Real grassroots reform happens when small groups of people get together to think about how to become involved in the change they want to see. That thinking together, that critical dialogue then emerges into organic praxis. Reform happens best when it bubbles out of the cafes and living rooms out into the streets. What we need now is a model of civic agency in these politically dangerous times that forefronts the localized collective. This model needs to include the reclaiming of public space; it needs to have a critical political education, opportunities for dialogue and leadership development, and, most importantly, opportunities for real and active involvement in the immediacy of civil life.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Civic Agency in Politically Dangerous Times
Real grassroots reform happens when small groups of people get together to think about how to become involved in the change they want to see. That thinking together, that critical dialogue then emerges into organic praxis. Reform happens best when it bubbles out of the cafes and living rooms out into the streets. What we need now is a model of civic agency in these politically dangerous times that forefronts the localized collective. This model needs to include the reclaiming of public space; it needs to have a critical political education, opportunities for dialogue and leadership development, and, most importantly, opportunities for real and active involvement in the immediacy of civil life.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
What We Really Want

I haven't forgotten the Bush years; the two-termed nightmare with its lies, its invasion, its economy at a grounded halt; the scorn of the world. How can we compare our problems now to our worst fears at the end of 2007? There's no way that we can go back there again. The only direction is forward, and we have the president to lead us. I am not daunted, I have no second thoughts, and my hope burns just as bright as the night we all cried when we made history. Change is painful, but the status quo is just plain lethal.
We must continue in our collective struggle. Hope is not short of will. We’ve only begun to fight. Our cause is just; a better world filled with more peace, more freedom and more light; healthier children with better opportunities to learn and grow; decent and plentiful jobs with livable wages; clean air, civil liberties. Human dignity and justice are not political terms, or at least they shouldn’t be. What we want is what everyone wants; only we want it for everyone.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
The Qualities of Youth
"This world demands the qualities of youth: not a time of life but a state of mind, a temper of the will, a quality of the imagination, a predominance of courage over timidity, of the appetite for adventure over the love of ease."- RFK
When I think about the change we need, what I think about most is the changes we must demand from ourselves. Radical and substantive changes that allow us to retain these qualities of the young. It will be our courage, our imagination, and our relentless pursuit of dignity and justice for all that will bring about the changes we want to see in others, in our schools, in our government and political institutions, and in the world at large.
When I think about the change we need, what I think about most is the changes we must demand from ourselves. Radical and substantive changes that allow us to retain these qualities of the young. It will be our courage, our imagination, and our relentless pursuit of dignity and justice for all that will bring about the changes we want to see in others, in our schools, in our government and political institutions, and in the world at large.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
In Solidarity
What does it mean to stand in solidarity with others? What does it mean to act in solidarity with them? How close is too close? Too overwhelming, too controlling? How far away is too distant, too removed, too out of touch? How do we balance between our isolationist and our interventionist tendencies? These are the questions I ponder when a text message seems too little and a plane ride maybe too much. I hope that we stay in this struggle for the long haul and we do everything in our power to help the most people possible to live lives of decency, dignity, and hope without doing too much or inserting our agenda. In the end though, I’d rather do too much and be asked to step aside than do too little and wonder who was asking when I was too far away to hear or too unconcerned to listen. Real transformation takes sustained engagement; it requires a consistent and unwavering solidarity, with a goal to develop sustainability. But if we leave when the cameras leave, we’ve done neither.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010
My Track Record is My Life!

Yes I am an outsider! All of these years I have been with you; in classrooms, in the streets, in community centers working for social justice. I've been teaching, writing, listening, marching, advocating, strategizing for ways to make this world a better place. My track record is a lifetime dedicated to change, not politics. This work, this struggle is all I have known, it is all I have ever wanted to do. I've no desire to become a politician. What I want is to be a representative of the people, with the people, for the people.
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