Here is the very first scan for the New World Rising archives, chosen by Fred himself. It's an interview for the Brown University Newspaper, in 1987, while our activist friend Andi was attending there. In it, he discusses his life history, and his activism in detail. He told me that he was also arrested with our friend Rob Axis. This is the first of many scans we will be doing, as we intend to share every single zine and article that Fred has. We hope you can read it, and we hope you enjoy hearing about this amazing time in American history.
New World Rising News
The New World Rising is a network of artists, activists, focalizers and visionaries. We are working together to be the change we wish to see in the world. We are dedicated to creating a movement to bring about a transformation in the way people think and live, so that our lives are a dance of love in motion. We do this through dialogue, collaboration, and the sharing of knowledge, skills, visions, and resources.
Wednesday, January 13, 2016
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Thursday, October 30, 2014
Gaia Grove Eco-Camp and Learning Center in Florida
Gaia Grove Eco-Camp and Learning Center
About
Permaculture, Sustainable Building & Farming,
Co-Creation, Community Development & Support.
Health & Wellness.
Offering products soon, including honey.
Coming soon, a support and education network,
and an eco-product buying club
for sustainable and healthy living.
Mission
To learn through hands-on experiential methods
and share information with each other
on how to live more sustainably.
We are interested in growing & gathering
as much food as we can,
and building low cost, energy efficent,
healthy homes such as our portable & recycled
'Gaia View Portable Eco-Home' and off-grid natural homes
such as cob, earthbag, cordwood, yurts, tree houses,
shipping container homes and more. We are
also interested in setting up cottage industries
on the land to help sustain us.
Description
We are located on 91.9 Acres
on the upper Santa Fe River in Bradford County,
12 miles north of Gainesville, Florida,
home of University of Florida.
We are inviting people to take a tour
and participate in one or many
of our hands-on eco-living workshops.
We have very low cost camp sites
and natural home building sites for one or many nights.
Groups can also
rent the facilities for their own events.
We also have two Guest Houses,
one 2 bedroom/2 bath furnished home
on the Gaia Grove property
and another 6/3 Home nearby with cozy fireplace,
large kitchen, nicely,fully furnished bedroom,
and handicap accessibility for short
or long term stays as an alternative to camping.
We will be offering language immersion classes
in English to speakers of other languages
as well as in Spanish, Portuguese and Mandarin Chinese.
We are now setting up language and
permaculture learning programs
at our affiiliated centers in Ecuador, Brazil and Taiwan.
We are just beginning the Gaia Global Institute
where we will offer classes in workshops
on such things as:
Global Localization,
Peace and Conflict Resolution,
Fair Trade vs Free Trade,
Global Environmental Issues,
Community and Economic Development
as well as Foreign Language and Permaculture Design.
For more info, please check the website:
http://gaiagrove.webs.com/
ARC 38 in Wassaic NY
Arc38 is a living experiment in authentic culture,
situated on 188 acres of wetland and forest in Wassaic, NY.
We strive to actualize human potential,
by creating an incubator
for the best ideas ready to take form, right now.
MISSION STATEMENT
Arc 38 is a community of people who strive to facilitate, educate
and uplift the populus by means of sustainable permaculture,
spiritual diversity and values of unifying inclusivity.
The Goals of Arc 38
The Goal of the Arc 38 Core Group is simplistic in it’s complexity
and is vastly encompassing of many ideals.
One of our most high goals is to ease and assist
in the unification of diverse social cultures.
We conclude that
our main goals must emulate missions
which are inclusive of all people
while still being definitive enough
to provide a general direction.
This direction will be developed through and for projects
which may assist in the lasting creation
of such a diverse atmosphere,
prioritizing the needs of the whole
over the wants of individuals,
thus the following will outline
what the projects at Arc 38 are representative of.
We seek to create an abundant and sustainable world
by becoming the proper example and epitomization
of what that may mean.
By using diverse methods of permaculture,
we are able to encourage
a more conscious use of our resources.
We serve to promote the preservation and facilitation
of life giving, tangible resources such as potable water,
clean air, abundance of nutritious foods,
renewable energies and more.
We collectively share the belief that
resources such as these
are that which is too precious to take for granted,
that all should have access to those resources
which provide life.
The land upon which Arc 38 is situated
is home to natural marsh and wooded environments
with diverse species of microbial, insect, plant and animal life.
