15 Points on Organizing

A good friend recently reminded me that there is a big difference between activism and organizing. Activism is to be involved at some level in political struggle; organizing is to make that struggle effective by planning for success.

Organizing requires attention to the smallest details and the broadest overview. It takes a great deal of strategic thinking, critical self-evaluation, people skills, and persistence.

Organizing is hard. None of us are born with the skills needed for effective organizing; we have to pick them up as we go.  All we have is us, and so many of us are tied up with families, jobs, and other responsibilities. But if we’re going to win struggles for social and environmental justice, we need more organizers.

With that goal in mind, I would like to share with you this list of points on organizing. I’m by no means an expert organizer, but I have gained some experience in the past decade. This list is not definitive or faultless. If you think I got it wrong, or if you have more points to add, let me know in the comments.

15 Points on Organizing

1. Reliable people are irreplaceable. One solid person is worth a dozen who don’t follow through on their commitments.

2. Beware of abusive and toxic people, as well as those who are bring nothing but drama and distraction. Set boundaries.

3. Social skills are profoundly important for organizing. Cultivate these skills. Avoid stereotyping or dismissing people based on their lifestyle, job, or any first impression you may have. Movement building requires getting outside of our comfort zone and engaging with people as individuals. You can’t have political conversations if your prerequisite is that everyone should agree with you. This is a dead end for making change.

4. When organizing people, folks seem to respond well to individual requests for assistance. For example: “I’ve noticed that you’re really skilled about getting people motivated. Can you help with promotion for our upcoming event?”

5. In organizing, details matter. Small problems can grow into major ones. Pay close attention to what is happening in and around your organizing community. But be careful to avoid getting bogged down in the small stuff.

6. Build coalitions and relationships with a wide variety of people and resistance-oriented communities. Sometimes you will be surprised at who is willing to lend support. Draw out linkages between struggles and focus on the shared visions and overlaps in thinking. Radicals are scattered and disorganized, so solidarity is critical.

7. Humility, respect, and appreciation for others are the foundation of relationships. Shared hardship, struggle, and joy are the mortar that cements these bonds. Build friendships and caring relationship with the people you organize with.

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Protest at Swamp Cedars sacred site, eastern Nevada.

8. Do what you say you will do. Follow up on commitments and responsibilities. Don’t give your word lightly.

9. Ask for help when you need it.

10. Make time to recharge. Burned out and overworked activists are no use to the movement. Allow time for relaxation and self-healing after intense periods.

11. Focus on the long term struggle. Make sure that each action, event, and campaign you engage in leaves your group stronger and more engaged than before. Try to maintain positive momentum, while at the same time understanding that we fight regardless of winning or losing. We fight because it is the right thing to do.

12. Sometimes you have to take risks.

13. Never stop learning. Deepen your wisdom and plan to become an elder and mentor as you age.

14. Justice is on our side. Be heartened by the spirituality and community that comes from battling injustice and building beautiful cultures of resistance.

15. Be so stubborn they will never stop you. Never give up.

Max Wilbert is an activist and organizer from Seattle. He primarily works with the local chapter of Deep Green Resistance, and can be reached at max@maxwilbert.org

Originally published on Counterpunch.

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Open Meeeting / DGR 101

The local chapter of Deep Green Resistance is growing. We are now a multi-generational group committed to organized political resistance. We’re involved in numerous efforts, including support for the Unist’ot’en Camp, resistance to the SNWA water grab, and other issues.

Come learn more about Deep Green Resistance, ask questions, and learn how to get involved further with our local efforts. This will be an informal time to get together and talk about anything.

Please RSVP via email to seattle@deepgreenresistance.org.

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FBI Contacts Deep Green Resistance Seattle Member

FBI deep green resistanceOn December 9th, 2014, around 1pm, an FBI agent by the name of Tim Suttles (?) called Deep Green Resistance Seattle member Max Wilbert on his cell phone.

Agent Suttles asked to speak to Mr. Wilbert, then identified himself as a member of the FBI.

Mr. Wilbert followed proper security culture (a set of basic rules and guidelines used by activists to keep our communities as safe as possible from state repression and disruption of social movements) by clearly stating, “I’m not going to speak with you,” and promptly hung up the phone.

