040: Everything Must Change: A Conversation
040: Everything Must Change: A Conversation

040: Everything Must Change: A Conversation

faijal

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<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">In this, the second part of our double-album release, we return to our familiar conversational format to discuss the ideas and diagnoses put forth in CrimthInc’s poetic manifesto,</span> <strong><em>To Change Everything</em></strong><span style="font-weight: 400;">. The 48-page pamphlet documents a dizzying array of morbid disorders from the same sick nation-states that give you endless awful B-sides, such as: “Disney’s Manifest Destiny,” “Healthcare, Sometimes,” “Bootstraps Best for You,” “Lock’em & Cock’em,” “Student Debt Meets Mr. Ramen,” and finally, “Do the COVID-Collapse.” Many of the threatening obstacles and dangerous injustices diagrammed in CrimethInc’s proclamation adhere, like super-glue, to the plastic surface of the U.S. petroleum project. And so, the collective’s polemic is always aware that the solutions required must be bigger than one state, one nation or one continent to contemplate, fathom or undertake. The manifesto stirs with telling details and insightful observations about what we know and what we wish to ignore in this, our shared reality that spins like a deranged compass. And while</span> <strong><em>To Change Everything</em></strong> <span style="font-weight: 400;">functions as a good primer to anarchist ethics and its attendant traditions, it’s worth noting how little it offers in the way of clear, practical, and focused solutions—like The Golden Square—or what Jesse</span> <em><span style="font-weight: 400;">&</span></em> <span style="font-weight: 400;">Matt like to call the “No-Bullshit Blueprint for Socialism” explored in Episode #031. The promise of anarchism is not some grand plan, or some self-righteous political dogma that will magically release us from capitalism’s death-grip, but its values demand us to make a clear paradigm shift away from the dizzying maze of domination and violence that perpetually blocks humanity from having any nice things. Anarchism points towards a deep-system critique and an egalitarian ethics of rights and responsib

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jamie.road

jamie.road

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