Enemies of All Borders

Enemies of All Borders

If the path of opposition and struggle against migrant detention centers that we tried to undertake in Salento can communicate anything, it is that the search for and the identification of the enemy pays off. A constant, stubborn, and meticulous search for information is the first step to free oneself from fear and move to action.

The choice to focus our attention on a migrant detention center was dictated by a simple consideration: as anarchists, we believed—and still believe—that the existence of places that segregate and deprive living beings of their freedom is intolerable. Starting from this fundamental assumption, we began to study the question of migratory flows and their containment, and we tried to equip ourselves with theoretical and practical instruments in order to address it, ransacking the writings of academics and discussing in-depth texts by other comrades who had begun to analyze the question better than us. To this, we added determination and imagination. As we progressed, our ideas became clearer and the horizon of perspectives became distinctly visible. From the initial efforts against what we called a concentration camp, we came to the realization that it not only should, but could be closed down, and we tried to pursue the paths, which were multifarious, that could lead us to achieve this result. Multifarious but not contradictory, as they were guided by those convictions that served to light our way: self-organization of the struggle, permanent conflictuality, and direct attack.

Being aware that we were not alone in the world, we tried to extend the struggle and hostility towards concentration camps in general, and the San Foca camp in particular, but always holding firm to our method which constituted the rudder of our approach. The fact we didn’t succeed did not prevent us from continuing on our path alone, even if we were few, sometimes very few, but aware that what would impact the struggle was exclusively its qualitative aspect, and not the quantitative one. This is a detail that should always be kept in mind, because what can make a difference is not the number of opponents, but their ideas, which generate their practices.

This book contains most of the texts—leaflets, posters and various writings—that were produced during those years and that reflect what we, too, believed back then. Today, we probably wouldn’t write some things anymore, and others we would write differently, but so be it… We don’t want to testify to or commemorate a non-existent victory against anything; we simply think that reprinting these texts might represent a potential, possible starting point for future struggles.

(Some) Enemies of All Borders, 2019
from the Introduction to the first Italian edition

230 pages, 2026

Europe: Rupture Distro

US & Canada: A Million Earthworms

Subterranean War

Hourriya #6: Subterranean War

The Battlefield of Raw Materials

To see how power gets and uses its most basic physical resources – and the devastating processes involved – is instructive in itself. This is power, raw and material. But it also profoundly reveals the social relations that the great “march of progress” relies on. These pages will focus on some of progress’s raw nerves, on the root-systems streaming with the substances domination relies on to feed its expansion and increased strength. These roots penetrate deep into the earth’s belly, ripping through it, toxifying it, overheating it, laying waste to it. Innumerable human and non-human beings are sacrificed every day – enslaved, poisoned, killed by ever-more powerful and sophisticated weapons – for the possession of these subterranean materials, fundamental pillars of the global system of exploitation. The machine of devastation is highly dependent on the extraction of coal, oil, gas, minerals… giving rise to wars, bloody conflicts, but also to struggles and revolts across the world.

230 pages, 2025

Europe: Rupture Distro

US & Canada: A Million Earthworms

Contents

Introduction
Rivers of Blood, Oil, and Toxic Waste: A Brief History of the Energy Industry
Behind the Scenes of the Global Commodities Market
The IIRSA Development Plan: Infrastructure and Devastation
in South America
Cries of Revolt from the Andes to the Amazon
Destroying What Destroys Us, Near and Far