A post in the New York Times by Julia Angwin and Ami-Fields Meye, authors of a forthcoming globally researched book on effective dissidence, champions the concept of "collective stubbornness." The most conspicuous American example lately has been Minneapolis, and its comprehensive and persistent resistance to the ICE invasion, which still goes on, despite the absent cameras (and another bogus indictment by the Chaos department of Injustice.)
It's not the big rallies, they say, although these have their obvious uses. It's the inventive and especially persistent activity locally that builds community as it organizes and expands its activities, finding new allies as it goes.
Aside from the examples they provide, such efforts are often highlighted by Rachel Maddow, for example, but besides collective stubbornness there is also individual stubbornness. There are many examples of that historically, too--the Greek poet Yannis Ritsos being one, as featured here. Simply bearing witness (and additionally articulating it) is a form of resistance, individual or collective, as proven by dictatorial efforts to prevent it and punish it.
Resistance is a growing electoral battle cry among Democratic candidates in this year's upcoming elections--and in the pro-active organization to thwart Chaos in distorting or destroying those elections. It comes at a time that political observers mark the political weakness of Chaos and his administration, including chaos among Chaos supporters.
But that is not stopping or even greatly slowing down the destruction that Chaos continues to impose. Apart from the obvious and costly outrages to federal spaces in Washington, a more damaging example recently is another Chaos federal bribe to get companies to abandon offshore wind power projects. Like so much else that Chaos does, this may be illegal but by the time the courts get to it, the damage is done.
The long term consequences are potentially enormous, and fateful. We're already seeing the abandonment of public health resulting in measles epidemics in the US, a highly dangerous Ebola outbreak in Africa, and the incursion of other previously rare diseases into the US.
Part of the public dialogue now is about the need to plan ahead to reverse the worst of Chaos, renew valuable institutions and move forward once Chaos is out of power, even partially. There are calls for comprehensive plans on the order of the notorious fascist blueprint Project 2025, though some observers find this a dubious comparison.
A recent post by David Kurtz at Talking Points Memo outlines the enormity, the difficulty and the possible resistance to such efforts at renewal. It is a sobering commentary.
Kurtz regards the late but recent court-order to return the Kennedy Center to its statutory name, as a kind of debut to this. "This was the first step in what will be a decades-long effort to strip Trump from American public life and repair the damage he has done. It will be slow, painstaking, halting, and thankless work — and perhaps most frustratingly it will have to overcome the inertia of faux reconciliation and indifference."
"The political dynamics of this renewal, America’s reconstruction history suggests, will be brutal," he warns:
"Each effort to undo what Trump has done will be met with howls of outrage, real or not, to maximize the political price exacted. Elected officials will have to decide whether to expend political capital to pay that price. If the 2008 financial crisis and Trump I are any indication, the stomach will not be there to engage in these fights even in the immediate aftermath of Trump II, let alone for the decades it will take to finish the work."
"The destruction of state capacity is the biggest and hardest thing to reverse. But the cosmetic and structural changes Trump has wrought without legal authority, in D.C., national parks, and the White House itself will carry symbolic weight that is likely to trigger the kind of backlash past Democratic administrations have avoided."
Obviously we don't know how it will all play out, but if it takes decades to restore what should never have been destroyed, that's a double whammy on the decades ahead of concentrated response to the growing dangers of climate distortion. It doesn't help that some of these institutions are precisely the ones that are most needed in that comprehensive response.
But clearly this much is true. As Kurtz writes, " If we don’t begin to confront now the scale and scope of the work ahead, we, too, will wilt when the times comes." Though I hope we can at least change that "will" to "may."































