Showing posts with label Activism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Activism. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

How Chalk Saved Me from the Belly of the Political Machine

By the end of this summer I was unemployed, but flush with OSAP cash. Eager to mark an item off my bucket list I volunteered for an NDP campaign in the provincial elections. I really dove into this head first, and so most of my waking hours in August and September were spent standing on the front porches of North York voters. Yesterday we finished picking up 15 thousand dollars worth of campaign signs, and today as I sit at my computer, eating an ungodly amount of cold pizza scavenged in the waning hours of the campaign party, I feel disoriented by both the lack of daily linear goals, and the sudden inpouring of free time. I guess I feel the need to reflect on this experience

Above all, I will miss the sense of community which was fostered on the campaign. Every night the core team would gather around a cheap plastic table piled with wrinkled maps, and swap election battle stories. Someone would suggest that the Liberals had stolen an NDP campaign sign, and we would unanimously agree that the only appropriate response would be to slash their tires (for the record, we never did!). We coalesced around a shared affinity to the NDP banner, and strengthened the bond by painting the Liberals into boogeymen. When we sat around telling these stories I felt a deep sense of belonging. This is what kept me coming back.   

Most voters with whom I spoke to fell into the broad categories of the staunch traditionalists, who always vote for the same party, or the apolitical apathetic, who have given up on politics altogether. While knocking on doors I shocked myself with how quickly I was able to throw away my youthful idealism and simply say anything to lock up a vote. When I was standing in front of a Conservative I would deliver my rehearsed spiel on strategically voting NDP to block a Liberal seat. If a Social Conservative launched into a creepy racist tirade filled with code words like, “the immigrant problem” or “the moral decay of the country”, I would frantically mask my discomfort by shifting the conversation to fiscal policy, or garbage removal (even though garbage is a city issue). Ultimately, the experience became a numbers game with layers of strategy.  I was constantly dancing from one side of the aisle to the other, hoping to appease whomever was listening.



Honestly, I got really burnt out near the end. The first signs of frustration surfaced while I was helping out with the creation of a piece of artwork. The piece was a large scale chalk drawing, and I vividly remember colouring in a portion and feeling really excited because I was free to choose any colour I wanted. It felt as if the NDP was some controlling mistress who was letting me watch the hockey game because I behaved myself at a party! I guess I was very accustomed to calibrating my actions relative to the singular goal of winning the election, and somehow the creativity of the chalk drawing tapped into an expressive freedom which I had suppressed. From that point on, instead of reading Huffington-post election clippings, I would spend my mornings scanning web comics. In the evenings, rather than volunteering to stay late and enter voter data, I would sneak off to read comics, re-watch old movies, and toss around ideas for short stories. It was pretty clear that the thrill of the campaign was fading.



I think these reflections connect in interesting ways. For one thing, my feelings towards both the party fundamentalist and the apathetic shifted from frustration to understanding. Over the last two months I definitely took a few sips of the NDP Kool-Aid, and so I can understand how holding a party so close to your sense of identity can develop into irrational, unconditional supportIt is pretty easy to start thinking of politics in terms of “we are the righteous, and they are from the depths of hell! On the other hand, by the end of the campaign I felt a certain kinship with the apathetic constituent (I mean screw it, I’m in my early twenties, if there’s ever a time to go through a nihilistic punk rock phase it's now!). The time I spent saying almost anything to get votes probably shows that there is a kernel of truth to the argument that “politicians are all the same”. The representatives on our ballet have each been processed and packaged through a massive machine designed to produce the person who will appeal to the most voters and generate the most campaign dollars.

 I understand the appeal of the apathetic position, but please do not understand this as an endorsement to not vote. Young people today have incredible challenges ahead of them, facing down a collapsing economic system as capitalism takes its last, wheezing gasps of life. If we ever hope to achieve true change and start the healing process, it won’t be through apathy or blind partisanship, it will be through people. People with different viewpoints, ideas and dreams, gathering and doing things both inside and outside the political machine. I will continue to support the NDP, because for the time being their platform correlates the closest with my personal ideals and convictions. However, I will now seek to balance my involvement with action outside of formal politics – in this sense I am very thankful to be a part of Feminist Action.

    Oh, I should probably mention that we lost the election, but I feel ok with this. I met inspiring people, and had some great experiences! When McGuinty’s minority falls you will probably see me helping the NDP again, but my activism will no longer begin and end on the front porch of North York voters.       

-Michael

Thursday, March 3, 2011

UPDATE ON COP AND "SLUT" COMMENT - ACTION!

 

Hey everyone,

We all know/experienced the barrage of comments and discussion after the cop inflicted his violence on the York campus, in a line of systemic violences upon us as students and community members.

Here is your update on what’s being done and how you can get involved!

A collective has been formed at York comprised of members representing student services, groups, and general members of the community. 

This collective is known as GENVep (GENder Violence Eradication Project @ York).