FBI agents are involved in a sweep trolling DGR members and associates for information. Under U.S. law, Deep Green Resistance members in general, and Mr. Wilbert in particular, have done nothing illegal. The FBI is digging (in vain) for information.

We are in contact with activist lawyers who are providing legal advice for how to proceed. These movement lawyers advise us that agents and cops can legally lie, threaten, and coerce members of the public. However, it is illegal for us to lie to cops.

In every political situation, lawyers advise activists to inform police that we choose to remain silent. No matter if you are doing nothing illegal, silence is the best response to police questioning and intimidation, since anything you say can and will be twisted in court to make trouble for you or your community.

FBI contacts Deep Green Resistance Members

Read about the FBI recently targeting other Deep Green Resistance members and associates

Learn more about security culture

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“Sex Work” Hides Exploitation of Women

cni-not-for-sale-photoThe term ‘sex work’ obscures the reality of exploitation and violence in prostitution and the sex industry as a whole.

Behind the libertarian rhetoric of ‘freedom’ and ‘choice’, many sex work advocates seem truly focused on eroticizing domination and the profits to be gained therein – not the reality of a racist, misogynistic enterprise.

Seattle was the scene of a recent series of events by a group of “sex worker activists”, one whom we will quote here:

“As somebody very leery of using the criminal-justice system to curb human behavior when it comes to sex, I find this very disconcerting that we want to punish men for having sex, especially when the women are consenting and wanting money,” said Melinda Chateauvert, a retired history professor and the author of “Sex Workers Unite!”

Asked about women who turn their earnings over to a pimp, Chateauvert, who will be speaking at a couple of the Seattle events, said: “What she does with the money once she earns it is her choice.”

That last paragraph is particularly outrageous.

The argument that prostituted women ‘consent’ to sex is built on a fallacy. Nearly 90% of women in prostitution say that they want out immediately. Prostituted women are often handled by pimps or madames, who take a portion (or all) of their earnings via coercion or violence. Choice is meaningless in a circumstance like this.

Choice does not also designate justice. Regardless of the fact that some people may choose to go into prostitution, it is a unjust industry. Would any anti-capitalist accept the argument that because some people choose to work in particularly exploitative jobs, that capitalism should not be criticized?

More than 80% of prostituted women are raped, with nearly 75% reporting they have been raped more than five times. This is just a brief writing on a large subject, so we invite you to learn more from these powerful feminist voices:

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Sacred Mountain near Columbia River Threatened

sacred mountain rattlesnake mountainFrom the website Roundhouse Talk:

Tucked within the 1,000-page defense bill passed by the Senate last week is a provision that would open the summit of Rattlesnake Mountain — a site considered sacred by members of the Yakama Nation — to the public.

The mountain, known as “Laliik” in Yakama, lies in the Hanford Reach National Monument and, for the most part, public access is now restricted. But opening the area for more public use has long been a goal of outgoing Congressmen Doc Hastings.

Hastings had previously sponsored similar bills that never gained traction in the Senate, so this time he added a provision to the National Defense Authorization Act for 2015, a vast, $580 billion piece of legislation that covers military spending with a host of other land management issues tacked on.

The act also includes provisions to turn Hanford’s B Reactor into a tourist destination as part of a new Manhattan Project National Historical Park, a move applauded by the Tri-City Development Council and others.

The measure easily passed the House earlier, and with Senate passage it now goes to President Barack Obama for his signature.

Opening Rattlesnake Mountain to the public, especially motorized access, is a major concern for the Yakama Nation, Tribal Council Chairman JoDe Goudy wrote in a letter to Sens. Maria Cantwell and Patty Murray in October.

“Senators, Laliik is our Mount Sinai,” Goudy wrote. “When our Long House leaders feel that a young adult is ready and worthy, Laliik is where they are sent to fast and to have vision quests. This is not a place for Airstreams and Winnebegos.”

Doc Hastings is known as one of the most pro-corporate senators in Washington DC (and that’s saying something). He has consistently opposed environmental protections, protection of women’s rights, and other issues.

