Michael Peifer

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Michael Peifer

Michael Peifer

@flakyfarseer

'For my part I know nothing with any certainty, but the sight of the stars makes me dream.' ― Vincent van Gogh

United States Beigetreten Mart 2010
1.9K Folgt2.2K Follower
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Michael Peifer
Michael Peifer@flakyfarseer·
“Belief is the death of intelligence. As soon as one believes a doctrine of any sort, or assumes certitude, one stops thinking about that aspect of existence.” ― Robert Anton Wilson
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Mary-Ann Thorson𐃆
Mary-Ann Thorson𐃆@NoctrnlValkyrie·
“Not all witches wear black- some shimmer in laughter and smell of rosemary and rain” - Dede Hawkins, Stardust Poetry
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Lucid Dreams
Lucid Dreams@sanjabh·
“The stars are like letters which inscribe themselves at every moment in the sky. Everything in the world is full of signs. All events are coordinated... Everything breathes together.” — Plotinus [ Art • “Vedya and Jalkivy” by Damjan Gjorgievski ]
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Physics In History
Physics In History@PhysInHistory·
“We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.” - Albert Einstein
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More Perfect Union
More Perfect Union@MorePerfectUS·
This is somehow not satire.
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Working Class History
Working Class History@wrkclasshistory·
#OtD 11 May 1894 the Pullman railroad strike began in Chicago after the firing of 3 workers. The biggest strike in US history to date, it was only eventually broken by federal government troops and the killing of at least 24 strikers stories.workingclasshistory.com/article/8336/p…
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Michael Peifer
Michael Peifer@flakyfarseer·
"The social revolution means much more than the reorganization of conditions only: it means the establishment of new human values and social relationships...we must learn to think differently before the revolution can come. That alone can bring the revolution." -Alexander Berkman
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AIT Gijón
AIT Gijón@AitGijon·
El 9 de mayo 1883 marcó un hito fundamental para el imaginario libertario cuando la bandera negra apareció por primera vez como símbolo del anarquismo en una manifestación de desempleados en París. Aquel día, la destacada luchadora social Louise Michel encabezó una protesta que buscaba denunciar el hambre y la miseria de la clase trabajadora bajo la consigna de pan o trabajo. Al frente de la marcha, Michel enarboló un viejo chal negro amarrado a un palo, transformando un pedazo de tela en un emblema de resistencia que buscaba diferenciarse claramente de la bandera roja de los republicanos y socialistas de la época. Para los participantes, el color negro representaba el duelo por las víctimas del sistema y la miseria de los explotados, pero también funcionaba como una negación de todas las banderas nacionales que dividían a los pueblos. Desde aquel momento en la explanada de los Inválidos, el negro dejó de ser solo un color de tristeza para convertirse en el símbolo de la anarquía, representando un vacío de poder donde no caben autoridades ni jerarquías. Este gesto de Michel no fue un simple detalle estético, sino un acto de autonomía política que definió la identidad de un movimiento que se negaba a marchar bajo los colores del estado o de partidos reformistas, estableciendo una tradición visual que hasta el día de hoy une a quienes, como nosotros en el grupo fuera del rebaño, elegimos caminar bajo nuestros propios términos y mantenernos firmes en el apoyo mutuo sin amos ni fronteras. #MemoriaAnarquista
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NADA 𓂆
NADA 𓂆@nadaa01012·
This video is real and not a movie clip. NEVER STOP TALKING ABOUT PALESTINE!
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MENA Visuals
MENA Visuals@menavisualss·
🇵🇸 A Palestinian mother breastfeeding her baby, Bethlehem, 1954.
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owen cyclops
owen cyclops@owenbroadcast·
top mother’s day painting: ‘mother of the world’ by roerich
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Not CrimethInc. - Ex Workers
Not CrimethInc. - Ex Workers@Thinc_Exworkers·
1/5 "Why does the Trump regime specifically identify "anarchists and anti-fascists" as one of the "three major types of terror groups" in their 2026 "Counterterrorism Strategy"?🧵
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Global Sumud Flotilla
Global Sumud Flotilla@gbsumudflotilla·
Saif has been released from israeli captivity and after 6 brutal days, his message is clear - we must continue to mobilize! Still, thousands of Palestinian prisoners are being held hostage in israeli dungeons, subjected to inhumane conditions. We are one small step closer to a free Palestine but our fight is far from over. We must continue to push against empire on all fronts! A heartfelt thank you Saif and Thiago’s legal team at Adalah and to all who mobilized and applied pressure at every level for the safe return of our comrades. Until liberation.
