|
Category |
Activity |
|
Protect
people being targeted |
Mutual aid
society Fundraising
for nonprofits Underground
railroad |
|
Defend
existing institutions |
Outreach to
veterans/families/military Citizen
scientist to assist EPA Find grants
to strengthen elections |
|
Envision what
comes after Trump |
Cultural/psychological
grounding Constitutional
convention |
|
Resistance |
Paperclip
movement among civil servants Strikes Tax
resistance |
So, having addressed the predictions in What if Trump Wins, I want to move on to their prescriptions. The authors comment that their categories of actions are not so distinct as they may seem, and I agree. In particular, most* of their proposals really are geared to building new institutions that the authors hope will survive if Trump is defeated. The authors would presumably like to see a society with a dense network of mutual aid societies and fundraisers for local non-profits, with federal regulatory agencies supplemented by citizen scientists, a clearinghouse for election-related grants, with the sort of cultural grounding they propose, and with not just their proposed constitutional reforms, but the democratic method they think the convention should follow. And, at the same time, the proposed courses of action give us some idea what they think likely to happen under Trump.
So, without further ado, here we go.
Protect people being targeted.
This is the section that talks by far the most about immigration, which makes sense, because immigrants take first place among people being targeted. But it does not focus exclusively on immigration. It paints a general picture -- large-scale immigration raids, summary deportations with little to no due process (no mention of a massive prison network, although that was mentioned before the election), loss of funds for health departments, increased workplace violence and hate crime, with a corresponding reduction in prosecutions. Accurate enough except for the hate crimes and workplace violence, and even an understatement for immigration. As options, it offers mutual aid societies, emergency fundraising for non-profits, and an underground railroad. In all cases, the authors aim for realism by starting small. In all cases they also have a significant focus on immigration at the start but move on to other topics as well.I previously said that the authors appear to regard staying small, nimble, and local; scaling up on a local basis; and forming a national network all as valid options. Looking back on it, that is only partly true. It is true that the issue of whether Trump is defeated does not rise or fall on any of these decisions. But scaling up does accomplish more than staying small, and if the goal is to build new institutions meant to survive whether Trump is defeated or not, then these things matter.
Mutual aid society
This version has you start by preparing a spreadsheet of needs and offerings. It starts very slowly, and you spend much of your time cleaning up the spreadsheet and researching to find resources for unmet needs. An elderly couple gets help building their wheelchair ramp and pays it forward with music lessons. The society starts offering weekly community meals that draws attention to their work. Things speed up with an ICE raid on a local plant after the owner reported his own workers just before payday.** The work is not initially seen as political and draws volunteers broadly across the political spectrum.
And here we go. If you don't scale up, more and more people come to you for food after a plant closing (watch these plant closing, there will be a lot of them). The system is even more stretched after a climate change-caused fire (watch these climate change-caused fires. There will be even more of them). If you scale up locally, you still have food needs, a plant closing, and a climate change-caused fire. But you talk more about problems with the system at community meals. Two volunteers leave the group, saying it is becoming too politicized. You add new programs like tree planting and visiting people in nursing homes. Finally, if you build a national network, you get to see how other mutual aid societies across the country work. The network helps your community with the plant closing and climate change-caused fire. Your community, in turn, helps out other communities when the Mississippi floods. You are even interviewed in national news.
So, what conclusions can we draw from this. Well, for one thing, neither the Trump Administration nor rightwing militias appear to see the mutual aid networks as a threat or make any attempts to bother them. Members are not afraid to give interviews to national news. Expanding to a national network allows communities across the country to help each other. But taking the option of a national network does not leave as much time to contribute to your own local community, with tree plantings or visits to senior homes. I think the authors' point here is to encourage national networks, but also to recognize that a national network is necessarily made up of local chapters. In other words, building a national network and growing your local organization are both good options. Some should do one and some should do the other. But do try to expand on one level or the other.
Joint emergency fundraising
The authors assume, accurately enough, that Trump will cut assistance to non-profits everywhere. They also assume that larger nonprofits can make up the difference with high profile fundraising, but smaller groups are feeling a serious pinch. A bunch of small groups band together to do joint fundraising and have a community funding source decide how to distribute. In a gesture toward realism, it starts very slowly and you spend more time that you expected answering details about who get the money, when, and how. The ICE raid when the local plant owner turns in his workforce** makes another appearance. Joint emergency fundraising is also not initially seen as political and draws people from across the political spectrum.
