Montréal Contre-information
Montréal Contre-information
Montréal Contre-information

Policing isn’t broken; it’s working for capitalist and colonial interests

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Jul 142017
 

From Stones and Sticks and Words

On July 24, 2016, Somalian refugee Abdirahman Abdi was brutally beaten to death by two Ottawa police officers.

His death caused outrage, and drew attention to the issue of police brutality towards Black people in Ottawa. Anti-Black racism, and police violence towards Black people has been one of the central political issues of the past two years. This is a short essay that analyzes policing, and some thoughts about what to do to end the violence of policing.

First, I want to acknowledge and affirm that Ottawa, and the entire Ottawa river watershed, is the stolen land of the Algonquin nation. The colonization of Ottawa, and Canada, is the backdrop of the present day fight against the violence of policing. Two hundred years ago, the Algonquin controlled the area, there was no modern police force, and everyone lived according to Algonquin law. It’s the theft of Algonquin land and the genocide of Algonquin people that makes the existence of the City of Ottawa, and the Ottawa Police Service (OPS), possible.

Settler activists in Ottawa have to ask themselves what it means to work for police accountability and transparency, as well as ending all of the violence connected to policing and prisons, when the OPS is a settler police force that enforces the settler laws of a nation and city that exist on stolen Algonquin land. More broadly, activists working to end the violence of policing have to take this colonial context into account in their organizing no matter where in Canada they are.

Law and Order Policing

Law and order policing is what most people tend to think of as “the police”. Law and order policing in principle focuses on enforcing Canadian law, although, in fact, most police officer’s time is not spent enforcing the law, preventing crime or catching criminals.

Police don’t impartially enforce Canadian law, and Canadian law is not impartial: Canadian police officers, police forces and Canadian law privilege certain groups, and oppress others. Groups that are targeted (criminalized) experience higher levels of violence, arrest and incarceration. Many different groups are targeted, including Black people, people of colour and Indigenous people, migrants, poor and working-class people, especially homeless people, street-based sex workers and drug users, people with mental health problems, as well as queer and trans people. Individuals who are members of more than one of these groups are more likely to be attacked, or arrested, or both, by the police.

There have been more than 15 reports written about anti-Black racism in Canadian police forces since the 1970s. In brief, these studies concluded that systemic anti-Black racism exists within Canadian police forces. The reports have also made many suggestions about what could be done to eliminate or mitigate the effects of anti-Black racism in Canadian police forces, but for the most part police forces have refused to implement these suggestions.

As few of the recommendations are implemented, it is only a matter of time before there is another incident of police racism and brutality, such as the murder of Abdirahman Abdi by Const. Daniel Montsion and Const. Dave Weir of the OPS.

There’s a reason that the recommendations from the reports on anti-Black racism in the criminal injustice system haven’t been implemented. Many reasons, really, but at the end of the day it’s because policing isn’t broken; it’s working for capitalist and colonial interests. The police, and the governments they work for, have been reluctant to implement reforms because police doing violence to oppressed people is, sadly, part of what the job is really about.

Political Policing

Political policing focuses on people and organizations that the Canadian state and the political police consider to be subversive and harmful to so-called national security.

Political policing prioritizes intelligence gathering, rather than arrests and incarceration, and the goal of the intelligence gathering is to be able to undermine, disrupt and control the people and organizations they target.

Political policing exists to protect political and economic elites and it attacks people, groups and organizations that these elites consider a threat. For much of Canada’s history this has meant Communists, but more recently the political police have targeted Black nationalists, migrants, and Quebec sovereigntists. Today, Muslim, Indigenous and environmental activists are particularly targeted, while the political police still continue to attack socialists, communists and anarchists.

A recent example of political policing is the RCMP’s Project SITKA. Project SITKA aims to identify members of the leadership of Indigenous resistance movements, especially those who are willing to use “tactics…outside the spectrum of peaceful and lawful demonstration”. The purpose of identifying them is, of course, to neutralize them and reduce or end their effectiveness as activists and leaders. While Project SITKA only identifies 89 individuals, hundreds, maybe thousands, of (primarily Indigenous) people were investigated.

As stated above, political policing emphasizes intelligence gathering in order to control targeted groups. An excellent example of this comes from the Project SITKA report, where the RCMP says, ““In order to be intelligence-led, the National Intelligence Coordination Centre strives to collect all available intelligence and information related to known or anticipated threats. This information is to be acquired through a wide variety of sources, including open source information, a review of police occurrence reports, and other investigative techniques.”

Organizing to End the Violence of Policing

To be effective, organizing for police accountability and an end to police brutality has to make sure not to inadvertently increase the strength of the police. For example, in the US, the police and the Prison-Industrial Complex have been greatly strengthened by liberal reforms that were in principle implemented to reduce police misconduct. More regulation and oversight of the police, rather than reducing police violence, has, in fact, aggravated the problems that liberals said it was intended to resolve.

Activists interested in ending the violence of policing have to pursue reforms that reduce and limit police power while working for strong, healthy and safe communities. They must also refuse to work with the political police in their efforts to gather intelligence on, undermine and control our communities and movements.

