This episode of It's the End of the World as we know it and I feel fine was made possible by contributions from slaves like you. Spank you very much! There's a militant group operating on the reservation. Call themselves A.R.M. Aboriginal Rights Movement. Extremely violent. They say they've gone there the defend the traditional Natives against the pro-government Natives. It's turned into a civil conflict - Indian against Indian. Whole place is a tinderbox. Gooooooooood morning slaves, and welcome to another sedition of It's the End of the World as We Know it and I Feel fine the show where hackey-sack is a full-contact sport. I am your host the Stimulator, and if you're like me, you love partying with your homies on New Years, and fuckin hate the motherfuckin Prison-Industrial-Complex. "I can't go to jail... I'll die in there!" Well… for several years now, anarchists and other trouble-makers have been combining their love for one, with their hatred of the other, ringing in the new year by showing solidarity with those forced to spend the holiday locked up behind bars. And New Years Eve 2015, was no exception, with noise demos and impromptu firework displays taking place outside jails and penitentiaries in dozens of cities around the world. This year, many of those New Year celebrations were carried out under the insurrectionary banner of BLACK DECEMBER as peeps answered a call made in November by imprisoned Greek anarchists Nikos Romanos and Panagiotis Argirou, urging comrades around the world to step up their game by increasing the anarchist offensive against the world of Power. By the time the smoke had cleared on 2015 over 100 separate solidarity actions, demonstrations, events, and clandestine attacks had been carried out in 20 different countries, all under the banner of Black December. Several got in just under the wire on December 31st, including a sledgehammer attack on a weapon manufacturer, BAE Systems, in Melbourne, Australia; a Molotov attack on a Porsche dealership in Montevideo, Uruguay; and two separate attacks in Germany: the torching of several Federal Customs Administration vehicles in Leipzig and a series of coordinated arson and sabotage attacks carried out against the sprawling, CO2-belching, open-pit brown coal mine in the Hambach Forest. Meanwhile, the past month has seen an intense escalation of repression in Kurdish regions of southeastern Turkey. including the imposition of round-the-clock curfews in Kurdish districts in the cities of Cizre, Silopi, Nusaybin and Diyarbakir and a full-fledged onslaught by the Turkish fucking military. "We have left our neighbourhood and we are leaving town. They are shelling us with mortars and attacking with tanks, so we are going to another region." As those who watched my previous report on the Kurdish insurrection in Turkey will know, back in August Turkey's aspiring Führer, Tayipp Erdogan, took a shit on the country's peace process and restarted a nearly 40 year-old civil war with the PKK, or Kurdistan Worker's Party. In response, community assemblies in the country's Kurdish southeast moved to declare autonomy from the Turkish state and began preparing to defend themselves, by digging trenches and building barricades. Since then, there have been 51 curfews imposed in this region including the latest wave, which began on December 14th. After sealing off neighbourhoods with tanks and special forces, and imposing a media blackout, Turkish snipers have been shooting anyone who leaves their house on sight, while the army pummels the region with artillery, and patrols the streets in tanks flanked by helicopter gunships. "We can't raise our heads. There are tanks... artillery. Our children's mental health is damaged. There's nothing to wear. Nothing to eat. We want this to end. Enough! We have been at war since the 1990s." This latest upsurge in violence has already claimed the lives of hundreds, if not thousands of peeps, mostly Kurdish civilians. But despite this fucked up level of state repression, Kurds in Turkey have continued to resist, with the YDG-H, or Kurdish Patriotic Youth Movement attacking Turkish personnel carriers with Molotov cocktails and even engaging Turkish troops and police in firefights. Solidarity actions have also taken place across the region, with tens of thousands of Kurds from around the country traveling to the besieged city of Cizre to demand an end to the military crackdown and massive rallies taking place in parts of Kurdish cities not currently under strict curfew conditions. Most importantly, the Kurds have not backed down from their declaration of autonomy, which has since been adopted by the leaders of the reformist pro-Kurdish HDP party, and new community self-defense forces have been formed, modeled after the Syrian Kurdish defense forces of the YPG and YPJ. ♬♬ Let me tell you something now the Natives is here we back on the real shit. Caps