CrimethInc.
File:Crimethinc hand.png | |
Type | decentralized collective |
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Membership | voluntary association |
Website | www.crimethinc.com |
CrimethInc., also known as CWC ("CrimethInc. Ex-Workers Collective" or "CrimethInc Ex-Workers Ex-Collective"[1]), is a decentralized anarchist collective[2] composed of many cells which act independently of one another. Multiple divisions of the group have published books, while others have acted as record labels; less public splinter-groups have carried out direct action, hosted international conventions and other events, maintained local chapters, rioted, toured with multimedia performance art and/or hardcore anarcho-punk musical ensembles, and supported various large-scale campaigns with publicity work (including the Unabomer for President and the "Don't Just Vote" campaigns as well as the anti-FTAA protests of 2003 in Miami, FL). Such activities have earned the collective national media attention.[3][4]
CrimethInc. is associated with the North American anarcho-punk scene because of its long relationship notable musicians in the genre and publishing of Inside Front, a "journal of hardcore punk and anarchist action", it has since expanded into nearly all areas of the current anti-capitalist movement. The name "CrimethInc." is a satirical self-criticism about hypocrisy of revolutionary propaganda (and other "margin-walking between contradictions") and a direct reference to the concept of "Thoughtcrime" detailed in George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four.[5]
Philosophy
It promotes itself as a mindset and a way of life first and foremost, rather than as an organization per se, by its active participants. The ongoing CrimethInc. experiment is primarily anti-capitalist and anti-authoritarian, looking critically at the culture, economy, politics, work ethic and social dynamic of modern life. Crimethinkers, those who ascribe to the CrimethInc. philosophy, advocate radical ways of living one's life to the end of eliminating the inequities and tyrannies it perceives within society. CrimethInc. is often categorized as post-leftist,[citation needed] although it has also largely drawn from situationist thought, green anarchy, and class struggle anarchism.
Participants
CrimethInc as a loose organization represents a variety of political views. Anyone can publish under the name or create a poster using the logo. Each agent or group of agents operate individually. As well as the traditional anarchist opposition to the state and capitalism, agents have, at times, advocated a straight edge lifestyle, including veganism, the total supersession of gender roles, violent insurrection against the state,[6] turning one's life into a series of vignette moments,[citation needed] and the refusal of work.
Activities
Among their best-known publications are the books Days of War, Nights of Love, Evasion, Recipes for Disaster: An Anarchist Cookbook and the pamphlet Fighting For Our Lives (of which, to date, they have printed 500,000 copies),[7] the hardcore punk/political zine Inside Front, and the music of several hardcore punk bands, of which the most notable is Catharsis. The group is also connected to other collectives/organizations that share some of their ideas (notably Curious George Brigade which has written a number of publications including Anarchy in the Age of Dinosaurs) The group also maintains several websites which promote their ideas. In 2005, they began publishing a half-gloss journal, Rolling Thunder, which they call "An Anarchist Journal of Dangerous Living".
Convergences
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For five summers (and counting), CrimethInc. has hosted a convention of anarchists and adventurers, extending an invitation to all who wish to attend. Typically featuring the performances of traveling theatrical troupes, musicians, direct-action and mutual-aid workshops from individual participants, the few-days-long camping trip has made newspaper articles, initiated multiple Reclaim the Streets actions, mobilized large Critical Mass actions, and catalyzed many other extremities.
It is typical of these gatherings to demand that all attendees have something to contribute to the momentum: whether it's bringing food or equipment to share, leading a discussion group, or providing materials with which to write to political prisoners. There has also been a pattern of promoting convergences as festivals, reminiscent of barnstorming flying circuses and traveling sideshows. A webpage is maintained promoting the event on the CrimethInc.com domain.
These convergences have been hosted by different groups within the collective each time: typically based on the initiative of local enthusiasts. Every year a different set of policy requests is released from locals in the field, typically encouraging a sober, consensus-based space in which no financial transactions are made. The one firm rule always made clear has been "No police informants.", a regulation which has been ignored at least twice by the FBI.[8]
Publications
Books
- Days of War, Nights of Love - Crimethink For Beginners (2000)
- Recipes for Disaster - An Anarchist Cookbook (2005)
- Off the Map - A tale of Wanderers.
- Evasion (2001)
- Stone Hotel - Poems From Prison by Raegan Butcher (2004)(PDF version)
- Rusty String Quartet - Poems by Raegan Butcher after his release (2005)
- The Secret World of Terijian - A children's eco-defense story (2007)
- Anarchy in the Age of Dinosaurs - by fellow-travellers Curious George Brigade
- Fire & Lightning - IvoryBell
- In Search of the World: A Traveller's Almanac- IvoryBell
Zines / papers
- Fighting For Our Lives
- Rolling Thunder
- A Civilian's Guide to Direct Action (PDF)
- Harbinger
- D.I.Y Guide
- The Ex-Worker
- Crimethinc Worker Bulletin 47 & 74
- Hunter/Gatherer
- Inside Front
Video
In March of 2001, two documentaries from Eugene, Oregon's Pickaxe Productions were published through one cell of CrimethInc.: Pickaxe and Breaking the Spell.
At the end of 2005 (A year after the release of Recipes for Disaster) CrimethInc. announced the first volume in a "Guerrilla Film Series", a DVD including 3 feature-length documentaries and a collection of shorts. A few of CrimethInc.'s "thinktank" experiments had been documented on film by the "folk-scientists" themselves, and copies of these lived in relative obscurity until included in the Guerrilla Film Series. CrimethInc. Guerilla Film Series, Volume One included Pickaxe, Breaking the Spell, The Miami Model, 2 Submedia.tv Shorts and 3 Thinktank Documentaries.
Bands
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See also
Notes and references
- ^ After the Fall: Analysis of the Events of September 11th 2001, Crimethinc.com
- ^ described as an "anarcho-punk collective" in Thompson, Stacy (2004). "Crass Commodities". Popular Music & Society (Oct 2004): 307–322. Retrieved 2007-07-08.
CrimethInc.: Human suffering, reduced to a commodity, now available for your leisure-time listening pleasure. (advertisement for the anarcho-punk collective, "CrimethInc.')
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(help) - ^ Childress, Sarah (August 2004). "'Hacktivists' Log On" (news article). Newsweek. Retrieved 2007-07-08.
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(help) - ^ CrimethInc. Frequently Asked Questions
- ^ http://www.crimethinc.com/features/2.html
- ^ Crimethinc. "Ten Year Report"
- ^ Confidential Source "Anna" Issued Affidavit
External links
- http://www.crimethinc.com/
- http://www.crimethinc.com/blog
- http://www.crimethinc.net/ (recently reconstructed and currently at low function)
- http://www.crimethinc.be/
- Rethinking Crimethinc. by W.
- Ludwig, Mike (2007-07-30). "Melee breaks out uptown at end of anarchist confab". The Athens News. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
There is no central location or headquarters for CrimethInc., and no one is quite sure when and where the network originated, though some speculate it has been around since the late 1980s. According to some participants, the ambiguous and decentralized nature of the organization enhances the romantic appeal of its existence and propaganda, which is popular among youth in the punk, anarchist and dropout cultures.
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