The article discusses the response of liberal organizations like the ACLU to Trump’s election in 2016, and how their messaging was ineffective at mobilizing people to take meaningful action. It criticizes Democratic politicians in Washington state for making symbolic declarations against “hate” while simultaneously enacting policies that harm marginalized communities. The piece argues that the U.S. government, under either party, is fundamentally committed to projects of empire, militarism, and oppression, and that voting or working within the system cannot address the urgent global crises we face. Instead, the author advocates for direct action, mutual aid, and other grassroots efforts to support and defend vulnerable communities, rather than relying on policy solutions or the courts to save us. The article emphasizes the need to divest from trying to reform U.S. institutions, and instead focus on caring for each other and attacking the infrastructures of violence and extraction. It acknowledges the risks of increased repression, but argues that resistance and bold action at the local level is our best hope for creating material change. Ultimately, the text concludes that we must let go of the fantasy that the U.S. government can be made to care for us, and instead devote ourselves to the unglamorous but vital work of supporting each other and building alternative forms of collective resilience and resistance. The stakes are high, but the author believes this is the only viable path forward.

  • SapphironZA@sh.itjust.works
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    20 days ago

    My easy to understand guide.

    1. Wait for the GOP to fuck up, again. And for discontent to rise in the swing voters
    2. Recruit swing voters to ground level activism
    3. Flip the political monopoly board, aggressively.

    The enemy is the billionaire financial backers of both parties.

      • catsarebadpeople@sh.itjust.works
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        20 days ago

        Not saying you’re wrong or even that you shouldn’t feel that way but please don’t antagonize people who are suggesting doing something instead of just giving up.

      • anon6789@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        I was thinking today we’re not far from having a new Fugitive Slave Act, only with migrants. At this point, I don’t think we can really say anything is off the table. I don’t know any check or balance that isn’t currently compromised or 1 executive order from elimination.

      • phdepressed@sh.itjust.works
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        20 days ago

        That’s part of step 4-infinity of potentially fixing this shit. Impeachment of corrupt federal judges top down (I wish for imprisonment as well but I know better) or at least packing in judges who follow basic legal precedent and reasonable constitutional interpretations.