An open letter to those seeking to build a world 
from below, in which many worlds are possible
http://hopefrompeople.com/
We call on all anarchists, horizontalists, 
autonomists, anti-capitalists, 
anti-authoritarians, and others organizing a 
world from below to bring our best creative 
spirits to the project of a “Celebrate People’s 
History and Build Popular Power” bloc on January 
20, 2009, in Washington, DC—or in your hometown, if you can’t make it.

As people striving toward a nonhierarchical 
society, yes, we can—and should—be rigorously 
critical of Barack Obama. It goes without saying 
that we want a world without presidents; we want 
worlds of our own constituting via directly 
democratic structures, not states. But not all 
heads of state are alike, and if we fail to 
recognize both the historical meaning and power 
of this particular moment, we will ensure our own irrelevance.

We can—and should—also be in critical solidarity 
with people who have been violently marginalized, 
who see in the Obama campaign the possibility of 
their own agency. The inauguration affords a 
unique space for us to stand with a diverse group 
of activists inspired by Obama, many new to 
political organizing, even as we maintain our 
views on the limits of change from above.

Perhaps, as people working to build a world from 
below without electoralism or statecraft, we also 
need to listen on January 20. It is neither the 
time nor the place to critique hope or excitement 
on the part of people who have engaged in 
grassroots struggles in so many ways and won a 
substantial victory. The inauguration marks a 
watershed event in the often cruel history of 
these United States, and the whole world will be 
watching, hoping that we’ve done just a little to 
grapple with the legacy of slavery, lynching, 
segregation, displacement, and racism in general, 
both of the personal and institutional varieties.

There’ll be a true rainbow coalition on the 
streets of DC, made up of exactly those people 
who the libertarian Left has always aligned 
itself with and always should: those who are not 
radicals but who have been exploited, oppressed, 
and relegated to powerlessness. So instead of 
breaking things, if we’re serious about building 
visionary social movements, doing meaningful 
anti-racism work, and honoring those who have 
resisted and dreamed before us, we should break 
bread with those millions globally who will feel 
moved by Obama’s inauguration—many of whom were 
also moved enough to participate politically 
(well beyond voting) for the first time in this election.

With our bloc—using banners, photos, artwork, 
zines, theater pieces, posters, armbands, and 
other visual expressions—let’s illustrate the 
many moments when people on this continent and 
across the world aspired to better approximations 
of freedom, via their own forms of collective 
organizations and mutual aid. Let’s create and 
display images of social movements, cultures of 
resistance, and especially our experiments to 
institute the new society in the shell of the 
old: from popular assemblies to self-managed 
workplaces, from freedom schools to free clinics, 
from autonomous villages to reappropriated land, 
and much more. And let’s remember all those many 
moments throughout history when we took to the 
streets, factories, schools, and neighborhoods; 
when we built movements ranging from abolition 
and civil rights to the American Indian Movement 
and the Black Panthers, from Zapatismo to Ya 
Basta!, from No One Is Illegal to anti-capitalist 
mobilizations, from Argentina’s factory 
occupations to Oaxaca’s federated assemblies; and 
when we reclaimed the commons and, in the process, ourselves.

For if we aspire one day to live in a world 
without borders and prisons, without states or 
capitalism—or presidents for that matter—we must 
stand in solidarity on January 20 with those most 
impacted by hierarchy and institutional 
oppression. Then, in the days beyond, we’ll join 
with millions of others in demanding fulfillment 
of, as Obama put it on election night, the 
possibility of change, as we support the growth 
of social movements toward a free and directly democratic society.
Points of Unity:

– We believe that human freedom and happiness 
would be best guaranteed by a society based on 
principles of self-organization, voluntary 
association, egalitarianism, and mutual aid. And 
thus, we reject all forms of social relations 
premised on systemic violence and hierarchy, such 
as the state, capitalism, and white supremacy.

– On January 20, we will actively seek to 
cooperate with as well as support anyone who is 
working to create a more liberatory world, and in 
fact, to learn from them and each other.

– We will gather as a bloc, unmasked and with 
open arms, respecting the celebratory spirit of 
the day—presence rather than protest—and will 
encourage others who want to honor social struggles from below to join us.

To sign on to this call, please send us an email 
at hopefrompeople [at] gmail [dot] com.

