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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDon’t Wait for the Revolution — 'Be the Change' and Live It
http://www.alternet.org/visions/dont-wait-revolution-be-change-and-live-itWe cant create a better world if we havent yet imagined it. How much better then, if we are able to touch such a world, experience it directly, even live in itif only to a partial degree and for a brief moment. This is the idea behind prefigurative interventions, actions that not only work to stop the next dumb thing the bad guys are up to, but also enact in the here and now the world we actually want to live in.
These kinds of interventions come in all shapes and sizes, from modest artistic gestures like John and Yokos 1969 WAR IS OVER! (If You Want It) Times Square billboard, to utopian-flavored mass movements like Occupy Wall Street with its free libraries, communitarian ethic, and experiments in direct democracy.
You never change things by fighting the existing reality, Buckminster Fuller advised. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete. A brilliant insight, but hes only half right, because the best direct actionsand social movementsactually do both.
Consider the lunch counter sit-ins of the 1960s. They were not only brave acts of resistance against the racism of the Jim Crow South, but they also beautifully and dramatically prefigured the world the civil rights movement was trying to bring into being: blacks and whites sitting together as equals in public spaces. The young students didnt ask anyones permission; they didnt wait for society to evolve or for bad laws to change. In the best spirit of direct action, they walked in there and simply changed the world. At least for a few moments, in one place, they were living in an integrated South. They painted a picture of how the world could be, and the vicious response from white bystanders and police only proved how important it was to make it so.
Fire Walk With Me
(38,893 posts)xchrom
(108,903 posts)hootinholler
(26,449 posts)MineralMan
(146,255 posts)For example, rainwater washing off yards in dense residential areas pollutes local lakes & rivers in Minnesota. If everyone planted a rain garden in their front yard, they would reduce the amount of runoff.
Now, a guy could form a committee to study this and put out recommendations that everyone create a rain garden. OR, the same guy could grab a shovel from the garage, go out in his yard, and start making a rain garden in his own front yard. The neighbors see it, and ask about it. They're impressed by the positive change the rain garden makes in that front yard and go get their own shovels out.
If you want change, make a change. If you're neighborhood needs sprucing up, paint your house. Your neighbors will see your nice new paint job and be stimulated to do some work on their own house. I did that a few years ago, and several neighbors painted their houses the same year, or replaced old worn siding.
This works.