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Greetings troublemakers... welcome to Trouble.
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My name is not important.
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Whether you see them as punitive sites of enforced isolation
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set up to protect the public and deter criminal behaviour,
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or oppressive and entirely illegitimate institutions
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that need to be abolished and systematically razed to the ground...
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everyone pretty much agrees that jail is a horrible place
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that you wanna avoid if at all possible.
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Alongside police and the courts,
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prison forms one pillar of
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the brutal apparatus of state control
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often called the criminal justice system.
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And as if this three-part system wasn't
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intimidating enough on its own,
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it forms only one part of the broader prison-industrial-complex
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-- a sprawling, self-propelled conveyor belt of human misery,
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whose primary beneficiaries include politicians, lobbyists,
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correctional workers’ unions (that is, prison guards, or screws),
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probation officers, construction companies, and private contractors.
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Whenever we take meaningful action that breaks the rules
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set out by the powers-that-be,
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there's a chance that we will be subjected to a gauntlet of punishment
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that begins with our violent arrest,
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continues through legal proceedings
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that are often lengthy and definitely stressful,
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and could potentially end with us serving long prison sentences.
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This is a pretty daunting thing to come to terms with.
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But if we hope to be successful in our efforts,
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it's important for each of us to be aware of the risks
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involved in the actions we take.
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Whether you prefer working in a small affinity group,
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or as part of a larger network, be proactive,
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and take the necessary steps to prepare for the repression you might face.
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Without being properly prepared,
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we risk being set against one another,
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isolated and paralyzed into inaction,
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which is exactly what our enemies want.
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With that in mind, over the next thirty minutes
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we'll share the voices of a number of individuals
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who are helping people navigate complicated legal situations,
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offering crucial support to jailed comrades,
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building infrastructure for collective defence
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... and making a whole lot of trouble!
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The political climate in the US right now
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is really bad for the radical left,
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and very dangerous for us as well.
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Not only are we facing the state repression that we've been so used to,
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we're also facing increasing threats from the right,
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whether that is alt-right trolls and doxxing
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and live-streamers at protests and rallies
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outing people to be targeted online,
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or it's ultra-violent and murderous actions
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such as in Portland most recently.
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There's also the threats from the police,
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who are working very clearly and very blatantly
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with the far-right in order to target
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radical left organizers and activists.
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So I think we're at a time right now
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where the stakes are really high for people.
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There is really widespread resistance,
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not only to the Trump administration
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but to a rise in white supremacist organizing and fascism across the country.
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There's a lot of resistance that's going on
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to police murder, police violence...
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also to extraction projects.
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And so I think that as resistance is growing,
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the repression that's coming from the government is increasing as well.
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Since the election,
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there have been hundreds of new felony defendants across the country
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ranging from everything that's happening over at Standing Rock,
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to the inauguration in DC.
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May Day in different places
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there was a good number of felony arrests as well.
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When people are arrested in political situations,
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it seems to be that the charges are becoming much higher
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than a lot of us are used to...
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with J20 being a really good example of that.
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On January 20th 2017,
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during an anti-capitalist, anti-fascist march in Washington DC,
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over 200 people, myself included
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were assaulted with chemical weapons,
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surrounded and trapped using a technique known as kettling
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and arrested.
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We were all charged with one count of felony rioting,
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which later became eight or more felonies
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including engaging in a riot,
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inciting a riot,
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conspiracy to riot
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and several counts of property damage.
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The sum of these charges carries a maximum sentence
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of 75 years in prison.
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To put this clearly, we are facing the rest of our lives
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behind bars for going to a protest.
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Conspiracy charges are one of the prosecutors'
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favourite tools because they're basically a thought crime.
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So it's a way of the prosecutors to put blanket charges on people
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and make them all responsible for actions
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that maybe only one person took.
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Basically they're saying that
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200 people were equally responsible
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for breaking a handful of windows.