For the bloc’s meeting place and time, ideas for 
celebratory images, and upcoming details on the 
post-inauguration teach-in and party, keep checking this Web site.
This call is endorsed by:

Cindy Milstein, Montpelier, VT
Andrew Willis Garcés, Washington, DC
Walter Hergt, Montpelier, VT
Chris Dixon, Sudbury, Ontario
Jessica Hall, Washington, DC
Jeff Winder, Charlottesville, VA
Vasudha Desikan, Washington, DC
Pavlos Stavropoulos, Littleton, CO
Lindsey Hobbs, Washington, DC
Andrej Grubacic, San Francisco, CA
Mark Lance, Washington, DC
James Tracy, housing organizer and writer, San Francisco, CA
Ellen Chenoweth, Denton, TX (Washington, DC)
Noam Chomsky, MIT, Cambridge, MA
Staughton Lynd, Youngstown, OH
Welch Canavan, Washington, DC
Hillary Lazar, Seattle, WA (Washington, DC)
Joshua Stephens, Washington, DC
Harjit Singh Gill, Oakland, CA
Chris Crass, Catalyst Project, San Francisco, CA
Lelia Spears, New York, NY
Howard Zinn, Auburndale, MA
Ernesto Aguilar, Houston, TX
Betty Jeanne Rueters-Ward, Catalyst Project, San Francisco, CA
Brian Tokar, East Montpelier, VT
Madhuri Singh, Washington, DC
Ericka Taylor, Washington, DC
Patrick Lincoln, Harrisonburg, VA
Andrew Cornell, Brooklyn, NY
Ben Grosscup, Amherst, MA
Almah LaVon Rice, Baltimore, MD
Maria Mier, Shaw, Washington, DC
Brooke Lehman, New York, NY
Carwil James, New York, NY
Jose Palafox, Oakland, CA
Michael Friedman, San Francisco, CA
Dave Zlutnick, Friendly Fire Collective, San Francisco, CA
Petros Evdokas, Portland, OR
Karen Ganey, Plymouth, VT
Hannah Dobbz, San Francisco, CA
Janelle Treibitz, Washington, DC
Philippe Duhamel, Montreal, QC
John Hardenbergh, Washington, DC
Jean Marie Pearce, Albany, VT
Joshua Kahn Russell, Oakland, CA
Carlos Perez de Alejo, Austin, TX
LLoyd Strecker, Monte Rio, CA
Dana Ward, Claremont, CA
Bill Templer, SE Asia
Heather Pipino, Montpelier, VT
Bob Spivey, Vashon, WA
Julie Yoder, Washington, DC
Dan Berger, Philadelphia, PA
Jonathan Uss, New York, NY
Kazembe Balagun, outreach coordinator, Brecht Forum, NY
Harris Bucklin, Burlington, VT
Charlie Clements, Athens, GA
Jonathan Bates, Holyoke, MA
Samuel Meneely, Salinas, CA
Emily Forman, Brooklyn, NY
Arun Aguiar, New York, NY
César Maxit, Washington, DC
Johann Jaeckel, New York, NY
Nicole Poindexter, teacher, Santa Rosa, CA
Eugene Rodriguez, Boulder, CO
Camilo Viveiros, Fall River, MA
Marguerite Tingkhye, Seattle, WA
Ken Montenegro, technologist and law student, Los Angeles, CA
Sean Gleason, Princeton, NJ
Barry McCann, Fort Collins, CO
Mesha Monge-Irizarry, community organizer, San Francisco, CA
Liana Sweeney, Amherst, MA
Andy Kafel, Jersey City, NJ
Robert Riversong, Warren, VT
Karim-Philipp Eid-Sabbagh, Beirut, Lebanon
Maia Ramnath, New York, NY
Thomas Chen, Jamaica Plain, MA
Aaron R. McMullin, student, Sarah Lawerence College
Amber Kelly, Gainesville, FL
Friendly Fire Collective, San Francisco Bay Area
Nathan Coe, Animas SDS, Durango, CO
Caitlyn Wallace, Berkeley, CA
Michael Novick, Los Angeles, CA (ARA-LA for identification purposes)
Roxanne Lawson, Washington, DC
Elen Awalom, Washington, DC
Lis-Marie Alvarado, Wecount! organizer, Homestead, FL
Salma Mirza, United Students Against Sweatshops, Buffalo, NY
Rahula Janowski, anarchist, mediator, mother, San Francisco, CA
Jason Lydon, Community Church of Boston, Boston, MA
Patrick Vitale, student, Pittsburgh, PA
Robert Jensen, Third Coast Activist Resource 
Center, University of Texas at Austin
Rebecca Mintz, Washington, DC
Lasitha Ranatunga, Kandy, Sri Lanka
Christina Tzintzún, Austin, TX
Molly McClure, Catalyst Project, Oakland, CA
Louis Frederic Gaudet, Montreal, QC
Mike Zmolek, Washington, DC
Matthew Johnson, Baltimore, MD
CODEPINK Women for Peace
Namdol, New Haven, CT
Francisco “Pancho” Ramos-Stierle, Berkeley, CA
Nico Amador, trainer and organizer, Philadelphia, PA
Parag Rajendra Khandhar, Takoma Park, MD
Josh Raisler Cohn, Boston, MA
Pete Perry, Washington, DC
Christy Pardew, Boston, MA

November 20th, 2008


------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to