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Tag: prisons

June 11, 2024: No Separate Worlds

Posted on 05/10/2024 - 05/10/2024 by chicagoantireport

Repost from: June 11th

We once again approach June 11th, a day of remembrance and active solidarity, in a world of multiple crises and struggles for liberation. All of these are interconnected; there are no separate worlds. Across borders, languages, contexts, and identities, both catastrophes and victories of spirit and defiance reverberate around the globe. One environment is not untouched by another. The personal is not separate from the political. The positive project is not separate from that of destruction. Prison is not separate from the “free world.” Means are not separate from ends. Bridging these divides is a shared curiosity and commitment; bridging these divides is solidarity. This is not to flatten or oversimplify diversity and differences in circumstance, intensity, and consequence. Rather, that these different pieces are held together like organs of the body held by connective tissue. So we consider: how do we strengthen this connective tissue? How do we remain strong, yet supple and flexible? Bridges, connection, must also be built through time, especially in a world that moves too fast, from one crisis to the next. June 11th aspires to be one of these bridges: to build solidarity across borders, between movements, and among generations. Remembering and supporting long-term prisoners, as well as carrying on shared struggles, are two ways to strengthen this connective tissue. A stronger connective tissue will, in turn, bolster us against further repression.

Each year, as part of our effort to be a bridge between movements, time, and borders, we assess the terrain. We consider what threats from the state look like at this time, how imprisoned comrades can be connected to activity on the outside, how have the struggles they are a part of continued despite repression, and how remembering those locked up can become a natural part of anarchist activity. Often repression and criminalization feel new; but frequently, this is a failure of memory. There are innovations to pay attention to, while seeing their lineage in tactics and ideologies used against our forebears. What can we learn from how people have responded in the past? What can we learn from people in times and places where innovative repressive tactics were developed, and how can we act in complicity alongside them?

As the day of solidarity nears, we are struck by the unfolding of the current terrain; the horrors abound, and confront us in new ways, but these are also patterns and histories in repetition. Power is scrambling to maintain itself amidst the uncertainty of our fragilely constructed society, and individuals and groups continue on with our refusal of their world. We see continued colonial violence, through prisons, guns, bombs, and nationalist ideologies in places such as Palestine, Ukraine, and West Papua. Too, extremely harsh treatments of people in Russia acting against militarism and colonialism, as well as the criminalization of pro-Palestinian activity all over the world.

Palestinians, fighting for their freedom and against policing, surveillance and detention for decades, have faced an all-out culmination of violence and genocide at the hands of the Israeli state — crisis and colonial violence continue to rapidly unfold. So too, does an intense current of Palestinian resistance: solidarity actions have taken place across the globe in attempts to refuse complicity and the feelings of powerlessness fueled by the geographical distance, the 24-hour news cycle, and the propaganda and war machines that abound.

As people continue to flee their regions due to capitalist and imperialist-made violence, and the catastrophic consequences of climate collapse, we are witnessing a renewed fear-mongering at U.S and European borders, as white supremacist militias murmur about confronting ‘migrant caravans’, and individual states implement a greater level of violence to keep people out of artificial borders. This crisis extends throughout the globe, as people worldwide move to eek out any stability, and others rush to enforce the promised order of borders and citizenship.

Colonial violence springs up daily, in guns drawn and territory stolen, in extraction projects and the expansion of policed land, and in the loss of the last wild spaces. But resistance to a homogeneous and hollow future being sold to us by tech-giants, green capitalists and the State still continues across the world. Pipelines, cell-towers, and extraction infrastructure is being targeted, both in individual sabotage, as well as ongoing land defense world-wide. The dependence of this noxious future on policing, surveillance, and control couldn’t be clearer, and struggles are confronting the ways these practices interact. Rebellions break out against police, prisons, and the indignity and macabre realities of daily life. For every crisis, and moment of resistance we could list, there are countless others simmering, exploding, or simply being disappeared from the public, global view. Freedom and resistance always find their way through the cracks of this horrifying society.

Public food serves being harassed, heightened criminalization of houseless populations, RICO charges for bail funds and the “conspiracy” of anarchist ideas and practices, as well as proximity, associations and social networks. Intense and courageous acts of sabotage continue. Everything is new, and nothing is. The question is not ‘what are the solutions?’, but ‘how do we expand, deepen and intensify what we already know works?’. How do we see ourselves in one another, how do we understand our plights as intertwined, as inseparable, and how can we continue to expand these relationships of solidarity. How do we embrace the reality that there are no separate worlds, and explore the ways that we can break through the limiting effects of prison walls, border walls, time, place and context.

