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I also support Deep Organizing, see hereherehereherehere and here also see here for background and how to do that . Also see this post for tangible steps we can take toward building a better tomorrow. This post is  primer on political strategy, which uses the great example of MLK Jr and African Americans during the Civil Rights movement (and a less SJW way to boycott too) Also something like this 

Since an America socialistic Revolution is very likely not happening within the near future, I tepidly give extremely cautious and unenthused support to some Squad members who are populists (like AOC unironically)

AOC and her Squad populists literally can’t enact our Left wing policies /non Liberal 2.0 policies herself themselves since AOC and her populist Squadron are working in a system stacked against NON Liberal 2.0ers (AOC teeters on Liberal 2.0 and non Liberal 2.0 left). 

I realize that Republicans and corporate Democrats are far worse on imperialism than progressives like AOC and the Squad populists. I agree with what AOC said here as that is a fair and reasonable reason on why Democrats protest like they do recently without caring about optics. AOC should be more constituent with that type of thinking though

AOC and the Squad populists are not perfect, but they’re the best types of non Liberal 2.0 politicians to the left of Joe Manchin and Krysten Sinema and most practical politicians between both parties that we can use to defeat Liberalism 2.0 now and usher in a socialistic revolution. 

AOC wants to reform the Democrats to make them go left of Liberalism 2.0 which is great with the added bonus of the Democrats shedding themselves of Liberalism 2.0 , Capitalism and corporatist fascism

For example while working as a bartender, she auditioned with Justice Democrats (.com) when she heard that a new PAC, started after his failed 2016 Presidential run by disgruntled Bernie Sanders campaign staffers and leaders, who were looking for people to “audition” as candidates to run against incumbents for Congressional seats, with the goal of the take over of Congress by Progressives committed to the JD/BNC platform.

The Justice Democrats’ (JD) purpose is the takeover of the Democratic Party,  because in order to save the soul of the Democratic Party the Justice Democrats will board the Democratic Party ship and take it over. (This is the proper definition of “mutiny”) 

Cenk Uygur also said that the Justice Democrats will run strong progressives (hopefully non Liberal 2.0 ones only) from now on and they will be the new wing of the Democratic Party. Maybe this can include getting an intellectual fringe to seize key positions of authority and power within the Democrat Party and eventually bring large numbers of people around (similar to what the Koch brothers did with their pro-business libertarianism)

This political ideology was greatly influenced by Subhas Chandra Bose who in the 1930s advocated a aggressive revolution against the British Empire to gain total independence for India.

From this article by Jacobin with Dr Cornel West which is overall agree with:

DANIEL DENVIR

There will be a lot of pressure for the Left — especially community-based nonprofit organizations and the political wings of organized labor — to help prop up an ailing and weak Biden administration. How should we on the Left position ourselves for a likely lame duck hobbled by a Republican Senate? My gut sense is that we need a strategy, but that also a big part of the Left’s job is going to be responding to crises — like the possibility of mass uprising that we can’t entirely anticipate. Mass uprisings that, given recent history, seem likely to occur.

CORNEL WEST

Mm-hmm. Yeah, you see, I think that we have to engage in a very subtle dance between the inside and outside. We’ve got to get concessions, because people are starving, people are unemployed, people want to gain access to health care and educate their precious kids. So we’ve got to get concessions from the rotten neoliberal rule. Because it was everyday people who pushed them over, it’s everyday people who stopped the march against fascism. Biden didn’t stop it; it was the everyday people who pushed him over, disproportionately, working people, and black, and brown, and progressive middle class. Those are the ones who pushed Biden over. And, of course, black women and the black men played an important role, disproportionately.

But, see, that’s just the inside. But if we bank on the inside, we’re headed toward even deeper disappointment. The outside is not just protest, hitting the streets and going to jail. It’s the creation of — or the revitalization of — left institutions, from political parties, to pre-party formations, civic organizations to music groups to athletes and entertainers.

It’s everyday people who stopped the march against fascism. Biden didn’t stop it; it was the everyday people who pushed him over.

And it can’t just be symbolic protests, it must provide resources for Left institutions and structures. And that’s not on the inside, that’s on the outside — to make sure that they don’t get co-opted, that they don’t get diluted and seduced into the glitz of the establishment, of the status quo. And I think we have to make it a major, a major priority. We really do. I mean, this could be, you know, the last stand of the neoliberal elites, as it were.

And if we can’t seize this moment to provide a strong credible option and alternative to our fellow citizens — let alone the world — there will be extinction at the international level, self-destruction at the domestic level, and we’ll all go under. And that’s what it is to live at this particular historical moment. It’s an unprecedented moment. It’s a moment of unbelievable suffering, and misery, and despair, and disappointment. But it can also be a moment of tremendous breakthrough, and joy, and resilience, and resistance. And in the end, a moment demanding the kind of fundamental change required in order for all of us here and abroad to live lives of decency and dignity.

DANIEL DENVIR

That does prompt one follow-up. I think we often take it for granted that people know what we’re talking about when we talk about organizing. But what is it to organize, to be organized, to be an organizer, to build real left organizations? Because what I find is that our society, the system we live under, disorganizes us. And by no means do people necessarily know what you’re talking when you’re initially trying to organize them, and organize them into becoming organizers.


CORNEL WEST

I mean, I could give my own experience with the prisons, where . . . there was a while where I was banned because I was too radical. And so I would go in on Sunday mornings, and the brothers themselves would organize in such a way that our teaching could still go on under the aegis of church services. So there’s a tremendous capacity of ordinary people to engage in their own forms of organizing, if they are so moved. If they are so motivated. If they see that there are real possibilities that they themselves had not even imagined, because they hadn’t yet come together. And so that’s a very small, small, narrow example. But it’s an important one, because the self-organization of everyday people is something that has yet to be fundamentally tested. This is why the arts are so very important, man.


The self-organization of everyday people is something that has yet to be fundamentally tested.

See, James Brown’s band was the self-organization of oppressed, hated, black poor and working-class people that generated levels of beauty that the whole world had to recognize. That’s true for The Temptations, it’s true for The Emotions, it’s true for Curtis Mayfield’s band. See, it’s in the arts that you get people who have been spit on, who organize themselves, sustain themselves year after year with hardly no money and produce things that take us to places we know not of. And that’s just one small little example of the tremendous genius and talent of so-called everyday people. That’s what democracy’s all about. That’s a threat. That’s why they try to co-opt the music, co-opt the entertainers, co-opt the artists. What does art and music do? Bring folks together in a lot of different ways, man.


A Jewish brother in Minnesota, he hears the blues. I’m going to change my name, I’m not Robert Zimmerman no more, I’m Bob Dylan, god dang it. When you see what I got to say, my song and my voice over against the black blues folk from Mississippi, and New York, and Chicago and so forth, going to be part of that cacophony.


And that’s part of the crucial artistic and cultural expression of everyday people, that goes hand in hand with the larger collective expression of everyday people. And in that sense, you know, I think that’s one of the real moments in the incubation and possibility of unleashing radical democratic sensibility. Raising voices . . . Ordinary people raise their voices, brother. They’re not going to choose poverty. They’re not going to choose getting mistreated at the workplace by the bosses. The women aren’t going to choose being manipulated by men. The gay brothers and lesbian sisters, they’re not going to choose being dishonored by the straights. The trans going to walk around with their backs straight, with smiles on they faces, with their own style. And we ain’t even got to the global thing yet.


They ain’t going to be putting up with no neocolonial rules. No neocolonial regimes, mm-mm. Unleash that possibility.

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