frandroid: Drawing of sabotabby in revolutionary attire: beret, tight green top, keffiyeh, flowing red hair (revolution)
Mike Duncan has finished telling his Martian Revolution volume. [personal profile] sabotabby I don't know if you listened to his interview on It Could Happen Here, but if you were worried about events in your writing happening in real life before publishing your story, imagine publishing a weekly speculative historical fiction podcast where events in real life catch up with your narrative week by week... :P

Duncan has switched to Patreon as his publishing platform, and now there is a discussion thread where he mingles with listeners/fans. He revealed that he was thinking about writing this Martian Revolution fiction throughout the 10 years he spent doing the Revolutions podcast. So that kind of explains why he was able to write the damn thing week by week as he did, (I mean he did plan the big lines of it ahead of time) but holy cow. That was a magnificent story, especially if you have been a listener of the podcast, or if you have good revolutionary history knowledge in general, because you can pick up many references to other revolutions, and I probably didn't even catch two thirds of them. But there was a LOT of the Russian Revolution infused in this story.

For all of you holdouts who haven't ever listened to the podcast, just listen to one episode per week... Start at 3.1 as even Duncan himself recommends, and even though the French Revolution is too many damn episodes, it's worth stretching the pleasure over time. I think I was consuming about 2-3 episodes a week for a long time, so I only caught up to its weekly release a year or two ago, in the middle of his 10th volume (the Russian Revolution) and I was also catching up on his seven years of History of Rome as well, though I did not pay as much attention to that one.

Maybe I should start a Révolution Weeklé, like Whale Weekly, to get more people to tackle it... *cough*

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A friend is planning on starting a Capital vol. 1 reading group, and he asked me if I would read it in French so I could provide a different perspective... Weee! (I first turned him down because I think in English these days, but Marx personally supervised the French translation, rewrote some bits of it, and eventually told Russian translators that they should use the French translation rather than the original German to base their own translation on! So I will read it in French after all.

David Harvey has a course (a recording of which I have as a podcast) teaching Capital... In an interview, he was discussing how he has taught Capital for like 30 years, but not always at the same school, and even in the same school, the cohort of students he would get would change in terms of personal interests and areas of study, so every time he has taught the course, students have been picking up on different parts of the book and/or had different perspectives to bring to it. Imagine how interesting that must be.

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After listening to 10 years of podcasting on 10 different Revolutions, I do wonder though why revolutionaries (and many of their arm-chair wannabes) still focus so much on Marx. I mean I understand that he's a phenomenal writer and the finest analyst of capitalism and all that, but in the end, revolutions, even the Russian one, didn't quite happen because of a good grasp of Marxist theory. Marx /followed/ the French revolution, the mother of all the other modern ones. The Cuban Revolution didn't have much of a Marxist character until the U.S. started opposing Castro and forced them in the hands of the Soviets, along with Ché's own inclinations. I mean the end of the Cold War means that there's a lot fewer people focusing on Marx today, but he's still a big deal in many university revolutionary/activist circles, one of which I am somewhat adjacent to thanks to F.
frandroid: camilo cienfuegos in a broad-rimmed hat (anarchism)
So I'm catching up to Andor Season 2, and listened to It Could Happen Here's Andor s02e1-3 review episode. Totally worth it! The bit about the Nazi simulacrum was quite a revelation, and the discussion about leftist infighting was amusing.

[personal profile] sabotabby and a former LJer whose old alias I forget brought to my attention, from a Variety interview, that Diego Luna used to volunteer for the Zapatistas. As side notes, Denise Gough is a full-blown supporter of Palestine, and Tony Gilroy a listener of the Revolutions podcast, so this is a pretty awesome crew.

The only huge letdown is that Luna reveals that he talked Tony Gilroy down from doing 5 seasons to 2. What a fool.
frandroid: YPG logo, Syrian Kurdish defense forces (ypg)
I had posted my takes on FB and BlueSky, but in case you didn't see any of that...

