Political leaders from opposing parties couldn't bear to speak to each others. They behaved childishly.
In 1978, the opposing parties started talking. Eventually they rebuilt trust.
(Not everyone joined. You'll never get the hard-core right wingers)
The talks staved off “potentially destabilizing conflicts.”
What’s the lesson?
For me, it's: Find common ground with anyone who doesn’t support Trump’s autocratic methods and work on building a majority coalition.
I saved this tweet👇
Heather says “our despair is entitlement.”
Ok, it was a bit harsh—but I agree.
All the great progressive heroes (MLK, Jr., Thurgood Marshall, Susan B. Anthony, etc.) fought the same battles against the same forces.
They’ll keep plotting and trying to seize the steering wheel and turn us backwards again.
What's all over?
It wasn't all over in Chile, even under a military dictatorship.
I wrote my FAQs and To-Do list for people who are exhausted, worn out, and think it's all over.
FAQs: terikanefield-blog.com/faq/
To-Do list: terikanefield-blog.com/things-to-do/
When the parties finally got their acts together and teamed up and came together, they were able to make a peaceful transition.
Family stories reinforce this.
That's probably why I have faith in strong majorities
Ukraine is another success story of what a motivated majority can accomplish.
"Motivated majority" is key.
Whining and rage tweeting isn't activism. (Some people seem to think it is.)
And we're the people. So we are responsible.
I'll conclude this mini rant by telling new followers that I walk the walk . . .
The past year, I've put in a few hundred hours doing voter protection volunteer legal work and I feel guilty that I don't do more.
So the rest of us have to work hard to offset it and protect the vulnerable.