Filed under: Breaking News, Capitalism, Student Activism | Tags: california, davis, education, kerr hall, kresge town hall, mark hall, occupation, san fransisco city college, san fransisco state, santa cruz, sit in, Student Activism, student protest, uc, UC Berkeley, uc davis, ucla, university of california, walk out

IndyBay Reports:
On Thursday, November 19th, the University of California regents approved a 32% increase in undergraduate fees, pushing fees to over $10,000 a year for the first time. Student regent Jesse Bernal was the only vote in opposition. Protests, including the occupation of four buildings, have taken place November 18th and 19th at UCLA, UC Berkeley, UC Santa Cruz, UC Davis, San Francisco State and San Francisco City College. Students occupied Campbell Hall at UCLA, Kresge Town Hall and Kerr Hall at UC Santa Cruz, and Mrak Hall at UC Davis.
On Wednesday at UCLA, one protester was reportedly arrested after police struck students with batons and another person was reportedly tasered.
About a hundred students were arrested on Thursday at UC Davis. UCSC’s Kresege Town Hall and Kerr Hall are the only buildings that remained occupied Thursday evening.
For photos, more articles, and future updates, please visit California IndyBay
Filed under: Breaking News, Capitalism, Student Activism | Tags: campbell hall, education, occupation, regents, riot, Student Activism, twitter, uc, ucla, university of california
Stay abreast on what is going on in the UCLA Student Occupation at these sites-
UCLA Resistance: Blogging from inside Campbell Hall
Jesse Cheng: UCLA Student Regent Designate, Live tweeting the Board of Regents Meeting
IndyBay CA: Radical news from the Golden State
Filed under: Breaking News, Capitalism, Student Activism, Video | Tags: Activism, bruins, california santa cruz, Capitalism, education, riot, student, uc, ucla, university of california
After the University of California Board of Regents decided to approve a 32% tuition increase, students have been in an uproar. Reports say that Campbell Hall is currently being occupied by 40-50 students, and that police are using tasers and nightsticks to keep protesting students and faculty at bay outside of Covel Commons, where the Regents are meeting.
LA Times Article
More on this story as it develops.
Filed under: Anarchism, How-To, Organizer Resources, Student Activism | Tags: Activism, activist, manachism, meeting, self facilitation
While we understand that this piece isn’t helpful for everyone, we hope it either reminds some of us of the value of silence, or gives hope to those new to our movement who are already sick of the loudmouths.
“Even with my mask I often spoke the tyranny of power. My first duty was to cultivate a revolutionary silence.”
-Subcomandante Marcos
Introduction
Being an activist these days means fighting for a thousand different things – indigenous rights, rainforests, corporate accountability, etc. Despite this diversity of campaigns, there seems to be some agreement on the kind of society we want to create. It’s a society that isn’t based on white supremacy, class exploitation, or patriarchy.
This essay is about how men act in meetings. Mostly it’s about how we act badly, but it includes suggestions on how we can do better. Men in the movement reproduce patriarchy within the movement and benefit from it. By patriarchy I mean a system of values, behaviors, and relationships that keeps men in power. It relies on domination, claiming authority, and belligerence. By the movement I mean the anti-corporate globalization movement in the US I am a part of.
I think people organizing for affordable housing, against police brutality, for the rights of immigrants (for example) are also fighting the same system that’s wringing the blood out of the bottom 99 percent of the world’s population and the environment they live in. However, I don’t know from my experience if the men who organize around those issues act the way the men in the movement do.
Just to be clear, those men are almost always white and from middle-class or wealthier backgrounds. In my experience, as someone who identifies as a man of color, men of color dominate meetings in basically the exact same way. But I find that men who do not speak English fluently tend not to do so as much. I wish I could think of more exceptions.
Who cares about meetings?
