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Greetings troublemakers... welcome to Trouble.
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My name is not important.
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Insurgencies are, by their very nature, chaotic events.
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They are attacks on the dominant order,
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waged by determined and mobilized groups of people
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intent on uprooting and destroying the established power structure
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by any means necessary.
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From the perspective of the political and economic elites
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who draw substantial benefit from the status quo,
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the unpredictable and tumultuous nature of insurgencies
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make them terrifying worst-case scenarios.
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To those in power, they constitute existential threats
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that must be carefully managed
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and avoided at all costs.
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Despite the sophisticated means of coercion
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and incredible capacity for violence that they wield,
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modern states are more precarious than they let on.
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Like fortresses built on sand,
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they are vulnerable to the seismic shifts
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of their internal contradictions and political fault lines.
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While anarchists have historically been
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at the forefront of critiques of the state,
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we are by no means alone in rejecting
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the illegitimate authority that they represent.
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Whether it's colonized nations fighting against foreign occupation,
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crowds of people rising up to topple dictators,
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or radicals struggling against the exploitation, oppression
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and ecological destruction of capitalist democracies
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... the desire for freedom is universal.
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Well aware of this, states seek to prop up their legitimacy
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by assuming the mantle of the protectors of freedom itself,
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and the guarantors of another universally-shared human trait,
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the desire for security.
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But on their own, these promises are not always enough,
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and so states have developed intricate systems of social control,
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aimed at proactively seeking out and destroying
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any potential challenge to their continued rule.
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This constant shaping of internal political dynamics
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forms the basis of counterinsurgency doctrine
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– a science that cuts to the very essence of state power itself.
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Over the next thirty minutes, we'll share the voices of several individuals
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as they explain the principles of counterinsurgency,
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how they’ve manifested in historical
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and contemporary strategies of state repression,
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and some of the ways that our movements can thwart these dynamics
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in order to challenge state legitimacy,
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spread treasonous thoughts,
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and all around just make a whole lot of trouble.
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Counterinsurgency is a specialized form of warfare
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waged by a state against its population.
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An insurgency is an organized revolt
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by people against an established authority.
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Most commonly throughout history it's an anti-colonial
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or anti-imperialist resistance movement.
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Counterinsurgency is the technical art of counterrevolution.
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At it's broadest, counterinsurgency refers to the whole range of activities
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that a state engages in to repress an uprising.
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Counterinsurgency is basically the constant war
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that states carry out in order to manage conflict
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and ensure the stability and continuity of governance.
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Counterinsurgency is designed to keep a movement
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which is at a formative stage, which is weak and vulnerable
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– they're designed to keep them at that stage and to be able to crush them.
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To make them lose legitimacy
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or keep them from getting any real legitimacy
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for their demands or their grievances.
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Under the counterinsurgency philosophy, conflict is permanent.
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Therefore state institutions need to always be the arbiters
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and the mediators of conflict.
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They therefore need the legitimacy to be seen as neutral arbiters.
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To be seen as the only ones with the resources
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or the capability to offer a solution to a problem.
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There's always a thing within counterinsurgency
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that it's always supposed to be operating within the rule of law
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and within a democratic context.
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At least that's sort of the modern counterinsurgency,
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is the ideal that the soldiers won't be out on the street.
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It won't be evidently a war.
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The objective is to maintain the level of conflict at the lowest levels.
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At levels of simple dissidence or non-violence.
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And not allow those conflicts to evolve to more insurrectional
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or revolutionary levels.
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As it has developed as a term of art in the military literature,
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it has come to refer to a specific approach
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- a specific philosophy as to how that is best done.
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And that approach is characterized
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less by a reliance on sheer coercive force,
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and more by the use of soft power
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– the shaping of social conditions,
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the co-optation of movement leaders into the state apparatus,
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and the offering of concessions and reforms
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to undercut popular support for the uprising.
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Former British military officer Frank Kitson,
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in a book called Low Intensity Operations,
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talks about the need to find and neutralize
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subversive elements in the population
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and to remove the masses from leadership of the subversive movement.
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And one of the key components of that is attaching
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parts of the resistance movement that engage in
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non-violent, civil disobedience-type of campaigns
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– attaching those types of elements to the state
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as a means of dividing the resistance movement
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and undermining the more radical or militant components.
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Big non-profit groups are responsible for subverting radical political change,
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and they play a big role in the counterinsurgency.