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We see conspiracy charges being used
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to really brutal effect in the so-called War on Terror,
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which is mostly targeted against Arab Muslims here in the US.
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We see a lot of conspiracy charges in the so-called War on Drugs
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targeted against both inner-city populations
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as well as a lot of rural populations.
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Mass arrest and prosecution is nothing new.
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What sets our legal cases apart
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is that the state has charged so many protestors
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with so many serious felonies.
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This is the first political arrest of the Trump presidency.
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This case is about giving the government more power
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to criminalize and shut down protest.
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Initially it was just answering questions
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about knowing your rights
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and advising people about risks and consequences of actions...
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and when we had our first mass arrest,
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then it became a much more intense situation.
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Over the course of a year there were over 800 people who were arrested,
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with really varying levels of charges.
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Early on it was things like criminal trespass.
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Y'know, as people were going to work sites
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and attempting to disrupt the work that was happening on the pipeline itself.
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And as those months dragged on,
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as more and more people were getting arrested,
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the charges then increased quite a bit.
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One of the things that the special prosecutor
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Ladd Erickson has said,
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in a motion, he writes:
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there's no relevance to any testimony or evidence
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regarding historical treaty, tribal sovereignty,
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the merits of the Dakota Access Pipeline, climate change,
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sacred sites, corporate power, corporate media
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or any other social or political cause.
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Meaning he is attempting to discredit the resistance efforts
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of the water protectors
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and the merits of the power of prayer
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and the responsibility to protect our first medicine...
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our water.
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There's also seven people who are facing federal charges,
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Red Fawn Fallis being one of them,
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who is facing upwards of 25 years in federal prison.
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And she is currently still being held in custody pre-trial,
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so she'll be awaiting trial
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while still in the custody of the US marshals
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up there in North Dakota.
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There's also six other people who are facing federal charges.
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And all of those people are facing the same charges of
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Civil Disorder and Use of Fire in a Civil Disorder.
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So these people are facing up to fifteen years
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in federal prison.
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All seven of those people are Indigenous water protectors.
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While the people who are facing state charges
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come from a wide array of identities,
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it seems that the federal repression matrix
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is really centered on Indigenous people,
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their resistance and their assertion of their own sovereignty
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over their lands and their waters.
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Due process is not going to be delivered to these water protectors
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by the way the trials have been set up.
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There is a continuing grand jury that was convened
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to investigate the activities of water protectors.
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They've been used historically as a means of political repression.
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As a way of shutting down resistance.
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Of starting to tear communities apart by spreading paranoia,
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suspicion, getting people to self-isolate.
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One of the most clear wins that we have
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in regards to the movement defence work
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that's happening at Standing Rock
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is around this grand jury.
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We found out about the grand jury,
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we very quickly organized,
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not only with the person who'd been subpoenaed,
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but also spreading - within the same day –
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information and resources throughout the camp.
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And then also put together a month-long tour
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to reach water protectors across the country as well.
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The US Attorney's Office, the FBI, the ATF, the JTTF,
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and other federal law enforcement bodies had a really clear vision
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of how that grand jury process was gonna unfold for them.
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And I think that we fucked it up for them.
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And I think we did a really good job of it.
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Many people who've never had a first-hand experience
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being a defendant in the criminal justice system
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tend to have a pretty skewed idea of what to expect going into it.
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And given the way that the legal process is generally depicted
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in movies, in TV shows
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and sensationalist corporate media accounts,
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it’s understandable that when people think of court proceedings,
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they usually imagine two sharply-dressed lawyers
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squaring off in a courtroom,
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each arguing the merits of their position in front of a stern judge
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and an undecided and apprehensive jury.
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-I hereby order Ruben Carter released from prison.
- <>
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In fact, the whole process is less like a John Grisham novel,
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and more like something dreamt up by Franz Kafka.
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If you are privileged enough to make bail,
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which, by the way, most people aren't....
