-
Greetings Troublemakers
... welcome to Trouble.
-
My name is not important.
-
From the endless turf battles
found within the animal kingdom,
-
to the mechanized
carnage of modern warfare...
-
the drive to control territory is a
potent and recurring source of conflict.
-
Yet within the artificial borders that
fortify the so-called “developed world”,
-
this type of conflict, like all others,
is carefully managed.
-
Which is not to say it doesn’t exist.
-
People quarrel with their neighbours
all the time, even in suburbia
-
… and in places like
Chicago’s South Side,
-
young men routinely get shot
fighting over street corners.
-
As groups and individuals,
-
we face differing types and levels
of conflict in our everyday lives
-
... but at the end of the day,
-
the ultimate manager and
mediator of these conflicts is the state.
-
Through their police,
courts and prison systems,
-
states enforce laws
that reproduce power dynamics,
-
restrict our choices,
and regulate our behaviour.
-
The allocation of resources is determined
-
by the logic of
the so-called “free market”,
-
whereby ownership over
land is given official sanction
-
by the state-backed illusion
of private property.
-
The key to the state’s
control over our lives
-
lies in its ability to regulate all
conflict within a given physical area.
-
It follows, then, that those of us
seeking to steal back the power
-
to resolve conflicts on our own terms
must first draw a firm line in the sand,
-
and deny access to the state and its
sophisticated apparatus of social control.
-
In order to meaningfully
assert collective autonomy,
-
we must be capable of defending territory.
-
Over the next thirty minutes,
we will explore three autonomous zones
-
serving as living embodiments
of defiance to state rule:
-
the ZAD, or Zone to Defend,
in Notre-Dame-des-Landes, France,
-
the Unist’ot’en Camp located on the
Wet’suet’en territories of so-called BC,
-
and the autonomous spaces movement
in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
-
Along the way, we will speak
with a number of individuals
-
who are flaunting state authority,
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asserting control over
the spaces they inhabit
-
... and making a whole lot of trouble.
-
The ZAD has many realities.
-
But mostly it’s kind of a
community where people try to
-
experiment other ways to live
their social and political life.
-
In the end of the 1960s,
somebody came up with an airport project
-
for this area,
Notre-Dame-des-Landes.
-
And during all those years, the bocage
itself is put under the status of ZAD
-
– which basically means
Postponed Planning Zone,
-
which was transformed one day
into Zone to be Defended.
-
So there was a big resistance
with lots of different forms of action,
-
including sabotage, black bloc
demonstrations, quite offensive defense.
-
Occupying land is quite
similar to a political squat,
-
but with a strong dimension
regarding the environment
-
and the territory we live in.
-
During all those years,
-
we did not simply organize
politically against the airport,
-
but we also made connections locally.
-
We took care of the land.
-
Some of us settled for good.
-
And we thought out
the future of the ZAD together.
-
So it’s been ten years now that
structures have been created on the ZAD
-
to figure out how to live
as autonomously as possible.
-
It necessarily means that we have
to be able to answer our basic needs.
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Like be fed, sleep under a roof,
have access to medicine.
-
It’s a place that has become
a place where you can live for free.
-
You can build your house, your cabin...
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The occupation movement was created
at a time when some of the peasants
-
had called for illegal
occupation themselves.
-
When squatters came in 2007
they were close to anarchist
-
and/or antiauthoritarian ideas.
-
Trying to work together
and allowing for a diversity of tactics,
-
and knowing that that is our strength.
-
We’re fighting against
this state and this project.
-
Also we come here....
-
we fight against things, but we
also try to create things together.
-
And making things available
and trying to share.
-
That everybody has possibilities
and access to a place to live
-
... to water and food.
-
So there’s a kind of hegemonic ideology.
-
Diversity of tactics has been much more
of a theory for the past few months.
-
Certain ideas that become
ways of judging people,
-
of excluding people from discussions.
-
So yeah there’s some kind
of really well-organized,
-
sort of communist ideas that have taken
a lot of place in the past few years
-
that will have a kind of discourse about
-
“you have to go to our meetings, and if
you don’t agree you might have to leave,
-
or shut up... or maybe later on we’ll
come beat you up with baseball bats.”
-
Some people who used sabotage
as a tactic have been pressured
-
and even attacked for
having dug holes in the concrete
-
of one of the roads which crosses the ZAD.
