Socialist Aotearoa is a working class revolutionary organisation. We believe that capitalism must be overthrown and replaced with a world of equality and workers' democracy.
Dayle Takitimu - "This is the time for the uprising"
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Dayle Takitimu of Te Whanau a Apanui tells the hikoi "This is the time for the uprising!".
Kia ora readers, This post is to let you know that we have relocated our website to socialistaotearoa.org.nz ! We are uploading on there from now on, though this blog will be left up as an archive of our past activities and commentary. Here are our latest articles, which you can read on the new website: Ghosts of Christmas Present: Macron's Ongoing Yellow Vests Nightmare by John Mullen 100 Years Ago: the Murder of Rosa Luxemburg by Elliot Crossan Taxing the Richardson Will Not Be Enough by Elliot Crossan
All great art is ideological weaponry. The song 'The Guillotine' by 'The Coup' is a perfect example. A mixture of funk and hip-hop, it is explicitly an attack on the ruling class and can be comfortably categorised as both a 'text of resistance' and 'authentic subcultural activity'. The radical ideology that is integral to the cultural content of the song is both feminist and anti-capitalist. The characters in the music video are taken from 'The Wizard of Oz', allowing for pre-established symbolism to be used to express meanings and ideas to a greater extent than would otherwise be possible. The artists, through an independent record label, have used the internet and social media to reach a mass audience whilst being in active opposition to the 'culture industry'; thus breaking free of the material control and ideological 'hegemony' of the capitalist media corporations. The song is accessible to an audience of politically aware
Part “Hobson’s Pledge”, part “Blue Lives Matter”, with a thin rainbow veneer. Their rhetoric appears to be lifted straight from talkback radio. Intimidation, gas-lighting the victims of police violence, and outright assault of a Māori trans women — this is what the loud majority in the LGBT community have stooped to in order to defend the right of a largely heterosexual police contingent to dominate the Pride Parade. The core argument appears to be one of inclusion — but if we want to talk about not excluding straight allies, then how about we talk about not excluding Māori allies, whether cis and straight or LGBT? During my time working with the Mana Movement, I never once encountered discrimination due to my gender identity. When I am a guest on a Marae, even as a Pākehā, my gender identity is always respected — a stark contrast to the Pākehā establishment, who many in the LGBT community wish to make peace with. Naturally, Māori LGBT people have expressed concern with the pol
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