🐱 How to Be an Activist When You're Unable to Attend Protests

CatParty
https://www.teenvogue.com/story/how-to-be-an-activist-when-youre-unable-to-attend-protests

Teen Vogue's Civil Discourse 101 features Amnesty International USA staff members, who answer questions from young activists as part of its #Right2Protest series. To submit your own question that could be featured in an upcoming column, head over to their Tumblr.

clasifieds said: I'm disabled and have severe claustrophobia. Is there any other way I can help besides showing up to rallies and marches?

First, thank you for your activism and for giving voice to the fact that people with disabilities are too often not included when protests are planned.

Nonviolent direct action, including attending a march or a rally, can be a powerful way to speak out on an issue you care about, but it’s just one of many ways to have an impact. The Women’s March on Washington has been touted as the largest single-day demonstration in recorded U.S. history, and the online Disability March was an important component of it. Social movement strategies that include large public events often employ other tactics as well, such as educational events, fundraisers, artistic components, legislative advocacy, social media engagement and more, and there are roles for everyone to play.

Here are some tips for ways to “show up” when you aren’t able to show up in person, as well as suggestions for all of us for building more inclusive movements for social justice and human rights.

Learn about the issuesIf you’re interested in an issue but can’t go to the rally, spend some time learning about the topic and the groups organizing the event. Spend some time on their websites and sign up for email alerts — this way you’ll be in the loop when there’s another opportunity that feels like a good fit for you. Share what you learn, and have conversations with your friends, family and classmates about why you care about the issue. Movement building happens one person at a time, and one-on-one conversations are a great way to support issues you care about.

VolunteerEach of us have unique skills to offer, and movements need everything. Childcare, web design, phone banking, outreach, legal aid, and letters to the editor are just a few of the hundreds of ways people contribute. Think about what you have to offer, and share that skill with groups and organizations.

Get active on social mediaLook for groups and organizations on social media that share your beliefs. You can re-post and promote their work, and engage your own online community around the issues. Share action alerts, news and other updates. Remember to use hashtags when they’re trending in order to join the larger conversation. You can also start your own blog to share news and updates on issues you care about.

Take actionRallies and marches are effective if they get the attention of someone with the power to make a change – this is sometimes called the “target” of the campaign. Use your voice to contact them directly, either by phone, personal email, mailed letter, or even Twitter. This is often an elected official such as a member of the city council, a Congressperson or even the President of the United States, and you can use resources like Ballotpedia to get the contact information of everyone from your local school board members to White House officials. Look for organizations with clear calls to action – they will tell you who you should contact and what you should say. Ask others to take action with you to amplify your voice.

DonateIf you’re able, make a donation to a cause you care about. Do your homework to make sure the organization is in line with your beliefs, and decide what you can afford to give. You can also hold a fundraiser for the cause — bake sales, online fundraisers and other activities can all raise money for important work.

Ask for what you needSocial justice movements will only be effective when they are inclusive of everyone, and event organizers should be aware of and responsive to the needs of the disability community. If you feel comfortable, contact the event organizers and let them know what you will need in order to participate. And if you’re an organizer yourself, make sure you’re considering accessibility as broadly as possible. Disabilities are as diverse as our communities, and not everyone will have the same needs. Here’s a great list of tangible steps to take in making your work more accessible.

Social change work requires that we commit for the long haul. In the end, what matters is that we work toward the world we want to see each and every day, and that we participate in ways that work for us. In solidarity!
 
People with disabilities are already aware of the different ways they can help out even if they can't wave a sign/march/smash mailboxes though. It's almost like this is written for the benefit of a bunch of malingering dipshits but that wouldn't be very inclusive, would it?
 
There wasn’t already a straight white guy speaking for the disabled and getting offended on their behalf? Get on your shit, guys.

But what about the disabled who crawled up the steps of the Capital building for the Americans With Disabilities Act in 1990? Nothing stopped them from getting out of their wheelchairs and demanding to be heard when many of them could barely move.