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Their goal is to channel people in directions
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that will not put them in the position of directly confronting the state.
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Basically counterinsurgency as a state philosophy arose
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as specialists working for the state,
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as state institutions analyzed their failures and weaknesses
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in the anti-colonial struggles of the 50's and 60's,
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and the particularly urban, and other domestic struggles
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within powerful colonizing states of the 60's and 70's.
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Back in the 60's and 70's, you had more of a revolutionary consciousness
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among many people in the United States.
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A lot of it was influenced by the revolutions that were actually
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– the armed revolutions –
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that were going on in Africa and South-East Asia at the time.
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They did not want these kinds of groups to ever exist again.
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They did not want groups like the Black Panther Party
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to ever be able to come into existence again.
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Counterinsurgency, because its a type of warfare,
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involves all the means of war
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– including political, economic, military, cultural and ideological
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as well as psychological measures.
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A huge part of counterinsurgency, it's about hearts and minds.
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That's what they say,
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but really it's not about actually offering people services
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or actually providing them with a better life.
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It's about saying that that's what you're doing,
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and repressing people to the point that their silence becomes consent
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for whatever kind of rule you decide is appropriate in that moment,
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as the sort of state or as the elite ruler.
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It's all about fear.
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It's about managing people through fear.
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And when you see these thugs being thrown into the back of a paddy-waggon,
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you just see them thrown in. Rough.
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I said please don't be too nice.
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Whether it's handing out speeding tickets,
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kicking in doors to execute search warrants,
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or putting down riots with batons, tear gas
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and other so-called “less-lethal” weaponry,
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police are the front-line shock troops of the state and capitalist class.
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They’re tasked with enforcing laws
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and meting out repression
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in order to keep domestic populations in line.
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Armed with a badge and a gun,
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and basked in the legitimacy of the state,
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police are granted a blank cheque to beat and even kill
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whoever they deem a threat to their authority
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… as long as the person on the receiving end is
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Black, Brown, queer, trans, and/or poor.
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Because they form the most visible face of state repression,
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cops are often seen as being synonymous with state power itself.
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And while they actually comprise only one small component
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of the broader state security apparatus,
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which itself makes up only one facet of
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the state’s sprawling bureaucracy
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... it’s fair to say that their historical development
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was of pivotal importance to the rise of modern states.
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Processes of state formation and consolidation
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have taken different paths in countries around the world,
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as they’ve had to account for different historical,
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geographical and socio-political factors.
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And while cops generally play the same repressive role everywhere,
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and are, without a doubt, all bastards
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… these national and regional distinctions have left imprints
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in the character of local police forces themselves.
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In the United States, for instance
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... given contemporary police officers' role as the enforcers
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of white supremacist terror in Black communities,
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it should not be surprising that they trace their origins
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to an earlier institution of racist social control
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– namely, slave patrols.
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[♫] WOOP WOOP! That's the sound of the police.
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WOOP WOOP! That's the sound of the beast! [♫]
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To understand slave patrols,
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it's important to understand the slow development of the state intervention
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in maintaining slave society,
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beginning with simply passing laws
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that would restrict the activities of the slaves.
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And then, laws on their own being insufficient,
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authorizing any adult white man to enforce those laws.
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But then the reliance on individual action proving insufficient,
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forming into this body called the slave patrols
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that were an off-shoot of the militia
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and worked as kind of a voluntary-compulsory organization,
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meaning that participation was mandatory,
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but it wasn't a professional outfit.
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That provided a way of making the entire white male population
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directly involved in maintaining slave society.
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As industrialization came to the south,
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and there were larger slave populations in southern cities,
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the slave patrols moved similarly into the city.
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And there they became professionalized
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and very quickly their duties expanded
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and they became a body that we would
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immediately recognize as a modern police force.
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[♫] Overseer! Overseer! Overseer – officer!
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Yeah officer from overseer!
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You need a little clarity?
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Check the similarity! [♫]
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And now 200 years later,
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the basic function of the police is largely the same.
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It's maintaining the stratified nature of the society,
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both in terms of race and class.
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White lives matter! White lives matter! White lives matter!
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If you look at the whole concept of white supremacy
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and how that fits into the counterinsurgency
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on a historical basis,
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of course the oldest terrorist organization in the United States,
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which is the Ku Klux Klan
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– that was a group that was founded right after the Civil War
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to inflict terror against the African people in the United States,
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who had been newly freed from slavery
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and who were beginning to try to organize.
