Organized Power

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There is no power without relationships: two or more people come together, express and argue their concerns, develop a plan and the intention to exercise that plan, and take some sort of action. The challenge is how to teach them to get enough power to do the things they think are important. This can happen through two routes, organized people or organized money—obviously the poor have more of the former than the latter. Two or even ten people by themselves may not be able to do much, but if they begin to build coalitions with other people and learn the rules of politics, including relational power and reciprocity, then they begin to learn the process through which they can take advantage of the opportunities presented by economic, social, and political change.
-- Ernesto Cortés, Jr.[1] | Interwoven Destinies: Cities and the Nation - “Power”[2]

ABSTRACT

Our Humanity: Civilizations throughout history are nearly always dominated by a tiny number of elites. Sometimes a society’s elites rule with relative benevolence, or at least refrain from causing too much harm. At other times, sociopathic individuals take control and lead entire civilizations into ruin.

Our Crisis: Empires rise and fall; tyrants come and go. But only in the past few generations have humans achieved the capacity to destroy ourselves, along with virtually every other living thing on our planet.[3] What hasn’t changed is our behavior. The tiny elite who currently dominate most of humanity are once again leading us all to ruin. And we can’t seem to stop following.

Our Response: We can chart our own course if we choose to. Acting together, we can identify, comprehend and coherently respond to the mounting crises we face. One stepping-stone to reaching this goal is to harness powerful new technologies to communicate, coordinate and collaborate with each other. As we carefully examine the challenges that confront us, we can act together.

Organized Power dedicates itself to the task of acting with ordinary working people to harness collaborative technologies, and turn the dysfunctional power pyramid upside down.

About Organized Power

Organized Power is a civic engagement and community organizing project spearheaded by a small group of community activists in Portland, Oregon. The project’s primary organizers are drawn from current PortlandWiki contributors and others active in the Portland community. The project’s organizing focus is to connect individuals and groups living in particular communities with each other, and to also connect these intra-connected communities with one another.

Civic wikis play a central role in Organized Power’s community-building strategy. As the city wiki for Portland, PortlandWiki is a great example of a civic wiki. In addition to acting as a “knowledge commons” for a given community, a civic wiki can act as that community’s networking hub by linking together individuals and organizations who share common interests. In this way, civic wikis can function as a Wikipedia, Wikinews and WikiLeaks, as well as a community yellow pages, telephone directory and neighborhood bulletin board -- all at the same time.

Organized Power also focuses on identifying free or freely available technologies that individuals and groups within a given community can use to assist them with their organizing goals and community building efforts. In this context, Organized Power acts as a technology consultant and service provider to deploy carefully selected collaborative technologies, and to train people how to use them. The overarching goal is to assist people within the community in making use of these technologies for the purpose of bringing people together to meet, plan, communicate, collaborate, get things done and enjoy each other’s company.

Concentrated Coercion & Disempowered Communities

Markets despise uncertainty. These days, terms like "markets," "the marketplace," the "free market," and the like almost always refer to a particular marketplace order commonly called neoliberalism, globalization, or sometimes just plain liberalism. These same markets produce “negative externalities” -- costs and consequences the marketplace producers seek to avoid by foisting the off onto the rest of us.[4] Air pollution, water contamination, soil depletion, collapse of ocean fisheries, human dislocation (ranging from widespread unemployment to forced migration to extermination), and never-ending military conflicts are just a few of the myriad negative externalities produced by modern “free markets.”

Sure the marketplace may have its downside. But hasn’t the marketplace “lifted millions of people out of poverty”? The “lifted millions out of poverty” argument is one of the most frequent claims the free market’s most ardent propagandists like to make. This argument implies that one of the free market’s most important functions, apart from making its “jobs creators” maximum profits, is to lift poor people into neoliberal prosperity. A closer look, however, calls that assumption into serious question.

