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Armed Struggle Quotes

Quotes tagged as "armed-struggle" Showing 1-5 of 5
Malcolm X
“Sometimes you have to pick the gun up to put the Gun down.”
Malcom X

Dan Berger
“Over the next seven years, the group [Weather Underground] claimed credit for more than two dozen bombings of high-profile targets such as the Pentagon, numerous courthouses and police stations, the U.S. Agency for International Development, and several corporations involved in the coup in Chile or colonialism in Angola. Weather articulated a politics of solidarity that demanded a high level of sacrifice by whites in support of Black and other revolutionary people of color. This support emanated from a strategic belief, pioneered by Che Guevara, that U.S. imperialism could be defeated through overextension; bombings were an attempt to pierce the myth of government invincibility and draw repressive attention away from the Panthers and similar groups. It also reflected a political position that said white people had to side with Third World struggles against the U.S. government—and had to do so in a similarly dramatic way.”
Dan Berger, The Struggle Within: Prisons, Political Prisoners, and Mass Movements in the United States

Dan Berger
“The UFF [United Freedom Front] claimed credit for nineteen bombings in the Northeast in the 1980s against assorted U.S. military installations and corporate headquarters, such as General Electric, Motorola, and IBM. These actions were done expressly in solidarity with the revolutionary struggles against racism and U.S. imperialism in El Salvador, Nicaragua, and South Africa. The UFF took precautions to ensure that no one was killed in any of its bombing attacks; like most other groups, it relied on bank robberies to secure funding for its activities.”
Dan Berger, The Struggle Within: Prisons, Political Prisoners, and Mass Movements in the United States

Dan Berger
“Tried together, they were dubbed the Ohio 7, although legal battles took some of them from Ohio to New York, New Jersey, and Massachusetts. These legal battles weren’t the only troubles greeting these revolutionaries: except for Williams, whose wife and children did not accompany him underground, the other six were couples who lived and raised their families underground. After the arrest, the government attempted to use the nine children, most of them under ten and all of them minors, as bargaining chips against their parents. The state offered the Levasseurs’ eight-year-old daughter $20 and some pizza to cooperate with the government against her family. The Mannings’ children were held incommunicado for two months after the parents were first arrested; they had to go on hunger strike to force the government to disclose the whereabouts of their children.”
Dan Berger, The Struggle Within: Prisons, Political Prisoners, and Mass Movements in the United States

“The only "achievement" for Palestine in their armed struggle has been in making Israelis feel the pain. At best, the armed struggle for Palestinian liberation creates a "lose-lose" scenario, which has essentially been what we have been facing for too long.”
Gershon Baskin, In Pursuit of Peace in Israel and Palestine