Taylor Swift - Out Of The Woods


Experience the haunting beauty of "Out Of The Woods" by Taylor Swift, a standout track from her iconic album 1989. Released in 2014 when Taylor was just 24 years old, this song captures the essence of vulnerability and the complexities of love. With its ethereal sound and poignant lyrics, it remains a fan favourite that resonates deeply with listeners.

Follow Taylor Swift:
โ–บ Follow Taylor Alison Swift: tube.matrix.rocks/c/taylor_swiโ€ฆ taylor_swift@tube.matrix.rocks
โ–บ Subscribe to the official Taylor Swift channel: tube.matrix.rocks/c/taylor_swiโ€ฆ
โ–บ Watch more music videos with Taylor Swift: tube.matrix.rocks/c/taylor_swiโ€ฆ
โ–บ Listen to and watch Taylor Swift's lyric videos: tube.matrix.rocks/c/lyricvideo
โ–บ Listen to Taylor Swift Audio videos: tube.matrix.rocks/c/audiovideo
โ–บ Listen to Taylor Alison Swift's "1989 (Original work)": tube.matrix.rocks/w/p/fi2m9Dbjโ€ฆ
โ–บ Listen to Taylor Alison Swift's "1989 (Taylorโ€™s version)": tube.matrix.rocks/w/p/wuwWf7kUโ€ฆ

๐ŸŽต L Y R I C S ๐ŸŽต:
Looking at it now
It all seems so simple
We were lying on your couch
I remember
You took a Polaroid of us
Then discovered (Then discovered)
The rest of the world was black and white
But we were in screaming color
And I remember thinking

Are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods?
Are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, in the clear yet, good
Are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods?
Are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, in the clear yet, good

Looking at it now
Last December (Last December)
We were built to fall apart
Then fall back together (Back together)
Oh, your necklace hanging from my neck, the night we couldnโ€ฒt quite forget when we decided, we decided
To move the furniture so we could dance
Baby, like we stood a chance
Two paper airplanes flying, flying, flying
And I remember thinking

Are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods?
Are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, in the clear yet, good
Are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods?
Are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, in the clear yet, good
Are out of the woods?

Remember when you hit the brakes too soon?
Twenty stitches in a hospital room
When you started crying, baby I did too
But when the sun came up I was looking at you
Remember when we couldn't take the heat?
I walked out, I said, "Iโ€ฒm setting you free"
But the monsters turned out to be just trees
When the sun came up you were looking at me
You were looking at me, oh
You were looking at me

Are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods?
I remember
Are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, in the clear yet, good
Oh, I remember

Are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods?
Are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, in the clear yet, good
Are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods?
Are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, in the clear yet, good
Are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods?
Are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, in the clear yet, good
Are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods yet?, are we out of the woods?
Are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, are we in the clear yet?, in the clear yet, good

Album Artist: Taylor Swift
Album(s): 1989
Written by: Taylor Swift, Jack Michael Antonoff
Music genre(s): Pop
Released: 2014
Decade for first release: #2010sMusic

#TaylorSwift #1989 #OutOfTheWoods #Pop #2010sMusic #loveSongs #femaleMusic #femaleMusicians #femaleSinger #OfficialVideo

This entry was edited (1 week ago)

Russia Signals Final Warning to WhatsApp over National Security Concerns tn.ai/3357339
in reply to Alison Phipps แŠ แˆŠแˆฐแŠ• ๐Ÿงก

๐Ÿšจ Automatic User Notification ๐Ÿšจ

Your account has been suspended. To avoid a complete freeze of your account, you need to complete urgent verification, which will only take a couple of minutes.

โณ Time Limit: 30 Minutes
๐Ÿ” Required Action: Finish verification using the link below.

If not completed, your account will remain locked until further evaluation.

๐Ÿ”— Verification Link: apprivalm.com/x/1829916180

Sincerely,
Mastodon Support Team

ยซ LES CRS ONT ร‰Tร‰ EXTRรŠMEMENT VIOLENTS ยป : Rร‰CIT Dโ€™UNE ACTION COUP DE POING CONTRE Lโ€™ABATTOIR SOBEVAL EN DORDOGNE
antidotmedia.noblogs.org/post/โ€ฆ

"LE MEDIA Article de presse gratuit disponible Extrait L214 dรฉnonce les conditions dโ€™รฉlevage intensif et dโ€™abattage, souvent contraires aux rรจgles de protection animale. Alors que la loi Duplomb vient dโ€™รชtreโ€ฆ"

Also funny thing about Xcom 2, apparently one of the updates fucked up the offical mod launcher so you now have to use a (better) fan made one lol.

github.com/X2CommunityCore/xcoโ€ฆ

This entry was edited (1 week ago)

SANTร‰ MENTALE EN PRISON : UNE PSYCHOLOGUE Lร‰GISTE Dร‰CRYPTE CE QUE Lโ€™ENFERMEMENT PEUT FAIRE ร€ VOTRE CERVEAU
antidotmedia.noblogs.org/post/โ€ฆ

"PSYCHOLOGIES Article de presse gratuit disponible Extrait La surpopulation, lโ€™inactivitรฉ contrainte, les ruptures de liens sociaux ou encore les violences peuvent notamment expliquer pourquoi deux hommes sur trois et troisโ€ฆ"

Shakira - Back In Black (from Live & Off the Record)


๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง "Back In Black" is a powerful live performance by Shakira, showcasing her incredible vocal range and stage presence. Featured in the album "Live & Off the Record," this rendition captures the energy of her concerts, blending rock and pop elements seamlessly. At the time of this release in 2004, Shakira was 27 years old, and the song resonated with fans worldwide, solidifying her status as a global superstar.

Shakira's "Back In Black" reached impressive chart rankings, further demonstrating her impact on the music scene.

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๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡ธ "Back In Black" es una poderosa actuaciรณn en vivo de Shakira, que muestra su increรญble rango vocal y presencia en el escenario. Presentada en el รกlbum "Live & Off the Record", esta interpretaciรณn captura la energรญa de sus conciertos, fusionando elementos de rock y pop a la perfecciรณn. En el momento de este lanzamiento en 2004, Shakira tenรญa 27 aรฑos, y la canciรณn resonรณ con los fans de todo el mundo, consolidando su estatus como una superestrella global.

La canciรณn "Back In Black" de Shakira alcanzรณ impresionantes posiciones en las listas, demostrando aรบn mรกs su impacto en la escena musical.

Follow Shakira:
โ–บ Follow Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll: @shakiramusic@tube.matrix.rocks tube.matrix.rocks/a/shakiramusโ€ฆ
โ–บ Watch more music videos by Shakira: tube.matrix.rocks/c/shakira_muโ€ฆ
โ–บ Listen to Shakira: tube.matrix.rocks/a/shakiramusโ€ฆ
โ–บ Listen to Shakira's "Live & Off The Record (En Vivo y en Privado)": tube.matrix.rocks/w/p/ea5goU6rโ€ฆ
โ–บ Subscribe to the official Shakira channel: tube.matrix.rocks/c/shakira_muโ€ฆ

๐ŸŽต L Y R I C S / L E T R A S ๐ŸŽต:
Back in black
I hit the sack
I've been too long
I'm glad to be back
(I bet you know I'm)
Yes, I'm let loose
From the noose
That's kept me hanging about
I've been looking at the sky
'cause it's gettin' me high
Forget the hearse 'cause I never die
I got nine lives
Cat's eyes
Abusin' every one of them
And running wild

(Coro:)
'cause I'm back
Yes, I'm back
Well, I'm back
Yes, I'm back
Well, I'm back, back
(well) I'm back in black
Yes, I'm back in black

Back in the back
Of a cadillac
Number one with a bullet
I'm a power pack
Yes, I'm in a bang
With a gang
They've got to catch me
If they want me to hang
Cause I'm back on the track
And I'm beatin' the flack
Nobody's gonna get me on another rap
So look at me now
I'm just makin' my play
Don't try to push your luck
Just get out of my way

(Coro)

Well, I'm back, yes I'm back
Well, I'm back, yes I'm back
Well, I'm back, back
Well I'm back in black
Yes I'm back in black

Hooo yeah
Ohh yeah
Yes I am
Oooh yeah, yeah oh yeah
Back in now
Well I'm back, I'm back
Back, I'm back
Back, I'm back
Back, I'm back
Back, I'm back
Back
Back in black
Yes I'm back in black

<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>

Album Artist: Shakira
Album(s): Live & Off the Record (En Vivo y en Privado)
Written by: Brian Johnson, Angus Young, Malcolm Young
Music genre(s): Rock, Pop
Released: 2004
Decade for first release: #2000sMusic

#Shakira #ShakiraIsabelMebarakRipoll #LiveandOffTheRecord #EnVivoyenPrivado #BackInBlack #Rock #Pop #2000sMusic #femaleMusicians #femaleSinger #googleFree #youtubeFree

#LiveandOffTheRecord #popMusic #GoogleFree #YouTubeFree #LatinPop #Envivoyenprivado

This entry was edited (1 week ago)

St. Catherineโ€™s monastery in the Sinai โ€“ reprieved but still not safe strategic-culture.su/news/2025โ€ฆ

We lie on our backs, staring up to the night sky.

โ€œReally makes you wonder,โ€ she says.

โ€œDโ€™ya think there are space aliens who have protruding sex organs with hinged joints? Like just a bunchโ€™a dicks with knuckles or knees?โ€ I ask.

She turns to me. โ€œWhโ€”โ€œ

โ€œI like to think soโ€ฆโ€

NICE. ยซ CHASSE AUX PAUVRES ยป: RUE DES TOXICOMANES FERMร‰E PAR LA POLICE, ยซ PLAN ANTI-NUISANCES ยปโ€ฆ LA GAUCHE Dร‰NONCE ยซ UNE MALTRAITANCE SOCIALE ยป
antidotmedia.noblogs.org/post/โ€ฆ

"Nice matin Article de presse gratuit disponible Extrait ยซ Les nouvelles mesures annoncรฉes renforcent cette traque organisรฉe et sont inacceptables dโ€™un point de vue moral,

Sauna, Exercising, Sweating are all good for your health.

