home.social

#repression — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #repression, aggregated by home.social.

  1. [Article] Au tribunal : un voleur de trottinette à la croisée des chemins

    Le 21 avril à Paris, un homme était jugé pour le vol d’une trottinette. C’est pour ces faits très simples que son existence, le temps d’une audience de comparutions immédiates, semblait immobilisée à la croisée des chemins.
    blast-info.fr/articles/2026/au #justice #repression

  2. « Il va falloir réinterroger notre doctrine de maintien de l’ordre dans sa totalité, estime-t-elle. Je n’imagine pas qu’on puisse se contenter de s’en prendre au gendarme qui est l’auteur du tir. Ça va chercher bien plus loin que ça. »

    La députée considère qu’il « serait tout à fait opportun qu’une commission d’enquête se penche sur le sujet ».

    2/2

    #ViolencesPolicieres #Repression #Darmanin

  3. « Ils nous interdisent tout : écrire, parler, chanter » : ces jeunes Russes qui contournent le blocage d’ #Internet

    En #Russie, les coupures et blocages d’Internet perturbent le quotidien de la population. Ce contrôle décidé par le #Kremlin s’inscrit dans un contexte de #répression accrue depuis l’invasion de l’ #Ukraine. Les citoyens tentent d’y échapper. Reportage. basta.media/Jeunes-Russes-qui-

    #censure #poutine #europe #extremedroite #actu #actualite #info #information #dictature

  4. 13 Jahre Haft für Daniela Klette – Urteil mit lautem Protest

    ‚Nach über 68 Verhandlungstagen wurde das mutmaßliche Ex-RAF-Mitglied #DanielaKlette zu einer langen Haftstrafe von 13 Jahren verurteilt. Inner- und außerhalb des Gerichtssaals kommt es zu Protest.

    Das Landgericht Verden hat die frühere mutmaßliche RAF-Angehörige Daniela Klette am Mittwoch zu 13 Jahren Haft verurteilt. Das Gericht sprach die 67-Jährige des besonders schweren Raubes in sechs Fällen sowie des versuchten schweren Raubes, des erpresserischen Menschenraubes und von Verstößen gegen das Waffengesetz schuldig.…‘

    perspektive-online.net/2026/05

    #Repression #RAF #Deutschland #Justiz #Solidarität #Antireport

  5. Six Years On: George Floyd, his legacy and the future of racial equity

    The Bounce Black Team

    Six years after the murder of George Floyd, the world is still reeling from the promises and limits of what followed.

    His death catalysed a global uprising against anti-Black racism, policing violence, and structural inequality. Organisations, institutions, and governments issued statements of solidarity, pledged reforms, and, in some cases, implemented new frameworks for racial equity.

    Yet for many communities and advocates, the question remains: what has actually changed beneath the surface?

    While visibility increased, the deeper systems that sustain racial injustice — surveillance, state and extrajudicial violence, institutional neglect, and the criminalisation of dissent — have in many contexts adapted rather than dissolved.

    The result is a shifting landscape where racial equity is increasingly discussed, but not consistently protected. Likewise, racism is increasingly feared as an accusation, but not frowned upon as a culture.

    The evolving landscape of racial justice

    In the aftermath of 2020, racial equity work has become more visible, but also more contested and, in some spaces, actively constrained.

    Equity practitioners, activists, whistleblowers, and human rights defenders report growing forms of retaliation that are often subtle, bureaucratic, and difficult to challenge.

    One of the most concerning developments in this period is the rise of transnational repression, where individuals face intimidation, surveillance, legal pressure, or detention across borders, often linked to their advocacy, identity, or perceived political stance.

    Alongside this, there has been increasing attention to the phenomenon of organised harassment: coordinated patterns of intimidation, discrediting, digital targeting, workplace retaliation, and social isolation that can operate across institutions and jurisdictions. While often difficult to evidence in traditional legal frameworks, its impact on wellbeing, civic participation, and democratic engagement is profound and lasting.

    These dynamics raise urgent questions about the safety of those who speak out for justice, and whether current human rights protections are keeping pace with contemporary forms of harm.

    A live case study: concerns about the detention of Dr Tamara Dixon

    Recent concerns have been raised regarding the reported detention of Dr Tamara Dixon, an African American academic and former university professor.

    Writing every step of the way about her experiences, Dr Tamara’s latest updates include that she is currently being held in an immigration detention setting in Luxembourg, where she is seeking asylum from severe transnational repression. Yet her efforts have been met with hostility and further covert harm in addition to restricted access to legal counsel and a limited ability to communicate due to confiscation of her personal devices.