Ending the violence of policing is a part of broader struggles: struggles for racial and gender equity in the workplace, for accessible, quality and relevant education for all, for decent, and affordable housing for all, higher welfare rates, a living wage, good quality and culturally appropriate support for people with mental health problems, and much more.

For more information:

The Justice For Abdirahman Abdi Coalition

Naomi Murakawa & #BlackLivesMatter: Liberals, Guns and the Roots of the U.S. Prison Explosion

Gary T. Marx, Thoughts on a Neglected Category of Social Movement Participant

Jean-Paul Brodeur, High Policing and Low Policing: Remarks about the Policing of Political Activities

Jean-Paul Brodeur and Stephane Leman-Langois, Surveillance-Fiction or Higher Policing?

Jean-Paul Brodeu, The Policing Web

Steve Hewitt, Spying 101

Steve Hewitt, Snitch

Gary Kinsman (Author), Dieter K. Buse (Editor), Mercedes Steedman (Editor),  Whose National Security?

Gary Kinsman and Patrizia Gentile, The Canadian War on Queers

Tim Groves, Living among us: Activists speak out on police infiltration

Anti-Black Racism in Ottawa

Report-back from Garam Masala anti-caste, anti-Hindutva disruption at Montreal’s “Festival of India”

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Jul 122017
 

GARAM MASAMA (Groupe d’Action Révolutionnaire sud-Asiatique de Montréal / Montreal Alliance of South Asian Leftists and Allies) had a successful intervention at this weekend’s misnamed and offensive “Festival of India”. We exposed it as a Hare Krishna and caste-Hindu sect event that does not represent India in any way. We passed out almost two-thousand flyers, had dozens of conversations with supportive and curious folks, but also had to deal with hostile and violent Hare Krishnas and their right-wing caste-Hindu accomplices (as these videos from the Saturday intervention attest). Nonetheless, our anti-caste message of “Hindutva must fall, an India for all” was heard loud and clear all weekend, raising awareness about grassroots and pluralistic movements in opposition to chauvinism and bigotry in South Asia and here.

In addition to physical and verbal assault, the right-wing caste Hindus at the falsely named “Festival of India” bizarrely placed filled garbage bags and cans around our GARAM MASALA crew on Sunday. We were taking up space in the middle of the event, so the garbage inconvenienced everyone. It might seem bizarre, but in the skewed outlook of caste/varna Hinduism, and specific caste-based insults (“dogs” … “dirty” … “sudra”) aimed at us all weekend by people wearing overt caste signs, it was a specific dismissal of us as no better than garbage. We didn’t take it as an insult (since we reject caste and caste-based bigotry) but it was a reminder of the vile caste-based discrimination, bigotry and violence faced by India’s low-caste and out-caste populations (and practiced in the diaspora). It reminded me personally of my visit to a group of garbage pickers in Chennai (Madras), and their courageous struggle for better conditions and resistance to discrimination based on caste. Those workers represent the grassroots struggles against caste and Hindutva (high-caste Hindu hegemony) in India.

Text of flyer passed out at the “Festival of India” in Montreal:

Stop caste-based violence!
Indian culture is not just Hindu!
Hindutva must fall: An India for us all!

THIS IS NOT AN INDIAN FESTIVAL
The so-called “Festival of India” is directly complicit in the marginalization of India’s multiple religions and cultures. It is also a festival that promotes practices directly linked to the violent subjugation of India’s religious minorities.

WHAT’S THE PROBLEM?
We are a group of South Asians who oppose the Festival’s decision to:
– Advertise this event as “Indian”, though they themselves state it only celebrates the Vedic (or Hindu) tradition. This is part of an oppressive history that equates Indian identity with Hinduism.
– Promote Hindu/Vedic practices and beliefs that are directly linked to the violent subjugation of India’s minorities. This includes the abhorrent caste system which segments society into rigid, hierarchical, groups.
– Organize this Festival in conjunction with the colonial MTL 375 festivities.

The pretext for today’s “Festival of India” is offensive and completely erases the history of resistance by Indigenous peoples in North America and on the Indian subcontinent. It makes invisible the destruction caused by colonialism and imperialism. Here’s an insulting excerpt from the official Festival of India website:

“For centuries, the interest of European explorers to discover cultural wealth of India has driven them to amazing findings, such as the discovery of the North American continent itself. We may remember that there is a good historical reason why we call the native population of this continent ‘indians’. Today the cultural wealth of India continues to inspire and attract the world, and we are presenting you an unforgettable opportunity to taste the flavours of this ancient tradition – so different, but so welcoming!”

India’s minorities are currently experiencing a wave of Hindu-nationalist violence. The failure of the “Festival of India” to acknowledge India’s plurality makes the organizers complicit in this violence. This is especially important given the current state of Indian politics.

