This entry was edited (5 days ago)
in reply to Tinker ☀️

in canada, non profits have work in the areas you are discussing. I have work at one site, a job that is difficult to fill at a site that struggles with hiring. Yes non profits can be considered "sell outs", compromising values for funding, but they do provide for people struggling. I cook 2 days a week. In 4 years this building has been open, they have only had one other person cook my shifts, and only for 5 months. The site i work at hasn't had a janitor in over two years. The people who live there used to be homeless and many of them struggle with substance use/self medication. Another option for joining in.
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.

@Me
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.

💞 💞 💞

in reply to Tinker ☀️

for me, when I moved there 3 years ago, it was *food* — it was the pandemic and I was just really drawn to making sure people could EAT. Food banks, community gardens, garden training, farm share, food co-ops... it took me a minute to work into it but as you say, they're all connected. My fav time of year is when I can pick up from farm share and drop half at the food bank. It's more "charity" I guess but I can afford it. And it connected me to a TON of b-corps...
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

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.

Tinker ☀️ reshared this.

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...

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.

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. 💚 🌱

Tinker ☀️ reshared this.

in reply to Tinker ☀️

That all sounds great. I suggest another area to start: If you are working, your workplace is a good spot. The advantage of your workplace is that you are already there and that your workplace's dependence on its workers gives you special power. I invite people to contact me for training and literature on organizing the workplace. Many of the methods also apply in other sorts of organizing, so I invite you to contact me even if it is not for workplace organizing.
in reply to Tinker ☀️

Tinker ☀️ reshared this.

in reply to Tinker ☀️

Yes, I also do that :blobcat_sipsmile: 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.

Tinker ☀️ reshared this.

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.