Folks have asked me how to find and build community.
Here is a very pragmatic and approachable way to find the community in your local town or neighborhood.
A little of bit of the concept with a focus on praxis.
So if you're new to community and mutual aid, don't think about what you can build. You're going to be wrong. People have already tried what you're thinking and dropped it back at version 0.3 - Everyone is on 8.2c right now.
So join what exists. Once you get good at it, then you can build out from there - with the knowledge of what is actually needed and works.
Quick note: Things are working. You're just not hearing about it via corporate news. Because it doesn't make those corps money. But its working and has been working. Glad you are joining us now! I think you'll be very pleasantly surprised as what exists around you and what you've been missing out on. Everyone joins at some point. Glad you're here now.
How do you find what exists?
The simple answer is, via community. But you haven't joined the community, so how do you find community without the community!
Since you're here, on the internet, let's start with the internet.
One thing: Folks building and running mutual aid aren't always building and running websites. They're meeting actual people doing physical things in the world. So their websites suck. Also, putting things out publicly runs the risk of inviting the nose of town government and their police forces. Sometimes posting publicly is a *BAD IDEA*. So they don't. You understand OpSec. They understand it better.
But, you certainly can start on the internet to find a "doorway".
Mutual Aid and community is DISTINCTLY DIFFERENT from charities/non-profits. I won't go into it here, but the two (mutual aid and charities/non-profits) aren't the same and actually opposed to each other.
Buuuuuut.....
Folks overlap between the two.
So I might focus on mutual aid, but I'll work with some charities because their apparatus furthers a mutual aid goal in the immediacy.
With that in mind, you can search out charities on the internet. They are well established there and are often upheld by local govt and churches. So they're protected.
Certainly go find some charities that align with your "one thing" (the thing you'll focus on now until you learn about more).
The big thing though, is the charity is not the goal. The people that work there are the goal. You are building a network. So go and meet people but BE FUCKING CHILL about your goals. You start spouting off mutual aid and bad things happen. So just be quiet and listen (this being quiet and listening is going to be your main skill to develop for a long while... so embrace it now).
You'll mostly find old boomers in retirement and religious folks with some politicians. They are charity folks. Great. But you're looking for folks that don't fit those molds. You're looking for the hippies, the socialists, the anarchists, the folks who have grown up poor and now have some means. "One of these things is not like the other". Find the anomalies and follow *their* lead.
You're going to sit in these charities for months while you meet people. Listen to "small talk". If it's related to religion, enjoy learning about your neighbors and what motivates them.
But if it's apparatus building and working with other groups, those are the conversations you want to join in on.
I'll say that again:
If the conversation is about WORKING WITH OTHER GROUPS on shared goals... get in on that. I don't care if its other charities. Get in on it.
After a while, you'll start meeting folks that are building real mutual aid. Learn the initiatives in your area and you'll find and settle into the groups that are doing work but not advertising on social media about it.
So.
Where to start?
Pick one of the following areas (there are more, but these are entry points):
- Food.
- Homeless outreach.
- Literacy / schooling.
- Political access and voting.
Just pick one area and find groups that do that thing. Don't worry about picking the right one. You're going to be moving around for a bit while you learn, so its fine. They all flow.
For Food: Find your local Food Bank and Food Pantries. Feeding America is a good start. Look there. Food Banks need lots of volunteers. Find a thing you can do and do it. Local churches act as Food Pantries. Go to those and help hand out food. If you're really lucky, find a place that makes and serves hot food. DO THAT!!! You'll get real close to mutual aid right away.
For Homeless outreach, look up local shelters - sure. Shelters tend TO ABSOLUTELY SUCK!!! So your mileage may vary. Look for places that gather up clothes and coats and hand them out. Look for places that serve the homeless communities and do that.
For Literacy and schooling, look up various elementary schools, libraries, and the same. After school programs for children. Boys and Girls clubs and the like as well. If you have kids, talk with your school counselors and ask them about the school programs that serve under-privileged families.
For political access and voting, don't join a political party. Instead find local orgs that focus on registering people for voting. The NAACP shines in this. You don't have to be black to join the NAACP. Local DSA (Democratic Socialists of America) are also a good place to look.
