Family of Allentown grandfather Luis Leon, 82, said they were headed to a Guatemala hospital to reunite with him after he was taken into custody at a Philadelphia immigration office and disappeared…
And what happened when they didn’t get what they wanted?
That’s right, they mostly moved on to the next shiny distraction, love island or whatever. It’s time to revolt, and liberals still think going out with signs once a year is “protest”
Don’t you dare question those lazy, servile Americans. They’ll downvote you and call you a keyboard warrior and demand to know WHAT YOU DID in response to their pants-pissing inaction.
“Organize” doesn’t mean you find out there’s a planned protest in a designated area away from everyone and surrounded by cops to make sure you’re contained. That’s performative.
Organize means building power from the ground up, knocking on doors, meeting in living rooms, cooking meals, making childcare plans, and finding the people in your community who are ready to fight and ready to love. It means strategizing together, planning direct actions that disrupt, not entertain power. It means understanding that the terrain of struggle isn’t just symbolic; it’s material. Streets, workplaces, campuses, and housing complexes become the front lines.
Organizing is about forming bonds that last beyond a single march, about mutual trust and shared risk. It’s not just about showing up, it’s about staying. It’s not a hashtag, it’s a commitment. It’s not consent to be managed, it’s consent to resist.
And what happened when they didn’t get what they wanted?
That’s right, they mostly moved on to the next shiny distraction, love island or whatever. It’s time to revolt, and liberals still think going out with signs once a year is “protest”
Don’t you dare question those lazy, servile Americans. They’ll downvote you and call you a keyboard warrior and demand to know WHAT YOU DID in response to their pants-pissing inaction.
Yea you’re right people shouldn’t organize. They should give up instead.
Yeah that’s what I said.
“Organize” doesn’t mean you find out there’s a planned protest in a designated area away from everyone and surrounded by cops to make sure you’re contained. That’s performative.
Organize means building power from the ground up, knocking on doors, meeting in living rooms, cooking meals, making childcare plans, and finding the people in your community who are ready to fight and ready to love. It means strategizing together, planning direct actions that disrupt, not entertain power. It means understanding that the terrain of struggle isn’t just symbolic; it’s material. Streets, workplaces, campuses, and housing complexes become the front lines.
Organizing is about forming bonds that last beyond a single march, about mutual trust and shared risk. It’s not just about showing up, it’s about staying. It’s not a hashtag, it’s a commitment. It’s not consent to be managed, it’s consent to resist.