What people are saying about Crashing the Party

Reviews

07/12/18 | Fifth Estate | Repression & Resistance: From RNC 2000 to Trump

11/20/16 | Radical Criminology | Book Review: Crashing the Party

08/01/16 | NLG Review | Book Review: Crashing the Party

06/01/16 | Friends Journal | Book Review: Crashing the Party

01/19/16 | Slingshot | Arts & Crust reviews Crashing the Party

12/15/15 | Progressive Populist | Book Review: Politics of Protest

11/25/15 | Toward Freedom | Legal Hangover: A Review of Crashing the Party

Blurbs

"Crashing the Party is a must-read for every dissident, legal activist and those opposed to our growing police state. Don’t leave for your next demonstration believing that the cops and courts have all the power. They don’t. This important book, building on the lessons learned when activists took on the repression unleashed at the 2000 Republican National Convention, tells you otherwise. It is an untold story of “collective resistance:” the radical way in which activists and legal people, working together, beat back state repression."
     —Michael Ratner, President Emeritus, Center for Constitutional Rights

Crashing the Party is an exhaustive on-the-ground account of the tools that all levels of governments now use to suppress political dissent. Although focused on the 2000 Republic National Convention in Philadelphia, author Kris Hermes identifies and documents coercive techniques employed at many other protests, both large and small. Hermes, who gained first-hand experience before, during, and after the event, also shows how dedicated jail solidarity efforts can mitigate the harmful effects of arrests and overcharging, although sometimes at great personal cost. A must-read for anyone interested in knowing the how far governments can and will go in this post-9/11 era.” 
     —Jim Redden, author of Snitch Culture

Crashing the Party is a participant-observation case study of the protests surrounding the 2000 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia, but it is much more than that. It reminds readers that the United States did not become a police state only after 9/11. Violent, armed repression has been a continual theme throughout the country’s history. Those who resist political domination should study this book as it reveals the continually changing dynamics between the repressive apparatus and the people. Engagingly written, it is both a critical and detailed history, and a handbook for resistance.”
      —Geoffrey R Skoll, emeritus faculty of criminal justice, author Dialectics in Social Thought: The Present Crisis.

Crashing the Party is a triple treat! It delves into the creative dance between the forces of repression and forces of resistance, grippingly revealing how both experimented with new steps. Yet it follows the lead of activists, letting us listen to the music of their voices. And against the crushing weight of the state’s policing apparatus, in 2000 and now, the book celebrates people’s ability to gift each other strength and solidarity.” 
     —Cindy Milstein, coauthor, Paths toward Utopia: Graphic Explorations of Everyday Anarchism

“A terrific book filled with fascinating stories. Through insightful analysis and firsthand experience, Hermes weaves together an intriguing tale of the complex interactions between activist groups, lawyers, legal workers, the community, the media, police, and prosecutors. Having worked on defense committees, I found the text and tone rang true throughout. I'd recommend this book to anyone interested in studying grassroots civil liberties and the right to dissent.” 
     —Chip Berlet, author, paralegal investigator, and human rights activist

“In Crashing the Party, author Kris Hermes frames this compelling story through a broad lens of local politics, historical repression, and present day civil rights abuses. In fact, Hermes offers a uniquely informed perspective. Although Crashing the Party is meticulously researched—the case study relies on court documents, media reports and personal interviews—it greatly benefits from Hermes’ own detailed observations. As a legal advocate, he played an integral role in supporting activists who protested during the 2000 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia. He bore witness to the politically motivated mass arrests and brutality aimed at the protesters, punished by law enforcement for nothing more than exercising a Constitutional guarantee. In this book, Hermes recreates scenes that are so ludicrous as to be laughable, had the consequences not devastated lives. As a former journalist who covered the treatment of RNC activists in 2000, I recognize the importance of documenting the city’s efforts to suppress political dissent. Crashing the Party goes a step further by providing a guide for activists who continue to fight for social change.” 
     —Gwen Shaffer, Assistant Professor of Journalism at California State University Long Beach and former reporter who   covered the RNC for Philadelphia City Paper

“In trying to shut down the Republican National Convention protest in 2000, we fought the law and the law kicked our butts! But we fought back, during and afterward, with lots of lessons to be learned in how to challenge the national security state. Crashing the Party takes us inside that pivotal moment, its social context, and its enduring influences for those protesting in the streets, organizing against state surveillance, and navigating the legal system in radical and transformative ways.” 
     —Dan Berger, author, Captive Nation: Black Prison Organizing in the Civil Rights Era and The Struggle Within: Prisons, Political Prisoners, and Mass Movements in the United States

"Crashing the Party will make you angry, it will inspire you, but mostly, you will learn. Despite the unconstitutional efforts to crush them, the protesters at the 2000 RNC in Philadelphia and their allies in the legal community developed creative new tactics and strategies to push back. The stories are so powerful in part because Kris Hermes was there, which gives us a unique and intimate view of the events on the ground, and he’s written it all down in engaging prose. Everyone who seeks to create change must read this book." 
     —Sue Udry, Executive Director, Defending Dissent Foundation

Banner photo by Brad Kayal