Great. So how do you find them?
A quick note on internet searches just to get it out of the way: Search for "city or town name" and:
- "food bank"
- "food pantry"
- "mutual aid"
- "after school programs"
- "voter advocacy"
- "homeless shelter"
- "women's shelter"
- "town resources"
- "library"
On that last note: The BEST PLACE TO START is your local library.
Just go hang out in the library for a while. They post A LOT of stuff for the town. Classes, resources, groups, events, etc. And by "post" I actually mean physical posts. Fliers on the wall and on physical "announcement boards". The librarians themselves are great. Just ask them. They're there to help. Literally.
In fact, don't approach looking for these groups as a volunteer (I hate that word). Don't approach them as a person looking to contribute and build.
Instead, approach these groups as a person who could benefit from them. So for food, ask the librarians to help you find "food pantries for distributions". The libraries are geared to help the community. So get all the info on that, and then flip it around and go to the food pantries and ask how you can help.
So. Internet search for groups is an okay start. But go to the local library and ask.
All you need is ONE WAY in. Once you find some sort of group doing something - anything... go there. Then meet the people. Find a stray community worker that also works there and learn from them. Then find out about the other groups that meet and are building and doing. Go to those in person meetings and spread from there.
(Ask questions in this thread and I and others will give you ideas.)
Also, if you need help finding those initial groups, DM me with your town name and I'll give you a list of groups that you can start with.
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Me
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Tinker ☀️
in reply to Me • • •@doublemonkeyfun - Yeah, non-profits and charities are similar in that. It's capitalism co-opting community movements.
The goals of that non-profit are good, as you've mentioned. But the apparatus of the non-profit and forcing it to find "funding" from capitalist sources are limited.
It makes sense that it has the problems its having.
My section where I say I'll work with some charities if it has an apparatus that helps with an immediate goal applies to non-profits as well.
I don't think of them as "sell-outs" - I just dont think that model works at all. The examples that you've given align with my understanding.
Tinker ☀️
Unknown parent • • •Aboodj_new
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Tinker ☀️
in reply to Aboodj_new • • •mask-wearing, socially distant entity
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Tinker ☀️
in reply to mask-wearing, socially distant entity • • •1dark1
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •What a generous essay! Thank you for sharing everything you know so far about mutual aid. Some really solid points about knowing the difference between charities and actually effective work one can do.
I donated a bunch of food to this great after-school center with all kinds of cool programs, overtly for all kids, essentially for underprivileged kids. I want them to have everything.
I’ve also started a couple local communities for like-minded people to get together over common interests, and they are really hard to get off the ground, so I appreciated the point of not being tempted to roll your own when you can be more effective going where people already are.
And omg so true about relying on the internet as little as possible. OPSEC more than ever before, people. Work locally for maximum impact.
💞 💞 💞
Tinker ☀️
in reply to 1dark1 • • •Michelle (she/her) 🇵🇷
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Tinker ☀️
in reply to Michelle (she/her) 🇵🇷 • • •Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱
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in reply to Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱 • • •Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Tinker ☀️
in reply to Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱 • • •@susankayequinn - That's awesome! I've pivoted from food banks into free fridges and community pantries as a distribution model. I'm also looking at expanding food production.
I'm trying to move from charity to mutual aid to post-scarcity food.
So Food Inputs (Production):
- Charity / Donation (eg Food Drives)
- Food Rescue from Restaurants, Grocery Stores, etc (relies on capitalistic initiatives though)
- Community Farms (Centralized Production)
- Community Gardens, Backyard Gardens, Indoor farming (Decentralized Production)
Food Outputs (Distribution)
- Centralized: Food Banks to Food Pantries
- Decentralized: Free Fridges / Community Pantries
- Peer-to-peer: Person to person exchange either through in person coordination or via apps like Olio
Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •yes 100%
The solarpunk discord has some free fridges & food rescue. Grow Pittsburgh is a whole operation that trains people to do community gardens. One of the mods is building an exchange system for labor/goods in the community.
