this post was submitted on 21 Feb 2025
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Resist: It's Time
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We are still in this together, but "this" is going to be real different in the very near future. This demands a different kind of "we."
The French Resistance during Nazi occupation played important roles delivering downed Allied airmen back to safety, supplying military intelligence, and acts of sabotage.
The Underground Railroad is estimated to have brought 100,000 freedom seekers to safety between 1810 and 1850.
It's time.
Rules
- Do not gatekeep resistance
- Do not organize specific subversive plans here.
- Do not identify yourself or anyone else here.
- Do brainstorm general ideas about how to support people who need it and stymie the efforts of fascists
- Do share thoughts on how to be personally prepared for subversive action
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Why put end dates on them? Even if the boycotts get a huge turnout and meaningfully damage the bottom line of each corporation, the boycotts will be over (and a lot of the damage made up for) faster than they even COULD make the changes the website is demanding. Changes which will take years even if pursued in good faith, which, of course, they won't be. They'll lead us around, make empty gestures, and inoculate themselves against the next round of blowback.
This feels like Occupy Wall Street all over again. People's enthusiasm being wasted on ineffective protests with vague demands. If we want change, we're gonna have to be willing to put up with more inconvenience, i. e., no Amazon at all, permanently, until they meet some specific, achievable goals to make things better, like full unionization.
Good point. I view this as more of a way to get the politically inactive to start being active. As I said in response to another comment, it's easier to get most people to give up stuff like that for a week than forever. I plan to continue my own personal boycott indefinitely, and I encourage others to do the same. That said, most people balk at the idea of permanently ridding themselves of a major shackle on their lives - because they simply don't see it that way. Every journey begins with a single step, and my hope is this can convince enough people to take that first step.
Then we should be setting up to help people prepare for actions that would actually be effective, like sharing Amazon alternatives to make a permanent boycott less intimidating. Public enthusiasm is a finite resource, and if it's wasted, we're stuck waiting until the next round of "things got worse." The megacorps we're trying to fight will be entrenched even more deeply, making meaningful action even harder.
Great idea! I'll start doing my research now. Do you know of any alternatives off the top of your head?