True education should teach us how to think, how to see the beauty in the midst of ugliness, how to love without judging, how to find opportunity to help, and how to develop a peaceful and nonviolent society.
Debasish Mridha
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Germany
seen from Chile
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Macao SAR China
seen from United States

seen from T1
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from South Africa
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Bangladesh

seen from Kuwait
seen from United States
True education should teach us how to think, how to see the beauty in the midst of ugliness, how to love without judging, how to find opportunity to help, and how to develop a peaceful and nonviolent society.
Debasish Mridha
“Acts of non-coöperation are very powerful,” Merriman, the former president of the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict, says. “Non-coöperation is very much about numbers. You don’t necessarily need people doing things that are high risk. You just need large numbers of people doing them.”
I missed this The Political Scene podcast (link at bottom of post) when it came out in late September, but Daniel Hunter steered me to it and I'm listening for the second time because it's such extraordinarily good (and encouraging) insight into how resistance can and does work in general and in our current crisis in the US: "The Washington Roundtable discusses how, in the wake of the reinstatement of Jimmy Kimmel’s show, public resistance has a chance to turn the tide against autocratic impulses in today’s politics. They are joined by Hardy Merriman, an expert on the history and practice of civil resistance, to discuss what kinds of coördinated actions—protests, boycotts, “buycotts,” strikes, and other nonviolent approaches—are most effective in a fight against democratic backsliding"
Conventional wisdom has it that Trumpism is going to win and prevail for a long time and there's not much we can do, but it's conventional because it's informed by status quo/centrist notions that power is something that resides in those people we call 'the powerful,' the elite few, that the rest of us have none, and that most people are narrowly self-interested and won't stand up on principle (leaving aside that we don't need 'most people,' just a lot of people). Which is just wrong and ignorant and extremely disempowering and a story some of all of us get fed all the time and some of us swallow. Especially as people are standing up in a thousand ways. Do not forget that the Trumpists are weak and scared and rushing to destroy as much as possible before we stop them.
As an aside, one of my frustrations about moderate Democrats, some socialist-y people, and too many pundits is their insistence that 'people' other than themselves, the people they're patronizing, only vote for narrow self interest, aka 'kitchen table issues.' In fact, people often choose the candidate they agree with ideologically over their immediate material well-being or there wouldn't be this right-wing stuff to begin with. The whole idea that when you're financially insecure you don't care about democracy and human rights is an insult to poor people and a total miss of the rich people who would sell democracy and human rights and their mom to add to their billions.
Photos by Brooke Anderson Photography: Stills of Our Stories & Struggles
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-political-scene-the-new-yorker/id268213039?i=1000728651220
Rebecca Solnit
Anyway I helped get my city to fund a non police mental health crisis response team so thats cool
We aren't writing history, we're re-writing it.
We aren’t writing history, we’re re-writing it.
When I walked up to a local protest in Northern Indiana with a friend by my side, signs in our hands, and masks rubbing against our faces, I didn’t know what to expect. I had read the posts, seen the pictures, and watched the videos of protests turning into “riots” while police reacted in ways that made me sick. I had also seen the brighter side, with people truly coming together and officers…
View On WordPress
The casual nature of the police violence in this case, and the easy manner in which police were able to deploy weapons in a deadly way, demonstrated to many Chicanxs that mainstream America would not tolerate even nonviolent dissent from people of color.
Joseph Orosco on the Chicano Moratorium March “Lessons About Police Brutality from the Chicanx Experience”
How to Communicate Your Feelings Without Becoming an Emotional Manipulator
It's important to be open and honest when you communicate your feelings to others, but we also have to be careful not to turn ourselves into "emotional manipulators" – where we use our feelings to try to change people's behaviors.
Click here to learn more!
It was important to remain nonviolent but not to seem weak. He liked the ideas of Doctor King: to find a method to reject revenge, aggression, retaliation. The past is prophetic. Wars are poor chisels. Lightning makes no sound until it strikes.
Colum McCann, Apeirogon: A Novel (Random House, February 25, 2020)