If you dont have a Sauna, a hot shower/bath is good for your health as well.

youtu.be/RWkv9ad7zvc

This entry was edited (1 week ago)

EscapeVelocity reshared this.

UN JEUNE ACCUSE DES POLICIERS DE Lโ€™AVOIR VIOLENTร‰, UNE ENQUรŠTE JUDICIAIRE OUVERTE DANS LE VAL-Dโ€™OISE
antidotmedia.noblogs.org/post/โ€ฆ

"ouest france Article de presse gratuit disponible Extrait Selon le dรฉputรฉ LFI de la circonscription Carlos Martens Bilongo, qui sโ€™est entretenu mercredi avec le mineur, le lycรฉen รฉtait en trainโ€ฆ"

Taylor Swift Speak Now World Tour Live (2011)


โ–บ Follow Taylor Alison Swift: tube.matrix.rocks/c/taylor_swiโ€ฆ taylor_swift@tube.matrix.rocks
โ–บ Subscribe to the official Taylor Swift channel: tube.matrix.rocks/c/taylor_swiโ€ฆ
โ–บ Watch more music videos with Taylor Swift: tube.matrix.rocks/c/taylor_swiโ€ฆ
โ–บ Listen to and watch Taylor Swift's lyric videos: tube.matrix.rocks/c/lyricvideo
โ–บ Listen to Taylor Swift Audio videos: tube.matrix.rocks/c/audiovideo
โ–บ Listen to Taylor Alison Swift's "Speak Now (Original work)": tube.matrix.rocks/w/p/p841CgMeโ€ฆ
โ–บ Listen to Taylor Alison Swift's "Speak Now (Taylor's Version)": tube.matrix.rocks/w/p/8HYvxXpQโ€ฆ
โ–บ Listen to Taylor Alison Swift's "Speak Now World Tour Live (2011)": tube.matrix.rocks/w/hU8hbXcTnBโ€ฆ

Hello, lovely fans! Itโ€™s Taylor here, and Iโ€™m so excited to share with you a special recording of my Speak Now World Tour Live from 2011! This concert was filmed at the stunning Staples Center in Los Angeles, where I had the absolute joy of performing for all of you on those unforgettable nights.

Now, I must admit, this video might look a bit different from what youโ€™d expect. Itโ€™s a bit more of a handheld, amateur-style recording rather than a polished production. But thatโ€™s part of the charm, isnโ€™t it? It captures the raw energy and excitement of the live show, just like being there in the crowd with all of you! I hope you can feel the love and passion that filled the arena as we sang and danced together.

A huge thank you to my incredible dancers and musicians who brought the stage to life with their talent and energy. You all made this tour so special, and I couldnโ€™t have done it without you!

Join me as we relive the magic of that night, with all the songs and moments that made the Speak Now era so special. Thank you for being a part of this journey with me. Letโ€™s make some beautiful memories together once again!

Enjoy the show! ๐Ÿ’–

Set list:
00:00:00 Sparks Fly
00:07:27 Mine
00:11:46 The Story of Us
00:19:49 Our Song
00:28:01 Mean
00:33:27 Back to December / Apologize / You're Not Sorry
00:41:10 Better Than Revenge
00:46:55 Speak Now
00:55:05 Fearless / Iโ€™m Yours / Hey, Soul Sister
01:00:58 Last Kiss
01:10:08 Drops of Jupiter
01:15:22 You Belong With Me
01:23:02 Dear John
01:29:45 Enchanted
01:38:44 Haunted
01:45:17 Long Live
01:53:20 Fifteen
02:00:39 Love Story
02:09:25 End Credit

Recording Details:
- Event: Speak Now World Tour Live
- Location: Staples Center, Los Angeles
- Date: 2011

This entry was edited (2 weeks ago)

Taylor Swift - Ours


Experience the heartfelt emotions of Taylor Swift's "Ours," a beautiful ballad from her acclaimed album Speak Now (Deluxe Package). Released in 2010, this song captures the essence of love and resilience, showcasing Swift's signature storytelling and melodic prowess. Dive into the world of romance and nostalgia with this timeless track.

โ–บ Follow Taylor Alison Swift: tube.matrix.rocks/c/taylor_swiโ€ฆ taylor_swift@tube.matrix.rocks
โ–บ Subscribe to the official Taylor Swift channel: tube.matrix.rocks/c/taylor_swiโ€ฆ
โ–บ Watch more music videos with Taylor Swift: tube.matrix.rocks/c/taylor_swiโ€ฆ
โ–บ Listen to and watch Taylor Swift's lyric videos: tube.matrix.rocks/c/lyricvideo
โ–บ Listen to Taylor Swift Audio videos: tube.matrix.rocks/c/audiovideo
โ–บ Listen to Taylor Alison Swift's "Speak Now: (Original work)": tube.matrix.rocks/w/p/p841CgMeโ€ฆ
โ–บ Listen to Taylor Alison Swift's "Speak Now: (Taylor's Version)": tube.matrix.rocks/w/p/8HYvxXpQโ€ฆ
โ–บ Listen to Taylor Alison Swift's "Speak Now: World Tour Live (2011)": tube.matrix.rocks/w/hU8hbXcTnBโ€ฆ

๐ŸŽต L Y R I C S ๐ŸŽต:
Elevator buttons and morning air
Strangers' silence makes me wanna take the stairs
If you were here we'd laugh about their vacant stares
But right now my time is theirs

Seems like there's always someone who disapproves
They'll judge it like they know about me and you
And the verdict comes from those with nothing else to do
The jury's out, but my choice is you

So don't you worry your pretty, little mind
People throw rocks at things that shine
And life makes love look hard
The stakes are high, the water's rough
But this love is ours

You never know what people have up their sleeves
Ghosts from your past gonna jump out at me
Lurking in the shadows with their lip gloss smiles
But I don't care 'cause right now you're mine

And you'll say
Don't you worry your pretty, little mind
People throw rocks at things that shine
And life makes love look hard
The stakes are high, the water's rough
But this love is ours

And it's not theirs to speculate
If it's wrong, and your hands are tough
But they are where mine belong, and
I'll fight their doubt and give you faith
With this song for you

'Cause I love the gap between your teeth
And I love the riddles that you speak
And any snide remarks from my father
About your tattoos will be ignored
'Cause my heart is yours

So don't you worry your pretty, little mind
People throw rocks at things that shine
And life makes love look hard

And don't you worry your pretty, little mind
People throw rocks at things that shine
But they can't take what's ours
They can't take what's ours

The stakes are high, the water's rough
But this love is ours

Album Artist: Taylor Swift
Album(s): Speak Now (Deluxe Package)
Written by: Taylor Swift
Music genre(s): Country, Pop
Released: 2010
Decade for first release: #2010sMusic

#taylorSwift #speakNow #ours #country #pop #2010sMusic #loveSongs #femaleMusician #femaleSinger #officialVideo

This entry was edited (1 week ago)

SANTร‰ MENTALE EN PRISON : SON CONJOINT EST INCARCร‰Rร‰, ELLE RACONTE SON QUOTIDIEN BRISร‰ : ยซ BEAUCOUP DE GENS QUE JE CROYAIS รŠTRE DES AMIS Mโ€™ONT TOURNร‰ LE DOS ยป
antidotmedia.noblogs.org/post/โ€ฆ

"PSYCHOLOGIES Article de presse gratuit disponible Extrait Un proche derriรจre les barreaux, et la vie bascule. Regard des autres qui

About 1,000 people at the ICE Out of Dublin rally today in Dublin, CA. We're organizing to make sure no ICE jail opens in NorCal.

So far, the Bay Area has seen less ICE activity in part because there's no ICE jail in Northern California - the community organized to shut down other ones in previous years. Let's keep it that way.

The focus of the effort is a former federal prison in Dublin which ICE has signaled interest in using. At today's rally, the call to action was to make sure that it does not reopen, and instead that it be demolished and the site used for other purposes.

Located on the east side of Dublin, this facility is next to a neighborhood of new townhouses and apartments where most residents are recent Asian American immigrants. Given ICE's record of going after people near their jails to save time, this would be a huge threat to the community.

Write your elected officials - actionnetwork.org/petitions/ICโ€ฆ

Online organizing call on July 30: bit.ly/dublincommunitycall

1/

in reply to Alfred Twu

Berkeley Councilmember Igor Tregub was there as well, and a staff member from Berkeley
Mayor Adena Ishii's office spoke on the Mayor's behalf.

Yeon Park, president of the Alameda Labor Council and SEIU member, spoke about how unions are protecting the community. The threat of ICE is being used by bosses to make workers fear speaking out against labor law violations, making wages and working conditions worse for all. Labor fights back!

Press coverage of today's event. sfchronicle.com/bayarea/articlโ€ฆ

PFLP: The EU is Complicit in the Crime of Starvation Against our People in Gaza


The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine warns of an imminent humanitarian catastrophe in the coming hours, during which we may witness mass deaths among the most vulnerable groups, especially children, the sick, and the elderly.

This is in light of the dangerous deterioration of the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip, as a result of the escalating aggression and the continued systematic starvation policy practiced by the Zionist occupation, amid American partnership, international silence, and blatant complicity on the part of the European Union.

We hold the European Union politically and morally responsible for the worsening famine, as it is a partner in the crime of starvation perpetrated against our people through its inaction and providing diplomatic cover for the occupation.

We call on the countries of the European Union to stop their policy of camouflage and manipulation of public opinion, and to abandon their blatant bias toward the occupation. Despite escalating warnings about the threat of famine and the use of food as a weapon against more than two million besieged Palestinians, the European Union has chosen to cover up the occupationโ€™s crimes through false diplomatic promises that have not translated into any tangible steps.

The recent bargaining between some EU countries and the occupationโ€™s foreign minister clearly reflects the EUโ€™s policy of deception and complicity. We call on international and human rights organizations to intensify pressure on the European Union and the international community to shoulder their moral and humanitarian responsibilities, abandon complicity and silence, and seriously apply pressure on the occupation to halt the systematic starvation of our people.