-
And someone especially was
put in the trunk and taken out of there,
-
molested and left almost naked
in front of a psychiatric hospital.
-
And it’s been some years that
contesting this hegemonic power
-
of the dominant group
has been much more difficult.
-
They tend to concentrate wealth.
-
To concentrate strategic discussions
regarding the movement.
-
Bonds with local farmers
-
and people governing other
institutions of the movement.
-
And they of course, deny it
when it comes to critique.
-
We provoked a number of discussions
on the place that their reading group,
-
called the CMDO,
has been held among us.
-
But they never recognized, publicly,
their group as a group of power.
-
And thus, never wanted to share that
power with other groups or individuals.
-
It was mainly this group of
persons which pushed towards
-
the negotiations during the evictions.
-
Well as you can see
all around us it’s pitch black.
-
People were not expecting the expulsions
to happen until 6am this morning,
-
local time here in France.
-
Tiny groups of people
chose their means of actions.
-
When the police attack,
making barricades,
-
going to harass the police
in any form, or any way
-
... to throwing back their own grenades
or other forms of explosives,
-
or molotov cocktails.
-
From sabotage attempts
... especially on the tanks.
-
We really wanted to see one burn.
-
Digging holes to prevent
the tanks from going further.
-
And of course, erecting barricades
and defending them.
-
Deep in the central interior forests
of so-called British Columbia
-
lies the unceded territory
of the Wet’suwet’en nation.
-
Never surrendered to the
settler-colonial Canadian state,
-
the gateway to these remote territories
is the headwaters of the Wedzinkwah River,
-
which lies under the stewardship
and protection of the Unist’ot’en clan,
-
one of the five house groups
that make up the Wet’suwet’en nation.
-
For the past decade, the Unist’ot’en
have been physically blocking
-
the construction of three major
oil and fracked gas pipelines
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slated to pass through their
territories en route to refineries
-
and tankers on the Pacific coast.
-
Ground zero in this stand
has been the Unis’to’ten Camp,
-
constructed in 2010 as a
permanent resistance community,
-
located smack dab in the path
of the originally proposed route
-
of the Northern Gateway, Pacific Trails,
and Coastal Gaslink pipelines.
-
The Unist’ot’en have also established
a checkpoint system,
-
with access to the territories
conditional on completing
-
a Free Prior and
Informed Consent Protocol.
-
This system grants
the Unis’tot’en authority
-
over who gains access to their territory,
-
which has allowed them to keep
representatives of the extractive industry
-
and Canadian state at bay.
-
This territory is unceded
Unist’ot’en territory,
-
which is part of
the Wet’suwet’en territory.
-
Knedebease is the hereditary chief
that manages this territory,
-
and I am a member of that house group,
so we manage these territories.
-
And in my view, it is not Canada.
It’s not BC.
-
This has always been
Wet’suwet’en territory
-
because we’ve never ceded
or surrendered it to anybody.
-
Doesn’t belong to the crown.
-
Doesn’t belong to the federal government.
-
Doesn’t belong to
the provincial government.
-
It belongs to Unist’ot’en.
To my people.
-
We started travelling
through the territories
-
back here a lot more frequently.
-
And the reason why we started
spending a lot of time back here
-
is because there were some
proposed pipelines that were
-
being proposed
by industry and by government,
-
to begin doing some preliminary
work back here to stop them.
-
You guys can’t be doing any work in here,
because we’ve already told them no.
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That they can’t access our territory.
-
Once we found out that industry
was trying to force their way in,
-
we put our cabin directly in the path
of the initial proposal for Enbridge,
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for the bitumen pipeline that
was proposed to come through here.
-
So the log cabin sits right
en route of their GPS points
-
of where Enbridge initially had planned
to put their pipelines through here.
-
At the same time, there was Coastal
Gaslink and Pacific Trails Pipeline
-
that wanted also to put
pipelines through our territory.
-
To me that’s not self-sustaining.
-
When it’s really quick,
it’s boom and bust.
-
And they’ll come, and then they’ll be gone
and they’ll leave their mess behind.
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As you see on the sign behind
it says checkpoint.
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So whenever industry,
or just anybody comes through here
-
you go through protocol,
which you ask a series of six questions:
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Who are you?
Where are you from?
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How long do you plan to stay
if we let you in?
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And do you work for industry or government
that’s destroying our lands?
