-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On 11/12/2015 01:25 PM, grarpamp wrote:
On Thu, Nov 12, 2015 at 9:23 AM, Steve Kinney <admin@pilobilus.net> wrote:
There's a lot to dislike about The Facebook, but I do my best to assure that my participation causes more harm to the opposition team than to my own interests. They do get a constantly updated map of a big chunk of my real-world social network, and that kind of collection used to cost money and deplete finite resources dammit. But then, so did reaching a receptive audience with anarchist propaganda and commentary, so, I figure it for a break-even proposition.
Everyone bitches about having a hard time reaching the sheeple, from their tech lab in the basement that is. So similar above, to reach them you have to go to them, to their boring online "forums" and facebooks, the ones about football, beer, trucks, sewing, baby raising, cooking, etc... just start posting links to news stories you want them to see... all automated from the comfort of your basement.
Promoting news, propaganda, links to offsite documents and archives "of interest," etc. is easy, fun, and necessary. But one should not neglect the shoe leather aspects of the game. I have been involved with "political activism" off and on since the 1970s, and I never saw anything like the revival of Anarchy following Occupy. In my view Occupy was a tremendous success, because the camps became venues for intensive political education and practical training that changed the nature of radical politics and populist actions in the U.S. We still have many miles left to go, but at least something's finally on the move again. The anarchist veterans of Occupy seem to be the glue that holds a lot of today's ad hoc activist coalitions together, because Occupy taught its participants how to run consensus driven groups, and gave them practical experience in organizing and executing public events in a spectrum from "family friendly" to rude and confrontational. The Obama abomination stirred up a lot of middle class Liberals; their demographic is now well represented in public events that have little or nothing to do with partisan politics. The Bernie business is likely to bring a large wave of mad as hell, not gonna take it any more adults out of the woodwork. From every hundred or so who show up for a well organized public event sponsored by radicals, three or four are likely to stick and help run the next on e. "Anarchy finds work for idle hands." Everybody has their own jobs to do, determined by their interests, abilities and motivations. A keyboard and mouse may be enough for some folks, and those who do it well contribute a lot of value. But the ones who get up on their feet and down to the street will be the ones who actually change something. How can a local community voluntarily blow up the bridge over the swamp and raise their own flag, without a process for consensus and people who know how to beat some practical results out of the resulting clusterfuck? "Training tomorrow's trainers and challenging tomorrow's leaders" is widely recognized as Serious Business: Anyone who can find a functional radical crew, jump on board and stars contributing real work will be brought along pretty quickly. :o) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1 iQIcBAEBAgAGBQJWRQWAAAoJEDZ0Gg87KR0L2P4QAJBUwCw9IKMnxt+oEPfYFuVw TYFviSlt7VLd0zIw7yfPwsEfFPBGAE/limRtT/VmRoScTTH3yrHVhiIT7ffJDqyG fNLuCFaXhcXbuN2U1RGJjZoBRdRlXxbxt91KLM0AIa6EKCoto3VxmF10xVB6kbMS PDzNhE/gYhNH5mGtowkGNxE7zwxYZj+QYVFoPIuHYJHS5B8zuuJtFYGzfhUU8DOv PmU78lsGMSFAQqpvN0cO2IZ+8aDbqJvYh5M8Z5H2B5ABoAknf8ybN+YsOkqANMU7 pFxbx42JDg1M0TSeOfnNU2AgRV80sbVQXWbUOTm87RPMKlW5iyPonSYsWoXlMsYU mjdwOThAzrNHTR95nY8JPiU2Ys18zbGGcgjMyIYJy2Hvyq8lwY0/8iQDQa2io8Gr Op31nE2XubCVxnf9ChveUmWZfyUmR0T35FkjkoVqveXaP+HGRUPVtL6E6NfXRw7E NxaTr0wN9GV09Qp+pAacMGKpS8hTO3xUKS3eyvee372+W05X6oFVN/1Z9Y/xDLqS IHftLPeYgCZLQnYzHqAF4UmcKgb6U4+SIbg/b+KY3td/q1w0Tqm/fnq0dAE95rAD IffoiM/gFwDUWzpgdT5fcu+x3KgYf3gkK0c9zfcV85RzVmKZC+9GGH9tWgyUbMZi zu2aAAwidONJDscN0rE7 =uepi -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----