If you stay small, the climate change-caused fire puts in another appearance, along with a rightwing militia burning down local (presumably minority-owned) businesses. Resources are strained. You decide to become more political, offering for each militia member to raise $100 for progressive causes. Two members quit to protest the politicization, but the fundraising ploy works. Scaling up on a local basis is not too different. In this case, the expansion allows you to offer no-interest loans to businesses to rebuild much faster than the city. It also means running an op ed denouncing the militia. Finally, if you go national, you become a national fundraiser regranting to local groups. There are tradeoffs -- speed versus accountability. Thoroughly vetting groups lead to delays; moving quickly leads to mistakes and money being poorly used. But you opt for speed, counting on a group's good local reputation. The climate-change fueled fire and militia burning Black businesses make another appearance. The differences in scaling up are less clear here.
Underground railroad
This one naturally focuses heavily on immigration, though not exclusively. It begins with an undocumented community member whose neighbor put all her contact information online and called ICE on her three times. It seems uncommonly naive to expect (as the authors apparently do) that she could escape arrest with that much exposure. And the authors sound equally naive saying that the cases "aren't numerous." They do increase when we again meet the plant owner who calls ICE on his workforce right before payday,** Naturally work speeds up a lot at this point. Operational security is vital, of course, but many "conductors" are remarkably open about their work to allow people in need to find them. Security means moving people on to the next "station" and not knowing what becomes of them after.Here expansion is not just a matter of scale, but of openness. It also moves into other areas besides immigration. The authors envision a rightwing militia burning Black businesses and the owner finding a bomb planted in his car and has to be moved to safety. If you choose to stay local, the authors also envision smuggling a high-ranking EPA whistle blower who has been fired and doxed. And, again, if the assumption about immigrants totally fail to foresee how bad it would get, the militia attacks are mercifully something that has not happened. I am less sure about the whistle blower. There do appear to have been doxing and threats toward a wide range of government officials who stood up to Trump, though actual physical violence appears to be much less common. That is about it if you stay quiet and local. Another option is going local but more public -- running an op ed in the local newspaper about the general nature of your work, without, of course, the operational details. This brings in more work.
The authors propose that going national starts with attempts at online training that are not very successful. Instead, the most effective way to work is through somewhat countercultural religious organizations -- Black churches, Quaker meetings, synagogues and mosques. This is interesting as being to sole mention of religion in the book. I do believe that organized religion can be a valuable ally on behalf of immigrants. Many immigrants will be members, after all. It is a shame that the authors do not consider this any further.
In background news, the authors propose Trump sending that Texas National Guard into California to take the place of uncooperative local police, and ICE raiding a house full of immigrants and 200 neighbors coming to their defense and some of them being shot by ICE, though not fatally. This sounds accurate, all right. It also proposes Stephen Miller as the head of ICE (plausible, though not what happened), the underground railroad smuggling the targets to safety (not feasible, alas, there is no safety, but there are ICE watchers disrupting operations), and a veterans' network including retired generals denouncing politicization of the National Guard (also not quite what happened, but reports are that National Guard members were unhappy with being deployed against fellow citizens, and the Supreme Court eventually put at least a temporary stop to the practice). It also envisions Liz Cheney being arrested and the underground railroad moving the rest of the January 6 Committee to safety, along with some 2000 other targeted whistle blowers. Trump's Department of Justice has, indeed, being showing and increasing and alarming tendency toward political targeting -- though still well short of 2000 cases (so far as I know). On there other hand -- where is safety? Canada?
__________________________________________________
**I have my doubts about this. I do not doubt that many unscrupulous employers wage theft and other highly exploitive practices with an undocumented workforce that does not dare report the abuses. Indeed, who can doubt that many unscrupulous employers hold the threat of deportation over their employees to force compliance. But calling ICE on your workforce right before payday requires recruiting and training a whole new workforce, no doubt with delays and down time while doing this. It does not seem like a sustainable model.