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
"Such a fine, sunny day, and I have to go. But what does my death matter, if through us thousands of people are awakened and stirred to action?" Sophie Scholl spoke these words on February 22, 1943, moments before she was executed by guillotine. She was twenty-one years old. Her crime: distributing leaflets that called on Germans to resist Adolf Hitler. The Nazis thought they had silenced her. Instead, her words would be dropped by the millions from Allied planes over Germany -- reaching more people than she could ever have dreamed. Sophie Scholl was born on this day in 1921 in Forchtenberg, Germany, the fourth of six children. Her father, Robert Scholl, was a politician who despised the Nazi party from the start. He kept banned books on the family shelves, remained friends with Jews when others looked away, and spoke against Hitler in his own home -- even knowing that his children could turn him in. At twelve, Sophie joined the League of German Girls, the female wing of the Hitler Youth, along with most of her classmates. Her brother Hans joined the boys' division. They argued constantly with their father about politics. But one evening, walking along the Danube, Robert Scholl turned to his children and said: "All I want is for you to walk straight and free through life, even when it's hard." It took years, but the words took root. In 1937, Hans and several of his siblings -- including Sophie -- were arrested by the Gestapo for participating in a youth group the Nazis had outlawed. Sophie was released the same day, but the experience shattered her faith in the party. Then she heard an anti-Nazi sermon by Bishop Clemens August Graf von Galen, who spoke of the "theology of conscience" -- the idea that Christians had a moral duty to resist evil, even when obedience was easier. Her disillusionment hardened into determination. In 1942, Sophie enrolled at the University of Munich to study biology and philosophy. Hans was already there, studying medicine. That same year, their father was arrested after a colleague overheard him calling Hitler "the scourge of humanity" and was sent to prison. Sophie was forced into compulsory labor at a metallurgical plant. Meanwhile, Hans and his friends had begun meeting secretly, discussing philosophy, theology, and what it meant to live under a dictatorship. Friends who had served as medics on the Eastern Front returned with stories of what they had witnessed: the mass killing of Jews, Soviet prisoners shot in open graves, the machinery of genocide in full operation. Sophie's boyfriend, Fritz Hartnagel, was still serving there -- and his letters home described the same horrors. They decided to act. They called themselves the White Rose -- an image of purity and innocence in the face of evil -- and began writing leaflets denouncing the Nazi regime and calling on Germans to resist. "We will not be silent," they declared. "We are your bad conscience. The White Rose will not leave you in peace!" When Sophie discovered what her brother was doing, she insisted on joining. She bought an illegal typewriter and helped craft the arguments. Because the Gestapo rarely searched young women, she became essential to distributing the leaflets -- mailing them to professors and doctors, leaving them in phone booths and lecture halls, taking trains to other cities to create the impression of a vast network. She knew the risks. She told Fritz she understood that resistance could cost her "both her head and her neck." She asked him for money to buy a printing press anyway. On February 18, 1943, Sophie and Hans entered the University of Munich carrying a suitcase filled with copies of their sixth leaflet. They moved quickly through the empty corridors, leaving stacks outside classrooms before lectures ended. They were almost finished when Sophie noticed a few leaflets still in the bag. She ran to the top floor and flung them over the railing into the atrium below. © A Mighty Girl #archaeohistories
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Michael Peifer
Michael Peifer@flakyfarseer·
@mattsinz94 @quill67 @ProudSocialist Since I'm not a Marxist, I do not let Marx, Engels, or Lenin define what "socialism" means or how to achieve it. Anarchists never considered "State Capitalism" to be a necessary step in the development toward socialism.
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Michael Peifer@flakyfarseer·
@mattsinz94 @quill67 @ProudSocialist "State Capitalism" became associated with "socialism" due to the Marxist interpretation of how socialism is achieved, with State Capitalism as the final stage of capitalism before it transitions to "socialism" (decentralized worker control rather than centralized State control).
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Power to the People ☭🕊
Power to the People ☭🕊@ProudSocialist·
Elon Musk called Hitler a socialist then Grok correctly debunks him by pointing out Hitler rejected Marxism and ran a fascist system that prioritized nationalism and private enterprise. Grok then explains socialism is class equality and worker ownership! Never deleting this app.
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