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then you can look forward to a long stretch of time
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when your legal case will severely impact your life.
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This might be months...
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or if you wanna actually take the charges to trial, years.
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Either way, you’re looking at a steady stream of
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seemingly pointless court appearances,
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plus regular meetings with your lawyer.
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More often than not, the process is entirely confusing,
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stressful and expensive.
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If you have co-defendants,
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get used to not communicating with them unless your lawyers are present...
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even if they're your partner, your close friend or your comrade.
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If you're lucky, your lawyer will respect your agency,
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and might even be sympathetic to your politics.
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If you have the support of some solid comrades,
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you might even be able to come up with a way
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of advancing your struggle through the court proceedings themselves.
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And who knows... the charges might even get dropped out of the blue.
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Sometimes for reasons nobody can really explain.
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In very kind of basic terms,
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a legal defence would be what somebody is saying
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in response to the state's allegations of them having broken a law.
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So if somebody is charged with destroying property
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such as breaking a window,
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a legal defence could be 'not guilty',
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as in that person did not do that.
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Political defence, in contrast, would be about
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looking at the political climate and figuring out
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what are the different leverage points that can be used
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to bring the politics of the case
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or the politics of the movement that's being targeted
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into the forefront.
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So your political defence is really based off of:
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“what are your goals politically for your movement?”
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whereas a legal defence is based off of:
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“what are your goals...
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to have the least harm through the legal system as possible?”
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Whether it is throwing down against racist cops,
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or locking down against earth-destroying machines,
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if you get arrested it's not just you that's on trial
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... it's your struggle too.
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A successful defence campaign draws on both legal and political tactics
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to mitigate the potential repercussions the case can have
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on individuals and the movement at large.
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Your legal defence is based off of the confines of the legal system
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and the goal of defence is to get you off of charges.
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To make sure that you're acquitted at trial,
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or you negotiate a plea that's favourable to you
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and avoid going to trial if that might be the best thing
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in your particular legal situation.
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Whereas a political defence can sometimes actually
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butt up against that normal legal defence.
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There's different costs that can be involved.
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There's also a lot that can be gained
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through taking a political approach.
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This approach moves away from the realm
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of what is deemed legal by lawmakers
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and steps into the larger realm of ethics, morality,
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and liberation from all forms of oppression.
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It can also include defendants deciding that
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they're not going to cooperate with the proceedings against them.
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Notably different Puerto Rican independence fighters
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and some Black Liberation Army soldiers back in the 70s and 80s
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decided that they were taking a Prisoner of War approach to their cases,
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so they rejected the legitimacy of the US government
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to file and press charges against them,
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and refused to cooperate in the proceedings at all.
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Those prisoners of war were convicted despite their lack of participation,
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and many of them sentenced to decades in prison,
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a good number of who are still serving that time.
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It can also mean trying to put pressure onto the legal system itself.
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Calling campaigns, reaching out to the prosecutor's office, or the judge.
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Writing letters to the judge from people all over the country
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or all over the world about this particular defendant
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or group of co-defendants.
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Over the last number of years
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there have been a number of successful uses of political defence.
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Most of those are also unfortunately, also mixed victories
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where we were able to win in certain respects and lose in other respects.
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An example that comes to mind is the Cece McDonald case in Minnesota.
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Cece is a Black trans woman who was attacked
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while walking to the grocery store late one night.
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And in the fight that ensued,
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one of the attackers was stabbed near the heart
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and died on the scene.
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He was later found to have a swastika tattoo on his chest
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which he received while involved in white supremacist gangs in prison.
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Cece was the only one who was charged in that incident at first,
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and she was initially facing 20 years on a murder charge.
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After a certain amount of time in her case
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she was offered a plea agreement to around ten years.
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And she rejected that,
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so the prosecutors added on a higher level murder charge
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that upped the amount of time she was facing to 40 years.
