Recent from talks
Knowledge base stats:
Talk channels stats:
Members stats:
Radio Insurgente
Radio Insurgente is the official voice of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN).The radio station has been operating since August 2003 and it is independent from the Mexican government. Its broadcasting location is unknown. Radio Insurgente's content is focused on promoting the ideas and struggles of the Zapatista movement. Radio Insugente transmits programs in Spanish and in the indigenous languages Tzotzil, Tzeltal, Chol and Tojolabal. According to their website Archived 2005-04-04 at the Wayback Machine, they transmit "from various places in Chiapas directed to the Zapatista bases, the insurgentes and milicians, the commanders and local people in general". No new programs have been posted on the website since 2009, but CDs are on sale on the site and users can listen to previous content.
There was a prior attempt to create a Zapatista radio network in 1998 with Radio Rebelde to cover human rights violations and provide political commentary that does not seem to have ever gained much traction. The radio station was first transmitted via short wave frequency in 2001 during a high-profile Zapatista gathering in Ovente, Chiapas. With the start of Radio Insurgente in 2003, many people arranged meetings and brought their own radio sets to mark the occasion and hear the first words "broadcast" by the network, which actually came via a CD that was played through loudspeakers.
Radio Insurgente has also used criticism and humor since its first broadcast, when it mocked U.S. foreign policy, Silvio Berlsuconi, Tony Blair, José María Aznar, the King of Spain, and Judge Baltasar Garzón. It has also made fun of the low wattage of its stations, stating that "We broadcast with such little power that not even electronic Viagra can raise it."
Since it launched it has experienced technical glitches. Prior to the launch of Radio Insurgentes, the EZLN transmitted content over clandestine FM stations. To get started, the Zapatistas built an "egg carton-lined studio" to transmit their programs. They have also trained themselves on how to operate the radio station; the group has also trained young women insurgents on producing radio content. The radio station is also completely portable; insurgents can take it up to the mountain in the morning and back down at night.
Mexican broadcast laws require individuals to have a permit or concession to broadcast a radio signal, but the government makes it difficult for individuals to get a permit through red tape and other provisions. It is not uncommon for tiny wattage radio stations to pop up in Mexico, but they are often shut down by the government. The station was not sanctioned by any national laws and lacked a proper license, yet the San Andrés Accords between the EZLN and the Mexican government held that the indigenous communities had a right to broadcast their own content.
In 2004, the station started a website Archived 2005-04-04 at the Wayback Machine where they archived recordings of their programs and sold CD copies. The website Archived 2005-04-04 at the Wayback Machine also archives the communiqués and speeches given by the EZLN leader, Subcomandante Marcos.
In July 2006, Subcomandante Marcos was prevented from appearing on XENK-AM Radio 620 in Mexico City because of a fear the state would discontinue advertising on the station. Hosts of the show expressed shock at the incident, and there was a protest outside of the radio station's offices.
Self-proclaimed as "La Voz de los sin Voz", which translates to "The Voice of the Voiceless", Radio Insurgente's objective is to diffuse the ideals of the Zapatista movement through shortwave radio, FM radio, their website Archived 2011-11-07 at the Wayback Machine, and CD-productions. Furthermore, Radio Insurgente aims to inform listeners of the progress of the autonomy process within the Zapatista zones and promote the words and music of the indigenous Chiapas communities. Radio Insurgente is an Information and communications technology (ICT) that merges traditional forms of communication with new information technologies. This braiding of old and new forms of communication technologies is what allows Radio Insurgente to be so successful, as it can simultaneously reach the rural populations through the more traditional medium of radio and reach the urban populations through the more modern medium of the Internet. The Internet audio version of the radio network was launched in November 2004 to celebrate the 21st anniversary of the EZLN movement and focused on recordings of local indigenous musicians and story-tellers to political speeches by movement leaders and helped to serve as a recorded history of Mexico's indigenous people.