Lalíik (Rattlesnake Mountain) is held sacred by native peoples of the Columbia Plateau, including the Nez Perce, Umatilla, Wanapum, Cayuse, Walla Walla, and Yakama, and remains a spiritual epicenter to this day.

Deep Green Resistance Seattle is following the evolving story of this sacred mountain. We are reaching out to our members and allies across the region around this issue. We stand to protect all sacred land.

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Anne Braden: Southern Patriot (Anti-Racist Film Screening)

Check out this event from European Dissent Seattle:

anti-racist event in Seattle, Dec. 13th 2014Click the image for a larger version of the poster. Film screening and discussion as part of our work to build a base of anti-racist white organizers!

Saturday, December 13th

3:30 – 6:00pm

YWCA, 2820 E Cherry, Seattle WA 98122

ALL ARE WELCOME!

European Dissent Seattle presents a screening and discussion about this documentary on pioneering white anti-racist organizer Anne Braden. The documentary explores the life and legacy of this American civil rights leader. After she was charged with sedition for attempting to desegregate a Louisville, Kentucky neighborhood in 1954, Braden used the attack to turn herself “inside out” and embarked upon a lifetime of racial justice organizing matched by few whites in American history. Braden was hailed by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in his 1963 “Letter from Birmingham Jail” as a white southerner whose rejection of her segregationist upbringing was “eloquent and prophetic,” and named as one of only five white southerners he could count as allies. Labeled a “traitor to her race” and ostracized as a “red” by segregationists and even many in the civil rights movement, she fought for an inclusive movement community and demonstrated that protecting civil liberties was essential to gaining civil rights. After decades of being shunned by even the most progressive organizations, in 1989 Anne Braden was awarded the first Roger Baldwin Medal of Liberty from the American Civil Liberties Union as a “lifelong leader of the movements for racial justice, labor rights, and peace in the South.” Read more: http://annebradenfilm.org/about/

RSVP here or here: https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/AnneBraden


 

Anti-Racism As a Foundation

Deep Green Resistance Seattle stands in solidarity with all serious, radical anti-racist organizing. We recognize that racism is a fundamental pillar of modern civilization. Confronting and dismantling racism serves as a serious blow to industrial civilization (the culture of empire). Some of our members plan to attend this event and are beginning to participate in the strong anti-racist organizing taking place in the Seattle area. We support the work of European Dissent Seattle.

Until we win.

 

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Report-Back From Unist’ot’en Solidarity Event

Unist'ot'en Solidarity Event at the Capitol Hill LibraryOn December 7th, Deep Green Resistance Seattle held a solidarity event, fundraiser, and info session for the Unist’ot’en Camp.

The Unist’ot’en Camp is a resistance community whose purpose is to protect sovereign Wet’suwet’en territory from several proposed pipelines from the Tar Sands Gigaproject and shale gas from Hydraulic Fracturing Projects in the Peace River Region. You can read more about the camp here: http://unistotencamp.com/

The December 7th event was a total success. We shared photographs and films from the camp (including these two videos: one, two). A passionate discussion followed as participants shared questions about the issue and how best to lend support, and discussed the strategic issues around the camp and fossil fuel resistance in general.

Nearly 20 people attended the event, which was held at the Capitol Hill library. We raised over $400 for the Unist’ot’en Camp as well as several large boxes of supplies. Attendees are energized and several may join a winter caravan of DGR members and friends heading to the camp.

Stay Updated on Our Website for More Unist’ot’en Solidarity Events and Other Resistance Efforts

Stay tuned for more events like this. Comment or message your email address to join our newsletter. You can also follow the Unist’ot’en Camp on Facebook. We’re going to be taking part in ongoing Unist’ot’en solidarity events and efforts for the camp and other indigenous resistance throughout the region.

About Deep Green Resistance Seattle

We are the chapter of Deep Green Resistance covering the Seattle area, as well as Renton, Kent, Shoreline, Lynnwood, Federal Way, Tacoma, Everett, Bainbridge, Vashon, Bremerton, the Eastside, Kirkland, Bellevue, Issaquah, and all surrounding regions. This is occupied land of the Duwamish, Suquamish, Muckleshoot, Snoqualmie, Tulalip, and Puyallup nations.