    With only one hour per day of permitted access to the computer facilities at the detention centre, without much clarity as to what’s next for her, Dr Tamara’s case is emblematic of broader concerns around due process, access to legal representation, and the treatment of individuals who may be vulnerable within detention systems.

    It also highlights how quickly individuals can become isolated from support networks and advocacy channels, particularly when communication is restricted.

    For human rights observers, such cases underscore the importance of independent monitoring, legal access, and safeguards against administrative or institutional overreach.

    Importantly, and unfortunately, this case is not isolated or exceptional. Instead, it’s part of a wider pattern being flagged by activists and civil society organisations about how dissenting or visible individuals can become exposed to compounded vulnerabilities, especially when intersecting with race, gender, migration status, and advocacy work.

    Organised harassment as a human rights issue

    Organised harassment is increasingly being recognised by advocates as a serious but under-acknowledged threat to human rights and democratic participation. This type of repression and retaliation does not always appear in ways that are easily legible to formal institutions.

    Instead, it thrives on weaponised conditioning cues to signal surveillance and intimidation in public without widespread detection. The campaign of psychological warfare and total assault on character, life and property can also extend to hidden reputational harm, career sabotage and other forms of financial and emotional abuse designed to destabilise and destroy victims.

    Its effects are cumulative: social isolation, reputational damage, economic harm, and in some cases, deterrence from civic or advocacy engagement altogether.

    For individuals working in racial justice, gender equity, and human rights, these patterns can operate as a form of structural silencing, thereby reducing participation not through direct censorship, but through sustained pressure and attrition.

    A personal dimension: lived experience within Bounce Black

    At Bounce Black, these conversations are not abstract.

    Our Founder has, for the past four years, experienced sustained organised harassment and transnational repression while continuing to lead racial equity-focused work, community programmes, and trauma-informed advocacy initiatives.

    This lived reality underscores how advocacy itself can become a site of vulnerability, and how those working to challenge systems of inequity are often simultaneously navigating personal exposure to harm.

    This is not unique.

    It reflects a broader pattern experienced by many Black women leaders, community organisers, and equity practitioners who operate at the intersection of public visibility and structural resistance.

    Where do we go from here?

    If George Floyd’s legacy is to extend beyond symbolic remembrance, it must include a serious reckoning with how power adapts, and how harm evolves.

    This means:

    • Expanding human rights frameworks to recognise modern forms of repression and organised harassment
    • Strengthening protections for activists, academics, and whistleblowers across borders
    • Ensuring access to legal representation and communication for those in detention settings
    • Supporting independent investigation and accountability mechanisms
    • Investing in the wellbeing and safety of those doing racial equity work
    • Listening seriously to lived experiences, even when they fall outside conventional institutional categories

    Racial equity cannot exist without safety for those who speak about it. And that is everybody’s business!

    A call to action

    Six years on, the challenge is not only remembrance, but responsibility.

    We are calling on human rights organisations, policymakers, academic institutions, and civil society actors to take coordinated action in:

    • Recognising transnational repression and organised harassment as urgent human rights concerns
    • Supporting individuals and communities reporting these harms
    • Demanding transparency and accountability in detention and immigration systems
    • Protecting the civic space required for racial justice work to continue

    The legacy of George Floyd demands more than reflection. It demands infrastructure (legal, social, and political) that protects life, dignity, and truth-telling.

    Without that, equity remains an aspiration rather than a reality.

    And to quote a wise Black woman…

    Ain’t nobody got time for that!

    #blackLivesMatter #BLM #bounceBlack #COINTELPRO #DrTamaraDixon #GeorgeFloyd #healing #intimidation #justice #mentalHealth #racialEquity #racialTrauma #repression #retaliation #sayHerName #sayHisName #socialJustice #surveillance #surveillanceState #transnationalRepression
  6. Six Years On: George Floyd, his legacy and the future of racial equity

    The Bounce Black Team

    Six years after the murder of George Floyd, the world is still reeling from the promises and limits of what followed.

    His death catalysed a global uprising against anti-Black racism, policing violence, and structural inequality. Organisations, institutions, and governments issued statements of solidarity, pledged reforms, and, in some cases, implemented new frameworks for racial equity.

    Yet for many communities and advocates, the question remains: what has actually changed beneath the surface?

    While visibility increased, the deeper systems that sustain racial injustice — surveillance, state and extrajudicial violence, institutional neglect, and the criminalisation of dissent — have in many contexts adapted rather than dissolved.

