Dan Berger

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Meryl
994 books | 24 friends

Rebecca
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Victori...
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Ava Cairns
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Sharmeen
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AK Press
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Olivia
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David Kaib
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Dan Berger

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December 2022


Average rating: 4.17 · 655 ratings · 102 reviews · 39 distinct worksSimilar authors
Outlaws of America: The Wea...

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Captive Nation: Black Priso...

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The Struggle Within: Prison...

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Stayed On Freedom: The Long...

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The Hidden 1970s: Histories...

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Rethinking the American Pri...

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Remaking Radicalism: A Gras...

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3.75 avg rating — 4 ratings3 editions
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Weather Underground: Histoi...

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liked it 3.00 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2010
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Struggle Within: Prisons, P...

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Kampf im Herzen der Bestie:...

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Quotes by Dan Berger  (?)
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“Conspiracy is a vague legal category that does not require the accused to have participated in illegal activity to be guilty of allegedly dangerous associations. Its capaciousness has proven a convenient way to target different anarchist networks and radical groups who have planned protests, participated in direct actions, or organized international solidarity efforts.”
Dan Berger, The Struggle Within: Prisons, Political Prisoners, and Mass Movements in the United States

“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

“The liberal international human rights community often defines political internees as those incarcerated for their beliefs, not necessarily their actions. While such instances abound, they are not the only or even the best examples of politically motivated incarceration. Whether someone “did it” ought not to determine fully who receives our support. Instead, political prisoners are best conceived as active participants in resistance movements.
Thus the central issue for thinking about political prisoners is not whether they “did it” but what movements did they come from and what are the broader circumstances surrounding their arrest. Most of those incarcerated participated in radical movements seeking fundamental overhauls of structures of power. (...) Political prisoners emerged from movements seeking to stop, to overturn, to develop alternatives to state and extralegal violence of the system. All of America’s political internees did something; some resisted with force, some put their bodies on the line, and others used words and propagated ideas the state deemed too powerful to let slide as just so much free speech. The issue of political prisoners is less one of “innocence” than of defending people’s ability and capacity to resist.”
Dan Berger, The Struggle Within: Prisons, Political Prisoners, and Mass Movements in the United States

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