If you have any questions/comments or want to get involved directly, please email GENVep at: genvepatyork@gmail.com

In order to address the various key modes of thoughts around this issue, we have developed a diversity of tactics which include (but are not limited to)

1)     OPIRG and CWTP have created a “COPS OFF CAMPUS” letter which is going to be sent to media,circulated around, and will also function as a petition to get on/off campus signatures to end the violence and lack of safety created by the increased presence of cops at York.

2)     An ongoing, long-term sustainable effort to change the CULTURE OF VIOLENCE @ York. This will include media reports by various students/groups sent to both York and Toronto media sources. 

This will include initiatives to see the “SAFETY” recommendations by the third party group METRAC implemented at York to see REAL change in the mishandling of security and safety at York. Here we want to see DIALOGUE between York community members, students, police, security, and administration (in the forms of panels, meetings, etc.) 

This is our school and ACCOUNTABILITY and TRANSPARENCY need to occur.

3)     COMMUNICATION TACTICS. To address those who have accessibility concerns, those who live outside of the direct community, and to keep an ongoing discussion around this, we will be employing a number of communication methods, including

Letter Writing Campaign (a general template which people can use and send to authorities)

Educational material (a “History of Violence” postcard detailing the misdoings of York security and Toronto police, possible pamphlets and other material to be distributed throughout the entire period on and off campus and at events, in the effort to inform the public of our grounding discussion/understandings and what we want to see happen).

Guerilla Postering – both on and off campus, we support and encourage individual folks who express their feelings and politics on guerilla postering. 
4)     PROTESTS.
One protest at YORK, to address the varying opinions from “cops off campus”, to concerns over policing/safety, to the violations and the mishandling of marginalized groups
We would love to see other students/groups band together on this, to create a visible stance by the community that we are TIRED and EXHAUSTED of this long list of mistreatment and ignorance.

One protest DOWNTOWN TORONTO, CULMINATING AT THE TORONTO POLICE HEADQUARTERS. which will include groups from different pockets of the community (TORONTO-WIDE), as well as those who have differing opinions on this (from those who don’t see the police as a source of safety and want to undo the erasure of bodies by the police, to those who want to demand real change in the way of training and etc.). 
The goal here is to show on a wide-scale level (not only on one campus) the community members from the city who SEE the culture of violence within policing and want REAL CHANGE, ACCOUNTABILITY, AND ACTION. 
The initial promotion for this will occur online, and in the media, at the International Womens Day march at Ryerson. We will be marching in a “York” contingent at the IWD march as well. This will lead up to aligning with the protest SlutWalk Toronto (url), which will walk from Queens Park to Toronto Police Headquarters.


TIMELINE

Mar 2Community Safety Council (meeting to discuss how to implement METRAC’s safety recommendations)

March 5 – Banner and Postering Party!

March 12International Womens Day march – with York contingent! (DETAILS ABOUT IWD COMING SOON!)

Apr 3 – SlutWalk Toronto – PROTEST AT POLICE HEADQUARTERS.

Throughout March: letter writing, meetings, possible panels between community members, multiple efforts to open and continue this discussion.

we have split into subgroups:

a) outreach/allies/Toronto initiatives 
b) on campus initiatives
c) media blitz

If you are interested in making your voice heard and channelling your concerns into real action, please contact us and let us know which area you are interested in being involved with.

DO YOU WANT TO GET INVOLVED?
Next opportunity: BANNER/POSTER PARTY!
MARCH 5th
11:30-2:30, GSA council office, 433 Student Centre.

Come out and get feisty, help create the banner we will use in the International Womens Day march as a York contingent, and also create guerrilla posters and other materials! 

Channel your frusrtration, activism and concern into beautiful works of art to be used on and off campus!


TL;DR

If you wanna protest, we will be doing our toronto-wide city march, culminating at the POLICE HQ, with SLUTWALK TO. http://www.slutwalktoronto.com/
subscribe to stay alerted to meetups and updates.


+++++to get INVOLVED ++++
contact genvepatyork@gmail.com for YORK INITIATIVES 
contact alyssa or SlutWalkTO for TORONTO initiatives

-Alyssa





Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Our Foundation - A Timely Introduction to Feminist Action @ YU

 OUR HISTORY 

The WSUSC has been in existence in collaboration with the Women’s Studies Department at York University for approximately six years.   
However, while they did amazing activism each year it was taken over by a new coordinator.
With that in mind, the WSUSC set to work in the 2009/10 academic year to build a foundation that feminist’s and allies can build upon.   
Our goal was to provide a young feminist voice both on and off campus while supporting the third wave of feminism (arguably fourth?) within Canada.   
After copious amounts of emailing and meetings, we were successful and landed ourselves a beautiful office within Founders College. It is this foundation that we wish to share in order to achieve solidarity and equity for all walks of life.

 OUR ACTIVISM
 
The WSUSC activism is based on a radical, queer, grassroots lens.   


However, we do recognize the multiple interpretations of feminism and celebrate and support this diversity.This grassroots approach allows us to dismantle structures of power from the bottom up, while being a fluid as possible.


Our attempt is to try and work outside of societal systems in order to question what we consider ‘normal.’  It is through this activism that we hope to blur traditional identity categories and structures of power in our fight for equity.