You have heard rumors of the existence of the Ⓐnti-Society.

No doubt you have formed your own picture of it.
You have imagined a huge underworld of conspirators,
meeting secretly in cellars, scribbling messages on walls,
recognizing one another by code words
or by special movements of the hand.

I tell you that the Anti-Society exist,
but I cannot tell you whether it numbers a hundred members,
or ten million.
From your personal knowledge you will never be able to say.

The Ⓐnti-Society cannot be wiped out
because it is not an organization in the ordinary sense.

Nothing holds it together except an idea
which is indestructible.

Monday, November 22, 2010

The new "weapon of choice" for the revolution!



Government officials and law enforcement officers are more terrified of the average citizens armed with cameras than they are of an entire constitutional militia armed with guns. One who is inclined to thoughtful reflection might wonder why this should be.

Government (and yes that includes your local government and it's officials as well B-town!), by its very nature, is a violent organization. They need to use force, intimidation and coercion in order to exist. They have, in fact, claimed a monopoly on the use of force. If you were to try to try to do the same things these people do everyday you’d be arrested in a heartbeat. To those of you who are reading this and think that police brutality and corrupt government officials are "big city" problems that do not effect us here in "small town" Bloomington, I say let us not forget the tragic case of James Borden Sr. who was murdered by two Monroe County jailers on Nov. 6 of 2004.

Borden had been transported to the Monroe County Jail from his home in Lawrence County for violating house arrest. He was a diabetic whose father had just died, and he was not taking his medication. Police reports say he was disoriented and seemingly mentally confused, reportedly talking to inanimate objects.

In a written report immediately after Borden's death, Shaw explained the first of three shocks he administered: "Borden was handcuffed behind his back. I was facing Borden at that time. (Borden was not wearing shackles). Borden was wearing a pair of shorts which was around his ankles. Also had on blue boxers. I asked Borden to lift his foot as to remove the shorts, but he was being combative and refused. I (D. Shaw) dried stunned Borden in the lower abdominal area. At that time Borden lifted his feet so we could remove his shorts."

Brown went so far as to suggest that Shaw may have shocked Borden as punishment for dying. "Jail officers have reported that Borden was kicking and struggling while pinned, face down, on the floor with his hands cuffed behind him," the H-T reported. "But Brown suggested in court that the man could have been dying at the time — or at least unable to breathe."

Imagine yourself as that citizen, on the floor of our jail, hands cuffed behind your back, in your underwear with four deputies constraining you, being shocked with 50,000 volts of electricity from a man, who seemed to be enjoying himself.

That image is the disturbing but inevitable consequence of a community whose "leaders" have their heads firmly embedded in quicksand on the subject of police violence and accountability. It is but the latest in a lengthy, well-documented history of police brutality and abuses of power in and around Bloomington.

High-profile, historic examples are many, from the disappearance of a barn full of marijuana under county sheriff control in the 1980s to the BPD People's Park lineup in 1995 to the ISP sidewalk beating of County Councilman Scott Wells in 2002. Others, while not rising to the level of lore, are no less disturbing.

Such as the story in the H-T in the early 1990s about a deluded, elderly man who had barricaded himself in an apartment on South Walnut Street Pike with a gun. Police subdued him, and no one was hurt, except the man. Buried in the story was a line that he suffered a broken arm while being taken, in handcuffs, to the police car.

Then there's the time police bloodied up local activist Mike Andrews during a bicycle protest in downtown Bloomington. His crime: crossing the centerline into a lane that the police told him to stay out of.

That a cadre of cowboy cops routinely cross the line, sometimes violently, in the performance of their duties is not news to our community "leaders", yet they continue to turn their heads and allow such injustices to be practiced here in Bloomington.


Read original article about the James Borden murder from the Bloomington Alternative here http://www.bloomingtonalternative.com/articles/2004/04/25/7508

But the government (both globally and locally) and there elected officials, including the police, do not want you to think about them in this way. They want you to think of them as benevolent. They don’t want you to think of them as thieves, they want you to think of them as charitable angels saving the under privileged. They don’t want you to think of them in terms of generating revenue for their own self interests, they want you to think of them in terms of providing public safety. They don’t want you thinking of them as cheaters who won’t follow their own rules, they want you to think of them as more knowledgeable than you, superior to you, and better able to determine what is best for you. And one way or another you’ll pay them to do so. They don’t want you to think of them as violent thugs violating the rights of innocent humans which they supposedly took an oath to protect, they want you to think of them as super humans who never make a mistake, never arrest an innocent, and instinctively know when someone has victimized another human being. They want you to believe that their good intentions make the wrongs they do okay.

