I feel like I should say
Aug. 16th, 2017 12:02 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
U.S. politics has (have?) washed over my head again, as it does periodically, rising from the baseline fear and disappointment that mounted during election season and spiked in November.
I don't talk about it much here. This blog, and
bironicwastaken, are my dedicated fannish spaces online. It looks like we all understand that media consumption, fannishness and other creative pursuits are permissible hobbies, community building in an environment of divisiveness, necessary breaks and even artistic acts of resistance as we struggle with current events. Still, I sometimes (1) worry that fannish-oriented posts strike the wrong tone in wider context, such as yesterday's, and (2) feel a defensive urge to point out that I'm doing things "in real life" to fight what's happening, even if they may not be enough and even though no one has said anything.
When I get down on myself about not doing enough, I focus on things like these, in addition to thinking through how I can have a greater impact:
- Since November, every feature article I’ve written at work has made an explicit or strong implicit political statement
- This auction vid not only raised money for a good cause but is also about celebrating many characters of color in current genre sources, and that's not for nothing these days
- Every month, I donate to activist, investigative journalism and/or minority-support organizations
- I talk to people, including family and friends who voted in ways I am trying to understand
- etc.
That is all. It's a[nother] tough day. ETA: Not least: Someone shattered a pane of glass in the Holocaust memorial downtown for the second time this summer, and last night I dreamed about photo-documenting four young white women neo-Nazis in front of the science museum.
I don't talk about it much here. This blog, and
When I get down on myself about not doing enough, I focus on things like these, in addition to thinking through how I can have a greater impact:
- Since November, every feature article I’ve written at work has made an explicit or strong implicit political statement
- This auction vid not only raised money for a good cause but is also about celebrating many characters of color in current genre sources, and that's not for nothing these days
- Every month, I donate to activist, investigative journalism and/or minority-support organizations
- I talk to people, including family and friends who voted in ways I am trying to understand
- etc.
That is all. It's a[nother] tough day. ETA: Not least: Someone shattered a pane of glass in the Holocaust memorial downtown for the second time this summer, and last night I dreamed about photo-documenting four young white women neo-Nazis in front of the science museum.
no subject
Date: Aug. 16th, 2017 04:41 pm (UTC)I sincerely applaud you for this one.
I feel like this is one of the most basic ways people can make a difference. It's sometimes the hardest thing to do, but I strongly believe it's the one thing that will have the most impact in the long run.
I am not a U.S. citizen, but I have found that speaking up when you are around relatives and loved ones who make racist, sexist etc. comments, challenging them, creating a dialogue about the issue, reasoning with them, correcting inaccurate facts, etc. that's the key.
Do not sit silently by and let their way of thinking go unchecked. Sure, it's the easier thing to excuse it, or to not want to make a scene at a family gathering. It's safer and more comfortable to reblog your opinions in a virtual environment of strangers, but it will never make as much impact as confronting your own near and dear ones, and trying to effect change from the home, you know?
no subject
Date: Aug. 17th, 2017 01:54 am (UTC)For instance:
A couple I'm friends with who are gay and Jewish: Why did you choose to vote for someone who targets both minority groups you belong to in exchange for personally favorable tax policies and less corporate regulation? Especially when one of you passionately studies, and whose family was damaged by, the Holocaust?
Stepfamily who are Jewish and well-off healthcare professionals: What made you decide that trying to eliminate the Affordable Care Act was worth all these blows to civil rights, including encouragement of attacks on our own religion?
Mom: Have you talked with your boyfriend about his conservative voting practices and the impact they have on you, a woman who has health care needs and would like bodily autonomy?
Mom's boyfriend: is racist, xenophobic, anti-poor, and difficult to reason with; attempts to counter propaganda usually end in him sliding into the next talking point, and then we start shouting, so when I do ask questions like what appealed to him most about Trump and whether the administration is meeting his expectations, I try not to lose it. Though I did have it out with him over Inauguration weekend...
no subject
Date: Aug. 17th, 2017 02:09 am (UTC)