five questions for change-makers
by Alex Evans
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Comment: Tim Dutton, June 29, 2022
My friend, Joseph, cares about many of the same things I do. He yearns for, reads about, and works for social justice, equity and progressive values and change. And Joseph wants nothing to do with those who want otherwise. His contempt is built on countless experiences and a palpable fatigue that saddens and freezes him. I know more than one Joseph, whether they are burnt-out or seduced by mutual radicalization. Building a Larger US, Guide for Change-Makers locates Joseph, and it locates me and the work that lies ahead.
The grounding in historical pendulum swings offered up a reminder that the current political environment presents an opportunity to consider questions that center empathy. I found myself drawn to consider, even while reading the Guide for Change-Makers, what motivates those who are drawn to nationalism and authoritarianism.
Each idea and example is well researched with links to dozens of resources from thought leaders that underscore the concepts and promise to unlock more understanding. This makes the Guide itself a living document.
So often the gravity of the issues, the overwhelming volume of supporting data and the painful stories can lead to a sense of futility and dread and maybe despondency. The Building a Larger US, Guide for Change-Makers, while explicitly addressing the tragedy of inequities, discouraging climate realities and the rigidity of entrenched systems, identifies practical and helpful examples from around the world that are both reminders of one’s agency and are uplifting and hopeful.
Comment: Anthea Lawson, July 7, 2022
Larger Us’s new report starts with the provocation that if we do ‘them and us’ politics, our attempts to make things better can end up making them worse, despite our good intentions. Changemakers don’t like to think about this… but we need to.
As campaigners we’re taught to identify who the ‘bad guy’ is, and focus attention and anger on them. It’s good for recruiting support, and it makes it easier to get our stories in the press and trending on social media. Everyone likes doing down the bad guys.
But Larger Us is asking a vital question: ‘What about the people who disagree with us, the people whose views we find infuriating or oppressive, the people who seek to frustrate our hopes and ideals at every turn? Should we see them as part of ‘us’?
If we play the ‘them and us’ game, Larger Us is suggesting, we risk winning the battle but losing the war, by fuelling polarisation along the way. And even if we defeat ‘them’ in a ‘them and us’ game, we’re vulnerable to the next pendulum swing. I’m not sure about that bit of the argument. I think the pendulum swings anyway. As the late Labour MP Tony Benn said, we have to fight for our rights every generation.
The really compelling thing for changemakers to think about, here, is the feedback loops between our state of mind and the state of the world. Through the feelings that we evoke with our communications we can contribute to more breakdown and polarisation… or to something more generative.
Of course there are reasons for not worrying about the other side’s views. Plenty of effective campaigners – Larger Us quotes some of them – would say we’re not getting it right if we’re not annoying our opponents.
I do find this hard. I’ve written about how the ‘activist’ mentality creates resistance as soon as we speak, and how we need to loosen our attachment to the identity of it. I stand by that. But also: I still want to resist the bad stuff! And just now, in a moment of downtime on social media, I saw the facilitator and philosopher of changemaking, adrienne maree brown (who is also, by the way, an excellent poster of memes) share a quote from the Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel. ‘We must always take sides,’ he said. ‘Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.’
This helped clarify my ongoing discomfort around this question. We think that to not provoke our opponent is to not oppose our opponent. But these aren’t the same thing. We do want to oppose them. We will resist their worldview. But we need to do so in a different way, that doesn’t do their work for them.
There aren’t easy answers in this report, because it’s envisaging nothing less than a complete rethink of how we fight for change. But it’s got all the right questions, and I’ll keep coming back to them.
Anthea Lawson, author of The Entangled Activist: Learning to recognise the master’s tools (Perspectiva Press)