Placard protesting police brutality at a Shell...Image via WikipediaThey want you to believe these things so much that they start teaching them to you at a very young age. Of course, they are a little more subtle about it. They may do it under the guise of public education, but what they are really doing is forcing the vast majority of the populace to spend a large portion of their day at federally funded government indoctrination centers. They then teach us that this is the greatest nation in the world due to government rather than due to lack of government, faith in the free markets and the ability for the people to control their own destinies. They force children to recite a pledge that was written by a socialist flag salesman, Francis Bellamy, instilling a sense of necessity to defend government even when its actions may be questionable or indefensible. They teach obedience to authority rather than the axiom to question authority and to hold them accountable for their lies, misrepresentations and lack of respect for the laws they swear an oath to uphold. We are taught to memorize the facts they want us to memorize. We are taught their version of events, their version of the facts. We are never taught to explore other versions, other points of view and to evaluate them to determine which version is the closest to actuality or how the different versions could mesh to create another version even more likely to have occurred.

This type of learning can make it difficult to point out problems the system might be suffering. It makes it difficult to convince some people of the reality of an event or situation. If it isn’t seen, or isn’t reported on, then it must not be true, particularly if it goes against the dogma of great governance that the populace has been brainwashed to believe in since childhood. This is when the camera can be so important. The camera’s eye doesn’t lie. When it records the violence that the state engages in, those who continue to sing the praises of the state and believe in an innate goodness of government that isn’t there do so at their own peril. Those who wish to believe these examples don’t occur that often, that they are the exception instead of the norm, will find it harder and harder to maintain that stance as more and more occurrences are videoed.

Warning sign for police brutality.Image via WikipediaGovernment agents and police officers are far more frightened of video cameras than they are of guns. They know how to handle guns. Common folks threatening violence against statist criminals may find it difficult to succeed in their efforts. The only thing the state knows is violence. It only knows enforcement. It wouldn’t surprise me to find many of the tax bottom feeders chomping at the bit to get a chance to exercise that which they know best. Common folk armed only with cameras, however, that’s another story. The statist criminals are going to find it very difficult to beat such efforts, as all options should eventually lead to their demise.

Cameras are something these people have been using against the general public for years. We have red light cameras, speeding cameras, public security cameras, all kinds of cameras in different areas set up to make sure we don’t break a myriad of victimless laws they’ve created for revenue generation. When anyone complains about it, about the lack of privacy or violating rights, their standard reply is “if you’re not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to worry about.” Well, what’s good for the goose is good for the gander. Why are they so afraid of cameras if they’re doing nothing wrong? Why would they have laws against operating video in courtrooms and other venues where they supposedly work for us? If they are doing nothing wrong, what do they have to hide? Think about that the next time you hear about mindless police automatons asking legitimate protestors and political activists to put away their cameras on public property. Don’t believe the security excuse. The only security they’re worried about is their own. They do have secrets to keep and things to hide, and they don’t want the general public to find out, mostly because they are doing something wrong, and likely they know it.

The camera can expose all this. It can provide proof of wrongdoing. It can provide a tool to help hold accountable those who break their own rules, and the rules they expect the common folk to obey. Most of all, it can help change the way people think about our government servants and how they behave. It can help create an overwhelming righteous indignation toward arrogant government agents who feel they are better than the common man and above the law. The camera may, in effect, be a weapon far superior to the gun, for it is a weapon that helps win the hearts and minds without causing significant blowback. When one is not physically harming another, revenge is less likely to be sought.

Government agents and police officers are afraid of the camera, and with good reason. After all, one of the hardest thing for a human to do is to confront the monster in the mirror. Documenting the rise of the police state on video, exposing the cheating and corruption, publicizing the violations of human rights by government agents, etc., holds a mirror to society and forces us to ask if this is the road we wish to take. It can also help the individuals involved evaluate their own behavior. The camera is the new "weapon of choice" not because it is a weapon that kills, but because it is an effective weapon that defends human rights and has the potential to heal. We should all be armed and ready to use it wherever we see wrongs being committed, and we should be allowed to carry one whenever we have to deal with our government servants, including and especially on the streets and in courtrooms, if only for our own protection and the protection of all involved in such a situation.

So the camera is the new “weapon of choice” and more and more activists are using today’s technology to hold law enforcement officials accountable, or in other cases to clear the accused officers of any wrong doing. Think of all the controversey that could have been avoided with the recent shooting of a kid in downtown B-town  if only some one had began recording. Most all cell phones available today are capable of video. Most of us have our phones at hand and ready, so the ability to document and communicate is readily available.


Some of us are bolder than others and have no problem confronting situations of concern head on. Some have no outwardly apparent concern of the possibility of being arrested, or confronting the offender verbally with camera prominently displayed. I am reminded of Sullivan chasing the cops with a camera in hand down at People's Park just a few years back. Some of us are not that ballsy however and would love to contribute from the sidelines, to avoid becoming a target. For those of us in the background, we do realize that we need you just as much as you need us, to give support to those that do. Not only that, but as for me, I thank you for “standing on that line”.

