💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › crimethinc-we-defend-each-other.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 08:56:07. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

➡️ Next capture (2024-06-20)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: We Defend Each Other
Author: CrimethInc.
Date: April 5, 2020
Language: en
Topics: tenant organizing, COVID-19
Source: Retrieved on 2020-04-07 from https://crimethinc.com/2020/04/05/we-defend-each-other-no-rent-no-evictions-no-debt-a-poster

CrimethInc.

We Defend Each Other

Landlords, property managers, real estate speculators, debt collectors,

police and sheriffs, be warned—in this community, we defend each other.

Home is not a private enclosure that separates us into tiny fiefdoms

that can be divided and conquered one by one; it the collective

solidarity that we build in the process of standing up for each other

and intervening whenever we see harm being done.

The more each of us resists, the safer all of us will be.

---

The idea of a rent strike in response to the unemployment and economic

crisis generated by the COVID-19 pandemic gained visibility in the

United States when a longstanding anarchist housing collective in San

Francisco, Station 40, announced that on March 16 that they would not be

paying rent in April and later hung a vast banner reading “RENT STRIKE”

across the front of their building. By March 20, there was a nationwide

telegram channel and rent strike groups had emerged in Seattle, Chicago,

Atlanta, the Bay Area, and elsewhere.

By the beginning of April, dozens of rent strike groups were actively

organizing around the US. The New York Times reported that 40% or more

tenants in New York City might not be able to pay April’s rent whether

they wished to or not.

In Canada, rent strike organizing has spread to Toronto, Montréal, and

elsewhere, while housing activists in Vancouver have attempted to occupy

buildings to establish self-organized residences for the homeless in

response the pandemic. In the UK, students in Bristol have mobilized

alongside other sectors of society. Rent strike organizing is underway

in Italy with a website and Telegram channel of their own. In Catalunya,

one rent strike initiative spearheaded by anarchists had drawn

commitments from 10,000 households by April 3. There are stirrings in

Germany, Brazil, Indonesia, and elsewhere around the world.

Well before the pandemic, gentrification had already rendered many

cities almost uninhabitable for all but the very wealthy, destroying

countless neighborhoods and communities. If we don’t mobilize quickly

and forcefully, this pandemic is going to be a step in the emergence of

an explicitly expendable class—a vast number of people who are forced to

work in high-risk environments without any protection whatsoever. This

reality has already arrived for Whole Foods employees, garbage

collectors, and countless others.

There is no need to set about trying to convince people to go on strike

against rent, loan, or mortgage payments. Millions are already unable to

pay whether they like it or not. The pressing thing is to prepare

networks that can defend everyone who can’t pay. Over the coming months,

we have to develop tactics of mutual support and solidarity and

strategies with which to shame and attack every landlord that wants to

penalize people for not being able to pay. To this end, we can revisit

the tactics of the SHAC campaign and the victory of the poll tax

non-payment movement in the UK.

Of course, the more people refuse to pay rent, the more pressure on the

economy and our rulers to make provisions for those in need. In the long

run, rather than making demands of our oppressors, who are at least as

incapable of addressing the catastrophes they have brought about as we

are, our organizing should equip us to make the changes we want to see

directly. As the totalitarian police state becomes more and more

invasive and destructive in the wake of this pandemic, it will be

especially important that we continue building connections and gaining

experience in networks like the ones that will emerge from proper

eviction resistance organizing.