sathari: (Waiting for ourselves)
We're gonna do this. ([personal profile] sathari) wrote in [community profile] thisfinecrew2017-01-07 11:47 pm
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Brainstorming post

In addition to the master post of ideas and suggestions, on the encouragement of one of our wonderful mods [personal profile] tassosss, I'm offering up a brainstorming post for batting ideas back and forth--- things we've done that seem to be effective, ideas we have, especially for making activism easier in general... and, because of the fannish spirit of this comm, any ideas for activism/tools/etc. that you've gotten from fiction and other media? Or for that matter any stories/art/music/other creations that inspire and support your activism that you want to share?
teaotter: (Default)

Re: Activist tools idea from the Vorkosigan Saga

[personal profile] teaotter 2017-01-08 06:38 am (UTC)(link)
This sounds like the sort of project that would work well in GIS software -- something that's made to take a giant database of data and create maps with different colors based on that data.

I don't know where you'd get the data from, though I assume that someone out there has it. I guess you could base it on voting records...
tanaqui: Illumiinated letter T (Default)

Re: Activist tools idea from the Vorkosigan Saga

[personal profile] tanaqui 2017-01-08 07:31 am (UTC)(link)
We did a post a while back on FiveThityEight's analysis of which senators are most likely to cross party lines, and the FiveThirtyEight post links to OntheIssues.org, a site which tracks candidates' positions. You'd have to dig a bit, but it looks like the data is out there for a lot of major issues.
Edited 2017-01-08 07:46 (UTC)
teaotter: (Default)

[personal profile] teaotter 2017-01-08 06:34 am (UTC)(link)
It's not fannish, but I recommend setting up a google alert on all your reps, especially if they're Republicans.

I mentioned this elsewhere, but I've come to the conclusion that some reps will toss an opinion to the media -- that they're unhappy about the way a bill is put together, for example -- as a way of floating an idea past their constituents and seeing if those voters care enough to yell about it. So finding out what your reps are talking about can give you an idea of what issues they're already willing to move on.

And heck, even if they're being stubborn -- if every time they speak up for something, they get called, then they know their voters are paying attention.

Right now, pretty much every single member of the House is freaking out over the last election and what it means for them. They were expecting a completely different outcome, and their assumptions about how to get re-elected look shaky. There are a million surveys being done right now, in both red and blue districts, trying to figure out what voters "really" want. So it's a great time to tell them, in no uncertain terms, loudly and often.
tassosss: Shen Wei Zhao Yunlan Era (Default)

[personal profile] tassosss 2017-01-10 03:36 am (UTC)(link)
Maybe one thing we could do is put each state up for claiming (people could take their own, or another if there's multis) and then have that person/group track google alerts, webpages, press releases, etc and once a month put up an update to the comm?

... the more I think about this, the more I feel like we're going to be reproudicing a secondhand news room, which isn't necessarily a bad model. If folks claim a topic like healthcare or immigration they can track the reporters and organizations who are doing the most useful coverage on where to put pressure in congress and we can ask the folks on the comm (or in our own journals) in those states to make the call.

We could even have people sign up for a topic to watch by month like a reccing comm.
executrix: (actualshepherd)

[personal profile] executrix 2017-01-10 02:20 pm (UTC)(link)
I bought a bunch of pre-stamped postcards at the Post Office, addressed them to my representative (and left some blank for senators and local officials) and stuck on some of the mailing labels I get for being on every sucker list in America. Then, when I want to express an opinion, I just grab one and write "Please vote for Bill because" or "Thank you for voting for Bill because"--waiting for my computer to warm up is a good time for this, or as soon as I see something on the news.
watersword: Keira Knightley, in Pride and Prejudice (2007), turning her head away from the viewer, the word "elizabeth" written near (Default)

[personal profile] watersword 2017-01-10 06:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Holy crap this is a GENIUS idea.
executrix: (blakeposter)

[personal profile] executrix 2017-01-08 05:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Even in light of how it turned out, I would definitely carry a Freedom Party banner and wear Freedom Party colors at demonstrations, but TPTB declined to provide us with information about what they are. (The logo for the show depicts the Federation logo, which in this case is the Bad Guys, although Servalan dresses much better than Trump.)
executrix: (save kill)

[personal profile] executrix 2017-01-09 04:10 am (UTC)(link)
Blakes7. It's an awesome show, it's about the Worst Rebels Ever completely failing to overthrow the Evil Empire. That's Blake and Avon in the icon.
tielan: (AVG - agents)

[personal profile] tielan 2017-01-09 10:01 am (UTC)(link)
I'm going to offer to make some fandom badges for the future. I'm not a US citizen, but I'd like to help however possible.
tielan: aussie flag background with 'aussie aussie aussie' overlay (aussie aussie aussie)

[personal profile] tielan 2017-01-10 09:25 pm (UTC)(link)
An Australian friend of mine said that a (one-time) mutual friend sniped at her social media that other countries could just shut up about the US Election because it didn't pertain to them.

The irony? She's UK born who got American citizenship through her marriage to a US citizen. She should know that the most televised politics in the world will bloody well affect the world!

I'm here because I have US friends who will be negatively impacted by the current administration, and not all of them have the spoons or time to act. (And because I'm hoping that seeing how you guys organise yourself here might help with ideas on how to mobilise Australian politics so that we don't end up following in your footsteps. (I think it's less likely due to mandatory voting, but I'd rather do too much and not need it, than have to fight a rearguard action on the back foot.)
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)

[personal profile] redbird 2017-01-10 06:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you. A bunch of Americans are trying to screw the rest of us Americans, and the rest of the world, so this is not just an American fight.
tielan: aussie flag background with 'aussie aussie aussie' overlay (aussie aussie aussie)

[personal profile] tielan 2017-01-10 09:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Most internationals who are looking at this comm understand pretty well that it's not all of America, even when we rant about "stupid Americans, what have you done?" (There's an automatic #notallAmericans clause in there, rather like any statement to which some dudebro is going to add #notallmen. If it's not your fault - ie. you voted for Hillary and the Dems - then the disclaimer doesn't apply.)

And as I said above: your politics and society is the most televised and broadcast in the world. Chances are, we'll know more about your politics and your general society than we'd know about the pockets of our own cultures. That makes you extremely influential, and when your president and government normalises such anti-humanitarian behaviour against its own citizens, it affects everyone.