CA/Community Assembly Continuations

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Let's build a movement together.

Community Assembly Continuations

Post-event organizing and movement building.

On Saturday, May 5th, 2012 a coalition of 80 community, labor and social justice activists gathered at the First Unitarian Church in downtown Portland, Oregon to actively participate in a Community Assembly to Create a People's Budget. One of the event's primary objectives was to educate attendees on the often opaque decision making that produces the City of Portland's annual budget. Another major objective was to show how budgets produced through genuine community participation contrasted sharply with those produced mostly behind closed doors, with little (if any) community input.

Participants also had an opportunity to educate each other about the struggles each faced in the current climate of imposed economic austerity. Students and parents from the Harriet Tubman Leadership Academy for Young Women talked about their ongoing struggle to take their school off the budget chopping block. Community activists from Right 2 Survive and Right 2 Dream Too described how cutbacks to already skimpy basic services for Portland's most vulnerable citizens heaped even more burdens on the already extraordinarily difficult lives of Portland's unhoused community. Laborers from Laborers' Local 483 showed how funds diverted to "urban renewal" projects result in the layoffs of city maintenance workers.

Organizers also presented their research findings. The Community Assembly's "Where's the Money" group connected the dots on how urban renewal financing provides both investment opportunities and tax breaks to wealthy individuals and corporations while shifting tax burdens onto working people and main street businesses. Event organizer Shamus Cooke contrasted the "cuts only" approach--pitting vulnerable members against each other to fight over budgetary "crumbs from the table"--with participatory budgeting. Although participatory budgeting approaches vary, the most democratic of them allow community members to control the entire budgetary process--from raising revenue to distributing funds and services.

Continual Organizing

  • Upcoming assemblies
  • Post-assembly actions and follow-through events
  • Alliance building
  • Connecting organizations, groups and people
  • Connecting communities—near and far

Budgetary Requirements

  • Office
  • Skeleton staff, office expenses, materials, etc.

Globalized Anti-Democracy

The current economic order--variously characterized as "free-market capitalism," "neoliberalism," and "predatory capitalism"--has devolved from being merely anti-democratic and anti-egalitarian. It's still all that, but it has also become an existential threat to living beings on an relentlessly persecuted planet. It's a threat that will never go away voluntarily, although biospheric collapse[1] might kill it, while also snuffing out every living thing.

This economic and social order has integrated into (some say "infested"[2]) a growing number of economies across the world into "globalized" marketplace characterized by extraction, consumption, widening inequality and massive exploitation. "Resources" are extracted to the point of depletion, provoking continual social, political and environmental mayhem in the process. Billions of ordinary people are transformed into consumers of products and services, with each consumer heavily conditioned to feel an unquenchable thirst for "more." A handful of multinational corporations profit at the expense of everyone else.

A neo-feudal social order is taking shape as familiar historical trends reassert themselves: extreme wealth concentration; social, economic and political domination over societies by a tiny clique of "elites"; environmental degradation and collapse.[3] Indeed, for much of the planet's human population, these conditions have persisted, and now in the "rich," developmentally "mature" "democracies" these chickens are coming back home to roost.[4]

Control over one's own economic livelihood is quickly diminishing, creating a "race to the bottom" effect as growing numbers of economically imperiled people attempt to sustain themselves by any available means. As this wretched race (to the bottom) accelerates, it leaves leaves expanding human and environmental catastrophe in its wake.

Institutional Failure

A complex society striving to build and maintain any sort of healthy democracy relies on a number of primary institutions, including education, media, religious, legal, political, military and economic. If we judge the legitimacy of these institutions by their capacity to deliver the greatest benefits to the largest number of people, they are all failures.

For instance: instead of instilling a genuine desire to learn, schools teach pupils to passively accept a culture of rigid hierarchy, domination and control. Too many church "leaders" focus more energy on demonizing folks they've already damned rather imparting the universal principle of doing "to others what you would have them do to you." Doing so ensures that the "flock" is kept divided and conquered.

Foreign military invasions are perpetrated to gain geostrategic advantage or to pursue resource domination, actions that degrade the actual security of the "homeland." Legal systems are degraded to favor those with sufficient political and economic wherewithal to corrupt the law. Politicians, much like harlots, sell themselves to anyone ready and willing to pay. Economic systems are rigged to favor a tiny elite at the expense of everyone else.

Managed Ignorance

It's instructive to look at our society's relationship with our major media. Major corporations have captured all of our primary media organizations. These are private companies that sell products to make a profit. They are not in the business of delivering vital information in order to serve the common good, especially if such information potentially threatens profits.

Put another way, we've allowed a handful of big businesses, motivated by profit and social control, to manage the information (including disinformation, propaganda, sales pitches and so on) we're exposed to. This is insane. Corporate-owned media companies have produced one of the most propagandized and heavily deluded societies the world has ever known.