Pittsburgh has like #1 abandoned lots in the country or something so Grounded does work trying to reclaim those for food/greenspace. Still very capitalistic tho.
Buy Nothing has food exchanges.
People just don't know this stuff EXISTS. It's very early days.
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Tinker ☀️
in reply to Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱 • • •Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •so we had that solarpunk zoom yesterday (about setting up a new community discord) and I told them obliquely about your post, that there were people looking for community and how it was hard for them to find other likeminded folks.
I'm still mulling your post and the difference between charity/non-profits and mutual aid... 💚
Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱
in reply to Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱 • • •& nonprofits, one of which sponsored a solarpunk Expo & then we were getting closer. The vibes were better. But still *networking* maybe? Working toward something that connected likeminded folks for support (emotional mutual aid LOL).
I'm literally tomorrow zooming w/2 other non-profit peeps to organize our solarpunk discord: still sussing it out but it's a way to connect, give info, I'm gonna maybe teach solarpunk classes to draw people in etc
I'm gonna think about this post tho...
Tinker ☀️
in reply to Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱 • • •@susankayequinn - That's amazing!!! Let me know what y'all come up with.
I've got a nascent solarpunk group in my town and we work with a lot of the mutualaid groups around us.
I'd like to connect with other similar groups and start networking our towns and cities. Share ideas and see what works, etc.
Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •oh cool! You know, I feel like this is just bubbling up everywhere at once. Feels invisible but people are just like OH HECK Imma just do this. It's beautiful.
I love the idea of having some higher level networking to see what works. Applications have to be super local cuz that's how that works but IDEAS should swish around so they can find where they'll work best.
I'll think on this thread and touch back with you as we progress. 💚 🌱
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in reply to Sue is Writing Solarpunk 🌞🌱 • • •Ramarro Marrone
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in reply to Wilf • • •Paul Sutton
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in reply to Paul Sutton • • •Paul Sutton
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Union Whore
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Thank you for this great post! I found my mutual aid group (a food not bombs style cooking group) over a signal chain message I got from a demo drumming group I was in at that time, which in turn I found at a demo when I danced to their music.
We cook (nearly) every Sunday for about 3 years now and bring the food to a place where many unhoused people hang out. We get our food half from dumpster diving, half we just buy it. For a time we got much food from a community farm, but at one point it was just too much work unfortunately. The money for buying food we get from donations when we cook for political events that align with how we want to build the world.
One of the biggest challenges is to close the gap between people who mostly cook and people who mostly eat. I don't mean that everyone who eats should cook, but the mostly cooking people and the mostly eating people are still mostly separate communities and one of them holds most of the power, which is a charity-like power dynamic. It is a slow process and it's starting to get better, but it's a lot of hard work to
... Show more...Thank you for this great post! I found my mutual aid group (a food not bombs style cooking group) over a signal chain message I got from a demo drumming group I was in at that time, which in turn I found at a demo when I danced to their music.
We cook (nearly) every Sunday for about 3 years now and bring the food to a place where many unhoused people hang out. We get our food half from dumpster diving, half we just buy it. For a time we got much food from a community farm, but at one point it was just too much work unfortunately. The money for buying food we get from donations when we cook for political events that align with how we want to build the world.
One of the biggest challenges is to close the gap between people who mostly cook and people who mostly eat. I don't mean that everyone who eats should cook, but the mostly cooking people and the mostly eating people are still mostly separate communities and one of them holds most of the power, which is a charity-like power dynamic. It is a slow process and it's starting to get better, but it's a lot of hard work to destroy those boundaries. We are now moving into a new, hopefully more accessible space.
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in reply to Union Whore • • •Union Whore
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Yes, I also do that
Also maybe I'm a bit of an edge case because I don't have much money and free food makes it a lot easier for me. Also I love good food and also love cooking. Those three things probably make this the perfect group for me.
It's very important for us to make the food nourishing as well as as tasty as possible. Half a year ago we got an industry oven for free (it was advertised for €50, but in the end they giftd it to us) from a restaurant that upgraded their oven and it was the best thing ever. We can now bake up to 100 portions at once, we already made Lasagna, Gratin, and various Cakes.
