Monday, November 11, 2024

Where to Start

In the spirit of continuing the absorption of information, it's important to have a wide variety of ideas to absorb in order to build a larger picture. Some of the takes I've seen include a lamentation about a large portion of the country not looking at a bigger picture, and I struggle to disagree with that. "The Economy" is good actually, they say, but prices for consumers have not gone down and people blame the current leadership for that rather than the first cheeto administration, which did a lot of damage to the good economy it inherited from Obama. We won't see the true damage from the new administration until after it is over, in other words. I digress, and risk treading on territory in which I am not an expert.

So, here's some stuff to check out/follow/remember/subscribe to today. I'm also making an "activism" folder or filter for my inbox, so I do not go absolutely mad with newsletter-style content. This is a small and not comprehensive list just for online voices. This is not necessarily going to help with local community building, but it might help me find some more like-minded online folks, or at least give you talking points whenever I do find in-person groups. I'll talk a little about that tomorrow.

I am already subscribed to the following:

John/Hank Green and Nerdfighteria: https://nerdfighteria.com/ or https://werehere.beehiiv.com/ or https://www.youtube.com/@vlogbrothers/

W. Kamau Bell: Comedian and activist. https://wkamaubell.substack.com/

Popular Info/Judd Legum: investigative journalist. https://popular.info/

ProPublica: Investigative journalism, not purchased by billionaires. https://www.propublica.org/ 

Robert Reich: Former Labor Secretary. Very, very smart. Sam Reich's dad. https://robertreich.org/

I will be investigating the following (will update this as I find more):

F.D. Signifire: Learned about him through W. Kamau Bell: https://www.youtube.com/@FDSignifire

Endevorance: Followed him on IG for awhile, but will subscribe to the newsletter. https://www.skh.news

Everytown.org: Anti-gun-violence organization

ACLU's podcast At Liberty: https://www.aclu.org/podcast

Heather Cox Richardson: Professor and historian. https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/ 

Angry Gay Grandpa: LGBTQ+ advocate. https://www.youtube.com/@AngryGayGrandpa 

Still to find: 

More trans rights advocates

Reproductive rights advocates

Immigrant rights advocates

Friday, November 8, 2024

Procrastinated Re-posts

rainbow colored graphic with text describing steps for thinking critically about information
Global Digital Citizen Foundation
Yesterday, I said I was going to find some people that are doing real valuable work...and I did start that post, but in the process of searching, I realized I needed to slow down and evaluate what I was looking at, because I was going too fast and risked following folks who were peddling misinformation that fed into my existing beliefs and biases. 

One thing that I'm guilty of, and that I know others are too, is seeing an inflammatory or scary or interesting post on X-itter (formerly Twitter, pronounced "shitter," by the way), Bluesky, Mastodon, TikTok, Instagram, etc., and re-posting it without thinking. I'm going to start doing a simple checklist. I've had a printed copy of this graphic tucked in one of my backpacks for so long that it's started to fall apart along the fold lines, but I've gotten out of the habit of using it on the regular. 

Media literacy is maybe the most important thing that we need to be teaching in schools, but it won't amount to much if we let public education erode any more than it already has. A lot of that can be controlled in local elections with school boards. So, local matters and that's important to cling to when most of our news is about big national drama. 

Anyway, Crash Course has a pair of YouTube series about navigating digital information and media literacy that are worth watching in their entirety. The videos are about 15 minutes long so it's pretty easy to get through. I'm going to watch them both again, because there's going to be a lot of misinformation coming at us in the next few years and we need to be prepared to evaluate everything, including things we agree with or think are probably true. 

All of this said, I'm going to be quiet over the weekend, and absorb some books and continue to gather people to follow. I'll do my best to follow my own guidelines about it. 

Take care of your family, found or otherwise, and be kind to your neighbor, always.

Thursday, November 7, 2024

Shock Doctrine and Other Books

Today I'm going re-learn something, which is the one thing I'm good at. Shock Doctrine is a book written by Naomi Klein about what she calls "disaster capitalism." It plays up our fears and uncertainty after big news items drop to allow dangerous policy to go through. She wrote this in 2007, and a documentary of the same premise was released in 2009. I read the book a decade ago, but it is still highly relevant and I have forgotten most of it. The media plays into it fully with its always on, 24/7 requirements. We are now forced to stay in a heightened state of shock for longer periods, because every single day there's a new travesty that needs our immediate attention. We're entrenched in it. Absolutely everything is a disaster now, from homelessness to trans rights to immigration to inflation. There is no nuance or subtlety. This book addresses that, and I'm hoping to find further action items at the end of it.