There are moments worth celebrating, when we feel the opening of possibilities and capacity, of cohesion and strength; there are certainly also many moments to mourn, when it feels like we’re losing it all and our bodies or spirits are taking a beating. We can savor a touch of solace when we notice the deep desperation apparent in the moves of the state. They’re scrambling, finding new ways to criminalize even the most basic of acts. This can serve to motivate us. If anything even vaguely anarchist is enough to throw us to the helm of repression, we must choose to live our lives as we decide, regardless of the consequences. As more and more of us interact with repression, jails, courts, prisons, let this possibility be a never-ending invitation towards continuing to remember and include those locked away as an ongoing part of our moves toward getting free. Time, geography, the barriers of the prison wall-none of these are strong enough to obliterate the vast network of bridges that keep us interdependent, connected, fighting the same enemies of freedom, worldwide.

This year saw the passing of many who carried the vivacious anarchist spirit. Some may be known to us, while many remain unknown. They sowed rebelliousness in every path they walked. Perhaps their impact is incalculable, though never nonexistent. We can carry the same spirit, traverse similar paths, and remain steadfast and diligent, just as those who have come before us have. Rest in power: Alfredo Bonanno, Klee Benally, Ed Mead, Sekuo Odinga, Tortuguita, Aaron Bushnell.

Rest in power to all of those whose names we’ve never uttered, not known, but who walked these lengths, nonetheless. Time is merely constructed; those that have come before us, and passed onto death, still impact the lives of the living, still contribute to the history of anarchists and anti-authoritarians, and our shared struggle. Let us make them a part of our active memory, and continue forward, in a fight for lives against domination. May these words spark a fire in you-encourage you to get up, forge ahead and seek what it might feel like, to live like you’re trying to get free.

View and submit regional prisoner udpates on full post.

Submited anonymously

Posted in NEWSTagged prisons

Support for Jack

Posted on 02/13/2024 - 02/12/2024 by chicagoantireport


Jack is being held in Fulton County Jail on chargse related to the Stop Cop City and Defend the Forest movement. Please write to him to let him know he is loved and supported! Please remember to address envelopes to ‘John’ but you can refer to him as Jack inside the letters.

Jack loves rock climbing, history, Pilates with Nicole, Buddhism, poetry, vegan prison recipes, hip hop, straight edge, punk, carpentry/diy construction, sewing, he wants to hear anecdotes that felt special to you from just everyday things. You could write about a sunset or a wholesome gathering or a way a song made you feel.

His birthday is coming up on March 1! Let us celebrate him!

Posted in NEWSTagged cop city, letter writing, phone zap, prisons

Winter Anarchist Huddle 2024

Posted on 01/22/2024 - 01/24/2024 by chicagoantireport

Posted in NEWSTagged assembly, DNC, Palestine, prisons, solidarity

New Year Noise Demo 2024 MCC Chicago – Reportbacks and Photos

Posted on 01/03/2024 - 01/12/2024 by chicagoantireport

For this year’s NYE noise demo we set our sights on the Metropolitan Correctional Center in the Loop. We battled bitter cold and embittered pigs to ring in the new year beneath the city’s skyscraper jail, chanting and dancing with passersby in the street beneath the El tracks. Banners, fireworks, drums, pots, pans, spray paint, the whole megillah. After a few hours we decided to move the party into River North and headed up State St. before we got penned in by the pigs and had to make our various escapes into the bustling crowds.

Fuck The Pigs

Fire To The Prisons


By the time we rolled up to MCC, there were already four pigs out, three fingers on three triggers of paintball guns (pepper balls) and a rifle (rubber bullets). The fourth pig in his manager’s jacket seemed to be sweating already, nervous of having already lost control of the situation.

By my estimate, it was around 10pm and the majority of the crowd– maybe around 50 folks– were on the opposite side of the street while 5-6 folks held two banners in front of the pigs. Some folks had already tagged the wall with “intifada,” “ftp,” “burn this jail,” and “acab,” so we knew the night was off to a good start.