If you do decide to put yourself on the line with conventional methods of video recording an incident, you not only run the risk of getting harassed, but you may lose your footage as well.  Or your camera “accidentally” gets “damaged”.  On a side note - an acquaintance of mine had his decoy camera confiscated during a traffic stop, but quickly received it back when the police officer in charge was notified that his backup cameras had vlogged one of his officers threatening him, as well as stealing his property.

The Anti-Society encourages others to visually document the negative/illegal behavior of the police and local government officials, especially here in B-town. The success with any activism is numbers. Many are willing to help, but do not know how they can contribute, what they can offer or what they can do, so if the very least you can do is educate and inform, then that is a positive step in the right direction. If you or someone you know has video footage that you would like to get into the public eye you can contact Anti-Society t.v. HERE!

 
Send a message to the local officials here in B-town that WE are watching THEM!
 

Saturday, November 20, 2010

What is Zeitgeist?

Zeitgeist, the MovieImage via Wikipedia
Since the original public performance of "Zeitgeist" in 2007, there has been an evolution of intent which has manifested into an on-going film expression consisting now of multiple productions. While each film stands on its own with regard to content, the Zeitgeist Film Series as a whole has a dedicated social intent to create awareness about the world we share, the problems we face, along with what we can do to make it better as a collective species.

The original Zeitgeist was not a film, but a performance piece, which consisted of a vaudevillian style multi-media event using recorded music, live instruments and video. The event was given over a 6-night period in New York City and then, without any interest to professionally release or produce the work, was "tossed" up on the Internet arbitrarily. The work was never designed as a film or even a documentary in a traditional sense - it was designed as a creative, provoking, emotionally driven expression, full of artistic extremity and heavily stylized gestures.

However, once online, an unexpected flood of interest began to generate. Within 6 months over 50 Million views were recorded on Google Video counters (before they were reset for some reason). The current combined estimates put the number of Internet views at over 100 million as of 2009. Suddenly "Zeitgeist" the event, became "Zeitgeist: The Movie".

In turn, the decision was made to make a follow up in 2008 entitled "Zeitgeist: Addendum". (www.zeitgeistaddendum.com) Originally this was going to conclude the series, introducing ideas of resolve for some of our ongoing social problems. Yet, this work succeeded in sparking a mass shift of attention, inspiring the development of an activist organization now called The Zeitgeist Movement. This Movement, founded by Peter Joseph in conjunction with Jacque Fresco's "Venus Project", now works globally to spread information about a new social system called a Resource Based Economy. With over 420,000 registrations from nearly all countries as of mid 2010, the development has been dynamic.

However, this is an aside- The Zeitgeist Film Series, while an inspiration for The Movement which shares the term "Zeitgeist", is not to be confused with the content/views of the films in detail. The Zeitgeist Movement is an economic/sustainability movement at its core and its relationship to the Film Series content is not consistent. The Films, while now moving to promote The Movement more so in part, are still intellectual/artistic treatments and are not to be considered a basis for The Movement itself. Please see www.thezeitgeistmovement.com for more information on this important social revolution.

Now, a new production is in the works, the third film of the series, which will be entitled "Zeitgeist: Moving Forward". This work will focus on the state of modern scientific understandings with regard to human behavior, along with advanced technological and organizational methods which could improve our society greatly, reducing the possibility of severe ecological problems for the future and hence working towards true global sustainability for the species itself. More on this work can be found on its website: www.zeitgeistmovingforward.com

As a whole, this Film Project will likely continue given the large audience that has emerged to support it.In other words, a long-term series of films under the title of "Zeitgeist" is underway. As the definition of "Zeitgeist" states, we are dealing with the "intellectual/spiritual/cultural awareness of the time" and it is the goal of this project to explore what makes us who we are, how we relate, what we are doing and what we should be doing if we wish to live in a peaceful, abundant, and healthy global community.

Beyond that, please note that all the films are available for free viewing/download. 5$ DVD with cases are also made available for purchase. This "not-for-profit" price structure, which is essentially 75% less that the average cost of such a DVD product commercially, is presented to the public as a gesture of intent. This isn't about money - it is about getting this important information out there. Likewise, while the films are fully copyright overall to protect from profit oriented piracy, we encourage everyone to duplicate, upload, post and screen at will- just as long as there is no monetary exchange. However, please have no illusions here- this Project is only possible to continue if people do purchase the $5 DVD. So, while you have the option to get everything for free, please respect the fact that money is still the driving mechanism for exchange in our current system and, sadly, each one of us have to "make money" somehow to continue.

If you would like to get a look at the original 2007 Zeitgeist movie then tune into Anti-Society t.v. tomorrow at 10:00 AM!



Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Puck the Folice!