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And as you move on into the 20th century
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and the Civil Rights Movement began to develop,
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the Klan and other groups would work alongside the police,
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whether it was local police or whether it was sheriffs departments.
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And they would work together to inflict terror
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to restrain the movement - the organizing against white supremacy.
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I think one of the big differences
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between police in Canada and police in the US
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is that the North-West Mounted Police
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were modeled after the Royal Irish Constabulary,
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which the British had set up in Ireland as a colonial police force.
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And they replicated this type of thing not only in Canada,
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but also in their colonies in India and Africa.
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Y'know, one of their main functions was to impose colonial law and order,
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and to extend the control of the state into these frontier regions.
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And that remains pretty much the role of the RCMP today across Canada.
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A lot of the critical infrastructure and transportation corridors,
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such as railways and highways,
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they pass through or very nearby Indigenous populations and reservations.
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Especially as you go further north in the country.
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So this type of situation creates a lot of vulnerabilities for Canada,
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and I think the state is very aware of this.
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And that's why it's so cautious in its repression of Indigenous social movements.
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A big wake up call was during the Oka Crisis of 1990,
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when you had widespread solidarity actions across the country,
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and you had sabotage actions being carried out
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against this type of infrastructure.
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So I think it's very clear to the state that this is the possible consequence
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if their repression leads to the widening of Indigenous resistance,
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and even to the beginning of actual insurgency.
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We try to use training dummies as much as we can for,
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like, the strikes and everything.
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But a lot of the pressure points you really gotta feel it on the human body.
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Repression is basically the attempts by the state to punish,
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and to enclose and to isolate – and therefore neutralize –
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threats to its authority.
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Recuperation are the attempts to integrate threats to authority.
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To redirect them towards non-threatening modes,
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or modes that even regenerate or modify state power
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in a way that makes states more able to respond to similar threats.
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And if you look at the 1950s and 1960s
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civil rights struggle in the United States,
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there's some really good examples because the government,
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especially the Kennedy administration,
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y'know they're having high-level meetings with Martin Luther King
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and all these other leaders of non-violent civil disobedience organizations.
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And then at the same time,
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they're carrying out repression against the more radical elements
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of the Black Civil Rights – which came the Black Liberation Movement,
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and which led into the FBI's counter-intelligence program, COINTELPRO.
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In addition to COINTELPRO,
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the FBI ran a program called the ghetto informant program.
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And the ghetto informant program is where they would get preachers,
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pastors of churches, teachers or whomever
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– they would try to get those people to be informants.
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Militarization and community policing are talked about
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as though they're these two separate alternatives.
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Two different ways that policing can develop.
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But what the history shows
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is that they developed at exactly the same time,
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both in response to the crisis of the 60's.
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And generally developed alongside each other in the same cities
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- often with the same commanders in charge.
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Rather than seeing these as two separate and competing developments,
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it makes more sense to see them as complementary developments,
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each operating as one half of a domestic counterinsurgency strategy.
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The counter-intelligence program was designed to be hard-hitting.
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And designed to assassinate,
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designed to subvert and actually destroy organizations,
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whereas the ghetto informant program was designed
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to spy on the Black population at large,
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and to find out who it was, as they saw it,
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would be agitating for riots.
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All of that is pretty textbook counterinsurgency stuff.
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As we see it play out domestically,
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it has the political benefit of building legitimacy for the police,
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while at the same time the militarization preserves their capacity
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to come in hard when they do face actual resistance.
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The FBI's illicit program of surveillance,
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sabotage and assassination known as COINTELPRO
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was formally ended in April of 1971,
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after their covert activities were exposed by activists
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who broke into a Pennsylvania FBI field office
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and released troves of top-secret documents to the press.
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Just two months later, the Nixon administration launched the War on Drugs.
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America's public enemy number one is drug abuse.
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Pretty convenient, right?
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Any suggestion that the timing of these two events
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could be chalked up to simple coincidence was quashed
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by Richard Nixon's chief policy advisor, John Ehrlichman,
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who in a candid interview in 1994,
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admitted that the War on Drugs was a lie
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concocted to target anti-war leftists
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and Black communities for political repression.
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After Tricky Dick was dishonorably deposed...
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I'm not a crook!
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... subsequent Presidential administrations took the idea of the War on Drugs,
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greatly expanded its scope,
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and refined it into a potent tool for both domestic social control
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and imperialist foreign policy aims.