-
And how will your visit
benefit Unist’ot’en?
-
And one of the key questions
that they could not answer,
-
truthfully and honestly,
was the question where we ask
-
“how will your visit benefit
the people of this land?”.
-
Uhh.. I really don’t think
there is any benefit.
-
And the reason why we turn them back
-
is because they could not pass
simple protocol questions.
-
The RCMP was created by the government
to keep our people off our land.
-
So, they are part of the government,
so they too don’t pass protocol.
-
We don’t trust police,
because we’re suspicious that your forces
-
would in to scope out our layout
so that if there is an injunction,
-
you guys would be better prepared
about how you’re gonna deal with us.
-
The camp serves as a beacon for other
people who are struggling with these ideas.
-
That they might not
be able to stop a project
-
from coming through their territories.
-
And you know,
-
for anybody to stand up to something
like that is quite a daunting task.
-
But a lot of people who
have studied us over the years,
-
and learned from the
resistance that we’ve taken
-
... they’ve taken those lessons
and have started their own actions.
-
And there’s an incredible amount
of economic and logistical disruption
-
that arise from that type of activity.
-
We are here today in solidarity
with the Unist’ot’en camp.
-
We wish to share the Unist’ot’en
hereditary chief’s clear statement
-
that they do not consent
to having pipelines built
-
on their unceded traditional territory.
-
This colonization has always been
about the taking of Indigenous lands.
-
We always said if we heal our people,
then we’ll heal our land.
-
The healing center idea
came when we realized that
-
“why aren’t our own people
coming out here to visit us?”
-
And even though some do come, there’s
not a high number of our own people.
-
And we realized that a lot of our people
are still struggling
-
because of colonization.
-
From the Residential School era.
-
From the public school system
... lotta racism.
-
We realized that a lot of our people
are struggling because of trauma.
-
And we realized that
we needed a healing facility
-
that incorporated all the whole
wellness thing that we were talking about.
-
And we wanna put our
culture back into our people.
-
So that they will be strong
and they will stand up.
-
When people come out
to a space like this,
-
what they experience is land
that's actually beginning to go
-
through the healing process.
-
This land back here that
we’re walking through and passing through,
-
is land that was devastated
from logging already.
-
And it’s in a process of healing.
-
It actually has berry bushes,
so we’re surrounded by berry bushes here.
-
There are grizzly bear tracks
a half a kilometer from here.
-
So when people come up
to spend time here,
-
they begin to learn about the
importance of connecting themselves
-
to the planet that is in need of healing.
-
While defending territory from
state incursions is hard enough
-
in rural, or remote natural terrains,
-
those seeking to establish autonomous
spaces in urban environments
-
face an additional set of challenges.
-
Cities are sites of concentrated
state power.
-
Not only are they strongholds of
surveillance and repression,
-
but they are also areas where
the logic of state control
-
is thoroughly integrated
into everyday social relations.
-
This opens the door to recuperation,
a process whereby state power
-
constantly shifts and adapts itself
in order to preemptively cut off
-
and assimilate potential threats
to its authority and legitimacy.
-
This is the balancing act faced by
urban squatter movements
-
in cities around the world, whose
participants must constantly navigate
-
the twin minefields of eviction
and legalization.
-
This means simultaneously
avoiding the social isolation
-
that would make full-scale repression
possible, while also combating
-
state and real estate developers’
attempts to transform these spaces
-
into nothing more than
edgy tourist destinations.
-
One of the really important
functions of the urban occupation
-
is that it becomes
a source of inspiration.
-
Despite being surrounded by hostile forces
- in the form of state, police, capital -
-
that it is possible to have a
space in which you can experiment
-
with different forms of existing.
-
With different forms of living.
-
With different forms of
relating to one another.
-
We could speak about three distinct phases
of squatting experiments in Ljubljana.
-
First one is early 90s.
-
This is the time of the
destruction of Yugoslavia.
-
It’s a time of massive changes
in Slovenian society.
-
This movement had a clear continuity with
-
alternative cultural movements of the 80s
that was heavily influenced
-
by progressive currents such as
feminism, LGBT movement,
-
anti-militarist tendencies,
ecological movements.
-
This movement found its highest
expression in the squatting
-
of Metelkova military barracks
in 1993.
-
The second wave of squatting
can be traced to the late 90s.