Especially now it is important that people in Vienna build cooking and food distribution groups since the local government abolished warm meals in homeless shelters some weeks ago. In the midfle of fucking Winter!!! It's fucking grim at the moment.
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in reply to Union Whore • • •Jdb_env
in reply to Union Whore • • •@unionwhore 1/2
Hello now you say that i have read a book, it was a sociologilal + photographical ( and political) work from a study on the greek big crisis since 2018, titled "un archipel de solidarités".
It shows how people resisted the crisis in strong solidarity. I strongly recommend this book, but if you can't read french here is what stroke me.
This man's experience, is important, imho.
He was taking care of people, looking for post date food in bakeries, restaurants.
Ma Quest
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Thanks, once again, for posting. Tagging this for next weekend's #SolarPunkSunday. Some very useful comments too.
#CommunityBuilding #Community #CommunityEngagement
wauz ワウズ
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •SlightlyCyberpunk
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •It varies by region and by time but you'll often find groups that are pretty insular and that isn't where you want to be if you have other options. You'll get government agencies that don't want to work with community groups, churches that won't work with anyone outside their faith, socialists that won't work with anyone who hasn't memorized enough Marx...so look for the flyers that have ten different logos on them, go to the street festivals and find the booths that don't quite seem to fit in, because those are the people actively trying to build a broader community. They'll be much more willing to answer questions and connect you to the right people.
You can also often just find and plug in to mutual aid groups directly. At least around here you can find Food not Bombs on Facebook, distributing food at the same time and place every week where they've been for years. (They haven't made feeding people illegal yet here...) Not every mutual aid action can be that public, but some often can, and that's a great place to start too.
Aerin
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in reply to Aerin • • •Dan
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •thank you for this!! a few additions (it honestly feels like a cheat code):
bikeshops are chockablock with the most radical people you've ever met that have a sense of humor
tool libraries are like makerspaces for regular folks that aren't looking for a 3d printer/CNC timeshare
mask-blocs are a great way to find covid-conscious folks and events in your area
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Dan
in reply to Dan • • •all of these allow for covid-safer ways to contribute. my local bike co-op & tool library do repair clinics. when it's warm they're outdoors and you can contribute at any skill level.
i have a sewing machine, hand tools, and a big powerbank, so i end up fixing chains, flats, tuning up derailleurs, mending clothes, and hemming pants.
mask-blocs always need help distributing supplies and are your ticket to finding other people with similar concerns, as well as disability-aware friends
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Tinker ☀️
in reply to Dan • • •Dan
Unknown parent • • •@tomjennings bikes have been an enabling technology for societal improvement for very many years, from the early enablement of feminism to mobility and independence in rural areas to a sticking point in reparations for ww2
dirkdeklein.net/2018/03/26/giv…
“Give Us Your Bicycle or Die.” The Story of the Bicycles and World War II in the Netherlands.
dirkdeklein (History of Sorts)Kropotkinson (we are all 🇵🇸)
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •What's missing from this discussion the most I think is labor unions. They are a source of power one shouldn't ignore. Especially since unions have been some of the more important non-state actors to combat fascism throughout history.
Unions also give you something you have in common: your workplace or your trade.
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Tinker ☀️
in reply to Kropotkinson (we are all 🇵🇸) • • •@amici - Agreed. From a "beginner" standpoint, though, you either know about your union or you don't.
That post is really geared towards people new to the concept as a whole and are looking to join something already in existence. If they have a union at their place of work, they'll know about it and how to join it. If they don't, they'll generally have to organize and create one themselves, which is outside the scope of that post.
That said. Yes. Unions are key and important part of mutual aid. Thank you for highlighting that.
deer witch
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Genuine: How does this adapt for disabled people with chronic fatigue & can’t get out of the house easily?
How can we let irl mutual aid groups know we exist & be a part of them?
For folks w/ my conditions I’m lucky that I can occasionally leave the house. I’ve tried to sooooo-slowly build community at my zen Buddhist center. Ppl are kind & accommodating when I can make it there physically, but that’s <1/mo these days. I also talk to a librarian who wears an N95 for 5 minutes once/2mo.
