Disaster compassion is real. Here are some things I've seen today and yesterday in Western North Carolina:
The Asheville Tool Library and a repair clinic teamed up behind firestorm to fix countless broken generators and chainsaws, just folks sitting around on their trucks fixing two-stroke engines, cheering as each one starts running and then goes out to where it can save people
Appalachian Medical Solidarity and countless unaffiliated medics and doctors running a free clinic outside of a punk bar under tents and easy-ups, connecting people to meds and first aid supplies
I drank unlabeled canned water, because there are countless breweries around here and at least some have turned their equipment to canning water to get it out to where it needs to go
I met some college students (I think) with a hatchback who are running back and forth 90 minutes to the most reliable gas stations multiple times a day with gas cans, giving away gas to anyone who needs it, prioritizing the people doing mutual aid
I met a man from a permaculture farm who has water equipment so he drives up the mountain to a spring above the flood contamination and fills water tanks, delivering 55gallon drums with spigots he makes and then returning to fill them up.
His truck doesn't have a working fuel gauge and it was still hard to convince him that he should accept free diesel for the work he's doing. He's convinced someone else might need it more than him.
A woman I met years ago because she's in a radical choir wrote instructions for how to make and use dry toilets, in English and Spanish, and set up to give away instructions and toilets. She thought she'd give away the 3-4 she brought. 2 hours in, when we talked, it was 20...
because people saw what she was doing and brought her 5 gallon buckets and pipe insulation (for the seat), and meanwhile a man with a saw mill had been driving around with saw dust thinking "I bet someone will need this sawdust for dry toilets."
Crew after crew of volunteer delivery drivers showed up at all the central supply dropoffs to load up and bring them to the more isolated communities that don't get as many donations, such as poorer neighborhoods in the cities and more remote areas in the hills.
I met someone who has spent the past few days driving around back roads on a dirt bike, connecting people and delivering supplies.
All I can think during all of this is that... disaster compassion is real. And also? Human compassion. We are wired to take care of each other. People are struggling, tired, nervous. They're also hopeful.
I'm seeing a biased sample, of course: people who can make it into town for supply runs, or who were waiting to receive supplies we drove to them. But mutual aid relief funds and supplies are pouring in and it's being used, and I am seeing people well, smiling.
There is a carnival air to the disruption of the status quo.
All I can think though, is that we could live like this.
We could fix each other's shit, we could give each other things, we could talk to our neighbors, we could check in on each other.
It takes organization. What's happening is grows out of grassroots organizing that goes back decades. It's organic organization, not simply raw chaos. It's directed. It's wielded. No one person or group is in charge or coordinating, but instead people are doing it together.
And again: I feel so terrible pointing out the positives, because the harm is ongoing and has not been alleviated. People are trapped. People are dying. People need help.
I've left NC now because I am on book tour. But next week's Cool People Who Did Cool Stuff is going to be about all these folks in NC who are helping each other out.
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this might be an unpopular take. You don't have to listen to it. But I was asked on tour what my advice for fellow trans people is, and here it is:
right now, it might be more important that your paperwork match the gender you can pass as rather than your gender identity.
I would keep your legal name and gender marker unless you reach a point where you reliably pass. I would avoid getting an X gender marker.
You can ignore this advice, that's fine. But it's my advice. It's not a good time to be on lists.
You might consider conceptualizing your legal name as a "i don't care about you" name instead of a deadname. Rather than it being something that hurts to hear or be called, it's the name you give to people you don't care about: cops, courts, landlords, etc.
what revolutions don't necessarily do is make things better. They can! There are lessons we can learn from past revolutions to make future revolutions more likely to improve things.
Unfortunately, each of those things means playing the game on a harder mode.
Centrally controlled revolutions are "easier" but almost never make anything better, for example, because the authority in control of the revolution will attempt to destroy all its own allies in order to maintain control. These lead to authoritarian states.
i drove into asheville today to deliver supplies for various mutual aid orgs and to, yeah, do some journalism. I took this week off of writing about history, next week's podcast is going to be about the groups doing stuff in western north carolina right now.
what's happening in Asheville right now is absolutely classic "disaster compassion." I lost count of how many grassroots mutual aid organizations are working together to distribute resources. Sure, it's the usual folks, like the progressive churches and the anarchists...
but closed restaurants with power have just set out extension cords with power charging blocks. Today I loaded produce out of a grocery store, handed to us by employees, lest that food go to waste, then drove it to a mutual aid hub.
western north carolina is an image of the future. disasters will get worse. This is not a reason to despair. It is a reason to get organized. To get prepared.
In the current crisis, we can clearly see the purpose of individual/family preparedness as a way to help larger collective disaster resilience. The largest problem (that we're currently aware of) is that people are stranded without power, communications, food, water, or gas.
You, reading this, wherever you are: where you live is not so unique and special and safe that you can assume disruptions like this will never happen to you.
A car comes with a spare tire and a jack for a reason. So to, your apartment or house ought to have some basic things:
hitting nazis with heavy objects works. I've talked to antifascists in multiple countries about how the growth of fascism was stopped through militant street resistance.
fascism is a populist movement, and street violence is an important component to its growth. but nazis make poor underdogs... the average fascist wants to be a fascist when he feels like he is winning. He wants to feel strong with his strong buddies.
the antifascist, on the other hand, paradoxically, is effective even when outnumbered, because by showing that resistance is possible, more people are emboldened. Because fascists are a minority, and only win when they go unconfronted.
The very first sentence reads like a fragment: you generally don't say "not only in..." without following up with a "but..."
The second sentence contains a comma splice ("the united mission" is the subject of both the first and second clause, so the comma should not be present)
the word "thereof" seems to serve no purpose except to make the writers believe that they are conveying intelligence and education. It conveys the opposite.
The serial comma is used inconsistently throughout the piece.