Hub AI
Radio Insurgente AI simulator
(@Radio Insurgente_simulator)
Radio Insurgente
Radio Insurgente is the official voice of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN).The radio station has been operating since August 2003 and it is independent from the Mexican government. Its broadcasting location is unknown. Radio Insurgente's content is focused on promoting the ideas and struggles of the Zapatista movement. Radio Insugente transmits programs in Spanish and in the indigenous languages Tzotzil, Tzeltal, Chol and Tojolabal. According to their website Archived 2005-04-04 at the Wayback Machine, they transmit "from various places in Chiapas directed to the Zapatista bases, the insurgentes and milicians, the commanders and local people in general". No new programs have been posted on the website since 2009, but CDs are on sale on the site and users can listen to previous content.
There was a prior attempt to create a Zapatista radio network in 1998 with Radio Rebelde to cover human rights violations and provide political commentary that does not seem to have ever gained much traction. The radio station was first transmitted via short wave frequency in 2001 during a high-profile Zapatista gathering in Ovente, Chiapas. With the start of Radio Insurgente in 2003, many people arranged meetings and brought their own radio sets to mark the occasion and hear the first words "broadcast" by the network, which actually came via a CD that was played through loudspeakers.
Radio Insurgente has also used criticism and humor since its first broadcast, when it mocked U.S. foreign policy, Silvio Berlsuconi, Tony Blair, José María Aznar, the King of Spain, and Judge Baltasar Garzón. It has also made fun of the low wattage of its stations, stating that "We broadcast with such little power that not even electronic Viagra can raise it."
Since it launched it has experienced technical glitches. Prior to the launch of Radio Insurgentes, the EZLN transmitted content over clandestine FM stations. To get started, the Zapatistas built an "egg carton-lined studio" to transmit their programs. They have also trained themselves on how to operate the radio station; the group has also trained young women insurgents on producing radio content. The radio station is also completely portable; insurgents can take it up to the mountain in the morning and back down at night.
Mexican broadcast laws require individuals to have a permit or concession to broadcast a radio signal, but the government makes it difficult for individuals to get a permit through red tape and other provisions. It is not uncommon for tiny wattage radio stations to pop up in Mexico, but they are often shut down by the government. The station was not sanctioned by any national laws and lacked a proper license, yet the San Andrés Accords between the EZLN and the Mexican government held that the indigenous communities had a right to broadcast their own content.
In 2004, the station started a website Archived 2005-04-04 at the Wayback Machine where they archived recordings of their programs and sold CD copies. The website Archived 2005-04-04 at the Wayback Machine also archives the communiqués and speeches given by the EZLN leader, Subcomandante Marcos.
In July 2006, Subcomandante Marcos was prevented from appearing on XENK-AM Radio 620 in Mexico City because of a fear the state would discontinue advertising on the station. Hosts of the show expressed shock at the incident, and there was a protest outside of the radio station's offices.
Self-proclaimed as "La Voz de los sin Voz", which translates to "The Voice of the Voiceless", Radio Insurgente's objective is to diffuse the ideals of the Zapatista movement through shortwave radio, FM radio, their website Archived 2011-11-07 at the Wayback Machine, and CD-productions. Furthermore, Radio Insurgente aims to inform listeners of the progress of the autonomy process within the Zapatista zones and promote the words and music of the indigenous Chiapas communities. Radio Insurgente is an Information and communications technology (ICT) that merges traditional forms of communication with new information technologies. This braiding of old and new forms of communication technologies is what allows Radio Insurgente to be so successful, as it can simultaneously reach the rural populations through the more traditional medium of radio and reach the urban populations through the more modern medium of the Internet. The Internet audio version of the radio network was launched in November 2004 to celebrate the 21st anniversary of the EZLN movement and focused on recordings of local indigenous musicians and story-tellers to political speeches by movement leaders and helped to serve as a recorded history of Mexico's indigenous people.