Wednesday, December 31, 2025

05: Breaking the Pyramid -Zapatistas Seedbed - dec 30th

 






The Architecture of the Common:
Breaking the Pyramid:

A Presentation for the Global Solidarity Movement with the Zapatista Communities: 

Friends, family, and sisters and brothers of the Americanas Zapatistas:



A Presentation of Subcomandante Insurgente Moisés’ 2025 Address:


Imagine a pyramid. 

At the very top, a single point of power. In most of our world—in our governments, our corporations, and even our families—this is the only shape we know. We are told that to be successful is to climb; to be "right" is to be the one at the peak, isolated and deaf to the world below.

But on December 30, 2025, Subcomandante Insurgente Moisés stood before the Zapatista communities and offered a different geometry [01:26].

 He spoke of a radical shift from the individual to "El Común"—the Common. This isn't just a political theory; it is a lived experiment in survival and dignity that has lessons for every one of us, from the mountains of Southeast Mexico to the urban centers of the Americas.


1. The Power of the Negative

Moisés begins with a simple, yet revolutionary, electrical metaphor: the battery. To have light, you need both a positive and a negative pole. In the Zapatista struggle, the "positive" is our progress, our "we are doing well." But the "negative" is the critique, the voice that tells us what we are missing or what we are doing wrong [01:55].

For those of us in solidarity movements, the temptation is to always look for the "win." But Moisés reminds us that if we stay at the "top of the pyramid," only listening to our own praise, we fail. True autonomy requires the "Negative"—the humility to listen, to smell, and to imagine alongside others [02:54].


2. The New Generation: Laboratories of Freedom

One of the most moving parts of this address is the focus on the youth. For decades, the Zapatista roles were clear: Insurgent, Militia, or Support Base. But today, the youth are demanding more. They are becoming ultrasound technicians, dental workers, artists, and environmentalists [08:13].

This isn't just professional development; it is an evolution of freedom. Moisés shares stories of young people challenging their parents—old Zapatistas—to let them serve the community in new ways [11:45]. 

They are moving from a struggle defined by "taking up arms" to a struggle defined by "taking up the common good." They are inventing their own futures, designing their own paths, and proving that the movement is not a relic of the past, but a living, breathing laboratory [10:05].


3. Practicing: "El Común"

What does "The Common" look like in practice? It is the rejection of private property in favor of shared life. Moisés describes communities coming together to experiment—not competing to see who earns more, but collaborating to see what works best for the collective [15:41].

 Whether it is a cornfield, a fish pond, or a bakery, the goal is "rendición de cuenta" (accountability) to the assembly [15:29].

Crucially, "El Común" is not an exclusive club. Moisés recounts the construction of a communal hospital where non-Zapatistas—people of different religions and political parties—came to work [19:29]. 

When an outsider asked if they had to become Zapatistas to help, the answer was a firm "No." [20:33]. 

"The Zapatistas are not recruiting followers; 
they are building a world,
 where everyone can live with dignity, 
regardless of their label."


4. The Weight of Memory:

Finally, Moisés grounds this communal hope in the "digna rabia"—the dignified rage—that connects all of Mexico. He speaks directly to the 43 students of Ayotzinapa and their families [01:03:21].

 Ten years later, while others have used their pain for political gain, the Zapatistas remain steadfast. They understand that there can be no true "transformation" in a country that refuses to heal its deepest wounds [01:05:08].


 To seek justice is a communal act; 
to remember is a form of resistance.


Conclusion: For Everyone, Everything

To our brothers and sisters in the Americanas Zapatistas, this video is a mirror and a compass. Moisés reminds us that "Para todos todo, para nosotros nada" (For everyone everything, for ourselves nothing) has evolved [23:43]. 

It is now: For everyone, everything, in common [24:05].

The path is not easy. It involves long assemblies, exhaustion, and the difficult work of reaching consensus [58:01]. 

But it is the only path that leads away from the pyramid. As you watch this video and reflect on your own local struggles, ask yourselves: How can we build "The Common" in our own geographies? How can we listen to the "Negative" to improve our "Positive"?
The revolution is not a destination; it is the practice of sharing the world.