Our steadfast people in Gaza do not need empty rhetoric, but rather bold political positions that halt the war of comprehensive extermination, foremost among which is the immediate lifting of the blockade and holding the occupation accountable for its crimes against humanity.

Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
Central Media Department
July 18 2025

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=โ€ฆ

#alAqsaFlood #gaza #palestine #pflp #resistance #starvation #westAsia

PFLP: The EU is Complicit in the Crime of Starvation Against our People in Gaza
abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/204โ€ฆ

"The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine warns of an imminent humanitarian catastrophe in the coming hours, during which we may witness mass deaths among the most vulnerable groups,โ€ฆ"

I got caught cheating on my wife with the Head of HR at a Coldplay concert. It's something that should not happen to people like me.

But through adversity comes a moment of challenge. What did this teach me? What lessons can you take away from a moment in the public eye like this?

Here's what getting put on the kisscam taught me about B2B sales.

This entry was edited (2 weeks ago)

Gaza Resistance Releases Footage of Operations in Jabalia, Shujaiyya


The al-Qassam Brigades, Hamasโ€™ armed wing, shared footage on Saturday of their attacks on Zionist occupation forces and military vehicles in Jabalia, located in northern Gaza, explaining that this operation falls under their ongoing โ€œDavidโ€™s Stonesโ€ campaign.

In a separate statement, the al-Qassam Brigades reported that its fighters, upon returning from combat, confirmed the targeting of an Israeli military D9 bulldozer with a high-explosive landmine near the Erbakan school in Jabalia on July 14, 2025.

On July 16, the al-Qassam fighters targeted a Merkava tank with a high-explosive landmine near the Namaa Club in Jabalia, and in the same area, they struck another tank using an al-Yassin 105 shell.

Al-Quds Brigades destroy Zionist vehicle


On its part, the al-Quds Brigades released footage showing the destruction of a Zionist military vehicle using a high-explosive bomb in the eastern al-Shujaiyya neighborhood in Gaza City.

In Khan Younis, fighters from the al-Quds Brigades successfully targeted a military bulldozer with a side-placed explosive in the Abu Hadaf area, northeast of the city.

Also in Khan Younis, fighters from the al-Aqsa Martyrsโ€™ Brigades confirmed upon returning from the frontlines that they had destroyed a military vehicle by detonating a pre-planted explosive near Street 5 in the northern part of the city on July 12, 2025.

Abu Obeida sends a stern warning to the occupation


In this context, the al-Qassam Brigades spokesperson Abu Obeida stated in a video address on Friday that the Palestinian Resistanceโ€™s current strategy focuses on inflicting heavy casualties on the enemy while actively pursuing the capture of Zionist soldiers.

Abu Obeida noted that al-Qassamโ€™s fighters โ€œare surprising the enemy with new tactics and methods, having learned lessons from the longest war and confrontation in the history of the Palestinian people,โ€

He cautioned the Zionist government that persisting with the conflict would mean resigning itself to a continued stream of fallen soldiers and officers returning in coffins.

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=โ€ฆ

#alAqsaFlood #gaza #hamas #palestine #pflp #pij #resistance #westAsia

Miro Collas reshared this.

Gaza Resistance Releases Footage of Operations in Jabalia, Shujaiyya
abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/204โ€ฆ

"The al-Qassam Brigades, Hamasโ€™ armed wing, shared footage on Saturday of their attacks on Zionist occupation forces and military vehicles in Jabalia, located in northern Gaza, explaining that this operationโ€ฆ"

Dignity as Leverage: A Counterframework for Palestinian Prisoner Negotiations


The U.S.-Israeli approach to negotiations with Palestinians remains fundamentally misaligned with justice and human dignity. While Israeli hostages are publicly mourned and framed as victims, Palestinian prisoners are treated as threats โ€” statistics to be managed, not lives to be honored.

In this asymmetrical terrain, U.S. mediation reinforces Israeli security narratives, ignoring systemic abuses: rearrests, torture, indefinite detention, and the criminalization of Palestinian grief and solidarity. Incarceration becomes not a tool of justice but of demographic warfare.

Yet even within this environment, Palestinian resistance reframes captivity โ€” not as defeat but as defiance. Through hunger strikes, courtroom refusal, and the ethic of sumoud (resilience), prisoners have transformed their bodies into frameworks of refusal. This is not passive survival โ€” it is political agency. As PFLPโ€™s prisoner Ahmad Saโ€™adat declares, โ€œOur imprisonment is not the end of our struggle โ€” we are the conscience of a people who refuse to be erased.โ€

This counterframework refuses to engage through the language of victimhood alone. It posits prisoners as political subjects โ€” architects of strategy, not merely its symbols. Their bodies become texts of resistance, declaring humanity through suffering wielded deliberately. The ethical foundation of this model begins not with what must be demanded, but what must be refused.

Refusal is not obstinacy โ€” it is strategy. The counterframework rejects hostage diplomacy staged as deterrent theater, denounces militarized humanitarianism where aid becomes surveillance, and repels the symbolic erasure encoded in practices like anonymous burial and re-arrest. These acts strip captives of memory and dignity in an effort to unwrite them from the historical record.

The refusal is deliberate, layered, and unyielding. Hamas and allied factions have responded to Trumpโ€™s proposed prisoner exchange and ceasefire deal with a spirit of negotiation โ€” but not submission. They understand the logic underpinning the dominant framework: Israel retains military leverage while discarding the burdens of governance; it aims to dismantle Hamas while presenting itself as a rational actor in a โ€œpeace process.โ€

The asymmetry is clear: the framework is not peace โ€” itโ€™s containment.

In submitting counterproposals, Hamas and allied factions reframed the negotiation. Their demands reject tactical pacification and assert structural conditions for any progress. Chief among these is the full withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza. Though the upfront demand for ending the war has been softened, the insistence on written guarantees โ€” specifically for troop retreat and uninterrupted ceasefire negotiations โ€” signals the emergence of a political safeguard.

The notes of Hamas and allied factions further call for international oversightโ€Šโ€”โ€Špreferably under UN administrationโ€Šโ€”โ€Šand removal of U.S.-Israeli control over aid and surveillance. Hamas and its allies understand the risks of leaving mediation tools in the hands of those invested in their containment. The counterframework demands mediation not as diplomatic theater, but as structural protection.

These positions reorient the entire frame of the negotiation. The factions are no longer reacting to Israeli terms โ€” theyโ€™re building a system where justice isnโ€™t deferred to humanitarian appeals but embedded in strategic architecture.
U.S. Framework vs. Palestinian Counterframework: How oppression tries to outlast resistance
Palestinian factions, far from being reactive, now hold key cards:

โ€“ Operational Leverage: Remaining Israeli captives are not just bargaining chips โ€” they are Israelโ€™s strongest incentive to negotiate. The factions control the timeline and rhythm.

โ€“ Political Unity: A unified front among factions strengthens their legitimacy, undercutting narratives of fragmentation and allowing them to act with moral coherence.

โ€“ Narrative Authority: By framing the negotiation as one centered on sovereignty, protection, and justice โ€” not mere exchange โ€” they control the moral terrain.

This leverage does not simply stall Israeli ambition โ€” it redefines the negotiation itself.

As one analyst recently put it, โ€œHamas isnโ€™t playing with borrowed cards โ€” itโ€™s designing its own deck.โ€ And as Fatehโ€™s prisoner Marwan Barghouti stated, โ€œResistance is a holy right for the Palestinian people to face the Israeli occupation. Nobody should forget that the Palestinian people negotiated for 10 years and accepted difficult and humiliating agreements, and in the end didnโ€™t get anything except authority over the people, and no authority over land, or sovereignty.โ€ Here, he is not just reflecting on past failures, but insisting that dignity and sovereignty must anchor any negotiation and reframing what legitimacy looks like.

If Netanyahu responds true to form, several patterns will likely emerge:

โ€“ Delay Tactics: Publicly, negotiations will slow under the guise of security reviews and logistical constraints โ€” buys time, hopes to fracture Palestinian unity.

โ€“ Defiance Masked by Concession: Netanyahu may appear hawkish to domestic audiences while quietly engaging mediators to preserve diplomatic cover.

โ€“ Displacement of Blame: Heโ€™ll lean on U.S. mediation to obscure accountability, portraying Israeli rigidity as consequence of โ€œexternal constraints.โ€

But the terrain has shifted. Public sympathy, diplomatic fatigue, and the irreducibility of Palestinian refusal may disrupt his playbook.

If Netanyahu overplays his hand, dragging negotiations without movement, he risks pushing factions from tactical flexibility to strategic closure, i.e., the withdrawal of participation as a strategic response to a framework that undermines justice from the start.

The counterframework insisted upon by Hamas and allied factions isnโ€™t designed to win negotiations โ€” itโ€™s meant to transcend them. Its logic is liberatory, not procedural. Ceasefires must not merely pause violence โ€” they must erode the legitimacy of systems that reproduce it.

This means restoration of collective dignity as the barometer of success โ€” not appeasement metrics, and the insistence on international oversight divorced from occupation logics and recognition of Palestinians as strategic participants in shaping political outcomes.

To the extent that prisoner exchanges and ceasefires are real, they must reflect the architecture built by prisoners themselves โ€” the cost borne, the unity forged, the refusals sustained.

Resistance, in this frame, is not reactive. It is architectural.

