Archive for November, 2008

New Poster: Crisis is Business as Usual

Here’s a new poster on the economic crisis, perfect for wheatpasting in neighborhoods with a lot of foreclosures.

Everybody knows that you’ve got to have money to make money, and never is that more true than in a speculation-driven economy. As the stock market reached unprecedented heights, its connection to the nuts and bolts of the economy became more and more illusory, making a “correction” inevitable–and profitable, for some. Gambling on the correction became a money-making scheme in its own right, and continues now after the collapse, without regard for the fact that such late-game betting assures that the recession will be all the more severe. Institutional investors can afford to play this game because, for them, a collapse of the stock market just means an opportunity to gamble on bonds or currency or whatever other financial product which might benefit from the disappearance of trillions of dollars in artificial value.

But if the value lost in the stock market is artificial, the consequences for human beings are very real. The ranks of the unemployed are rising by the hundreds of thousands every month. Inflated prices for consumers goods will largely stay inflated, even as earnings decline and homes are repossessed. And while the ultra-wealthy will ride out the recession in a riot of luxury and consumption, everyone else will be faced with a new, harsh reality—one in which the means of subsistence are increasing hard to achieve.

So for all the media’s obsession with stunned stockbrokers and disgraced corporate tycoons, their suffering is distinctly abstract: paper losses to be pondered during a long and comfortable early retirement. The rest of us will be forced to wonder why the most basic needs of our lives—food, shelter, medicine—are tied to the whims of a marketplace designed for collapse.

Further reading links after the jump.

Rolling Thunder #3 & #4 Almost Gone


Just a note to anyone who was hoping to one day get their hands on a copy of Rolling Thunder #3 and/or #4, we are down to about our last 50 copies of each, and there is no way they will last through the end of the year—so, if you want one, order it now, before they are gone forever. Currently they are part of the Rolling Thunder Bundle that include issues #3-#6 for $10, a bargain that will disappear once these two issues sell out.

Stay The Course


An analysis of the political climate following the election of 2008; a plea for anarchists to maintain vibrant networks and confrontational organizing even as Obama takes office; a discussion of what it takes for such networks and organizing to succeed; and a brief review of actions around the election, with a glimpse of what is to come.

Featuring a revision of our earlier Obama poster, and a PDF [6.2 MB] of a paper used to satirize corporate media the day after the election . . .

It’s all after the jump!

2nd Expect Resistance Printing Now Shipping

We recently received, and have begun mailing out, fresh copies from the second printing of Expect Resistance. In our endless quest for perfection, we’ve made several minor changes to this printing, resulting in a hard-fought, solid advance towards the definitive edition: 1) shifted the margins around just a smidge to allow more space on the inside margin, and more centering of text that appears on image backgrounds, 2) Switched the color of the red ink on the inside to a slightly darker tone to facilitate easier reading (from Pantone 193 to 187), 3) adjusted some images to print better, partricularly images that were printing too dark, 4) a couple design adjustments that no one will even notice, and 5) fixed a typo. All that said, there is no new content, so if you bought the first printing, don’t feel slighted—and if you’ve been waiting to check the book out, now is a great time to get a crisp copy hot off the press.

Rave Review for Rolling Thunder

The British magazine Last Hours recently presented a glowing review of the fifth issue of Rolling Thunder, which we present here:

Rolling Thunder #5
September 24th, 2008 · review by Tom Fiction

I first encountered CrimethInc. some years ago as I sat in a cramped living room chatting with friends. On the coffee table lay a truly battered and well thumbed copy of Days of War, Nights of Love (CrimethInc.’s flagship publication). I was a young punk kid lightly politicised by the threat of war in Iraq but with no real knowledge of radical culture. Anarchy was just a word printed on the sleeves of my parents old punk records. The text and images I found in those faded pages offered something new and engaging that I had never experienced.

Read the rest of this entry »