CNT STRIKE COMMITTEE SIGNS AGREEMENT ON WAGES AND CONDITIONS WITH THE AEROSPACE
MANUFACTURING COMPANY
~ from CNT Seville ~
The strike at GAZC Sevilla SL, called by CNT and started on October 6, ended
yesterday with the signing of a strike settlement agreement. The agreement
includes a new bonus system that more fairly compensates night work, promotions,
a new professional classification system, greater participation in the creation
of the work schedule, and increased flexibility in choosing vacation days.
Payment of wages during vacations is corrected, and measures are taken to ensure
job stability and guarantee rights for union representation.
Mechanisms have been added to the agreement to maintain a climate of dialogue
and negotiation so that, in the future, an attempt can be made to avoid the
escalation of a possible conflict.
The strike ends after a tough conflict that was finally resolved thanks to the
impetus given to negotiations by both sides a couple of weeks ago, the result of
the willingness of both the union and the company to restart dialogue and end an
indefinite strike that ultimately lasted 72 days.
Following a constructive final negotiation process, both the union and the
company consider the agreement reached to be balanced, with mutual concessions
that have made it possible to end the strike. Both parties hope that the signing
of the agreement will usher in a new era of mutual understanding, aimed at
resolving any future disagreements through dialogue.
The post Strike at GAZC Seville ends after 72 days appeared first on Freedom
News.
Tag - Spain
THE STRIKE FUND AND THE SUPPORT OF SOCIAL AND NEIGHBOURHOOD GROUPS KEEP MORALE
HIGH
~ CNT Sevilla ~
Fifty days have passed since the workforce of Gazc Sevilla SL, an aeronautical
company, decided to take a stand. They did so on 6 October, calling an
indefinite strike under the banner of the CNT Sevilla union . Fifty days later,
the standoff remains firm, with no agreement in sight, but with one certainty:
“Our spirits haven’t waned. We are more united than ever and standing up to the
company,” says Jesús, one of the striking workers.
The spark ignited after months of breaches of contract: ignored professional
categories, illegal cuts in vacation pay, imposed work schedules, and a
progressive erosion of rights.” We’ve always been on triple shifts, with very
poorly paid nights because the collective agreement leaves us vulnerable. The
afternoons are awful, and the company forces us to work overtime, even though
they deny it,” Jesús complains.The creation of the CNT union branch in May was a
response to a wave of layoffs and mounting frustration. Far from negotiating,
the company rejected all demands. The assembly then decided to launch an
indefinite strike with clear objectives: recognition of job categories,
improvements for night shift workers, job security, and an end to the cuts.
“If we didn’t have this strike fund and the support of the union, we wouldn’t
have lasted 50 days like we have,” admits Jesús. “The management at Gazc Sevilla
hasn’t lifted a finger. They keep pretending everything’s fine, that they’re
meeting production targets, but from the outside it’s clear they’re not meeting
them. They’re resorting to strikebreaking, both internal and external, forcing
overtime, and leaving machines running,” the worker explains. The management has
resorted to illegal practices: “We’ve already caught them working weekends; we
have videos and filed complaints with the Civil Guard. They’re facing
penalties.”
The company, which receives substantial public subsidies, prefers to absorb
losses, pay for private security—”22,000 or 23,000 euros a month“—and install
cameras rather than address demands that the strikers describe as “modest.”
“It’s not about money; they’re not giving in because of pride. They refuse to
back down in the face of a strike,” Jesús concludes.The strike has strengthened
membership: from 20 to almost 40 workers in the union section. “People have seen
it clearly: the union is a valid tool. Without the CNT, this wouldn’t be
possible,” he affirms. The Strike Fund and the support of social groups like
Barrios Hartos and Gente de Barrio keep morale high. “There are good days and
bad days, but there are always comrades who lift you up when you’re feeling
down. If one of us is feeling down, another goes and encourages him. That’s how
we’re holding on,” Jesús confesses.