-
In around 98 and 99, several different
initiatives and individuals
-
were squatting different
spaces in the city of Ljubljana
-
and were all evicted from those squats.
-
And in the middle of this wave
of repression over the movement,
-
the community of Metelkova decided
to give one empty space
-
in the Autonomous Cultural Center
to the anarchist infoshop.
-
The third wave of squatting
in Ljubljana is symbolized
-
by the squatting of ROG Factory, which is
maybe the biggest squat in Ljubljana.
-
It was squatted in 2006
by a new precarious generation
-
of younger people that
later came to be identified
-
as the generation without future.
-
It has always been understood by us
that the front
-
between the two different squats
is the same front.
-
Because if one of us is attacked,
or evicted for instance,
-
that will mean a huge attack
on the ability of the other
-
to actually be part of any kind
of political process in the city.
-
The relationship of the state has been
slightly different in its expression.
-
So for instance, when it comes to ROG
they have had constant attempts
-
of the city to either evict them
or attack them in different ways.
-
And just two years ago
there was the most serious attempt
-
to tear down several
buildings in that area.
-
That attempt was stopped
by a broader political mobilization.
-
The nature of an urban occupation
is that it is faced
-
with different kinds of factors that
perhaps escape rural occupations.
-
Our squats are part of
the neoliberal capitalist society
-
that is progressing further and further
towards social devastation.
-
Every time we are faced with the
processes that are destroying our cities,
-
we always have to question our position
-
and our changing position
within those processes.
-
Metelkova and ROG both
generate quite wide public support.
-
So this forced the public authorities
to be cautious.
-
And even though there are several
softer attempts to push Metelkova
-
into the state of legalization,
we haven’t in the last decade
-
really been faced with
an attempt of eviction.
-
That of course brings a different
set of questions for all of us
-
who are part of Metelkova squat.
-
And that is, in such moments, where
the city is actually trying to sell you
-
as one of its premium tourist destinations
... how do you maintain yourself
-
as a space that can still produce
radical social movements
-
and interventions in the city?
-
That of course comes with
every question of recuperation.
-
How do we still manage to
keep our practices DIY?
-
How do we still manage to stay
ungovernable,
-
which is basically the only way
not to become a squatting museum,
-
or a sort of caricature
of what a squat should be?
-
Many people and many activities
that are cleaned from the city center
-
because of the demands of the tourist
industry... we all end up in squats
-
with different trajectories
and different positions that we occupy
-
in the current social-economic order.
-
This naturally leads to tensions.
Some more serious than others.
-
And the consequence also can be seen in
what recently happened to club Jalla Jalla
-
- it was destroyed in a fire.
-
As a community this was
immediately recognized as an effect
-
of the general state in which
the whole city is being pushed.
-
And our focus is not only
to rebuild Jalla Jalla the club,
-
but also to rebuild and reclaim
our collective capacity to resist
-
the processes of devastation
that are everywhere destroying
-
the conditions of living
for so many people in this town.
-
Establishing and effectively securing
an autonomous space isn’t something
-
that happens overnight.
-
States cannot afford to let challenges
to their legitimacy go unanswered,
-
lest they serve as examples
for others to follow.
-
For this reason, any political attempt
to reject state authority over a territory
-
is likely to provoke a serious reaction.
-
It is therefore crucially important
that those involved
-
anticipate the state’s response,
and are in a strong enough position
-
to weather the inevitable storm.
-
Autonomous territories allow
for the building of dual power.
-
They are alternative focal
points of legitimacy that can
-
effectively challenge the
state’s monopoly on authority.
-
Indigenous Nations draw this legitimacy
from spiritual and cultural practices
-
rooted in generations of deep connection
to the lands claimed by their colonizers.
-
For those of us more alienated
from the lands and spaces we occupy,
-
the process of asserting autonomy
must begin with navigating the tensions
-
and contradictions that
exist in dominant society,
-
cultivating strong bonds of solidarity,
-
and fuelling antagonism towards the state.
-
We’d rather not pass lessons to anyone.
-
If people get inspired from what they’ve
done here, it will always be a pleasure
-
to share experiences and knowledge
of those years spent here.
-
I think it has been proven several times
that building the infrastructure
-
for the movement and of the movement
really becomes crucial in moments
-
of high and demanding political
mobilization in the society.
