Russian feminist punk rock outfit and perpetual headline-makers Pussy Riot has just released a new music video (distinctly political in true Pussy Riot fashion) for their song “Police State,” featuring a cameo from Chloe Sevigny.
The video for “Police State” marks the one-year anniversary of the 2016 presidential election, the D-day that was Donald Trump’s ascension into the White House (as well as the centennial of the Russian Revolution in 1917, a powerful example of political revolution and resistance).
The video is directed by Matt Creed and contains a range of Pussy Riot-quality images: stacks of TVs depicting small fires and on-the-blink colors, technologically induced chaos. Sevigny herself takes part in the clip as an unforgiving member of law enforcement, beating the stuffing out of a teddy bears and other toys while masked children watch on cowering. Eventually Sevigny pulls the hood off of firecracker Nadya Tolokonnikova, the lead singer of the band.
And it wouldn’t be a Pussy Riot video if it didn’t come with a politically charged statement. Pussy Riot has never been a band known for subtlety, but Tolokonnikova’s to-the-point writing about how events of the Russian Revolution should be a model for modern activism gains a certain poignancy in modern times.
“Look back: people did it before. Soviet dissidents were fighting against one of the most oppressive governments on the planet and shared their own D.I.Y. magazines (samizdat) via secret networks,” wrote Tolokonnikova. “Labor union leaders and civil rights activists were dying for their beliefs in the U.S. And it actually did make our world a better place. What was in fact blown up on 8th of November 2016 was the social contract, the paradigm that says that you can live comfortably without getting your hands dirty with politics.”
Based on what Pussy Riot have endured in the past and continue to endure to truly live out the anti-authoritarian punk attitude, “Police State” shouldn’t be taken lightly.
Check out the video and the full statement below.
Pro-authoritarian trends and autocratic, conservative, right-wing leaders are spreading around the world like a sexually transmitted disease. What can we do?
If we find a way how to act together, be articulate, focused and persuasive, we can shift mountains. Look back: people did it before. Soviet dissidents were fighting against one of the most oppressive governments on the planet and shared their own diy magazines (samizdat) via secret networks. Labor union leaders and civil rights activists were dying for their beliefs in the US. And it actually did make our world a better place.
“Think about 120 years ago. There were children working in factories, losing their fingers. People fought back. They fought to create unions. Think about the women’s movement. Think about the civil-rights movement. You’ve got to jump in and start fighting.” – Bernie Sanders reminds us.
When Trump won the presidential election one year ago, people were deeply shocked. What was in fact blown up on 8th of November 2016 was the social contract, the paradigm that says that you can live comfortably without getting your hands dirty with politics.
But we’re more than atoms, separated and frightened by TV and mutual distrust, hidden in the cells of our houses behind screens, venting anger and resentment at ourselves and others. If you have to point at an enemy, our greatest enemy is apathy. We’d be able to achieve fantastic results if we were not trapped by the idea that nothing can be changed.
What we’re lacking is confidence that institutions can actually work better, and that we can make them work better. People don’t believe in the enormous power that they have but for some reason don’t use.
We do fight with the police state in Russia; since we’ve been released from jail we started an independent media outlet Mediazona (zona.media) that covers what’s happening in Russian courtrooms, police stations, prison, labor camps. With lawyers of “Zona Prava” (Zone of Justice) we’re fighting for prisoners – helping them to get medication and better conditions, get out of jail, open criminal cases against guards and cops who break the law and abuse their power.
Actions are more important that opinions and comments. It’s crucial to build alternative institutions, establish alternative power structures and networks, especially when your government sucks. There’s a lot that can be done and should be done. Putin will not disappear tomorrow, but we can show our fellow Russians how corrupted, damaging and ineffective his rule is. If everybody who denounced Trump on social media showed up on the streets and refuse to leave until he’s gone, he’d be out of office in a week. What it takes is just to abandon our learned helplessness.
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