    The result is a shifting landscape where racial equity is increasingly discussed, but not consistently protected. Likewise, racism is increasingly feared as an accusation, but not frowned upon as a culture.

    The evolving landscape of racial justice

    In the aftermath of 2020, racial equity work has become more visible, but also more contested and, in some spaces, actively constrained.

    Equity practitioners, activists, whistleblowers, and human rights defenders report growing forms of retaliation that are often subtle, bureaucratic, and difficult to challenge.

    One of the most concerning developments in this period is the rise of transnational repression, where individuals face intimidation, surveillance, legal pressure, or detention across borders, often linked to their advocacy, identity, or perceived political stance.

    Alongside this, there has been increasing attention to the phenomenon of organised harassment: coordinated patterns of intimidation, discrediting, digital targeting, workplace retaliation, and social isolation that can operate across institutions and jurisdictions. While often difficult to evidence in traditional legal frameworks, its impact on wellbeing, civic participation, and democratic engagement is profound and lasting.

    These dynamics raise urgent questions about the safety of those who speak out for justice, and whether current human rights protections are keeping pace with contemporary forms of harm.

    A live case study: concerns about the detention of Dr Tamara Dixon

    Recent concerns have been raised regarding the reported detention of Dr Tamara Dixon, an African American academic and former university professor.

    Writing every step of the way about her experiences, Dr Tamara’s latest updates include that she is currently being held in an immigration detention setting in Luxembourg, where she is seeking asylum from severe transnational repression. Yet her efforts have been met with hostility and further covert harm in addition to restricted access to legal counsel and a limited ability to communicate due to confiscation of her personal devices.

    With only one hour per day of permitted access to the computer facilities at the detention centre, without much clarity as to what’s next for her, Dr Tamara’s case is emblematic of broader concerns around due process, access to legal representation, and the treatment of individuals who may be vulnerable within detention systems.

    It also highlights how quickly individuals can become isolated from support networks and advocacy channels, particularly when communication is restricted.

    For human rights observers, such cases underscore the importance of independent monitoring, legal access, and safeguards against administrative or institutional overreach.

    Importantly, and unfortunately, this case is not isolated or exceptional. Instead, it’s part of a wider pattern being flagged by activists and civil society organisations about how dissenting or visible individuals can become exposed to compounded vulnerabilities, especially when intersecting with race, gender, migration status, and advocacy work.

    Organised harassment as a human rights issue

    Organised harassment is increasingly being recognised by advocates as a serious but under-acknowledged threat to human rights and democratic participation. This type of repression and retaliation does not always appear in ways that are easily legible to formal institutions.

    Instead, it thrives on weaponised conditioning cues to signal surveillance and intimidation in public without widespread detection. The campaign of psychological warfare and total assault on character, life and property can also extend to hidden reputational harm, career sabotage and other forms of financial and emotional abuse designed to destabilise and destroy victims.

    Its effects are cumulative: social isolation, reputational damage, economic harm, and in some cases, deterrence from civic or advocacy engagement altogether.

    For individuals working in racial justice, gender equity, and human rights, these patterns can operate as a form of structural silencing, thereby reducing participation not through direct censorship, but through sustained pressure and attrition.

    A personal dimension: lived experience within Bounce Black

    At Bounce Black, these conversations are not abstract.

    Our Founder has, for the past four years, experienced sustained organised harassment and transnational repression while continuing to lead racial equity-focused work, community programmes, and trauma-informed advocacy initiatives.

    This lived reality underscores how advocacy itself can become a site of vulnerability, and how those working to challenge systems of inequity are often simultaneously navigating personal exposure to harm.

    This is not unique.

    It reflects a broader pattern experienced by many Black women leaders, community organisers, and equity practitioners who operate at the intersection of public visibility and structural resistance.

    Where do we go from here?

    If George Floyd’s legacy is to extend beyond symbolic remembrance, it must include a serious reckoning with how power adapts, and how harm evolves.

    This means:

    • Expanding human rights frameworks to recognise modern forms of repression and organised harassment
    • Strengthening protections for activists, academics, and whistleblowers across borders
    • Ensuring access to legal representation and communication for those in detention settings
    • Supporting independent investigation and accountability mechanisms
    • Investing in the wellbeing and safety of those doing racial equity work
    • Listening seriously to lived experiences, even when they fall outside conventional institutional categories

    Racial equity cannot exist without safety for those who speak about it. And that is everybody’s business!

