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Posts Tagged ‘democracy’

Community Outreach for Mass Mobilization

February 27, 2025 Leave a comment

With all that is going on nationally being engaged in a national political organizing project is a real blessing. I don’t feel powerless and alone in front of the giant forces threatening democracy and the rule of law. Taking action and talking to other organizers is heartening and I highly recommend it.

Our neighbors are under attack for tax cuts to billionaires

The New American Community is moving into the next  phase of our County Party Outreach Project. I have called all of the state parties and had some great conversations and several active collaborations. Delaware and New Mexico are helping our outreach efforts and have agreed to work together. Several other states are reviewing information or have made a commitment to work together in the future. As a political unknown outside of my region though it has felt a little like cold call sales.

We also have  received almost 150 survey responses from county party organizations. Reviewing the responses help with Messaging is the largest unmet need. We created our survey as good community organizers both to have feedback to inform our work and to identify collaboration opportunities.

This week I’ve contacted county party leaders who completed the survey for follow up conversations. I’ve begun providing technical assistance to some party organizations and also discussed what people are doing.

What I found inspiring was the three conversations I had all said the same thing. We are focusing on community outreach because we need to know who is out there in case we have to do a mass mobilization to fight for democracy. From rural South Carolina, to a small city in Missouri, to the New Mexico suburbs the answer was the same.

We have found our Message. Democracy and the rule of law are under assault and we need to take action with our neighbors right now. The pro-Democracy Alliance is forming at the grassroots level everywhere. There is new energy to fight back and defend and folks aren’t waiting for non-existent national leadership but are leading themselves. Finding like minded souls in organizations or online and taking action.

Democrats and Direct Action

February 18, 2025 Leave a comment

I cut my teeth in political organizing around direct action with a long term focus on building a community of resistance. I found it far more energizing than electoral politics, more immediate, and far more fun.

Speaking truth to power and engaging in active non violence shaped who I was. I also engaged in influence campaigns that worked within the system. As a young field organizer in Utah I helped gin up significant opposition to an inadequate wilderness prevention Bill generating thousands of postcards and turning out hundreds of students at a critical public meeting.

That shifted the Utah delegation and the bill was defeated. The next year a bill was passed that includes an additional 1.2 acres of mostly Red Rock desert permanently protected as wilderness. I thought about that 1.2 million acres a lot and how we freed the weed by petition gathering, voter registration, organizing a GOtV and passing the California Compassionate Use Act.

My support of electoral politics further strengthened as a three term City Council Member in Columbia, Missouri  I saw a laundry list of progressive accomplishments and good government wins all through campaigning for votes. As I completed The Practical Guide to Building a Better World, I formed a Political Action Committee to support my national level local organizing.

After the inauguration we all witnessed the unconstitutional and illegal invasion of government systems and employee relations by unaccountable billionaire Elon Musk and his high tech goons. A spontaneous movement on Reddit called 50501 for national protests at state capitals.

I was intrigued but unavailable. I hope as also a little shocked by the general reception by Democrats and other activists not wanting to take part because they didn’t know who was organizing it. Folks who shared information were encouraged not to participate because of a lack of permits and no identified organizers and folks speculates it was a setup.

So most of the folks I know stayed home. But not all. I heard reports from Michigan where the crowd was robust and inspiring and I saw news reports on many other protests.

In spite of being 50 states, 50 protests, 1 day a President’s Day protest was called by the same network. In Leavenworth the local Democrats put out a call and on a frigid day 40 or so concerned citizens came out with signs and flags and it was beautiful.

The flag of the Free French Resistance was particularly inspiring

When I got home I enjoyed seeing protest photos from across the country. We think protests need leadership and organization, and both can be helpful to win concrete victories but they are not necessary. During the Vietnam protest era the largest protests happened after the national leadership splintered and went silent. The protests kept growing.

We live in an era of increased suspicion and less and less trust. The more that we can rebuild our ability to organize together on a common cause the more effective we are going to be. The New American Community is embracing and promoting decentralized grassroots movements and we encourage others to do likewise.

We have to be wise. There are agents of chaos and misinformation that drive divisive activities. There are risks to trusting strangers. There are also risks from not trusting others we do not know. The risks of being isolated and powerless and having our cherished institutions destroyed without an effective public outcry.

We need to be wise and structure for safety. Do your homework, withhold judgement, make sure if you go to an action you have an exit plan and support. But please don’t stay at home out of fear. The next big action is the February 28th economic blackout.

If you must keep it local and keep it cash.