Good question. Most meetings of large-ish organizations (of more than 30 people or so) I’ve been to don’t amount to too much. The real work – doing research, getting people involved, organizing protests and actions, fundraising, media stuff – gets done by working groups or individuals. Meetings are just about a lot of talking, right?
Well, yes and no. At worst meetings force a lot of people to get together and generally discuss everything that’s been done, everything that’s going on, and everything that needs to be done. These meetings tend to wander a lot. Responsibility is not clearly delegated, decisions aren’t made overtly, and the organization isn’t more focused afterwards than before. At the same time, there’s heated arguments over seemingly trivial things, or hurtful criticism of individuals. But those arguments and criticisms don’t amount to too much in the end.
But a good meeting is a different animal altogether. With good self-facilitation and a good facilitator (or two, or three…), everyone contributes to the meeting, without anyone taking control over it. People make constructive criticism, and try to incorporate concerns raised into their proposals. And since everyone gets to contribute their ideas into the decision-making process, the decisions are not only the best possible ones – but also the ones people are most invested in. Since everyone feels ownership over the decisions, people are more likely to take on responsibility for projects.
If you’re serious about using consensus, you have to care about meetings. That’s the only place a group can democratically decide what to do and how to do it. The alternative is an informal group of the most influential and forceful members (who dominate discussion) making the big decisions.
It’s not just how often you talk, but how and when
Consensus decision making is a model of the society we want to live in, and a tool we use to get there. Men often dominate consensus at the expense of everyone else. Think about the man who…
* Speaks for a long time, loud, first and often
* Offers his opinion immediately whenever someone makes a proposal, asks a question, or if there’s a lull in discussion
* Speaks with too much authority: “Actually, it’s like this…”
* Can’t amend a proposal or idea he disagrees with, but trashes it instead
* Makes faces every time someone says something he disagrees with
* Rephrases everything a woman says, as in, “I think what Mary was trying to say is…”
*Makes a proposal, then responds to each and every question and criticism of it – thus speaking as often as everyone else put together (Note: This man often ends up being the facilitator)
And don’t get me started about the bad male facilitator who…:
* Always puts himself first on stack, because he can
* Somehow never sees the women with their hands up, and never encourages people who haven’t spoken
It’s rarely just one man who exhibits every problem trait. Instead it’s two or three competing to do all the above. But the result is the same: everyone who can’t (or won’t) compete on these terms – talking long, loud, first and often – gets drowned out.
This is a result of society’s programming. Almost no men can actually live up to our culture’s fucked up standards of masculinity. And our society has standards for women that are equally ridiculous. In one way, we both suffer equally. That’s why we all yearn and strive for a world where these standards – which serve to divide us and reduce us and prop up those in control – are destroyed.
In another way these standards serve those who come closest to living up to them. Sure, we all lose when a few men dominate a meeting. But it’s those men who get to make decisions, take credit for the work everyone does, and come out feeling more inspired and confident.
But I can’t be sexist – I’m a hippie
Oh, but you can. The irony is that you can basically do all the things listed above, even if you don’t fit the stereotype of the big strapping man. I’ve seen hippies, men who would be described as feminine, queer men, and others who in many ways go against the grain not go against the grain at all when it comes to dominating discussion. A hippie might speak slowly and use hippie slang, but still speak as the voice of authority, and cut off the woman who was speaking before him. A man who some might call feminine can still make a face like he smelled something when someone he doesn’t respect says something he disagrees with, thus telling her to shut up; he may also politely but consistently put himself on stack every time someone criticizes his proposal.
So shut the fuck up already
What’s to be done? I’ve come up with a little idea I like to call, “Shut the fuck up.” It goes as follows: Every time someone…
* Says something you think is irrelevant,
* Asks a (seemingly) obvious question,
* Criticizes your proposal or makes a contradictory observation,
* Makes a proposal
* Asks a question, or
* Asks for more input because there’s a brief lull in the discussion. . .
Shut the fuck up. It’s a radical process, but I think you’ll like it.
