Tag Archives: 2000
The Value of Life
by
Adonide |
The famous Spanish artist Salvador Dali wrote that nothing excited him as much as the spectacle of a third-class train-car full of dead workers crushed in an accident. He was not at all indifferent uncaring in the face of death since when a friend of his, Prince Mdinavi dies in an accident, he was deeply upset by it. It was simply that, for Dali, the only death for which to grieve was that of a prince, which has nothing in common with a load of workers’ corpses.
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The End of the World
by
Mare Almani
On September 13, 1999, at the power station at Tokaimura on the Pacific coast of Japan, the most serious nuclear accident since the time of Chernobyl took place. During a laboratory experiment, three technicians spilled sixteen kilograms of uranium into a sedimentation tank designed to hold little more than two. The error started a chain reaction that continued for many hours, contaminating the entire area surrounding the station for a radius of several kilometers. |
Money and Logos
By M. D. P. |
Diavolo in corpo
Is there a relationship between the birth of the rational mentality and the development of commercial economy? In the 7th century B.C.E., a whole series of tightly connected social changes took place in the Ionian Greek cities of Asia Minor. It is precisely during this epoch that the rational mentality arose, at the time when maritime commercial culture began to experience its first great development.
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The Merchants of Life
by Val Basilio Thirty years ago, a Belgian situationist—whose decayed radical subjectivity is now in an advanced state of decomposition—noted in his most famous work that: “Power, if only it were human, would be proud of the number of potential encounters it has successfully prevented.” Continue reading The Merchants of Life |
A distanza
“Killing King Abacus”
Ma da ogni altro punto di vista che non sia quello del facilitare il controllo poliziesco, la Parigi di Haussmann è una città costruita da un idiota, piena di rumore e violenza, che non significa nulla.
G. Debord
Letter from Michele Pontolillo,anarchist prisoner in struggle
I announce that at 12 o’clock on December 7 2000, I will start an indefinite hunger strike. Given the situation of growing repression in which we live inside as well as outside prison, and departing from the inalienable right of every individual to revolt against the omnipotence and arrogance of those in Power, I announce that at 12 o’clock on December 7, 2000 I will start an indefinitive hunger strike for the reasons I would like to expose here.
Continue reading Letter from Michele Pontolillo,anarchist prisoner in struggle
SUICIDIO
Alfredo M. Bonanno
Affrontare il problema del suicidio equivale ad affrontare uno dei punti essenziali della problematica umana, in quanto immediatamente esso conduce al problema della morte, del limite dell’esistenza, cosa questa che resta nello stesso tempo un punto di riferimento e qualcosa da cui cerchiamo di allontanarci per quanto possibile.
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Sentenza d’appello per Giovanni Barcia, Claudio Lavazza e Michele Pontolillo
Nessuna sorpresa per la sentenza d’appello del tribunale supremo di Madrid.
Le condanne emesse a Malaga, nell’ottobre 1999, contro i tre compagni anarchici Giovanni Barcia, Claudio Lavazza e Michele Pontolillo (gli ultimi due in sciopero della fame a tempo indefinito da, rispettivamente, 12 e 6 giorni), sono state tutte confermate, 11 anni per ognuno di loro.
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Ma che storia è questa? – Adreba Solneman
Continue reading Ma che storia è questa? – Adreba Solneman