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I was involved in her defence committee
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and we were able to get a lot of support and solidarity for her
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from across the country and across the world
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and helped expose that prosecution for being a continuation of
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the racist transphobic attack against Cece
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that the white supremacists in the streets had begun,
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by attacking Cece and her friends.
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As a result of that pressure campaign,
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in combination with her defence that her legal team was working on,
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she was able to accept a plea agreement
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to a lower-level felony charge of involuntary manslaughter.
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She had to serve about an additional year of prison time,
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and she's been released for a number of years now
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and has been involved in a lot of public organizing,
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public speaking and pursuit of justice for trans people,
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particularly Black trans women.
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Because of the large numbers of trans folks,
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and Black trans women in particular,
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who are assaulted, targeted and murdered in the streets.
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The legal system is meant to really individualize people
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and to isolate you from one another.
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And it's good at doing it.
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And so the more that we can
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maintain communication with one another,
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the more that we can maintain our solidarity with one another.
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There are plenty of people who are charged criminally
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that'll fold on somebody else in order to save their own self.
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But if that's something that is absolutely against
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your values and your politics,
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you need to find an attorney who also is gonna uphold
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those same values and politics
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and not push you to do something
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just because it might be better for your individual case.
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So if you have co-defendants,
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you wanna make sure that your plea agreement,
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or any statement of facts that you have to sign
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aren't going to harm or incriminate other people
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if they're y'know, known co-defendants
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– especially if they're not known co-defendants.
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Y'know, if the state doesn't know something
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we wanna keep it that way.
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It is important that we understand the implications
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and consequences of snitching
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and do our best to ensure that all defendants
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feel supported and do not buckle under the state's pressure
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and coercion to comply with their demands.
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Non-cooperation agreements are meant to establish trust
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and solidarity between co-defendants
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and make it clear that defendants will refuse to help the state
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in its efforts to prosecute us.
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In the case of J20,
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over half of the defendants have agreed to points of unity,
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which include a non-cooperation agreement,
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refusing to snitch on each other or otherwise cooperate with the state
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in targeting and isolating their co-defendants.
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This agreement also includes a commitment
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to sharing resources and working together
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for our collective defence.
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There are people facing charges from all over the country.
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And people that maybe didn't know each other before,
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and communities that weren't necessarily very well connected to one another,
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are better connected now.
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And so while the state thinks they can use things like this to tear us apart,
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it's actually an opportunity for us to grow stronger
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if we are willing to be bold.
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The Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoyevsky once wrote
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that if you want to understand a society,
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you should look inside its prisons.
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As a former prisoner himself,
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he understood that the ways in which power operates
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in a given society determine who the state locks up,
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under what conditions, and for what ends.
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Take, for example, the United States.
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Its lofty modern day position atop the global economy
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has its roots in the nation's lucrative plantation system,
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built through the unpaid labour of generations of enslaved Africans.
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Slavery in the US never really went away.... it just transformed.
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Like, there is literally an 'except' in the 13th Amendment.
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Look at it.
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Neither slavery, nor involuntary servitude,
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except as punishment for crime,
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shall exist within the United States.
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Today it is manifested in the country's system of mass incarceration,
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in which one out of every three Black males
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is imprisoned at some point in their lifetime,
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and prisoners of all races are forced to work for almost no money,
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helping to pad the profit margins of an array of wealthy companies,
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from McDonalds to Verizon.
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The US prison system is a byproduct of a specific society
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with a specific history,
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as are prisons everywhere else.
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But no matter where they’re located,
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prisons have at least one thing in common.
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Namely... they're full of people who have plenty of reasons
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to hate the state.
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The history of the Anarchist Black Cross begins in Russia
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in the period of 1900 to 1905,
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to support the comrades that were being persecuted and jailed
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in the context of the struggle against the Czar.
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Here in Mexico, the first one was established in the mid 90’s.
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The way in which we decide which comrades to support
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mainly it has to do with affinity.
