More than 20 years after co-founding YES!, I am launching a new project.
The idea came to me when I was on the road trip that resulted in my new book, The Revolution Where You Live. As I traveled, I met people who were doing amazing things in their communities. Some were starting cooperatives and other institutions of the new economy, while others were working to heal their city’s legacy of racism, resisting fossil fuel development, or transforming their local food system. These innovations are, I believe, the seeds of a more just and sustainable world.
But a question kept nagging at me: Why isn’t there more of this?
The question became even more pressing with the election of Donald Trump. On my recent book tour—in cities from Portland, Oregon, to Madison, Wisconsin—people asked some variation on this question: “The election was a wake-up call. I see now that I can’t outsource my activism. I’m ready to get involved. But how do I get started?”
So I began wondering: What if the people I met in one city—say, Detroit—could share what they know with people in other communities around the country? What if people had access to the skills that would allow them to step up with confidence together with others where they live?
We have a lot of work ahead of us—especially with the retrograde politics in Washington, D.C. Could work in our communities deepen relationships while building our power and nourishing our spirits?
Those questions led to explorations of peer-to-peer trainings. What if we created an online space where people coached each other about how to have meetings that energize, to navigate conflict, or to take the first steps toward building a new economy?
Perhaps this is how we can spread the genius of grassroots change.
Building a different sort of society happens from the grassroots
By connecting online via Skype, for example, we can keep costs low. And learning groups can develop into the skillful local teams needed to get things done.
One more thing. I don’t believe deep change can be top down. I think building a different sort of society happens from the grassroots—most powerfully, when local groups can learn from each other.
The response to this idea has been thrilling. People are stepping up to provide and receive training and to help launch this project, which now has a name: PeoplesHub.
I believe we need strong communities—to resist the terrible policies of the Trump administration, to sustain us when times get bad (and things could get very bad), and to build the future we want.
This isn’t as big a shift as you might think. Building community takes skills, and I believe we can accelerate learning and empowerment when we unleash the genius we already have in cities and towns around the United States.
The best way to get in touch, and stay in touch, is to sign up at PeoplesHub.org.
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