The conflict has also exposed the role of other unions. “UGT has always sided
with the company. They’ve never achieved anything for the workers, only for
those on the morning shift. Now they’ve issued statements against us, even
questioning the legality of the strike,” Jesús complains. “Whenever we raised
our voices, they ignored us. This time was no different .”The demands are clear
and specific. “The ideal agreement hinges on two points: a €150 bonus to
compensate for the overtime others work that we can’t, and more flexible
vacation time to better balance work and family life. If they close for three
weeks in the summer, they should give us one week off to choose from at another
time,” Jesús explains. “If the company agrees to that, we can reach an
agreement. But we’re not going to negotiate down the price.”
To understand the magnitude of the conflict, it’s helpful to know what these
workers do: “We machine aircraft parts. We’re the first link, the most
important, because if we don’t produce, the rest can’t work. And we’re the ones
who suffer the most: three shifts, poorly paid nights, and constant pressure to
work overtime.” The question hangs in the air. How much longer can this last?
“It’s a matter of time. But the moment will come when they have to sit down, one
way or another”, Jesús asserts. His prediction: “I don’t think they can hold out
much longer. They’re behind on their payments and risking lawsuits. I think it
will be sooner than many expect”. Meanwhile, the strike continues to set the
pace at Gazc Sevilla. A struggle that, beyond the numbers, speaks of workers’
dignity in the face of corporate arrogance. Because, as they repeat on the
picket line, “if we don’t fight, nobody will fight for us”.
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Machine translation
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THE INTERNATIONALIST MILITANT AND EDUCATOR WAS ALSO A PIONEER OF LGBT+
ORGANISING
~ Cristina Sykes ~
Tino Brugos, a committed trade unionist, educator and internationalist whose
activism spanned more than four decades of social struggles in Spain and beyond,
died on 10 November 2025 in his native Cantabria. He was 67.
Born in Santander to a working-class family, Brugos became a history teacher and
long-time syndicalist militant. Colleagues describe him as a figure of rare
coherence and generosity, a union organiser who “brought people together,
listened, and worked with rigour, tenderness and a sense of humour”. Brugos was
central to defending public education, secular schooling and equality in the
classroom, transmitting to generations of students a critical understanding of
the world and a belief that social transformation was possible.
He played a key role in the Inter-syndicalist Confederation, later becoming its
head of union action, and was known for his democratic instincts and ability to
hold diverse movements together. An early pioneer of LGBT+ organising in
Asturias, he helped open spaces where visibility still carried personal risk. He
was also active in feminist, ecological and labour struggles, seeing them as
inseparable fronts of the same fight for collective emancipation.
Brugos’s internationalism was equally deep. He participated in solidarity
campaigns with Kurdistan, Palestine and the Western Sahara, and travelled
repeatedly as an observer to support human-rights defenders. In 2023 he was
expelled from Turkey for his work accompanying the Kurdish movement—an episode
fellow activists cite as emblematic of his commitment. Anticapitalistas Asturies
remembered him as “a revolutionary encyclopaedia” whose homeland “was anywhere
an oppressive regime was doing the oppressing”.
He was also active in antifascist memory work with La Comuna and other groups
documenting Francoist repression, viewing historical memory as a living tool for
present struggles. The CGT union, which had been collaborating with Brugos on
recent working groups, noted his tireless dedication to anti-militarist
organising, opposition to NATO and solidarity with peoples resisting war and
occupation.
Brugos had recently retired from teaching but remained active until days before
his death. Friends and comrades across the left have expressed profound loss.
“Your loss is enormous for the movement in Asturies, the Spanish state and
internationally”, wrote Anticapitalistas. For the Confederación Intersindical,
his legacy is a mandate to continue “the defence of public services, critical
education, equality of rights, democratic memory and solidarity between
peoples”.
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Verified machine edit
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FIGHT CONTINUES FOR BAKERY WORKERS CONVICTED OF ‘COERCIVE’ UNION ACTION
~ punkacademic ~
The Suiza 6 began their jail sentences yesterday (10 July) after being ordered
to report to prison by the authorities. The six, bakery workers in Gijón in
Asturias and members of the CNT syndicalist union, were sentenced to three and a
half years in prison and fined 125,000 euros by a regional judge in 2021. This
followed an extended legal campaign by the owner of La Suiza bakery, after a
worker joined the union in 2017 and levelled allegations of harassment and
withholding of wages against him.