We held the street until just after midnight, occasionally shooting off fireworks to our folks flickering lights through their windows, but mostly dancing in the street, hanging up banners, banging pots and pans, and sharing snacks. Some folks were dressed in some form of bloc– including someone in grinch bloc– but some folks weren’t, which is something we want to share here, not to judge anyone or cause shame, but to remind each other with love and anger that the state is not fucking around, and every time we go out and give them any information, we are putting ourselves and our loved ones at increased risk. It is worth the effort to bloc up to keep ourselves out of the ever-peering eye of the surveillance state.

A few highlights from that time:

  • Hats off to the banner-makers! There were a lot of good ones, but three highlights of the night included: “criminals are better lovers”; “jails prisons and detention centers are the colonizers’ tools of genocide”; and “fire to the prisons,” with a (I assume) hand-painted machine gun and upside cop car on fire. If one investigated the latter banner with a careful eye, they would have seen a pig in the front seat of the car. We gotta commend comrades with an eye for detail!
  • We eventually took over the street and blocked off the intersection. At one point, a car pulled over and someone got out and started shaking hands and thanking us for being there, saying that they were in that very detention center about a month prior and it meant a lot to them that we were out there. We welcomed them home, and we wished each other well for the new year.
  • The scene at midnight was a powerful one: we shot off fireworks up into the night sky! We flipped off the pigs watching from inside! We busted out a bottle of champagne! We pulled down our masks for a quick kiss! There were a few folks who’d pulled over and gotten out of their car to join us right before midnight, dancing in the intersection and catching the festivities on IG live. By that point, some pigs had joined us in the intersection in a futile attempt to intimidate us, and were approaching the partygoers– I was glad to see our folks respond quickly by surrounding the pigs to make sure they didn’t escalate and ruin our fun. The pigs backed off, the partygoers danced with us a bit longer, then off they went to enjoy the rest of their night.
  • In response to another attempt at intimidation, one of our folks loudly declared “I don’t speak pig!”
Annual New New Year Noise Demo, Jan 2024, MCC Chicago
Annual New New Year Noise Demo, Jan 2024, MCC Chicago
Annual New New Year Noise Demo, Jan 2024, MCC Chicago
Annual New New Year Noise Demo, Jan 2024, MCC Chicago

A little after midnight, a small crowd broke off to take to the streets, carrying banners and waving to folks who had gathered downtown for fireworks and general NYE tomfoolery (and hopefully some trouble, too!). Spoiler: the night ended in us getting kettled and two of our folks getting arrested. Here, I want to share some observations and criticisms, not from a place of condescension but from a place of concern and, frankly, responsibility– we have a responsibility to each other to be honest about our mistakes and missteps so that we can move smarter next time. And so that we can be sure that there is a next time. In no particular order:

  • The marching crowd lost numbers as we moved further towards the downtown core. This is more of an observation than a criticism– we know of the ongoing tension at marches to stay and keep numbers up, but to also leave when you and your crew’s spidey sense starts tingling. Folks peeled off from the crowd, and by the time we got kettled, we were down to maybe 15 folks.
  • This one IS a criticism: we should have left when our spidey sense started tingling. We were approaching a major intersection that led into a bridge, and right before we crossed, a few of us had half an instinct to disperse. We didn’t, and about 30 seconds later, those fucking bike cops kettled us and arrested two of our folks. This happens! It’s not the first or the last time that the night gets flipped around in a split second. But it was an unfortunate way for the night to end, especially how close we were to calling it a night, and especially how many of us already had an inkling to leave. (The two folks were released later that night!)
  • Marches have lots of overlapping and complicated dynamics and there aren’t ways to keep everyone abreast of every decision and every risk. It is difficult if not outright impossible to practice horizontal decision-making in a crowd, even a smaller one. You just have to trust that folks who are there will do what is best for them based on their risk level, etc. and that folks are crewed up and have some amount of experience with being out in the streets. But next time, we will be more strategic– we will have better eyes looking out for cameras and undercover pigs, we will scout out intersections and routes up ahead, we will notice how the pigs are moving and be one step ahead. Fuck those bridges.
  • We were marching on a special night– NYE has that feral energy, kind of like Halloween. I wish we had been more strategic about taking advantage of that night– could we have retreated into the chaos and reemerged later? Were the pigs understaffed that night? What parts of downtown could we have visited where folks might have joined our festivities?
  • Fuck those bridges though, seriously.
Annual New New Year Noise Demo, Jan 2024, MCC Chicago
Posted in REPORTSTagged MCC, noise demo, prisons

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