just going into the West Bank
because there's further resistance now as well.
And there has always been just a lot more quiet
than Gaza at the moment
because, I guess, of the government
that's over them, Palestinian Authority.
But yeah, it's all connected.
And they want to just squash any kind of resistance there is,
whether it's in the West Bank and Gaza,
as well as just trying to take as much land as possible
before international intervention happens,
which we haven't seen because the U.S. continues to supply weapons and arms to Israel.
Yeah. Apparently what happened to you isn't going
to stop that like nothing else is i don't know what is just for people who aren't familiar the
west bank so much larger geographical area bank refers to the jordan river right settler colonialism
is a term that people are familiar with right like and it happens it's not i'm not saying it
doesn't happen in america because it still happens every day. It's a process that we continue to create.
It's not one that stops in the 19th century.
I don't want to imply that.
But where you were is the bleeding edge of settler colonialism.
It's a family being kicked out of their house.
It's people not being allowed to go back to their homes.
Do you have a sense of what does that look like?
Because it's incredibly violent, right?
And incredibly inhumane.
No reasonable person would think that like,
oh yeah, this seems normal and cool.
Can you explain like perhaps how that would appear
for one family or for the farm or the village?
So in Khusra, there has been a good amount of resistance even before october 7th
from the leaders there and the community but even with that three months before it looked like
settlers coming into town a whole wave of them burning 11 houses i believe it was cars
attacking people with israeli army they're not stopping anything i believe it was masferyata
where other activists are where they literally come to the land say this is ours try to destroy
infrastructure like water wells they come in and literally say god told me this is my land and I'm here and try to settle there.
There's, I guess I saw a place where the Israeli occupation forces would guard around a mosque,
not for the Muslims there, but for settlers to come in and pretty much make it a synagogue for however long.
It looks like someone coming in and claiming that your home is theirs
and destroying any infrastructure so you don't come back,
whether it's the home, the streets, water, whatever it is.
Yeah. i keep thinking about like one how much it didn't matter that you were american
but i i keep thinking about rachel cory and how maybe that was the most like egregious
recent example i can think of of an american citizen i think she was 23 when she died
it's very young got run over by a fucking bulldozer from the iof nothing happened her parents are
still trying to remind the world what happened like year after year yeah and so it's not surprising
to me that no one reached out to you and that there is no outrage but it's just really frustrating
that it really doesn't matter like it
you could have like you could have lost your life and no one would have bad an eye in government
like it really really just makes my blood boil because it's i don't know that's what i've been
thinking about for a tiny bit i just reminded me of that and how there's no protection being American when you're on the ground in Palestine at all.
Yeah, when we're there, our power comes from having a passport somewhere else and our phone, right?
That's why we go there to volunteer to create a buffer between the Israeli army, settlers, and the Palestinians.
And it shows their complete disregard. between the Israeli army, settlers, and the Palestinians.
And it shows their complete disregard.
The caveat there is that they said it was a mistake,
which it went straight through my leg,
so I don't know what kind of mistake goes straight through my leg.
But also, someone was arrested and heard that they thought I was Palestinian.
So it just shows even more so the complete disregard for Palestinian life.
Whether they thought I was or not
that they would just shoot me.
And yes, there
was two US
citizens that were recently attacked
by settlers and
the IOF did not do anything.
Only a little bit after
they said stop throwing rocks.
But the damage is done.
Yeah, our government has complete disregard for Palestinian lives because there was also a lot of Palestinian Americans that have been dead. or my life or others that are just american with another nationality have you know i guess
a little bit more value in their eyes but because they don't want outrage um international outrage
but yeah our government they haven't reached out to me which showcases that they don't care about
u.s citizens that support palestine yeah even b, you know, if a U.S. citizen got hurt,
he would do something and nothing has happened.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think it's kind of illustrative, right?
Like we're supposed to live in a democracy and like here they are,
like choosing the interests of a state to do what is extremely clearly
and like it's a very widely agreed upon illegal and to do so in
a genocidal manner and they're gonna back that over your right to not be shot in the leg yeah
i i do think it's it's funny maybe that's not the right word but the fact that they thought
you were palestinian as if that was a good enough excuse to shoot at you.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like, oh, that explains it, of course.
Like, okay, sure.
That makes me so, so mad.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
God.
We mistook that person for a person whose life doesn't matter.
Yeah, it's shameful.
You know, you're really giving it away.
Yeah.
And I think, like, I don't know.
It seems to me that our government
is not going to solve this right like it realistically in the election you know there
are third parties and stuff i'm not going to vote for someone who said nice things about asad but
like you don't have a box you can take that will make the stop in november right and the only way
we can do anything is with solidarity so So like, what do people do?
Like how, you've been there, you've seen it.
How do people most effectively be in solidarity?
Yeah, I think the biggest thing is international pressure
that we've seen all across the globe,
which has showcased some results in other countries, not here,
where arms exports are actually at least,
some are being banned or restricted altogether.
But here, I think it's continuing to build up anti-imperialist organizations
like Anak Bayan, like the many pro-Palestinian organizations,
like many revolutionary black organizations,
and then uniting and coming together to create a power that is beyond the two-party system.
And uniting with everyone that is pro-Palestinian, that does want to see true democracy in the United States,
and all across the globe.
Because I was one person, and people call me a hero. But for me,
the Palestinians face this every day. They're the heroes and we should be uniting to support them
in their liberation. And sometimes it looks like building those organizations. Sometimes it also
looks like going to Palestine and joining things like FAZA,
like International Solidarity Mission,
to be a buffer as much as we can,
even though it's showcased that they don't care.
And I think when we unify,
we would be able to pressure,
especially when we have good organizations, to pressure elected officials to really divest from the two-party system and people that support genocide. to more than the lobby for Israel or people lobbying for arms for Israel
to have that outweigh the pressure financially
that they have politicians.
Yeah.
That was very informative
and I really appreciate you sharing your experience.
Yeah.
Thank you for all the work you do.
People might want to support your healing. They might want to support F do. People might want to support your healing.
They might want to support FATHER.
They might want to support
International Solidarity Mission.
They might want to find out more
about how they can be that buffer.
Do you have any suggestions
on where people could do any of those,
all of those things?
I don't have a personal fund right now,
which is fine.
I'm going back to work teaching.
But there are people that need funds to be able to participate, especially during the olive harvest. So following
Afaza, F-A-Z-3-A underscore P-A-L is somewhere to follow, as well as defendpalestine.org.
They're both connected.
So you can follow the news on what's happening on the ground,
as well as, I believe, contacting them.
There's a general fund for folks that want to travel to Palestine but are not able to.
So there's a general fund for that.
In the future, my friend was going to make a T-shirt
to help fund the Palestinian Aminian ambulance center over there that
i got a first aid training with amado sisoma on there so i don't know if it'll work here but um
over there definitely so there's a lot of different things i know there's the different camps that are
being raided right now i think there's some fundraisers for them as well in gaza there's
plenty too but in any way that people can contribute to any of those things you know it always goes a
long way for them yeah that's pretty great thank you is there anything else you wanted to say to
people before we finish up yeah i hope that one day folks folks, persons listening right now, if you're capable and able to join up to see the beauty of Palestine, the landscape, it's gorgeous outside of the settlements.
The people are so loving and caring, and the culture is just amazing. And I just hope that you will be able to see Palestine one day,
whether it is to be in solidarity with them as a protective presence or just to
see it. And hopefully one day, inshallah, it's free and we are all able to visit.
Hey, we'll be back Monday
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until the heat death of the universe.
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