A Response to Filler Collective’s “Solidarity in the Streets”

  Pittsburgh activism has long and sordid history of cooptation by the police. Liberal organizers invariably honor a tacit agreement in which they guarantee that their “actions” generate minimal material disruption of the prevailing order, in exchange for the cops’ allowing them to proceed unimpeded. The police, notoriously lazy in Pittsburgh, benefit from protest organizers … Continue reading A Response to Filler Collective’s “Solidarity in the Streets”