Drop Prime Now
Yes the holidays are coming. Likely you have some scrambling for gifts going on. You also have a commitment to collective liberation, to equity, and to our planet. For all those reasons and others that impact people next door and around the world, boycott Amazon. The temptation of convenience is strong, deliberately. Lean into your commitment; you're stronger. Your action…
WA State Wants to Hear From You—LGBTQ+ FOlks
The Washington LGBTQ Commission has sponsored a survey study giving LGBTQ+ Washington residents the opportunity to voice their concerns and provide important information to increase state officials' understanding of the community's demographics and geographic distribution. Your action…
Here’s What Michelle Obama May Have Meant by “Do Something”
At the DNC, Michelle Obama implored us to do something. I thought it would have been helpful to have some specifics: many of us want to do something, many just need some clear direction. Focusing on the election, here are a few things I've come up with. Your action:
Figure Out *What You Do*
Here's a helpful framework I've used when I want evaluate what anti-oppression or liberatory actions I'm taking, or want to do more, or be more effective. Choose one oppression you feel most riled about, or spread a few interests across the four categories below. Your action:
Check Your App: Conscionable Purchases
I want to spend my money in ways that further the work I put into human rights, not obstruct it. I'm a tiny player in a huge system...but there are a lot of us. Here are a couple of apps we can use to make conscionable choices. Your action:
Get a Kid With Medical Needs Out of Gaza
I have a friend in Seattle who created an organization that is working to get people out of Gaza. So far, she and her group Donkeysaddle Projects have evacuated over 100 individuals and set them up with critical basic needs like housing or medical care for at least several months. Your action:
Get a Group, Do a Thing
Have you or your friends ever said to each other, "I'm just not sure what to do"? Gather them up and donate your labor together. It doesn't have to take more effort than having people over for dinner or going to see a movie together. Many nonprofits or mutual aid organizations support people most impacted by systemic oppression, but you'll also be able to find groups that work to shift the system itself. Your action…
Thwart the Oppression of Palestinians: From Home, Nonviolently
The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against "Israeli and international companies that are complicit in violations of Palestinian rights" has been active for almost 20 years. Since the genocidal-level of violence the Israeli government has sustained against Palestinians since Hamas' Oct. 7 attack, the BDS movement has gained a lot of ground.
Your action…
Bail Out the Bail Outs
Last month month's action was Direct Solidarity, one of two ways longtime author and activist Paul Kivel recommends for people who identify as white to take action against oppression. The other is educating and mobilizing your own people.
Your action…
Educate & Mobilize Your Own People
Last month month's action was Direct Solidarity, one of two ways longtime author and activist Paul Kivel recommends for people who identify as white to take action against oppression. The other is educating and mobilizing your own people.
Your action…
Reverse What’s Dominant
When I'm at the food bank, I'm not in charge. I punch holes in plastic bags, listen to people's stories, bag apples, discuss the oddity of English words, and do what I'm told. My goal: not being in charge, not being in a position of power, not influencing. It's a momentary and deliberate reversal of the relationship of power I'm normally positioned in as an educated, white American woman.
Your action…
Demand a Ceasefire
First things first: let's leverage everything we have to reach a ceasefire. Signing a petition, joining a march, emailing a representative: these may seem rote, worn, or ineffective...yet momentum is building, globally. Please contribute your heart, time, and attention.
Your action…
Support Organizations That Support BIPOC with Cancer
This one's simple.
Your action:
Find out who provides supports to BIPOC with cancer in your community and donate to them….
Join SURJ’s Abolitionist Action Hour
Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ) is a national network of groups and individuals organizing white people for racial and economic justice. Each month, SURJ hosts a one-hour virtual Abolitionist Action Hour where participants…
Get Books to People in Prison
On a recent episode of Ear Hustle (one of my favorite podcasts), I learned what it’s like for people in prison to get books, and what kind of books they want. So I did a little research and learned this is something we can definitely help with.
Here’s your action:
Anti-Racist Giving Workshop
An easy and impactful anti-racist action is redistribution. The concept is simple: people who have benefitted from white affirmative action, wealth accumulation, and labor of disadvantaged peoples share their wealth with those who have been historically excluded from those benefits.
Here’s your action:
Pay a Visitation Tax
When I travel—by plane to another country, on a road trip through other states, or simply to nearby mountains for a hike, I pay attention to who the original people were who cultivated, protected and lived on the land I’m enjoying. In recognition of the extreme exploitation and loss they’ve suffered, I pay them a use fee.
Here’s your action:
28 Days of Black History
ARD—Anti-Racism Daily—is a resource I’ve featured before. Each evening during Black History Month, they do the amazing service of highlighting significant moments in our history influenced by the contributions of Black people.
Here’s your action:
How Often Do You Think About Being White?
I know, this may not seem like a concrete action with an immediate impact on systemic racism. Yet, white supremacy culture is effective because it renders ‘whiteness’ invisible. Seeing whiteness, in ourselves and in our world, is the basis for profound impact.
Make a Difference in the Lives of LGBTQIA+ Incarcerated People
A liberatory practice I work to uphold is focusing my efforts on those most impacted by oppression. Black and Pink is a prison abolitionist organization that does just this by supporting the lives of incarcerated people who identify as LGBTQIA+ or live with HIV/AIDS ARD.
Join their Pen Pal program: