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It’s been a long time coming, but you can now search PTP’s website with out new Google powered search page.
It’s been a long time coming, but you can now search PTP’s website with out new Google powered search page.
Typetester is a cool online tool that will show you how fonts look on-screen. If you do web work, this could be pretty useful to you. If you don’t do web work, this is probably useless.
If you’re looking for an example of what a blog-comment flamewar looks like,this is a pretty good example.
I had the honor and pleasure of doing a workshop at the Jobs with Justice Annual Meeting. You can take a look at the materials I used at the session on the training page.
During the session, in commenting on the phenomena of blogging, I said that I thought that by and large, blogging - the phenomena - was pretty much irrelevant for community organizing because bloggers - and here I’m really talking about the “A list” bloggers A) don’t really have any power over issues of substance outside the sphere of blogging and technology; and B) aren’t connected to the communities that CLOs are working in; and C) CLO membership isn’t online in large numbers anyway, so they aren’t reading blogs.
Carlos, from Chicago Jobs with Justice rightly pushed back against that statement with the example of CAFTA and how a non-A-list blogger used his blog to share information about CAFTA. I don’t know the specifics of that story, so if you know more about it, please share. And Carlos, if you’d like to write up your thoughts on how blogs were an important factor in your CAFTA example, I’d be happy to post them here.
What I’m interested in here is what this specific story can teach us about using blogging in support of community organizing work. What were the factors that made this example work? What kind of readership does the blog in question have? Are organizers reading blogs regularly? Which ones?
If you didn’t donate to PTP’s Walk for Justice there is still time. Just follow that link and make your donation to support PTP’s grants pool.
The walk itself was great. I’ve been at the walk for the last three years, and this was the first one we’ve had where the weather was nice as you can see from these pictures:

This hurricane has presented a challenge to community organizing - how to reach all the people dispersed by the storm and create or re-create democratically-led organizations that can respond to the government and private interests that will control the rebuilding of the cities and towns. This is a big challenge for community organizations that usually are struggling to survive and barely made it through the hurricane themselves.
This is a critical moment for developing power for low income survivors - Some national organizations (PICO network, Jobs With Justice) are using their Washington connections to bring the voices of the communities directly to the federal government. These and others are organizing in the evacuation housing sites. Houston’s The Metropolitan Organization - affiliated with the Industrial Areas Foundation - has formed a survivors’ leadership group which is developing a set of demands (Another article.) ACORN is organizing evacuee groups in Baton Rouge and Houston. According to Madeline Talbott of ACORN, they brought computers to the Houston Astrodome to give ACORN members a way to register with FEMA on-site.
These national groups have some visibility, but the unaffiliated local and regional organizing groups are also engaged in noteworthy, if unsung, efforts. Randy Stoecker over at the U of Wisconsin has put together a rudimentary list of organizations that meet this list of criteria:
1 Its pre-Katrina address was in an affected community.
2 It is governed by the people it serves.
3 It is currently involved in relief efforts (including organizing efforts)
Please check it out and support groups on it. Add to it if you know of more groups.
Groups that PTP has engaged with in the area: Southern Echo in Mississippi, Louisiana Bucket Brigade, Working Interfaith Network in Louisiana. There is also an impressive philanthropic organization at the Southern Partners Fund, which has set up a special fund for recovery. With its board made up of staff from community-led organizations, Southern Partners Fund is well connected throughout the region. They’ve got their finger on the pulse of community organizing.
Even as the local community organizing groups are struggling to put together a forum for power, the online organizing networks have mostly focused on relief issues by using computer systems to track missing and safe evacuees or to match housing requests. With so many people displaced, the internet hasn’t been much help in bringing the displaced back together. Most of the low income people in the hurricane’s ground zero weren’t on the net anyway. While there has been some interesting techniques used - I like the People Finder Interchange Format (PFIF) as an interesting technology application - generally speaking these are tools for the portion of the population on the net. The internet hasn’t a offered good substitute for a coordinated on-the-ground organizing effort. As usual, its greatest benefit to organizing has been as a fundraiser, but most of the funds are going towards individual survival and not yet towards strengthening the organizations that help communities as a whole survive. Our organizing community sorely lacks a robust fundraising system for community-led organizing. PTP has set a goal to develop a solution to this problem and we will write about it in the near future.
In the meantime, it sure looks like the “times they are a changing” again. Let’s make the most of it.
this is what I saw in front of our building this afternoon:
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I assumed that they had something to do with the large number of young people I saw touring the building (our building is a fairly famous green building around these parts, so we get a lot of visitors)
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