Spoke to my friend who lives near St. Cloud, MN yesterday.
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If you are feeding people, that is the work.
If you are helping people with clothing or shelter, that is the work.
If you offer encouragement & support, that is the work.
If you share information & speak the truth, that is the work.
If you're setting up chairs for a community defense training, that is the work.
If it's worth doing, it is worth doing.
The best analogy I have right now is an ant colony: ants don't fret about "importance", they just do their job, & together ants are ridiculously powerful for how frickin tiny they are.
We're ants. We're small but many, & by all making our contributions, we have so much power.
All I really ask is that you give of yourself. I mentioned my big bro: he has 7 kids. I'm not going to ask him to take unnecessary physical risk. Those kids need him. But he needs to be in this.
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The best analogy I have right now is an ant colony: ants don't fret about "importance", they just do their job, & together ants are ridiculously powerful for how frickin tiny they are.
We're ants. We're small but many, & by all making our contributions, we have so much power.
All I really ask is that you give of yourself. I mentioned my big bro: he has 7 kids. I'm not going to ask him to take unnecessary physical risk. Those kids need him. But he needs to be in this.
Take setting up chairs for a community gathering for example.
A lot of people who do this kind of work don't even see that it's real & it matters.
It's not "just setting up chairs". For that meeting to happen, someone needed to set up the chairs. You decided to be that someone.
That is the work. It's a job that needs doing, & you showed up & did it. So much of what needs doing feels ridiculously "small", but that's why we are strong *together*, because everyone has *something* to give.
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The best analogy I have right now is an ant colony: ants don't fret about "importance", they just do their job, & together ants are ridiculously powerful for how frickin tiny they are.
We're ants. We're small but many, & by all making our contributions, we have so much power.
All I really ask is that you give of yourself. I mentioned my big bro: he has 7 kids. I'm not going to ask him to take unnecessary physical risk. Those kids need him. But he needs to be in this.
@artemis Hollywood force feeds us lies about brave, courageous, "manly" heroes overcoming Impossible odds to stick it to the man.
There are people who believe these myths and try to fight back against the whole world on their own. They are generally known as spree killers.
The only real power is solidarity and community. Monke together STRONG.
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Take setting up chairs for a community gathering for example.
A lot of people who do this kind of work don't even see that it's real & it matters.
It's not "just setting up chairs". For that meeting to happen, someone needed to set up the chairs. You decided to be that someone.
That is the work. It's a job that needs doing, & you showed up & did it. So much of what needs doing feels ridiculously "small", but that's why we are strong *together*, because everyone has *something* to give.
I've been talking about my little bro & how proud I am: some of what he's doing carries significant risk, but a lot of it is just showing up & asking "what can I do to help?"
He is in physically good shape, so beyond risky confrontational shit, he can just be a big help, because he is physically able to do a lot of things that need doing.
It's not about being a hero for him. He says he just shows up to things & says "tell me what you need me to do."
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The best analogy I have right now is an ant colony: ants don't fret about "importance", they just do their job, & together ants are ridiculously powerful for how frickin tiny they are.
We're ants. We're small but many, & by all making our contributions, we have so much power.
All I really ask is that you give of yourself. I mentioned my big bro: he has 7 kids. I'm not going to ask him to take unnecessary physical risk. Those kids need him. But he needs to be in this.
@artemis
> he has 7 kidsThat's an indication of the underlying issue.
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@artemis
> he has 7 kidsThat's an indication of the underlying issue.
@handsomebird
It sure is.... -
The best analogy I have right now is an ant colony: ants don't fret about "importance", they just do their job, & together ants are ridiculously powerful for how frickin tiny they are.
We're ants. We're small but many, & by all making our contributions, we have so much power.
All I really ask is that you give of yourself. I mentioned my big bro: he has 7 kids. I'm not going to ask him to take unnecessary physical risk. Those kids need him. But he needs to be in this.
@artemis If you'll pardon a quote from the /antagonist/ of A Bug's Life, speaking to his underlings, as emphasis for your point...
"You let one ant stand up to us, then they ALL might stand up. Those 'puny little ants' outnumber us a hundred to one, and if they ever figure that out, there goes our way of life!"
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@artemis If you'll pardon a quote from the /antagonist/ of A Bug's Life, speaking to his underlings, as emphasis for your point...
"You let one ant stand up to us, then they ALL might stand up. Those 'puny little ants' outnumber us a hundred to one, and if they ever figure that out, there goes our way of life!"
@LexYeen
Fantastic! Exactly. -
Take setting up chairs for a community gathering for example.
A lot of people who do this kind of work don't even see that it's real & it matters.
It's not "just setting up chairs". For that meeting to happen, someone needed to set up the chairs. You decided to be that someone.
That is the work. It's a job that needs doing, & you showed up & did it. So much of what needs doing feels ridiculously "small", but that's why we are strong *together*, because everyone has *something* to give.
