I’m sure I’ll really appreciate the new shared use trail in my community after they take away my hormones.
You realize some of us are going to die, right? I’m trying to be patient here, but you don’t seem to realize the stakes. People need to take large bites or we aren’t going to make it. Doing stuff for the sake of doing stuff is not a political action plan. This is going to take a political organization bigger than each of us individually, something that can do more than pass a local sales tax for road repairs or a new community pool. It’s not enough to have done something and tried. We have to win.
And that’s not going to be Democrats. They are tied to the sinking ship of elections, and they will keep wasting their time in them long after Republicans have rigged everything and made winning impossible. Sure, you can get some small wins that way, like shared trails, but the big stuff? Like my access to healthcare? That’s off limits. Republicans will kill me if I play by the rules of the game.
We have a couple months to prepare. That’s it. After that? Anything can happen.
I think you’ve misread me. It’s not like I’m oblivious to the danger we all face, that’s exactly why the inaction of the left makes me irritated. I also admittedly led with a softer touch in regards to organizing in my last comment because I had no idea if going overboard would just shutdown the conversation. While I live a fairly heteronormative life, I’m queer, so is my wife, and so are a large chunk of the people I surround myself with. I brought up zoning and infrastructure because I have a lot of knowledge when it comes to those topics so my effort isn’t wasted. Densifying is an environmental imperative. The spread out nature of our infrastructure is the single greatest threat to human survival because the vast majority of our fossil fuels goes to supporting it.
There is a reason I said I’m not a fortuneteller, we really don’t know how far Trump and Co will take it, and we will all have to be open to pivoting depending on what he does. The single greatest thing people can do is get involved in literally anything. Because once people understand how to navigate activism and politics, it becomes that much easier to pivot when things get bad. Many people on the left have to still take the first step, literally just getting off the couch and used to organizing. I’ve been encouraging that on lemmy and reddit specifically because people need to start somewhere. It’s been my experience that the people most angry on here, the people that refused to vote, etc, are also the people that never get involved in real activism past protests. I really just want people to engage, now, while there is still time…
The single greatest thing people can do is get involved in literally anything.
I disagree. I think that the single greatest thing people can do is read, especially history and political theory. I just finished with Revolutionary Suicide and am currently rereading The Wretched of the Earth, and next on the agenda is Blood In My Eye.
It’s been my experience that the people most angry on here, the people that refused to vote, etc, are also the people that never get involved in real activism past protests. I really just want people to engage, now, while there is still time…
You want people to engage with the Democratic Party, specifically.
You didn’t address this, but what about the Uncommitted Movement? They engaged with party politics and involved themselves in party business! They nominated delegates and went to the Convention to lobby the Party leadership! They were at the table! But in the end, it accomplished literally nothing, and the Democrats didn’t even let a single Palestinian-American speak at the DNC.
I’m sure I’ll really appreciate the new shared use trail in my community after they take away my hormones.
You realize some of us are going to die, right? I’m trying to be patient here, but you don’t seem to realize the stakes. People need to take large bites or we aren’t going to make it. Doing stuff for the sake of doing stuff is not a political action plan. This is going to take a political organization bigger than each of us individually, something that can do more than pass a local sales tax for road repairs or a new community pool. It’s not enough to have done something and tried. We have to win.
And that’s not going to be Democrats. They are tied to the sinking ship of elections, and they will keep wasting their time in them long after Republicans have rigged everything and made winning impossible. Sure, you can get some small wins that way, like shared trails, but the big stuff? Like my access to healthcare? That’s off limits. Republicans will kill me if I play by the rules of the game.
We have a couple months to prepare. That’s it. After that? Anything can happen.
I think you’ve misread me. It’s not like I’m oblivious to the danger we all face, that’s exactly why the inaction of the left makes me irritated. I also admittedly led with a softer touch in regards to organizing in my last comment because I had no idea if going overboard would just shutdown the conversation. While I live a fairly heteronormative life, I’m queer, so is my wife, and so are a large chunk of the people I surround myself with. I brought up zoning and infrastructure because I have a lot of knowledge when it comes to those topics so my effort isn’t wasted. Densifying is an environmental imperative. The spread out nature of our infrastructure is the single greatest threat to human survival because the vast majority of our fossil fuels goes to supporting it.
There is a reason I said I’m not a fortuneteller, we really don’t know how far Trump and Co will take it, and we will all have to be open to pivoting depending on what he does. The single greatest thing people can do is get involved in literally anything. Because once people understand how to navigate activism and politics, it becomes that much easier to pivot when things get bad. Many people on the left have to still take the first step, literally just getting off the couch and used to organizing. I’ve been encouraging that on lemmy and reddit specifically because people need to start somewhere. It’s been my experience that the people most angry on here, the people that refused to vote, etc, are also the people that never get involved in real activism past protests. I really just want people to engage, now, while there is still time…
I disagree. I think that the single greatest thing people can do is read, especially history and political theory. I just finished with Revolutionary Suicide and am currently rereading The Wretched of the Earth, and next on the agenda is Blood In My Eye.
You want people to engage with the Democratic Party, specifically.
You didn’t address this, but what about the Uncommitted Movement? They engaged with party politics and involved themselves in party business! They nominated delegates and went to the Convention to lobby the Party leadership! They were at the table! But in the end, it accomplished literally nothing, and the Democrats didn’t even let a single Palestinian-American speak at the DNC.
What did they do wrong, in your opinion?