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If there’s an anarchist comrade who is jailed,
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regardless if they are “guilty” or “innocent”,
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if they did it or not,
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for us that’s not relevant.
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What’s important is that it’s an anarchist comrade
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who is in prison.
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One of them is Fernando Barcenas,
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a youth who has been imprisoned for three years,
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accused of having burned a Coca Cola Christmas tree.
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The work that we do with jailed comrades
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includes keeping up with how they are doing inside,
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physically and emotionally.
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Visiting them to establish a relationship based in solidarity.
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This is done with the intent of stopping the destruction of personality
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that prison tends to achieve.
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We try to maintain a channel of communication
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through letter writing.
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Some of the actions that have been done from inside prison,
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and that we have supported,
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have been for example, hunger strikes.
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For example, a coordinated hunger strike
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from different prisons
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by four anarchist comrades
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who were in separate jails.
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The objective of the hunger strike was to denounce
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the existence of prison themselves,
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and the social function of prisons
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as part of the disciplinary regime
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of society in general.
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We also try to support small organizing projects
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that deal more with everyday life inside prison.
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There was one collective that was focused on this,
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facilitating music workshops, creative writing workshops
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and also workshops on health care,
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on music, and some other things
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that have had results.
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There’s a newspaper of chronicles.
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They even recorded a punk album.
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We are the “La Fuga” (jailbreak) coordinating committee.
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We have been around since 2015
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and we began as a coordinating collective
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between small groups and individuals
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that have an anti-prison and anti-systemic perspective.
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Mainly we organize awareness-building actions
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- especially street actions like marches, and assemblies
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in different places.
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Days of awareness.
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This can be in city squares, universities, or in high schools.
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The days of actions are mainly in the streets and in public places.
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We also mobilize against state terror.
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This has to do with principle of international solidarity,
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and we have protested at different embassies
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to bring awareness to prisoners,
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but also state terrorism and repression.
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We have a horizontal structure,
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flexible, and by affinity.
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Our operation is dynamic.
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There are no pre-determined functions,
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instead it has to do with the initiative of each individual
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and what each wants to bring to the table for a specific action.
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We just facilitate the coordination of desires
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more than a set structure.
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The Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee
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is a committee of the IWW.
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It was inspired by George Jackson's call
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for a prison labour union back in the day
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- he's an old Black Panther prisoner
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who was assassinated by the guards in California –
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and by recent struggles and uprisings.
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There was a big strike in Georgia in 2010,
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and then the Free Alabama Movement
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were shutting prisons down left and right
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and so a couple of members within the IWW
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who are formerly-incarcerated got excited about
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forming the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee.
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We have over 800 members currently on the inside
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and we have people who are coming out
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and staying with the union and staying with the organizing,
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and really informing it a lot.
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The structure is really experimental
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and the day-to-day activities vary from state to state
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and different locals.
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In some places we're trying to build inside branches
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by connecting all the prisoners across the state.
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In other places they're focusing on single communities
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and single facilities, or even units.
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A lot of the day-to-day activity is correspondence.
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Writing and trying to facilitate communication
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across the bars and the fences.
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September 9th of 2016 was the largest prison strike in history.
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Tens of thousands of prisoners participated all across the country
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and engaged in a wide variety of different tactics and actions.
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It was called for by prisoners in Alabama, Ohio and elsewhere
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and how it went down was they wrote up a call to action,
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which we distributed as broadly and widely as we could.
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And prisoners all across the country got it.
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And then at the same time we organized on the outside
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to do solidarity actions and demos.
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And many many facilities were shut down
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because of either strikes or rumours of strikes,
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as well as individual prisoners engaging in kinda
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spontaneous or unexpected actions.
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There were hunger strikes in Ohio and Wisconsin
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and work stoppages all across Texas and the Pacific North West
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and in Florida and Michigan there were a couple of actions
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where prisoners kind of wilded out
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and tore shit up inside their facility.