Stewardship of these lands is very important to us,
protecting and caring for these natural wonders are of top priority.
Biodiversity may flourish through intelligent forestry management,
taking great care not to choke the ever flowing
forces of nature yet instead to work in harmony.
It is only through the pursuit of these ends
that we gain the ability and time to practice
a more positive atmosphere of equality, acceptance,
and coexistence for all people.
By removing the fear and grip of scarcity
we are more capable of providing a peaceful existence,
a non-discriminative sanctuary where people of diverse social,
economic and spiritual cultures may congregate without fear of judgement.
We look forward to the evolution of human consciousness as a whole
and strive to become a great cultural center.
Monetary sustainability will ensure our survival and success
in the current outer paradigm, giving us the opportunity to
improve our services and provide better outreach.
Through the main goals of Arc 38 a myriad of services
may generate monetary funding that may both be used to uplift Arc 38,
it's individual projects and those in the pursuit of similar goals.
We also hope to help bring economic flow for the local community
outside of our miniature community,
doing our best to live in harmony with all around us.
Lastly, by inviting the public to become apprentices
and stewards of our projects we hope to provide the ability
for people to learn with hands on experience.
Educating people on how they may implement similar projects,
anywhere in the world, is what will truly create
the change in the world that we wish to see.
For though we may all be individuals who are responsible for ourselves
there is no limit to what we can accomplish by uplifting one another.
Together we will change the world.
For more info, check the website at http://arc38.org/
Friday, October 24, 2014
Meet
Burnpile Press; a DIY publishing project
in Northeast Florida
by Siddie Friar
I'd
like to introduce you to Burnpile Press; an independent publishing
project dedicated to producing and distributing progressive
literature for free. Located in Jacksonville Florida and founded in
2012 Burnpile has a strong DIY ethic. Our battle cry is 'Do it
yourself. Do it together. Do it now.' We believe that education is a
basic human right. That no one should be denied access to educational
materials or opportunities because of an inability to 'pay for it.'
On a micro-level we work to meet the need for open access to
alternatives to the mainstream for under-served populations of our
city. While also filling the general void left by the mainstream
media for communities with access to more resources. We do this by
producing and publishing our own literature with our off-set printing
press. As well as distributing the works of other groups with
progressive, radical, or anti-authoritarian politics.
Burnpile
Press is a worker owned cooperative
entirely run by volunteers and
funded by contributions of time, materials and money
from our
community.
One example of this is in the summer of 2013
we were loaned funds by one of our allies,
Grateful Fred of New World Rising,
to purchase a house.
This space is becoming the
operational hub for Burnpile Press.
One third of the house is
dedicated to production, there will also be dorm rooms for volunteer
staff, an outdoor kitchen and shower, renewable energy systems, a
variety of edible landscaping and aquaculture installments around the
entire property.
We salvage as much material as we can and
live simple lives. While our volunteers are supported by the projects
none of us get paid. We are here because we want social change and
recognize that it starts at home. It starts with each one of us and
the relationships we keep with each other. We are young with a
stubborn optimism of what's possible if we work together toward a
shared horizon goal. We hope to spark inspiration in our peer group
and beyond to take action.
This is a reveille. Life is short,
it's time to step up to the plate; do it yourself, do it together, do
it now. Visit our website for more information, we look forward to
connecting;
- Email: Burnpile@riseup.net
- Twitter: @Burnpile_Press
- Facebook: Burnpile Books and Press
The STAND Center in Belize by Andrea Ackerman
EARN A 1 ACRE FARM IN THE MAYA
MOUNTAINS!
@
The STAND CENTER
Sustainable Tropical Agriculture &
Natural Development
Center for Experiential Learning
Belize, Central America
learn.live.grow.give.
We are a family, a community,
a not
for profit organization
and a permaculture farm.
We are the seeds of tomorrow,
pushing our courageous
cotyledons up out of the dank fertile rotting mess
society has left us as our inheritance.
When life hands you a sack of shit,
grow some
tomatoes!
We are you...your voice, your soul song,
singing its melodious
sonnet of love
for this intricate economy of ecology.
We are your hands, digging
deeply...gently...
into our Mother earth to extract her good gifts
without
raping her essence.
We are your heart, pulsating
wild love for our wondrous world,
caressing her and mending her
in all the ways we know.
