Zine: Burn, Olympia, Burn - A Conversation With M-1 of Dead Prez

Note: Digital Read
URL: http://www.mediafire.com/?25dyiavqyheyede
Summery:
In this interview, he (M-1) shares his thoughts on where hip hop is today, and it’s potential use as a tool for resistance and liberation; his recent trips to Palestine; he election of Barrack Obama; and why dead prez considers Olympia, “one of [their] revolutionary homes.”
Book: Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)- A Graphic History

Note: 1) Digital Read 2) This book covers the history of SDS as it was through the 1969 (and briefly about the Weather Underground in the 70s). It does not cover the history of the organization from 2006-present.
URL:
Pt 1: http://www.mediafire.com/?l8y7sfdi0rlf2ld
Pt 2: http://www.mediafire.com/?9gf86ckwznkxv0x
Description:
By the late 1960s, America seemed to be teetering on the edge of a vast transformation. Helping to push it over that edge was a brigade of young radicals, the Students for a Democratic Society, who were fighting the establishment for peace abroad and equality at home. In Students for a Democratic Society: A Graphic History, famed graphic novelist Harvey Pekar, gifted Gary Dumm, renowned historian Paul Buhle, and marvelous cast of they-were-there contributors illustrate their struggle, bringing to life the tumultuous decade that first defined and then was defined by the men and women who gathered under the SDS banner.
With brilliant art and memorable dialogue, this collection follows the organization’s rocketing rise and fall, from the famous Port Huron Statement to the last SDS convention in 1969, which ultimately signaled the group’s dissolution. The individual stories from those on the front lines go beyond the general history, showing the revolution as it was: deeply national as well as deeply personal. Students for a Democratic Society captures the idealism and activism that drove a generation of young Americans to believe that even one person’s actions could help transform the world.
Book: Horizontalism- Voices of Popular Power in Argentina

Note: 1) A Digital Read 2) the last chapter is kinda messed up.. I need to rescan it. That’ll be updated later. 3) I’ve been reading this book for the last week or so and it’s incredible. Very inspiring, and thought provoking. I HIGHLY recommend this book.
URL:
pt 1: http://www.mediafire.com/?65nkok5mrzu1y6a
Pt 2: http://www.mediafire.com/?081pxneofbu7v6n
Description:
December 19th and 20th, 2001 marked the beginning of a popular rebellion in Argentina. After IMF policies led to economic meltdown and massive capital flight, millions of Argentinians poured into the streets to protests the freezing of their bank accounts, the devaluing of their currency, unemployed, of the middle class and the recently declassed- erupted without leadership or hierarchy. Political parties and newly emerged elites had no role in the movement that toppled five consecutive national governments in just two weeks. People created hundreds of neighborhood assemblies involving tens of thousands of active participants. The dozens of occupied factories that existed at the start of the rebellion grew to hundreds, taken over and run directly by workers.
The social movements that exploded in Argentina that December not only transformed the fabric of Argentine society but also highlighted teh possibility of a genuinely democratic alternative to global capital. Horzontalism: Voices of Popular Power in Argentina is the story of those movements, as told by the men and women who are building them.
Zine: The Most Beautiful Word in the English Language - Resist