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The FBI's War On Democracy --Claude Marks discusses the new film COINTELPRO 101

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Angola 3 News: What can you tell us about your upcoming film COINTELPRO 101?


Claude Marks: We've been aware of the need to talk more about COINTELPRO since we made The Legacy of Torture the video about the government torture of the Panthers in New Orleans in 1973 which later became the unjust basis for the San Francisco 8 Case. In travelling with that film and organizing for the dropping of charges, we referred to COINTELPRO but often were talking to younger people in particular, who had not heard the term and had no historical frame of reference for that period of intense repression.


So we undertook to make this new film, knowing that no government agent or agency has ever been held accountable for the assassinations of leaders, the destruction of organizations, the imprisonment and political targeting of so many people people who still remain prisoners of the wars against movements for liberation and self-determination within the US borders.


COINTELPRO 101 is not the first or only film on the subject, although there have not been many, but we hope it can help reinvigorate some organizing work, and reopen some thinking about the violence directed against progressive movements, this hidden history, and nature of the state and its agencies of repression.


A3N: How was the film showing and related workshop at the US Social Forum received by the audience?


CM: This was a good opportunity to infuse the very broad conversations at the Social Forum with a self-conscious discussion about the nature and continuity of government repression. From the European invasion & Middle Passage forward, we have always seen genocide. Prisons, COINTELPRO, Abu Ghraib"all represent the continuity of what any movements to change power relations are and will be up against.


A3N: Your website states that the film's "intended audiences are the generations that did not experience the social justice movements of the sixties and seventies." Given that COINTELPRO officially ended in the early 1970s, why is this story so important for the younger generation to know about?


CM: Well, the mission of the Freedom Archives is to help educate people, and especially the rising new generations, as to the true nature of recent radical history. The high point of struggle represented by the loosely used term "the sixties" and the violent repression against it, contains essential lessons for every young person seeking a more just society. More generally, people should not be misled by the myth of democracy, the idea that the system can be made to work for "us" or that those in power will somehow reach a moral epiphany and give up anything of consequence without a fight.


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Over 40 years ago in Louisiana, 3 young black men were silenced for trying to expose continued segregation, systematic corruption, and horrific abuse in the biggest prison in the US, an 18,000-acre former slave plantation called Angola. In 1972 and (more...)
 
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