Grassroots Activism: Time to Demand Justice?

Je suis charlieDoctors take buses to protest outside parliament. Noisy physicians crash a local political meeting. Doctors hand out flyers at a shopping mall, scuffle with security and get on the evening news.

Grass roots activism sends chills into both sides of a political war. It’s messy and carries huge reputational risk. It might back fire. It’s often crude and unsophisticated.

Activism is not about riots, and doctors cannot strike. The occupy movement used professional demonstrators funded by partisan organizations to drive a political message. They did not grow on local individuals and families standing shoulder to shoulder against injustice.

Organizations prefer thoughtful, coordinated media-based campaigns. They show the other side that you can mount a sophisticated attack. Media campaigns often work very well.

But what if media has no interest in being convinced of your message? What if journalists fundamentally disagree with your position?

What if your audience cannot understand what you’re saying? What if a campaign drags on, year after year, same old thing?

What if the public doesn’t care?

Grassroots Activism – Features & Benefits

1. It gives people something to do. When citizens get oppressed, they go through shock, disbelief, anger and depression. But eventually, many of them will look for ways to fight back. They need something to do.

2. Grassroots activists welcome sacrifice. They volunteer. They believe in their cause. They use personal funds. They enlist their families into the movement.

3. It focuses an issue. It does not try to deliver a complex intellectual message. Activism sharpens discussion onto a single injustice. It’s gritty, emotive. It speaks to people’s hearts. This is wrong! You cannot treat people this way! Simple messages empower activists, recruit members and resonate with the public.

4. It’s time limited. Movements wrap up when they achieve success. People go back to their families, on with their lives. Movements that spawn reactionary organizations never hold public sympathy for long; they get old, stale.

5. Activism rests on the value of individuals. At its heart, activism relies on free people speaking out. A free and democratic society demands that people get active in the face of injustice. Leaders offer information and support but not control.

6. Grassroots activism does not worry about compromising political relationships or contracts. It puts truth before partnerships, justice before political control. Political leaders can join movements but do not define them.

7. Activism works when the courts cannot help. The law has limits. It’s shackled by process like any other political system and often impotent in the face of abhorrent oppression.

8. It is diverse. Everyone can join. I am Charlie enlisted millions who had never heard of the controversial French tabloid. People from every group in society can stand shoulder to shoulder against injustice. It’s not a strike but a social movement.

9. Grassroots activism works. Oppression persists when one group benefits from taking advantage of another. Entire systems survive on institutionalized trampling of particular groups. Such a system will not change on its own. It cannot. It needs to keep squeezing one group to stay alive. Only activism can challenge a dysfunctional system.

Imagine this:

A government signs an agreement with a group of workers. When the contract runs out, politicians decide they want to pay less for more work. They need the work done so politicians make it illegal for the labourers to work anywhere else, illegal to strike, and refuse to negotiate a new contract. The politicians cut pay with legislation. In fear, the workers make peace by signing a terrible 2 year contract.

Two years later, the politicians want to pay the workers even less. They say the workers are greedy. Politicians blame workers for finding tricky ways to make supplies even more expensive.

The politicians pretend to negotiate with the workers for a whole year but say the same thing in nearly 100 meetings. Finally, the politicians offer the workers a massive pay cut. They threaten, “Take it or we’ll legislate an even bigger cut!” On top of that, politicians promise to make workers pay for all the increasing costs of supplies and new projects.

The workers refuse. The government delivers their threat. The media yawns. Lawyers shrug with elbows bent and hold out empty hands, “I’m sorry, but there’s nothing we can do!

If something like this happened, would it warrant outrage? What would you do about it?

[photo credit: cnn.com]