March 20th Pittsburgh, anti-war call for a
Radical Queer/Pink Bloc
On the weekend of March 20th (M20) a
regional convergence against wars and occupation will
take place in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Primarily
organized by the Thomas Merton Center and Pittsburgh
Organizing Group, M20 aims to organize a permitted mass
mobilization alongside direct action targeting the local
war machine.
Resyst is sending this call out to all radical queers
and queer sympathizers to join us in Pittsburgh. Those
who see the interconnectedness of all oppressions and
struggles and who wish to ensure that a radical queer
perspective is heard in the ongoing anti-war movement
must join together. We will not allow our movement to be
divided based on class, race, nation of origin,
language, perceived or chosen gender, sexuality, income,
size, perceived "ability", age, etc.
Resyst is a radical queer group, working to
radicalize the queer movement and queerize the radical
movement. We see the need for queers to be intimately
involved in the anti-war, anti-racist, anti-sexist, and
class war movements. While many strands exist, there is
one struggle for liberation, that of humanity against
all those who seek to exploit, oppress, restrict and
restrain for their personal power and gain the freedom
of others, and it is as a part of this liberation
movement that we fight. It is of the utmost importance
that we work on a grassroots level and remain in touch
and contact with the everyday lives of people both
inside and outside the struggle. We feel that no group
should be the scapegoat for the government’s racism,
bigotry, or capitalistic greed, and by organizing a
Queer Resistance we can speak to so many people by
sharing our historic liberation.
A large number of us in the activist community have
seen what happens when a movement loses its ties with
the everyday reality in which people live. It is clear
that "gay activists" are losing liberty through
assimilation, marketing, addiction, and capitalism. We
must not forget the struggles that got us here today and
must not lose sight of the struggles that lie ahead.
While the country is distracted and abuzz with hopes
that the state will finally validate a union between two
people of the "same gender," the US government plows on
ahead with the "War On Terrorism." And it continues to
come at the expense of basic support service for lgbtq
people. Community organizations that provide support for
queer youth, HIV/AIDS counseling, and referrals have
experienced extreme budget cutbacks, while government
spending on the military has skyrocketed.
And some gay activists continue to fight for the
right to be part of the killing overseas – without
realizing that war and the entire concept of the
military is oppressive to the core. Militarism continues
to perpetuate rigid gender norms. At its most basic
level, it’s rooted in traditional, heterosexist ideas of
gender that define masculinity as physically powerful
and aggressive, and femininity as meek and passive.
These gender norms have historically been used to
marginalize and criminalize queer people who often
challenge the legitimacy of these norms. Increasing our
dependence on the military and making war a priority
strengthens the heterosexist, patriarchal culture that
promotes war, intensifying the stigmatization of those
who defy that culture.
As people struggling for liberation, we don’t
consider it "equality" if we too can participate in the
killing of thousands of innocent people for oil or any
other reason; we don’t want to participate in the
oppression of others for a misguided, assimilationist
approach to freedom. We don’t want to be admitted into
the military – we want to abolish it. And we demand an
end to America’s imperialistic warmonger tactics.
And so we must begin our demands at home, where our
struggles need to stay rooted. Right here in our own
backyard, Carnegie Mellon University continues to
receive contracts from the military to research and
develop military applications. The Robotics Institute is
currently developing a remote controlled scout "tank,"
lovingly referred to as "gladiator," that has "offensive
capabilities" to "neutralize threats" and the Software
Engineering Institute develops the software testing and
rating system that every military contractor using
software must now pass to be eligible for Department of
Defense contracts. This needs to end. We can make an
impact to stop the war by calling for an end to the aid
that schools and businesses in our own city are
providing to keep the war going.
The POG plans to occupy part of CMU on March 20th
to demand an end to these military contracts and to kick
ROTC off the CMU campus. We’ll be there too - marching
with the direct action contingent, raising awareness
with our presence, occupying the hallways and the
streets. We will not be satisfied with challenging the
surface issues that leave us behind, denying the
intrinsic links between queer struggle and challenging
power in its most basic forms. We struggle for the
autonomy of all queers, gender defiant individuals,
trannies, and all other marginalized groups that got
expelled from the struggle during the quest for normalcy
led by the reformists. We are not struggling for the
equal rights of queers to kill people, rather for the
equal right of all people to live in peace and without
fear.
Love, kisses, and molotovs
RESYST and the Queer Resistance
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