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  • Start contacting local socialist orgs, PSL, DSA, CPUSA, etc., go to their meetings and start talking to people. Look for groups that offer education, seem to have good internal democratic processes, good comradely vibes, and who are actively engaging in campaigns to struggle against injustice, and doing stuff that you want to participate in.

    Groups that have lots of political discussion, rather than being obsessed with internal processes, groups that don't work with cops, and don't just follow the dems on everything, is another thing to look for.

    Your local conditions are the most important thing to consider. I wish I could tell you what group to join, but it varies quite a lot. A small and very active group is probably better than a large group with mostly inactive members. I'm in DSA, because I want to build a alternative workers political party, and I like DSA, but I also know that not every chapter is the same, there's def some chapters I would not recommend, although my local is very good.

    Once you find your political home, you can branch out, keep working with other groups help build coalitions in your city. The most important thing is, you can't affect change by yourself. We need to combine our efforts to be effective. Always speak up, speak your mind and rep your personal perspective, and groups that don't handle good well considered perspectives can be toxic. Then again, we can bring toxic perspectives with us, so always be open to hearing criticism and always be trying to improve yourself. Be patient and assume good intent but find a group you can work well with. Develop your cadres.

    Virtually every group needs people who can take good notes and/or can begin meetings on time. Like that bar is so incredibly low, but the people who do it for their own groups are some of the only people who will do that reliably, and they're also often people who are the most committed and experienced. Taking those simple functions off peoples workload or even providing support in those areas can be invaluable to the whole group. Other things, like doing phone/text banking or tabling for like a few hours per month is incredibly valuable work, that helps with turn out to events and allows recruiters to make and build contacts. Very low bar, very high impact. One of the groups I'm involved with actually pays people to make calls so volunteering for that work on your spare time, and being reliable and consistent is another invaluable quality in a new member.

    One final tip, it is better to do one thing consistently then it is to try and take on everything that you see needs done. Make room in your life for organizing, and don't take on extra unless you're sure you have time/energy for it. Tell people in your life like "I have a commitment every Thursday from 7-9 pm" and then stick to that for a while. Burn out will fucking destroy you. So check in with your self, and check in with others.

  • Want to help Terrence and Philip?

    Sneak out after you get tucked into bed tonight and meet at Carl's Warehouse.

    Punch and pie.

  • Right now there isn't really one (assuming USA which is where I'm located). IMO the best thing you can do right now is first find likeminded people IRL and do stuff that's interesting to yourselves and other like minded people, then use those shared interests/bonds as a foundation for motivated community outreach.

    Where I live I feel like the sense of community is almost nonexistent despite having a large population. IDK how much of that is from me being autistic, but a lot of things that stem from capitalism like car culture, addictive social media platforms, anything AI, shitty work-life balance, and horrible safety net are also strong contributors to society being super isolating, which then causes anger and self centeredness which results in a lot of what else is wrong with society.

    One of the reasons Republicans are as successful as they are is that they provide community through stuff like religion and church, which tests people's commitment through rules and tithes but also results in tighter bonds where people are more open and trust each other more and do a lot of (mentally) uplifting things together. Then politicians use that to create a unified vision of an ideal society and wield that to their advantage to gain political power, and those communities are super motivated to uphold it.

    Meanwhile there are tons of churches everywhere, but as for a left-wing equivalent there's next to nothing and I'm not even fully sure that it's possible to replicate something like this with left-wing values. Probably the most important things to take from this is being based on an agreed upon set of values, having a shared vision, expecting some level of commitment (including financially), meeting IRL, having regular activities that are enjoyable and based on the shared values/vision, and the most visible outreach being centered around the interests of those being immediately talked to and also around helping the local population which contributes to a positive image of the organization among less informed people and helps boost its popularity (it's also less difficult to make changes locally than nationally). Once there is enough popular support, then there's actually a chance of gaining political power and overthrowing capitalists through next step actions, but without popular support or some other form of power the chances of that succeeding is basically none.

    As far as organizations that exist right now go, for ones like PSL I'm not sure how other chapters work or how it works on a national level. The problems I have with my local chapter is that it mainly focuses on peaceful controlled protests (has no chance at making meaningful change, sucks for community building, and is ultimately a waste of time) and it rarely focuses on local issues on social media (not good for building local support, and I want to actually do stuff, not just read and yell things). The best organization I've found so far which I'm volunteering with is one that stemmed from Food Not Bombs, which is run by leftists and focuses on raising awareness of local issues (specifically related to homelessness), using temporary aid as a way to protest unjust laws and promote a vision for an ideal society that fixes systemic issues that cause homelessness. Outside of the main distribution efforts, the main organizers in the group know some homeless people by name and where they're located and will help them as well. They've also gotten media attention in local mainstream news outlets (not exactly good attention but it's something). Some other Food Not Bombs chapters have gotten national media attention for breaking laws that hurt homeless people. A more broad organization that still prioritizes local issues (until more can be done outside of that) would be a lot better IMO, but that doesn't really exist where I live so this is what I've been involved with for now.

  • I know guys, let's like all form a resistance group and we'll all meet downtown on Thursday at 6 o'clock. That way we're all done with work and everything and we'll have a big fucking meeting. Like every resister, all over the country, we're all gonna meet downtown.

    Think about it. There will be too many of us for the cops to do anything about it.

    Like, even though they'll know where we are and when we're gonna be there, it'll be all of us versus only however many of them can actually show up.

  • Be kind by default, and turn to defense mode when proven to be necessary. Helping and loving each other is resistance against cruelty. <3

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