Since my childhood, I was raised by my parents and by every teacher I ever had in school to demand as much attention as possible. In class I spoke more often than almost anyone else I knew. Surprisingly enough, some of my teachers were annoyed with me. But while they may have counseled me to raise my hand first, they never asked me to speak less or listen more. As a result I probably got twice as much attention from my teachers, measured in time spent with me, than most of the other kids I went to school with.
But a mere 15 years after I started learning to exhibit almost all the dominating male behavior I list above, something happened. I was in a class with a friend of mine. Let’s call her Anne, because that’s her name. Anne and I were in the same study group, and the night before she had gone over the exact question the professor was now asking. However, Anne wasn’t answering, even though the rest of the class was silent.
I don’t know what struck me to actually stop and think instead of answering the question myself, as I was wont to do. That incident got me thinking about who spoke most often in class, why, and what I could do. The answers to the first two questions I’ve basically given already. The third is a little trickier.
What else can we do?
Lucky for us, being a man gives us a lot of authority. I mean that in a good way, too. Much like people of color are always assumed to be selfish or paranoid when they speak out against racial profiling, women are often assumed to be bitchy when they call out patriarchal behavior.
What does that mean for us? First, we shut the fuck up. This was easy for me in school – I just made a rule that I never spoke more than twice in a 50 minute class. Surprise! Almost every time I would have spoken, someone else eventually said the exact same thing, or something smarter. It was frustrating when it was another obnoxious man doing the answering, but a lot of times it wasn’t one of the two guys in class who spoke most often.
The problem is that the classroom is designed to have one person in charge, and it ain’t the student. While you could point out problem behavior in class, there’s not a lot of ’space’ for it – it’s not expected or encouraged, and would probably be dismissed by the professor.
The beauty of consensus is the facilitation. Not only can we facilitate ourselves – and we should – but we can facilitate each other. This is mainly the job of the person chosen to be the facilitator. But when the facilitator is ignoring problem behavior – or exhibiting it – it’s easy for other people in the group to guerrilla facilitate.’
Sometimes it’s as easy as pointing out the people who have their hands up, but are somehow missed by the facilitator, or by suggesting straw polls or go ’rounds or other tools that get everyone involved. But it’s usually not that easy. The worse the pattern of behavior in the group, the more natural the fucked-upedness will seem. And you’ll often be given the evil eye by the people you’re calling out, if not a verbal backlash. And finally, it’s obviously not the job of the people most trampled on by patriarchal behavior to always be calling it out. That’s where we come in. We are, at least at first, given the most respect when we call out bad behavior.
The problem is doing the calling out in a constructive way. It’s all too easy to call people out in a hurtful and authoritarian fashion – thus entertaining everyone with your unintended irony, but also acting the exact way you don’t want others to. When you call people out in a way that’s hurtful instead of constructive, it still tends to keep the quietest people at a meeting from participating.
The solution
So call people out, but try not to be too personal about it. Unless it’s outrageous, wait until the person is finished, and then make your process point about how people should stick to stack, or consider not talking if they’ve just spoken, or whatever. And if it seems someone’s pissed off at your calling them out (and white men make it real easy for you to tell if they’re pissed off), make the effort to talk to him after the meeting is over. It usually doesn’t take much to smooth ruffled feathers.
Unfortunately, it also doesn’t take much for those same people to do the exact same thing the next meeting. So while part of the answer is self-facilitation and facilitating others, another part is also giving everyone the skills and confidence they need to assert their place in the meeting. This means having regular workshops, for new and experienced activists, on how consensus is supposed to work. It also means going through the formal process of consensus and explaining it during meetings. You can do it quickly, especially after the first few times. But when people assume that everyone is familiar with the process, those who are least confident (but still have good ideas) will be the first to drop out of discussions. Meanwhile, other people who think they know the process but don’t tend to hold things up. I’ll let you guess what I think the gender breakdown of those groups is.
