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Title: Reflections on Rent Strike Vancouver
Date: March 28, 2020
Source: Retrieved on 2020-03-31 from [[https://plagueandfire.noblogs.org/reflections-on-rent-strike-vancouver/][plagueandfire.noblogs.org]]
Authors: Anonymous
Topics: Canada, COVID-19, tenant organizing
Published: 2020-03-31 07:04:36Z

So called Vancouver BC has in its most recent years been a place of

relative social peace – anarchist intervention in local politics has

been pushed into the shadows. After decades of insurrectionary agitation

and action, things slowed down – folks left, faced repression, struggled

with the daily onslaught of capitalism, or for their owns reasons took a

step back. Yet in the shadows is where we thrive, and more recently

anarchist action and analysis has been occurring on a semi-public stage

in so called Vancouver.

One such initiative is Rent Strike Vancouver (rentstrikevan.ca), it is a

decentralized effort to provide those interested in striking resources

while agitating the fires of class war. It emerges as a result of

COVID-19, a symptom of the intersecting and inseparable crises of

capitalism, civilization, colonialism.

Agitating for a rent strike is fraught with tension. A rent strike’s

strength comes from its numbers along with the organization and

militancy of its strikers – as such accessible messaging is needed to

build mass participation, while radical messaging is necessary to grow

and inspire action. Remembering the need for a diversity of tactics and

voices lead to the establishment of Rent Strike Vancouver, which stands

in contrast to the more reformist efforts of the Vancouver Tenants’

Union. Despite this realization we find ourselves still walking a fine

line, and struggling to decide if we should participate in the politics

of producing respectable speech. Recognizing our local context, and the

lack of visible anarchist scene we have hung our heads and chosen to

participate, watching our mouths. Participating in activism feels like

it forces us to obscure our most insurgent dreams and it is exhausting.

Nonetheless we find ourselves unable to pay our rent, or wanting to

experiment with not paying and as such participation seems necessary.

Capitalists not only force us to go to work, but it seems they are

endlessly capable of constraining our desires.

Another tension emerges around the idea of risk and identity. Rent

strikes by there very nature confront capital and the colonial project –

therefore they pose significant risk to their participants.

Simultaneously, the politics of risk have lead many to discredit them.

Many activists demand a strike not put anyone at risk, particularly

those most vulnerable. While we agree this is a noble intention, our

lives are always at risk – its avoidance is both impossible and would

constrain any desire for militant struggle. Of course different people,

have very legitimate reasons to have different thresholds of acceptable

risk. So we want to be explicit when we say that we cannot guarantee

anyone’s safety and anyone else who promises to do so is lying. With

this in mind those who feel angry enough or “safe” enough should join us

and withhold rent April 1st.

Through striking we hope to further actualize the desires shared in

whispers between friends, the screams splattered on the city’s walls and

the hate for this system imprinted into our hearts. Solidarity with all

rent striking. Solidarity with all striking blows against the crises of

capitalism, colonialism and civilization. Solidarity with those living

on the streets unable to withhold rent, yet resisting with every breath.

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For a growing revolt and realization of desire

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