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As individuals,
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we all have different experiences with the legal system
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and our odds of ending up in prison are shaped
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by a number of factors.
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Some of the most important determining factors are based on identities,
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such as nationality, race, and gender, that are inscribed on us at birth.
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Others are based on our personal experiences of trauma,
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medical diagnoses, poverty, and class position,
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which often help to determine our habits and drastically limit our options.
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Some are based on the strength of our political convictions,
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and our refusal to betray them.
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But there's one factor that we do have control over...
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and that's whether or not, when the time comes,
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we have each others' backs.
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The criminal justice system is designed to keep us divided,
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because when we're isolated, we're weaker.
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It does this through a crude mixture of fear,
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self-interest and reliance on social hierarchies
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formed by, and reinforced through systemic oppression.
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If we are serious about building movements
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capable of dismantling the ideological institutions
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of white supremacy, patriarchy, ableism,
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and the capitalist states they uphold,
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then we need to focus on the physical institutions
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where they play out.
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This means building movements that can provide meaningful solidarity
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to those most affected by the state's repressive apparatus,
-
while building up infrastructure of collective defence
-
that can help us weather the struggles to come.
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If one wants to confront the state,
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the immediate response from the state is going to be repression,
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and the basic ethic of any movement has to contemplate that.
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Has to contemplate the necessity to support
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and include the comrades that are being persecuted.
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What's actually really counter-intuitive is that
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when you're facing that kind of repression,
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one of your strongest tools that you have in your community
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or as part of your movement,
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is actually to make that shit public.
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Defendants are in need of considerable support,
-
as each of us is facing the prospect of long legal battles,
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thousands of dollars in fines,
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and potentially prison sentences.
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All of us have been thrown together by the state
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into an incredibly stressful legal situation,
-
and now must figure out how to coordinate political and legal strategies
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that will keep us all out of jail.
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That support can manifest in tabling at an event,
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doing fundraisers,
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doing social media blasts to bring prominence to the case
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and let people know what's happening.
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Also letting people know, like what implications this case has
-
for people across the country.
-
This case is very significant in terms of being such a massive case,
-
and unprecedented in many ways that it happened
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right on Trump's first day in the presidency.
-
It's not a coincidence that
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they're going so hard against these defendants.
-
It's not a coincidence that this is a case that's trying to set the tone
-
for what state repression looks like under Trump.
-
The charges that Morton County State's Attorney's Office
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has brought against water protectors...
-
there are over 569 pending cases in Morton and Burleigh County.
-
And when we're talking about that number of people,
-
and the insurmountable financial liability by retaining attorneys,
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posting bail, getting cars out of impound,
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horses that were impounded,
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dogs that were impounded,
-
kayaks that were impounded...
-
not only that, but travel expenses.
-
We need support from people who care about this issue,
-
who care about destroying capitalism,
-
who wanna erode, and y'know, believe in the strategy
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of corroding the glue that holds capitalism
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white supremacy and patriarchy together
-
-- which is the prison system.
-
For us the strategy is always strong coordination,
-
to stay away from sectarianism,
-
and to be capable of establishing,
-
between different small groups and individuals,
-
the creation of potent and permanent organizations.
-
There is very seldom going to be a handbook to follow
-
or a playbook to follow that will say:
-
“if you do A, B & C, then you'll fully support the defendants
-
and they'll win at trial, and then they'll walk home free."
-
I would encourage people to not be intimidated by
-
all of the, like, legal jargon and y'know... specifics
-
of the legal system in and of itself.
-
It's complicated.
-
And while attorneys like to view themselves as being experts,
-
even attorneys aren't experts at it.
-
Because the state is constantly trying to
-
switch the way that it's utilizing its own language and rules
-
to its own benefit.
-
Situations in prisons vary state by state,
-
facility by facility.
-
So there's not one single thing to do
-
that can apply across the country.
