Distributed as in non centralized. Many people feel like there is nothing they can do to contribute to meaningful change, especially with how spread out Americans are, but surely there has got to be something.

Using the trend of blocking traffic as an example, I think a coordinated effort to not just block a highway in one city, but to block state routes and other arteries in many places would be more effective. Instead of one city having bad traffic for a day, it would be many towns and it would be harder to dismiss as a local problem if people across the states are engaging.

  • LesserAbe@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Something I liked about the response to LA was people showing up at hotels where occupiers were staying and driving them out. There’s a sort of group denunciation happening, and then also it just makes it hard to do the work - they don’t have enough sleep, they have to travel farther to the intended area of action.

    What about other ways to foul logistics? And what are other ways to shame/demoralize people supporting the regime? Totalitarians require everyday people to carry out their orders. The more people we peel away or disillusion the less control a totalitarian can exert.

    • ItemWrongStory@midwest.socialOP
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      4 hours ago

      Not civil disobedience, but I agree. Unfortunately creating communities is probably a bigger ask than getting arrested in a protest.

    • _cryptagion [he/him]@anarchist.nexus
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      People are already doing that. Birth rates globally have been trending downwards for decades, but in the US they’ve been below replacement for over fifty years.

      It’s not as bad as someplace like South Korea, which is already doomed and past the point of no return, but it’s still not great, and we’re headed towards the same end if we don’t turn things around very soon.

    • 𝕛𝕨𝕞-𝕕𝕖𝕧@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 hours ago
      1. reproduction isn’t a choice for some people. that’s fucked up but it’s cold & hard reality.

      2. this just increases the ratio of parents in the next generation that are shitty people, effectively strengthening fascist movements by increasing the proportionment of lil hitlers vs everyone else in the kindergarten class.

      i think this strategy is highly problematic if you think about it for literally even just a second, and i say that as someone who would never voluntarily have kids.

      • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        isn’t a choice for some people

        Previous poster isn’t talking about those people; but about people who do have a choice and why they should decline.

        this just increases the ratio of parents in the next generation that are shitty people

        Correct. But that doesn’t justify dropping a child into the dumpsterfire we’re turning our planet into just so they can serve as a footsoldier in the fight against it. Children aren’t sacrificial lambs.

        effectively strengthening fascist movements by increasing the proportionment of lil hitlers vs everyone else in the kindergarten class.

        What’s to say good parenting can combat that to enough of an extent to actually make a difference? It’s not rare for two genuinely good people to produce a little hellspawn that grows up to be a lil hitler despite their parent’s best efforts. Good parenting is certainly an important factor, but that’s far from a guarantee your kid will do good with their lives. They could just as well be the next actual Hitler.

        We can’t outbreed stupid or evil. If abstaining from having a kid for the sake of protecting that kid from an increasingly dire hellscape is some kind of failure to delay humanity’s downfall, then humanity isn’t something that should be preserved.

    • chaospatterns@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      It has to be the employees not the state because companies withhold it and remit directly to the IRS. Not saying you should do this, but if you increase your withholdings then it won’t go to the IRS. Though you will owe it in April and may have to pay penalties for underwitholding.

  • pleasestopasking@reddthat.com
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    8 hours ago

    Opting out of consumerism. Not that it’s legal disobedience, but it’s certainly social disobedience that would get the attention of and take power from the corporations who control our politicians. Yes we can’t stop buying everything completely, going to a barter system for everything is not feasible. But we can at least stop buying so much crap.

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Yep

      Modern American economy doesn’t give a shit about labor strikes.

      But a consumer strike?

      Everyone literally cutting out all extraneous purchases and cancelling every subscription except utilities…

      That would get the wealthy’s attention.

      • StrawberryPigtails@lemmy.sdf.org
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        5 hours ago

        Can’t speak for your household, but ours is already there, by necessity. Shit’s gotten too damned expensive. At this point we’re buying only what we actually need with an eye on how to make it last as long as possible. And me and my wife make $140k combined.

    • ItemWrongStory@midwest.socialOP
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      7 hours ago

      That’s true, but at the same time, aren’t most people already boycotting what they can? I think anyone who feels bad about supporting shitty companies are already avoiding them when they can, and if they can’t, well there isn’t much more to do until we hit mutual aid networks.

      • pleasestopasking@reddthat.com
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        I’m not talking about boycotting shitty companies, though. Just like, boycotting capitalism. To the degree that’s even possible. We need food, shelter, and utilities.

        But clothes? Repair, swap, thrift.

        Entertainment? Cancel streaming services, stop going out to movies. Don’t use social media sites that make money by showing you ads. Play cards or board games, read or listen to books from the library. Trade things with friends when you get bored of what you have instead of just buying new stuff. Touch grass.

        I’m not saying I do all of this stuff or that it would be easy, but lots of people doing this consistently would make a much bigger difference than boycotting shitty companies piecemeal.

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        You need to extricate yourself from your bubble if you think American’s are meaningfully boycotting anything.

        • ItemWrongStory@midwest.socialOP
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          Well, that’s part of my point. Everyone who stopped eating at Chick Fil A stopped 10+ years ago, everyone else doesn’t care. Anyone willing to boycott is already boycotting, and they can’t boycott any harder until we have a method of acquiring necessities from somewhere else.

          • shalafi@lemmy.world
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            4 hours ago

            Ah! Perfect example as I won’t touch Chick Fil A. :)

            So yes, those who care and are politically aware are boycotting what they can, but the vast majority of Americans neither care or are aware.

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            5 hours ago

            I don’t think there’s some fraction of people who are ethically driven, and the rest don’t care. Everyone sits on multiple spectra for what they care about, and where their thresholds for acting are. Most people are under the pump for cost of living, and that’s pretty dominant when you’re on the verge of poverty. Get those people a bit more stability, and they’ll have more capacity to care about broader ethical ssues…

            • ItemWrongStory@midwest.socialOP
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              Everyone sits on multiple spectra for what they care about, and where their thresholds for acting are

              Right, so what would push people over that threshold now?

              • naught101@lemmy.world
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                4 hours ago
                1. Its different for everyone, and there will usually be multiple influencing factors, not just one big one, but
                2. I already pointed out one big one in my last sentence.
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      7 hours ago

      Worked against Bud Light and Cracker Barrel. Not sure how effective it is elsewhere. Maybe Target?

    • ItemWrongStory@midwest.socialOP
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      6 hours ago

      Not against the idea in spirit, but that’s not distributed and not feasible for many people who live far from corporate HQs.

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        5 hours ago

        Eh? Corporate HQs are all in city centres, and the vast majority of people live in cities…

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    7 hours ago

    I have been fantasizing about figuring out where epstien is buried, digging his evil ass up and catapulting his corpse onto the white house lawn.

    That would force them to release the files. It is so outrageous that it would get national attention, and people would support it because RELEASE THE FUCKING EPSTIEN FILES.

  • blarghly@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Make friends with random people, especially conservatives.

    Make lots of money, which can be used for many useful things.

    Buy real estate in your communtity.

    Start a business in your community.

    Develop personal relationships with your elected officials or other powerful people.

    Get elected to positions of power, even if just a school board member or neighborhood council representitive.