We are your mind, seeking
ancient wisdom to cultivate,
wild seeds of hope finding refuge from the
ever
encroaching concrete jungle!
Do you hunger for these things?
Do
they feel like shimmering shadows of
something you long for but have
forgotten where to find?
Do you find societies narcissistic demands for your time
and attention
draining your vitality
and leaving your aching bones
too dry to follow
that gypsy song
into the forest garden you know.you belong in?
Does freedom
feel like a mirage, always at the tips of your
fingers, yet never touched?
Here is your chance...
you need
nothing more than resolve, courage, faith, and trust.
NOW IS YOUR TIME TO BREAK
FREE! We left the confining comforts of
economic slavery a decade
ago....knowing in our hearts our kindred would
follow...and yet, our hearts grieve
to see our sisters and brothers too
institutionalized to step out of
the open door into their birthright.
As we raise our own children
feeding themselves in
the rainforest, we call to them.
They are too attached to the same familiar
luxuries
that have ripped our culture
and soul life down to a bleeding
skeleton....
without a petroleum based reality,
without Walmarts and Starbucks and and free
WiFi...
without these fancy health food stores that fill their packages
with cleaner yet still highly processed, mass farmed
foods devoid of living essence that
can only come from
eating our food minutes off the branch.....
without these
sparkly lures, a real life, connected to one another
and to the dirt and the water and
the sunshine that sustains us.....
just feels like too much of a sacrifice.
But I call
out to my true TRIBE... those rainbow warriors
and wild humans who gather together
to celebrate life
for a brief magical moment...
those souls who at the end
of the gatherings,
wonder WHY we all choose to leave our forest home so
quickly....
It was these feelings that inspired us, more than a decade ago,
to find
a home for this lost tribe I had finally rediscovered....
And we have!
So.... I call out to you
in a song many of you already know.....
I hear the voice of my Grandmother
calling me
I hear the voice of my Grandmother
calling me
Wake up! Wake up! Wake up! Wake up!
Listen...listen,
Listen...listen....
May the rivers all run clear,
May the mountains go unspoiled!
May the air be pure,
may the trees
grow tall,
may the earth be shared by all....
So, If you know you have what it
takes to turn raw land
into a garden and to feed yourself...here is our challenge!
EARN A 1 acre ETHO-FARM!
All you
have to do is BUILD A HOUSE,
PLANT A GARDEN, and share and
connect with
our community!
It really is that simple!
If you
have what it takes to cultivate raw land into
something that can provide for you
...and YOU CAN HAVE IT!
We will share our own knowledge
with you as you hone your own skills.
To find out more, visit our
Community\Organization web page.
(www.stand-center.com)
Click on ETHO-Farm challenge!
Community begins with You!
The What's Hip Docufilm Project by Marcus Severns
The
What's Hip Docufilm Project
When
I was in high school, I felt the desire to see the world.
As a
senior, I was living on my own and desired to drop out
and pursue
this goal.
Yet I stayed to get a diploma, since American society
places formal education in high revere.
After my first year of
college, in 2010, I dropped out to travel the
country.
The
temptation to experience life was overwhelming,
I had to see
and learn things which could never be taught by TV, movies, or
school.
I gave nearly everything I owned to charity. The only stuff I
kept was art, books, and my vehicle.
With the idea of freedom and not
much else, I hit the road.
While on the road, living in my car
and in the woods,
I learned there isn't much a person needs to
sustain themselves;
and as for companions,
After
living at two organic farms, my film maker friend Mateusz Gugalka
contacted me
to ask if I wanted to make a documentary about
“hippies”,
since he was interested in how I lived.
In
the summer of 2014, we began filming the documentary “What's
Hip”.
Our agenda was to go to festivals, interview
historians, and go to intentional communities.
Due to several unfortunate events, “What's Hip” was put on hold.
Mateusz and I
have temporarily split ways until we can generate enough money for
travel.
However, we plan to reunite in 2015. Our goal remains the
same:
Show
how the hippie movement has progressed from the 60's to today.
With a
focus on intentional communities
and
living off the land.
So,
from dropping out, I traveled the country, volunteered, and set my
life towards the
betterment of Earth.
Unknowing of what to do or where to go, I
simply went.
I've heard from numerous people who want to to do as I've done.