    A call to action

    Six years on, the challenge is not only remembrance, but responsibility.

    We are calling on human rights organisations, policymakers, academic institutions, and civil society actors to take coordinated action in:

    • Recognising transnational repression and organised harassment as urgent human rights concerns
    • Supporting individuals and communities reporting these harms
    • Demanding transparency and accountability in detention and immigration systems
    • Protecting the civic space required for racial justice work to continue

    The legacy of George Floyd demands more than reflection. It demands infrastructure (legal, social, and political) that protects life, dignity, and truth-telling.

    Without that, equity remains an aspiration rather than a reality.

    And to quote a wise Black woman…

    Ain’t nobody got time for that!

    #blackLivesMatter #BLM #bounceBlack #COINTELPRO #DrTamaraDixon #GeorgeFloyd #healing #intimidation #justice #mentalHealth #racialEquity #racialTrauma #repression #retaliation #sayHerName #sayHisName #socialJustice #surveillance #surveillanceState #transnationalRepression
  7. Six Years On: George Floyd, his legacy and the future of racial equity

    The Bounce Black Team

    Six years after the murder of George Floyd, the world is still reeling from the promises and limits of what followed.

    His death catalysed a global uprising against anti-Black racism, policing violence, and structural inequality. Organisations, institutions, and governments issued statements of solidarity, pledged reforms, and, in some cases, implemented new frameworks for racial equity.

    Yet for many communities and advocates, the question remains: what has actually changed beneath the surface?

    While visibility increased, the deeper systems that sustain racial injustice — surveillance, state and extrajudicial violence, institutional neglect, and the criminalisation of dissent — have in many contexts adapted rather than dissolved.

    The result is a shifting landscape where racial equity is increasingly discussed, but not consistently protected. Likewise, racism is increasingly feared as an accusation, but not frowned upon as a culture.

    The evolving landscape of racial justice

    In the aftermath of 2020, racial equity work has become more visible, but also more contested and, in some spaces, actively constrained.

    Equity practitioners, activists, whistleblowers, and human rights defenders report growing forms of retaliation that are often subtle, bureaucratic, and difficult to challenge.

    One of the most concerning developments in this period is the rise of transnational repression, where individuals face intimidation, surveillance, legal pressure, or detention across borders, often linked to their advocacy, identity, or perceived political stance.

    Alongside this, there has been increasing attention to the phenomenon of organised harassment: coordinated patterns of intimidation, discrediting, digital targeting, workplace retaliation, and social isolation that can operate across institutions and jurisdictions. While often difficult to evidence in traditional legal frameworks, its impact on wellbeing, civic participation, and democratic engagement is profound and lasting.

    These dynamics raise urgent questions about the safety of those who speak out for justice, and whether current human rights protections are keeping pace with contemporary forms of harm.

    A live case study: concerns about the detention of Dr Tamara Dixon

    Recent concerns have been raised regarding the reported detention of Dr Tamara Dixon, an African American academic and former university professor.

    Writing every step of the way about her experiences, Dr Tamara’s latest updates include that she is currently being held in an immigration detention setting in Luxembourg, where she is seeking asylum from severe transnational repression. Yet her efforts have been met with hostility and further covert harm in addition to restricted access to legal counsel and a limited ability to communicate due to confiscation of her personal devices.

    With only one hour per day of permitted access to the computer facilities at the detention centre, without much clarity as to what’s next for her, Dr Tamara’s case is emblematic of broader concerns around due process, access to legal representation, and the treatment of individuals who may be vulnerable within detention systems.

    It also highlights how quickly individuals can become isolated from support networks and advocacy channels, particularly when communication is restricted.

    For human rights observers, such cases underscore the importance of independent monitoring, legal access, and safeguards against administrative or institutional overreach.

    Importantly, and unfortunately, this case is not isolated or exceptional. Instead, it’s part of a wider pattern being flagged by activists and civil society organisations about how dissenting or visible individuals can become exposed to compounded vulnerabilities, especially when intersecting with race, gender, migration status, and advocacy work.

    Organised harassment as a human rights issue

    Organised harassment is increasingly being recognised by advocates as a serious but under-acknowledged threat to human rights and democratic participation. This type of repression and retaliation does not always appear in ways that are easily legible to formal institutions.

    Instead, it thrives on weaponised conditioning cues to signal surveillance and intimidation in public without widespread detection. The campaign of psychological warfare and total assault on character, life and property can also extend to hidden reputational harm, career sabotage and other forms of financial and emotional abuse designed to destabilise and destroy victims.