I don’t know who is planning it. I know it makes sense. I know I want to do it. I know it’s safe. Now more than ever we need a mass mobilization to protect our democracy and our way of life. When the call to action is just and proper and good I am acting, whether I know who made the call or not.

Resistance Strategy

January 25, 2025 Leave a comment

– Adapted from The Practical Guide to Building a Better World, Bread and Roses Press, Spring 2025


With the election of Donald Trump and Democrats shut out of policy making nationally we see a shift in organizing activities. Once again people are focusing on “resistance” types of activities. As we consider the principal goals of protest activity, one of the most significant but least likely to be achieved is policy change.


Protesters want to stop projects, change laws, end war, fund programs, and save the world. There are many reasons why policy change is elusive. Obviously, the deck is stacked for the interests of those who have concentrated power. Money, resources, and entrenched power structures favor and support the status quo. There are also important factors regarding how activists play the hands they are dealt. Focusing on those areas is more fruitful as things that are under our control comprise our entire arena of action.


One of the great strategic community organizers was Saul Alinsky. He wrote the dated but still relevant Rules for Radicals and promoted activist training via The Midwest Academy and other community organizations. Before he was a bugaboo of the right and I was a field organizer for the Student Environmental Action Coalition, one of the critical tools we used was the Midwest Academy’s Strategy Chart. The strategy chart is a simple tool primarily designed to address a common activist problem: jumping to tactics without identifying a strategy that can result in policy change.


It’s a common error to see a problem and jump to tactics without really exploring what you would need to do to have a better chance of a positive outcome. Strategy charts are usually created in a group setting. It’s important not just to have a good plan but to involve as many stakeholders as you can in the planning. People are much more invested in activities in which they have a voice.


The first step is to identify what you want to accomplish. One of the reasons we may not have seen policy change commensurate with the level of protest activity during the most recent racial justice protests could be the lack of clear policy objectives. Movement leadership was dispersed and localized and, even within individual communities, there was a lack of a consensus on what we were trying to accomplish.
As the Roman philosopher Seneca said, “If you don’t know to where you are sailing, no wind is favorable.”

You can make long-term, intermediate and short-term goals if you are working from an existing organization, or immediate goals might be self-evident if you are rallying around a particular issue or objective.
When you are movement building, organizational considerations need to be taken into account. What kind and how many resources do you have to mobilize? What activities can move forward your agenda and build your organization? How does your organization/movement need to grow to achieve your mission?  What skills, reputation, and collaborative partners can our actions enhance?
Being thoughtful to ensure actions build up, rather than deplete, your group/community is smart organizing. The two ways to ensure your activism will continue into the future are building strong and lasting organizations and building robust and resilient communities of change.


You must be specific in a strategy chart. How much money do we want to raise? How many new participants or how many new leaders will there be? Lastly, you want to identify any internal issues that will need to be addressed to take on the issue you have identified.
The next step is identifying potential allies and stakeholders who you can activate to work with you. Who shares similar values? Who has worked on this issue in the past? Who is impacted by the issue you are trying to address? The more diverse the stakeholders you can identify, the bigger your potential change movement becomes.


After identifying what you want to accomplish, you determine who has the power to make that change. If you want to shut down a nuclear power plant that is an asset of an investor-owned utility, you might look at the Board of Directors or the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. On a smaller scale, if you wanted speed bumps on your busy road, your local Mayor and City Council or the City Manager might be able to give you what you want. It might take a little research or fact finding to get this step right.


Once you know who your target is, you identify what leverage you have over your target. In general, businesses and corporations respond to money and elected officials respond to votes. In our antinuclear power work, our movement sought to impact the Board of Directors through shareholder amendments and protest activity that drove up security costs and soured public perception of the company.


We did a “fold, mutilate, spindle” campaign when customers paid their bills. By taping pennies to their electric bill or stapling the check we forced hand processing of bill paying instead of the automatic bill processing that is the most cost effective.  This tactic served to drive up costs, as boycotting a utility is nearly impossible for most of us.


We largely sought to impact the Nuclear Regulatory Commission through public comment via public engagement and feedback processes. The first demand of protest groups is to get a meeting with leadership to facilitate negotiations and lend credibility to your organization. However, even with our dynamic tactics and public support, we were unable to get over that hurdle.


On a much smaller scale—the quest for speed bumps for example—you may learn that speed bumps are decided on by the Public Works Department and approved by the City Manager. Having no direct influence over the City Manager or Public Works, your campaign might focus on your City Council Members or the Mayor, who hires and fires the City Manager. Such indirect targeting is common, as many decisions are made by appointed, rather than elected, officials. After you know your target, you can assess whether you want to address them directly or focus on someone who has power and influence over that person.