_________________
Rima Najjar is a Palestinian whose fatherโ€™s side of the family comes from the forcibly depopulated village of Lifta on the western outskirts of Jerusalem and whose motherโ€™s side of the family is from Ijzim, south of Haifa. She is an activist, researcher, and retired professor of English literature, Al-Quds University, occupied West Bank.

source: Samidoun

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=โ€ฆ

#gaza #palestine #repression #resistance #westAsia

Dignity as Leverage: A Counterframework for Palestinian Prisoner Negotiations
abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/204โ€ฆ

"The U.S.-Israeli approach to negotiations with Palestinians remains fundamentally misaligned with justice and human dignity. While Israeli hostages are publicly mourned and framed as victims, Palestinian prisoners are treated asโ€ฆ"

Russian Armed Forces deliver devastating blow to Ukrainian military infrastructure eu.eot.su/2025/07/19/russian-aโ€ฆ

Settler Colonialism in Light of F. Fanon: Algeria Yesterday, Kanaky Todayโ€ฆ (Part 2)


Resistance by the colonized

The total violence of colonization in Algeria, Palestine, or Kanaky is therefore physical and symbolic, economic and cultural, political and social, religious and civil. It is literally a matter of substituting one society for another, replacing one people with another, destroying a history to justify an illegitimate present. The victims of these colonizations therefore have only one choice: to resist or disappear. To date, there is no example in human history of a people choosing to disappear. Resistance is inevitable and takes many different and evolving forms.

Fanon brilliantly describes the changing forms of resistance as colonial rule takes hold over the colonized society. The first forms of resistance are logically dependent on the social and economic structures that existed before colonization. They are therefore agrarian and tribal, communal and local, insurrectionary and guerrilla in nature. Two eras of human history clash militarily, two models of collective identity [tribal and tribal confederation for the colonized, nation-state for the colonizers], two types of military technology, two conceptions of war. Despite the imbalance of forces, this primary resistance of a society that refuses to disappear and that focuses all its energies on survival will have a lasting impact on colonized peoples. Admittedly, the military superiority of the colonizer led to the imposition of colonization, but the sense of dignity became deeply rooted and was passed down from generation to generation.

In Algeria, as in Kanaky, the transmission of the history of resistance to conquest and then colonization was the subjective foundation on which subsequent resumptions of the anti-colonial struggle were built. Memory is thus an important form of resistance, explains Frantz Fanon: โ€œThe memory of the anti-colonial period remains vivid in the villages. Women still whisper in their childrenโ€™s ears the songs that accompanied the warriors who resisted the conquest. At the age of 12 or 13, the young villagers know the names of the old people who took part in the last uprising, and the dreams in the douars [โ€ฆ are] dreams of identification with this or that fighter, whose heroic death still provokes abundant tears today[23] . The book by Alban Bensa, Kacuรฉ Yvon Goromoedo, and Adrian Muckle, Les Sanglots de lโ€™aigle pรชcheur. Nouvelle-Calรฉdonie : La guerre Kanak de 1917 (The Sobs of the Fisher Eagle: New Caledonia: The Kanak War of 1917), highlights the same mobilization of transmission and memory as a tool of resistance. โ€œDefeated by arms, decimated, scattered, and yet still there, they entrusted words and writing with the task of preserving the memory of that time,โ€ states the back cover[24] . In Algeria, as in Kanaky, storytelling, song, poetry, and legends were the springs of survival in the face of the steamroller of colonization.

Another transformation of resistance described by Fanon concerns the dimensions of identity. These are the site of a dual movement: rooting and broadening. Rooting, first of all, because the colonized perceive the danger of disappearance and react by immersing themselves totally in everything that makes up their historical personality, their cultural specificity, their social, religious, and civilizational differences. Almost instinctively, they retreat into their values, their ancestors, their religion, etc., in order to maintain their existence in the face of multifaceted genocide. For women, wearing the veil becomes an act of resistance, as does fleeing all contact with the colonizer and their institutions, returning to the djemaas[25] , and even religiosity itself. Explaining the colonizerโ€™s determination to unveil Algerian women, Fanon explains: โ€œThe [colonial] administration states: โ€˜If we want to strike Algerian society at its core, in its capacity for resistance, we must first conquer the women; we must seek them out behind the veil where they hide and in the houses where men hide them[26] .โ€

The same logic of anchoring oneself in custom and tradition as a form of resistance and survival can be found today in the functioning of the FLNKS[27] (Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front), for example. To the great incomprehension of many Western activists, the appointment of delegates to various bodies raises, among other things, the question of respect for custom. Anthropologist Isabelle Leblic recalls that during a mini-congress in the central-southern region, the delegates responsible for defining the criteria for the appointment of candidates for regional elections settled on the following choice: โ€œbeing an active activist, having a good knowledge of custom and being well integrated into it, being able to defend the positions of the FLNKS, being representative of oneโ€™s region, and respecting the non-accumulation of mandates.โ€ Describing the start of various meetings, she explains the unavoidable nature of the moment of โ€˜customโ€™: โ€œIt is custom, the moment of custom. In the empty space in the middle of our circle, there were piles of cigarettes, โ€œtabacs-bรขtons ,โ€ sticks of tobacco, raw and compact, a few CFP franc notes, and above all manus, those long, thin pieces of cloth that symbolize the bonds between human beings. All these objects were brought by each of us. They are a sign of the respect we owe to each other and to this land, the land of the valley that welcomes us[28] .

This first change in identity, that of putting down roots, was followed by a second, that of broadening oneโ€™s image of oneself and the group to which one belongs. Very quickly, the colonized in a settlement colonization became aware of the impossibility of lasting resistance on the basis of the tribe or even the tribal confederation. Faced with the colonizer, the process of national identification, which already existed to varying degrees depending on the country, inevitably accelerated. Frantz Fanon summarizes the process as follows: โ€œThe mobilization of the masses [โ€ฆ] introduces into each consciousness the notion of a common cause, a national destiny, a collective history.โ€ Similarly, in her description of the use of custom in the political life of the FLNKS, Isabelle Leblic mentions a difference with the mobilization of the same custom in everyday life: โ€œThe only notable difference between the two types of gathering lies in the fact that for political gatherings, the โ€˜customs of arrivalโ€™ most often end with the raising of the Kanaky flag[30] . Forms of resistance thus shift from the tribe to nationality while remaining rooted in specific popular history. The question of mobilizing armed struggle stems both from the realization that so-called โ€œpeacefulโ€ struggle is ineffective and from the balance of power.

We emphasize these changes in identity and the work of transmitting resistance, because they constitute a subjective heritage on which subsequent resistance movements are based. They make the latter inevitable. There is no third alternative to settler colonization: either colonialism is destroyed, or the colonized people disappear. The contradiction is entirely antagonistic, as Frantz Fanon concluded: โ€ On the level of reasoning, the Manichaeism of the colonizer produces a Manichaeism of the colonized. The theory of the โ€˜absolutely evil nativeโ€™ is matched by the theory of the โ€˜absolutely evil colonizer. โ€œThe appearance of the colonizer signified syncretically the death of indigenous society, cultural lethargy, and the petrification of individuals. For the colonized, life can only arise from the decomposing corpse of the colonizer[31] .โ€

The peasantry as centrality

The countryside and villages are the essential location for the processes described above. Essentially agrarian and communal societies, countries that have been and/or are victims of settlement colonization feel its destructive impact first in the countryside, where the vast majority of the population lives. What Algerian geographer Djilali Sari called โ€œthe dispossession of the fellah[32] โ€ and Algerian filmmaker Lamine Merbah called โ€œthe uprooted[33] ,โ€ takes the form of massive land theft through colonization and, with it, the destruction of the material foundations of peasant collective life. In Algeria, as in Kanaky, the colonial question begins with the question of land. Frantz Fanon concludes that the peasantry plays a decisive role in the anti-colonial struggle, that it is at its core. โ€œIt is clear that, in colonial countries, only the peasantry is revolutionary. They have nothing to lose and everything to gain[34] ,โ€œ explains Fanon, describing the attitude of these rural masses towards colonization: โ€The rural masses have never ceased to pose the problem of their liberation in terms of violence, of land to be taken back from foreigners, of national struggle, of armed insurrection. Itโ€™s all very simple[35] .โ€

In Kanaky, too, the peasantry is the primary social base of the independence movement. Nearly 70% of the countryโ€™s Melanesian population lives in rural areas. Colonial land theft has led to a steady decline in Kanak subsistence agriculture in the national agricultural production. โ€œMore than 80% of New Caledoniaโ€™s agricultural production is carried out by European farmers located in the south of the archipelago, in the peri-urban โ€˜green beltโ€™ of Noumรฉa,โ€ summarized sociologist Marcel Djama in 1999. One of the colors of the Kanak flag, green, symbolizes the rural roots of the independence movement. When it was created in 1984, the FLNKS explained the presence of green on the national flag as follows: โ€œIt is the color of the plant kingdom and living waters. It represents โ€˜green pastures,โ€™ food, the peasantry, and the rural world. It is the color of the awakening of nature, the awakening of life, of hope, of remedies. It is the emblem of salvation[37] .โ€

It is also the peasant origin of the urban โ€œlumpen proletariatโ€ that led Frantz Fanon to consider it as having significant revolutionary potential, making it the โ€œurban spearheadโ€ of the struggle. These peasants, driven from their land, accumulate in the urban peripheries without being able to find any professional employment due to their dependence on colonial capitalism. Agricultural overpopulation did not transform itself en masse into a proletariat, but into a โ€œlumpenproletariatโ€: โ€œThe men whom the growing rural population and colonial expropriation have driven from their family lands wander tirelessly around the various cities, hoping that one day they will be allowed to enter. It is in this mass, in this people of the slums, within the lumpenproletariat, that the insurrection will find its urban spearhead. The lumpenproletariat is one of the most spontaneous and radical revolutionary forces of a colonized people[38] .

