For José Domínguez Muñoz, “El Cabrero” (1944-2026)

I am not the animal
that stays silent for a meal
I am not that animal
because I have within me
a discontent
that nourishes me.

The sea boasts of its depth
and time of its wisdom
the wind, of its power
the sea boasts of its depth
the earth of its stature
and man, I don’t know of what.

They call me the black sheep
I’ve always been called the black sheep in the flock
for not sharing the mess
with others in the filth
when the common lands are so clean.

My homeland is Freedom
the Universe my god
my homeland is Freedom
my flag, reason
my path, truth
that’s how I think.

I’ve sung about almost everything
that has given me pause
I’ve sung about almost everything
and now I’m going to sing
to the one that never existed
The Dove of Peace.

Sheep leave wool on the wires when they pass by,
sheep leave wool on the wires,
and men, when they hunt,
leave indelible marks
on those of their own kind.

I’ve spent half my life
arguing with my donkey,
and the animal would say to me, “Look at the world, you’re always riding on top of me.”

I’m looking around and I don’t see
the shepherd of the flock,
I only see the dogs
that silently lead them
to the slaughterhouse.

Andalusia is my mother,
and I love her like a son.
Andalusia is my mother,
I venerate her with all my heart,
but I am like the air,
my homeland is the whole world.

From here,
to those who wage wars,
I’m going to say one thing:
go underground
so the world can smell like roses
because it smells so much like shit.

Don’t try to lull me to sleep with stories
don’t try to lull me to sleep
with time I’ve learned
where the winds blow from
and I don’t even trust the wind.

Many get annoyed
when they hear me sing
they still get annoyed
they’re falling behind me
because I’m climbing the hill
of discontent.

The man with a mace
tried to stop the wind
the man with a mace
also tried to stop time
and it was no use
that’s where talents crash.

I grab hold of the soleá
and shout with the seguiriya
I grab hold of the soleá
but when I get to the fandango
I’m a squashed ant
that has to die accusing.

El Cabrero, Una disconformidad 

Flamenco singer José Domínguez, known as El Cabrero, passed away in Seville on Tuesday morning at the age of 81. A charismatic, free-spirited figure, he was admired in the world of flamenco for decades.

From childhood and for much of his adult life, he was a goat herder, having only acquired a presence on social media in the final phase of his artistic career. Herding gave him ample time to “think and look to the future,” serving as “a refuge.”

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“this is not a golden calf”

Choose your leaders
with wisdom and forethought.

To be led by a coward
is to be controlled
by all that the coward fears.

To be led by a fool
is to be led
by the opportunists
who control the fool.

To be led by a thief
is to offer up
your most precious treasures
to be stolen
.

To be led by a liar
is to ask
to be told lies.

To be led by a tyrant
is to sell yourself
and those you love
into slavery.

Octavia E. Butler, Parable of the Talents


“… this is not a golden calf”; or, so said pastor Mark Burns, a member of Pastors for Trump, at the May 6th inauguration of the over 6 metre tall, gilded statue dedicated to Donald Trump, at his Doral, Florida golf course.

Commissioned by a collective of crypto investors, created by sculptor Alan Cottrill, the pastor also informed those attending the event that the statue “stands as a reminder of the hand of God and His protection over President Trump’s life”. (Independent, 07/05/2026)

Never wishing to think the worst of people, we imagined the pastor engaged in some form of irony, perhaps as a master of paradoxical or even antiphrastic speech. But, no, it would seem that idolatry and cynical self-interest continue to weave their grotesque tapestries.

We avoid commenting on Trump, in general, for his public stupidity and buffonery only serves to cover over the terrible violence that his government is meting out to so many. And the pastor’s words only made the spectacle even more ridiculous.

But what Bertolt Brecht said of “The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui” – written in 1941 and a satire of Hitler – we perhaps should say of Trump: that he is neither an idiot nor a great leader, but someone who permits “great political crimes”. And the “great political criminals must be exposed and exposed especially to laughter”. (“Laughing at Criminals”, HAC, 06/01/2024)

Trump’s “Don Colosus” deserves to be mocked, laughed at, graffitied, shat upon, and then placed in some new Washington DC monument building for posterity. Or, on this occasion, let us more modestly borrow the poetry of June Jordan, in an exercise of Juvenalian satire, when she indignately derided John Ashcroft, a former Attorney General under President George W. Bush; a man given over to both religious zealotry and the seductions of “gold”.

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For Ben Morea (1940-2026)

For Ben Morea, a eulogy and a collection of interviews.


A Life in Rebellion

Ariel Uesseler, May 7th, 2026, Ill Will

On Saturday May 2, 2026, our friend and comrade Ben Morea (1941-2026) — animist, artist, and lifelong revolutionary — passed away near his home in Colorado. 