-
Instead you gotta plug in with local organizers
-
and find things that are appropriate
-
and connect with what's going on
-
on the inside in the places that you're at.
-
A lot of times I think people get burnt out very easily,
-
or overwhelmed very quickly
-
with how much there is to learn about the criminal legal system
-
and can feel stalled out in their work.
-
And so when people are working,
-
or engaging in this defence work,
-
they need to really approach it with the idea of
-
entering into the unknown in order to fight a battle
-
that is designed for the defendants to lose
-
in order to figure out how to create space
-
to either not give the state a full victory,
-
or ideally to give us a victory instead.
-
We think that one of the best ways
-
to create solidarity with jailed comrades
-
is to not forget that they are there for fighting.
-
Not to forget that they are there because
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they decided to face the system,
-
and that it’s necessary to continue the struggle
-
and continue fighting against the system.
-
It is important for people to consider that solidarity
-
isn't just responding to repression by raising money and awareness.
-
It also means continuing the struggle,
-
so it's important that people not be scared away
-
by what is happening to us.
-
The necessity of resistance hasn't gone away
-
just because 200+ people are facing felonies.
-
If anything, it is just further evidence
-
of how rotten this system is.
-
As a whole we're facing a lot of state repression.
-
We're facing a lot of threats from the right.
-
And we're also organizing resistance and solidarity
-
in really remarkably effective ways.
-
We can always strengthen that.
-
We can always come together more.
-
We can always get better at how
-
we are handling those different threats...
-
but there's a lot of inspiring actions happening
-
and a lot of inspiring organizing to bring people together
-
in the face of all these threats.
-
And hopefully we'll come out stronger
-
as a result of all that organizing.
-
The same kind of... fire that motivates people
-
to get out into the streets,
-
or to plan actions,
-
or drop a banner in the middle of the night,
-
or sabotage something,
-
is the same kind of fire that motivates you
-
to protect the people that you're in resistance with.
-
As resistance to nationalist reaction,
-
soaring inequality
-
and rampant resource extraction continues to gain steam,
-
our movements will face more waves of state repression.
-
Whether this ultimately strengthens our movements,
-
or crushes them,
-
will depend a great deal on our capacity to develop
-
the tools, resources, and infrastructure necessary
-
to strengthen our collective defence,
-
and our ability to thwart the state's efforts
-
to isolate our comrades
-
behind walls of steel and concrete.
-
So at this point, we’d like to remind you
-
that Trouble is intended to be watched in groups,
-
and to be used as a resource to promote discussion
-
and collective organizing.
-
If there are no local legal defence
-
or prisoner support initiatives in your area,
-
please consider getting together with some comrades,
-
screening this film and discussing what steps
-
would be involved in starting one up.
-
Hosting fundraisers
-
and letter-writing nights for political prisoners
-
is a great place to start.
-
Check out the screening kit
-
for this episode for more info on where to begin.
-
Are you interested in running regular screenings of Trouble
-
at your campus, infoshop, community center,
-
or even just at your home with friends?
-
Become a Trouble-Maker!
-
For 10 bucks a month,
-
we’ll hook you up with an advanced copy of the show
-
and a screening kit featuring additional resources
-
and some questions you can use to get a discussion going.
-
If you can’t afford to support us financially,
-
no worries!
-
You can stream and/or download all our content for free
-
off of our website: sub.media/trouble.
-
If you’ve got any suggestions for show topics,
-
or just wanna get in touch,
-
drop us a line at trouble@sub.media.
-
We’re excited to see that people have been
-
supporting our work by becoming troublemakers
-
and wanna send a shout out to Marvin, Noah,
-
Cameron, Liam, Joshua, Thomas, Johnny,
-
Richard, Dark, Badger, BJ, Tino, Filip, Thomas,
-
Maciej and Leslie.
-
This episode would not have been possible without the
-
generous support of Anda, Felipe, Whitney,
-
Roger & Liberation Frequency.
-
Now get out there, and make some trouble!