For example, China is often held up as the poster country to highlight the free market’s rags to riches prowess. Indeed, neoliberal globalization has delivered formerly unheard of prosperity to millions of Chinese people. Take a peek under the surface, however, and one discovers that a huge number of the newly prosperous in China were essentially forced to leave their farms and villages and migrate to overcrowded cities, where they soon found themselves condemned to working long hours in factories and sweatshops. Some are literally worked to death, while others leap to their deaths from factory rooftops in order to escape their miserable place in the globalized free market.[5]

At this point we might ask ourselves: What kind of “prosperity” forces subsistence farmers out of their villages and into overcrowded cities, where it works them to exhaustion -- or even to death -- in near slave-like conditions? Is this the same “free market prosperity” that abandoned once-thriving communities in heartland America, transforming them from wholesome, family oriented communities into crime-ridden, hopeless rust-belt wastelands? Why would people in any community choose to do this to themselves? If markets despise uncertainty -- meaning a disruption to business as usual -- doesn't it follow that people would despise any disruption to life as usual even more?

One of the most pernicious “externalities” the neoliberal regime imposes onto the rest of us is the delusion that “there is no alternative” to the current marketplace arrangements imposed by major multinational corporations onto communities all over the globe. A range of trade agreements and other marketplace arrangements strip local communities of much of their sovereignty, and hands it over to oligopolistic corporate entities and other marketplace actors. What emerges are anti-democratic arrangements in which money, goods and small number of affluent individuals flow freely while the rest of humanity is condemned to economic and political servitude.

Empowering Alternatives: Working People’s Campaign

“We know now that Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob.”[6]
- Franklin D. Roosevelt

The goal of a Working People’s Campaign is to create an updated and revitalized continuation of King’s Poor People’s Campaign, which stalled after King was assassinated.[7][8][9][10][11][12]

In recent years reports of the numbers of working Americans living paycheck to paycheck ranged from 42% (2011) to as high as 77% (2010).[13][14][15][16] Other phrases used to describe this “living paycheck to paycheck” phenomenon included “two paychecks away from homelessness” or even “one paycheck away from homelessness.”[17][18] In light of all this, a particular question begs us to ask it: What kind of economic system puts anyone in jeopardy of homelessness?

As we meditate on the question we just asked ourselves -- “What kind of economic system puts anyone in jeopardy of homelessness?” -- perhaps we can broaden the question by asking ourselves “What kind of person terrorizes, brutalizes, tyrannizes, robs, degrades, defrauds and routinely abuses others?” A criminally insane person? A sociopath? A tyrant? A person possessed by demons? When folks with this same mentality demand we drastically cut their taxes while publicly subsidizing their activities in myriad ways so they can become better “jobs creators,” why do we give them the time of day?

When these same folks claimed that some of the public largess they’re grabbing at our expense will come trickling back down upon us, creating a rising tide that will lift all boats -- even our meager, leaky little vessels -- why did we fall for it? When their schemes finally came crashing down and plunged the entire world into the Great Recession, prompting them to demand that we bail them out at public expense, why did we comply? When they go right back to their excesses and financial orgies after grabbing all of our public loot, then demand cutbacks and austerity for the rest of us as punishment for all the overspending we did to bail them out of a catastrophe of their own making, why do we put up with it?

Is this the best we can do? Can we do better?

<videoflash>3EZ5bx9AyI4</videoflash>

Is there more to living in a democracy than just casting the occasional vote? Is there more to “free expression” than just grinding your teeth while a handful of elites in big business, government and media tell you what to think and how to behave? Why is it that we seem to always end up with “the best democracy that money can buy”? Is this the best we can do? Can we do better?

Half of all Americans are just two paychecks away from living on the street.

Is this the best we can do? Can we do better?

For the first time ever, half of all Americans think the American Dream is over.

Is this the best we can do? Can we do better?

America is slipping behind the rest of the world in health, education and living standards.

Is this the best we can do? Can we do better?

Millionaires and billionaires pay zero to 15% tax rates while up to half of working Americans’ income is siphoned off to pay all sorts of taxes.

Is this the best we can do? Can we do better?

A handful of politicians and business executives make decisions that negatively affect millions of us.

Is this the best we can do? Can we do better?

Yes! Together, We Can Do Better!

{{#section:Peoples’ Assembly Organizing Committee|Creating_a_People.27s_Budget}}

Organized Power -- An Association of Independent Unions

“inspiring a movement”

Organized Power can function as a vehicle for organizing independent unions into an association of independent unions.