    Its effects are cumulative: social isolation, reputational damage, economic harm, and in some cases, deterrence from civic or advocacy engagement altogether.

    For individuals working in racial justice, gender equity, and human rights, these patterns can operate as a form of structural silencing, thereby reducing participation not through direct censorship, but through sustained pressure and attrition.

    A personal dimension: lived experience within Bounce Black

    At Bounce Black, these conversations are not abstract.

    Our Founder has, for the past four years, experienced sustained organised harassment and transnational repression while continuing to lead racial equity-focused work, community programmes, and trauma-informed advocacy initiatives.

    This lived reality underscores how advocacy itself can become a site of vulnerability, and how those working to challenge systems of inequity are often simultaneously navigating personal exposure to harm.

    This is not unique.

    It reflects a broader pattern experienced by many Black women leaders, community organisers, and equity practitioners who operate at the intersection of public visibility and structural resistance.

    Where do we go from here?

    If George Floyd’s legacy is to extend beyond symbolic remembrance, it must include a serious reckoning with how power adapts, and how harm evolves.

    This means:

    • Expanding human rights frameworks to recognise modern forms of repression and organised harassment
    • Strengthening protections for activists, academics, and whistleblowers across borders
    • Ensuring access to legal representation and communication for those in detention settings
    • Supporting independent investigation and accountability mechanisms
    • Investing in the wellbeing and safety of those doing racial equity work
    • Listening seriously to lived experiences, even when they fall outside conventional institutional categories

    Racial equity cannot exist without safety for those who speak about it. And that is everybody’s business!

    A call to action

    Six years on, the challenge is not only remembrance, but responsibility.

    We are calling on human rights organisations, policymakers, academic institutions, and civil society actors to take coordinated action in:

    • Recognising transnational repression and organised harassment as urgent human rights concerns
    • Supporting individuals and communities reporting these harms
    • Demanding transparency and accountability in detention and immigration systems
    • Protecting the civic space required for racial justice work to continue

    The legacy of George Floyd demands more than reflection. It demands infrastructure (legal, social, and political) that protects life, dignity, and truth-telling.

    Without that, equity remains an aspiration rather than a reality.

    And to quote a wise Black woman…

    Ain’t nobody got time for that!

    #blackLivesMatter #BLM #bounceBlack #COINTELPRO #DrTamaraDixon #GeorgeFloyd #healing #intimidation #justice #mentalHealth #racialEquity #racialTrauma #repression #retaliation #sayHerName #sayHisName #socialJustice #surveillance #surveillanceState #transnationalRepression
  8. Six Years On: George Floyd, his legacy and the future of racial equity

    The Bounce Black Team

    Six years after the murder of George Floyd, the world is still reeling from the promises and limits of what followed.

    His death catalysed a global uprising against anti-Black racism, policing violence, and structural inequality. Organisations, institutions, and governments issued statements of solidarity, pledged reforms, and, in some cases, implemented new frameworks for racial equity.

    Yet for many communities and advocates, the question remains: what has actually changed beneath the surface?

    While visibility increased, the deeper systems that sustain racial injustice — surveillance, state and extrajudicial violence, institutional neglect, and the criminalisation of dissent — have in many contexts adapted rather than dissolved.

    The result is a shifting landscape where racial equity is increasingly discussed, but not consistently protected. Likewise, racism is increasingly feared as an accusation, but not frowned upon as a culture.

    The evolving landscape of racial justice

    In the aftermath of 2020, racial equity work has become more visible, but also more contested and, in some spaces, actively constrained.

    Equity practitioners, activists, whistleblowers, and human rights defenders report growing forms of retaliation that are often subtle, bureaucratic, and difficult to challenge.

    One of the most concerning developments in this period is the rise of transnational repression, where individuals face intimidation, surveillance, legal pressure, or detention across borders, often linked to their advocacy, identity, or perceived political stance.

    Alongside this, there has been increasing attention to the phenomenon of organised harassment: coordinated patterns of intimidation, discrediting, digital targeting, workplace retaliation, and social isolation that can operate across institutions and jurisdictions. While often difficult to evidence in traditional legal frameworks, its impact on wellbeing, civic participation, and democratic engagement is profound and lasting.

    These dynamics raise urgent questions about the safety of those who speak out for justice, and whether current human rights protections are keeping pace with contemporary forms of harm.

    A live case study: concerns about the detention of Dr Tamara Dixon

    Recent concerns have been raised regarding the reported detention of Dr Tamara Dixon, an African American academic and former university professor.