will get peeled quick here's a war mask for the family, the savage, the fearless. I got that feeling, it's about that time that we ghost up, coast up like we supposed ta, feed em to the fish at the bottom of the ocean. It's that old shit brought back cock back like you ready to kill for your fam, kill for your tribe are you ready to die? Then show me now, is you really a savage? Cuz if you is, then can you hear them songs they sung in the past? The one for the savage native man ain't afraid to pick that gun up and blast ya. And if I ask ya Would you actually be ready for that tho? To protect and defend, they left us for dead. It's time to put some lead in these assholes. That's how it goes here. There's consequence to the actions they make. And they can't get away with the slaughter and rape that was brought to these places back in the day. That's all I have to say about that. Native pride til I'm coastin. Til the casket drops I'm blastin shots Got a strap in my hand with a full clip, man. To pray for peace is like prayin for death in the way that we living. It'd be a shame to forgive them cuz the shit they did wasn't made for forgiveness. Dem da bad man dem wan none of it. Run up and get done up Rise above em on that natty shit Let them know we are so serious Gun shot warning. Grab your man and shit away from us. ♬♬ As regular viewers of this mothafuckin show may have noticed me and my subMedia slaves spend a good chunk of time showcasing stories from the global motherfuckin Indigenous resistance. From the Mapuche nation fighting against the ongoing theft of their lands by the Chilean state, to Palestinians resisting illegal settlements and the Israeli fucking army, anti-colonial resistance is alive and well in today's so-called post-colonial world. In resisting the ongoing colonization of their traditional territories, Indigenous land defenders form a primary global line of defense against many of the destructive mega-projects proposed by the gangsta capitalists of the energy and extractive industries. Here in Klanada, Indigenous elders and warriors have been at the forefront of struggles against fracking, clear-cut logging, and the construction of oil and natural gas pipelines and the motherfuckin Tar Sands. For much of the past decade this resistance has taken place under the reigns of Klanada's petrol-pimping Prime Minister, Stephen Harper. ♬♬ West Alberta... county mama take me home.... ♬♬ An ultra-conservative ideologue, and former oil industry lobbyist, who went out of his way to gut domestic and international ecological regulations, muzzle his environmental critics, and callously ignore the demands of Indigenous peeps, both at home and abroad. But back in October of last year, politricks in Klanada got a fucking face-lift. Harper got his pasty ass tossed to the curb and the voters elected themselves a hunky new overlord - Justin Trudeau! Despite the fact that Trudeau voted for the totalitarian police state-inducing legislation Bill C-51, and unequivocally supports existing pipeline proposals, and the expansion of the motherfuckin Tar Sands, loads of so-called “progressives” are swooning. In part, this is typical lesser-evilism similar to when the man your mama calls Obama took over from the Bush and Cheney cabal in 2008, and this is just an expected byproduct of an electoral system managed by PR companies and mediated by corporate and state media. But another one of the insidious reasons why peeps have shown JT so much love lies in his professed plans to reboot the federal government’s relations with the country’s First Nations. This shift in tone was signaled, in part, by his nomination of the country's first Indigenous Attorney General, Jody Wilson-Raybould, a former regional chief of the BC Assembly of First Nations who before joining the federal government, oversaw several rounds of treaty negotiations that attempted to assimilate the unceded Indigenous territories of so-called British Columbia by bringing them under the legal jurisdiction of their colonial occupier. As the head honcho of the country's justice department, she is now in charge of dealing with troublesome Native groups who continue to maintain their territorial sovereignty, such as the Unist'ot'en clan blocking pipelines in unceded Wet'suwet'en lands. As western corporations and their political pets get increasingly wise to the threat posed by the current upsurge in Native-led resistance, attempts to co-opt their struggles will no doubt increase. But grassroots Indigenous activists and land defenders live lifestyles very different from the sellout leaders that the state handpicks as negotiating partners. These differences have incredibly high stakes. Particularly when it comes to negotiating treaties and signing infrastructural development projects. To learn more about some of the real life shit affecting grassroots Indigenous peeps in Turtle Island, I