Another key ingredient is talking to individuals outside of meetings. Talking honestly – “I know you care about the group, but in meetings it seems like you talk down to anyone who disagrees with you, and you cut people off a lot, and that makes it really hard for other people to participate” – is a big part of it. And as with any interaction, you have to keep an open mind to hear their perspective. Ideally, you could resolve things at this level and not have to bring things up before the group.
But it’s still a good idea to come up with a structure to address the way people act badly in meetings, for people to regularly “check in” with how they feel the process is going. It also makes it easier for people who wouldn’t normally criticize others to do so constructively. The structure could mean that once every two months the group has a “process” meeting, where the focus is on how people act in meetings, working groups, etc. It’s often easier and ’safer’ for people to call out problem behavior, and easier and ’safer’ for the culprits to own up to it and ask for constructive criticism.
Finally, it means constantly thinking about how we, as men, tend to dominate and control the world around us. To me this is most apparent (at least in other people) in meetings. To me, that’s also where it’s easiest to address. This is a continuous process. We have to always read about this, talk about it, inquire into how others address it, come up with creative and successful solutions, and apply them. But no matter where we take it, I think this struggle always starts with shutting the fuck up.
As men, we’re encouraged to dominate conversation without even thinking about it. It’s too easy for us to do really good work – fighting genetic engineering, tearing down the prison industrial complex, freeing Mumia – and still act exactly like the frat boy next door. We have to confront each other and ourselves so that domination stops seeming natural, and so we can start doing something about it. So the next time you don’t think about how you’re talking, please think about how you’re talking.
Epilogue
This essay came out of my frustration with the male domination in meetings in this movement and the absence of men’s efforts to change it. It also came out of my need for self-reflection. This will ideally lead not just to all men acting exactly like I think they should, but also a lasting dialog on how we behave in meetings and what we can do about it. If you have any thoughts on what I’ve written, please contact me and tell me what you think dan@midnightspecial.net. This isn’t a declaration of war; it’s just a starting point.
Time for me to shut the fuck up.
Filed under: Capitalism, Organizer Resources, Student Activism | Tags: college, diploma, education, emancipating education for all, free education, ged, higher education, international students movement, ism, university
Education is key to the growth of any society, so thus free education is key to the growth of a free society. However here in the United States education has become so commercialized that it is supremely difficult, occasionally even impossible, for the children of low income families to progress beyond a high school degree. A country which used to pride itself as being the land of opportunity is now showing that the only opportunity it means to offer anymore is to work 50 hours a week at minimum wage (which is still only $6.55).
However, like so many other problems, this isn’t isolated to just the United States. Any who have looked into the European higher education system may have heard stories of the idyllic land where education is provided to all for the good of the nation. However recent accords like the Bologna Process are bringing about a new era of commercialized education. While this author is not familiar enough with the application of these new mandates to do a worthwhile assessment, European contacts are in an uproar over this indignity. Likewise, students in Africa and East Asia are starting to see “Americanization” in their school systems, and are as dissatisfied with the prospect as to be expected.
However despite what many people over the age of 30 seem to think, we are not a generation to take things lying down. One group of note opposing this on an international level is the International Students Movement (ISM). With representatives from all six developed continents, ISM has been organizing a Global Week of Action from today, April 20th until April 29th.
There will be more coverage of this week as it develops, but the best course of action would be to go direct to the source and get involved. Below are several links for anyone interested in learning more about the International Students Movement, the Global Week of Action, or free education in general.
*ISM Homepage
*Contact ISM
*ISM Forums
*Planned Actions for the Global Week of Action
*Bologna Process Homepage
Filed under: Anarchism, Breaking News, Student Activism, Video | Tags: Anarchism, new school university occupation, Student Activism
This morning I was awoken by a myriad of text messages and phone calls telling me to come out to 65 5th avenue because there is an occupation taking place. I was excited, worried, and confused at the same time. How many people were inside? How many of them were my friends? How will the NYPD and the administration handle this? These questions were quickly answered when I arrived minutes later.