Now we are ready to go to tactics. Continuing with the speed bump example, if you did some research, you might find an already established process in place. In Columbia, Missouri this process involves collecting petition signatures to show neighborhood support. After that, the city measures traffic counts and driver speed, and with that info and crash statistics, it generates a score. Then, the top three or so projects get built each year.


If your project was lower on the list but had a good case to make, you could organize protests and rallies targeting City Council Members or Candidates, especially if there is an upcoming election. You could write letters to the editor, show up at Council meetings for public comment, make social media posts, and get signs made. There is an art to being the squeakiest wheel, which tends to get more than its fair share of the oil. Focused strategic squeaking is even more likely to be successful.


Another reason policy change can be elusive for activists is that they’re coming to the issue too late. Frequently, people who oppose an issue don’t learn about the issue until the major decision points have passed. Trying to bring about change at the 11th hour is much harder than getting in early and engaging in public input processes. Also, activists sometimes bite off issues in which a policy win would require more participants than they can mobilize.


With good strategy your resistance activities can be more than a feel-good experience of speaking truth to power. Instead you can engage in resistance activities with movement and organizational building in mind to build relationships and accumulate power and influence to make effective policy change a reality.

Rolling with Resistance

January 22, 2025 Leave a comment

To be in opposition to authoritarianism is right and proper and good. Trump pardoning the January 6th insurrectionists raises the chance of street violence by both sending a message and releasing violent empowered organizers back to the street.

We are moving into dangerous times. I see the punching Nazi memes spread widely. I see the don’t just say you see Proud Boys but say how many, engaged in what tactics, armed how, and exactly where.

This preparation for street fighting seems reminiscent of the German socialists street fighting the fascist youth. It played into Hitler’s hands to see more power. Street violence plays into the hands of the authoritarians.

I would call for other tactics than street violence. In a counseling technique called motivational interviewing it talks about rolling with resistance. We don’t engage directly with the unhelpful bullshit but allow it to pass by.

Undermine the authority of the dominant paradigm through the simple act of telling the truth and not buying into the gaslighting. Humor and mockery and pointing out the absurdity of their actions. Being reasonable and unperturbed and not taking their bait is in order.

We need to remember our audience. Those folks who don’t follow the news, have little factual information and have real issues that were not addressed by the Bidenomics of rising prices, housing costs, and lack of opportunity.

Trump is at his highest approval underwater at a little less than 2% negative. If he can be brought down to 10% negative the Supreme Court and Senate may set some limits to this lame duck would be authoritarian.

Or we can engage him in  rhetorical battles of his choosing where our complex truths are less compelling than his simple lies and we lose the middle. His hurting his voters by ending $35 insulin is lost in the culture wars and his executive orders trump the constitution because no one who can will hold him accountable.

The choice is ours. To be strategic and disciplined, true and right and shape what comes next for justice or be reactive and right and lose it all but the boot smashing in our face for all eternity. Or something entirely different, I don’t know, I just need to do my best to build something good.

Last days of democracy?

January 19, 2025 Leave a comment

What makes a good leader?

A good leader promotes democracy. Democracy is our commitment to each other that we respect each other and we respect fairness.

The pro-Democracy Alliance Pledge

We, the undersigned, pledge our unwavering commitment to the principles of democracy, justice, and equality. In an era of profound challenges to the foundations of our republic, we affirm that:

1. Democracy is Worth Defending

We stand resolute in protecting free and fair elections and political activism in all its forms, ensuring every American can participate in their democracy without obstruction or fear of reprisal.

2. Truth and Accountability Matter

We commit to fostering transparency, combating misinformation, and holding leaders accountable to the people they serve.

3. Unity is Our Strength

We reject divisive politics of cynicism and seek to build bridges across communities, celebrating diversity as a cornerstone of our democracy.

4. Justice and Equality are Essential

We champion policies and actions that promote fairness, safeguard rights, and empower all citizens to have a voice in the political discourse.

5. Action is Required

We will not remain idle in the face of threats to democracy. We commit our resources, energy, and voices to advancing democratic ideals and combating anti-democratic forces.

By joining the pro-Democracy Alliance, we vow to work towards our common goal to uphold these values, protect our shared future, and leave a stronger democracy for generations to come.

If not us, then who? If not now, then when?

The pro-Democracy Alliance won’t form itself. Being born into a democracy won’t ensure you get to stay one. Democracy is under threat and dies in the darkness. All of us need to take action, speak out, and participate.