Only,
they believe money is an issue. It's not; anyone can find a community
by word of mouth, through directories such as the website ic.org,
Wikipedia, or even random browser searches.
As
for travel itself, a person just needs courage.
There are so
many options to living alternatively,
and the populations of these cultures are growing.
If you've heard of
an alternative lifestyle which you want to live,
but don't know how
to start, you can learn from someone who has done what you'd like to
do.
Or, you can do as I've done – quit
everything you're doing, and just go.
"We Can All Make A Difference With A Little Change" by Amanda Walton
“We
Can All Make a Difference With A Little Change” by Amanda Walton
We
can all be a part of the process of Change. We don’t have to force
change; we can let our world change on its own, But when we make our
own small changes, with positive intentions, it makes the kind of
change that matters the most. These
are some of the steps you can take, to make small
changes that contribute to big changes for the world.
Step
1 – Know What You Stand For: Be willing to struggle
for the things you stand for, but first, know what it is that you
stand and struggle for. Every life lived consciously has a huge
impact.
Step
2 – Get Others to Join Your Cause: Getting others
to join you is fairly easy. Just tell others about the things you’re
passionate about. When you’re passionate about something, people
are going to take notice, and this inspires them to plug in with the
movement too.
Step
3 – Be Open to Making Change within Your Plan:
If
you’re working to make changes happen, remember to be flexible.
Stay on course, but go with the flow. Plans don’t always work out
as planned, but being flexible makes room for synchronicity and the
flow of small miracles.
I’m
part of change in our world. I want people to see and hear the truth,
and to know they can do something about the injustices around them.
To create a big potential impact, I’m making these changes at home
first. I teach my children about the important things in life. I
teach them how to treat each other and the world around us. I
know that I’m making an impact when I hear my children
talking to their friends about the changes that they too can make.
Just remember that you have the power to start making change today,
and you can make those changes all on your own.
Amanda
Walton is a busy stay home mom to four, writer, and blogger.
She
writes about the things in life that matter the most to her at Simply
Shawn N Jenn.
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Activism for Affordable Housing
Activism for Affordable Housing
It’s been three years since the big Occupy Wall Street movement in New York City’s Zuccotti Park, the protest movement that began in response to rampant social and economic inequality. While it appears that the protesting aspect of the Occupy movement is dormant, the fact is, the movement is alive and well. Why? Because the same rampant conditions that compelled the movement continue, and are even worse. Income gaps continue to widen, people continue to lose their homes, and the robber barons continue to raid every aspect of the country on all levels. Moreover, while these things continue to worsen, our so-called leaders continue to cut social programs, which were designed to relieve poverty and to provide security nets.
Even though social justice activism is not currently centralized in the Occupy Movement, the spirit of it is dispersed far and wide, seeding new programs everywhere. This is because, after the protesting, comes the real work: that of building a better new world, a sustainable world based on equality and justice of all kinds, for all people everywhere
.
One exciting issue that the Occupy Movement focused on, and that the New World Rising cares a lot about, is Alternative Housing, Affordable Housing, and Fighting Gentrification.
What can social justice activists do to advocate for affordable and alternative housing, in this terrible time of economic collapse and housing market nightmares? We can commit ourselves to direct action, by actually building shelter and by cooperatively acquiring properties to rehab and sell at low cost, for example.
We can organize marches and encampments to rebel against gentrification. We can fight alongside and on behalf of socioeconomic victims, in areas where housing will be torn down for corporate developments. We can bring people together to participate in trainings on legal home ownership defense and nonviolent direct action, and then participate in coordinated actions, which will hopefully grow and strengthen the movement.
Most importantly for the focus of the New World Rising, we can work together
to acquire and build affordable and alternative housing, to be occupied by fellow activists.
We are not powerless. Together, we can do this.
The federal government has proven that it’s unwilling and unable to address the economic and housing crises. And while the Occupy Movement did have difficulty translating into a widespread political movement, the fact remains that we still have power to make effective change on the grassroots, local and community levels. If you care about affordable housing and alternative housing, whether for the homeless, for activists, or for anyone else, then it’s important to get busy and organize a grassroots community group to deal with the city, county, corporate and other forces that try to oppose fair housing. That seems to be the best and possibly only way to demand that things like sustainability and affordability play a vital role in housing plans. When opposition and protest do not work, we turn to actively building viable alternatives together.