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Emma
in reply to deer witch • • •A few possible ideas that may or may not work for your specific situation, take them if they sound helpful or feel free to disregard if not applicable:
- if your local community has a mask bloc or other community group that distributes supplies like masks/air purifiers/etc, those groups are often much more disability-aware than others
- receiving aid is also a part of being involved in mutual aid! If there are things that groups in your area provide that would help with any of the impacts of your disability (e.g. grocery deliveries, etc), being on the receiving side rather than the volunteering side can be a way to still build bonds with the community
- some groups have a need for people in remote communication/organization/etc roles. For example, I volunteer with a food distro that has people who call or text people receiving food to confirm if they need a delivery that week, or text drivers to let them know which addresses they're delivering to, or post to a WhatsApp thread of volunteers asking who's available on a specific day to pick up donated food. So looki
... Show more...A few possible ideas that may or may not work for your specific situation, take them if they sound helpful or feel free to disregard if not applicable:
- if your local community has a mask bloc or other community group that distributes supplies like masks/air purifiers/etc, those groups are often much more disability-aware than others
- receiving aid is also a part of being involved in mutual aid! If there are things that groups in your area provide that would help with any of the impacts of your disability (e.g. grocery deliveries, etc), being on the receiving side rather than the volunteering side can be a way to still build bonds with the community
- some groups have a need for people in remote communication/organization/etc roles. For example, I volunteer with a food distro that has people who call or text people receiving food to confirm if they need a delivery that week, or text drivers to let them know which addresses they're delivering to, or post to a WhatsApp thread of volunteers asking who's available on a specific day to pick up donated food. So looking for volunteer tasks that can be done remotely and on a flexible schedule could be one way to get involved. Another one I can think of is writing letters to people in prison, there are a number of anticarceral mutual aid groups that do things like that
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in reply to deer witch • • •@moss - This is such a key question and a big part of mutual aid... key part on the mutual. You should be able to GET help as well as RECEIVE help.
@emma@fedi.emmjuettner.com has already answered and I'll pitch in my thoughts.
Their first point stands and I'll repeat for emphasis. See what exists that YOU can benefit from. And utilize it. Utilizing mutual aid means you can gain more spoons and be better rested, healed, and supported long term. It's the whole point of mutual aid. So be on the receiving end of it.
In America, we're pushed this cult of individualism which intentionally removes us from community. That means we lose our economies of scale and support networks. Which then, intentionally, means we're atomized and HAVE TO get all of our needs met through corporations.
So find ways to get your needs met without having to lose your money to corps.
Find ways to USE mutual aid.
The second point that Emma makes, which I'll add onto (again for emphasis) i
... Show more...@moss - This is such a key question and a big part of mutual aid... key part on the mutual. You should be able to GET help as well as RECEIVE help.
@emma@fedi.emmjuettner.com has already answered and I'll pitch in my thoughts.
Their first point stands and I'll repeat for emphasis. See what exists that YOU can benefit from. And utilize it. Utilizing mutual aid means you can gain more spoons and be better rested, healed, and supported long term. It's the whole point of mutual aid. So be on the receiving end of it.
In America, we're pushed this cult of individualism which intentionally removes us from community. That means we lose our economies of scale and support networks. Which then, intentionally, means we're atomized and HAVE TO get all of our needs met through corporations.
So find ways to get your needs met without having to lose your money to corps.
Find ways to USE mutual aid.
The second point that Emma makes, which I'll add onto (again for emphasis) is, there is SO much to do that is within your abilities. We have one person in our group that only does social media. They take pictures posted onto our chat and then posts them up onto the social media feeds. That's amazing. We have someone else who is going through national chains and seeing if they have food rescue programs and then applying to them. She does this as she has time. It greatly helps.
I'll finish with this: DONT go outside your comfort zone.
I'll say that again. Only do what you are ABLE to do. And only do what you have energy to do.
If you do one tiny thing a month... and take a break for three months. That's huge.
Find something that you can do that doesn't take up too much spoons and that you are able to do withOUT consistency and still help.