    Writing every step of the way about her experiences, Dr Tamara’s latest updates include that she is currently being held in an immigration detention setting in Luxembourg, where she is seeking asylum from severe transnational repression. Yet her efforts have been met with hostility and further covert harm in addition to restricted access to legal counsel and a limited ability to communicate due to confiscation of her personal devices.

    With only one hour per day of permitted access to the computer facilities at the detention centre, without much clarity as to what’s next for her, Dr Tamara’s case is emblematic of broader concerns around due process, access to legal representation, and the treatment of individuals who may be vulnerable within detention systems.

    It also highlights how quickly individuals can become isolated from support networks and advocacy channels, particularly when communication is restricted.

    For human rights observers, such cases underscore the importance of independent monitoring, legal access, and safeguards against administrative or institutional overreach.

    Importantly, and unfortunately, this case is not isolated or exceptional. Instead, it’s part of a wider pattern being flagged by activists and civil society organisations about how dissenting or visible individuals can become exposed to compounded vulnerabilities, especially when intersecting with race, gender, migration status, and advocacy work.

    Organised harassment as a human rights issue

    Organised harassment is increasingly being recognised by advocates as a serious but under-acknowledged threat to human rights and democratic participation. This type of repression and retaliation does not always appear in ways that are easily legible to formal institutions.

    Instead, it thrives on weaponised conditioning cues to signal surveillance and intimidation in public without widespread detection. The campaign of psychological warfare and total assault on character, life and property can also extend to hidden reputational harm, career sabotage and other forms of financial and emotional abuse designed to destabilise and destroy victims.

    Its effects are cumulative: social isolation, reputational damage, economic harm, and in some cases, deterrence from civic or advocacy engagement altogether.

    For individuals working in racial justice, gender equity, and human rights, these patterns can operate as a form of structural silencing, thereby reducing participation not through direct censorship, but through sustained pressure and attrition.

    A personal dimension: lived experience within Bounce Black

    At Bounce Black, these conversations are not abstract.

    Our Founder has, for the past four years, experienced sustained organised harassment and transnational repression while continuing to lead racial equity-focused work, community programmes, and trauma-informed advocacy initiatives.

    This lived reality underscores how advocacy itself can become a site of vulnerability, and how those working to challenge systems of inequity are often simultaneously navigating personal exposure to harm.

    This is not unique.

    It reflects a broader pattern experienced by many Black women leaders, community organisers, and equity practitioners who operate at the intersection of public visibility and structural resistance.

    Where do we go from here?

    If George Floyd’s legacy is to extend beyond symbolic remembrance, it must include a serious reckoning with how power adapts, and how harm evolves.

    This means:

    • Expanding human rights frameworks to recognise modern forms of repression and organised harassment
    • Strengthening protections for activists, academics, and whistleblowers across borders
    • Ensuring access to legal representation and communication for those in detention settings
    • Supporting independent investigation and accountability mechanisms
    • Investing in the wellbeing and safety of those doing racial equity work
    • Listening seriously to lived experiences, even when they fall outside conventional institutional categories

    Racial equity cannot exist without safety for those who speak about it. And that is everybody’s business!

    A call to action

    Six years on, the challenge is not only remembrance, but responsibility.

    We are calling on human rights organisations, policymakers, academic institutions, and civil society actors to take coordinated action in:

    • Recognising transnational repression and organised harassment as urgent human rights concerns
    • Supporting individuals and communities reporting these harms
    • Demanding transparency and accountability in detention and immigration systems
    • Protecting the civic space required for racial justice work to continue

    The legacy of George Floyd demands more than reflection. It demands infrastructure (legal, social, and political) that protects life, dignity, and truth-telling.

    Without that, equity remains an aspiration rather than a reality.

    And to quote a wise Black woman…

    Ain’t nobody got time for that!