All of the elements that led to the Occupy
movement’s birth are still in place, and are in fact worse. The rich are richer, the corrupt live without fear of going to jail, and everyone knows the government is not coming to save us.
Social Justice Activism is the individual or collective effort to address injustice and to promote justice, by direct or indirect means, including writing letters and signing petitions, campaigning for politicians who stand for justice and equality, commitment to boycotts or to such things as only buying local, going to street marches, going on strike, and things of that nature, performed with all due respect. We make it known that the situation is unacceptable. My favorite and most accessible form of activism is online networking,
using social media to facilitate your participation in the conversations,
and to organize collective actions.
The New World Rising is aligned with the cooperative movement style of activism. In this way of activism, people work collectively to build alternatives to what is not working, going so far as to build new institutions and entities that are in accord with cooperative principles. The intentional communities movement would be a good example of this. Intentional communities help to reinhabit the suburgatory of America and rewild it with life ways closer to those of our grandparents, living with and loving your neighbors, more like family than strangers. Activists in cooperative mode don’t seek to lobby politically or to protest, they simply combine powers and resources in order to accomplish great things that actually address the needs of the common people, the common wealth, and the common good.
We’ve touched on the Occupy Movement as an ongoing event that drew in many people to protest widespread economic and political horrors, but failed to translate into a huge widespread movement with the power to actually transform society. However, we sure tried it for quite a good long time, planting memes and seeds for future change and growth. We touched on the fact that all of those seeds dispersed far and wide, as activists went home and reinvigorated the sociopolitical climate wherever they lived. Now I will round this out by touching on the right to housing, which is why social justice activists fight for affordable housing in the first place.’
The right to housing is the basic socio-eco-cultural right to adequate housing and shelter. This most basic human right is endowed to all humans, and is recognized in most national constitutions, as well as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, it is stated that humans have a right to housing as part of the right to an adequate standard of living. It states that “Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing, medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age, or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.” According to international human rights law, in the UN Committee on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, the right to housing is regarded as a freestanding right.
So what’s wrong with this picture??? What’s wrong is that this is theoretically
one of the richest countries in the world, yet millions of people of all ages are homeless!
And the vast majority of them are homeless due to circumstances beyond their control.
They're completely deprived of their basic human rights,
and very few people do anything about it.
Sure, we can be creative and talk about earth bag houses, boat houses, tree houses, and all kinds of cool stuff. But for now, consider that these things are not even in the realm of possibility for the vast majority of people. They can’t even find a bathroom sometimes, so how are they to find a way to create a humble little home like that,
as their basic human rights say they can and should have?
That’s where social justice activists come in.
Habitat for Humanity does some mainstream things, and they have their pros and cons. However, there are many innovative people out there,
actually inventing housing solutions of all kinds, both permanent and mobile.
They are putting their money where their mouths are,
they are walking their talk, and they are a gift to the world.
And if more people lived like them, we would have a lot less homeless people.
We must work individually and collectively to promote solutions,
economically, politically and culturally,
at the grassroots, local, and countrywide levels.
We need a return to diversity, extended families, sustainability,
innovation, clean energies, and so on.
We need gardens on every rooftop, so every family can feed itself.
We need rain catchment barrels with filters at every home.
And most importantly, we need a nice humble home of some kind or another
for every single person and family who wants one.
There is no excuse for it to not be that way.
The reason is greed and power in the wrong hands.
We have a long road ahead, but if we take it together,
one step at a time,
we make real change in lives, in history and in the world.
Radical Zines Give a Voice to Activists
Radical Zines Give A Voice to Activists
A ‘zine (pronounced “zeen”, like bean) is a self published magazine, pamphlet or booklet, which is distributed through an intricate network of people, outlets like college campuses, and collectives.
Zines give a voice to people who don’t usually have a platform in mainstream media, such as activists for social justice and revolution. They give us an outlet to express our opinions, visions, ideals, and creativity, without censorship and with total freedom. With zines, anything goes, because you are making it yourself, in collaboration with other activists. The motive is passion, not profit, and so zinesters, the people who make zines, tend to value authentic voices that rant and sing, rage and awaken.