A disturbing pattern has emerged, and various legal and law enforcement experts agree with this conclusion:
The vast majority of people are mystified by the basic rules of search and seizure and due process of law. Consequentially, they're likely to be tricked or intimidated by police into waiving their constitutional rights, resulting in a greater likelihood of regrettable outcomes.
Take, for example, a recent encounter that one of my associates and a fellow contributor here from time to time, had with a female officer employed by the Bloomington Police Department here in B-town (Bloomington, IN) wherein upon knocking on the door without a warrant of any kind whatsoever or a criminal complaint concerning the occupant of the residence, the officer then proceeded to unlawfully and without just cause place her foot inside the door of the residence in an attempt to make unlawful entry into the residence and thus depriving the legal occupant and all parties present of their constitutional rights. Specifically their rights concerning protection against "unreasonable searches and seizures" as provided under the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution. Last I checked, Bloomington, IN is still within the U.S. boarders. Isn't it folks? After dodging the officer's attempt at a B & E, my associate maneuvered the female officer and her back-up (a tall, dark and presumably menacing individual) outside to the sidewalk where there was some unwarranted questioning about a civil copyright dispute that my associate had been having with a former client. The only reason ever given for why the police were even involved to begin with was a response in the form of a question from the female officer about an e-mail that contained a notice of copyright infringement that was sent on behalf of my associate to not only his former client but to the US office of copyrights and to the Google offices as well, as it is standard operating procedure in such cases. The Bloomington Police Department has no jurisdiction in a copyright dispute case. There was no offer given by either officer present of any other reason whatsoever for their presence. The female officer then proceeded threaten to contact Housing Officials false accusations concerning the occupant of the residence.
"It took me a minute to regain my composer after being confronted with such strong-arm tactics, but once I did I dismissed the officers by stating that I was within my legal rights and that I had not broken any civil or criminal laws, and asked them if there was anything else that I could do for them." said my associate, who wishes to remain anonymous in order to avoid any further scrutiny or intimidation tactics from the B.P.D. towards his friends and loved ones. "Of course there wasn't anything else. I was shaking with adrenaline and outrage by the time that they hesitantly drove off. I felt angry that a [bitter] individual with a badge and a bad day could have the audacity to think that she had some kind of authority that gives her the right to use terrorists acts of fear and intimidation on a legal US citizen and thus depriving that citizen of his or her constitutional rights and the protection provide under the Fourth Amendment from such unlawful abuses of authority!"  he went on to say, "I mean, I have traveled this great country a lot and been in some places were the police force has a scary reputation, like New Orleans and L.A. where police brutality and abuses of power are a common occurance. It was this and other factors that attracted me back to Bloomington were I thought one could escape such big city injustices."
After hearing my friends story, and numerous other stories like it, concerning a number individual officers as well as the "accepted behavior" policy of the B.P.D. I was disturbed by what these stories were saying, not only about our citizens lack of knowledge of their constitutional rights when dealing with the police but at the outright misuse and abuse of power being exibited by these officers and, at least, tolerated by the B.P.D. All of this brought to mind an awesome organization called "Flex Your Rights!"
***
Flex Your Rights (Flex), a 501(c)(3) educational nonprofit, was launched in 2002. Their mission is to educate the public about how basic Bill of Rights protections apply during encounters with law enforcement. To accomplish this, they create and distribute the most compelling, comprehensive and trustworthy know-your-rights media available.
The founder, Steven Silverman, was previously a campus organizer for the campaign to repeal the Higher Education Act’s aid-elimination penalty. The law blocks financial aid access to students reporting drug convictions. As part of his work, Silverman prompted students to describe the details of the police stops and searches leading to their minor drug arrests.
A disturbing pattern emerged, and various legal and law enforcement experts confirmed his conclusion: The vast majority of people are mystified by the basic rules of search and seizure and due process of law. Consequentially, they're likely to be tricked or intimidated by police into waiving their constitutional rights, resulting in a greater likelihood of regrettable outcomes.
The sum of these outcomes flow into all major criminal justice problems -- including racial and class disparities in search, arrest, sentencing and incarceration rates. All areas in which B-town is currently experiencing problems in! 
"In order to ensure that constitutional rights and equal justice are upheld by law enforcement, we must build a constitutionally literate citizenry. For example, a citizen who properly "flexes" her rights in the face of police misconduct will be poised to counter with a convincing police complaint or civil action.
 
