Mormon-Satanists Against Fascism and Exploitation

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Community about socialists, anarchists, anti-fascists, and anti-racist philosophy.

Post content that's thoughtful and relevant to social liberation from an socialist, anarchist, autonomous, antifascist perspectives.

I also don't care that you still hate me just because I didn't fucking vote for Biden, Harris, or Trump. :)

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Local prison book program brings connection and humanity despite censorship

by Julia Dixon Evans

Cherish Burtson remembers when books were her only escape. She was incarcerated at the Federal Correctional Institute in Dublin, California.

"And I went through so many books; I think that's the only thing that allowed me to actually get through it," Burtson said.

Now, Burtson volunteers with Books Through Bars San Diego, a mutual aid collective that sends books to prisons. The group holds regular packing events at Groundwork Books at UC San Diego. Volunteers open letters from incarcerated people, select books, and write letters back.

This year, the group received about 150 letters per month. They shipped 1,200 books to incarcerated people in 200 facilities across 40 states.

"When you're in there, you're just at a complete standstill and you really feel like the outside world forgets about you. And it's those little things — letters and books — that make you feel like you actually still are a part of the world," Burtson said.

Books Through Bars operates with minimal overhead. It is volunteer-run and relies on word-of-mouth and prison resource lists to spread the word. Groundwork Books donates storage and event space for packing events. Books are donated by the community and bookstores, with donation sites scattered throughout the region.

Another volunteer with Books Through Bars, Terry Vargas, said the busiest book donation sites include Libélula Books, the Friends of Serra Mesa Library, and Groundwork Books.

The group’s primary expense is shipping. It costs roughly $5 to send each package of books, which added up to $6,295 in shipping costs in 2024. To raise money, the group recently published and sold zines of art sent by incarcerated people along with their book requests.

Organizers say about 70% of their packages make it through security.

Prisons routinely censor books. According to a 2023 study by PEN America, correctional facilities in all 50 states contribute to the nation's largest book ban. Many states, including California, keep a centralized banned book list. In other states, the list is vague and less predictable. Books containing sexuality, nudity, violence, or content that may be considered a "threat to security," certain DIY instructions, or stories about life in prison are often censored, according to PEN America research.

Researchers found that, in addition to banned book lists and categories, censorship also exists from on-the-spot judgment from facility mailrooms, and “content-neutral” censorship — a catch-all for other reasons an incarcerated person may not be allowed to receive a book.

This may include used books, hardcovers, improper mailing practices, or failure to comply with facility mailroom procedures.

The rules for book shipments vary widely and are hard to track.

"Facilities are becoming stricter and stricter with the requirements — some facilities have adopted requirements where they only accept white envelopes — and these are just like arbitrary rules, just add barriers for us to be able to send these packages," Vargas said.

But for Books Through Bars, it's worth the effort.

The packing events are powerful for the volunteers, too.

"I think that impact goes two ways," Burtson said.

"Just being able to actually read people's words and know that we are making some kind of difference, no matter how small. So actually showing up for people who are incarcerated and building that connection with them — which reading their actual words forces you to do — that was really powerful for me."

Letters from incarcerated people often express gratitude, Vargas said. At a recent packing event, she opened a letter from Zachary in Indiana, written on a torn half-sheet of binder paper.

"He says, 'I'm writing to request books. I really appreciate the work your organization is doing for prisoners. It really helps me not lose my cool. It saves my life, really,'" Vargas read.

Books Through Bars’ next packing event is scheduled for January. Volunteers and donations are always welcome.

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Air Canada Flight Attendants Victory (internationalsocialist.net)
submitted 1 week ago by [email protected] to c/msafe
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/49278834

Great write-up about Voltairine de Cleyre, and I’ve been kinda obsessed ever since. Chick was a badass. She was self-taught, grew up in poverty in Michigan, and rose all kinds of hell as a public speaker, feminist, and anarchist writer.

She ditched labels and embraced what she called “anarchism without adjectives.” Basically an inclusive, no-bullshit version of anarchism.

The more I read about her, the more I see how much she actually did. She led free speech fights in the early 1900s, risked arrest, and got thrown in jail for standing up for unemployed workers.

A great quote that stuck with me comes from her essay, Anarchism and American Traditions: “Direct action... means that the workingman knows what he needs and how to get it, and does not need any intermediary to secure it for him.”

That line pretty much sums her up. No gatekeepers. No waiting for permission. Just straight-up action rooted in real people’s needs. She deserves to be talked about way more than she is, imho.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/49213641

I gotta say, it hit me way harder than I expected. One of the more inspiring books that I've read.

I first read it as an assignment when I was a student in Lincoln University which is a historically black college in a very rural area. I'm biracial, and knowing that Booker was too, made it a little more personal to me. When I was young, I sorta took everything too personal, so re-reading this book as an adult has been interesting.

On the surface, some people paint him as someone who was too accommodating to white people in power at the time, too willing to work within the system. But honestly? I think there was something pretty radical in what he was doing.

He wasn’t trying to blow the system up. He was trying to outsmart it; which is my favorite way fo doing things. He was teaching Black Americans how to survive it, how to thrive despite it, and how to build something of their own.

The big thing was his emphasis on vocational training and economic self-reliance. A lot of people don't view it as a socialist text, but I think there’s a strong case to be made that it was actually kinda socialist in spirit.

Not in a theoretical, Marx-reading way, but in the real, ground-up, community-empowering way.

He believed in lifting people up by teaching them skills, organizing schools like Tuskegee to be self-sustaining, and creating networks of support that didn’t rely on charity or pity.

That’s a collective spirit. That’s building infrastructure from below. And to me, that feels closer to socialist principles than it does to capitalist bootstrapping myths. Tho some charge Booker with being capitalist, I just don't see it.

Yeah, he had to play nice with powerful white people. I don’t think it was all because he loved doing it, though he did have some genuine friendships and respect with them. I think it was a lot of strategy.

Booker knew that full equality wasn’t going to happen overnight, and that if black folks waited for white America to hand it over, they’d be waiting forever. So he focused on building real independence. The kind where you don't have to ask anymore, because you've already made your own way.

And the man walked to college. Like literally. Crossed multiple states on foot just for the chance to learn! I bitch when I have to drive across town for something.

Sure, in a truly socialist society he shouldn’t have had to do that at all, but he worked with the world he had. And that grit and that drive made this a really great book for me. I'm trying to shop around and find one of the first editions of it to buy for my collection.

It's a free e-book on Gutenberg: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2376

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