recently caught up with Ant-Loc, MC for one of my favourite hip hop groups, Savage Fam. My name don't matter in this situation. We represent Savage Fam: Standing Against Violent Adversaries and Genocidal Environments Forever Always Movement. The voice of the voiceless. The people that nobody speaks for. The people that aren't allowed to speak for themselves. I'm from the Lower Elwha Klallam people in illegally occupied Washington State. North-west portion of the United Snakes of America. To most peeps out there, Savage Fam is a hip hop group. But to others, it's much more than that. Can you explain? Some people consider us, you know, music or hip hop artists, or rap artists or whatever the fuck that is, but I feel like Savage Fam was a coming together of a lot of people that were tired of having to face the sicknesses, the death, the destruction that was going on on our communities. And I think that some of us grabbed on the portion of music, hip hop because it was something that was listened to in our communities. But realistically the way we always address it - I know when we are sitting behind closed doors, and we're conversing with ourselves, the fact is that Savage Fam is a voice.. it's an idea, it's a concept. It's a way of being that existed even before we gave it a name. Like the way it's broken down: Standing Against Violent Adversaries and Genocidal Environments - what that suggests is that, not only do we function with addressing the issues in terms through music, we also confront the system - we have confronted the system, we have been arrested... got down doing what was necessary to hold it down for our people. We've crossed the country helping out our people in every way possible.... not just through music. But music was the way that people got to know us, Savage Fam When I first saw y'all perform, y'all had more rappers on stage than the Wu Tang Clan. How many peeps are in Savage Fam? Many people, like, grabbed onto this shit and we never wanted to turn anyone away in terms of being a part of this shit. In terms of being like "Well I got nobody else. I have fuckin nothing remaining of my identity. I have nothing remaining of any of this shit, because this shit has been stripped from me by every possible means there is. And you're the only fucking thing we have... is this shit. I seen in this video where y'all were getting arrested at fuckin Columbus Day in Denver. I seen this shit when y'all came over to the spot and droppred some clothes off. Y'all came up to the spot when the girl killed herself just to come show support." People were like "Fuck that, we wanna be a part of this shit, you know what I'm sayin? Yeah man... fuckin this is all we have. You make us feel strong. You make us feel this, or you make us actually only fuckin feel like somebody gives a fuck about us." Like, that simple. Like "you actually fuckin care about some shit that we're going through, and we can tell you really been through it." So Savage Fam spans all the fuck over. You might find a motherfucker in Nova Scotia... you might find some motherfucker in South America. A lot of the lyrics y'all drop are about the motherfuckin police. Why do y'all hate them so much? And what is their role in the colonial process? Pigs and military, they hold in place an illegal occupying force. So like, the system of the United Snakes, the systems of anything else that exists here, is held in place by the policing system and by the military system, which in a sense, if you look at it, are very much one and the same. Because under the US view of the world might makes right, so the more power that you exert, the more power that you show in terms of policing the streets with guns.. the Feds, the pigs, what they do, is they continuously hold down - they make sure that this occupancy is continuing, and ongoing. And I think - that's like, from an Indigenous perspective. When you look at it from a human perspective, or any other perspective, you can see every single day people being killed by the police. You can see people being raped by the police. You can see how corrupt the system is. How misplaced the idea of justice is. Because what they have created is bullies with badges, bullies with guns. People that kind of, can get away pretty much with anything. Are there any groups or movements out there that you have affinity with? Any other movement outside of an anarchist movement has always been about "how do we find our place for justice within the system? How do we find our place to exist within the system, but equal? How do we find our place within the system but have our piece of the pie as well?" And under that, there's no addressing of the fact that people are - everyone is illegally occupying Indigenous homelands. And I think that is a fundamental flaw in every single movement that needs to be addressed, first and foremost before I even listen to anybody