"Frustrated by the lack of innovative and accessible know-your-rights information, Silverman developed the "Flex Your Rights!" website and lectured at conferences and universities. Playing the role of “Officer Friendly”, he donned a cop uniform and engaged volunteers in typical police situations. These role-playing lectures greatly enhanced the know-your-rights educational experience, but a more versatile and cost-effective approach was needed.
"In 2003, Flex secured funding from the Marijuana Policy Project grants program to create its first docudrama, BUSTED: The Citizen’s Guide to Surviving Police Encounters. Flex has overseen independent distribution of more than 20,000 DVD copies, and it's one of the Internet’s most popular advocacy videos, reaching more than 2.5 million viewers. It's also regularly screened in hundreds of college and high school classrooms and embraced by an array of professional and civic groups -- including police instructors, student and community activists, lawyers and concerned parents. Most importantly, Flex materials positively impact people who use our advice.
"Flex has recently completed production for 10 Rules for Dealing with Police, a new docudrama focused on the concerns of communities of color. The DVD is now available."
Based in Washington, DC, Flex collaborates with community activists to fight new policing schemes that violate citizens' Bill of Rights protections. Successes include decisive victories against Mayor Fenty's so-called Safe Homes Initiative and an attempt by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority to implement random searches of Metro passengers.
***
The Anti-Society staff highly suggest that each and every one of you visit and bookmark their website. There is a huge resource of informative, educational and USEFUL information available there.
Fear not fair readers and good citizens, for you can be assured that as long as THEY are watching US, WE WILL BE WATCHING THEM!




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Proceeds fight homelessness today! Get a drink!

In an effort to help fight hunger in Bloomington, Soma Coffee House has agreed to donate a portion of our profits today to the four agencies participating in Hunger and Homelessness Awareness Week.
Kirkwood Ave. in Bloomington, IN. http://art.a...Image via Wikipedia
The participating agencies are Martha's House, Mother Hubbard's Cupboard, Stepping Stones, Inc., and Shalom Community Center
 
They are  located at 322 E Kirkwood Ave, below the Laughing Planet Cafe, just off the corner of Kirkwood and Grant. Hours are 7am-11pm Mon-Sat and 8am-11pm on Sundays.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Do It (something/ anything) Yourself!

DIY yo' life!

More important than any other resource is the raw awareness that YOU have the power to change the world—this is the hardest one to develop and share, and the most essential. It doesn't help to give your endorsement to political representatives, social programs, or radical ideologies when the fundamental problem is that you don't know your own strength.


 Nothing is more enraging than to hear someone say, "Yeah, the world is a fucked up place and my life sucks, but there is nothing that I can do about it." YOU are the only one who can DO anything about it!

Self-determination begins and ends with your initiatives and actions, whether you live under a totalitarian regime or the canopy of a rain forest. It must be established on a daily basis, by acting back on the world that acts upon you—whether that means calling in sick to work on a sunny day, starting a neighborhood garden with your friends, or toppling a government. You cannot make a revolution that distributes power equally except by learning firsthand how to exercise and share power—and that exercising and sharing, on any scale, is itself the ongoing, never-concluded project of revolution.
 
What you do today is itself the extent of that revolution, its limits and its triumph.

1 aaaaImage via Wikipedia 
 You can carry a marker in your pocket and get in the pleasurable habit of altering your environment everywhere you go—by adding "capitalism:" at the top of DEAD END signs, for example, or "LIES" across the display window of corporate newspaper vending machines. . . or writing "ballot box" on trash cans during an election. 





You can make your own ineffaceable graffiti marker by combining 80% Rustoleum and 20% mineral spirits in a shoe polish applicator or similar device—how about a deodorant container with a dry eraser inside?


You can make a potato into a battery by putting a piece of copper in one side, a piece of zinc in the other, and attaching wires to each. Add more potatoes or other vegetables to the circuit for more power.

You can suspend banners from helium balloons tied to power lines, if you want to make them particularly difficult to take down.
You can create a seam sealing two sheets of plastic together by cutting them with a hot razor blade—try this for do-it-yourself lamination.

 
You can get play your favorite music backwards for a new listening experience by taking a cassette apart with a screwdriver and putting the tape reel in backwards; better, record it onto another tape on the third or fourth channel of a four track recorder, then listen to the other side of the second tape.
 

You can compile a monthly calendar of events that include free food (art openings, city council extravaganzas, etc.) and circulate it to hungry people.

 
You can approach restaurants and grocery stores as a representative of a charity group, asking for their leftovers. You should be able to gather enough food this way to provide for a number of people—perhaps a free grocery program for a poor neighborhood, or a weekly communal meal in a public place . . .

 
You can establish a community garden, with lots open for people to grow their own food, or volunteer programs for them to participate and share in the harvest. Lots of people have yards that go untended, and there's always those abandoned lots . . .

 
You can put glass etching solution (hydrofluoric acid) on the windows of corporations or agencies that you think need a wake-up call, if a brick would attract too much attention; if you want to make it clear why you're doing it, try applying the solution through a stencil expressing your message! If a brick is called for, You can dress up nice, carry it in your purse, and apply it without ever having to take it out.

 
You can really wreak some havoc on videotapes in noxious corporate rental stores, etc. with a powerful magnet. The same goes for computers, of course.

