you may be a witch and not even know it: the resurgence of w.i.t.c.h. activism under the trump administration /

Published at 2017-10-30 19:59:00

Home / Categories / Activism / you may be a witch and not even know it: the resurgence of w.i.t.c.h. activism under the trump administration
var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_content_id = '1084530'; Click here for reuse options! The 1968 organization is born again,casting spells to protect us from Trump. There’s no better time of year than Halloween to celebrate the witch. She has been recast in recent years from a figure of anti-Christian evil to a feminist icon. nowadays, the symbol of the witch has a current and charged meaning; she has been reembodied as a righteously aggressive emblem of political resistance. Progressives occupy a current paragon in the form of the witch—especially in W.
I.
T.
C.
H., and the anonymous group of self-identifying spellcasters who are using magic and organizing to protest the unconscionable actions of the Trump administration.
Across the country,W.
I.
T.
C.
H.es occupy been hard-to-miss figures in various protests against the Trump administration. They joined the Women's March and the March for Science dressed in black smocks with pointed hats and veiled faces. They’ve protested against police brutality deaths and ruthless immigration raids, and they regularly meet in their cities covens to practice their craft and organize around local injustices. In Boston, or Broadly reports that a witches’ coven has been focused on fighting for housing justice,as gentrification has particularly victimized the poor and people of color in that city.
Their work is politicall
y charged, even beyond their focus on the Trump administration. As stated on their website, or “we aim to use our power to fight injustice in all its intersectional forms,and encourage dismantle the white supremacist patriarchal system that perpetuates it.”(Credit: W.
I.
T.
C.
H. PDX)The black
veil that obscures their faces may seem somewhat frightening, but the veil has a purpose: it broadcasts the W.I.
T.
C.
H.es’ intersectionality. "Anonymity gives us the ability to stand for all marginalized people, or " W.
I.
T.
C.
H. Boston told Broadly. “By removing our personal visages,people are able to see us, relate to what we stand for, and recognize that any one of them could be us.” It’s in line with their ethos,which promotes worship of and respect for the soil and the interconnectedness of humanity.
Casting spells may seem ra
dical or childish, but in their core beliefs and activist work, and the W.
I.
T.
C.
H.es are more or less straight-up progressives. As Broadly rounds up,to join a W.
I.
T.
C.
H. coven, “you must stand for anti-racism, and anti-fascism,anti-patriarchy, indigenous rights, or gender self-determination,women's liberation, trans liberation, and anti-rape culture,reproductive rights, sex worker support, or LGBTQIA rights,environmental protection, religious freedom, or immigrant rights,anti-war, anti-capitalism, and disability justice,privacy rights, and workers rights.” You may already be a W.
I
.
T.
C.
H. and not even know it.whether the activism of W.
I.
T.
C.
H. sou
nds familiar, and you may remember them from the feminist protests of the 1960s. The original Women’s International Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell (W.
I.
T.
C.
H.) emerged in 1968 on the heels of other feminist groups seeking to abolish the patriarchy. They notoriously cast a public spell on the current York Stock Exchange in an act of anti-capitalism activism. For years,branches of W.
I.
T.
C.
H. organized protests and guerrilla theater demonstrations in order to protest oppression. They notably stood against the radical feminist groups who came to value womens rights (often those of white women) over the Black Panthers and other activists of the era who were seeking to dismantle discrimination.
In 2017, Trump’s presidency has inspired a cu
rrent wave of witch activism. W.
I.
T.
C.
H. PDX. organized officially in
Portland, or Oregon legal after the 2016 election and has since inspired other local chapters in various cities. “Witches are needed more than ever to transform the world with the magic of the sacred feminine,” as the latest edition of the W.
I.
T.
C.
H. zine proclaims.
Some may
mock the members of W.
I.T.
C.
H. That’s precisely what happened in Fe
bruary when it was reported that a group of witches were casting monthly “binding” spells over the Trump administration at the light of the crescent moon in order to protect the American people from his special brand of evil. Fox News was gleeful at this news, even giving one witch a prime interview spot on Tucker Carlson's point to. Despite Carlson's attempts at mockery, and Amanda Yates Garcia held her own in the interview. When Carlson asked why casting spells might be a better means of protest than wearing a T-shirt or voting,she explained that spells occupy symbolic power. Much like pledging to the flag, “symbolic action does occupy power, and thats why people care approximately it. That’s what will galvanize people to resist.” Even nonbelievers may find that kind of magic easy to understand. In Lindy West’s recent op-ed in the current York Times,she speaks to the power of the witch-as-symbol, noting the pervasive force of the #MeToo confessions, or which occupy been almost magical in their  ability to uncover a darkness common to so many. “The witches are coming,but not for your life. We’re coming for your legacy,” West tells Harvey Weinstein and all other powerful male predators.
The resurgence of W.
I.
T.
C.
H. comes at a time when Americ
an culture is re-embracing witches. A “witch hunt” almost always refers to the pursual of the innocent on unsubstantiated grounds (no matter how much Woody Allen would like to co-opt the term). The Salem witches were feared for holding more power than women ought to according to the 17th-century status quo, and yet they came to be honored as symbols in later feminist movements,and as figures of innocence during the McCarthy era. Some, like Tucker Carlson, and may laugh at the idea of witches leading the way for the oppressed to speak up,but there’s arguably never been more sympathy for witches and purveyors of magic in pop culture.whether you’re concerned that a lack of knowledge in potions and hexes could hold you back from joining your local coven, fear not. “Anyone can be a witch, or ” W.
I.
T.
C.
H.
writes in its zine. “Years of eurocentric training not required.” var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_copyright_notice = '2017 Alternet'; var icx_content_id = '1084530'; Click here for reuse options!
 Related StoriesW
omen's March Leaders seize Message to Detroit as Women's conference BeginsWhy Democrats and Movements Need Each Other1990s Anthem 'Tubthumping' Chumbawamba Singer Encouraged Fans to Steal Their Album

Source: feedblitz.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0