state violence - National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee https://nwtrcc.org/tags/state-violence/ Fri, 18 Aug 2017 02:21:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 There And Back Again: Organizing on the Road https://nwtrcc.org/2017/08/22/there-and-back-organizing-road/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=there-and-back-organizing-road https://nwtrcc.org/2017/08/22/there-and-back-organizing-road/#comments Tue, 22 Aug 2017 16:17:46 +0000 https://nwtrcc.org/?p=7165 Whew! What a trip. Eight days, six presentations, two conferences, nine states & provinces in two countries, 50 hours on the road, and 3,600 miles later! And I am back in Philly. Glad to say it was a rental car with unlimited miles rather than with my 1990 Oldsmobile (even though I would have been... Continue reading

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Whew! What a trip. Eight days, six presentations, two conferences, nine states & provinces in two countries, 50 hours on the road, and 3,600 miles later! And I am back in Philly. Glad to say it was a rental car with unlimited miles rather than with my 1990 Oldsmobile (even though I would have been looking a lot more fly on the road in the Oldsmobile…).

There’s so much to share from my latest war tax resistance organizing trip, I’m not even sure of where to begin. So I’ll share some tidbits and then if you have additional questions, please comment or email me.

Most Relaxed Point

The first stop of my field organizing trip was perhaps the most peaceful. I arrived in Western PA amid rolling green hills and a garden full of wildflowers. Karen and Michael Bagdes-Canning hosted me for a home presentation on war tax resistance as an avenue for challenging white supremacy. After a delicious bowl of chili we had a great discussion with a group of people who are involved with local organizing around environmental, healthcare, and peace issues. Many of them were familiar faces from when I was doing organizing against fracking and pipelines throughout Pennsylvania. Nice to see old friends in a new context.

Most Effective Point

Hmmm, it’s always a bit hard to gauge but I think the most effective part of the trip was my presentation at the “Solidarity and Fightback: Building Resistance to US-led War, Militarism, and Neofascism” Conference in Toronto. The conference was organized by the International League of Peoples Struggle and brought together people who are involved in resistance struggles from around the world, from the Philippines to Kurdistan to Oakland. It was inspiring to hear the work of, in particular, youth activists who are working for true system change and building connections across huge divides.

I was on a panel discussion of radical activists from the United Snakes of America as well as Klanada. There were about 30 people in attendance, almost all of whom had never heard about war tax resistance, and were excited to know that this form of civil disobedience “in the belly of the beast” was alive and well. There are a number of people who are now wanting to organize presentations in their local communities (in particular, organizers who came to the conference from the Bay Area in California). I also got to meet Monica Moorehead which was a life goal! Always inspired by her organizing and life’s work.

Most Stressed Point

Partly from my own doing, I didn’t have any firm housing lined up for when I was in Toronto. I had heard from one of the conference organizers that they were working on it, but hadn’t gotten any confirmation. So I ended up driving 16 hours from Minneapolis to Toronto without any housing. Oh, and also no phone or email because I couldn’t get service once I crossed the border. I thought about stopping in Detroit and driving the rest of the way in the morning, but the folks I know there were either out of town or I couldn’t get in touch with them. I also tried to set up an AirBnb thing ahead of time, but the host never confirmed so that was no longer an option.

So I just kept driving, past Climax, Michigan which is a real place, and arrived in Drake’s hometown at 1:30 AM bumping Controlla and totally exhausted. Needless to say I found a dark sidestreet in a random neighborhood and passed out in the car. I woke up shivering a few hours later (it’s 50 degrees in Toronto in August apparently), so went to go find a Tim Horton’s (or “Timmies” for us Canucks) to try to warm up and find some wifi to get directions to the conference. It worked out eventually, but with a cramped neck and a grumpy Sam.

Personal Favorite Point

I stopped for a bit in Cincinnati, Ohio to visit some friends there and got to cuddle with their adorable puppy. But my favorite moment was once I arrived back in the United Snakes of America (coming over the “peace bridge” into Buffalo ironically enough). After another “Aghhh, I don’t have a map of Buffalo State University” hectic directions search again, I joined up with Vicki Ross from the Western NY Peace Center for her “talking peace” radio show on the university station. It was a solid conversation talking about everything from systemic racism and war tax resistance to fracking to trans issues. Unfortunately, I don’t have a recording of it, but it was nice to chat about a lot of important issues near and dear to my heart.