Deep Green Resistance Seattle is about stopping the destruction of the planet. We work to stand in solidarity with oppressed communities. If you’re interested in joining our collective, participating in our organizing work, or supporting in any other ways, get in touch. For ongoing news, check out our blog.

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Unist’ot’en Solidarity Event

fundraiser for the Unist'ot'en Camp

The Unist’ot’en Camp is a grassroots indigenous community reclaiming their traditional rights and lands and blocking Tar Sands and Fracked Gas pipelines in “British Columbia”.

Join community members on December 7th for an anti-thanksgiving gathering with all proceeds from the event going to the Unist’ot’en Camp! Suggested donation at the door is $5 and will include snacks.

The Unist’ot’en Camp is a resistance community whose purpose is to protect sovereign Wet’suwet’en territory from several proposed pipelines from the Tar Sands Gigaproject and shale gas from Hydraulic Fracturing Projects in the Peace River Region. You can read more about the camp here: http://unistotencamp.com/

We will also watch some short films about the camp and will have information about pipelines available. Hear from people who have visited the camp and learn how to support this incredible resistance community. Join us at this fundraiser for the Unist’ot’en Camp and learn about ongoing indigenous resistance to colonization and civilization.

Bring donations for the camp, including supplies. In January a group of us will be traveling up to the camp to deliver these supplies personally and to supply volunteer labor for the camp. This resistance is a group effort and it takes consistent, reliable support from all across the land to be successful.

unisthoten-stop-sign

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Ferguson, Burnaby Mountain, and Earth at Risk

Earth at Risk

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This past weekend in San Francisco, an event called Earth at Risk: The Justice and Sustainability Conference was held. It brought together feminists, indigenous peoples, anti-war activists, anti-racists, and others. The event, headlined by Derrick Jensen, Vandana Shiva, Chris Hedges, and Alice Walker, united a disparate set of movements acting in solidarity with one another.

Earth at Risk was a huge success. Deep Green Resistance was there, tabling in the lobby and represented by several people on the stage. This event may be the beginning of something big. Stay tuned.

Ferguson

Racist systems can only produce racist results. The prosecutor is flaming example of white organizational culture and Internalized racial superiority. Now, we gotta organize for structural anti-racist change. Amerikkka is amerikkka.

– Seattle Anti-Racist Organizer Dustin Washington

Read commentary from Deep Green Resistance member Will Falk here.

Follow the DGR People of Color’s Caucus here.

Burnaby Mountain

 

At Burnaby Mountain, pipeline resistance is popping off. Arrests have continued as police and resisters clash over the planned Kinder Morgan tar sands pipeline slated to go in through a supposed conservation area. Grassroots resistance has been strong, but as usual some effectiveness has perhaps been compromised for ego.

A local Vancouver activist, Harjap Grewal, put it like this:

Can’t get up to Burnaby Mountain very often but hope that at some point people stop making plans to get arrested and instead start making plans to shut down Kinder Morgan’s work (maybe without getting arrested). Solidarity to all those holding it down for weeks. Less solidarity for folks going up for their arrest photo op. Most places in the world, where people are seriously challenging power, people don’t make arrests the goal of their actions.

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Horizontal Hostility Conference

DGR members Stella and Jose, who live on the Canary Islands off the northwest coast of Africa, have created a virtual conference to address to the topic of horizontal hostility. The conference materials are available in:

  • English
  • Español

To describe the conference, in their words:

This online Conference about Horizontal Hostility is designed as a study group for understanding and sharing how HH operates so effectively as the greatest obstacle in re-designing the oppressive systems which are currently threatening Life on Earth, dividing & wasting the energies of the activist population that is working for change.

Diagram of how horizontal hostility splits prevents activists from engaging power effectively

Several Deep Green Resistance members, along with other activists, participated in the conversations that Stella and Jose put together for this conference. The discussions are very interesting and may contribute to your understanding of how activism works, common dysfunctions in activist cultures, and common communication issues and unspoken power structures that are important to understand.

 

http://en.ecoinversion.net/hh

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