Dealing with paranoia when being suspicious is important:
Paranoia is a defense mechanism that, alongside anger, will hurt you and your organizing if gone unchecked. Below are some tips (far from comprehensive) for managing it. #pdxprotests#portlandprotests #blmpdx
Out and about: tell ppl when you're leaving the house and where you're going. Start shifting your behavior from going out alone to scheduling errands with buddies. Get a tazer/mace. Don't feel silly crossing the street if there's a car that's worrying you.
At home: get to know your neighbors, sleep with a weapon near your bed. Develop affirmations that your home is a safe space, have calls with comrades. Find friends that live nearby that are available to swing by during the night. Stop yourself from looking out windows.
I have been driven to an anxiety attack because one of my neighbors has a car with tinted windows that drove past me. Catch yourself making conclusions w/o evidence and have a group chat for random things that make you worried and MOVE ON unless you have something concrete.
Now, the big one. Paranoia while you're organizing and not just protesting.
Any time a white, masculine-looking person walks up to me, my pulse skyrockets. That's a part of the trauma we're facing. I'm posting what I have because this next part is big and important.
Part of seeking true liberation is building the world we envision in our organizing. That is how we survive and how we keep ourselves centered. And yes, part of that is seeing the white people who have earned our trust and respect as partners in our collective liberation.
Every interaction is a microcosm of power imbalances, many of which we are unaware of. People don't look at me and know I'm trans, chronically ill, and autistic. I have to be gracious in my work with people who don't know all of the microaggressions they're committing.
Decisions should center the people who are most affected by the issue at hand. That's basic leftist theory. But when we're organizing, we can't hold white race traitors at an arm's length. They have recognized the advantage they unwittingly received and are *throwing it away*
The white people I choose to organize with are all in. Most white protestors at the JC are DOING what is asked of them, even when they disagree. And the police hate them basically just as much as they hate us, because they are, explicitly, traitors.
All of this is to say, the only way to deal with paranoia in organizing is to deliberately and intentionally place trust. When someone comes up to you and says "how can I help," know a simple and low-risk way they CAN help. If they follow through, you take one more step.
Another important detail: honesty. Tell someone when you're withholding information that's sensitive. It's nothing personal, you just don't know them well. If they get upset at this, odds are they're not a good organizing partner. The first time you take a risk with your trust...
... be cognizant of that risk and make sure it's not something that will be catastrophic if they betray that trust (intentionally or not). An exhausting amount of organizing is outreach. Talking to the people who just showed up, who have been doing their work in the background...
...the people who for whatever reason wasn't here before, but is ready now. That is how a movement grows! Relationships - personal, 'professional,' and community - are the only healthy way to manage paranoia in dangerous situations. And it's how you build a movement, too!
Ok i got really tired by the end of this thread so I got repetitive. But seriously, without managing the very rational suspicion you're feeling, factions will develop and people will burn out. If you dont trust someone, respect the common goal and respond accordingly.
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@brianorwhatevr I have a long answer for that! I'll let you know when I'm done. Most antiracist workshops include tools and building blocks for getting started. The grassroots way is finding a white person who is further along that you can reach out to whenever you notice yourself reacting.
@brianorwhatevr There is plenty of research to be done, but the main thing to remember that whiteness is a preservation tool for white supremacy. Defensiveness, reacting to discomfort with fear or willful ignorance, dichotomies/absolutes (good or bad, right or wrong, this or that)...
@brianorwhatevr These are things that allow you to ignore reality and maintain the facade of law and order, capitalism, etc - which in the United States all serve white supremacy. To fall into the binary, white men typically enforce whiteness through rational and aggression, white women...
The weekend isn't over til it's over, but given the peak of the threat has passed, I have some contributions that I hope folks consider as we take lessons from the past few days. The first is I appreciate how at no point did internal disputes interfere with antifascist response.
This thread will be updated throughout the day. First: to hold myself accountable for tolerating antiblackness. As someone who knew a fair bit of the planning information for JUICE's event and personally saw a plethora of red flags, I paid less attention to those who agreed.
As others have said, while there were plenty of PoC in every camp, there were many white people who were stepping out of their lane. There are also a fair number of white people who, rather than raising safety concerns, were badmouthing and condemning the organizers.
In shocking news, Black people are people and if you want to be in community w/ us you can't treat us like we are all-knowing, infallible entities that you should listen to without thought. That's deification and dehumanizing. It is clear many of yall are on step 1 of antiracism.
Many Black Portlanders are capitalists, or arent abolitionists. We SUPPORT their work but if their efforts arent in line w/ our goals, that's important to talk about. If youre only as far as "listen to Black ppl" w/o the nuances (like when Black ppl disagree) you aren't there yet
If you're Black and feeding into this... you should stop. We deserve respect, the first outreach of collaboration, and to be listened to. And, when we're wrong, we deserve feedback. If we seek Black liberation, it cant happen w/o mutual liberation. All of our fates are tied.
My advice for Saturday, thread: These are my personal conclusions considering risk assessment & other dynamics. There are five "things" this Saturday that people have the opportunity of doing: staying in, the Vanport event, Peninsula park event, counterprotesting, & obstruction.
1. Staying home. In a perfect world, everyone would have a safe place to stay inside, have adequate warning, and the alt-right would be cruising through a ghost town. Still, my earnest stance: if you don't know exactly how your presence will keep others safe, stay at home.
I keep saying it b/c risk of rolling the dice is too fucking high. This is the first major confrontation since we've had a body count. Someone in that crowd will be prepared to commit a mass murder. Yeah, they're cowards - they're also on a flat chunk of land with no buildings.
I know people are really stressed about this Saturday & what the goal is. There are a lot of things being done that aren't mine to share, but of the people I have spoken to (mutual aid, various event-holders, bloc members), the goals of the 26th have been essentially unanimous.
The first priority is to affirm that Black Lives Matter and uplift our dedication to Black liberation in spite of the hate movement that gathers and threatens the city. We cannot stop the alt-right rally from happening. But we can declare that we will not tolerate their bigotry.
Emphasizing community safety: We know without counter-protesters, the alt-right will attack anyone. The solution, however, isn't taking the bait. It's community awareness & intervening in events of violence. A non-confrontational presence affirming: you are not welcome here.
COMMUNITY FORUM ALERT! There has been significant concern about the lack of discipline, plan, & safety involved w/ counter-protests. The best way I know to address these concerns is to open up the conversation. This evening is the first open convo for refining our approach.
Disinformation will be clarified, ideas for harm mitigation proposed, and people not looped in w/ established coordinators/organizations can be part of the conversation. This is an informal "forum" for lack of better phrase. Other than that, idk what info is helpful. Ask your Qs!
Disclaimers: time and location were chosen within a pretty truncated process, but the information has been carefully considered. If you see a potential issue with the time/locale, I encourage feedback. Otherwise, i hope to see you this evening!