democracyisdead
democracyisdead
= DEMOCRACY =
4K posts
GRAB YOUR FORKS IT'S TIME TO SHANK SOME OLIGARCHS SEIZE EVERYTHING | CEDE EVERYTHING I'm Twitch and this is my political blog. You can read more about it on my about page. I like radical democracy, revolutionary syndicalism, and alter-globalization.Possibly imaginary. Definitely gay. This is not the original democracyisdead.
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democracyisdead · 7 years ago
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What I find just incredible is when someone I helped bring over to communism tries to talk to me about how you'll never reach conservatives with reason and compassion. Did you forget you were an antifeminist?
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democracyisdead · 7 years ago
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There are honestly some conservatives for whom the entirety of their political ideology and thought process is defined on the basis of which conservative public figure they support, whether that’s someone like Trump, or Ben Shapiro, or Jordan Peterson, or Alex Jones etc.
Thing is though, by centering the individual public figure as the basis of their politics, it ultimately makes these supporters completely unable to discern for themselves what they think about a particular topic. They just parrot the talking points that these public figures spew out, where the thinking is already done for them, and the only thing that they have to do is absorb and regurgitate without doing any of thinking for themselves.
And the really strange thing is how these people have constructed not just their politics, but also their entire identity as a person based on being “a supporter/follower of [x public figure].” This is why they take it so fucking personally when people criticize these public figures. They’ve literally created a cult of personality around them, to the point where criticizing or disagreeing with those public figures is very personal. To say that any one of those public figures is “wrong” isn’t just attacking their ideas, it’s considered to be an attack on the very identity of the people who support them. 
These “conservative intellectuals” fundamentally appeal to the emotional states of their fans. They give a voice to their anger about how the world doesn’t let them act without basic human decency anymore, and it’s enough for these people to have their anger validated with some vague platitudes about “political correctness gone wrong” etc. They say they’re concerned about the facts, but that’s not true at all–what they want is for their feelings of general discontent and hatred to be prioritized, even if it comes at the expense of the truth.
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democracyisdead · 7 years ago
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mfw ur a Good White™ so ur friends trust u but all white people have deep seated racism so u hurt them anyway and it hurts even worse bc it's a betrayal
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democracyisdead · 7 years ago
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opsec
This has been bothering me all day, so I’m going to take a moment to go into personal stuff with minimal details.
For those unfamiliar, opsec is short for operational security - or how to organize in a way that keeps those involved around.
This discussion was about organizing antifascist actions on Facebook, and in particular keeping public guest lists. My argument: Even if all you’ve done is organize a peaceful solidarity rally, keeping a public guest list is a terrible idea.
What bothers me in particular is the rebuttal that making the guest list private is paternalistic. I would like to soundly shut that argument down.
Private guest lists will not protect you against police surveillance. If they’ve got a warrant, they can get the guest list. If they don’t have a warrant, they can sometimes get the guest list. If you expect retaliation from cops, don’t organize on Facebook. Period. This is especially true of Facebook’s event system. All you’re doing by using Facebook’s event infrastructure is providing a searchable database of surveillance targets, the means to sabotage your network. Any escalation above strict nonviolence that poses no threat to capital is probably best kept off Facebook. No, there is no good alternative, and that sucks, but if we expect to mobilize and win, we can’t organize on communications infrastructure designed to expose organizers.
This, however, is not what I’m talking about. I am talking about the more limited threat of what’s academically called lateral surveillance, and less academically called nazis knowing where you live.
The argument about paternalism went like this: If we want to effectively oppose fascists, we must be seen to oppose fascists, we must be loud and proud, and assuming that people want protection rather than to be loud and proud is paternalism. People understand the risks of signing up for a public event and will take precautions when they need to.
Conceptually, I agree with some of this. Yes, it makes no sense to fail to condemn fascism in our private lives. Antifascists should certainly make it clear that fascism is unacceptable within their communities. Fascists should know that their neighbours and coworkers won’t tolerate them stepping out of line, that the silent majority is not with them, because the majority is not silent and it’s not having any of their shit. So long as there aren’t fascist secret police, we shouldn’t be acting like there are.
