Contents: The Hot Wire [2:33]

Excerpt from “An Anarchist Response to Ebola”, from the Agency [14:17]

Introduction: Rebellion and Reaction Since the Grand Jury Decisions. [21:04]

Excerpt from “The Thin Blue Line is a Burning Fuse: Why Every Struggle is Now a Struggle Against the Police” [31:26]

The Past Doesn’t Pass: White Supremacy, Capitalism, History, Part I [42:01]

Listener Feedback [1:20:34]

Holiday Song: “No Christmas,” by Dan Mac and the Bullet [1:31:10]

Next Week’s News [1:35:32]

The Hot Wire [2:33]

Excerpt from “An Anarchist Response to Ebola”, from the Agency [14:17]

Introduction: Rebellion and Reaction Since the Grand Jury Decisions. [21:04]

Excerpt from “The Thin Blue Line is a Burning Fuse: Why Every Struggle is Now a Struggle Against the Police” [31:26]

The Past Doesn’t Pass: White Supremacy, Capitalism, History, Part I [42:01]

Listener Feedback [1:20:34]

Holiday Song: “No Christmas,” by Dan Mac and the Bullet [1:31:10]

Next Week’s News [1:35:32]

Heads up, everyone: this episode includes some frank discussions of really horrifying racist realities, from the present day unfolding around us as well as centuries back in history. Please take care as you listen.

As per his request, we have posted the letter written by imprisoned anarchist Luke O’Donovan to the Carrboro Anarchist Book Fair that a supporter read on our last episode. You can read the text in the partial transcript for Episode 31.

Anarchist Agency promotes contemporary anarchist perspectives and practices through commentary on current events, media relations, and educational campaigns. The project’s goal is to influence the way anarchists are represented in mainstream media, using several tactics, including tracking mentions of anarchists in the media and creating and circulating analysis by anarchists written for the general public. We featured an article they published by Carwil Bjork-James and Chuck Munson titled “An Anarchist Response to Ebola: Visions and Questions”.

There are innumerable books, zines, articles, and conversations that informed the history and analysis in this episode. Here is a necessarily woefully incomplete bibliography for reading more about the history of white supremacy and capitalism.

On the roots of the global economy in slavery and racist oppression, see Capitalism and Slavery by Eric Williams and How Europe Underdeveloped Africa by Walter Rodney.

We also drew on Orlando Patterson’s Slavery and Social Death, a brilliant synthetic and analytical history of the institution of slavery. Patterson’s work was an important influence on the “Afro-pessimist” tradition of criticism, including writers such as Frank Wilderson, Saidiya Hartman, Hortense Spillers, and Jared Sexton, which deserves a much deeper engagement than we can give with our limited understanding.

On the origins of Spanish white supremacy in the Iberian reconquista and “limpieza de sangre” ideology, see “European Race-Colored Glasses” in “Understanding Racism: An Historical Introduction”; on the origins of English white supremacy in the oppression of the Irish, see Theodore Allen’s Invention of the White Race, Volume I.

For some of the statistics we cited about the realities of racism in contemporary America, we drew on a Washington Post article on the black/white economic gap and this comparison of life for black folks in Obama’s America versus apartheid South Africa, among others.

We read a long excerpt from the CrimethInc. blog feature “The Thin Blue Line is a Burning Fuse: Why Every Struggle is Now a Struggle Against the Police”.

Greek anarchist prisoner Nikos Romanos successfully won his demand to be allowed to attend university classes while in prison! You can read many of his statements and updates on solidarity actions via 325.nostate.net.

We shared the song “No Christmas” by Dan Mac and the Bullet.

The New Yorker released an interesting article about anarchists in the Hong Kong occupation movement.