The CNT issued a statement condemning the imprisonment, which it described as a
“tremendous attack on trade union freedom”, and calling for their immediate
release. The union said it was “not an isolated case” but “part of a repressive
trend against unionism”, including the 23 arrests following the recent
metalworkers’ strike in Cádiz.
The six include the worker herself, who did not participate in the campaign for
health reasons, and has effectively been jailed simply for joining a union. The
workers’ actions, which focused on spreading information outside the business,
were strictly non-violent and followed the business owner’s refusal to discuss
the matter with the union. The judge characterised this as ‘coercion’. The
sentence was upheld by the Spanish Supreme Court last July.
In Spain and elsewhere, the case has caused uproar, with twenty-two unions
supporting the group. Solidarity demonstrations for the six have been held
across Europe, and a crowdfunder organised by the CNT for their legal costs
raised 95,000 euros. On 29 June a major demonstration calling for the six to be
pardoned took place in Gijón, drawing support from unions and activists across
Spain.
Union members met last week with the Spansish Minister of Labour Yolanda Díaz, a
member of the Communist Party, who offered to attempt to expedite a pardon
though it is unclear if her efforts will be successful. “We will continue to
fight for the freedom of the La Suiza 6, which is to fight for union freedom”,
said the CNT, “in the courts, in the streets, and in the conscience of this
country. And above all, we will continue to wage war in every workplace”.
The post Suiza 6 jailed: “A repressive trend against unionism” appeared first on
Freedom News.
VARIOUS UNIONS AND ORGANISATIONS JOINED THE PROTEST IN XIXÓN AGAINST THE BAKERY
WORKERS’ CONVICTION
~ Guillermo Martínez, La Marea ~
Following the court’s refusal to suspend their sentences, the streets of Xixón
(Asturias, Spain) once again chanted, “the Suiza 6 will not go to prison”. The
protest on Sunday (29 June) drew around 8,000 people, according to the
organisers, and demonstrated their rejection of the prison sentences imposed on
the union members. Various unions and organisations joined the protest,
demanding a pardon from the central government. “Trade unionism is not a crime”,
they repeated in their hoarse voices.
The demonstration started on Paseo de Begoña at noon and ended in front of the
courthouse in the Asturian city, which once again vibrated with the activists’
passage. Erica Conrado, the general secretary of the CNT (National Union of
Workers’ Unions), the union to which four of the convicted women belong,
criticised the court’s refusal to allow the union members to divide their
sentences, a measure that would have prevented them from going to prison.
The conflict began in 2017. The CNT in Xixón began mobilising in front of the La
Suiza bakery, as its owner owed money to one of his workers. The union’s
pressure materialised in demonstrations in front of the shop and an attempt to
mediate with the owner of the establishment after he also filed a complaint. The
process ended with a conviction by Judge Lino Rubio, known for his landmark
rulings against union members. They were sentenced to two years in prison for
‘serious coercion’ and another for ‘obstruction of justice’, which translates to
a year and a half in prison.
Against the court ruling, Xixón has once again taken to the streets to
strengthen this armed barricade of mutual support, which has continued to grow
over time. “The prison order could come at any moment. Our comrades live in a
state of constant uncertainty”, Conrado told La Marea before the start of the
demonstration. The sun was beginning to set over the city streets. “Irreparable
damage has been caused after eight years of legal proceedings that have
persecuted six people solely for defending the rights of the working class”, she
added.
Throughout the march, which lasted a couple of hours, chants such as “worker
fired, boss hanged,” “comrades, you are not alone”, and “the strength of the
worker: solidarity” were heard constantly. Several of the convicted individuals
also participated in the demonstration. One of them welcomed the announcement by
the Socialist government of Asturias that this Monday it will join the petition
for a pardon already formalised by 22 union organisations.
“It’s a precious opportunity for the PSOE to position itself in favour of the
working class it claims to defend”, the convicted woman stated. However, the
sentence they suffer goes beyond themselves: “Three of us have two young
children. We think a lot about how our children will cope with their parents
potentially being in prison”.
