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No buses are due on Nathan road: Mong Kok occupation 2.0 weekend sum-up

No buses are due on Nathan road: Mong Kok occupation 2.0 weekend sum-up

by chuang | Oct 21, 2014 | Blog

Reposted from Nao.1 — The “first” Mong Kok occupation was cleared on Friday (17th) after 5:00. The cops first removed the Christian altar on one of the south barricades then the Guanyu shrine in the north. After that they let it rip, tore the road...
Hotpot, Gods, and “Leftist Pricks”: Political Tensions in the Mong Kok Occupation

Hotpot, Gods, and “Leftist Pricks”: Political Tensions in the Mong Kok Occupation

by chuang | Oct 15, 2014 | Blog

Reposted from Nao (October 15, 2014).2 —– Analysis of events in the Mong Kok occupation (part of Hong Kong’s “Umbrella Movement”) from October 9 to 11, related to a split between what could roughly be called “left” and...
New foundations for struggle and solidarity: The culmination of development and privatization on a Guangzhou Island

New foundations for struggle and solidarity: The culmination of development and privatization on a Guangzhou Island

by chuang | Oct 8, 2014 | Blog

Reposted from Nao (October 29, 2014).9 —– For nearly a month, garbage piled up throughout the streets of Guangzhou’s edifice to higher education as China saw another cleaner strike. The disgruntled employees are the sanitation workers who keep the...
Twenty-Five Years since the Tiananmen Protests: Legacies of the Student-Worker Divide

Twenty-Five Years since the Tiananmen Protests: Legacies of the Student-Worker Divide

by chuang | Jun 4, 2014 | Blog

Reposted from the Nao (June 4, 2014).1 —– During the protest movement that centered around Tiananmen Square in Beijing twenty-five years ago, workers protested alongside students and intellectuals. But the political relationship between the two social...
The Student Parliament: Reflections on the Sunflower Movement

The Student Parliament: Reflections on the Sunflower Movement

by chuang | May 31, 2014 | Blog

Reposted from Nao (May 31, 2014).1 —– The Taiwanese students movement against Cross-Strait Service Trade Agreement with China was hardly a radical movement in any way, it nonetheless politicized a lot of people and perhaps opened up space for a more...
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