In India the government is ruled by a Hindu-nationalist party whose leader, complicit in the 2002 genocide of Muslims in the state of Gujarat, promotes the idea that India is synonymous with Hinduism (or should be forcibly made so). Empowered by the government, mobs of Hindu extremists have been lynching non-Hindus in the name of “cow-protection”. We are horrified to see the same beliefs and practices being insidiously disguised as an apolitical cultural exchange with food, yoga and dance.

WHO ARE WE?
We are a Montreal-based group called “GARAM MASALA” (an acronym for “Groupe d’Action Révolutionnaire sud-Asiatique de Montréal / Montreal Alliance of South Asian Leftists and Allies”) who share progressive politics: anti-caste, anti-colonial, feminist, in support of Indigenous and adivasi self-determination, against all forms of oppression including sexism, homophobia ableism, and racism, including Islamophobia and anti-Semitism; support for progressive secular social justice movements on the subcontinent, and here in North America. We also confront and challenge all forms of oppression that exist within South Asian diasporic communities.

Info: GaramMasalaMontreal@gmail.com

International Week of Solidarity July 20-27: Keep the Pressure On!

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Jul 092017
 

From CrimethInc

We are calling for a Week of Solidarity with the J20 defendants from July 20 to 27, 2017. July 20 marks six months from the initial actions and arrests during Donald Trump’s inauguration, and on July 27, a motion to dismiss the charges will be argued in court. The case has finally begun to receive the media attention it warrants; with this court date approaching and the cases underway, this is a crucial time for a second Week of Solidarity. Send reportbacks, photographs, and inquiries to J20solidarity@protonmail.com.

On January 20, 2017, thousands of people came to Washington, DC to protest the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump. In the early morning, blockades shut down security checkpoints and discouraged people from attending the inauguration itself, while impromptu marches and direct actions occurred throughout the day. There was a spirit of defiance in the air.

Iconic images circulated almost immediately, from the punching of white supremacist Richard Spencer to pictures of a limousine on fire. These were only the most spectacular images, however, of a day that was characterized by generalized disruption.

Midmorning, an “anticapitalist and antifascist” march of several hundred people made clear its opposition not just to Trump but also the system that made Trump possible. Led by banners reading “MAKE RACISTS AFRAID AGAIN” and “TOTAL LIBERATION FROM DOMINATION,” the disruptive march took the streets of DC to the sound of fireworks and anticapitalist chants. After about half an hour, the march was brutally attacked by police, who used chemical and crowd control weapons along with physical force, then boxed in (“kettled”) and mass-arrested people. Everyone on an entire city block was arrested and given the same charge of felony rioting. Approximately 214 arrestees now face a total of eight felony charges, including conspiracy and destruction of property. All of the J20 defendants are now facing up to 75 years in prison.

A great deal has happened in the six months since the inauguration. Confrontational protests have taken place across the continent, challenging the political landscape shaped by Trump’s election. Participants have stood up to emboldened white supremacists, disrupted airports in the face of anti-Muslim bans, blockaded proposed pipeline routes, set up sanctuary spaces and rapid response networks against ICE deportations, and much more. In turn, states are passing legislation aimed at further criminalizing protest and limiting resistance.

The J20 case fits into this wave of repression. The police seized and hacked phones in an attempt to strengthen the government’s case, and subpoenaed social media accounts. They raided an organizer’s home in DC. Arrestees had their personal information leaked online. The prosecution filed additional charges, essentially accusing the entire group of breaking the same handful of windows. All this has disrupted the lives of the defendants in the J20 case, who have lost jobs, incurred legal expenses, and been forced to make repeated trips to DC. The majority of cases are now headed to trial, with a handful of trials set for November and December 2017 and the rest scattered throughout 2018. Despite the fact that the state forced a large number of strangers into this situation at random, the majority of defendants are working together, responding to the charges in a collective way.

In order to continue to build our capacity to counter state repression and strengthen our interconnected struggles, we are calling for a Week of Solidarity from July 20 to 27, 2017, to make support for the J20 defendants widely visible. July 20 marks six months since the initial actions and arrests; on July 27, a motion to dismiss the charges will be argued in court.

We call on supporters to organize events and actions in solidarity with the J20 defendants throughout the week. Be creative and strategic! Help cultivate a spirit of resistance and mutual aid! Some ideas and areas to focus on during the week include:

Fundraising – As with any legal case, fundraising for legal and travel costs continues to be important. You can consult a list of regional fund-raising sites here and make donations to the general DC fund here. One easy fundraiser activity would be to organize a screening of the new subMedia film “No Justice … Just Us: Movement Defense against State Repression”. Other ideas include bake sales, raffles, speakers, or benefit shows. Some folks have also made t-shirts and tote bags.

Take Political Action – The J20 arrests were so plainly illegal that even the DC city council has funded an investigation into police abuses that day. This could turn up evidence useful to the defendants, but only if it takes place soon! During the Week of Solidarity, flood the DC Office of Police Complaints with demands that the investigation happen NOW. For more details, go here.

Outreach – One reason these prosecutions are possible in the first place is the lack of visibility around the case. Find ways to spread the word, with an eye toward translating visibility and public awareness into the capacity for material and emotional support. If you are part of an organization or have connections to one, ask it to endorse the “Statement of Solidarity,” or write and release your own statement against the prosecution in solidarity with those arrested on J20. Circulate statements widely among all the networks you have access to.

Increase Visibility – Design posters and decorate your town with them. Several poster designs are available here, but more designs are always welcome. Consider designing handbills or other agitational materials. Share them in the days before the Week of Solidarity. Drop banners. Paint graffiti. Set up an information table at a public event or space. Spread the word on social media; try to persuade people who are well known to take a public position. Organize public visibility actions to spread the word about the case; international readers could consider taking action at US embassies to demand that the charges be dropped as a means of raising awareness.

Build Connections – Use the Week of Solidarity as a means of connecting struggles. The J20 defendants aren’t the only ones facing felony charges for their resistance or presence at political events. Organize joint events to benefit other defendants as well. Think of ways to connect across movements, using such events as a stepping-stone toward building robust and combative movements that can withstand repression and take the initiative.

Build Capacity – It’s also important to remember the many and varied reasons that people took to the streets on January 20. Those are at least as urgent now when so many people are facing charges. It is imperative that people not turn away out of fear of repression or isolate themselves. That is what the state wants. We must meet these charges with defiance and continued resistance. We must respond not just as supporters but also as active comrades in a shared struggle.

Finally, we encourage folks to visit Defendj20resitance.org to sign up for e-mail updates about the case, or follow “Defend J20 Resistance” on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

Islamophobic Panic Surrounding “Safarigate”: A Fake Scandal Made Up by Notorious Racists!

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Jul 062017
 

From Montreal-antifasciste.info

The media has begun commenting on a short racist youtube video, shot at Parc Safari (a zoo 45 minutes outside of Montreal) on July 2nd[i]. The video, seemingly shot by a woman who just happened to be innocently visiting the zoo that day, is in fact not easy to make out – one sees a crowd of people milling around of the grass, a woman in a headscarf walking by, and one hears something difficult to make out coming through a sound system. Nothing in fact out of the ordinary to anyone who spends any amount of time out in public in most big cities in North America.

Nonetheless, this anodyne 47 second video clip (linked to by several media websites now) has apparently provoked a storm of controversy, as it shows Muslims praying in public, and not only that but saying their prayers through a sound system. The number of angry complaints and demands for clarification, elicited an official response from the zoo[ii], which explains that the Muslim Association of Canada had organized a group visit to the zoo that day, that they had brought their own portable sound system, and that they had followed all of the zoo’s rules. As Parc Safari explains, their zoo is open to everyone, regardless of nationality, religion, race, culture, language or sexual orientation, and that it is too bad that freedom of religion has offended so many people.

So far, all seems clear, if depressingly so: just another day in this Islamophobic society, just more of the media stirring up fake scandals about “reasonable accommodations.” If anything, we are pleasantly surprised that the zoo issues such a good response.

Scratching a bit beneath the surface, though, there are other facts that should be brought to light.

First, who uploaded this video? On youtube, the video was uploaded by “guindon87” [iii]; this account specializes in uploading anti-Muslim videos, including footage shot by members of far right groups in Quebec. For instance, one recent upload is a video shot by Sylvain Gallant in 2016 in Drummondville[iv], in which he drives by a local mosque asking “Are we going to allow this in Drummondville, a mosque? Me I don’t want any here … we are being invaded by mosques here, there are three, and I am completely fed up!” This video is part of the evidence that was used against Mr Gallant earlier this year, for inciting hatred, getting him 200 hours of community service and a condition of not going on social media for three years[v]. Within the far right, Gallant is seen as a hero being persecuted for free speech. Other videos uploaded by “guindon87” defend the recent St-Jean parade against accusations of racism; include two videos devoted to a local activist, in which he is subjected to racist slurs[vi]; and more in a similar vein, including one in which she calls for the murder of anti-fascists militants[vii]. It is unclear whether guindon87 shot the video in question (which first circulated on facebook), or whether they are simply the one who uploaded it to youtube.

The timing is also curious. The day before this video was shot, the small town of Hemmingford was invaded by members of the Quebec far right, as sixty or so people from groups like the “templar knights” and La Meute heeded a call by the anti-immigrant Storm Alliance to gather at the border to bear witness to irregular crossings by refugees, and to intimidate the latter for good measure. Their anti-immigrant protest was met with a boisterous counterprotest organized by the Montreal group Solidarity Across Borders[viii]. This was all ten minutes away from Parc Safari, which is actually where the Storm Alliance parked their bus. So that weekend, far-rightists from throughout Quebec had gathered in the area.

A further element to consider is that once this video was uploaded to facebook by Audrey Tremblay, it went viral, as of Wednesday having over 1500 shares and 500 comments. In the comments, one can read not only the most vile racism, but also links posted to far right groups such as La Meute. Indeed, the video has been avidly promoted by members of La Meute over the past three days. “Sue Elle” (real name: Sue Charbonneau), a La Meute member from Montreal, posted the video to the Mouvement républicain du Québec and Front Patriotique du Québec web pages, along with a model protest letter to send to the zoo, encouraging people to protest the fact that Muslims had been allowed to pray in public. At the same time, André Pitre (aka “Stu Pitt”) used his youtube channel to promote the issue, tying the Muslims who were at the zoo that day to the Muslim Brotherhood and explaining that they want to set up a global caliphate, and that a key part of “conquest” by Muslims is to humiliate subject populations. According to Pitre, who claims to be nothing more than an ardent free speech advocate, this is what was being done when they broadcast a prayer on their sound system: it was all a matter of “invaders” humiliating their “victims”!

Muslims praying in public should of course not be cause for concern, and certainly should not be considered so controversial as to be newsworthy, any more than Christians saying grace at a restaurant, or people meditating at a park, or any of the other things people do to live their beliefs in a multicultural society. However, we live in a context where previous, equally innocuous, examples of minority groups daring to live in public and claim their place, have become hot-button issues, galvanizing broad racist opposition. Most famously, this racist potential has been harnessed by politicians of both right and “left” during the “reasonable accommodation” and “charter of Quebec Values” “debates”.

Since earlier of this year, following the massacre by a far rightist in a Quebec City mosque, a national populist movement has been on the march. The July 1st demonstration in Hemmingford is just the last in a series of public displays against immigrants and Muslims. La Meute (who were present in large numbers on the 1st, providing most of the boots on the ground) is very much at the center of this racist wave, so far.

This is the context in which a simply trip to the zoo can become a flashpoint for racist organizing.

 

[i] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AAY9FoHHjYY

[ii] https://www.facebook.com/ParcSafari/posts/1555486877824473

[iii] https://www.youtube.com/user/guindon87/videos

[iv] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_ksRxGtzn0

[v] http://www.journalexpress.ca/faits-divers/justice/2017/6/29/des-videos-hargneuses-contre-l-islam-le-mene-devant-le-tribunal.html

[vi] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ar3SiS37iVw

[vii] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KDbbv9d4FDY

[viii] http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/quebec-aslyum-seekers-crossing-roxham-road-canada-day-1.4187469

A “Vegetarian Act” of Vandalism Strikes Boucherie Grinder

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Jul 052017
 

On Wednesday morning this week, the butcher shop Boucherie Grinder was struck with two bricks. The display windows which house the shop’s ornately-hung meats in full view were not broken, only receiving marks, due to the strength of the glass. A message was attached to the projectiles:

“This is a vegetarian act. We consider that your hideous and infectious establishment requires a long and ostensible intervention. Cease the mutilation and sale of non-human animals. Starting today, June 27th, 2017, more and more speciesist institutions like yours will be vandalized in Montreal. Thank you for understanding that animals, like humans, are not for sale. Together for a 100% vegetarian future.”

Fuck Canada: VIA Rail celebration of colonial genocide covered in the colours of green anarchy

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Jul 012017
 

Anonymous submission to MTL Counter-info

Politicians, cops, capitalists and bootlickers across the territories of so-called Canada are celebrating the genocidal legacy of colonial civilization with a year full of grotesque spectacles. Canada tries to whitewash 150 years of colonial violence with fighter jets adorned with the colors of the Canadian flag, concerts and parades, and VIA Rail commuter train advertising.

We see nothing to celebrate about the genocidal campaign waged against indigenous peoples, ecological devastation, or the establishment of a State which represses our wild desires and steals our capacity to live free. Instead, we celebrate the resistance of indigenous peoples across Turtle Island; from the Gitwilgyoots peoples resisting the construction of a massive LFG (liquified fracked gas) terminal on their territories, to the Mi’kmaq resistance to fracking on their territories.

Earlier this morning, we defaced the Canada 150 propaganda on the side of the VIA Rail train headed from Tio’Tia:Ke (“Montreal”) to Gichi Kiiwenging (“Toronto”). We wanted to celebrate an anti-colonial July 1st a little early, because colonialism isn’t reserved to a few days on the calendar. This is the same railway that was blockaded in solidarity with Standing Rock last November.

Canada’s rail infrastructure played an integral role in the establishment of this settler society built on dead native and immigrant bodies – colonial expansion was contingent upon building these train lines for the transportation of troops and the transformation of “natural resources” into commodities for human exploitation.

This infrastructure continues to play an integral role in the maintenance of the capitalist economy in the territory dominated by the Canadian State. During the Oka uprising, there were widespread solidarity actions throughout the territory of so-called Canada: road and railway blockades, and sabotage of railway bridges and electrical transmission lines. This solidarity was a tangible threat to the Canadian economy and its politicians who tried to crush this indigenous insurgency.

We covered the train in green and black – the colours of an anarchism that is against civilization and domestication. We are settler anarchists who are inspired by indigenous struggles that assert their autonomy by any means necessary, and in the coming times of resistance to pipelines and territorial incursion, we hope that our solidarity will feel significant and impactful. We share a goal with many indigenous struggles of weakening the Canadian State’s power, and want to destroy it completely. If we want to be able to choose how we live, create the social relations we desire, and be free from cops, bosses, politicians and all authority, we see the only option as the destruction of the State, capitalism, and civilization.

