• jack [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      22 hours ago

      I organized one and all the speakers were communists and the thousands of attendees enthusiastically cheered when we told them we need to do a socialist revolution and a bunch of them signed up to get involved in organizing.

        • bubbalu [they/them]@hexbear.net
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          15 hours ago

          Like the OP said, they are a mixed bag. In my city too, there were a lot of radical speakers, and speakers from the socialist and revolutionary orgs in my city.

          • john_brown [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            22 hours ago

            I went to a No Kings protest and it was aggressively anti-left and anti-anything other than voting. They were petting cop horses, thanking cops, having blue dog council members tell us all to vote for them. IO sincerely don’t believe anything organized as a “No Kings” protest would be allowed to have anything legitimately left involved, much less involved in its organization.

          • calidris [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            21 hours ago

            This makes me happy to see. I hope you succeed in making real change in your community. I also hope you realize this was not the case in a majority of the other protests, despite our efforts.

            • jack [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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              21 hours ago

              I think the protests fall into a few distinct categories:

              You’ve got small town ones, which are essentially entirely grassroots and politically pretty soft. They’re still a good thing, because they are composed of people who basically have never taken any political action before. It’s progress, just starting from a very low baseline

              Then there are two city variants defined by the contest between the libs and the left. Either the libs have won via Indivisible and other components of the Dem machine quickly activating, or the left (embodied by PSL in most cities where there’s been some success here) successfully anticipating this movement and laying the organizational groundwork and earning the legitimacy to determine the political line and tenor. In big east coast cities, the Dem machine is powerful and mostly succeeded. In the midwest and mountain states, PSL has had far more success. I can’t really speak to the situation on the west coast, and these are all just trends with lots of exceptions.