-
To have the kind of spaces
that enable you to maintain
-
the historical memory of movements,
-
that enable us to find different
kinds of accomplices
-
in our struggles for
a different kind of world.
-
With the help of allies
all around the world
-
... we’ve garnered lots of support through
Indigenous, non-Indigenous, professionals,
-
... everyday citizens.
-
A lot of people do support what we’re
doing and have vocalized it to us.
-
We have come here to be with you,
-
to make sure you understand
you’re doing the right thing.
-
There’s always people who come here
also who have connections,
-
or who have been to other
places where people are struggling
-
and bring us information.
-
And so that creates solidarity
between different struggles.
-
You need to ensure that
the Indigenous people
-
who have always lived on those lands,
-
since millennia,
are involved in that struggle.
-
They have long stories.
-
Ancient, ancient stories that talk about
how and why they have responsibilities.
-
The mere fact that a squat
exists as a potential
-
of development of autonomous ideas,
of politically radical ideas,
-
is of course already a threat to the
state, a threat to capital’s interests.
-
And therefore we will never be safe,
-
no matter how many
selfies tourists make here.
-
If it is possible that in a city that
is so increasingly gentrified,
-
so penetrated with
different capitalist forces
-
– if it is able to have a space
where experimentation with our freedom
-
is possible,
then it kind of gives us hope
-
that other kinds of political
projects are also possible.
-
And what we would really love to see
is more of these kinds of inspirations
-
around the world, around different cities,
around different communities.
-
As for our inspiration,
we take as much inspiration as possible
-
from as many struggles as possible.
-
The Zapatistas movement, even though
we’re far far from what they achieved.
-
The Landless Peasant Movement,
especially in South America,
-
or Reclaim the Field network
all over Europe.
-
Or occupied neighbourhoods,
like in Exarchia in Greece.
-
Or people protecting seeds like in India.
-
Rojava is, of course, an insight
-
– especially regarding
feminist self-defence.
-
Some of us are also really
close to the Italian struggle
-
against the train line
crossing the Val di Susa.
-
The most important thing is that we have
to ask ourselves “what are our needs?”
-
And then find ways through
which we can express them.
-
We’re absolutely going to win this fight.
-
Y’know, this is a fight that belongs
to not only us, but all of our unborn.
-
This is a fight that belongs
to all of our ancestors
-
who died fighting for these spaces,
and protecting them.
-
So this is a fight that
doesn’t belong to us.
-
We’re not selfish people.
-
This fight belongs to all of
our Wet’suwet’en people
-
– past, present and future.
-
Some of us went to fight
the world of the airport.
-
And the airport was a pretext
to fight the system behind it.
-
I’d say for me, the ZAD,
-
it helps me burn the social
and structural boundaries in my head
-
... and then almost everything
became possible.
-
We live in a historical moment
in which the global neoliberal order,
-
wracked by overlapping social,
economic and ecological crises,
-
is rapidly unraveling
before our very eyes.
-
Yet far from being a
cause for celebration,
-
the dark new reality rising to take
its place promises to be even worse.
-
New and resurgent forms of
state power are being constructed
-
on foundations of
hyper-nationalist reaction,
-
armed with sophisticated new tools
of surveillance and repression.
-
A proliferation of civil wars,
surging levels of inequality
-
and climate change-fuelled catastrophes
are provoking historical levels
-
of forced human migration.
-
But while things look undoubtedly bleak,
-
the rapid transformations
currently underway have the potential
-
to uncover new cracks
in the facade of state power.
-
Revolutionaries must be ready to take
advantage of any and all opportunities
-
that these shifting
new dynamics may produce,
-
establishing a decentralized
network of autonomous zones
-
that can sustain projects of mutual aid,
respond to emergent threats,
-
and coordinate solidarity across borders.
-
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.
-
Are you interested in offering
sustained material support
-
for existing autonomous spaces,
-
or figuring out what steps would
be involved in launching your own?
-
Consider getting together
with some comrades,
-
organizing a screening of this film,
and discussing where to get started.
-
Interested in running regular
screenings of Trouble at your campus,
-
infoshop, community center,
or even just at 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 our website:
-
If you’ve got any suggestions for show
topics, or just want to get in touch,
-
drop us a line at:
-
This episode would not have been possible
-
without the generous support of
Komunal, Group Groix and Michael.
-
Now get out there
…. and make some trouble!