Post by Sam Koplinka-Loehr

Unfortunately with our website in transition (yay transitions!), we are having trouble uploading new photos at the moment. You can check out some photos of the ILPS conference here and here. So I will try to add photos back in at a later date.

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I Call Bullshit On The Trans Ban https://nwtrcc.org/2017/08/01/i-call-bullshit-on-the-trans-ban/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=i-call-bullshit-on-the-trans-ban https://nwtrcc.org/2017/08/01/i-call-bullshit-on-the-trans-ban/#comments Tue, 01 Aug 2017 15:18:22 +0000 http://nwtrcc.org/?p=7075 I call bullshit. Trump announced last week that trans people will be banned from serving in the US military. And no I don’t call bullshit on Trump tweeting that trans people are banned from serving in the military. Unfortunately as a trans person in this world, I am not surprised by the constant transphobia and... Continue reading

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I call bullshit. Trump announced last week that trans people will be banned from serving in the US military. And no I don’t call bullshit on Trump tweeting that trans people are banned from serving in the military.

US soldiers during a raid in Iraq. Photo credit: creative commons license from Wikipedia

Unfortunately as a trans person in this world, I am not surprised by the constant transphobia and oppression of us at just about every level of our lives. Instead, I am disgusted by the responses. I have spent hours and hours pouring through article after article, and across the board, the media and “progressive organizations” have taken this time to glorify and pinkwash* the military, violent masculinity, and murder. All in the name of “supporting trans people!” And I call bullshit.

There’s so much to say, I almost don’t know where to begin.

Soooo let’s just jump in.

First off, this is so much of a distraction, it is insulting. The sheer amount of news about the trans ban is outrageous. To be clear, the trans ban in the military was only lifted a year ago by the Obama administration. But these articles, which mostly focus on trans men in the military by the way and totally ignore the realities for nonbinary people in the military, make it sound like trans people have been able to live free of oppression in the military and Trump is taking that away.

  • There is this one that somehow “now we know” that Trump is horrible, rather than when he increased the military budget and further militarized the US-Mexico border.
  • Then this article where the British journalist writes about her friend who is a police officer in the UK but “when I met her a few years ago she was busy saving lives in the RAF.” For those who don’t know, the RAF is the Royal Air Force. So now people who drop bombs and murder innocent people are “saving lives” if they are a trans person in the military?
  • Oh and this fun article that attempted to shame Donald Trump in order to be more like Israel where “they’ve served for years.” Ah yes, in Israel our trans brothers and sisters can destroy Palestinian villages with the IDF and achieve total trans liberation.

There were a few responses that were on point like from No Justice No Pride and L’lerrét Jazelle Ailith’s article THE MILITARY IS AN IMPERIALIST TOOL, BUT THE BAN ON TRANS FOLKS IS DEHUMANIZING AS FUCK. In it, she writes,

“But the President’s tweets from this morning are also a distraction. They are a distraction from the multiplicity of ways that the system has failed to protect trans people. Especially Black and Brown trans folks. […] This year alone, over 15 of Black transgender women and femmes have been murdered and the government continually ignores this issue. I think about the thousands of trans folks who are poor and homeless without access to adequate education or job prospects. Those who are not protected in the streets are consistently targeted, harassed, and imprisoned—and now our focus has been once again shifted.”

Trans people, and disproportionately black trans women, are being murdered in the streets every other week. Meanwhile, our national media is looking at Trump’s tweets, and barely covering official policy changes like the Senate’s attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Which, by the way, would single handedly impact almost all trans people in the United States (as L’lerrét Jazelle Ailith discusses in her article here).

The trans flag flying in the wind. Photo credit: creative commons license from Wikipedia

But even these discussions miss the larger point, which is why we as trans people are in the military in the first place and why our acceptance right now is being held up as our ability to join a terrorist organization—the US military.

So, why are so many trans people in the military? (FYI trans people are twice as likely to join the military.) We live in a world where trans folks have the highest rates of poverty and unemployment, especially for black and brown trans people. Many of us come face-to-face with total rejection from those closest to us resulting in extreme housing instability. The military is held up as one of the last remaining avenues where we can have some semblance of stability and camaraderie, but even that is mostly a facade as you can see in this pretty solid comic strip about the experiences of Jordan Blisk.

