Mar 12, 2017
Interviews with Queen
Tahiyrah and Franklin López
This episode contains two segments:
In the first, Bursts spoke with Queen Tahiyrah about the hunger
strike being engaged by Imam Siddique Abdullah Hasan and Jason Robb, two death row inmates put
there by their attempt to resolved the hostage taking involved in
the 1993 Lucasville Prison Uprising. During the uprising,
Jason Robb and Hasan acted as negotiators for the prisoners as
representatives of the Aryan Nation prison gang and Muslim
prisoners, respectively, at the facility. More on their case
can be found at http://lucasvilleamnesty.org.
Check out Queen Tahiyrah's podcast, entitled SiGnOtHeTiMeS. We apologize that the beginning
of Queen Tahiyrah's interview sounds crappy - that was a technical
fail on our part - but it clears up after about 2 minutes.
In the second segment, Bursts chatted with Franklin López about
Submedia, the importance of anarchist media production, his
upcoming anarchist hip hop podcast, and the new short documentary
series they're about to start releasing entitled Trouble.
Trouble is available for public showings, so find yourself a venue
in town, contact Frankie and company via, pass
word of the event in town via flyers and word of mouth and
antisocial media and make some friends where you're at!
The first episode will focus on diversity of tactics at Stand Rock
with a focus on the Red Warrior Camp. More work by Frankie
can be found at https://submedia.tv. Oh, and there's an
announcement of a podcasting network looming on the horizon.
More to come on that in future episodes.
Announces
Benefit Shows: Help our
comrades arrested at J20!
If you're in Asheville or the surrounding area, there is a benefit show TONIGHT (March 12) at the
Odditorium at 1045 Haywood Rd in West Asheville. Proceeds will
benefit our comrades who were arrested during the inauguration
protests in DC earlier this year.
Also, next Monday the 20th there will be a dance party to benefit
J20 arrestees, come dance to mod, punk, and all the classics new
and old with DJ Murphy Murph! This will be at the Lazy
Diamond at 98-A N Lexington Ave in downtown Asheville.
Rebel! Rebuild! Rewild! call
for submissions
The Rebel! Rebuild! Rewild! Collective has put out a call for
submissions of texts about strategic lessons that can be learned
from the resistance at Standing Rock. As one phase of the
resistance has ended and another has begun, the idea is to compile
experiences and analyses and reflect on the lessons learned from
this game-changing moment in movement history.
This project is mostly for the benefit of those who were not
present at Standing Rock but who might participate in something
similar in the future.
The plan is to publish a compilation of thoughtful strategic
analyses, both online and in print. However, seeing as it might not
be possible to publish everything that people submit, the plan is
to put an unedited version of everything that folks submit onto a
wordpress site sometime in the future.
The call is to write about anything you'd like to, but some leading
questions are:
Which actions were most effective?
Which actions were least effective?
Do you have any insights on dynamics between indigenous
and
non-indigenous water protectors?
What was unifying?
What was divisive?
What can we learn from the tactics of DAPL, the police, and the
state?
What can we learn from the legal battle?
What message would you like to pass on to future water
protectors?
Please submit writing to rebelrebuildrewild@riseup.net. Submissions can be
signed with your legal name, an alias, or be anonymous.
Please include whatever information about yourself that you
consider relevant.
Art by Julie Maas (borrowed from http://www.nightslantern.ca/)