Fuck Canada! Solidarity with all those who resist and revolt!

P.S. We used fire-extinguishers filled with paint. If you’re interested in trying them out for yourself, watch this instructional video.


11 x 17″ | PDF

Graffiti campaign: 375+150 = Bullshit!

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Jun 302017
 

Montreal streets covered with anti-colonial, anti-nationalist, migrant justice stencils,
images and graffiti

From No Borders Collective

This week, between the nationalistic displays of June 24 (Quebec holiday) and July 1st (Canada holiday), a group called Le Collectif No Borders in Montreal has covered various areas of the city with anti-colonial, anti-nationalist and migrant justice stencils and images.

Among the messages shared on the stencils, images and graffiti:
375+150 = Bullshit
Construisons une ville sans frontières
Arrêtez les déportations
Open The Borders
Refugees Welcome
Réfugié-e-s bienvenu-e-s
Ils construisent des murs, nous bâtissons des ponts
Ni Canada, Ni Québec. Fuck le 150e
Ni Québec, ni Canada.
Quebec, Canada … same shit, different piles.
Canada 150: Fake News

The images also include a burning Canadian flag.

No Images found.

The action this week is undertaken in opposition to Montreal’s 375 anniversary celebration, and Canada’s 150 celebrations, both public relations displays that mask the colonial and genocidal origins of the City of Montreal and the Canadian state. The action is undertaken in the spirit of anti-colonial resistance, support for anti-racist and anti-fascist struggles, as well as solidarity with migrant justice and a genuine Solidarity and Sanctuary City in Montreal. Le Collectif No Borders also undertakes to reclaim public spaces from corporate, colonial and nationalistic propaganda.

The various stencils and images appeared at various locations in Montreal, including (but not limited to), the neighborhoods of Cote-des-neiges, Parc Extension, Marché Jean-Talon, Villerary, St-Michel, Rosemont, Petite-Patrie, Hochelaga, Mile End, Plateau, St-Henri, Point-St-Charles and downtown Montreal.

We have included below various weblinks that provide more information and context to anti-colonial, anti-racist, anti-fascist and migrant justice struggles, but none of the groups affiliated with the links below are directly or indirectly involved with this action.

The photo links also include original stencil images, to encourage others in Montreal and beyond to redecorate their communities, on the streets. We encourage your redecoration efforts and urge you to share your photos with us.

See you on the streets!
— Le Collectif No Borders (lecollectifnoborders@gmail.com)

UNSettling Canada 150

NoCanada.Info / NonAuCanada.Info

Warrior Publications

Canada 150 banners destroyed on Mercier Bridge

Canada150 Installation Defaced in Montreal, and a Proposal

150, 375: rebels come alive!

Fascism & Anti-Fascism: A Decolonial Perspective

Anti-Canada 150 Poster Pack

Solidarity City Declaration / Déclaration pour une Cité sans frontières

Community Alert: Montreal is NOT a Sanctuary City

 

UNsettling Canada 150

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Jun 302017
 

From Warrior Publications via Michael Toledano

This year Canada is commemorating it’s 150th anniversary. But for indigenous people there’s nothing to celebrate and have called for nationwide actions.

In honour of Art Manuel and the integrity with which he always began with the land and honoured the grassroots people, the #Unsettling150 crew are proud to launch this video filled with Art’s words, read by his daughter Kanahus Manuel, to launch the final lead-up to the national day of action, education, and reflection.

How to: fill fire extinguishers with paint

 Comments Off on How to: fill fire extinguishers with paint  Tagged with:
Jun 292017
 

Anonymous submission to MTL Counter-info
Disclaimer: This video is intended purely for informational purposes only, and does in no way encourage or condone any illegal activity.

Fire extinguishers filled with paint have been useful to anarchists in Montreal fighting gentrification, surveillance, and most recently, colonial advertising.

1. Steal the extinguisher

Find a water-pressurized fire extinguisher. They are metallic silver and come in two sizes.

Both sizes have removable tops, which are often attached with a nut.

The larger size is 9 L and has a schrader valve, like your bike tire, so that they can be easily repressurized. It is often found in universities, apartments and office buildings.

The smaller size is 6 L and needs to be repressurized with an air compressor. It is only found in restaurants because they are for grease fires, and are sometimes conveniently placed near the back exit!

2. Empty the water

Wear cotton gloves to avoid getting your prints all over the thing. Spray the water out of the fire-extinguisher, ensuring that the pressure gauge reaches 0 psi. We usually do this in an alleyway, but it can be done in your bathtub.

3. Fill with paint

Remove the nut and top section.

Fill the extinguisher about half way with a mixture of equal parts latex paint and water.

4. Pressurize

Reattach the top section, and make sure it’s tight.

For the 9 L, pressurize with a bike pump until the gauge reads 100 psi.