    #blackLivesMatter #BLM #bounceBlack #COINTELPRO #DrTamaraDixon #GeorgeFloyd #healing #intimidation #justice #mentalHealth #racialEquity #racialTrauma #repression #retaliation #sayHerName #sayHisName #socialJustice #surveillance #surveillanceState #transnationalRepression
  9. #usa #denmark #israel #palestine : #gaza / #genocide / #armsexport / #blockade / #protest / #repression

    „Over 30 activists blockaded the entry point (…) of the Port of Newark-Elizabeth, attempting to prevent a shipment of ammunition and weapons components to Israel by the vessel ZIM Virginia. The activists called for the eviction of the Israeli shipping company Zim Integrated Shipping Services ( #ZIM ) and its Danish competitor, #Maersk — the two primary …

    1/2
    worldbeyondwar.org/ten-activis

  10. „Die Diskussion berührt deshalb mehr als nur die Frage nach Busfahrkarten. Dahinter steckt ein grundsätzlicher Streit darüber, wie stark der Staat Sozialleistungen kontrollieren sollte. Soll Bürgergeld möglichst frei verfügbar bleiben? Oder soll genauer vorgegeben werden, wofür bestimmte Teile des Geldes verwendet werden dürfen?“
    (Alt: Haltestellen bei Nacht mit Bewegungsunschärfe vom Verkehr)

    inside-digital.de/news/buerger

    #armut #repression #regelsatz

  11. Seeing that the Treasury Dept has supposedly issued a subpeona against Medea Benjamin and Hasan Piker supposedly over their trip to Cuba. There are reports of a subpeona on corporate media notably FOX, Medea says so far this is not yet the case.

    codepink.org/subpoenacubastate

    Normally I would call any such subpeona a declaration of war against the entire activist community, but they already DECLARED war on us with NSPM-7. Still, that did not directly name peace groups but rather us antifa. Now this shit might be getting extended to a peace group.

    YES, Donald Trump's regime may be declaring war on a peace organization. An attack on one is an attack on all. The US Dept of THEFT can eat shit.

    #Codepink #Repression

  12. Seeing that the Treasury Dept has supposedly issued a subpeona against Medea Benjamin and Hasan Piker supposedly over their trip to Cuba. There are reports of a subpeona on corporate media notably FOX, Medea says so far this is not yet the case.

    codepink.org/subpoenacubastate

    Normally I would call any such subpeona a declaration of war against the entire activist community, but they already DECLARED war on us with NSPM-7. Still, that did not directly name peace groups but rather us antifa. Now this shit might be getting extended to a peace group.

    YES, Donald Trump's regime may be declaring war on a peace organization. An attack on one is an attack on all. The US Dept of THEFT can eat shit.

    #Codepink #Repression

  13. Seeing that the Treasury Dept has supposedly issued a subpeona against Medea Benjamin and Hasan Piker supposedly over their trip to Cuba. There are reports of a subpeona on corporate media notably FOX, Medea says so far this is not yet the case.

    codepink.org/subpoenacubastate

    Normally I would call any such subpeona a declaration of war against the entire activist community, but they already DECLARED war on us with NSPM-7. Still, that did not directly name peace groups but rather us antifa. Now this shit might be getting extended to a peace group.

    YES, Donald Trump's regime may be declaring war on a peace organization. An attack on one is an attack on all. The US Dept of THEFT can eat shit.

    #Codepink #Repression

  14. Seeing that the Treasury Dept has supposedly issued a subpeona against Medea Benjamin and Hasan Piker supposedly over their trip to Cuba. There are reports of a subpeona on corporate media notably FOX, Medea says so far this is not yet the case.

    codepink.org/subpoenacubastate

    Normally I would call any such subpeona a declaration of war against the entire activist community, but they already DECLARED war on us with NSPM-7. Still, that did not directly name peace groups but rather us antifa. Now this shit might be getting extended to a peace group.

    YES, Donald Trump's regime may be declaring war on a peace organization. An attack on one is an attack on all. The US Dept of THEFT can eat shit.

    #Codepink #Repression

  15. Seeing that the Treasury Dept has supposedly issued a subpeona against Medea Benjamin and Hasan Piker supposedly over their trip to Cuba. There are reports of a subpeona on corporate media notably FOX, Medea says so far this is not yet the case.

    codepink.org/subpoenacubastate

    Normally I would call any such subpeona a declaration of war against the entire activist community, but they already DECLARED war on us with NSPM-7. Still, that did not directly name peace groups but rather us antifa. Now this shit might be getting extended to a peace group.

    YES, Donald Trump's regime may be declaring war on a peace organization. An attack on one is an attack on all. The US Dept of THEFT can eat shit.

    #Codepink #Repression

  16. Retour sur le procès de T. le 20 mai à bruxelles

    Ce mercredi 20 mai, un petite trentaine de personnes se sont rétrouvées devant le tribunal de Bruxelles, horrible bâtiment imposant, écrasant et sombre. Dehors, des policiers arrivent rapidement pour chercher un (...)