Click here to watch the full video:

 

04: Pyramids & Mountains - Zapatistas Seedbed - dec 29th

 



Pyramids & Mountains:
 Unmasking "The Other Right"


A Presentation for the Global Solidarity Movement with the Zapatista Communities: 

Friends, family, and sisters and brothers of the Americanas Zapatistas:


The Sacrifice of the Base

Imagine a pyramid. For centuries, it has been the shape of power in Mexico. It is grand, it is imposing, but it is also truncated. Its very design requires a sacrifice at the top to maintain the structure below. From the days of the Mexica to the modern presidency, this verticality has defined our reality. But today, a new architect has taken the stage, promising to dismantle the pyramid while secretly reinforcing its stones with the cold cement of global capital.


The Illusion of the "Left"

We are often told that Mexico is undergoing a "Fourth Transformation," a progressive revolution for the poor. But Arturo Anguiano, a voice of profound critical thought speaking from the heart of Zapatista territory, invites us to look closer. He suggests that what we are witnessing is not a shift to the left, but the emergence of "The Other Right." In this video, recorded in December 2025 [09:51],

 Anguiano pulls back the curtain on the "progressive" mask. He argues that the current regime is not a nostalgic return to revolutionary nationalism, but a modern, neoliberal administration of capitalism. It is a "mercantilism of politics" where social programs are not tools of liberation, but mechanisms of clientelism—buying loyalty while the fundamental structures of inequality remain untouched [51:05].


The Personalist Machine

One of the most striking revelations in Anguiano’s analysis is the nature of the ruling party, Morena. He describes it not as a social movement, but as a "personalist party" [32:32]. 

It is an organization with no collective direction, no internal debate, and no real volunteers—only a payroll of "Servants of the Nation" who operate as a semi-state machinery [36:58].

This centralization has led to what he calls a despotic regime [59:43]. 

The separation of powers is becoming a myth. The judiciary is under siege. The "imaginary republic" is being replaced by a reality where the president’s word is the only law that matters, justified by a "blank check" from the voters that is used to ignore the very people who provided it [38:39].


The Neo-Colonial Scalpel

For those of us in global solidarity, the most alarming part of this presentation is the discussion of "neo-colonial" infrastructure [01:18:46].

 Projects like the Tren Maya and the Interoceanic Corridor are presented as national triumphs, but Anguiano exposes them as "dry canals of Panama"—arteries designed to move global merchandise from China to the U.S. East Coast [01:19:07].

 These are not projects for the people; they are concessions to global finance, carving through indigenous territories and "razing the land" under the watchful eye of a newly militarized state [58:27].


So, where is the hope? 


The Mountain’s Response: Autonomy from Below


It lies in the metaphor of the mountain. While the pyramid represents the state and its sacrifices, the mountain represents the assembly of original peoples—the "assembly of pyramids" that Octavio Paz once spoke of, reimagined through Zapatista resistance [03:35].

Anguiano reminds us that "the state will not fall on its own; it must be dismantled from below" [01:13:34].

 The Zapatista movement provides the blueprint: not seeking the power of the pyramid, but building a different kind of power—one that is rooted in autonomy, self-governance, and a refusal to be assimilated into the "logic of the serpent" [05:46].


The Call to Action

To our sisters and brothers in the Americanas Zapatistas: this video is more than a political lecture. It is a warning. It is a call to recognize that "progressivism" can often be the most effective mask for "capitalism in its extreme form" [29:00].

Watch this presentation. Listen to the breakdown of how the military has been integrated into the very fabric of the economy [58:53]. 

Understand how "austerity" is being used as a tool to shrink the state’s responsibility to the people while expanding its capacity for accumulation [44:41].

Mexico, as Anguiano says, is a country that has "lost its soul" and requires a new one [00:27].

 That soul will not be found in the National Palace; it will be found in the mountains, in the communities, and in the global solidarity of those who refuse to be sacrificed for the top of the pyramid.


Watch the full presentation here: 

Participación de Arturo Anguiano, 29 de Diciembre de 2025