#anarcho crip
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"Oh but what about the buttons those cost money" do they? Do you drink out of single serving containers (soda, Arizona iced tea, beer/wine coolers)? Take the tops of glass bottles and the can tabs, grab a safety pin and some nail polish (or paint)
Bend the can tab a little, stick the safety pin around the middle section, stick the pop tab into the bottle cap, bend the cap so the rough edges are down and holding the pop tab in place. Add some hot glue or superglue if you feel the need. Slap some nail polish over the brand of the bottle cap.
Tada. You did it.
I think we need to start telling the āIām too poor to dress punkā crowd that theyāre posers.
#punk#cripple punk#diy punk#punk diy#queer punk#punk culture#diy or die#anarcho punk#riot grrl#riot ghoul#crip punk#cpunk#queercore
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I thought of a neat idea earlier: anarcho crip. I think that this can be useful... To come with an explanation of what it could mean though: Itās the idea of dismantling a society that unnecessarily divides people up by bodies, and classifies some people as redundant. It challenges the system where our bodies determine our worth depending on productivity. Dismantling the hierarchy that othersā survival should depend on the evaluation of oppressors and outdated viewings of health, body, and mind. Tying in obviously with similar schools of thought like queer anarchism, cripple punk or anti-capitalism. Itās an idea of dismantling an oppressive system, another approach to a type of liberation. Obviously Iām not trying to start a movement and an entire ideology on my own here. Iām just simply sharing an idea I had, and maybe someone reading this could find this useful, and would want to add more to it and expand on it if they want to. I came up with it by the thought that I donāt really have disabled symbols nor do we really have a proper and radical disability movement and ideology. The closest Iāve ever seen to this is just small handicap orgs and also online thereās cripple punk. This is a part of social justice I would say is lacking. People donāt really march for disabled rights and against ableism. Itās a very neglected topic despite the huge dark numbers and the incredibly obvious oppressive system people live in. I think to have a productive and effective social justice movement, we also need a radical approach to it. We need anarchy and anti-capitalism, and we need to push other movements into intersectionality.
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you know what. i just finished "beasts of burden: animal and disability liberation" (excellent excellent book) and....my veganism *is* integral to my anticapitalism, my anarchism, my antiableist & crip/Mad politics, and the critiques veganism enables of in/dependence and exploitability, in/disposable bodyminds under neoliberal capitalism, and global, colonial, white supremacist patriarchy as a force of mass disablement & mass genocide are foundational to the ways i do anarcho-communism, the genre of leftism with which i most closely associate myself. being vegan is a good thing actually. not a mockable or strawmannable thing. anyway read beasts of burden.
#the tldr of this is that i'm done being shy or chagrinned abt being vegan on here as seems so fashionable#by a left largely content to dunk on vegans based on the actions not of vegans writ large but of peta and other violent corporate entities#txt#mine#disability#vegan
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About Me
Cayden, he/they, 20, and part of a DID system
Queer, trans, biracial, diasbled, mentally ill
Black lives matter, acab, Anarcho communist
Your local crip who goes to too many doctors. I have eds among a few others and I use a sick ass cane sometimes, a wheelchair, or a walker
Ask me about me latest special interest/hyperfixation
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Ohhhh okay. What about just supporting gun control n stuff? No mental illness databases but just wanted guns banned or having it be harder to get them?
that's debatable. obviously wanting gun violence to not happen is punk. imo, that's achieved through taking full advantage of the second amendment. specifically, through the establishment and community regulation of diverse militia. i think that we can learn a lot about what to do from the black panthers, as well as both the crips and the bloods before their memberships devolved into open warfare (assuming the propaganda is based on truth. I've never been to LA). i think that we can learn a lot about what not to do from the various Irish republican armies, and gangs like the crips and the bloods in their later years.as an anarcho-socialist, i don't trust the government, the military or police, to disarm me. or to do anything else. as a punk, i acknowledge that all liberals, whether progressive or conservative, are members of the establishment, and distrust them implicitly.for a modern example, look into Redneck Revolt, the John Brown Gun Club, the Huey P Newton Gun Club, or Trigger Warning. they're worth checking outi know a lot of people who advocate gun control think that they're advocating a stop to gun violence, but how do you think the government is going to take away guns from a group of black people who're trying to protect their community?tl:dr; i don't think that the answer to gun violence will ever be state sanctioned gun violence. i think it's a community of people banding together to teach people how to use guns, and how not to use guns. think NRA pre-civil rights movement~mod Civ
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Much of the anarchist tradition rejects the ideology of individualism and focuses on mutual aid, or, in queer-crip language: interdependence. If disability studies and activism could offer a corrective to the anarchist practice of mutual reliance it will be to the concept of DIY, including anarcho-primitivism, which is DIY culture taken to an extreme. A focus on self-reliance and a "return to nature" requires a non-disabled body for its ideal society. Such calls will have a devastating effect on the lives of disabled people who truly embody a spirit of mutual aid every day by relying on personal assistants, friends, and family members to achieve independence abd autonomy, also core practices of anarchism. Through a queer-crip lens we should perhaps focus more on DIT - Do It Together.
Liat Bent-Moshe, Anthony J. Nocella and AJ Withers in: Queer-Cripping Anarchism
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