Think "project" based, not time based. Find a small easily-for-you-to-complete project that can be done within a reasonable amount of time (reasonable being your personal definition). And then do it as, and only as, you are able.
You'd be damned surprised how much you can accomplish in this way.
We don't want perfection.
We don't want highest utilization and peak efficienty.
We want you to be fulfilled and give and receive as you are able and as you need.
#solarPunk #mutualAid
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K-ZO da Snowman
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Tinker ☀️
in reply to K-ZO da Snowman • • •deer witch
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •@fedi.emmjuettner.com Thank you so much
At first I was like “what would I get aid for?” bc I feel privileged to be able to pay house cleaners 1x 2wk for what I can’t do, or scrape together for delivery from farmers market & restos. I tell others they deserve more than to survive, I needed the nudge too
If I was less worried abt food prep or home care—or those things could be more ethical, frequent, or low spoon I cld redistro my spoons/$ to more meaningful places too
Tinker ☀️
in reply to deer witch • • •🧙🏽♀️Nýktıméηı (she, her)
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •@moss
I was born during 1950s Jim Crow, my grandparents, born from 1900 to 1910, believed in cooperative mutualism, like Kropotkin described.
Today, I am often attacked personally for valuing mutual aid as working together for a shared common good, cooperating for food, for housing, for medical care.
Nowhere does that remotely suggest we shouldn't help others with indivudual cricumstances, it just means mutual aid must have a broader definition than crowdfunded self-interest.
Dan Fixes Coin-Ops
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Jessamyn
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •I am a small town anarchist librarian and I appreciate the library shout-out! We have a community fridge and sometimes just talking about it on the usual platforms can help bring resources (food) to people who need it.
One thing I tell people is just to find a way to meet with people f2f for basically anything (board games, supper club, walking group, dog playtime). Once you're there ask "How can we help with X?" and then see if you can seek out resources or folx who are working on X.
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in reply to Jessamyn • • •Shannon Clark
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in reply to Shannon Clark • • •Shannon Clark
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in reply to Shannon Clark • • •DuplexMismatch
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Mark Hughes
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •I recently moved from a UK city to a tiny rural village, via a few years on a canal boat.
I'm not naturally social so for years most has been online, but always also with one or two neighbours and acquaintances. On occasions I "looked".
Until now. I wasn't so much looking but hoping *this time* I might make more local friends, but wasn't expecting it.
I've been so welcomed in this village. It feels like going back in time.
Just by being here out & about with my dog.
It still exists.
Tinker ☀️
in reply to Mark Hughes • • •kasdeya
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •the way this post is written, it sounds like mutual aid groups are some kind of underground resistance movement that the cops are actively trying to infiltrate and shut down. is that really how it is? why would the cops even care that much, and what crime(s) could a mutual aid group be accused of breaking anyway?
what would happen if I just volunteered at a charity and was completely open and honest about being interested in mutual aid and about not being a Christian? I hate lying or misleading people
Tinker ☀️
in reply to kasdeya • • •@kasdeya - Coming back to this thread, sorry for the late response.
But yeah! Right?! So two examples, one historical and another more recent.
When the Black Panthers started up a mutual aid program to feed school children free breakfast, they put all the food in a local church to prepare for the next day. The local police went into the church and urinated on all the food in an attempt to destroy the program.
More recently, we see police coming down hard on mutual aid groups trying to feed the hungry. Houston Food Not Bombs was getting a ticket EACH TIME they fed people. They were in the upper hundreds of tickets last I checked.
Long and short, if your mutual aid group is undercutting the social order (which is where we all individually get our resources from corporations), then the local town and police may step in.
That said, you, personally, can join a charity group and feed people. Certainly. Charity groups don't solve the underlying *reason* why hunger (or whatever else they're serving) exists in the first place, but they can help people in the immediacy. So go for it.
Three plus or minus five
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •EverydayHuman(I0)
in reply to Tinker ☀️ • • •Looks like you have been busy. I’m slowly climbing out of the winter funk. I wanted to say hello and thank you for being you! The world is a better place with you in it!