For us, it’s not only an “economic draft,” but I would say it is also a “social draft.” A last ditch effort to being accepted. This is extremely dangerous. Because of this, now some transgender people and many “left” organizations are holding up stories of trans people in the military as the pinnacle of supporting trans people. At the same time, they are sacrificing any more meaningful analysis of how the whole damn system is guilty as hell.

Yes trans people should have job protection, but also the military shouldn’t even exist as it currently does (or shouldn’t exist period, perhaps). Maybe we should spend less than the $1.45 trillion we put into the military every year, and we would be able to create more protections for trans people, and people in general. I don’t know, maybe provide guaranteed free housing for every single trans person in the country? (Which by the way would only cost $1 billion/year if we gave every trans person in the US $715 for rent every month.)

As L’lerrét Jazelle Ailith aptly warns in her article, “It is my fear is that the white LGBT+ infrastructure will mobilize around repealing this ban and use all resources and tactics to fight that one particular angle whilst ignoring the needs of the most marginalized and how this is connected to larger structures of dehumanization perpetuated by capitalism and white supremacy.”

Unfortunately, that is what is happening. Even worse, there is some serious pinkwashing happening of the US military—an organization that has illegally murdered over 20 million people in 37 countries since World War II and is the proud owner of a long list of war crimes. Personally, I don’t want our struggle as trans people to be used to praise the military or erase the genocides our country has committed.

And I don’t want our liberation as trans people to be determined by our ability to be a drone operator and murder people overseas as Eli Lake suggests in an article for Bloomberg. Lake writes,

“Imagine if Trump had leaned into the military’s recent policy instead of reversing it. Perhaps, with a little luck, a transgender special operations officer would be on the team that captures Abu-Bakr al-Baghdadi, the current leader of the Islamic State. Or maybe a transgender drone operator would be the one who fired the missile that rid the world of al Qaeda’s boss, Ayman al-Zawahiri. Think of the opportunities. The Pentagon could tweet the image of Baghdadi on his knees with his hands tied behind his back, or Zawahiri’s exploded compound, with just a simple hashtag: #lovewins.”

I don’t think I even need to discuss the disgusting irony here….

This is part of a long legacy where oppressed people have been asked to join oppressive institutions with the false promise of recognition and rights. Perhaps the most famous example of people resisting these false promises is the National Black Antiwar Antidraft Union that included the Black Panther Party and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. They encouraged young black men to refuse to go to Vietnam to fight for a country that wanted to kill them here at home. It was because of their organizing that Muhammad Ali said his famous quote, “I ain’t got no quarrel with them Viet Cong,” before he publicly refused the draft. Muhammad Ali’s words are as pertinent today as ever. (By the way, to read more about the life of Muhammad Ali and the dope organizing of Gwen Patton with the National Black Antiwar Antidraft Union, check out this great article.)

U.S. Army soldier with gun over Nangarhar Province, Afghanistan in 2015. Photo credit: creative commons license from Wikipedia

But why hasn’t there been a similar outpouring of support for Syrians and Iraqis? Where are the articles about trans people who are refusing to drop bombs as a bombardier because they don’t want their “great work” to be dropping the 24,287 bombs the US military dropped on Iraq and Syria in 2016 alone? Or any critique of how—for the most part—the trans people who can openly serve in the military are those who have the privilege to “pass” as cisgender? Or a discussion of how US destabilization of Iraq has led to queer and trans Iraqis having their lives be a living hell. What about honest national coverage of when men in the US military murder trans women in cold blood, simply because we are trans women? Both on duty and off duty.

The whitewashing and pinkwashing of the military that is happening right now in the media is a blatant (or maybe not so blatant since I don’t hear many people challenging it) attempt to glorify the military and our participation in violence. Our liberation as trans people will not come from the military. It will come from ending the horrible institutions that impoverish us, kill us, and ask us to kill others. Us trans folks need your support, but glorifying military violence is not the way to do it. So cut this bullshit now, and start organizing for some real change.

Sam Koplinka-Loehr is the field organizer with the National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee. She is a white, 25-year old, transwoman. She is a nanny, a parent, and an activist. She is currently involved with campaigns fighting police brutality and prison slavery. Past references to Sam in NWTRCC materials referred to Sam as “they/them” or “he/him.” Sam currently uses she/her pronouns.

*pinkwashing is when an organization highlights LGBTQ people in the organization while attempting to hide or distract from the horrible things that organization does. This uses us to cover up other injustices.

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