Image credit: https://naomiklein.org/

Intersectionality is vastly important to get things done, but we've placed ourselves in echo chambers of outrage. So, step one is to slow down. I gotta breathe, and the best way I know is to immerse myself in a depressing but important book. Get these at your library where possible.

Book link: https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-shock-doctrine-the-rise-of-disaster-capitalism-naomi-klein/12304745

Film links: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3B5qt6gsxY or https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aL3XGZ5rreE  

If you don't have a ton of time to spend on a book or documentary that's ok. There's a Wikipedia page that does a pretty good job explaining it.

Another book on my re-read list is The Death of Democracy: Hitler's Rise to Power and the Downfall of the Weimar Republic by Benjamin Carter Hett. I listened to this one back in February but I need to grab a copy of the actual book. Seems important.

Other options I already have on my shelf include Poverty, By America (https://bookshop.org/p/books/poverty-by-america-matthew-desmond/21003293) by Matthew Desmond, and another, newer Naomi Klein book called No is Not Enough about the cheeto's first presidency (https://bookshop.org/p/books/no-is-not-enough-resisting-trump-s-shock-politics-and-winning-the-world-we-need-naomi-klein/7213773).

Either way, we have a few months to stock up on knowledge. So today I'm gonna read, and watch, and learn again.

Be kind. Tomorrow we find others doing the work and we reach out to them.

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Darker Days

It has been a long time since I updated this blog publicly. We lived (are living) through a global pandemic, and there are 3 simultaneous genocides happening in other places to other human beings. The United States has just re-elected the person whose original presidency spurred the creation of this blog. This post is a record of my thoughts and will hopefully be read by someone else who needs it. It has not been edited.

To leftists: The swirl of conflicting emotions feels unhealthy, but these emotions need to be honored. Give yourself a day to stir them, let them settle, and scoop out which of the anger, fear, despair, or others will drive you to action and resistance. Take that emotion and grind it into a fine flour. Bake it into each meal, mix it into your drinks, sprinkle it like glitter or mist it like perfume as you get ready for each day. And each time you do, let it galvanize you.

To others: The election in 2024 has upended what a lot of people thought was a common good that would prevent a doddering, narcissistic, felonious madman from usurping the title of President for a second time. But even there, in the language I used to describe him we cannot find agreement. Where I see cruelty in policy and politics, and economic policy that will bankrupt us for decades, you see decades of decline in your home areas, factories, farms, and infrastructure. You see the result of corporate greed and consolidation as the failure of Democrats. You blame the scapegoat of immigrants for home-grown problems borne of our own complacence. Democrats are not liberal despite what you thought, and continue to think, but neither are they a great evil. They are humans trying to do something helpful in a climate of vitriol and contention from the only other party we’re allowed to vote for.

Democrats are trying to keep afloat a system that has been broken from the start. They want slow change in a positive direction. But slow change does not help and to you who voted in 2024 it seems like empty words after decades of neglect. So you see a demagogue, a strong personality, a charismatic demeanor backed by a cadre of Christian Nationalists who promise you that they will upend things as they are. And they will. But keep a journal, please. Mark down your day to day thoughts and read them back on each year’s end. Take note of how your lives have or have not improved. Write down each emotion you have and ask yourself if they are healthy, and if you are happier now than you were before. This goes for congressional races too, by the way. Congress is supposed to set policy, yet so divided have we become that each session of legislation feels less and less helpful. Changes now have to come from places like the EPA, the FTC, the Fed, and the FDA using what little power they have to get real work done.

The problem is that we’ve never allowed real choice into an election. All of the elections I have participated in for the entirety of my voting life have been a “lesser of two evils” choice. I don’t prefer Democrats OR Republicans on a vast array of policies. Most of the people in my circles feel the same, but none of us have any power to change that.

Telling us to vote our conscience is cruel, too. Yes, vote for the person who you know will lose and pull votes from a marginally better option. What needs to change is not the parties themselves. Let Democrats be war-happy centrists. Let Republicans be whatever they sift out to be. But let’s put proportional representation into play so the Green Party, the Libertarian Party, and whatever else pops up have a real seat at the table. Use third parties for what they’re good at: people voting for things they actually care about that will actually impact policy going forward..

