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Are we still trying to change the world?
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Why aren't people confronting their employers, resisting mass firings, marching, creating new organizations to fight?
A lot of us thought that people would not just stand by doing nothing while their lives were devastated by corporate madness and government betrayal. But as months go by, it's getting hard not to wonder, as Herbert does, whether something's wrong:
I was thinking about the sense of helplessness so many ordinary Americans have been feeling as the nation is confronted with one enormous, seemingly intractable problem after another. The helplessness is beginning to border on paralysis.*
Americans have tended to watch with a remarkable (I think frightening) degree of passivity as crises of all sorts have gripped the country and sent millions of lives into tailspins. Where people once might have deluged their elected representatives with complaints, joined unions, resisted mass firings, confronted their employers with serious demands, marched for social justice and created brand new civic organizations to fight for the things they believed in, the tendency now is to assume that there is little or nothing ordinary individuals can do about the conditions that plague them.
This is so wrong. It is the kind of thinking that would have stopped the civil rights movement in its tracks, that would have kept women in the kitchen or the steno pool, that would have prevented labor unions from forcing open the doors.
Herbert's disquiet spoke to me and I felt his call--for a new generation of Andy Schwerners, Rosa Parkses and Betty Friedans to rise up and break the paralysis--deserved an answer and thanks.
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Thank you for your column "Changing the World." I, too, share the fear in seeing so much passivity of most folk in this country, yet I do see some hope.
I am 36 years old, so I didn't see the civil rights revolution, nor the women's liberation movement or the anti-war movement against the U.S. invasion of Vietnam. I can say with pride that I have a small window of understanding on how I benefited from that generation of Chaney, Goldman and Schwener and the rest of the incredible warriors of that era. I say small because I can't ever fully understand something that I didn't live. I only know that their generation impacted my life and the lives of millions in ways that are intangible and not easily calculated.
Yet, I am one of the lucky ones of my generation; I have been trained by one of the most gifted organizers that came out of that era, Eric Mann. I can now say with pride that I too am a civil rights organizer in a small city called Los Angeles. You might have heard of that small town and our experiment called the Labor/Community Strategy Center. I have worked for over 10 years with our flagship campaign, the Bus Riders Union, which has transformed public transportation for working class Black, Latino, Asian and white bus riders and have become a force to be reckoned with in the region - with have won over $2.7 billion in bus improvements and counting. I now am working with a new campaign called the Community Rights Campaign, which is taking on what we call the "pre-prison conditions of our public schools", something that I know you have been writing for years about. And it's not just us. There's so much more hope-giving work on the ground when you step back and take in all the work of our sister organizations across the country.
![]() Rosalio Mendez |
While I can't say we have thousands of members, it's definitely hundreds, who can reach thousands. But more importantly, to come back to your piece, we have amazing people, individuals who we have recruited over the years and who are today's irreplaceable heroes. There is Barbara Lott-Holland, a Texas transplant to Los Angeles with close to 40 years of living in Los Angeles; she's our Fannie Lou Hamer with over 12 years in the organization. We have the 86-year-old Hee Pok Kim (Grandma Kim). She's the fierce Korean grandmother who threw her chips in with a group that was primarily Black and Latino. She told us she had had been "waiting for us all her life" and has been with us now for over 8 years. We have Woodrow Coleman, a real hero and civil rights legend in Los Angeles for desegregating the city, who has been with us for over 15 years. There is Rosalio Mendiola, a long time hotel worker who witnessed the murder of Robert Kennedy at the Ambassador, 14 years. We have Patrisse Cullours and Carla Gonzalez, who were recruited at the age of 17, and now are amazing young women who have reshaped our organization and have recruited hundreds of young people into the organization with over 8 years under their belts. The list goes on and on, and that's without even mentioning the over 80 organizers we've trained in our National School for Organizing.
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I took the time to write to you to say that while I do fear the passivity of the millions, and worse, the passivity of our political elite, I am emboldened and hopeful that our handful can be the spark for social change in these dark times. It has happened before and I've seen it in our little experiment. I feel ready for the task. Thanks once again.
Manuel Criollo
Comments
Thank you for the insights, good to read your work, Manuel.
Great piece Manuel at an important intersection in history! You have a special ability to reinvigorate the organizer as well the members in our organization when people feel beat up from fighting. I know I will always remember what you shared with our Cleveland students at the Black and Brown Love Conference. When I begin to feel tired, weak and doubtful of change occurring anytime soon I recall what you said that day—“you have two choices in life: you can sit back and watch/observe history be made OR you can make history—I challenge you today to be a history maker!” I recently had this conversation with one of my student member--struggling with her in her organizing troubles and strong feelings of hopelessness and despair in people’s ability to change. It is not that folks can not or do not want to make change but that we must inspire them as organizers to do so.
One way to change the world is to get more working class Black and Latino writers who have deep ties to the masses, who can go beyond Bob Herbert's excellent questions to give concrete answers. Manuel Criollo did just that.
As Dae-han observed, we urge writers like Bob Herbert to respond to Manuel and publicize his views just as our site makes Herbert's article available so people knonw what Manuel was responding to.
"Movement Journalists" During the 1960s, authors like Howard Zinn wrote, "SNCC, the New Abolitionists" and journalists like Andrew Kopkind and Jack Newfield wrote about the "new left" meaning SDS and SNCC and the community organizing projects and gave us a lot of coverage understanding that we were the story. We need journalists who can recognize that Manuel and others like him are the new leaders,the new news stories. They have to go beyond giving their own opinions and then quoting us to give documentation to their theses, instead we need writers who will say, "I just read a great article by Manel Criollo, for a moment, forget my blog and check out his, I've learned so much!
So far very few situations like that exist, Two positive examples come to mind. One was Haskell Wexler's exemplary behavior in making the documentary film Bus Riders Union. He spent 3 years working with us, shooting a lot of footage, and made an hour and ten minutes feature film that helped to bring a social movement, us, to life, it will be the 10th anniversary of that film and we have to have a great tenth anniversary showing, to model what committed journalists and cinematographers can do to build social movements. David Bacon is another example of a movement journalist, meaning he focuses on publicizing social movements, especially among Latino immigrant workers and generates great photos of working class heroes, heroines, leaders in struggle against large employers.
Until then we need to push salt of the earth strategists like Manuel into a great public arena so folks can read his work. Manuel is getting to be a very fine journalist and as we in the movement learn more about e-organizing we want to take good articles written from the frontlines of the movement and publicize them all over the country to our members.
Dispatches from the field of struggle are always the most interesting, vital, so keep on keepin' on.
Eric Mann
I've been wondering the same thing Manuel!!! It's a refreshing blessing for me to know people like you and The Center. I may not be there but I have not fogotten.
Great piece and response to the NY Times Article. Only when we are engaged in struggle lead by the clarity of a vision, rooted in our history can we have hope even in the most difficult and trying of times. Bob Herbert put out a question/a demand to the public, and the Bus Riders Union gave him a concrete answer, let's see if Bob Herbert is willing to back this organization and help nurture its movement by featuring it in the New York Times as an response to his call for hope and action.
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Thanks everyone - I appreciate the words. As I prepare for the new year in the back drop of South America, Africa and Island Nations uprising for their survival and the future of our planet in Copenhagen against the US and West, it gives me hope and inspiration for the new year.
Lets keep in touch and going.
Manuel Criollo