KEEPING THE PULSE ON THE STREETS
Just a few meters away was Belén Álvarez, a friend of two of the convicted
women. “It’s important to take to the streets because this sets a very dangerous
precedent for the union struggle. We have no choice but to oppose it head-on”,
she stated, while banners of support held by activists from around the state
continued to parade around her. Álvarez added that “we must maintain the
momentum in the streets.” “Those of us who are convicted are taking everything
that’s happening to our friends badly, but demonstrations like this give us a
lot of strength to continue”, she continued.
Buses chartered by the CNT made it possible for hundreds of activists and
citizens to arrive in Xixón early this morning from provinces such as Barcelona,
Zaragoza, Segovia, León, Madrid, Bilbao, Burgos, and Vitoria. This was the case
with Fernando Sanfrutos, who, although not affiliated with the Confederation,
did not hesitate to join them for the protest from Valladolid.
Carrying the Palestinian flag on his shoulder, this protester stated: “A brutal
injustice is being committed here against six people who have only defended
their union rights, and for that they are going to prison”. Regarding the
pardon, Sanfrutos commented that “it should be granted immediately because these
people should never go to jail”. In his view, the judge would not act this way
“if it were a union more subservient than the CNT”.
DOUBTS ABOUT THE PARDON
While some passers-by filmed the demonstration with their cell phones, a woman
leaning out of her balcony looked down at the stream of people with a slight
smile and nods of agreement. A few meters below her, thousands of people chanted
against the bosses and in favour of class solidarity, something evident in the
number of unions, also the majority, that supported the mobilisation. Likewise,
the general secretary of Podemos, Ione Belarra, supported the march and
expressed her solidarity with those convicted.
Vicente Fernández and Lucía Fernández have decided to travel to Xixón from
Ourense on their own: “It’s time to be here. The streets are essential for the
condemned women to see that they are not alone and to raise awareness of the
grave injustice that is taking place”, said the former. Although they have
expressed doubts about whether the government will grant a pardon, both have
commented: “Perhaps it’s something that would even be good for them as a party,
given the current political situation”. According to them, neither of them is
active in any political organisation, and they admit that this “case of
repression”, as they have described it, is not widely known in Galicia.
EXPLOITATIVE BUSINESSMAN AND COMPLICIT COURT
A few minutes after 2:00 p.m., the protest arrived in front of the Xixón
courthouse, where a banner was lowered from a nearby bridge. There, the
organisers read a statement. They referred to the union unity evident today: “We
are forced to do this by a retrograde alliance of police, judicial, business,
and media powers that seeks to undermine the basic rights of the working class”.
They also shared with those present: “The criminalisation and sentencing of
these colleagues demonstrates that our rights as workers are so weak that the
collusion of ultra-conservative powers can deactivate them.”
As they explained, the Supreme Court’s ratification of the ruling has
highlighted how “the oligarchic alliance formed by the judiciary, business, and
other powers wants to make the demand for union negotiations a crime of
obstruction of justice. And that calling for rallies can be a crime of
coercion”.
On the other hand, they emphasised regarding the pardon that “when trade
unionism is imprisoned with perverse sentences, all legal responses are
legitimate”. The mobilisation concluded with a unanimous cry from the thousands
of people gathered in Xixón: “Comrades, you are not alone”! At least, in this
way, the uncertainty that has plagued those sentenced for eight years becomes
less painful.
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Machine translation. CC BY-SA 3.0
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News.
The only descendant of the anarchist revolutionary José Buenaventura Durruti has
died in France at the age of 93.
~ Rob Latchford ~
Colette Durruti, daughter of the anarchist revolutionary José Buenaventura
Durruti and the French libertarian activist Émilienne Morin, has died in France
where she spent most of her life. Also known as Diana, Colette was the only
daughter of the historic anarchist fighter, a key figure during the Spanish
Civil War.
Born in Barcelona on December 4, 1931, she was born while her father was in
prison, during the Second Republic. They barely knew each other. She was only 5
years old when her father died on the Madrid front during the early days of the
Spanish Civil War. However, she has always remembered him, “with affection,” as
she acknowledged in a French magazine a few years ago.
Daughter of the Revolution
Colette’s childhood was marked by economic hardship and constant moving, but
also by a family relationship based on equality and mutual support.
During the outbreak of the Civil War in 1936, her mother joined the Durruti
Column on the Aragon front, leaving Colette in the care of an anarchist
companion. A few months later, her father died on the Madrid front when she was
only five years old. That event would mark her life and that of her mother, who
was determined to raise her faithful to libertarian ideals.