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/07/americans-disabilities-act-capitol-crawl-anniversary/

Twenty-five years ago this weekend, the Americans With Disabilities Act was signed into law, officially outlawing discrimination against disabled people in employment, transportation, public accommodation, communications, and government services. The law was a long time coming: Activists had fought for decades against unequal access to jobs and exclusion from public schools. But the ADA might never have gotten to President George H.W. Bush’s desk were it not for a group of activists in wheelchairs who took matters into their own hands earlier that year.

On March 12, 1990, hundreds of people with disabilities gathered at the foot of the Capitol building in Washington to protest the bill’s slow movement through Congress. Dozens left behind their wheelchairs, got down on their hands and knees, and began pulling themselves slowly up the 83 steps toward the building’s west entrance, as if daring the politicians inside to continue ignoring all the barriers they faced. Among the climbers was Jennifer Keelan, an eight-year-old from Denver with cerebral palsy. “I’ll take all night if I have to!” she yelled while dragging herself higher and higher.

If an 8 year old can get up out of her wheelchair and climb the stairs no matter how long it takes I'm sure that you can put aside your glitter taped Walmart brand cane and your crippling triggerphobia long enough to protest that black lives matter or troons are LITERALLY dying or whatever it is that you're protesting against.

I'm curious as to what this person's physical disability is. I'm going to guess "chronic illness". Which these days just means "I have joint owies because I weigh 350 lbs and need pain management".
 
I'm curious as to what this person's physical disability is. I'm going to guess "chronic illness". Which these days just means "I have joint owies because I weigh 350 lbs and need pain management".
They never said it was a physical disability. It's a bad excuse too, because it's clear that mental disability has never stopped a person from going to these protests.
 
‘I want to be a radical woke protester but my severe claustrophobia won't let me. :(
They never said it was a physical disability. It's a bad excuse too, because it's clear that mental disability has never stopped a person from going to these protests.
I would feel sorry for them if it was a legit disability or illness that kept them housebound (Like they had a severely weakened immune system or something) but 99% of these people have nonsense ‘illnesses’ like they got PTSD from being violently misgendered.
 
‘I want to be a radical woke protester but my severe claustrophobia won't let me. :(
That's easy, be like cogsdev on twitter and get into twitter fights with the Sunless Seas video game developer telling him that he's a Hitler loving Nazi cause doesn't think it's good idea to assault people.
 
How to do something if your disabled

Donate education materials to poverty stricken schools
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Hyperion
This article reminds me of a rather infamous disabled professional protester for BLM who goes by Heather DeMian:
https://twitter.com/missjupiter1957

On her streams she's known to call her own protest group ableists and will start shouting "ABLEISTS" at them if they don't specifically route onto disability accessible ramps. Once she gets their attention she then forces them to apologize for not going out of the way to cater to her.
 
This article reminds me of a rather infamous disabled professional protester for BLM who goes by Heather DeMian:
https://twitter.com/missjupiter1957

On her streams she's known to call her own protest group ableists and will start shouting "ABLEISTS" at them if they don't specifically route onto disability accessible ramps. Once she gets their attention she then forces them to apologize for not going out of the way to cater to her.

Not surprising at all. That sort of power trip is why most of these people get involved. They generally only play the good low-level soldier until they can find a way to claw their way up into a position where they can bully their followers for that sort of dominance fix. Problem is when you run into someone who's so far up the oppression stack or whatever they call it that they can never be toppled, like a gay black woman in a wheelchair or something.
 
I mean honestly, the word "activism" itself is pretty triggering because it discriminates against certain groups, like the comatose, quadriplegics, and others. Certain people just can't be "active" in any sense of the word, and tying the idea of struggle and the pursuit of equality to being "active" disenfranchises those people and removes their voice and their experiences from the sphere of activism entirely.
 
Back