But this misunderstands what Facebook is, and the nature of social media in general. What we have on our hands is not a home to speech, as we would in something like Skype or Discord or even Facebook’s own Messenger but a publishing platform. Speech is ephemeral, even chatlogs are very limited in their reach and don’t lend themselves so easily to searching. Certainly they cannot be looked through by anyone to whom they are not specifically given.
But publication is a little bit different. It’s meant to be seen very generally, and it’s meant to be on the record. Once it’s out there, so it goes, it’s out there. And that’s the issue with public guest lists on Facebook. Facebook is pretty problematic to begin with, it’s a platform for publishing your personal life, all of it. You’re supposed to help friends find you by listing your full name, a recognizable picture, where you live, your place of work, your contact details, and so on. Many people don’t even protect their posts because of “it’ll never happen to me” syndrome.
So let’s say you’re an antifascist organizer, and you create an event page, where everyone’s going to show solidarity and it’s all very nice and peaceful, and then the cops or some fash decide it’s time to FSU even though nobody in the crowd is doing anything particularly confrontational at the moment. A fair chunk of the people going put it on their Facebook calendar. On the guest list of that page are the names and faces of all those people who went to the event. They might list their school, their workplace, their hometown, hell you might be able to get their phone number.
So a fashy looks up “<this city> antifascist rally” on Facebook after it’s all over and they find that the organizers (whose lives have been too disrupted to take down the page) left it up and left the guest list public. Dutifully they pick a couple faces they recognize and share those details around on stormfront or /bahamut/ or /pol/, wherever they feel like. The cops receive a frightened call, someone’s being attacked in their home! Through the crocodile tears of a white nationalist troll, the cops come to think they’ve got a tip, and send the swat team.
Or maybe someone armed and scary show’s up at that person’s door to intimidate them. Or maybe their workplace finds out they’re violent antifa terrorists who have to go. Et cetera. It’s been made positively easy for fascists to find you and fuck with you.
Keeping a public guest list is like recording the names and photos and personal details of everyone who attends a rally, and printing it in the local newspaper saying “look at us, we are the antifascists!” Really it’s more akin to a national newspaper. 
By setting a public guest list, you lower the barrier to doing all the nasty things people can do with all your contact details. You know how we’ve been sharing around the names and photos and workplaces of fash in Charlottesville? We’re not the only ones who can use that tactic, in fact it’s kind of a hallmark of their side of things, and they’re better at it than we are. The least we can do is not make it easy.
So to respond, is it paternalistic to not record all the contact details of most of the local antifascists and send it off to a newspaper and ask anyone who doesn’t want their name published to simply ask never to be updated about the status of the rally? No, I don’t think it is. I think it’s the normal way of doing things, and it’s not whatsoever mutually exclusive with encouraging people to be “loud and proud”. Furthermore I think it should be pretty clear how oversharing opens us up to infiltration and violence, without conferring any great advantage.
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democracyisdead · 7 years ago
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paranoia
I’m overcautious about organizing. Partly because I’m a fatalist, and I always assume things will go much worse than they actually go. Partly it’s because I work with tech and I understand exactly how easy it is for a smart person or a well-organized police intervention to destroy activist networks, given the motive (easy in principle, in practice there aren’t a lot of smart private citizens, and police are mostly incompetent).
But partly it’s because I am genuinely optimistic about the socialist cause. I think we can win and I think the record shows that once it starts happening, it happens fast, faster than anyone expects (at least in terms of how the political situation changes). When it does, the response is swift and brutal. We must seriously grapple with the fact that we can actually succeed, even partly, and success is often met with violence. When the violence comes, we must be in a position to resist destruction, or we could very well be destroyed.
All I mean by this is, be prepared to start making gains and to start winning, and consider what you’ll need to be doing if and when that starts happening. If we’re not ready to win, we’re setting ourselves up to fail. You don’t have to go as far as me, my position is driven as much by irrational fear of the worst-case scenario as it is by reasoning from my own knowledge. But think about going farther than you already do, don’t let things go horribly wrong before you think about being ready for them.
