How (if at all) does Precarias see itself situated in the Spanish tradition of non-capitalist organizing?
More than seeing ourselves situated in this tradition I think we just effectively are in the midst of it. I mean, weve never really dedicated much effort to thinking through that genealogy and weve found that most of the contemporary groups which are committed to a historic communist or anarchist stance are not very useful when it comes to thinking about the present. But of course one is infused by ones environment and the kind of language which works here is different than the language which might work in the US, for example, largely because the legacy of anti-capitalist organizing to which you refer is still alive, at least in memory, in a way it really isnt in the US. In recent years this legacy has semi-successfully reinvented itself in the context of anti-globalization and anti-war movements. As for our personal trajectories, some of us come out of the squatting movement (with its anarchist heritage, its critique of the social-democrat governments, its strong links to Italy and Ge