• Brainsploosh@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Tell me, what would a third option be?

    Petitioning your representatives is action, until you lose faith in it leading to change, then it’s coping.

    Either you find another action you believe could lead to change, or you don’t.

    • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      That’s what I’m fucking doing: I’m trying to enact change by explaining to party soldiers such as yourself that the do-nothing Dems in Congress aren’t perfect so that you might stop shielding them from any accountability for their (lack of) actions.

      Clearly you’re just as blinded to the faults of your own “team” as the fascists are, though, so I’m gonna stop wasting my time and efforts trying to talk some sense into your addled neoliberal brain.

      • Brainsploosh@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Oh, sorry for being unclear. I’m not USAmerican, I have no love for the dems other than that they’re not the GOP; not actively promoting fascism, enacting pogroms, or dismantling human rights.

        I’m an activist. And I currently teach, support and organise people to take an active role in their community.

        I know from experience that change needs nimble and concerted action, and on a grassroots level resourcefulness to find the actions that work.

        I’m not saying the dems nor others aren’t doing what they think is best, I’m saying that you should too. And maybe repeatedly petitioning the people you don’t believe capable of helping might not be the best use of your efforts.

        Unless it is all you can muster, at which coming to terms with that will almost certainly help both your mental well being and sym-/empathy for other action which will in turn benefit the change.