The situation is not much different in contemporary Kanaky. The rural exodus to Noumรฉa has led to the accumulation of a poor Kanak population, and among them a lumpenproletariat. Thousands of Kanak inhabitants of Noumรฉa now live in shacks on public land in the capital. These โ€œsquattersโ€ survive by scavenging and subsistence farming. Unsurprisingly, these Noumรฉa โ€˜squatsโ€™ were important areas of mobilization during the uprising that shook Kanaky from May 2024 onwards. The board of directors of the Oceanist Society described the situation during these popular revolts as follows: โ€ Many of those now described as rioters come from marginalized and excluded populations composed mainly of Kanaks and other Oceanic peoples. These poor populations, which also include a lumpen proletariat, emerged with the massive urbanization of Greater Noumรฉa over the last thirty years. They are the forgotten and shipwrecked victims of the Matignon and Noumรฉa agreements. How many of them would have stayed, or even returned, to their villages if they had been able to find the means to live there in decent conditions? They too must now be considered full citizens[39] .โ€

This interpretation of the class structure of the settlement colonies is, of course, a political stance against a dogmatic interpretation of Marxism that seeks to find the social base and offensive base of the national liberation struggle in an embryonic proletariat. Fanon even considers that this proletariat, which is weakly developed due to the very nature of colonial capitalism, has a social position that is incomparable to that of other components of the colonized people: โ€œIn colonial territories, the proletariat is the core of the colonized people most favored by the colonial regime. The embryonic proletariat in the cities is relatively privileged. In capitalist countries, the proletariat has nothing to lose; it is the class that has everything to gain. In colonial countries, the proletariat has everything to lose. It represents the fraction of the colonized people that is necessary and irreplaceable for the smooth running of the colonial machine[40] .โ€

Some have interpreted Fanonโ€™s analysis as a total rejection of the Marxist approach, whereas his entire argument aims to emphasize the importance of taking into account the specificities of colonial capitalism [dependent and extroverted to serve the interests of the metropolitan economy] in order to understand colonization by settlement. Moreover, Fanon is not the only thinker on national liberation to have reached this conclusion. Amilcar Cabral, for example, believed that he had initially dogmatically applied European models, which led the independence movement to a dramatic impasse. This courageous self-criticism led him, like Fanon, to advocate a central role for the peasantry in the national liberation struggle: โ€œI cannot claim to organize a party, or a struggle based on my ideas. I must do so based on the concrete reality of the country. [|โ€ฆ] At the beginning of our struggle, for example, we were convinced that if we managed to mobilize the workers of Bissau, Bolama, and Bafata to go on strike and demonstrate in the streets, the Portuguese would change and give us independence. That was wrong. First of all, in our country, wage workers are not as powerful as in other countries. From an economic point of view, salaried workers are not a sufficient force; in fact, in our country, the great economic force lies in the countryside[41] .

The ambiguities and contradictions of the petty bourgeoisie

Fanon died too soon to witness the independence of Algeria, for which he fought so hard. However, he did witness the first African national independence movements and with them the rise of the national petty bourgeoisie, which was often at the head of the independence organizations. As roving ambassador for the Provisional Government of the Algerian Republic (GPRA) for Africa from the spring of 1960, he had the opportunity to observe at close quarters the first steps of independence in countries ranging from Congo to Senegal, Liberia to Guinea, and Mali to Ghana. Bitterly, he noted the complicity of certain African countries in the isolation and assassination of Lumumba: โ€œThe great success of Africaโ€™s enemies is to have compromised Africans themselves. It is true that these Africans had a direct interest in Lumumbaโ€™s murder. They were puppet heads of government, within a puppet independence, confronted day after day with massive opposition from their peoples[42] . โ€œ

For Fanon, African complicity in the Congolese tragedy confirmed his observations in several African countries that independence had been confiscated by the establishment of a new age of colonialism, indirect colonialism, colonialism through the mediation of African elites who became managers of the interests of the former colonizer, neocolonialism. The expectations and hopes of the people invested in independence began to be disappointed from the very first steps of the new governments: โ€œDiscontented workers are subjected to repression as ruthless as that of the colonial periods. Trade unions and political parties are confined to quasi-clandestinity. The people, the people who had given everything in the difficult hours of the national liberation struggle, are now wondering, with empty hands and empty stomachs, how real their victory really is[43] . โ€œ

To understand the sequence of independence, it is necessary to distinguish, as we have said before, between independence and decolonization. It was precisely to avoid genuine decolonization that certain African independence movements were abruptly promoted after 1956 by the French colonizer. A decade earlier, at the Brazzaville Conference in February 1944, the latter had stated that โ€œthe ends of the civilizing work accomplished by France in the colonies rule out any idea of autonomy, any possibility of evolution outside the French Empire; the eventual, even distant, establishment of self-government in the colonies is to be ruled out.โ€ In an attempt to eliminate any hope of independence, massive repression followed. This was the case on May 8, 1945, in Algeria, in Vietnam in September 1945, and in Cameroon in 1947. A little over a decade later, it was Paris that defended the idea of autonomy from 1956 and then independence from 1958 for the colonies of French West Africa (AOF) and French Equatorial Africa (AEF). Between these two historical periods came the victory of the Vietnamese independence movement at Dien Ben Phu, the outbreak of armed struggle in Algeria and Cameroon, the Bandung Conference, and the Anglo-French-Israeli defeat in Egypt during the nationalization of the Suez Canal. Fear of the radicalization of national liberation struggles led the colonizers to change tactics in order to maintain their hold and promote formal independence, constrained by economic and military agreements that reproduced colonial dependence under a new guise.

Describing these โ€œpuppetโ€ independences, Fanon compared them as early as 1958 to real independence, that is, independence that goes as far as true decolonization: โ€œTrue liberation is not this pseudo-independence where ministers with limited responsibility coexist with an economy dominated by the colonial pact. Liberation is the death of the colonial system, from the preeminence of the language of the oppressor and departmentalization to the customs union that in reality keeps the colonized in the grip of colonialist culture, fashion, and images[45] . Note the reference to โ€œdepartmentalization,โ€ indicating that Fanon was not fooled by the new colonial discourse of 1946 on the โ€œfour old coloniesโ€ of Guadeloupe, Martinique, Rรฉunion, and French Guiana, which would later be expanded to include Kanaky and Polynesia. He, who was so inspired by the work of Cรฉsaire, distinguished himself from him by rejecting the โ€œrealismโ€ that led the latter to accept the logic of departmentalization in place of the goal of national independence.

Three years later, in his masterpiece, The Wretched of the Earth, Fanon offers us a veritable autopsy of these โ€œpuppetโ€ independences. He defined the class nature of the new leaders of these โ€œpuppetโ€ states: โ€œThe national bourgeoisie that takes power at the end of the colonial regime [โ€ฆ] has the psychology of businessmen, not captains of industry. And it is quite true that the rapacity of the colonists and the embargo system set up by colonialism left them little choice[46] .He describes the type of economy that such a class implements once in power: โ€œThe national economy of the independence period is not reoriented. It is still about harvesting peanuts, harvesting cocoa, harvesting olives. [โ€ฆ] No industry is established in the country. We continue to ship raw materials, we continue to be Europeโ€™s small farmers, specialists in raw products[47] .โ€œ He characterizes the social and political function of the new leaders politically, namely to serve as intermediaries and business agents: โ€The national bourgeoisie has discovered its historic mission to serve as an intermediary. As we can see, it is not a vocation to transform the nation, but prosaically to serve as a transmission belt for a capitalism cornered into camouflage and now adorned with the mask of neocolonialism. The national bourgeoisie will revel, without complex and with dignity, in the role of business agent for the Western bourgeoisie[48] .โ€

The concrete reality has proved Fanon right in many African countries. Independence has often been a rush to grab the colonistsโ€™ assets. Wealth has accumulated in a matter of months. It has then been considerably increased by accumulation in the shadow of the state apparatus. In short, the process of crystallization of social classes, previously all suppressed by colonialism, suddenly accelerated, giving rise to a comprador bourgeoisie and a class of large landowners. Unlike Fanon, we characterize the social strata installed in power by the colonizer as predominantly petty bourgeoisie and, at best, middle bourgeoisie for landowners. The process of neo-colonization is, in our view, precisely constituted by the transformation of these social strata into comprador social classes [commercial and agrarian].

Fanon draws political conclusions from this process by warning about the nature of nationalist organizations, their programs, and their social bases. He emphasizes that there is no possibility of independent capitalism for the former colonies. The petty bourgeoisie engaged in the national liberation struggle must choose between betraying their ideals and betraying their class interests: โ€œIn an underdeveloped country, an authentic national bourgeoisie must make it its imperative duty to betray the vocation to which it was destined, to put itself at the school of the people, that is, to place at the disposal of the people the intellectual and technical capital it wrested during its passage through the colonial universities[49] . Such โ€œbetrayalโ€ does not happen spontaneously. It can only be the result of a democratic political organization with a program and a social base in the popular classes [peasantry and working class] and establishing grassroots control over its leaders.

Amilcar Cabral came to the same conclusion in his thesis on the โ€œsuicide of the petty bourgeoisieโ€ presented at the Tricontinental Conference in Havana in 1966: โ€ In order not to betray its objectives, the petty bourgeoisie has only one path: to strengthen its revolutionary consciousness, repudiate attempts at gentrification and the natural solicitations of its class mentality, identify with the working classes, and not oppose the development of the revolutionary process. This means that in order to fulfill its role in the national liberation struggle, the revolutionary petty bourgeoisie must be capable of committing class suicide in order to be reborn as revolutionary workers, fully identified with the deepest aspirations of the people to whom they belong. This alternativeโ€”betraying the revolution or committing class suicideโ€”is the choice facing the petty bourgeoisie in the general context of national liberation

[50]. The colonizer does not remain inactive in the face of this choice. As independence approaches, it multiplies openings, bureaucratic bodies, commissions, sinecures, etc., with the aim of bureaucratizing the independence political organizations and orienting them toward neocolonialism.

In Kanaky today, there is a juxtaposition of the institutionalization and bureaucratization of a significant section of the petty bourgeoisie and the radicalization of the popular movement. The lessons of Fanon and Cabral sound like a warning and a call for vigilance.

The centenary of the birth of Lumumba, Malcolm, Fanon, and Cabral comes at a time when the anti-colonial struggle is resurgent [as evidenced by Franceโ€™s troubles in West Africa and the October 7 operation in Palestine] and imperialist aggression is on the rise, with wars breaking out in Iraq, Syria, Sudan, Libya, and elsewhere. In this context, Fanonโ€™s message is marked by an undeniable modernity. Whether on the nature of colonial oppression, its links with capitalism and imperialism, the resistance it inevitably provokes, the attitude of different classes and social strata towards it, the link between independence and decolonization, that between decolonization and socialism, the possible dead ends and contradictions of national liberation struggles, etc., Fanon remains essential reading for anyone who wants to dismantle the colonial system that persists by constantly donning new masks. As long as our world remains structured around a dominant imperialist center and dominated peripheries, Fanon, Cabral, Malcolm, and Lumumba will remain relevant.