@artemis There's a good bit in the bread book where he talks about how the Paris Commune failed because the so-called revolutionaries were making grand speeches on liberty while the people holding the barricades went unfed. The grand revolutionaries were notably all men and they neglected the care work necessary to actually sustain their movement. Feeding people was just an invisible thing that happened, not a thing "they" were supposed to do. Not "revolutionary".
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I've been talking about my little bro & how proud I am: some of what he's doing carries significant risk, but a lot of it is just showing up & asking "what can I do to help?"
He is in physically good shape, so beyond risky confrontational shit, he can just be a big help, because he is physically able to do a lot of things that need doing.
It's not about being a hero for him. He says he just shows up to things & says "tell me what you need me to do."
For every Luke Skywalker, how many other folks are carrying supplies and rendering aid. I don't have to be the one in the X-wing to be helpful.
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For every Luke Skywalker, how many other folks are carrying supplies and rendering aid. I don't have to be the one in the X-wing to be helpful.
@springdiesel @artemis Yup. Luke Skywalker wouldn't have been able to make that shot in the first place if the X-wing he was flying wasn't loaded, fueled, and in good repair, *or* if the events shown in Andor and Rogue One hadn't happened to set his sunbaked ass up for the win over Yavin.
Lots of wannabe/internet fighter jocks forget that they aren't getting off the ground without their direct support crews and the infrastructure behind them.
(PS: I'm not just talking about aircraft here.)
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@springdiesel @artemis Yup. Luke Skywalker wouldn't have been able to make that shot in the first place if the X-wing he was flying wasn't loaded, fueled, and in good repair, *or* if the events shown in Andor and Rogue One hadn't happened to set his sunbaked ass up for the win over Yavin.
Lots of wannabe/internet fighter jocks forget that they aren't getting off the ground without their direct support crews and the infrastructure behind them.
(PS: I'm not just talking about aircraft here.)
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@springdiesel @artemis Yup. Luke Skywalker wouldn't have been able to make that shot in the first place if the X-wing he was flying wasn't loaded, fueled, and in good repair, *or* if the events shown in Andor and Rogue One hadn't happened to set his sunbaked ass up for the win over Yavin.
Lots of wannabe/internet fighter jocks forget that they aren't getting off the ground without their direct support crews and the infrastructure behind them.
(PS: I'm not just talking about aircraft here.)
@LexYeen @springdiesel @artemis "An army marches on its stomach."
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For every Luke Skywalker, how many other folks are carrying supplies and rendering aid. I don't have to be the one in the X-wing to be helpful.
@springdiesel@spore.social @artemis@dice.camp Additional point: Luke Skywalker is a fictional character that is based both on the ideas of resistance and revolution as well as the tropes of drama and the underlying biases of the writers, including the Great Man myth.
You're not wrong for making the comparison or anything, you are making a good point, just worth also keeping in mind how the stories of great heroes we're often told are stories shaped by those telling them and the society around them. This focus on singular Great Men being one of the many ways that manifests. -
@LexYeen @springdiesel @artemis "An army marches on its stomach."
@lykso@tiny.tilde.website @LexYeen@plush.city @springdiesel@spore.social @artemis@dice.camp You know what wins wars, Comrade General? Logistics!
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@springdiesel@spore.social @artemis@dice.camp Additional point: Luke Skywalker is a fictional character that is based both on the ideas of resistance and revolution as well as the tropes of drama and the underlying biases of the writers, including the Great Man myth.
You're not wrong for making the comparison or anything, you are making a good point, just worth also keeping in mind how the stories of great heroes we're often told are stories shaped by those telling them and the society around them. This focus on singular Great Men being one of the many ways that manifests.@flesh @springdiesel
This is why I *loved* Andor. It's a much clearer image of resistance & solidarity. Like, it makes Star Wars *make sense*. -
I was listening to a YouTuber I like who said she thinks some men have a hard time acknowledging the violence of the present situation because they have been taught to think of themselves as "protectors" & "warriors", so if something this cruel & brutal was actually happening, they are scared they would have to *do* something.
But here's the thing. I do need my big bro to do things, but it's not "go out & get yourself killed." He's got a very large family. He needs to take care of his kids.
@artemis that argument of hers is emotional manipulation.
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@artemis that argument of hers is emotional manipulation.
@artemis but also, i think to be a truly new kind of experience, some kind of street war is not going to cut it. we've all been fans of martial arts as kids, specifically ninjas. i don't think that's a coincidence. it's going to be a very quiet but effective resistance, even if it's not about literally swinging katanas.
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@artemis but also, i think to be a truly new kind of experience, some kind of street war is not going to cut it. we've all been fans of martial arts as kids, specifically ninjas. i don't think that's a coincidence. it's going to be a very quiet but effective resistance, even if it's not about literally swinging katanas.
@artemis no idea if this helps but i'm getting this intuition that our war spirit animal will be the turtle rather than the hare (from aesop's fables).
hares have to run from A to B to win. turtles are already there. sometimes they live as mutants in sewers, and like pizza. that's all i have.
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@springdiesel @LexYeen @artemis It highlights the principle pretty well that even in a fictional Great Men universe like Star Wars, you can't really escape having a support crew.