about anything. That's me personally... because I think that it's very dangerous to assume as anybody - and I don't care what P.O.C. organization you come from, whatever it is, if you're not addressing first and foremost, that you occupy Indigenous homelands illegally - regardless of the circumstances that got you there - if you do not address that fact, first and foremost, then you disrespect and you disregard the ongoing occupation, and the injustice that continues because of that ongoing occupation - that colonization process. Colonization is simply the process of coming through forcefully, and pushing a new worldview, and a new way of functioning on a group of people or group of peoples. And so if you're willing to accept that, just as long as you can have your piece of equality within that, then it's problematic for the Indigenous population. Do you think people on this continent are paying more attention to Indigenous issues? Yes... but that's only in the context of like it fits now with environmental issues where we're seeing drastic environmental changes. And because of that, we're afraid of what might happen. So... the Indigenous population has always been the people to go to to be like "Oh, what the fuck should we do, because our fuckin world is changing, and it's turning all bad?" because they know how to take care of the land and shit. And so everyone's like "Oh, let's figure out a way to see what these Natives are doing." But even then, it's underground. And it's very very much underground. So like, right now, we're talking about a fuckin coal train that's going through Lummy, and nobody fuckin knows that even exists because people are so busy dealin with like, one or two major projects that are fuckin set up by the media to be important. But there's a thousand different projects going on. There's thousands of different things that are going on. There's fucking farms on rivers... there's fuckin ongoing deforestation and logging. Until it affects them in their back yard.. then it's like "Let's bring in the Natives, and let's have a picture of the Natives and what they're doing, and let's support them." Again, this is allyship at its finest, because this is when people like, bring Natives to the forefront, and have them be the voice. And they actually become the ones who are chased after and incarcerated, murdered, all those different things behind closed doors. And everybody else gets their accolades and shit. People wanna do the shit that gets them in front of cameras, gets them on pictures and shit like that. And I know we're sittin in front of cameras right now, but what I'm sayin is that people wanna do the pretty shit. People wanna do the fuckin - all the little shit that's the "major world" shit, so they can get a little fame and fortune behind what they're trying to do. But nobody really knows - people don't know about the fact that every fucking day there's kids killing themselves. People don't know the fact that, fuckin, there's kids overdosing themselves every fucking day - which doesn't mean shit to society at large. But when you have a population of 500 fuckin people, some places 30 people, some places 100 people. When you have a population like that, and you see 10 people die a fuckin year? That's fucking significant. But nobody fuckin pays attention to that shit. Ain't nobody coming to fuckin any kind of camp to, say, stop the child molestors from coming in our community. But if we have some big shit that affects them, they'll come fuck with us. But they won't fuck with us if we're talkin about let's try and protect our children. Let's try to protect our women. Let's try - it's not - it won't go down like that. Because personally, I don't believe anyone really gives a fuck unless they got some kind of stake in it. But we always got a stake in it. Thanks Ant, and that about does it for this sedition of It’s The End of the World as we Know it and I Feel Fine. If you want to hear an extended interview with Ant-Loc, find out the tracks I played, subscribe to my email list, get my podcast, or just clue me into some new hot shit political hip hop just visit my fuckin website: With that said, I want to thank all the slaves who contributed to the continuation of this transmission of tribulations by kicking down some coins into my virtual tip jar. So much appreciation to: Andrew, Lauren, Marisol, Joseph, Baraton, Taram, Christian, Michael, Kirk, Steven, Willie, Jerad, Zoe, Jeremy, Reto, Renzo, Yifan, Alexandra, Andrew, Amado, Isabelle, Jennifer, Sarah, Gregory, Premadasi, Freddie, Marten, Max, Jonathan, Steven, Miguel, Dylan, Shannon, John, François, and Benjamin. Huchinango! Id also like to welcome the newest members of the taconspiracy: John and Jennifer. Ocosingo! That’s all for now, and remember the wise words of KRS-one, when he said: There can never really be justice on stolen land! See you next time, suckers.