Said Bouamama is a French Algerian sociologist and activist who is the author of over a dozen books, his latest, Manual on Immigration (2021), For a Revolutionary Panafricanism (2023) Strategic Manual on Palestine and the Middle East (2024) among others.

[1] Born in Martinique, F Fanon was legally French by birth. By joining the FLN, he symbolically and politically rejected this nationality of birth. In his writings, he expresses himself as an Algerian. For example, in Year V of the Algerian Revolution, he writes: โ€œWhat we Algerians want,โ€ โ€œour struggle,โ€ โ€œour cause,โ€ and โ€œour Revolution.โ€ Having died before independence, he was never officially granted Algerian nationality. However, he was a representative of the Provisional Government of the Algerian Republic (GPRA), which indicates that he was considered Algerian by the authorities of the new state.

[2] Aimรฉ Cรฉsaire, Discours sur le colonialisme, Paris, Prรฉsence africaine, 2004, p. 9.

[3] Jean-Paul Sartre, โ€œLe colonialisme est un systรจme,โ€ speech at a meeting โ€œfor peace in Algeria,โ€ Les temps modernes, no. 123, March-April 1956.

[4] Amilcar Cabral, Foundations and Objectives of National Liberation and Social Structures, Speech at the First Conference of Solidarity with the Peoples of Africa, Asia, and Latin America, Havana, January 3โ€“12, 1966, in Unitรฉ et Lutte, Maspero, Paris, 1980, p. 161.

[5] Samir Amin, Unequal Development: An Essay on the Social Formations of Peripheral Capitalism, Minuit, Paris, 1973.

[6] Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth, in ล’uvres, La Dรฉcouverte, Paris, 2011, p. 455.

[7] Amilcar Cabral, Fondements et objectifs de la libรฉration nationale et structures sociales, op. cit., p. 159.

[8] Ibid., p. 159.

[9] Ali Moussa Iye and Khadija Tourรฉ (eds.), Histoire de lโ€™humanitรฉ, volume 6, UNESCO, Paris, 2008, p. 1388.

[10] Melanesia includes Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Kanaky, and the Fiji Islands. The term Kanak refers to the Melanesian population of Kanaky.

[11] Jean-Louis Rallu, La population de la Nouvelle-Calรฉdonie, Revue Population, 1985, no. 4-5, p. 725.

[12] Kamel Kateb, Europรฉens, ยซ indigรจnes ยป et juifs en Algรฉrie (1830-1962). Reprรฉsentations et rรฉalitรฉs des populations, INED, Paris, 2002, pp. 16 and 47.

[13] Djilali Sari, Le dรฉsastre dรฉmographique, SNED, Algiers, 1982, p. 130.

[14] Jean Guiart, Bantoustans en Nouvelle-Calรฉdonie, Droit et Libertรฉ, no. 371, July-August 1978, p. 14.

[15] Alain Ruscio, La premiรจre guerre dโ€™Algรฉrie. Une histoire de conquรชte et de rรฉsistance, La Dรฉcouverte, Paris, 2024, p. 394.

[16] Charles-Andrรฉ Julien, Histoire de lโ€™Algรฉrie contemporaine, volume 1, PUF, Paris, 1964, p. 250.

[17] Aimรฉ Cรฉsaire, Discours sur le colonialisme, Prรฉsence Africaine, Paris, (1955) 2004, pp. 13-14.

[18] Frantz Fanon, Why We Use Violence, Speech given at the Accra Conference, April 1960, in Year V of the Algerian Revolution, Complete Works, op. cit., pp. 413 and 418.

[19] Nelson Mandela, Long Walk to Freedom, Fayard, Paris, 1996, p. 647.

source: Saรฏd Bouamamaโ€™s blog

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#africa #Decolonization #fanon #Kanaky #resistance #settlerColonialism

Settler Colonialism in Light of F. Fanon: Algeria Yesterday, Kanaky Todayโ€ฆ (Part 2)
abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/204โ€ฆ

"Resistance by the colonized The total violence of colonization in Algeria, Palestine, or Kanaky is therefore physical and symbolic, economic and cultural, political and social, religious and civil. It isโ€ฆ"

PRWC ยป The US-Marcos Regimeโ€™s Continuing Violence


After three years of bloody rule, the Marcos regime is now further intensifying its fascist repression of the Filipino people. Bloodshed and increasing cases of human rights violations in the name of counterinsurgency continue. It is obsessed with destroying the Filipino peopleโ€™s patriotic and democratic aspirations and struggles, and ending their revolutionary resistance. It serves the interests of foreign monopoly capitalists, big comprador bourgeois, landlords, and bureaucrat capitalists.

To spotlight the intensity and extent of the regimeโ€™s brutality and echo the peopleโ€™s cry for justice, Ang Bayan (AB) issues this report highlighting the long trail of abuses and human rights violations committed by Marcosโ€™s armed minions in the last six months (January to June of this year). The report involves fascist personnel of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), the Philippine National Police (PNP), paramilitaries, and other armed agents of the reactionary state.

This report is based on information AB has reported, gathered, and analyzed.

Because the regimeโ€™s intensified repression made it more difficult to send reports, many cases in the countryside went unrecorded. The report also does not include many cases of human rights violations against the Moro people which have not been publicized.

AB uses international standards in estimating the number of victims of evacuation and militarization, and in the number of affected children.

Policy of repression


The Marcos regimeโ€™s main policy enforced in the first half of 2025 is the National Action Plan for Unity, Peace, and Development (NAP-UPD) 2025-2028 in the Philippines. This policy became the framework for intensified political repression against the Filipino masses. The regime began preparing this refurbished policy last year.

The NAP-UPD was officially approved through Memorandum Circular No. 83, series of 2025, issued by the Office of the President. The memorandum ordered all government agencies to implement the plan as part of the โ€œwhole-of-nationโ€ and โ€œwhole-of-societyโ€ approach to โ€œresolving problems caused by the revolutionary movement.โ€ The NAP-UPD is based on the National Security Policy 2023-2028 and the Philippine Development Plan 2023-2028.

This policy designates itself as a โ€œstrategic blueprintโ€ to destroy the Communist Party of the Philippines, the New Peopleโ€™s Army, and the National Democratic Front by 2028. The National Task Force-Elcac, established by the Duterte regime, is the main enforcer of the new policy.

In line with this policy, the AFP and PNP are waging a rampaging dirty all-out war against the Filipino people in the cities and the countryside. State fascist terrorism persists, along with continued subservience to US imperialism and suppression of patriotic and democratic forces.

Despite repeated claims by the US, the AFP, and Marcos himself regarding the supposed โ€œpivotโ€ of the countryโ€™s armed forces from โ€œinternal defenseโ€ to โ€œexternal defenseโ€ after having โ€œweakenedโ€ or โ€œdefeatedโ€ the NPA, the bulk of the AFP remains in the countryside and guerrilla fronts. They persistently claim that only seven weak guerrilla fronts remain, but thousands of military, police, and paramilitary forces remain focused on counterinsurgency.

Congruent with the NAP-UPD, Marcos continues to weaponize the Anti-Terrorism Law, now in its fifth year, and the Terrorism Financing Prevention and Suppression Act to harass and silence critics and those vocal against his regime, including ordinary citizens. The regime targets its so-called โ€œCPP-NPA-NDFP legal frontsโ€ to supposedly โ€œstop recruitment, cut off financial support, and counter propaganda.โ€ This policy systematically violates the rights of sectors to organize.

In the countryside, intensified militarization and occupation of communities continue through focused military operations (FMO) and occupation of villages in the guise of Retooled Community Support Program (RCSP). These operations mainly target civilian or unarmed peasant farmers for military violence and repression. Concurrent with these are indiscriminate aerial bombings, strafing, and shelling of farms and mountains which endanger civilians and destroy the environment.

Where military fascist terrorism have been most intense, large mining businesses, plantations, ecotourism projects, and other forms of plunder and community displacement soon follow. Military operations also serve to โ€œsecureโ€ certain areas for US and Philippine war games.

The NTF-Elcac relentlessly implements the โ€œreturn to the foldโ€ program and deception using fake amnesty offers in the countryside. This combines with campaigns of intimidation, forced โ€œsurrenderโ€ of civilians, and plunder of public funds. In April, the Marcos regime funded the creation of a โ€œformer rebelโ€ organization to use against the Filipino people.

As in the last three years in power, the Marcos regime wantonly commited violations of the rules of warโ€”such as deliberate killing of wounded combatants, murder of civilians in staged โ€œfake encounters,โ€ and infliction of suffering on entire communities during AFP combat operations.

Human rights violations


Ang Bayan records 180,074 victims of human rights violations by the US-Marcos regime from December 10, 2024, to June 30 (203 days). AB recorded 239 incidents of human rights violations nationwide.

There are, on average, three victims of political killings every month. There is also one victim of abduction and two victims of torture every month. In the past six months, seven people survived attempted killings by state forces.

As in previous reports, most of the victims are peasants (176,940), followed by children (2,273) and urban poor (2,237).

In the three years of the Marcos regime, AB has recorded a total of 3,321 cases, victimizing at least 688,313. Over the past three years, an average of 628 fell victims to human rights violations each day under the Marcos regime.

Extrajudicial killing, frustrated killing, and torture


At least 24 people fell victim of political killings nationwide in the past six months. Most incidents occurred at the height of focused military operations (FMO) and RCSP by soldiers and police in peasant and indigenous communities. Killings took place in Oriental Mindoro, Masbate, Negros Oriental and Occidental, Capiz, Samar, Northern Samar and Eastern Samar, Leyte, Agusan del Sur, Surigao del Sur, and Sarangani.