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democracyisdead · 7 years ago
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“It is a growing belief among historians that references to a ‘Max Stirner’ from before this point are not simply in deference to a pen the pen name of a colleague, nor were they because Engels was unaware of Stirner’s 'dead name’. Rather, they were in knowing reference to the preferred name of a respected colleague. Should it be true, it would mean that Engels was aware of Stirner’s intent to transition for years before she sought a medical transition, and would explain why the name ‘Max Stirner’ is only written on Stirner’s infamous text ‘The Unique and its Property’, and in Engels’ private notes.”
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trans-stirner.tumblr.com
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democracyisdead · 7 years ago
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[Stirner (post-transition) - 1864 - found in the notebook of Friedrich Engels, during the first meeting of the International Workingmen’s Association]
“While Engels seems to have recognized Maxime “Max” Stirner (assumed name) after her apparent resurfacing, this illustration is the only evidence that anyone was aware of her survival and transition following her apparent death in 1856. Engels was never recorded to have outed her to the First International, even though transsexualism was not widely accepted at the time, and the story is corroborated by the lack of other evidence for her transition. In fact, the belief that Stirner had faked her death and transitioned was largely believed to be apocryphal, until medical records were found indicating her prescription of early hormone replacement therapy, and her doctor’s personal records by German historian Wilhelm Schultz in 1989.” - Engels: A Biography (1855-1867); Simon Harrington; Cambridge University Press (2017)
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trans-stirner.tumblr.com
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democracyisdead · 7 years ago
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A while ago I was in Montreal, in a pretty big rally. The crowd got to chanting “NO BORDERS! NO NATIONS! STOP DEPORTATIONS!”
I found the “no nations” bit uncomfortable and kind of surprising. Blanket anti-nationalism is kind of unthinkable in my milieu, but there I was in Montreal, and there that was. You would think with the high profile of indigenous organizing in recent years that settler leftists might think better of it, but no.
So here I go again with my pro-nationalism-of-the-oppressed shit. I get it’s habitual for the Quebecois left to be anti-nationalist, especially in Montreal and especially in response to nationalistic (and specifically white supremacist) aggressions against migrants, but let’s reflect for a moment.
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democracyisdead · 7 years ago
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The power of shit-starting is most true of leaderless organizations. The state and capital are especially adept at finding heads to chop - an org that’s good at propaganda and which doesn’t need specific individuals or even specific branches to stay active is one that the state cannot articulate a response to. They don’t even seem to be able to understand how leaderless, informal orgs work. One article on Politico saw cops describing antifa as “cells”.
We should probably be researching the breakup of anon circles in the early aughts to predict how subsequent waves of infiltration are gonna go down as it’s a well-researched and very public case study in how the full weight of the surveillance state can be used against leftists who organize informally, even leftists using pretty decent infosec.
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democracyisdead · 7 years ago
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A status update, of a kind.
Next project: It’s being worked on. There’s little free time in my life and what little I have, I often spend uncomfortable and distracted. .~.
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democracyisdead · 8 years ago
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Margaret Atwood predicted exactly this
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democracyisdead · 8 years ago
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trans-stirner.tumblr.com
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democracyisdead · 8 years ago
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And there it is.
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democracyisdead · 8 years ago
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the longer I live the more I realize that nobody knows what they're doing and nothing happens on purpose
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democracyisdead · 8 years ago
Conversation
2015: it's impossible to get anywhere with activism how is anything gonna get done
2017: I posted once about rape culture and a mob showed up to some guy's door and it made national news
2019: I started the rev with a shitpost
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democracyisdead · 8 years ago
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Secret two: don’t take that to mean privacy is pointless, making it too clear who’s involved opens people up to getting picked off. If a few get removed or intimidated into submission, others can get scared away.
Part of the current “what the fuck” from cops is how public we are and how much organizing is done implicitly. People who know what to do and how to handle themselves and look out for their buds mainly just need to be told to show up. So secret number one: be very public about everything and super clear about what you want and how you’re doing it and what the ethical justifications for certain modes of action are.
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democracyisdead · 8 years ago
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if the communist technoutopia doesn’t give me freaky cellar implants to photosynthesize my own food, then what was the point of FALC at all? If I can’t become a plant woman, I might as well just be a primitivist.
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