After the war, mother and daughter went into exile in France, where Colette
lived for the rest of her life. In the 1950s, she acquired French nationality
when she married Roger Mariot, with whom she had two daughters, Yvon and Rémi —
the latter of whom died in an accident in 1989. Settled in Brittany, she managed
a dairy company before retiring to the French Pyrenees.
Libertarian Commitment to the End
Throughout her life, Colette Durruti never abandoned her anarchist ideology. She
actively participated in memorial events and tributes to historical figures of
the anarchist movement, keeping alive the memory of her father and an entire
revolutionary generation. She said she knew little about her father, despite
having read books and seen photographs depicting the adventures he experienced.
In 2009, she participated in the documentary Celuloide colectivo, dedicated to
films produced during the Civil War, and in 2019, she participated in a
commemorative event at the Montjuïc Cemetery.
Despite having spent little time with her father, Colette spoke of him with
admiration and tenderness.
Colette Durruti 4th December 1931 to 19th April 2025
The post Adios to Colette Durruti appeared first on Freedom News.
“THERE’S A STRONG TRADITION OF FAR-RIGHT ACTIVISM IN UNIVERSITIES, ANTI-FASCISTS
HAVE BEEN TRYING TO COMBAT THAT AND THEY’VE BEEN DEMONISED FOR IT”
~ Mike Finn joins us to talk about Austria’s targeting of anti-fascists barely a
month after being forced into a three-party coalition to shut out the far-right,
and how “liberal order” governments across Europe often still seem to think of
the left as the greater threat.
We also talk about the chaos of tariff imposition and its ideological
underpinnings, especially in the context of a globalisation project we have
never been huge fans of. Back at home, an attempt is being made to pile pressure
on Israel-supporting companies with a revived boycott campaign alongside direct
action from Youth Demand, and the government has unveiled its latest dystopian
brain fart …
The post Anarchist News Review: Anti-fascist crackdown, Stock market falls, new
BDS and predicting murder appeared first on Freedom News.
IN MORE THAN 40 LOCATIONS ACROSS THE COUNTRY, TENANTS UNIONS AND NEIGHBOURHOOD
ASSEMBLIES CARRIED OUT PROTEST ACTIONS LAST WEEKEND
~ Rob Latchford ~
Spain’s first national housing march was organised over the weekend, thanks to
the collaborative work of dozens of pro-housing organisations and unions.
Demonstrators called for a halving of rents, permanent tenancy contracts, the
recovery of all vacant tourist and seasonal rental properties, and the
dismantling of companies that carry out evictions.
In Madrid, more than 100,000 people gathered from noon, mostly wearing orange
t-shirts, and marched from Atocha along the Paseo del Prado to the outskirts of
the Plaza de España. Protesters denounced both the central and regional
governments for failing to guarantee universal access to decent housing.
San Sebastian. Photo: Javi Julio
“The general upward trend in rents in recent years means that anyone who wants
to rent a house needs to spend more than 50% of their salary on rent”, Darío
from the Carabanchel housing union told El Salto newspaper. “This is especially
affecting young people whose jobs are characterised by precariousness”, he
emphasised.
The Madrid Tenants’ Union shares this view: “most of us in the union, who are
young and from Madrid, live with our parents because we can’t become
independent”, said members Juan and Lucía. “It’s impossible, and this also has
consequences for our personal, emotional, and relational development”. In total,
almost 1,400,000 households in Spain currently spend more than 30% of their
income on monthly rent payments.
The protesters demanded measures to curb “parasitic” real estate speculation
practices as well as the complete closure of tourist and seasonal apartments.
According to official data, between August 2023 and 2024 the number of vacation
rentals in Spain increased by 16.6%, a phenomenon that has now also spread to
peripheral and working-class towns. Although a modification to the Horizontal
Property Law, requiring the express approval of 60% of residents to establish
vacation rentals, came into effect this Thursday, the tenants insist this
regulation is ineffective against vulture funds who buy entire blocks of flats.