 
You can short-circuit any electric or electronic machine by introducing salt water into it. Once upon a time vandals would do this to soda vending machines, causing them to spit out free soda and change.

 
You can save the "postage paid by addressee" envelopes you get in junk mail to send back stuffed with more junk mail—or, better, with love letters to whomever opens them, begging them to seek a better life.

 
You can soak the ink off some canceled stamps with alcohol—better, cover the stamps with a thin layer of soap or water-soluble glue before mailing; the addressee can soak off the soap or glue.
 
You can use lemon juice or urine as invisible ink—heat up the paper, and it will appear.

 
You can take the clear adhesive envelopes available free at unmanned Federal Express stations everywhere and put them up on the walls of city streets, corporate elevators, gas station bathrooms, etc. with secret instructions or maps to buried treasure inside.

 
You can protect yourself from the effects of tear gas by covering your mouth and nose with a rag soaked in vinegar or lime juice and wearing swimming goggles; when not wearing the goggles, put them on your forehead with the inside facing out, so they won't fog up.


By putting a weight at the bottom, You can insure that the big banner you drop from a building or freeway won't blow in the wind.

 
You can make massive inflatable structures out of thin plastic sheeting that folds up to a small size convenient for smuggling into unexpected environments. Even if you couldn't sneak a fan in, you could still spice up a street demonstration or public event by stretching one over a hot air vent on a city street—presto, a sixty foot missile silo towers over the Inaugural Parade.

You can make those paper stickers you scam from the local copyshop more weatherproof by covering them with clear packing tape.

 
You can go to stores that sell house paint and get mis-mixed buckets for little to no cost. Think of all the things You can do with paint. Make woodcuts with potato stampers, or linoleum, for example—or make a stamp out of shoelace with wire through it, shaped into a word or line image.

 
You can knit your own clothes in the time it would take you to earn the money to buy them prefabricated, and in much more pleasant environments.

 
You can keep warm in winter by lining the inside of your clothes with plastic—this will work best if you place the layer of plastic right next to your skin, although it will make you sweat a lot.

 
If you are traveling and need water, You can open the outside spigots at most gas stations and many other buildings with a good wrench. These spigots generally have one of two kinds of handles which can be attached to them for operation; you could carry both handles with you, for surefire access to water, if you happened to find them unremoved.

 
You can get drinks at fast food restaurants by retrieving a cup from the trash and asking for a refill.

 
You can find fabric (napkins, tablecloths, etc.) for making patches, banners, etc. in the laundry bins behind restaurants.

 
If quitting your job leaves you with more time on your hands than you know what to do with, try baby-sitting nights for single mothers—there are thousands of them longing for a chance to go out and have a good time. If you have a circle of dependable volunteers, you could organize an alternative day care collective—there's a real shortage of those these days.


If you have more food, shelter, time, energy, love than you need for yourself and the ones who depend on you, You can find others to share with. If you have a room empty in your house now that your daughter has gone to college, you could lend it to a homeless writer or traveling activist, for example—or if you have more sources of free bread than your team of urban hunter-gatherers can possibly take advantage of, you should see if You can get in touch with striking union workers.

 
You can write to companies informing them that you really enjoy their product, or that you were shocked to find you had purchased a defective item. They'll probably send you free coupons.

 
You can buy an expensive electronic video camera with a liberal return policy, and shoot all your footage and download it onto a computer before the return deadline, if you want to make a movie or documentary for free. You can do the same thing with fancy musical equipment for a few days of recording, or with . . .

 
You can get free press passes to attend concerts and similar events simply by approaching the promoters as a representative of the media. You'll probably get more privileged treatment than any of the paying customers. A press pass might also help you to get past security or even cross national borders in an emergency.

 
You can set up a fake activist webpage for the F.B.I. 0-o, to keep them busy and misinformed; at high-surveillance demonstrations, You can leave unmarked boxes and bags all around town, to keep the bomb squad busy and entertained—better yet, put little letters in the bags for them, or fragments that all together spell out a message.

 
You can improve your chances of being picked up and treated well while hitchhiking by dressing in dark pants and a white shirt with a tie and perhaps a name tag—that is, as a young Mormon on mission! Pick up some free Mormon bibles at your nearest tabernacle for authenticity. If anyone asks serious questions, what better form of cultural terrorism than to spread a little fun misinformation? This disguise might also help you to get away with other things .

 
You can protect your home from police dogs by laying down a thin line of cayenne pepper across each doorway. The dogs will pause to sniff it on their way in, and won't be able to smell anything else for a while.


You can make a hand warmer by filling a cloth bag with dry beans (and rice, or corn) and microwaving it. It should retain heat for a couple hours. If you get hungry, You can always cook and eat your hand warmer.