While we’re making big changes, let’s do Ranked Choice Voting. In places where it’s been implemented before, the entire tone of elections has changed. Ranked Choice Voting encourages real, lasting coalition-building centered on policy over popularity, and eliminates a lot of the contention in campaigning. Candidates don’t want to risk being negative because it turns off a lot of voters who might otherwise be persuaded to put their name in a higher rank on the ballot.

How it works: Candidate A and B agree on two big talking points that are in the zeitgeist at the moment. Vote for both so that there’s a better chance those two big talking points have a shot to become policy. Don’t like the rest of Candidate A’s policies? Well, put Candidate B in your top slot, and A in the second. Both votes will be counted, and if Candidate B doesn’t make it through to the next round Candidate A just might. And as long as you get your two big talking points changed you know you can live with the rest. You feel more powerful as a voter because you ARE more powerful as a voter. This is especially true for people living in a solid color state. There’s no guarantee the new systems would work, of course, but as it is now we are headed for either physical conflict, or a quiet death of democracy.

Our republic is broken, and has always been broken. It would be easier to change if we were smaller. Abolish the electoral college and winner-take-all elections in favor of Ranked Choice Voting. Implement proportional representation in the legislative branch, and add term limits to all 3 branches. I don’t precisely know how to do this, but I am certain it will not be done without a massive organizational effort. You can reach out to FairVote.org to start or boost efforts in your region, as the process to organize this is already underway by folks much smarter than me.

In the short term, connect in person with your neighbors and local mutual aid groups. Reach out to RAICES and other immigrant service organizations to find out what you can do. Do it offline and don’t use social media to organize. Get a VPN and find a local printer who won’t ask questions about the content of your flyers. Donate time and funds to mutual aid, local Fairvote orgs, and any issue you’re panicking about with any amount you can spare. Consume less from the oligarchs and do the hard, extra work to buy local. If you can’t, ask if you really need the thing before you buy it. Prepare your couch or spare room. Above all else, be kind to your neighbors no matter what.

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Brains vs. News: How damaging legislation goes unnoticed in the age of data

With the Internet's constant availability and the 24-hour news cycle, we are not really able to synthesize information over time. This allows politicians to ram through legislation under the radar while we are busy looking at other distractions. It's called Shock Politics and it is well-documented worldwide.

Reading a newspaper or magazine takes time. Reading a long-form Op-Ed online takes time. Reading a book takes longer still. Watching a cable news network yell-off and finding the view you agree with takes seconds and does not give your brain time to think about what data it just received. Here is a video demonstrating and explaining how thinking works.
Back from that?

Great! So the constant, steady stream of data from news, blogs, and social media mean our brains get to wallow in that delicious short-term snap judgement that isn't difficult at all. EVERYONE experiences this because it's just how our brains work. There is nothing wrong with that.

However, sociopaths and other such manipulators are very good at intuitively understanding what folks want. As a result, many become politicians and business leaders. Do you start to see where I am going with this?

Let's leap forward a little bit. Legislation was passed on March 14th repealing the Dodd-Frank act. That strips away protections put in place to prevent another banking crisis like the one in 2008. Why were so many Democrats involved with passing this? Why didn't we hear more about it?

My inexpert opinion is that our brains prefer stories about people. When we hear about some clown getting fired, it's easier for our brains to place that person into our camp of thought or into the "other." It is much, much harder to parse all the information in a piece of legislation and decide whether or not we should be angry about its contents. We rely on other people, our chosen experts, to tell us. It's basically the same reason we trust Google or Yelp reviews: it's easier to agree with someone's opinion than to form one of our own.

The only way we get past this is to slow down and do the uncomfortable things when it comes to forming opinions. Do not stop at the first article you see because the story is ALWAYS more complex. Or, if you must stop at the first article, refrain from posting about it right away. Tell your cat what you think, or your doggo. Maybe even your mother, if you must. But slow down.

Your sanity and sense of well being will thank you.

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Life as usual

Shock politics as usual. Pay attention to what's going on behind the curtain, not to the blowhard talking in front of it.
 