Purpose
  • Solidify connections with neighborhood associations, community organizations, faith groups and other stakeholders in the community.
  • Write "model legislation" that benefits working people and their communities.[19]
  • Provide training in technology, communications, proactive acting and assertiveness to rank and file union members and staff.
  • Build capacity in effective use of technology for organizing, political lobbying and building alliances.

Links to “Independent Union” Associations & Organizations

Launched in 1999. Focuses on federal employees.
"Helping workers since 1979." From mission statement: To promote and support the collective interests of Independent Unions and workers throughout Canada through organizing, servicing and education. CNFIU also aims to foster long-term growth and unity by effective communication, participation and action.
Anti-Union Associations & Organizations
Bills itself as a "union watchdog." Appears to be a business-funded front group hostile to organized labor.
Dave's Note: This organization, despite its hostility towards unions, has a pretty impressive database of labor unions.

Thinking Together

... our minds are accustomed to think about something, about a problem ... our personal desires, fulfilments, sorrow, anxiety and so on ... ‘thinking about’. We are (inquiring into) thinking itself ... not about something ... but thinking together. ... Please see the difference: thinking together does not mean that you agree or disagree, accept or reject, defend or offend, but together find out if it is possible by thinking together we can act together ...[20]
-- Jiddu Krishnamurti

One of wiki’s least understood features is the potential the wiki platform offers for deep collaboration, or what the great spiritual and psychological philosopher Jiddu Krishnamurti called “thinking together.” In the context of a civic wiki, deep collaboration often emerges through the collective participation of a core group of contributors. As pages are created, information gathered and presented, and photos, drawings, videos, sound files and other media are plugged into various articles, the wiki’s “personality” starts to take shape.

Unlike the hierarchical structures -- political, economic, social -- that govern a neighborhood, city or town, wikis can offer people living in a given community an accessible means to participate in building their own community information resource and knowledge commons. Wikis offer a democratic, collaborative platform that people in a given community can use to contribute to their own governance. Participants can build upon what others have already contributed. As people freely interact with each other in this way, a participatory culture begins to emerge. Spontaneous organization starts happening, and a valuable community resource comes into being.

A prominent wiki innovator once described the wiki as "the simplest online database that could possibly work."[21] In an age of social media, blogs, and other online technologies, wikis stand out. Unlike the others, wikis encourage participatory creativity, particularly in the realm of knowledge creation. Although rare, such collaborative and cooperative interactions can come close to "thinking together" as described by Jiddu Krishnamurti.[22]

The Debate Society: "Drinking Together"

A slave attends to a vomiting symposiast.

Of course "thinking together" is a difficult, almost incomprehensible notion in a shallow, me-centric culture unaccustomed to even thinking in solitude, much less in cooperative collaboration with others. Ours is a culture that often relegates to the debate floor the gibberish that passes for "serious" thinking. We want "experts" -- preachers, professionals, officials, politicians and other charlatans -- to debate amongst themselves and do our thinking for us. The debate form has an ancient pedigree going back at least as far as ancient Greece, where aristocratic "lovers of boys" argued with each other in Symposia ("drinking together") as they drank heavily and debauched children from the neighborhood. In their modern form, debates often vomit up the most obtuse conclusions imaginable.

Several years ago, a typically modern debate-as-path-to-idiocy trotted out into the public arena in the form of radio broadcast. The medium was a show called Intelligence Squared U.S., and the debate topic was "Global Warming Is Not a Crisis."[23] Before the debate commenced "30 percent of the audience agreed with the motion, while 57 percent were against and 13 percent undecided." In other words, the majority of the audience presumably understood that climate change is cause for deep concern.

Then the debaters began the business of destroying their audience's minds. How? While the bought-off academic, the dull meteorologist and the fantasy film producer quipped in smooth, chirpy non sequiturs, the pompous, I-am-smarter-than-thou "experts" managed only to confuse and piss-off an audience growing less and less sympathetic to their "trust-us-we-know-what-we're-talking-about-and-you're-just-too-dumb-to-understand" posturing. At the debate's conclusion, "46 percent agreed with the motion, roughly 42 percent were opposed and about 12 percent were undecided."