Galicia. Photo: Juancho Everman
The protest was joined by hundreds of allied organisations and platforms
including the Street Vendors’ Union, Ecologists in Action, and the Boycott
Sanctions and Divestment (BDS) campaign for Palestinian liberation.
“A STRUCTURAL PROBLEM OF CAPITALISM”
At the same time as the demonstration was starting out in Madrid several
thousand protesters gathered in Donostia (San Sebastian) in the Basque Country.
Marching from the old urban centre, they chanted slogans such as “No to the
housing business” and “Stop homelessness” as they passed City Hall and marched
along the avenue. According to the Socialist Housing Union of Euskal Herria, the
solution to the housing problem “will not come from public financing of the real
estate business, but from an organised struggle for effective improvements” and
a “reduction in real estate sector profits”.
The union pointed out that the housing crisis is affecting the working class,
while “everything is going well for business owners and tenants”. It also warned
about the impact of the housing problem on groups such as “young workers, who
cannot emancipate themselves” and “racialised and migrant people, who struggle
with poverty and housing racism”.
Barcelona. Photo: Victor Serri
The solution, according to the union, “is no middle ground; either profits are
reduced, or our living conditions will not improve”. This means ending the
structural problem of capitalism and building a new society where “housing is
not a commodity and where resources are planned according to social needs”.
Major deminstrations also took place in Galicia, Andalusia and Valencia.
In Barcelona, thousands of people (12,000 according to the Municipal Police and
100,000 according to the organisers) gathered to demand the right to decent
housing under the slogan “Let’s lower rents, let’s end the housing business”.
The housing situation in Catalonia remains critical. According to data from the
Catalan Institute of Land, the average rent in Barcelona in 2025 will be €1,117
per month, and many tenants spend more than half their income on rent.
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Top image: Madrid. Photo: David F. Sabadell
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IKEA TRAPPED ITS WORKERS INSIDE WAREHOUSES WHILE UBER EATS AND GLOVO FORCED
COURIERS TO MAKE USUAL DELIVERIES
~ Emilia Aiguader ~
The city of Valencia was today dealing with the consequences of a devastating
flood. Overnight, this “once in a century” storm laid waste to one of Spain’s
most vibrant communities. Throughout the city and its surroundings, streets once
bustling with people are now filled with brown, muddy waters and piles of
destroyed cars. At the time of writing, more than 70 people have been confirmed
dead, countless more are still missing and 155,000 people have been left without
electricity.
As climate change takes effect, Spain and Portugal have endured historically
hot, dry summers and heavy autumn storms in past years.
Yes perhaps the single most directly culpable person is Carlos Mazón, the
president of the right-wing government of Valencia. When Mazón took office last
year, one of his first moves was to shut down the Valencian Emergencies Unit,
which had been established to provide a rapid response to natural disasters.
Yesterday, as meteorological institutes issued a red warning, Mazón downplayed
the risk and falsely claimed the storm was diminishing. Then, while entire towns
went underwater and people began to lose their lives, he stalled for several
hours before finally issuing a warning for citizens to seek safety.
Unions have highlighted how companies risked workers lives during the flood.
Ikea trapped its workers inside their warehouses as the waters rose all around
them. Uber Eats and Glovo forced couriers to make their usual delivery routes
and face torrential downpours with only bicycles and scooters. And Mercadona,
the largest supermarket chain in the Valencian country, coerced its delivery
drivers to drive head-on into the rapids, where they had to be rescued by
emergency responders.
Firefighters, healthcare workers and other emergency responders are working
tirelessly to save lives. Mutual aid networks are rushing to provide food,
clothing and shelter to those who have been left without it. And trade unions,
including the anarcho-syndicalists of the CNT and CGT, are organising to fight
for the workers whose lives have been endangered by corporate greed. Even in
dark times, the bright light of solidarity is breaking through.
The post Valencia floods: 70+ dead, unions say firms risked workers’ lives
appeared first on Freedom News.
Items discussed in this program: German antifascist arrests and deportations •
Valencia square occupation for decent housing • Lisbon riots after police racist
killing • Escalation in Chiapas • UK budget and Labour’s capitalist cult of
growth • Tommy Robinson sentencing and the threat of fascist “victimhood”
The post Freedom News Review 29.10.2024 appeared first on Freedom News.