The following text forms the preface to the Japanese translation of Full Circle: A Life in Rebellion (Detritus, 2025; Kawade Shobo, forthcoming), an autobiographical dialogic account of Morea’s life. Coauthored by Morea and 1000 voices, the book was a labor of love by many. While leaving behind a trace of Morea’s extraordinary life, it asks what is possible and necessary for revolutionary change in the world today. 

For more of Morea’s writings, check out “The Pancho Villa Syndrome,” an excerpt from Full Circle, as well as our two recent interviews: “The Ultimate Dilemma” (2016) and “We Wanted to Destroy the University” (2024).

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People are fools

MAGA supporters sang the national anthem during AmericaFest, the first Turning Point USA summit since the death of Charlie Kirk, in Phoenix, Arizona, on December 20, 2025. Cheney Orr/ Reuters

Why is there such complicity with the old Fascism and why such an acceptance of the new Fascism? Because there is – and this is the point – a guiding principle common to both, sincerely or insincerely: that is the idea that the greatest ill in the world is poverty and that therefore the culture of the poorer classes must be replaced by the culture of the ruling class.

Pier Paolo Pasolini, Lutheran Letters, 1983


From lundimatin #517, (28/04/2026)

Taking the issue of fascism seriously requires us to consider, at the same time, how we oppose it. Jean-Luc Debry proposes here a demanding form of anti-fascism, that is to say, one that manages to steer clear of both the path of resentment and cheap moral self-righteousness. We do not morallychallenge right-wing culture; we combat it from a higher ethical standpoint, that is to say, a more generous one.

People are fools: The good conscience and the coming fascism

Jean-Luc Debry

The phrase, “People are fools”[1], as it was uttered in a fit of rage fuelled by inconsolable disappointment in the aftermath of elections marked by the Rassemblement national-RN’s [National Rally’s] gains and entrenchment at local level – and in the face of the threats its success poses at the national level should it win the presidential election – is a veritable slogan, almost a manifesto. This bitter observation reflects a slightly disillusioned sense of superiority that could well be one of the explanations for this deep rift, which is fuelling an increasingly threatening trend, especially since Trump has been in the White House and has been trumpeting his determination to impose a contemporary version of fascism with all the trappings of a victorious counter-revolution. It is, it seems to me, in its less explicit but equally relentless version of “we don’t associate with those sorts of people”, the product of antagonists who foster a vindictive atmosphere of very bad omens.

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‘The Mexican Question’ in the Cronaca Sovversiva

From The Transmetropolitan Review (01/05/2026)


In the interests of fostering physical print media, the full pamphlet is only formatted for printing.

Introduction

The involvement of Italian anarchists in the Mexican Revolution of 1910 is a moment in history that remains obscure not just to contemporary anarchists, but also to academic historians. Beyond this, the actual history of the Mexican Revolution is insanely complex and refuses to fit neatly inside any ideological boxes, including anarchist ones.

Nevertheless, vast areas of northern and southern Mexico achieved near total anarchism for various lengths of time, although the state tamed most of them by 1920. This assertion is backed up by numerous volumes of recent scholarship, but information traveled slowly in 1911, the year several dozen Italian anarchists crossed the border into northern Mexico to fight in a revolution.

Responding to calls printed in the Spanish language Regeneraciónthe Italian language l’Era Nuova and Cronaca Sovversivaas well as in the IWW’s Industrial Workerthree groups of Italians traveled to Los Angeles before crossing the border into liberated Tijuana. These groups entered Mexico by May 1911, having traveled from vastly different parts of the United States.

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Dietrich Bonhoeffer: On Stupidity

Eichmann was not lago and not Macbeth, and nothing would have been farther from his mind than to determine with Richard III “to prove a villain.” Except for an extraordinary diligence in looking out for his personal advancement, he had no motives at all. And this diligence in itself was in no way criminal; he certainly would never have murdered his superior in order to inherit his post. He merely, to put the matter colloquially, never realized what he was doing. It was precisely this lack of imagination which enabled him to sit for months on end facing a German Jew who was conducting the police interrogation, pouring out his heart to the man and explaining again and again how it was that he reached only the rank of lieutenant colonel in the S.S. and that it had not been his fault that he was not promoted. In principle he knew quite well what it was all about, and in his final statement to the court he spoke of the “revaluation of values prescribed by the [Nazi] government.” He was not stupid. It was sheer thoughtlessness – something by no means identical with stupidity – that predisposed him to become one of the greatest criminals of that period. And if this is “banal” and even funny, if with the best will in the world one cannot extract any diabolical or demonic profundity from Eichmann, that is still far from calling it commonplace. It surely cannot be so common that a man facing death, and, moreover, standing beneath the gallows, should be able to think of nothing but what he has heard at funerals all his life, and that these “lofty words” should completely becloud the reality – of his own death. That such remoteness from reality and such thoughtlessness can wreak more havoc than all the evil instincts taken together which, perhaps, are inherent in man – that was, in fact, the lesson one could learn in Jerusalem. But it was a lesson, neither an explanation of the phenomenon nor a theory about it.