This kind of absurd outcome is understandable from aristocratic narcissists and drunken pedophiles, but is such stupidity acceptable from our body politic?[24] In contrast, thinking together requires that we stuff the cork back into the bottle, unleash the squirming, debauched child from our lascivious grasp, zip up our trousers and direct sober, serious attention onto the problem at hand. What if the audience had dismissed the emotionally challenged "experts," and the morally corrupted buffoons there to debate them, and investigated climate change for themselves? Perhaps they might have reached a more intelligent understanding on their own.

Civic Wikis and the Community[25]

Dysfunctional Communities

Organized Power organizes around the fundamental understanding that the predominant social structures that currently govern society are largely outdated. Many of them are rapidly transitioning from functional to dysfunctional forces. Topping the list of functional-to-dysfunctional social institutions are:

  • media
  • financial
  • political
  • educational
  • economic
  • security

Personal and Economic Security

Personal and economic security generally tops the list of concerns for most people in any given community. Any disruption in the ability to maintain adequate personal and economic security has immediate and often dire consequences. Organized Power puts primary organizing focus on strengthening the ability of ordinary people to adequately provide for themselves, and for communities to transition towards healthier and more community-centric social and economic modes of operation.

Among ordinary working people, organized workers (those belonging to independent labor unions) are generally best positioned to maintain a certain measure of control over their personal economies. Dr. Martin Luther King remains the primary thought leader and spiritual guiding light in recognizing ordinary working people as having the greatest potential to lead social transformation.[26] Like King, Organized Power views working people as embodying the greatest potential for driving social change.

Holistic Community

Organized Power recognizes that strong, community-based networks are key to successfully migrating away from the rapidly deteriorating social structures that currently prevail. Healthy and participatory community-based information flows are key to transitioning towards the creation of healthier, more holistic communities. The increasing failure of legacy institutions to respond to the primary interests of ordinary people places greater responsibility on people within individual communities to create new institutional frameworks.

Similar to feudal societies, industrial social organization is characterized by hierarchical “pyramids” with control concentrated in the hands of a tiny, highly organized group at the top of the pyramid. These few at the top exercise authority over a fragmented, confused and highly disorganized base. Individuals inhabiting the middle of the pyramid are generally better organized and more privileged than those at its base. They serve as a buffer between the highly organized elite and the divided and conquered base.

In Europe and North America, the industrial model of social organization has steadily declined for decades. In the United States, the decline arguably accelerated with the first of the “oil shocks” of the 1970s. Recent developments in resource depletion, environmental degradation and financial collapse strongly indicate that the economic models and institutions charged with maintaining order in these areas are in crisis. They apparently have lost the ability to function coherently and effectively.

As old-order industrial institutions continue their decline, new arrangements will rise to replace them. Most of the incumbent institutional frameworks -- government, business, financial, religious and so on -- appear as if they are morphing into social arrangements that bear a strong resemblance to those that dominated pre-industrial feudalism. While it’s difficult to ascribe the precise motivations harbored by any of these legacy institutions, at least two characteristics clearly stand out: movements towards even greater and more rigid hierarchy, and extreme resource consolidation.

Knowledge Sharing vs Knowledge Domination

It’s essential to keep potential pitfalls top of mind while attempting to build any body of knowledge. Each precious nugget of human knowledge drowns in a vast ocean of human ignorance. Polluting this “ignorance ocean” are massive quantities of toxic noise -- misinformation, disinformation, lies, propaganda and the like. These toxic pollutants often coalesce into quickly moving currents that disturb, degrade and ultimately destroy all fragmentary bits of knowledge they sweep up. In this sense, every bit of so-called knowledge -- however legitimate -- is subject to finding itself corrupted into just another murmur of toxic noise or ripple of ignorance.

“How-To-Do-It”: Knowledge As Humanity’s Central Prosthesis

In his essay, “The Animal in the Dark Tower,” Ran Prieur (Superweed, Civilization Will Eat Itself)[27] asserts that drawing a “line in our heads” separating Homo sapiens sapiens (modern humans) into pre- and post-civilized states is the wrong place to make that conceptual demarcation. Instead Prieur suggests that we draw that imaginary line between humans and all other living beings “not in the sense that we are more ‘highly’ evolved, but that we have evolved to some strange place off to the side, isolated and dangerous.”[28]