    #ContrôleSocial #Répression #Anarchismes #Antiautoritaire #Prisons #Anticarcéral #ActionDirecte #Bruxelles
    stuut.info/12065

  17. Retour sur le procès de T. le 20 mai à bruxelles

    Ce mercredi 20 mai, un petite trentaine de personnes se sont rétrouvées devant le tribunal de Bruxelles, horrible bâtiment imposant, écrasant et sombre. Dehors, des policiers arrivent rapidement pour chercher un (...)

    #ContrôleSocial #Répression #Anarchismes #Antiautoritaire #Prisons #Anticarcéral #ActionDirecte #Bruxelles
    stuut.info/12065

  18. Retour sur le procès de T. le 20 mai à bruxelles

    Ce mercredi 20 mai, un petite trentaine de personnes se sont rétrouvées devant le tribunal de Bruxelles, horrible bâtiment imposant, écrasant et sombre. Dehors, des policiers arrivent rapidement pour chercher un (...)

    #ContrôleSocial #Répression #Anarchismes #Antiautoritaire #Prisons #Anticarcéral #ActionDirecte #Bruxelles
    stuut.info/12065

  19. Retour sur le procès de T. le 20 mai à bruxelles

    Ce mercredi 20 mai, un petite trentaine de personnes se sont rétrouvées devant le tribunal de Bruxelles, horrible bâtiment imposant, écrasant et sombre. Dehors, des policiers arrivent rapidement pour chercher un (...)

    #ContrôleSocial #Répression #Anarchismes #Antiautoritaire #Prisons #Anticarcéral #ActionDirecte #Bruxelles
    stuut.info/12065

  20. La mise en examen de #SophieBinet après une plainte déposée par #Tefal n’est pas un simple épisode judiciaire. Elle révèle une évolution #politique profonde : la criminalisation croissante de l’action syndicale dans la #France de #Macron. politis.fr/articles/2026/05/sy

    #politique #societe #actu #info #information #actualite #syndicat #repression

  21. La mise en examen de #SophieBinet après une plainte déposée par #Tefal n’est pas un simple épisode judiciaire. Elle révèle une évolution #politique profonde : la criminalisation croissante de l’action syndicale dans la #France de #Macron. politis.fr/articles/2026/05/sy

    #politique #societe #actu #info #information #actualite #syndicat #repression

  22. La mise en examen de #SophieBinet après une plainte déposée par #Tefal n’est pas un simple épisode judiciaire. Elle révèle une évolution #politique profonde : la criminalisation croissante de l’action syndicale dans la #France de #Macron. politis.fr/articles/2026/05/sy

    #politique #societe #actu #info #information #actualite #syndicat #repression

  23. La mise en examen de #SophieBinet après une plainte déposée par #Tefal n’est pas un simple épisode judiciaire. Elle révèle une évolution #politique profonde : la criminalisation croissante de l’action syndicale dans la #France de #Macron. politis.fr/articles/2026/05/sy

    #politique #societe #actu #info #information #actualite #syndicat #repression

  24. #Manifestation contre la #répression des #FreeParty

    RDV le 30 mai cours Caffarelli à #Caen.

    Manif organisée par le collectif #TEKNOANTIREP 1133.teknoantirep.org/

    Depuis plusieurs années maintenant le mouvement de la Free party est accablé par les #médias et des lois injustes. Notre image n’a fait que pâtir des stigmatisations médiatiques liées aux cultures alternatives et les pratiques de fête libre trognon.info/Manifestation-con

    #media #presse #politique #actu #info #information #actualite

  25. #Manifestation contre la #répression des #FreeParty

    RDV le 30 mai cours Caffarelli à #Caen.

    Manif organisée par le collectif #TEKNOANTIREP 1133.teknoantirep.org/

    Depuis plusieurs années maintenant le mouvement de la Free party est accablé par les #médias et des lois injustes. Notre image n’a fait que pâtir des stigmatisations médiatiques liées aux cultures alternatives et les pratiques de fête libre trognon.info/Manifestation-con

    #media #presse #politique #actu #info #information #actualite

  26. #Manifestation contre la #répression des #FreeParty

    RDV le 30 mai cours Caffarelli à #Caen.

    Manif organisée par le collectif #TEKNOANTIREP 1133.teknoantirep.org/

    Depuis plusieurs années maintenant le mouvement de la Free party est accablé par les #médias et des lois injustes. Notre image n’a fait que pâtir des stigmatisations médiatiques liées aux cultures alternatives et les pratiques de fête libre trognon.info/Manifestation-con

    #media #presse #politique #actu #info #information #actualite