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An Encuentro Against All Borders
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sd indymedia | 30.08.2005 10:45
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The No Border Encuentro took place on August 27-28th at the Sherman Heights Community Center in San Diego/Aztlan. Two days of events including a maquiladora tour, a benefit concert and a day of forums, panels and encounters took place with over 100 people from San Diego, Los Angeles, Fresno, San Francisco, Santa Cruz, Orange County, Eugene, Portland, Tijuana, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia participating. On the walls hung photos of recent actions to stop the Minutemen, a poster of the PGA Hallmarks, and maps of Calexico, where the No Border Camp will be in September. [Complete Summary, another account]
Radio coverage was done all weekend by Blast Furnace Radio, due to some technical difficultues at radioActive sanDiego.
Audio: Beats Against Borders with Dias Tristes, Boomerang Politick and Entartete Kunst | Encuentro Opening and Border History Panel | History of the Border Part 2 | Closing presentation by Ashanti Alston | Migration and Indigenous Nations 1 | 2
Photos: Maquiladora Tour | More | Beats Against Borders | Encuentro
This is only part of a large movement against the MinuteMen, La Migra and the Border itself. Thursday night before the conference, La Raza Rights Coalition held a community forum to present their demands around these issues to legislators. Next weekend, Sept 2-4, BorderHack 2005 will be taking place in Tijuana. Also that weekend, on the 3rd, is a forum against the Minutemen in Chula Vista.
The Encuentro was planned as a space to strategize about how to create a world without borders, how to effectively challenge racism and how to put an end to the Minuteman Project. These strategies will be put into action from September 16-18th in a series of actions and a No Border Camp in Calexico.
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Entartete Kunst at Beats Against Borders
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Throughout the day, the Sherman Heights Community Center was filled with people, as people arrived for the events they wanted to see and some people had to leave early. The space itself is large and beautiful, with lots of sunlight and tile mosaics on the walls. During the panels, such as the indigenous panel, the hall was filled. At other times, the group was split for simultaneous workshops. In the indigenous panel, the presenters said that they have been fighting European Imperialism since the 1400's and that, in a very real way "we didn't cross the border, the border crossed us."
This was more than a series of workshops. The indigenous panel began with a blessing ceremony complete with dancing, music and sage. The border disturbance art space included films, slideshows and a masked performance piece involving poetry and hand painted props. The panel on the Zapatistas and the 6th declaration allowed for a space for people to ask the Frente Zapatista any questions they had about the declaration.
Ashanti Alston's talk was definitely one of the high points. He spoke movingly about the ties between the work of the Black Panthers and the Zapatistas, about his experience joinint the Black Panther party and the need to have a creative, non-hierarchical movement, as the Zapatistas say "walking, we ask". He spoke of his belief in anarchism and the need for us to run our own lives and develop our own techniques of struggle. He said that if anyone comes to you telling you they have the way to revolution planned out, you should be suspicious. He ended by saying that our work gives hope to previous genetations and to many political prisoners still in prison for 20 or 30 years, and that we must press ahead and continue to walk and ask because "we have to win this thing...The Empire gotta come down because our dreams have to come up".
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Why call it an encuentro? Whats the purpose of putting one spanish word into in an english language announcement for an english-language event? I support the event whole-heartidly but seriously, come on, it's patronizing to latinos, and seems to have no rational other than white kid trying to sound cool. Go buy a 'Che' shirt.
Why?
Actually, spanish words in english sentences, and english words in spanish sentences are very common in my (latin@) community. Its patronizing to think that we only speak one language, that we don't use more than one, that we're not always going back and forth between and over.
Also, this title clearly comes from the Zapatistas who called for 2 intercontinental Encentros in the past. For more information on them, please see:
http://flag.blackened.net/revolt/andrew/encounter1_report.html
http://www.bookcounter.com/big/1-58322-548-X
http://flag.blackened.net/revolt/mexico/ezln/ccri_1st_dec_real.html
http://www.eco.utexas.edu/Homepages/Faculty/Cleaver/2ndEfzlne.html
I hope this helps.
organizer
Laws don't apply to illegals?
The ACLU, La Raza lawyers of San Diego and other pro-illegal alien
groups want to recruit volunteers to monitor civilian Border Patrol
groups to ensure that the rights of Mexicans entering this country
illegally are not violated.
I wonder if one of these lawyers could explain how someone acquires
the right to commit a criminal act? Entering this country illegally
is a criminal act.
To the best of my knowledge none of the Minutemen have been arrested
and charged with a crime. Conversely, there are over 28,000 illegal
aliens in the California prison system for crimes they committed
after entering this country illegally.
Other illegal aliens wanted for murder and other serious crimes have
fled to Mexico to avoid apprehension. Mexico refuses to extradite
these criminals. In my opinion, the ACLU and its associates are
watching the wrong people.
Oh! I forgot, the ACLU and its associates apparently believe that our
laws do not apply to illegal aliens.
Skippy
e-mail:: dadakulit2001@yahoo.com
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