The path that takes us to this “strange place” that Prieur characterizes as “isolated and dangerous” is “our reliance on culturally-transmitted technique: knowledge of how-to-do-it that is no longer dependent on nature, on having a place in the web of life, but on nurture, on abstract mental models learned from other humans.” This reliance on “knowledge of how-to-do-it” is, of course, the central thesis of Rogue Primate, the pathbreaking treatise on human domestication by Canadian naturalist John Livingston, whose protégée, fellow naturalist and former student Louise Fabiani calls “one of Canada’s greatest thinkers.”[29] This fragile membrane -- the countless ideologies, dogmas, concepts and thought forms mediating all human perception -- is what Livingston calls our “prosthetic being.”[30]

Community Media

WikiLeaks Mobile Information Collection Unit
- Media Policy 101 booklet
- Media Reform Action Guide
Major Corporate-Owned Media -- Anti-Democratic & Propagandistic
Entertainment Television -- A Veritable Death Ray For Civic Life[31]
Guided By Voices
Scientists use a range of terms to describe the subject - stuck-song syndrome, sticky music, and cognitive itch, or most commonly "earworm."
Have you ever had a song stuck in your head? That’s an earworm… and we’re collecting them!

Robust Grassroots Networks

<videoflash>3nuElu-ipTQ</videoflash>

Franklin Delano Roosevelt - I welcome their hatred.

“We had to struggle with the old enemies of peace--business and financial monopoly,
speculation, reckless banking, class antagonism, sectionalism, war profiteering.
They had begun to consider the Government of the United States as a mere
appendage to their own affairs.”

“We know now that Government by organized money
is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob.”
[32]

Community Organizing

Community organizing is a process where people who live in proximity to each other come together into an organization that acts in their shared self-interest. Unlike those who promote more-consensual "community building," community organizers generally assume that social change necessarily involves conflict and social struggle in order to generate collective power for the powerless. A core goal of community organizing is to generate durable power for an organization representing the community, allowing it to influence key decision-makers on a range of issues over time. In the ideal, for example, this can get community organizing groups a place at the table before important decisions are made.[33] Community organizers work with and develop new local leaders, facilitating coalitions and assisting in the development of campaigns.

The central role of the IAF organizations is to build the competence and confidence of ordinary citizens and taxpayers so that they can reorganize the relationships of power and politics in their communities, in order to reshape the physical and cultural face of their neighborhoods.
Ernie Cortés does not teach at a university or edit a political journal. Yet he is aptly described as a public intellectual, a thinker who cherishes ideas for their ability to advance the common good.
“Political power, as Ernie Cortes likes to say, comes from either "organized money" or "organized people." In the electoral arena, the money is organized, the people are not.”[34]
In an America where the rich and fortunate have free rein to do as they please, can the ideal of liberty and justice for all be anything but an empty slogan? Many Americans are doubtful, and have withdrawn into apathy and cynicism. But thousands of others are not ready to give up on democracy just yet. Working outside the notice of the national media, ordinary citizens across the nation are meeting in living rooms, church basements, synagogues, and schools to identify shared concerns, select and cultivate leaders, and take action. Their goal is to hold big government and big business accountable. In this important new book, Jeffrey Stout bears witness to the successes and failures of progressive grassroots organizing, and the daunting forces now arrayed against it. Stout tells vivid stories of people fighting entrenched economic and political interests around the country. From parents and teachers striving to overcome gang violence in South Central Los Angeles, to a Latino priest north of the Rio Grande who brings his parish into a citizens' organization, to the New Orleans residents who get out the vote by taking a jazz band through streets devastated by Hurricane Katrina, Stout describes how these ordinary people conceive of citizenship, how they acquire and exercise power, and how religious ideas and institutions contribute to their successes. The most important book on organizing and grassroots democracy in a generation, Blessed Are the Organized is a passionate and hopeful account of how our endangered democratic principles can be put into action.
Rules for Radicals: A Pragmatic Primer for Realistic Radicals is the last book written by community organizer Saul D. Alinsky shortly before his death in 1972. Published in 1971, it was Alinsky's attempt to impart his theory and methods of organizing to the current generation of young activists, largely drawing upon his own experiences.
Comprehensive set of organizing discussions, topics, resources.