Don't get me wrong, I am overjoyed at the overthrow of Assad, but anyone claiming that HTS did this on behalf of the US and/or Israel (!) is an absolute idiot. (In case you wonder, the people claiming such things are campists, i.e. people who think that the only lens for looking at political action is whether the U.S. supports it, and oppose that.) HTS are actually close to Turkey, because they're Islamists, not in spite of it. The Syrian National Army, the SNA, is the umbrella-group even more closely linked to Syria, and they also took territory in the last week, particularly Manbij, which had been held by the SDF. Isis also emerged from their underground status and captured a city or two in the south "east", as much as Syria has that.

Israel has been relentlessly bombing all military infrastructure in Syria since Assad left, over 300 air strikes now since Assad left. The Syrian army had good Russian-made anti-aircraft defenses, but with the fall of Assad, people stopped manning them and the IDF has been going to town, destroying these. Even the SDF hasn't been able to put their hands on much of the abandoned hardware in Qamislo before the IDF dropped their bombs. This is going to leave this new Syria even more vulnerable to Turkish domination in the north and possibly lose more territory to the IDF in the South as the latter grows Eretz Israel. Syria is today an even more failed state than it was last week, but a differently-shaped one.

Turkey is also going to use this opportunity to try to attack Kurds in Syria in the near future. If they can figure out a way to mediate a split of the country between HTS and the SNA, then they will push towards Rojava.

The SDF has been facing some popular resistance in their areas with larger Arab populations. The DAANES' (the official acronym of Rojava) feminist agenda (I'm not kidding. I can expand if you want) has not been popular with the rural Arab population and they don't like sharing the land with Kurds, so there are protests in the south in particular. Turkey has been bombing some Kurdish positions to help SNA takovers already. One Arab brigade has defected from the SDF to the SNA already.

CW: gruesome executions by HTS )

So it looks like this HTS/SNA takeover is bringing democracy to Syria, one bullet a time. A bit slower than the neighbour's 2000-pound ballots, but to each their own. Syrians are far from being out of the woods yet. :(
frandroid: Hammer and sickle logo, with the hammer replaced with a LiveJournal pencil (hammer and sickle)
I should pick a different name for this meme because I never write this on Friday. Anyway. Today I'm recommending three different podcast episodes which are accidentally* linked by the theme of Revolution.

(*: Because I'm totally not seeking revolutionary content in my podcasts as a primary interest...)

1) Neighbor Democracy - Justice Beyond Courts: The Conciliation Committees (Rojava Excerpt)
This episode is a short one, briefly discussing Rojava's system of community-driven justice. There's a strong emphasis on conciliation and diversion from the formal justice system, and trying to get at the root causes of crime to resolve issues and prevent further crime. I wish abolitionists in North America would pay more attention.

2) Green & Red - From Environmentalist to "Domestic Terrorist" with former Earth Liberation member Daniel McGowan
This is an interview with former ELF direct action partisan (!) Daniel McGowan, who did a fair bit of vandalism and set a few things on fire, eventually getting ratted on by a turncoat, was arrested by the FBI and did 7 years for huh, "green terrorism.". McGowan is super clear eyed about what he was doing, was well-studied in revolutionary practice, and now focuses greatly on prison solidarity. His journey is fascinating to listen to.

3) Revolutions - The Final Chapter. Alternate title: The Great Terror
This is Mike Duncan's last narrative history episode for the Russian Revolution, and for the Revolutions podcast as a whole. This was an insane 9 year odyssey that ballooned way beyond what Duncan planned. This episode is focused on Stalin's Terror, and what can I say? Stalin staged his campaign terror, then staged his own Thermidorian reaction, and basically wiped out the entire generation of early Soviet political and military leadership to ensure that no one with any kind of following or independent idea could even think of challenging him.

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An anti-recommendation: I find Behind the Bastards to be an irritating podcast format. I enjoy the information but not digging the tongue in cheek/let's have fun while telling horrible things vibe. You can be funny while recounting terrible events (hi Mike Duncan) without making it a whole style.

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#PodcastFriday is a tag where people recommend a particularly good episode from a podcast. The point of this tag is NOT to recommend entire podcasts--there are too many podcasts out there, and our queues are already too long, so don't do that. Let's just recommend the cream of the crop, the episodes that made you *brainsplode* or laugh like crazy. Copy this footer so people don't start recommending whole podcasts. :P

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Feel free to just post in the comments if you have podcast episodes to recommend and don't feel like making a #PodcastFriday post :)

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