From Kerri Kelly (CTZNWELL) <[email protected]>
Subject Hold the line.
Date September 30, 2021 12:39 AM
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Congress is contemplating passing a bipartisan infrastructure bill without the reconciliation bill that invests in working families. But we must not compromise on our collective wellbeing.
Rev. William Barber reminds us that “this is bigger than a vote. This is about corporate power learning they can’t bully legislators and abuse the poor and low-wealth people in this country”.
Joe Biden set the tone when he said "it is not enough to restore where we were prior to the pandemic. We need to build a stronger economy that does not leave anyone behind -- we need to build back better."
Democrats must finally become “the party of actual progress - of doing shit and helping people. [[link removed]] And whoever cannot get with that, then we will vote them out.
It’s about time we start governing. Hold the line and hold your representatives accountable.
#UntilWeAreAllThriving.
Kerri (she/her)
Art by Zeaink
Tell congress to hold the line. [[link removed]] We have a historic opportunity right now to invest in federal climate legislation, citizenship, housing and working people across the country. No bill without reconciliation. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
Why it took 30 years to convict R.Kelly. [[link removed]] Kelly’s trial and the decades of allegations preceding it highlight the systemic and societal failures that enable continued violence against Black women, girls, and trans and non-binary people. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
Why climate anxiety falls short. [[link removed]]What’s needed is a more nuanced [[link removed]] discussion [[link removed]] of climate change and mental health—one that de-centers the experiences of White, wealthy communities. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
What skin can teach us about interdependence [[link removed]]. [[link removed]] Mitochondria offer an example of what it means to shift resources to areas that have been harmed and how we can heal from extractive capitalism. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
How to share space again. [[link removed]-] [[link removed]-]At a time when so many of us feel like we are still straddling two different worlds, how do we move back into unpredictable spaces with some sense of intention? [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
Biden’s Build Back Better agenda is on Congress’s docket this week. On the line is medicaid expansion, universal pre-k, lower prescription drug prices, tuition free community college and taxes on the rich and corporations. Since the Democrats have the majority, they can pass the reconciliation bill with a simple majority vote. So what’s the hold up? Big business (Exxon, Apple, Walmart, Pfizer, US Chamber of Commerce, Koch Foundation) are determined to gut the bill and have dumped mountains of cash into buying off key Democrats.
CALL YOUR CONGRESSMAN AND TELL THEM TO HOLD THE LINE.
202-224-3121
Art by @BernieSanders/Content by @socialist_alternative
There’s an important new book on the role of everyday resistance [[link removed]]in disrupting the logic of violence amid war and genocide. According to our friends at Beautiful Trouble [[link removed]], cultural disobedience is one way we can practice everyday resistance and bravely subvert dominant cultural norms. All of us face unwritten cultural laws that feel oppressive; almost all of us rebel at some point in our lives. We engage in cultural disobedience:
To make an invisible oppression visible.
To publicly shatter a taboo, or to inspire its total elimination [[link removed]].
To normalize something that should be normal in the first place.
To prefigure life without an oppressive cultural norm [[link removed]]; and show that “another way of living/being is possible.”
To be in solidarity with those who cannot safely disobey culture [[link removed]].
To draw attention [[link removed]] to a larger social injustice in spectacular fashion.
Acts of cultural disobedience don’t have to be spectacular. In fact, many of us are engaged in small, everyday (and sometimes quite subtle) acts of cultural disobedience all the time, whenever we deviate from the expected norm. And when we can cohere our individual acts of rebellion and self-expression into a larger force, cultural disobedience can ignite not just a public dialogue about what is right and wrong, but also social changes that are both profound and lasting.
Words by Beautiful Trouble [[link removed]]/Art by Megan J Smith
“It is the obligation of every person who claims to oppose oppression to resist the oppressor by every means at (their) disposal”.
If you missed last week’s CTZN meetup with Tracee Stanley, Michelle Johnson, Hala Khouri and Kate Johnson, you can catch the replay on our patreon community page! [[link removed]] [[link removed]]
Words by Assata Shakur/Art by @subversive.thread
CTZNWELL is community powered and crowd-sourced. That’s how we keep it real. Please consider joining us on Patreon [[link removed]] for as little as $2/month so that we can keep doing the work of creating content that matters for CTZNs who care.

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