I arrived at 65 5th avenue at approximately 9:15am. Phone calls from the inside were consistent and the only worry that was going through people’s minds were questions of whether or not the police got to the roof through the building, or the one next door. There was a great amount of support from friends, allies, students, and New Yorkers alike. About an hour later more supporters showed up, mostly anarchists who had friends inside of the building.
The occupiers tried to leave out of the door on 14th street (across from Chase Bank) but the NYPD and barricades did not allow for it. When the supporters ran towards the baricades to help friends, confrontation was very real and very dangerous. One student from NSSR, David Benzaquen who was going to graduate next month was yelling “Shame on You!” along with the rest of us when all of a sudden a group of cops came up and began beating him up. This incident is shown in the video captured by independant videojournalist Brandon Jourdan of Brooklyn, NY who was present at the occupation site since its start. The video clearly shows students being hurt by police in a violent manner, not perpetuated by any action the students have partaken in.
I, along with many others, witnessed this and there is a general consensus that it was an incredibly disgusting act by the NYPD. There was even an elderly woman who told a friend of mine, “don’t blame the police” and after people told her what the NYPD had done (brutality towards students, teargassing the occupants inside the building, pepper spraying people outside and inside, etc) she came up to a cop and said, “I used to trust you. I used to have faith in the police. But now, how can you hurt STUDENTS?” We had convinced an elderly woman to hate the police. This was probably the only part of the morning that made me smile. The rest was very stressful, full of emotions and worries.
Right now there are 19 people arrested who are at the 6th precinct in Manhattan, NY who are awaiting more information about their legal situation. Support is very needed right now. So keep the letters of solidarity coming, and be ready for a rally in support of the occupants.
Also, tomorrow is the anarchist bookfair at Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village and at 9pm there is a dance party at Union Square called “CAT ASTROPHE”….( mew more than ever!)
-(A)gnieszka
link to the video:
Filed under: Breaking News, Student Activism | Tags: Activism, direct action, education, new school, new school in exile, new school occupied, occupation, occupied, student
At this time there is little information available, but the New School has been reoccupied in response to university President Kerrey and Vice-President Murtha not responding to an ultimatum issued by the New School in Exile in February.
More information as this story develops, but those inthe New York area are urged to go to 65 5th Ave (between 14th and 15th) to help out.
An F.A.Q. about the current occupation can be found HERE.
Filed under: Breaking News, Capitalism, Student Activism | Tags: Activism, education, hunter college, school, strike, student, walkout
While not expressly anarchist, this event is worth noting. Situations like this are occurring more and more often all over the world. Students are realizing that the current education-industrial complex serves the interests of the University board of trustees and their corporate masters better than the hopes and ambitions of the students and faculty. Education is becoming a commodity just like food, clothing, and shelter. However, unlike the other three, education is something that is not being commodified so easily.
The following is an article from The Hunter Word:
“No tuition hikes!”
By Jessica Lawson, The Hunter Word
March 6, 2009
“No tuition hikes! No tuition hikes!” yelled a dark-haired male student yesterday in the third floor corridor connecting Hunter North to Hunter West. “It’s two ‘o’clock guys! You coming out?”
Outside of the main lobby, what this reporter estmated as several hundred students and spectators gathered among drumbeats, tambourines and chants of “No budget cuts! No tuition hikes!” and “Students united, we’ll never be defeated!” Several students held colorful makeshift posters with demands calling for open admissions and the eradication of tuition for CUNY students.
“We need to send a message to the administration that we’re not going to take their bullshit!” shouted Owen Hill, a member of the Hunter Student Union. Hill, with a young face despite his scruffy beard and glasses and clad in a green corduroy jacket, said that this rally was the first organized by the HSU, a group started last semester when talks of tuition hikes and budget cuts for CUNY first surfaced.
