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Americans aren’t waiting for the Democratic Party to take on Trump

In February, anti-Trump demonstrations took place in all 50 states, part of the of 50501 movement (which stands for 50 protests, 50 states, one day).

On March 15, thousands of people marched in New York City under the banner of public employee unions against the Trump/Musk cuts to public services.

The arrest of pro-Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil, a green-card-holding Columbia University graduate who played a prominent role in anti-Israel protests last year, has sparked an uproar over whether the Trump administration is violating the 1st Amendment by targeting immigrants for their political beliefs.

And God bless New York Rep. -, 35,
and Vermont Sen. , 83, who are on the road in Western states with their
“Fighting Oligarchy” tour, which has drawn thousands of people to arenas this week in Arizona, Nevada and Colorado.

There’s more.
“Missing member” events, for example, where voters are holding their own town halls because their Republican members of Congress are too afraid to face them.

In some cases, constituents step up to a microphone and pose questions to an empty chair.

In Wisconsin, Republican Rep. Derrick Van Orden did not show up at a town hall,
so a Democrat from a nearby district,
Rep. ,
came instead and spoke to 300 people next to an empty chair with Van Orden’s name on it.

Hundreds of healthcare workers demonstrated outside the Anaheim Hills office of Republican Rep. the other day to protest expected cuts to Medicaid, the health safety net for more than 72 million low-income and disabled Americans.

And millions of Americans all over the country may answer the call on Saturday, April 5, for a
“Hands Off” protest organized by Indivisible,
the progressive grassroots group that got its start in 2017 when a handful of congressional staffers put together a handbook about peaceful, effective resistance to right-wing power grabs.

The “Hands Off” motto:
“They’re dismantling our country. They’re looting our government. And they think we’ll just watch.”
latimes.com/opinion/story/2025

Chuck Darwin

On Thursday, I, along with some 4,500 others, tuned in to one of Indivisible’s weekly Zoom meetings led by Indivisible founders
and
. There are about 1,600 local Indivisible groups scattered around the country
-- and more are springing up each day.

“Throughout history,” said Levin, “there has been no solution to creeping authoritarianism other than all of us — mass, broad-based organizing from people all over the country, from all walks life.”

“If your ideas are popular and you have a mandate for change,” Greenberg said
“you do not hide from your constituents.
We are the ones who are out there,
who are unafraid and organizing and showing up in public because our ideas are popular.
When people hear what we have to say, they want that, not them.”

The April 5 protests are meant to be a show of strength.

“‘Hands Off,’” said Greenberg, “is a message about everything that is happening, right?

It’s hands off Medicaid,
hands off our democracy,
hands off Social Security,
hands off our environment,
hands off veterans benefits.”

Now, for those who think that firebombing Tesla dealerships is a better tactic than nonviolent protests,
I would remind you of the world-changing work of Gandhi and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

And I would also tell you about the work of Harvard political scientist and her colleagues.

To Chenoweth’s surprise — shock, actually — she discovered that over time, nonviolent protests are far more successful than violent ones.

Between 1900 and 2006, she says, campaigns of nonviolent civil resistance were twice as successful as violent campaigns.

She also came up with the so-called 3.5% rule:
No government can withstand a challenge from around 3.5% of its population without accommodating the movement.

Examples:

In 1986, millions of Filipinos peacefully protested the entrenched Marcos regime,
-- which folded after four days.

In 2003, protesters in the country of Georgia stormed the Parliament holding red roses,
-- which led to the peaceful overthrow of the country’s President Eduard Shevardnadze.

In 2019, after decades in power, leaders in both Sudan and Algeria were forced to step down after peaceful popular uprisings.

To hit the magic percentage, about 11 million Americans would have to rise up.

In 2017, nearly half a million people protested Trump at the Women’s March in Washington.

Around the United States, between 3.2 million and 5.2 million people joined in, which amounts to between 1% and 1.6% of the population.

I could be wrong, but it seems to me that twice as many Americans are now upset enough to take to the streets.

The goal is not to overthrow the government.
The goal is to awaken the small-d democratic instincts of a Republican-dominated Congress
that has actively ceded its power to Trump.

And the only way they’ll snap to is if they begin to fear for their jobs.

Americans appalled by Trump’s wanton destruction of American democracy
— and, yeah, OK, the high price of eggs
— must be willing to show it before it’s too late
(and it’s getting perilously late).

As Trump himself once said,
“What the hell have you got to lose?”

Bluesky: @rabcarian.bsky.social.

@cdarwin

When violence starts, the most violent win.

@cdarwin

Time is already running out. Don’t wait until it’s too late!

If there are enough of you, you can run them out of town!

So, what the hell have you got to lose?

@cdarwin

The ‘3.5% rule’ discovered by Erica Chenoweth is really interesting.

Also the number of demonstrators in the former #GDR, who in 1989 ultimately contributed to the peaceful overthrow of the system in #EastGermany, was nearly 3.5%.

#uspol #runthemoutoftown
#ericachenoweth #civildisobedience #peacefulprotest