Today, our sound bites tell us that children are being ripped from their parents' arms at the U.S./ Mexico border as a result of Jeff Sessions' directive to detain and prosecute every single person coming into the country without proper papers. The truth of the matter is that those violations have historically been prosecuted rarely in the event that the asylum is granted, but Sessions has gone full crazypants with his "zero tolerance" policy, to the outrage of millions. While all that is happening, damaging legislation is being put up for votes to a group of harried, beleaguered Senators and Representatives. Budgets are being set and...
...Meanwhile in the most populated state in the nation, a measure has gotten enough signatures to go on the ballot to split the state of California into 3 separate states. This isn't the first time it's gotten attention, but piled on top of everything else that's going on....
...Oh right and don't forget all your safety nets for old age are going to go away as a result of the feckless government's inability to cut military spending for its endless wars or to stop giving tax cuts to the people who have/have donated the most money.
I've never been a Republican, and I've only recently signed up as a Democrat, but it's always a "lesser of two evils" choice for me and I hate it.
Right now, this is a country of whole evil and I have no voice left at all. The Repubs are swayed by religion and the Dems are swayed by money. Two party system is NOT working. One side or the other is just going to strip away what the previous administration did and only a scant few things will truly stick.
But, what are we supposed to do? We can't stop looking. We have to witness and record the atrocity that is our country in the hopes that history won't repeat itself for the umpteenth time. We'll either make it through this next 2.5 years and start to repair the damage, or we'll tear each other apart into a new something-or-other. We are living though something terrible and dramatic and awesome, in the most literal sense.
Now I go back to not thinking about all this and living the day-to-day, but also feeling supremely guilty for not thinking about all this. Words on a page are all I have left, because it offers me a chance to step back and organize myself. So I'll see you at knit night, game night, work, or whatever social outing we're doing together, because if I don't keep doing those things I might just pack a bag and walk away until I can't walk any further. Thank you for reading/listening. I can't afford therapy.

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

dumb, dumber, pious

Human quality of life, regardless of the political upheavals of the moment, can be directly attributed to human curiosity and the scientific method of testing hypotheses. Luckily for all of us, brilliant minds have always followed their curiosity despite religion's mandate of ignorance, often at great personal risk. That's why I'm so sad to read that Turkey is no longer teaching evolution before college. "Evolutionary mechanisms" yes (whatever that means), but not the greater overall concept. They think it's too "controversial" for kids' widdle bwains to handle.
My absolutely inexpert hot-headed opinion is that it's yet another attempt to dumb people down to religion's level and eat away at how people know their world. Systematically removing the tools for skeptical inquiry is the best way to keep your populace in line. Political and religious leaders are very good at creating a sense of strong identity around this ignorance. They use words like piety and patriotism to describe how "we know best." Encouraging ignorance helps no one.
What could I say to get you on my team here?
Folks, there is no scientific controversy surrounding evolution. The word "theory" has six definitions. While I think that's a really good reason to change the way we describe scientific discoveries, I don't think it is a good reason to stop teaching children how to think about the world around them.
That science has become a dirty word, spat out by religious authorities around the globe does not make it any less of a good tool for understanding the world around us. Without past scientific studies, which use the same exact methods as evolutionary biology, we would not know that Aspirin is a painkiller. We would not know how to create the combustion engines needed for vehicular travel. We would not have the orbital knowledge to create Global Positioning Systems that could get us from point A to B with staggering accuracy--not to mention the real-time traffic updates of Google Maps and Waze.
Please understand my resolute atheism from this perspective. Religion quashes the desire to further improve the human condition under the guise of a deity's love after you die. I was taught for the first 22 years of my life that if you do what deityman wants, you can die whenever and it's fine, because you'll be reunited with all your family and friends who die too! That engenders, whether on the surface or not, an attitude that it doesn't matter what happens to OTHER people as long as deityman is being served appropriately by YOU.
But there is something that tugs inherently at us when we see suffering. That is why Mother Theresa's beatification bothered me so much. She created an entire theistic branch based on the glorification of extreme suffering, while receiving all the money she could ever want, the medical care usually reserved for heads of state, and the adulation of kind people who didn't have the access to information which painted her as she truly was. There's willful ignorance, sure, on the part of many Catholics, but when those of us who aren't of that faith hear the name "Mother Theresa" we get a warm view of an old nun who helps people, right? Why? Because that's what information we were given in or out of school.
 
So, when someone says "we won't teach evolution" all I hear is the silent "because we want people to associate biology with deity so we can continue as an institution." It all ties together, in the end.