For the 6 L, there is no schrader valve, so you will need an air compressor, found at hardware stores or most pawn-shops. Remove the hose, and connect the air compressor tubing, using a 3/8” male adapter.

Set the air compressor to 115 psi. You may not even need to depress the handle of the extinguisher for the pressure to slowly raise to 100 psi. If you need to depress the handle, remove the safety pin and depress it gradually. Stop as soon as it reaches 100 psi, to avoid paint going into the tubing.

Return the safety pin and secure it with duct-tape.

5. Clean

Wipe down with a cloth soaked in rubbing alcohol to remove any fingerprints!

Check out the how-to page at Montreal Counter-info for more direct action guides: blocking trains, shutting down pipelines, demonstrations, riots and more!

“The only reason why we should reach to the higher class is to create disorder and disturb, but certainly not to corrupt graffiti like some people do. My goal is to install the insolence and violence of graffiti where it has no reason to be. Graffiti is a whole, and one cannot only take the parts he is interested in. The remaining parts can be found on your storefronts.”

Who is fuelling populist racism in Quebec?

 Comments Off on Who is fuelling populist racism in Quebec?
Jun 292017
 

According to Groupe de recherché sur l’extrême droite et ses allié-e-s (GREDA) , there are currently about 60 active Quebecois far right groups, and if you count those which are connected with the rest of Canada, there are about 100. However, once one starts looking at the activities of the groups, there is a lot of collaboration and cross-membership. Provided below is a list of the larger organizations operating in Quebec.

Registered Parties

l’Alliance nationale réformiste du Québec (formerly Front National du Quebec)

Registered with elections Quebec in October 2016, the founder of the party is Daniel Boucher. They aim to field candidates in the 2018 Quebec elections. Among their stated aims are to declare full independence, end reasonable accommodation, end the practice of Islam and destroy every mosque in the province. Boucher claims to have been inspired by meeting Marine Le Pen in March 2016.

Citoyens au pouvoir du Québec

Registered as a party in 2012, the current leader of the party is Bernard Gauthier. Citoyens au pouvoir is a populist party. They were at a colloquium of far-right organizations in the suburbs on June 17, and say that they were impressed by La Meute and by some of the organizing.

Parti Indépendantiste

Founded in 2008, Parti Indépendatiste was led by Éric Tremblay from 2008 to 2011, when Michel Lepage took over. According to the Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec, donations were sixth highest of the provincial parties in Quebec at $5,3350.00. The Parti indépendantiste has been criticised for having links with neo-Nazis. A neo-Nazi, Sebastien Moreau, was the president of the executive committee for the region of Quebec and Marc-Étienne Maurice, a member of the neo-Nazi group Blood & Honour, was a local treasurer.

In May 2017, Alexandre Cormier-Denis, ran for the Parti indépendantiste in the Gouin riding. Cormier-Denis won less than 100 votes — but caused controversy due to racist statements and posters. While most of the media stories about Cormier-Denis were the result of these stunts, his more important ties are to Horizon Quebec Actuel (see below). Despite being promoted by open racists, Cormier-Denis remains a member in good-standing of the Parti Québécois.

Parti unité nationale (formerly the Parti démocratie chrétienne du Québec)

Parti unité nationale was founded in 2000. The founding leader of the party was Gilles Noël and he was re-appointed the leader of the party in 2017. Elections Quebec authorized $16,055 for contributions to the party in 2017 according to the P.U.N. 2016 financial reports.

On June 18, 2017 Gilles Noël was one of the featured speakers at the Rassemblement pour le bien commun et l’intérêt supérieur du Québec (the assembly for the common good and superior interest of Quebec) organized by the Movement Republicain de Quebec and guarded by La Meute.

Large Quebec-based organizations

Fédération des Québécois de Souche (le FQS)

Founded in 2007 by a former skinhead named Maxime Fiset as Quebecers debated reasonable accommodation. The FQS now calls itself a political unifier of “real Quebecers.” Maxime Fiset, who now works against racists to help de-radicalize people, has recently been speaking out in French and English press about his role in founding FQS and in being one of the early adopters of Islamophobic organizing.

The group’s magazine Le Harfang is run by Remi Tremblay and focuses on publishing and disseminating information from the French far right. On May 6, 2017, the FSQ hosted Steven Bissuel of the Group Union Defense (GUD), a militant nationalist student group from France. Atalante (below) was also a sponsor. Founded in the 1960s, GUD has always been unabashedly far right, “nationalist,” and militant. Bissuel has been imprisoned for violent attacks against other students and is also credited with rejuvenating the GUD in Lyon. They were also heavily promoting the June 18 event organized by Mouvement républicain du Québec.

Mouvement républicain du Québec 

Founded in March 2017 by Guy Boulianne, author, editor and cultural promoter. On June 18, 2017, Mouvement républicain du Québec helped organize le Rassemblement pour le bien commun et l’intérêt supérieur du Québec (the assembly for the common good and superior interest of Quebec) originally planned at the CEGEP College de Maisonneuve and later moved to the suburb of Vaudreuil-Dorion. The conference featured a host of well-known far-right speakers. La Meute was providing security for the event. Here is an account in French by GREDA of who was there and what happened.

