this post was submitted on 02 Jan 2025
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Asklemmy
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My goal is to build more effective political organizations. I abandoned my career to do this as a consultant, I do this as a volunteer for the orgs that cannot afford me, and I do it in the orgs in which I'm politically active first-hand. Building communities of experts and people interested in improving, on a global scale, is part of the process.
There are effective orgs with problems and there are orgs with no chance of having a positive impact because they spend all their resources reproducing themselves. No problem joining the first kind, but I don't believe there's a point beating a dead horse with the second.
I'm not American, so campaign organization is not really the frame I'm immersed in. I do a lot of organizing with Americans, so I understand the context, but if you want to build a political org that can last a century and it's able to evolve and fit changing needs, that kind of know-how is generic and reusable. There are intrinsic dynamics of how humans behave within organizations and how organizations grow, and anything pertaining to those aspects is knowledge that is transferable and can live a long time. If you build for the short-term, you are subject to the ebbs and flows of the current moment and your impact will be short-lived. I'm not against this way of doing things, but I just don't find it interesting or ambitious enough.
A suspicious amount of my peers are past-IWW members who are now part of VerDi, lol.
It makes me feel much better knowing you're (probably) familiar with my type of questioning, it's become too ingrained to stop.
Now that I understand how this would differentiate itself from actual orgs, I'm definitely on board. I have some good things worth sharing already for tenant organizing