Tuition for CUNY students is supposed to increase by $600 a year starting in the upcoming fall semester.
About 10 students addressed the crowd, citing statistics, yelling chants and getting the students riled up. Bundled in a colorful striped scarf and grey fedora, Dr. Sandor John, who introduced himself as an adjunct history professor, told the crowd, “We are paid so little, we can barley pay rent! I’m a history professor and if history teaches us anything, it’s that we can’t get anything without struggle!”
The crowd roared.
The rally was coordinated to start in advance of a rally at Borough of Manhattan Community College and a larger labor rally at City Hall Park organized by the New York Central Labor Council. A small group of students on the sixth floor dropped HSU fliers onto the crowd detailing the directions to BMCC. Around 2:30 p.m. the crowd started dispersing to the 68th Street subway station, a slow and random cavalcade with spectators and photographers peering over the stair’s banisters.
After a short rally on Chambers Street outside of BMCC, students representing a variety of CUNY schools took to the streets to march to City Hall Park. It was a dynamic scene of several hundred students marching through the streets, a sea of signs and chants. Passersby, some with smiling faces and others with looks of bewilderment snapped pictures with their camera phones and took video with their camcorders. A big-grinned MTA bus driver on West Broadway honked his horn in solidarity with the student protestors. A cold breeze blew down Chambers Street, but the energetic spirit of the students could not be dampened. The Manhattan Municipal Building in the foreground sparkled white in the late afternoon sun. A feeling of sanguinity was in the air.
At City Hall Park, CUNY students joined a rally representing over 75 unions and community groups ranging from the service sector, educators and skilled tradesmen. The rally comes at a time when New Yorkers are feeling the far-reaching effects of a recessionary economy and with New York State’s 2009-10 budget deficit estimated to be at $13.7 billion.
The rally was jam-packed on Broadway stretching from Park Place to well past Chambers street leaving just one southbound lane open to traffic. Rally organizers estimated the crowd to be up to 50,000 people.
Further information:

Emancipating Education For All: Global Anti-Capitalist group focusing on education
Take Back NYU!: NYU based group fighting similar fight.
Filed under: Organizer Resources, Student Activism | Tags: Activism, chic, fashion, fetish, materialistic, organizing, student
Anyone who has experience with student organizing has seen it. You see the girl with the Che t-shirt, the guy with the keffiyeh, or someone rocking a “Make Love Not War” pin. It is tempting to see these symbols as indicators of a desire to change the world as they see it, or at the very least progressive politics. Right? Anyone who has some time on campus knows the answer is no. Like so much of our popular culture, the look is more important than the content. If you talk to these people you will quickly see that they know more about MTV than they do about socialism, Free Palestine, or the anti-war movement.
These posuers are everywhere, and can make finding the truly motivated activists difficult. With these false markers littering the landscape distraction is common, and one can get some time into a conversation before one realizes that this is an organizational dead end. Worse yet is when a group of commited organizers in an open group find that those who they had seen as new members are really just there for the fashion, and to later tell their friends about their “activist cred” over a fresh can of PBR.
But we should not discount these people just for their materialistic approach to our culture. While their motivation is dubious, they can still be useful for organizing and running events. They can serve as a bridge out to other social circles, since lets face it, if it is just you and your friends, you are really just preaching to the choir.
Filed under: Breaking News, Student Activism | Tags: 2009, kimmel marketplace, take back nyu
Around 2 PM yesterday Take Back NYU! ended their occupation of the Kimmel Marketplace after holding it for over forty hours. The university has not meet the demands of Take Back NYU! however the group felt it had achieved all it could through the occupation and chose to move on to new tactics and continue to push for transparency and student representation at NYU.
However the NYU administration is not through with the protesters. There are reports of students who participated in the action being denied access to their dormatories, arrested, and who knows what else.
Now, back to your regularly scheduled programing.