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It's hard to overstate the effect of the War on Drugs
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and its role in accelerating the development
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of counterinsurgency in American policing.
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Nixon launched the War on Drugs.
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And the War on Drugs was chemical warfare.
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A spreading of – at that time it was heroin –
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into the communities of colour.
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Black and Latino, poor communities of colour.
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They called it a War on Drugs,
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but they unleashed the drugs into the community,
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then they went into the communities
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and started arresting people for using the drugs.
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This chemical warfare, it has a historical parallel.
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After they killed the Indians here in this country,
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after the Indian Wars,
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then they turned around and gave them whiskey.
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And whiskey was an addictive drug that even to this very day
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is still destroying the lives of people in Native communities.
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So they gave them whiskey.
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Well they gave Black people,
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to put down the insurgency that erupted in the 1960's and 1970's,
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they gave them crack cocaine.
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This was deliberately done as the government's response
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to the Black Power movement,
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and all the other radical progressive movements.
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They wanted to make sure that none of this stuff ever happened again.
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And crack cocaine was distributed by people
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who were given the drugs by federal agents,
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and distributed to the urban market.
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And the effect of crack cocaine just destroyed
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numerous vibrant communities at the time.
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Communities where people had jobs
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... communities where people had social cohesion
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- well crack cocaine destroyed that.
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And the federal government used the fact of the drug trade,
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that they created
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– they used that to then turn around and build a paramilitary policing force.
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It provided a handy pretext,
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with the stories of police being out-gunned by gangs
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and all that sort of thing.
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Beyond that, there's just the sheer demographic effect
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of the War on Drugs providing a mechanism for
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removing a large portion of the Black population,
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just from cities altogether
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and putting them in prisons for long periods of time.
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And then later normalizing the monitoring of those communities
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through probation and parole,
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and other sorts of community-based corrections.
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I think it's probably impossible to accurately estimate
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the damage that has done to those communities
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in terms of just sheerly fracturing them.
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We've gotta understand that there's a continual path
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leading from COINTELPRO to the War on Drugs.
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And then the War on Drugs, now we're at a new counterinsurgency.
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The War on Drugs everywhere is a US war.
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The US is the largest consumer of illegal narcotics in the world as a market.
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Almost half of the whole drug market is in the United States.
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The US has always been pushing the most radical,
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militaristic “solution” to the drug problem.
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The basis of the US drug war in the United States is the prison system.
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And in places like Mexico, in places like Central America, Columbia
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– it's massacre and it's enforced disappearance.
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And it's often based on social class.
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It's based on living in certain areas that are resource rich.
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It's based on the potential that those communities could be a threat.
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That's where again, that same pretext gets used.
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They're called narco traffickers, they're called drug dealers,
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and instead of being brought to jail
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... they're murdered in the street.
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I think what's happening in Mexico
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is a counterinsurgent war against the people,
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and I think in Mexico they've sort of
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expanded the idea of who the insurgent is
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to include basically the entire population.
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Even just the idea that people are living in different ways,
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that they have assemblies, that they're living on collective land,
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that they're organizing in some way... even just with their neighbours
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– all of those things are seen as threats to the dominant order.
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And in Mexico they're being dealt with through a kind of
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counterinsurgency that is extremely violent.
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The Merida Initiative started in 2008,
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and it's a multi-billion dollar plan funded by the United States
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to finance the militarization, essentially,
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of the War on Drugs in Mexico.
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So when the drug war started in 2006, there were 4,000 federal police.
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Now there's 40,000, and they're deployed together with the army
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to different cities to "fight the War on Drugs."
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And what we see time after time in these different regions
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where federal police and soldiers are deployed together,
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is a spike in homicide rates,
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a spike in violence, a spike in disappearances
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– and again, enacted against the population at large.
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We're told that it's one drug cartel
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sending a message to another drug cartel.
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But when, y'know, in your town
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there's a bunch of beheaded bodies in the central square
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– that's a message to the whole town.
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What the militarization of prohibition has really done
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- because it's a militarized strategy to enforce prohibition -
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is it has meant that the folks who are
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moving these products also militarize.
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And that's kind of a paramilitary process.
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In Mexico these groups aren't explicitly political groups,
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but it's clear that they often work closely with other parts
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of the same state apparatus that's fighting them.
