Organizing requires meeting people where they are, not where you want them to be. If you expect everyone to hold acceptable lines on every issue before they engage with your org, you will remain relegated to the furthest margins. This doesn’t mean you should concede points or adopt reactionary positions (tailism), especially when protecting marginalized identities of comrades. It simply means that peoples reactionary positions are responded to politely and on a personal level, without an unrealistic expectation of overnight change. Think of how you would want to be corrected if a comrade saw an error in your line, or even how you would want to be corrected by a colleague at work if you were making a mistake. try to treat people expressing reactionary ideas in this way, Even when it is absurdly obvious to you that they are wrong and even hurtful in what they are saying. It is not obvious to them, so treat them with patience and respect.

Public humiliation, exclusion from spaces and performative debate tend make your space unwelcoming to newcomers. People see these things and become uncomfortable speaking In your spaces, fearing they might say something wrong and be subjected to the same treatment. This is not a good thing. If the masses don’t participate in your revolutionary project, it isn’t successful. Public humiliation or exclusion from spaces might be appropriate when dealing with people who are obviously arguing in bad faith, engaged in behavior that is deeply and actively harmful etc. however it should be a tactic of last resort, not a go to one.

The cadre I work with is focused on providing mutual aid to and organizing with the precariously employed informal economy workers in a rather poor rural area. Probably 40% of that demographic either voted for trump at least once or would have voted for trump if they could be bothered to vote. Probably 80% are at least somewhat transphobic. And that’s just scratching the surface of the anti communism, bigotry and reactionary brain worms we are working through. The bipoc women we work with tend to have the least reactionary brain worms (surprising almost no one) yet they are not immune in the slightest. I’ll talk the most about the transphobia because that perhaps the most widespread form of reactionary views. The way I personally handle transphobic statements is to talk to the person who said the statement about how it made me feel (or how it might make others feel). The way I approach such a conversation varies based on the specific issue and the person im talking to. I will set hard boundaries at times, depending on context, but will more often be patient. One older logger took multiple months before he would use my correct pronouns and now asks peoples pronouns preemptively. The only thing I have found to deprogram peoples bigotry is to get them to respect the very openly trans inclusive/anti racist etc folks on a personal as well as political level, by proving we are principled, helpful, friendly and genuinely care about our collective liberation.

Revolutionary organizing is a cyclical process of learning. some “communists” seem to think the task of a cadre is to study theory and then take said theory to the masses in a dumbed down form, thus showing them the correct path to their liberation. This is incorrect and you will be rejected by the majority of the masses as out of touch weirdos if not outright hucksters. Without revolutionary theory there is no revolutionary action and without revolutionary action there is no revolutionary theory. There are only empty, untested ideas. Revolutionary study must always include going to the masses and learning from the masses. Challenge the theory you read in books against what you learn about material conditions when you engage with the masses. Synthesize both to analyze your specific material conditions. Then test your analysis through your activities where you are engaged with the masses. The relationship between an organization and the masses it is engaged with is a reciprocal one of mutual learning, where you work together to learn how you might successfully do a communist revolution in your current material conditions, which is a fundamentally experimental question.

  • PowerLurker [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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    16 days ago

    100-com 100-com 100-com

    tbh, when i started doing organizing shit irl, this exact disparity between the real world and online left spaces like this one is what made me more and more alienated from the latter. internet leftism is fundamentally built upon posturing (and on hexbear specifically, generally this means posturing as the purest, most righteous exemplar of your belief system there is).

    and it makes sense: in spaces where all you have is anonymous words combined with inaction, what else are you left with? but this leads to a toxic dynamic where there’s a lot of arrogant, hostile venting of one’s own powerlessness onto others, and/or leads to folks turning completely understandable trauma & pain from oppression indiscriminately outward.

    but we are not better or more pure than the rest of our class because of our politics. we have the luck & mixed blessing of being exposed to the right combination of material conditions, personal experiences, and educational resources that led us to certain beliefs, that’s all. if a few things in our life stories were different, we’d also be reactionary “treatlerites.” and while there are members of our class who are too far gone, if we can make just a few things different for working people who are maybe currently on the wrong path, we can get them on our side (or at least, partway there).