 
If you need to create a false identity in an emergency—for example, at a hospital, when you have no money or insurance—You can simply make up a name and give your social security number with the first five digits as they really appear but the last four changed. If you offer a distant false home address, it will take longer for them to find out you have played a trick on them.

 
You can give your friends tattoos with a clean safety pin and India ink. For branding, heat a shaped piece of coat-hanger with a small blowtorch.

 
You can make paper maché (for puppets, or uncommissioned public sculptures, or . . .) by heating three parts water and two parts corn starch until it becomes thick. Let it cool a bit, and apply it to newspaper to make it stick together.

 
You can make puppets for street demonstrations that double as shields for self-defense by reinforcing them—with an internal fiberglass base, for example. Cut in half, the larger-sized cylindrical traffic cones might be useful for this, and they are freely available.

 
You can make wheat paste by mixing three parts wheat flour and one part corn starch, boiling that in water (at proportions of two parts starch to three parts water), and cooking it down to a paste. Hurry to stick up posters everywhere with it before it dries. You can keep your wheat paste warm and wet longer in winter by carrying it around in a drink cooler. Try variations of the recipe until you find a personal favorite.

 
You can encourage strangers to share their brilliant ideas with you and everyone else (and make public space more interesting!), by wheatpasting fliers with wheatpaste recipes on them all around your city—along with a headline reading "call for submissions."

 
You can make stencils out of cardboard or clear plastic acetate and spraypaint your own artwork and ideas everywhere. Alternately, You can apply house paint through the stencils with rollers. You could make a "handicapped" stencil and make all the parking spaces at the mall handicapped spaces (this might be easier to accomplish if you had a flatbed truck with a truck top on it and a hole cut out of the flatbed for street access from inside). You could make a stencil a hundred feet long out of a roll of thick paper, and apply it on the street in two minutes with three people—one in front, unrolling, one in the middle applying the paint roller, and one in back, rolling up.

 
You can take those priority mail stickers they give out at the post office, stencil your own designs on them, and put them up anywhere in instants. The post office will send more of them to you on request—but beware, misusing them is a federal offense, of course.
Speaking of spraypaint, when you see billboards that make you uncomfortable, You can reverse the effect by adding a clever phrase or picture of your own. If You can't reach them, You can attach a spraypaint can to the end of a long stick and operate it by means of a lever and pulley, or put paint in a long-distance water gun (a "super soaker") and get your point across more simply. Try between three and five in the morning—the floodlights are often off then.
To apply paint from a distance, You can also fill up light bulbs or Christmas tree ornaments with it, and throw it. On an entirely different topic—has it occurred to you that the Achilles' heel of riot gear is that the wearers need to be able to see out?

 
You can remove advertisements (from the subway, the bus, the bus stop . . .) and replace them after adjusting them in subtle ways. You can do this with the labels on food products in the grocery store. For a more advanced project, try this with the name plates on businessmen's desks or professors' doors, or the commemorative plaques at historic sites. For post-graduate work, try kidnapping time capsules from corporate skyscrapers or universities and replacing the contents with information about what it was really like way back when.

 
You can make projection devices to project messages or images onto the sides of big buildings, to get a point across without actually touching them. A smaller scale, subtler application of a similar concept would be to remove the "WALK/DON'T WALK" screens from crosswalk signs and replace them with your own message screens.

 
You can set up short-range pirate radio stations by key intersections, broadcasting site-specific messages on popular frequencies around the clock, without attracting the attention a citywide pirate radio station would.

 
In street warfare, it might be useful to know that You can easily set the dumpsters outside of bars on fire—the bottles and cans inside all have the residue of alcohol on them, after all. Just douse the inside with a bottle of whisky or similar substance, push a couple of them where they need to be, and throw in a smoke bomb for ignition.

 
You can still get almost all the books you need at the library, especially if you ask them to order the ones they're missing. Many libraries also have free video borrowing, for movies. If You can't use the internet to get free recordings of your favorite songs, go to a local college radio station; act like you work there, and tape whatever records you want. For free cassettes, write to Christian evangelical groups asking for listening material.

 
If you are a high school student in the United States, chances are You can get your school to pay for you to take college classes, if the classes aren't available there.

 
You can set up your own library, with all the books and magazines and records and videos and clothes you and your friends already have available for everyone, so no one has to buy anything. Whenever a band comes to your town to play, have a part of the door money go to buying a copy of their record for the community to share.

 
You can find food, flowers, furniture, clothes, building supplies, and more precious things left out on the street in front of houses in the suburbs, or in dumpsters. You might have more luck finding building supplies at construction sites at night, though—or just wheeling them out the back door of a corporate "home repair" chain on a cart. You might be able to return some of the items you rescue—such as food that has passed the expiration date—for money or store credit. For a more thorough approach, track down local distributors—a juice distributor will probably throw out whole dumpsters of good juice before the expiration date, because they cannot be shipped to stores in time.