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So like, say the federal police come in
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and they crack down on the Sinaloa cartel
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... okay, the Sinaloa cartel goes and they start working with
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state-level police officers, whatever it is.
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So people in these strategic areas,
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just regular folks trying to get on with their lives,
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they're the ones who are being picked up and disappeared.
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They're the ones who are being massacred.
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They're the ones who are paying, actually, with their lives for this war.
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And so when you take that kind of step back
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and you see it on a bit more of a macro level,
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it's very clear that what's happening is a war against the people.
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And the whole idea of the state fighting drug cartels
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is a big charade, basically to justify militarization, paramilitarization
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and a war against the population.
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States go to incredible lengths to study our movements.
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Dozens of federal security and intelligence agencies,
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and an untold number of private contractors
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are constantly combing over our social media posts,
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mapping out our networks and probing them for vulnerabilities.
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Analysts churn over a never-ending stream
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of risk assessments and policy suggestions,
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covering a vast array of possible contingency plans.
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Each year, billions of dollars are spent keeping tabs on dissent,
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infiltrating our organizations and training local police forces
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in riot suppression
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and community engagement tactics.
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No matter how powerful states are,
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and no matter how vast the scale of resources they're able to marshal
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towards maintaining and expanding their power
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... they still view us as threats.
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And why shouldn't they?
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States are collective illusions.
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The social, economic and political hierarchies
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that keep the many ruled by the few are
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built on a foundation of fear,
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loyalty
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and internal division.
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If these supporting pillars were ever to be removed,
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the whole house of cards would come crashing down.
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States have invested a lot of resources
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into understanding how insurgencies arise,
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understanding how uprisings succeed,
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understanding how states fail,
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and then working to counteract that.
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And I think we can learn from some of their insights,
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even as we are counteracting their operations.
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I think it's very important to understand,
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and to have some knowledge of
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how counterinsurgency operations are carried out,
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because that's how you can better defend yourselves against them.
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The more that we can spread awareness
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of counterinsurgency beyond anarchist circles,
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the more people will understand the methods we use,
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why we choose antagonistic and combative methods vis-a-vis the state.
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Because once you understand that states organize
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according to a philosophy of counterinsurgency,
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people understand that the state views them as their enemy,
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or as their potential enemy.
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And so people understand that when we talk about social war,
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it's not because we like war or we like violence,
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but because the state started the social war.
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The existence of the state is a social war,
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it's constant warfare against all of us.
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In order to defeat the enemy's plans,
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we have to understand them.
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And we have to do political education
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on a large scale about government repression.
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But even more than that, we have to design our movements
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to be able to withstand government repression,
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to be able to withstand all manner of secret police activity.
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Specifically within anarchist circles,
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if we encourage more nuanced understandings
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of how counterinsurgency works,
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it will certainly help identify recuperation
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and how not to fall into that trap.
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And it will also help us improve our anti-repressive strategies.
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Especially at the point that we realize that repression
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is primarily a mechanism for isolating people,
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then we'll begin to put more importance
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on creating broader social relationships,
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avoiding isolation and certainly giving up on strategies
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that basically amount to self-isolation.
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Still some of the best resources for this are our adversaries'.
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A lot of the RAND Corporation research on counterinsurgency
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is available on their website.
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The US Army Field Manual, FM-324, is widely available.
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All of that is worth looking at directly as well.
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A very important counterinsurgency campaign that people can learn from
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is the FBI's COINTELPRO operations in the United States
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during the 1950's to early 1970's,
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because I think these are the types of tactics
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that are being used against resistance movements today.
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That was a radical period in the 1960's and 70's,
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and so they used that heavy-handed repression.
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That was an illegal program.
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But the same kind of repression, if not even worse,
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now is being used – and it's legal.
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Under the so-called PATRIOT Act first,
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and now under other forms of legislation
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that allows the police and state agencies
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to spy on the population at large.
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Including spying on dissident organizations.
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Intelligence-gathering is probably the single most important part
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of a counterinsurgency campaign,
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because without intelligence
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the state doesn't know who the organizers of resistance are,
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where they are, what their plans are, or how to combat them.
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The tools around counter-surveillance,
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the tools around anonymity,
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and making sure that you're protecting yourself
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and that you're protecting your comrades from state surveillance
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... that stuff's really important.
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Obviously, y'know, not snitching and not talking to police officers,
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all that basic stuff - I mean, those are our weapons.
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We have to figure out how
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to build a movement to fight fascism in this period.