See Also

External Links

For many of us the first pinprick in our bubble of imagined well-being was the fraud in Florida elections and the subsequent decision by a Republican friendly Supreme Court that cancelled the recount and named Bush president in 2000. This made some doubt the very legitimacy of our democracy. The bubble of our complacency was further rent by the terrorist attack on 9/11, and the subsequent erosion of our leadership in the world. Rather than being a wake-up call shaking us up from a dangerous sleep, our masters used the occasion to solidify our chains through the enslaving emotions of fear and blind patriotism. We found ourselves in a contrived war based on lies that started to suck our country of its life-blood. The masters of our nation further empowered themselves with myths that justified acts against our core values and moral leadership, but the majority went along and reelected them. The accumulated mismanagement of our nation came to a head, as the threat of global warming became a clear and present danger, as hurricanes and natural disasters ripped at our aging infrastructure. The tsunami of our collapsing economy finally struck with a vengeance this September, and the subsequent bailout has failed to substantially save our sinking ship.
From Article: If we all treat one another with the best principles of human relationships, it is analogous to complying with Nature’s biophysical principles by taking responsibility for our own behavior. What we must "re-learn":
  1. Life’s experiences are personal and intimate.
  2. Sharing life’s experiences by working together and taking care of one another along the way is the price of sustainability.
  3. Cooperation and coordination, when coupled with sharing and caring, precludes the perceived need to compete, except in play—and perhaps in story telling.
  4. The art of living lies in how we practice relationship—beginning with ourselves—because practicing relationship is all we humans ever do in life.
(Plus 14 more "must relearn" suggestions.)

Who Rules America?

The theoretical starting point for power structure research is a seemingly mundane one, but that's what makes it very useful: power is rooted in organizations.

References

  1. Social Justice - Ernesto Cortes Jr. - "We organize people not just around issues, but around their values."
  2. Interwoven Destinies: Cities and the Nation - “Power”
  3. MASS EXTINCTION UNDERWAY: The World Wide Web's Most Comprehensive Source of Information on the Current Mass Extinction
  4. Beyond Accumulation and Technical Progress: Negative Externalities as an Engine of Economic Growth
  5. By the Numbers: Life and Death at Foxconn
  6. Franklin Roosevelt's Address Announcing the Second New Deal
  7. History of Poor People's Campaign
  8. Poor People's Campaign: A Dream Unfulfilled
  9. Poor People’s Campaign
  10. Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign
  11. The Poor People’s Campaign 43 years later through the lens of Occupy Wall Street
  12. King Versus the Tea Party: From the Poor People's Campaign to Occupy
  13. Almost 80% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck w/poll
  14. CareerBuilder: Three-fourths of Americans live paycheck to paycheck
  15. What Percentage of Americans Live Paycheck-to-Paycheck?
  16. The Top 100 Statistics About The Collapse Of The Economy That Every American Voter Should Know
  17. Two Paychecks Away from Homelessness
  18. One Third of Americans One Paycheck Away From Homelessness
  19. Model Legislation for Subsidy Reforms
    Good Jobs First has drafted model subsidy reform legislation with language requiring reporting and disclosure of subsidy information; the creation of quality jobs and a cap on the total subsidy amount; and recapture of subsidies in cases where companies are found noncompliant.
  20. Is There a Way Out of the Crisis in the World?
  21. What Is Wiki
  22. Search Query: krishnamurti thinking together
  23. 'Global Warming Is Not a Crisis'
  24. Fidel Castro attacks 'idiocy and ignorance' of US Republican race: Retired Cuban leader says Republican primaries are 'the greatest competition of idiocy and ignorance that has ever been'
  25. Community Building around Encyclopaedic Knowledge
  26. King, Martin Luther, Jr. Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos Or Community? Boston: Beacon Press, 1967, 2010. Print
  27. zine index
  28. The Animal in the Dark Tower
  29. The greatest environmentalist you've never heard of | 2007/04/08, Louise Fabiani | The Star (Delayed obituary.)
  30. Livingston, John A. Rogue Primate: An Exploration of Human Domestication. Toronto: Key Porter Books, 1994. Print (page 13)
  31. BetterTogether: Civic Engagement In America
  32. Franklin Roosevelt's Address Announcing the Second New Deal, October 31, 1936
  33. Organizing For Social Change: Midwest Academy: Manual For Activists
  34. Who Will Tell The People?: The Betrayal Of American Democracy