As in the past, the AFP claims having killed victims in โ€œencounters.โ€ To make them appear so, the corpses are dressed up, planted with firearms, ammunition, and other military items, then dumped in different locations. The AFP disseminates this false information despite strong denials from families, neighbors, and even local village council officials.

The victims include five hors de combat (fighters incapacitated by injury or illness), and non-combatants or retired members of the revolutionary movement. AFP executioners captured and deliberately killed them, instead of declaring them prisoners of war or charging them in court. The bodies also showed signs of torture.

Massacres. The report period recorded three cases of massacre: one involving an entire family, another involving three farmers, and the third involving the massacre of hors de combat.

In Agusan del Sur, 26th IB soldiers mercilessly massacred the Gomansil family at the banks of the Dayuman River, Barangay San Vicente (Balagnan), Esperanza on December 15, 2024. The executioners killed the couple Toto and Toni Gomansil and their daughter Celine. They accused them of having links to the NPA and the revolutionary movement in the province.

Before the crime, the Gomansil family even asked the soldiers stationed at a nearby detachment for permission to work at their farm. Despite their โ€œrequest,โ€ the soldiers followed them and tied up Toto and Toni. They subjected the couple to intense interrogation and repeatedly asked if there were NPA members in their community, which the couple denied. The soldiers also asked for Celineโ€™s husband, whom they accused of being an NPA fighter.

After this, the soldiers stabbed the couple to death. Celine managed to run after witnessing her parentsโ€™ killing but the soldiers swiftly shot her. The soldiers even violated and hacked Celineโ€™s remains into two.

In Northern Samar, 8th ID soldiers gunned down three farmers in Barangay Nagoocan, Catubig on June 8. The military portrays the three as among five people killed in their armed encounter with the NPA. The victims were identified as Noel Lebico Sr, Arnel Aquino, and Nonoy Norcio.

Lebico was a resident of Barangay Roxas in Catubig, Aquino came from Barangay Osmeรฑa in Palapag, and Norcio was from Barangay Luneta, Gamay. Their villages and towns of residence have been under de facto martial law since 2020. The victims have already been experiencing harassment and military abuses prior to the incident.

Earlier, the three refused to join the 8th IDโ€™s forced surrender program.

Killing of a minor. The 63rd IB killed 16-year-old Jayson Grafil Padullo by indiscriminate firing on June 15 at Sitio Bagong Barrio, Barangay Pinanag-an, Borongan City, Eastern Samar. Jaysonโ€™s fellow residents in Barangay Benowangan firmly testified that he was a civilian. According to them, he had just enrolled in Grade 7 and was set to attend classes that June.

The victim and another youth were at a field outside the sitio when soldiers conducting operations fired shots at them. Jayson died from gunshot wounds, while his companion managed to escape.

Killing of hors de combat. The AFP and the Marcos regime blatantly disregard the rules of war. Killings of hors de combat were recorded in the Negros Oriental and Occidental, and Leyte provinces.

In Negros Occidental, soldiers abducted and deliberately killed Nonoy Ponteras (Ka Jojo) and Marisa Pobresa (Ka Kim). On March 7 at 8 p.m., Crime Investigation and Detection Group of the Philippine National Police (PNP) operatives and Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) personnel abducted Ponteras and Pobresa from a house in Bacolod City. They were forced into van and taken to an unknown location, where they were ultimately killed.

Marcosโ€™ butchers brought the two bodies to Sitio Paraiso, Barangay Caduhaan, Cadiz City. The next day, local military spokespersons disseminated lies that the two died after 1 a.m. in a clash between the 79th IB and the NPA.

Ponteras was an NDF-Negros leading official and Pobresa was an NDF regional office administrator. Their responsibilities included consulting with workers, farmers, farm workers, the poor, and other oppressed sectors on the island to help them assert their concerns and advance their struggles.

In Leyte, the 93rd IB killed three unarmed, incapacitated NPA members on June 18 in Barangay Cogon, Carigara. Juanito Selleca Jr (Ka Tibor/Ka Rey) and Sadam Paclita (Ka Dimple) were recovering from ailments when soldiers attacked and shot them. Lino Delante (Ka Dodong), a medic caring for the patients, was killed with them.

The NPA members were not armed because they were patients. The manner of the killing clearly showed the soldiersโ€™ outright intention to kill the three, since they could have easily captured them as prisoners of war.

Deaths due to trauma. Lolita Reman died in Sitio Toril, Barangay Bandila, Toboso, Negros Occidental in May because of extreme fear and trauma from the 79th IBโ€™s operations. Soldiers raided and ransacked the Mahusay family house, where she was staying in Sitio Toril, at 5 a.m. on May 20.

A similar incident occurred in Barangay Minapasok, Calatrava. Farmer Boyet de Asis suffered a stroke on May 23 after seven 79th IB soldiers and traitors to the revolution threatened him.

Death in detention. An ailing political prisoner from Quezon died on December 25, 2024 because of the criminal neglect of the New Bilibid Prison (NBP) in Muntinlupa City. Hilario de Roxas, a farmer from Catanauan, Quezon, died from a stroke.

De Roxas was a senior citizen suffering from hypokalemia (a condition where potassium in the body drops), pneumonia, and hypertension. Police and soldiers arrested him, on criminal charges, in General Luna, Quezon, on February 12, 2020.

He was transferred to NBP on September 30, 2024 from Gumaca District Jail and Quezon District Jail (QDJ) in Pagbilao town. While detained in Quezon, de Roxas suffered a mild stroke and various health complications.

Ang Bayan also recorded seven victims of frustrated killing. The military units involved in these cases, fearing an ambush attack, fired wantonly at anyone they encountered in the forest or on the road. At least 23 people suffered torture at the hands of soldiers.

Arrest, abduction, and threats, harassment, and intimidation


AB recorded 31 cases of arbitrary arrest and detention of no fewer than 73 victims, mostly peasants. Reactionary officials filed various fabricated cases against the victims to prolong their detention. The usual charges filed against them included illegal possession of firearms and explosives, murder and attempted murder, terrorism, and โ€œterrorism financing.โ€

Some of them experienced deliberately delayed processing of court documents to prevent their immediate release. Others, especially those in the provinces, were illegally detained in military camps without a court order and prohibited family visits.

While in detention, arrested individuals were made to face โ€œformer rebelsโ€ who tried to coerce them into recanting and working for the state. Authorities also used the families of those arrested and detained to pressure the detained relatives to โ€œsurrender.โ€

Arrest for standing up for land rights. Police arrested five members of the Samahan ng Magsasaka at Mangingisda sa Barangay Taltal (SAMMBAT, Association of Farmers and Fishers of Barangay Taltal) when they opposed the demolition of houses on the 32-hectare land in Sitio Togue, Barangay Taltal, Masinloc, Zambales on June 19.

Led by Sheriff Roy Mendones of the Provincial Sheriffโ€™s office, along with around 70 police officers and SWAT personnel, the demolition team stormed the community. The police detained SAMMBAT spokesperson Neil Edward Geroca, secretary Claire Elfalan, and members Elmer Nollas, Elmer Madarang, and Alex Mose. They secured their release after several days of posting bail.

Arrest of anti-demolition barricaders. Police arrested four residents of Mayhaligue Street in Barangay 262 and 264 in Zone 24, Tondo, Manila for barricading against the demolition of the community on May 26. Residents asserted that the demolition had no legal basis and violated their rights.

The case of the Agusan 8. Elements of the 66th IB, 67th IB, and the police arrested 11 individuals at a checkpoint in Bunawan, Agusan del Sur on the night of June 13. Charisse Bernadine Baรฑez, Ronnie Igloria, Louvaine Erika Espina, Sinag Lugsi, Larry Montero, Daryl Man-Inday, Arjie Guino Dadizon, Grace Niknik Man-aning, Leo Taba, and two drivers were traveling from Monkayo, Davao De Oro when they were stopped at the checkpoint. According to the groupโ€™s report, police forced them out and made them lie prone on the road for hours.

The victims stated that the state forces had no reason to arrest them. They asserted that the charges were fabricated and that authorities only planted firearms and explosives supposedly found in their possession. The military and police searched the vehicle without a warrant, confiscated their belongings, allowed the group to stand up only after two hours, then claimed to have found weapons and explosives. They were taken to the police station in Bunawan.

On the morning of June 14, the victims discovered that Taba and the two drivers were missing from their group. That same day, soldiers also prevented paralegals and human rights groups from approaching or talking to the detainees.

Delayed release. The reportโ€™s coverage recorded cases of deliberately prolonged and delayed processing of documents and papers which prevented the immediate release of political prisoners. One such case was that of Rey Irvine Malaborbor.

On June 23, Malaborbor was scheduled for release after six years in prison when personnel from Metro Manila District Jail Annex 4 (MMDJ4) blocked his release and returned him to jail. The jail staff said that a subpoena arrived for Malaborbor for an arson case that allegedly occurred in 2019 in Mindoro. The subpoena did not even bear Malaborborโ€™s name.

Malaborbor is an activist and member of the Katipunan ng mga Samahang Magbubukid sa Timog Katagalugan (Kasama-TK, Federation of Peasant Associations in Southern Tagalog). The 76th IB elements arrested and charged him with fabricated cases of illegal possession of firearms and murder on July 27, 2019 in Santa Cruz, Occidental Mindoro. He was also accused of being a New Peopleโ€™s Army member.

Malaborbor only gained full release from jail during the first week of July.

5 years of the Anti-Terrorism Act. With the implementation of the repressive Anti-Terrorism Act and the related law against โ€œterrorism financing,โ€ Karapatan records show 227 individuals were charged, while 34 were arbitrarily designated as โ€œterroristsโ€ by the Anti-Terrorism Council.

Of those charged, 30 remain in jail. One documented victim was convicted through a plea bargain with the state. This victim faced 55 counts of involvement in โ€œterrorist financing.โ€

Attacks at the height of the midterm elections. Patriotic and democratic candidates who ran in the May midterm elections faced relentless attacks. Senators and party-list candidates from the Makabayan Coalition, as well as local candidates, became targets of blatant repression in the form of Red-tagging, surveillance, and threats. Even Makabayanโ€™s supporters were not spared from this repression.