Atalante

Founded in 2016, it is known for taking more racist positions than the other organizations in this list. Some of their slogans include “Terrorists to the death! Islam Out!” It does co-sponsor events with the FQS and some members of Atalante are also members of FQS.

In August, 2016 Atalante and FQS co-hosted a lecture in Quebec City by Gabriele Adinolfi, a prominent intellectual of the Italian neo-fascist movement. Atalante also engages in social activism, modeled after CasaPound, the best-known exponent of Italian neo-fascism. Atalante, like CasaPound, are committed to welfare programs and direct action, and Atalante hands out food in Quebec City’s underprivileged neighbourhoods, but according to their site, only to people of “Neo-French origin.”

Horizon Quebec Actuel

An NGO, founded in 2016, with Alexandre Cormier Denis as President. It is a new organization which aims to educate about French and Quebecois history. When it was founded, the Front National and the COMEF (le Collectif Mer et Francophonie), a global sovereigntist organization of which FN is an important part, celebrated the formation of this organization, which is a Quebec affiliate.

La Meute (the Wolfpack)

The following is pulled from a post by Itsgoingdown.org. Founded in 2015 by two ex-soldiers, Éric Venne (alias Eric Corvus, who since left the group) and Patrick Beaudry, the first major action of La Meute was on May 21, 2016. According to their Facebook page they have a little more than 42,000 members — but likes have never been an accurate way to guage membership.

The group’s most vocal position is against “radical Islam.” According to GREDA and the experience of protestors in Quebec, La Meute is a paramilitary organization. La Meute members come to rallies well-equipped with weaponry which they are allowed to carry. Since March 2017, they have been coming out in force to numerous anti-Muslim demonstrations across Quebec.

On May 15, 2017 on André Pitre’s YouTube show, La Meute announced that it would be making itself available anywhere in Quebec to stand up against “threats to freedom of speech.” Pitre and La Meute made it clear that what was meant by this, was any intervention by antifascists, feminists, or anti-racists to protest or disrupt racist, sexist, homophobic or transphobic events. It was also made clear in Pitre’s show, that this announcement was the result of Pitre himself reaching out to La Meute and requesting that they play such a role (the declaration was filmed in his living room).

Canadian Coalition of Concerned Canadians (CCCC)

Founded in 2017 by Georges Hallak, CCCC is known as a one-man show. A list of its founding principles can be found here. This group burst onto the scene on March 4, 2017, when along with other far-right groups, CCCC called for demonstrations in 63 cities across Canada. This call was supported by Guy Boulianne’s MRQ and others. The CCCC is now losing steam in Quebec. According to GREDA, Hallak is a federalist.

Global groups

PEGIDA Quebec

Founded in 2015, this group is affiliated with the German group called Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West. The current president is Stéphane Asselin, and this article from Vice provides an interview with him. According to the December 2016 interview, Asselin helps run a secret page that allies the leaders of most of the province’s far right-wing groups — roughly 50 of them — who are working to get political.

Soldiers of Odin Quebec

Founded in Finland, the group started growing in Canada and Quebec in 2016. By December 2016, they claimed to have 3500 members in Canada and 400 in Quebec. The current head of the Quebec chapter of Soldiers of Odin is Katy Latulippe. Soldiers of Odin have been patrolling neighbourhoods where Muslims live and have also joined Atalante for its food drives.

In the past months, the Soldiers of Odin began splintering in Canada over whether to remain aligned with their racist namesake in northern Europe. The president of Soldiers of Odin Canada, Bill Daniels, denounced the “racist agenda” of Soldiers of Odin leaders in Finland and said his branch was no longer associated with them. However, Katy Latulippe has said that Quebec will dissociate with Soldiers of Odin Canada and, presumably, retain the affiliation with Finland.

While the Canadian chapters have emphasized their community volunteerism, organizing events such as food drives, they have also clashed with anti-racism demonstrators, and posted blatantly anti-Muslim rhetoric on social media.

The politics of the Finland group were previously cited as the rationale for the split within the Quebec Soldiers of Odin where Katy La Tulippe took over and Martin Tregget left the group to form the Storm Alliance. The Storm Alliance is working with La Meute.

 

Radio

Garbage talk radio (Radio Poubelle) is big business in Quebec as in other parts of North America. Recently two of the prominent commentators Andre Arthur and Jeff Fillon were fired or let go. However, Eric Duhaime, who works with Rebel Media and FM 93, continues to broadcast Islamophobic tirades and others will be there to take their place. An online radio site which often broadcasts Garbage talk radio is Radio InfoCité.

 

Online

Online sites keep growing. This list is just a smattering. Three popular sites are Vigile.net, the Council of European Canadians, and Novopress, the press outlet of the bloc identitaire. One of the currently active Facebook pages is Justiciers du Peuple: Christian Desrochers and Alain Parent.