Hannah Arendt, Eichmann In Jerusalem, 1963


If Hannah Arendt distinguished stupidity from thoughtless, the later being the source of what she perceived as Adolf Eichmann’s evil in the Nazi extermination of Europe’s Jewry, she understood his thoughtlessness – “remoteness from reality” – in a way similiar to how Dietrich Bonhoeffer understood the stupidity of those who embraced fascism and nazism, and as something even more dangerous than wickedness.

The process at work here [of becoming stupid] is not that particular human capacities, for instance, the intellect, suddenly atrophy or fail. Instead, it seems that under the overwhelming impact of rising power, humans are deprived of their inner independence, and, more or less consciously, give up establishing an autonomous position toward the emerging circumstances. The fact that the stupid person is often stubborn must not blind us to the fact that he is not independent. In conversation with him, one virtually feels that one is dealing not at all with a person, but with slogans, catchwords and the like, that have taken possession of him. He is under a spell, blinded, misused, and abused in his very being. Having thus become a mindless tool, the stupid person will also be capable of any evil and at the same time incapable of seeing that it is evil. This is where the danger of diabolical misuse lurks, for it is this that can once and for all destroy human beings.

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Anarchism and mysticism: anarchist ecology as respect for the earthly sacred

William Blake, Jerusalem, Plate 94, “Albion cold lays on his Rock….”, 1804 to 1820

by Simón Royo Hernández

Redes Libertarias, 19/04/2026


That man is just who is informed with and transformed into justice.

Meister Eckhart, Sermon Fifty-Nine (Pf 59, Q 39, QT 25)

I to myself would live,
To enjoy the blessings that to Heaven I owe,
Alone, contemplative,
And freely love forgo,
Nor hope, fear, hatred, jealousy e’er know.

Fray Luis de León, The Life Removed

To be a philosopher is not merely to have subtle thoughts, nor even to found a school, but so to love wisdom as to live according to its dictates, a life of simplicity, independence, magnanimity, and trust. It is to solve some of the problems of life, not only theoretically, but practically.

Henry David Thoreau, Walden

Mysticism is tantamount to atheism because it asserts that all of Nature is sacred and divine, in the Spinozist sense; this is tantamount to saying, therefore, that every Church is false and that every Pope and transcendent God is a lie; and for that reason, mysticism is the only form of spirituality compatible with anarchist materialism.

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Giorgio Agamben: Whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad

François-Auguste Biard, L’Exorcisme de la folie de Charles VI, 1839

It is worth reflecting on a fact so incredible that attempts are made at all costs to sweep it under the carpet: the state that claims to be the most powerful in the world has for years been governed by men who are, technically speaking, insane. This is not simply a matter of taking a political judgement to an extreme: that Trump — as undoubtedly Biden before him — should be considered insane in the pathological sense of the term is a view already shared by many psychiatrists, and one that anyone observing the way they express themselves cannot help but share. It goes without saying that what interests us here is not the clinical case of the individuals known as Trump and Biden; rather, the question we cannot help but ask is: what is the historical significance of the fact that a country like the United States—which in a sense leads the whole of the West—is governed by a mentally ill person? What radical spiritual and moral—even before political—decadence could have led to such an extreme consequence? That the fate of the West was marked by nihilism is something Nietzsche had already diagnosed over a century ago alongside the death of God; but that nihilism would have to take the form of madness was not a foregone conclusion. Perhaps it is in some way out of compassion and mercy that God, who wishes to lose the West, leads it to its end not in consciousness and responsibility, but in unconsciousness and madness.

Quodlibet, March 30, 2026

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Élisée Reclus: To My Brother the Peasant

Communal society, Zoar, Ohio, U.S. (Zócola Public Square)

In 1873, Reclus wrote an article entitled “Quelques mots sur la propriété” for L’Almanach du peuple. He later revised and expanded it, publishing it as a pamphlet under the title A mon frère le paysan (1899). In his “Biographie d’Elisée Reclus” in Les Frères Elie et Elisée Reclus (Paris: Les Amis d’Elisée Reclus, 1964), Paul Reclus writes that “it was translated into a dozen European languages, even including two dialects of Breton”. While this small work is a classic of anarchist propaganda and possesses all the rhetorical qualities appropriate to the genre, it is also of interest for its comments on the relationship between capitalism and technological rationality.

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Israel, Apartheid, and the Death Penalty: When Law Becomes a Tool of Ethnic Cleansing

Anti-Apartheid Demonstration UC Berkeley 1985

By Rezgar Akrawi, from libcom.org (10/04/2026)


The Death Penalty for Terrorists Law was formally passed on 30 March 2026, with a 62–48 vote. Israel’s National Security Minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, during a session of the Knesset’s National Security Committee. He and other members of his far-right Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power) party arrived wearing yellow noose-shaped lapel pins to signal their commitment to a controversial bill they were spearheading.

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