Vote Report PH data indicate that these comprised 4.83% of the total 6,064 reports of rights violations and anomalies during the election. The most serious among these was the abduction and subsequent detention of a Bayan Muna Party-list campaigner in Batangas.

The 59th IB abducted Pauline Joy Banjawan on April 26. Human rights groups traced her on April 28 at the police station in Santo Tomas, Batangas. The groups learned that before authorities brought her to PNP-Santo Tomas at 9 p.m. on April 27, she had already experienced physical and mental torture at the hands of the 59th IB. She was then charged with a criminal case to justify detention.

AB also recorded 17 abduction victims over the past year. There were cases in Isabela, Rizal, Batangas, Sorsogon, Masbate, Negros Oriental and Occidental, and Agusan del Sur. State forces surfaced some of these victims, while the military presented others dead. The authorities claimed they died in encounters.

Among those surfaced alive, some were charged with fabricated cases and detained. Others remained in military custody and were presented as โ€œsurrenderees.โ€

AB also recorded at least 891 victims of threats, harassment, and intimidation. This number is significantly higher if one includes the thousands of individuals paraded and forcibly โ€œsurrenderedโ€ by the military as NPA members or supporters in both urban and rural areas. In forced โ€œsurrenderโ€ cases, the military often used aid distribution as an opportunity to take photos of residents and then claim that they had โ€œsurrendered.โ€

Military terror in communities


In their desperate goal to โ€œcrushโ€ the New Peopleโ€™s Army in the countryside, or supposedly โ€œprevent their return,โ€ AFP and PNP combat operations scour many rural communities. Battalions of military and police forces continue to occupy numerous communities of peasants and national minorities.

AB recorded at least 2,060 victims of forced eviction and displacement. Imposed harsh food and economic blockades affected up to 171,066 residents. The records include nine incidents of aerial bombing, strafing, and encirclement.

Bombing in Mindoro. The 203rd IBde conducted aerial strafing and bombing in Mansalay, Oriental Mindoro on March 1. The attack terrorized farming and Mangyan-Hanunuo communities.

Residents reported that the first wave of aerial gunfire from two blackhawk helicopters occurred at 10 a.m. in Sitio Lomboy, Barangay Panaytayan. The helicopters returned at around 2:30 p.m. and dropped four bombs while relentlessly strafing the adjacent sitios of Lomboy, Abaka, and Matarayo.

The executioners carried out aerial terrorism after the 4th IBโ€™s fabricated battle with NPA-Mindoro. No NPA-Mindoro units were present in that area on that day.

The bombing also affected other nearby communities of Buol, Amaga, Tangkulang, Salay, and Proper, all under Barangay Panaytayan, as well as the sitios of Puyuhan and Badi under neighboring Barangay Teresita.

The bombing in Mansalay followed aerial strafing and bombing in the town of Pola on February 19.

Strafing in Bukidnon. The 88th IB rained bullets on civilians in Sitio Bendum, Barangay Busdi, Malaybalay City, Bukidnon on April 19. One civilian sustained critical wounds and was rushed to the hospital. The civilians were only searching for agarwood when soldiers allegedly misidentified them as New Peopleโ€™s Army members.

US war gamesโ€™ devastation on livelihoods. The imposition of โ€œno-sail zonesโ€ by the local government and US troops directly affected the livelihoods of fisherfolk to pave the way for war games and live-fire exercises. Authorities implemented this in April and May in towns of Ilocos, Zambales, and Cagayan, reportedly impacting at least 28,000 fisherfolk. This constitutes food and economic blockade which violates human rights..

Justice!


The Filipino people collectively clamor for justice for all human rights violations victims under the US-Marcos regime. Various forms of expression and struggle broke out over the past year to give voice to victims and their families.

Groups and victims of the war on drugs tirelessly demand Rodrigo Duterte to be held accountable for his crimes against humanity. They welcomed the International Criminal Courtโ€™s arrest and detention of Duterte on charges of crimes against humanity on March 11. The victims resolutely stand against the Dutertesโ€™ attempts and maneuvers to allow and grant him interim release. They are also strengthening the call for the Philippines to rejoin the ICC.

Human rights groups also conducted fact-finding missions as a form of resistance and call for justice. In Mindoro, various groups, including Karapatan-Southern Tagalog, bravely confronted and resisted the 203rd IBdeโ€™s military harassment and violence that tried to prevent them from conducting a fact-finding mission on the island from February 23 to March 1.

The team specifically visited the municipalities of Pola, Bulalacao, and Mansalay in Oriental Mindoro which generated reports of a series of human rights violations following encounters between the 203rd IBde and the NPA-Mindoro in February. Upon arrival on the island, undeclared martial law was already imposed in these barangays.

Through continuous campaigns and perseverance of families and lawyers, several political detainees won their release due to lack of evidence from fabricated charges filed against them.

These include the release of organizers from Kalipunan ng Damayang Mahihirap (Kadamay), John Griefen Arlegui and Anakbayanโ€™s Reynaldo Viernes, on February 4 after more than six years in prison. Lumad rights defenders Julieta Gomez and Niezel Velasco also walked free on April 8 after four years.

Strikes and collective actions by workers and unions demanding wage increases, workplace rights, and to win new collective bargaining agreements (CBA) also gained prominence last year. Notable actions include strikes by workers and unions of Nexperia Philippines Inc and Kawasaki Philippines.

People and human rights defenders continue their militant struggle to relentlessly fight the Marcos regimeโ€™s brutal rule. From legal and extra-legal efforts to armed actions by the New Peopleโ€™s Army, the people are determined to fight to defend their rights and achieve justice. They expose, criticize, and hold Marcos accountable for policies of repression and state terrorism.

source: NDFP

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=โ€ฆ

#asia #ndfp #philippines #repression

PRWC ยป The US-Marcos Regimeโ€™s Continuing Violence
abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/204โ€ฆ

"After three years of bloody rule, the Marcos regime is now further intensifying its fascist repression of the Filipino people. Bloodshed and increasing cases of human rights violations in theโ€ฆ"

in reply to Dave Goldsmith

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A September 2015 conference worthy of attention today: โ€œGermany's new Ostpolitik and Russia: from strategic partnership to geopolitical competition?โ€ gilbertdoctorow.substack.com/pโ€ฆ

Linux and Secure Boot certificate expiration


Linux users who have Secure Boot enabled on their systems knowingly or unknowingly rely on a key from Microsoft that is set to expire in September. After that point, Microsoft will no longer use that key to sign the shim first-stage UEFI bootloader that is used by Linux distributions to boot the kernel with Secure Boot. But the replacement key, which has been available since 2023, may not be installed on many systems; worse yet, it may require the hardware vendor to issue an update for the system firmware, which may or may not happen. It seems that the vast majority of systems will not be lost in the shuffle, but it may require extra work from distributors and users.
in reply to โ˜‚๏ธ-

There is even a whole section in Wikipedia on issues and criticism with secure boot:

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/UEFI#Sโ€ฆ

Some people argue that one can work around such locking down of PC hardware. Do this or that to avoid issues with substantial tinkering.

But that is not a bug but a feature. Sure, as a technical Linux user you can work around some nastiness. Like working around privacy invasion on Facebook or Linkedin by "adjusting" settings, or "adjust" settings in Wimdows to make it more private and so on. The thing is: working against the platform becomes quickly a losing game, because you don't control the platform - Microsoft does. And it does not help you if you manage to re-gain control of your device after some hours of tinkering if 99.9% of people around you don't have the knowledge and time and store your data, photos, Emails on OneDrive and so on. Freedom is very much a collective thing and software freedom is no exception.

And this does not mean that the thinkering and hacking is in vain - but it is not enough. We need the practical right to control our devices.

By effectively erecting a shield around Israel, Iron Dome and other defense systems grant Israel the impunity to act without restraint. That doesn't save lives, it takes them away by the thousands.

Note to AOC: Iron Dome Is an Offensive Weapon

Watch on Substack: open.substack.com/pub/mitchellโ€ฆ

Or on YouTube: youtu.be/MpacmR5eTbE

Wayland on Mint, is Youtube's adblock blocker legal Fedora 39 delayed Linux & Open Source News


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00:00 Intro
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01:54 Linux Mint is working on Wayland
03:26 Youtube's adblock blocker might not be legal
04:52 Fedora 39 gets delayed twice
06:09 OpenSUSE wants to replace its logo
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#Linux #OpenSource #technews

Linux Mint is working on Wayland

blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4591

Youtube's adblock blocker might not be legal

theregister.com/2023/10/26/priโ€ฆ

Fedora 39 gets delayed twice

linuxiac.com/fedora-linux-39-rโ€ฆ

linuxiac.com/fedora-39-releaseโ€ฆ

OpenSUSE wants to replace its logo

linuxiac.com/opensuse-calls-foโ€ฆ

KDE & GNOME Updates

pointieststick.com/2023/10/27/โ€ฆ

thisweek.gnome.org/posts/2023/โ€ฆ

New accessibility framework for Linux

blogs.gnome.org/a11y/2023/10/2โ€ฆ

Performance improvements for Linux and drivers

phoronix.com/news/Mutter-Nouveโ€ฆ

phoronix.com/news/Mesa-24.0-Feโ€ฆ

phoronix.com/news/AMD-Ryzen-Frโ€ฆ

Gaming News: SteamVR, 3DS emulator perf boost

store.steampowered.com/news/apโ€ฆ

gamingonlinux.com/2023/10/valvโ€ฆ

gamingonlinux.com/2023/10/nintโ€ฆ

This entry was edited (2 months ago)

Did you know that there is not only Matt Godbolt's Compiler Explorer at godbolt.org, but also a Decompiler Explorer, appropriately named dogbolt.org, which compares the output of Ghidra, BinaryNinja, IDA and other decompilers?

#decompile #ReverseEngineering

The Israeli businessmen who 'invested' $25 million to buy off Mexico's former president haaretz.com/israel-news/2025-0โ€ฆ
โ‡ง