 
You can go to college campuses at the end of the semester and collect incredible amounts of discarded food, clothes, and furnishings—and all the bicycles that have been abandoned to rust on the bike racks, if you have a good set of wire cutters. You could start a "free bikes for kids" program with these. If you need more, dress up and go to the local police station—chances are they've already collected scores of forgotten bikes the same way you did.

 
You can establish a "yellow bike" program for your town: get a bunch of cheap bicycles, paint them all an ugly yellow color, and leave them around town at specified drop off points so people can ride them from one point to another. Voila! Public transportation that is both free and autonomous.

 
If You can get a password from a student, you should be able to use the computers at the local university for everything from email to printing out fliers. If You can borrow a student's meal plan card, You can go into a college cafeteria with a backpack and come out with enough food to feed yourself and some companions for a few days.

 
You can get a job working for a company you don't respect that has a resource you need (photocopies, food, information, art supplies . . .) and hold it as long as it takes to smuggle out what you want. A circle of friends could do this together, each supplying a different resource.

 
You can get as many credit cards as possible, run them all up to their limits purchasing useful materials, and then declare bankruptcy. If you wanted to, you could write them all letters announcing that you were acting to avenge all the families whose lives have been ruined by debt—though this might get you in trouble. Or, better: get together a circle of people who are committed to supporting each other; each year one will run up massive debts paying for the needs of the group, and then declare bankruptcy. There should be enough people in the group to cover the years until the bankruptcy period of a participant is over and the process can be repeated.

 
You can put on public puppet shows for children that get important information across to their parents as well. You might be able to arrange to give educational presentations at local schools, too. If you know students involved in a student group on a college campus, they can probably arrange a speaking engagement for you that would pay a significant amount of student funds—which could go to the worthwhile cause of your choice.

 
You can make a piñata in the form of a politician or monstrosity (such as the "free market," the "loyal officer," etc.) and have a piñata party at which, when sufficiently beaten, the piñata spills out party favors such as candies, little books, or invitations to the next special event. Try doing this in a public place during times of unrest.

 
You can make quite an impressive, arresting noise by shaking a large piece of sheet metal. These should be easy to find unattended at construction sites.

You can blow fire by holding a torch (an old 100% cotton t-shirt wrapped around a bent coat hanger) and spitting a cloud of paraffin lamp oil through it. Be sure not to swallow it, and have both water on hand to wash out your mouth and a towel to keep your face dry so you won't blow yourself up.

 
You can use the personal ads at the back of the local newspaper for a novel recruiting tactic: "Capitalism sucking the life out of you? BiWF, 27, non-monogamous, seeks lovers of life and liberty to form a revolutionary organization. Only those serious about playing need apply."

 
You can spice up a first date by resolving to get in trouble with the authorities for something dreadfully embarrassing by the end of it. Don't tell your date, of course.

If you have to work, You can organize a union with your fellow employees to gain a little leverage over your workplace. Once you pull off a sudden strike, or get support from a larger union organization, the management will be forced to take you seriously.

 
You can organize rent strikes to make your landlord take care of the problems with your plumbing, heat, electricity—but it would be far wiser to get together a circle of trustworthy people to invest in a communal living space together. In the city, you could use the space as a meeting place or center for the performing arts; in the countryside, you could grow enough vegetables to feed a lot of people. You can organize exchange programs with housing cooperatives in other cities, so You can move around if you like without having to rent from strangers.

You can give your friends massages on a regular basis. That can help everyone stay relaxed and feel close.

 
If your lover is a woman, You can find her g-spot by putting your fingers inside of her with your palm facing up and moving them in a beckoning motion exerting light pressure towards her belly. If he is a man, try the same thing a few inches further back!

 
You can practice a variety of daily rituals to get in touch with and establish power over your fears: try being naked with your friends and then strangers, being intimate with people of the sex opposite the one you are used to touching, walking alone down familiar and then unfamiliar streets blindfolded, starting frank conversations with strangers, climbing ladders on water towers—nothing can multiply your capabilities like confronting the limitations you have set for yourself.


You can take advantage of a thousand different little attempts people have already made to establish community—neighborhood associations, punk rock scenes, bowling leagues, Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, church choirs, high school clubs, student organizations, knitting circles, hobby groups—as starting points for working towards larger, more radical, durable, ambitious communities.


You can travel across the globe, hiking or skateboarding or hopping trains or driving cars for cross-country delivery services or working as the saxophonist on a cruise ship, and everywhere you go you will find people looking for holes in the fabric of this so-called reality. Together, You can cut these holes—by masterminding unexpected street festivals, carrying out occupations and permanent rent strikes, playing music that blows the roof off the world, seizing chances to leap up and shout out truths no one dares to express, charging off into the unknown on wild, unheard-of adventures . . .

You can get together with a handful of friends and discover that you have the power to create history.

Everything depends on this!