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In the United State particularly.
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And we have to begin to develop movements
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that are not just "left" movements.
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We have, y'know, people who will go on the streets
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and engage toe-to-toe, fist-to-fist combat with the alt-right,
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the neo-nazis, and neo-fascists
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on the streets and in various protests.
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And this kind of resistance is still needed.
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But this is a kind of resistance
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that is not going to organize masses of people.
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Everyday people in the communities,
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they identify that as being more of a kind of leftist movement.
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And most people in our communities, everyday communities,
-
are not leftists.
-
It's just amazing that no one was shot and killed in Charlottesville.
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And we can't say that that's not gonna happen
-
in other demonstrations that they put together.
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But they're not the primary threat.
-
We're getting past the time when you could just say
-
that the task to defeat fascism is just to get out
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and punch nazis in the face.
-
They're in office now. They're running the state.
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So we have to go to another level.
-
We need to build a broader-based movement.
-
We need to bring in peoples of colour and communities of colour.
-
We need to bring in the women's movement.
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We need to bring in all the forces that are necessary
-
to overthrow the entire system.
-
Our task is still a revolutionary task.
-
We have to change the society that creates fascism in the first place.
-
We have to overthrow capitalism.
-
Looking at it from our adversary's perspective,
-
their authority is in some ways very fragile.
-
And from their perspective,
-
the crucial thing that they need to maintain
-
is the sense of legitimacy.
-
The sense that the population trusts them.
-
The sense that the population supports them.
-
The sense that when they issue demands, that people will respond.
-
And we can reverse-engineer that
-
and see from what they feel like they need to protect,
-
where they're fragile.
-
And that sense of legitimacy seems to be something
-
that popular movements are very good at damaging,
-
even with far fewer resources.
-
And so the good news of all this is that
-
the place where they feel themselves most vulnerable
-
is actually the thing that we are best positioned to hurt
-
– which is their sense of public support.
-
They want our cooperation.
-
That's what this whole thing is about.
-
The key thing we can do against counterinsurgency
-
is not share information with them,
-
cooperate to the least extent possible with the state
-
– especially in terms of the criminalization of other people.
-
And keep our relationships with our friends, with our comrades,
-
but also with our neighbours, to the extent possible.
-
To other people in our community, folks we met at a Trouble screening.
-
Really keep those relationships strong and have each others' back.
-
That's our best weapon. That's all we've got.
-
People are deploying new strategies,
-
looking for new terrains of struggle and conflict,
-
and as always, the story hasn't come to its end.
-
As the world continues into a period of sustained and ever-deepening crisis,
-
new counterinsurgency strategies are being developed and deployed
-
in countries around the globe.
-
Overlapping catastrophes,
-
fueled by the destructive effects of neoliberal capitalism,
-
climate change,
-
devastating wars
-
and surging levels of global inequality
-
are culminating in historically-unprecedented levels of human migration.
-
This is feeding into a rise of xenophobic reaction,
-
whereby states and far-right media outlets
-
are redirecting popular discontent
-
towards targeted and already-oppressed groups.
-
These are dangerous times,
-
which require serious reflection
-
and committed action on the part of revolutionaries.
-
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.
-
Think that anarchists and other anti-capitalists in your town
-
need to start upping their game?
-
Consider getting together with some comrades,
-
screening this film and discussing what steps you can take
-
to collectively prepare yourselves to better anticipate
-
and resist state strategies of repression and recuperation.
-
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 of our content for free off our website:
-
If you’ve got any suggestions for show topics, or just want to get in touch,
-
drop us a line at trouble@sub.media.
-
This month we've kicked off a large-scale fundraiser
-
aimed at expanding subMedia, and increasing our monthly video output.
-
If we can reach our fundraising goals,
-
we plan on bringing the Stimulator back out of retirement,
-
in order to unleash him on the alt-right trolls
-
who got our paypal account shut down.
-
If you like Trouble, hate the alt-right, and want to see more subMedia content,
-
please consider going to sub.media/donate and becoming a monthly sustainer.
-
As always, we’re excited to see that people have been
-
supporting and screening our work,
-
and we wanna give a big shout out to new Troublemaker chapters
-
in London, Kitchener, Kingston, Halifax, and Tampa.
-
This episode would not have been possible without the generous support
-
of Brianna, Anonymous, Jodi, and Naber.
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Now get out there, and make some trouble!