Most zines are just simple 8 by 11 sheets of photocopied paper, stapled together, full on both sides with words and graphics. Fancier ones might be in the form of a quarter or half sheet booklet that’s laser printed, photocopied, letter-press printed, or silk screened, and bound together by stapling, sewing, gluing, or simply folding the pages together. Zines are typically distributed through the informal networks of friends, collectives, bookstores, record stores, music venues, the mail system, and hand to hand, for the purposes of our self expression, our group expression, and the documentation of our movement.
Since their beginning, at the invention of the printing press, zines have given protestors, activists and marginalized people an opportunity to have their own opinions published in leaflet and pamphlet form. And since their inception, zines have been linked with underground movements and insurrections. Zinesters, from Thomas Paine and Benjamin Franklin, to those in circulation now, have always emphasized the passion of the issues rather than any profit driven motives. True self expression and genuine communication of issues are always at the center of our creative efforts. But let’s be clear, all zines are equally good, whether they make sense or not, whether they have mainstream success or not, whether they are made of materials that last or not, because they are a means of putting people’s voices out there. For the activists of our network, our voices are chiming in for peace and justice through any means possible. We also toot our own horns about our activists and our projects in development.
The history of zines is surprisingly long and very colorful. A wide spectrum of people and groups, from anarchists and punks to communitarians and Rainbows, from people of color and radical lesbians to prison inmates and student activists, have used zines to express themselves creatively and to convey their ideas and issues passionately, with the colorful freedom that is only found in grassroots production. Zines are an empowering and interesting art form. The New World Rising has been producing and distributing a zine of its own since the eighties, and we’re preparing the 2014 edition right now.
Making zines is an enjoyable activity that anyone can do. If you do it with others, it’s an opportunity to develop friendships, build alliances, grow your network, be creative, and have a kind of fun that results in something you know will be distributed far and wide, and used to awaken and empower people. Activists like us tend to advocate for things like social justice, sexual liberation, musical enjoyment, and other things that make life good. But you can express or advocate anything you want, anything important to you, We encourage you to get involved in zine production with us, make zines of your own, and make mini zines, in addition to our big annual edition.
Zine production is part of DIY culture, (do it yourself culture), where we empower ourselves by taking the media back into our own hands. It was so cool when I was in college, because most everyone I knew would make zines by hand, by cutting out words and pictures from magazines and newspapers, gluing it to a page, adding in their own drawings and poems, then zeroxing it on both sides in black and white, stapling it together, and selling it for $1 a copy.
It was a whole subculture that was very cool, very intelligent, and very creative. We need a huge renaissance of that kind of thing!
Each zine in existence has its own unique flair, which makes zine collections quite fascinating to study. I can spend hours in anarchist coffee shops and bookstores, just getting lost in all the rants and philosophies, poems and art, quotes and ramblings. Activists, like many other people who are different from the mainstream, take it as a given that we have to use alternative forms of media to get our voices heard. We create our own newspapers, we make journals, we write books. Self publishing now takes back the power from the agents and publishing houses, and puts it squarely into our own hands, so we should take advantage of that.
It’s true that you could drown in a sea of zines out there, but so what. Your voice just adds more music to the literary symphony, and someone out there will just love what you do. It will likely be enjoyed by somebody who will then have a conscious conversation about it, which will then ripple out in ways you will never even know about. But you can know it’s true, because the history of zine production has proven that it is.
When activists engage in zine production, we are free of the constraints of censorship and publication standards. We can do it any freaking way we want to! Any style, any content, any anything! I find that liberating and empowering. There is a whole huge community of zine makers, too, if you ever wish to plug in to a great subculture. There are also graphic novels, comic books, pamphlets by groups like crimethinc (which I adore), and more. There is no shortage of inspiring and creative literature to explore. And I like to explore it randomly, not looking for any particular thing, but just being totally surprised and following wherever that goes.
We are now distributing 10,000 copies of the 2014 issue of the New World Rising magazine, from coast to coast, hand to hand and heart to heart, in college towns, coffee shops, laundromats, anywhere people want something good like this to read and be inspired by..
On this blog here, and in the upcoming online NWR e-zine, we're giving voice to our social justice activism, in the areas of community building, project promotion, socioeconomics in our income generation and funding of projects, decriminalization of cannabis, promotion of the music scenes, and more. We also plan to throw in great artwork, poetry, quotes and whatever else comes to mind.
Won’t you join with us and submit something too? Or think of a mini zine you’d like to make, and get it out there!
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