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Gaslit Nation

Fire in Our Peace: The Power of Nonviolent Resistance

Gaslit Nation

Gaslit Nation

Trump, Politics, Left, Democracy, Resistance, News, Society & Culture, Progressive, Liberal, Kendzior, Chalupa, Resist

4.84K Ratings

🗓️ 23 July 2025

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

They want us to believe that silence is strength. That if we keep our heads down, the storm will pass. But we are the storm. And our storm doesn’t need fists. It needs strategy, courage, and the fire of militant nonviolence.

In the latest episode of Gaslit Nation, Jamila Raqib, the executive director of the Albert Einstein Institution, delivers a masterclass in radical defiance without a single weapon raised. Raqib doesn’t just talk resistance. She teaches the art of war, the nonviolent kind, built on discipline, planning, and unshakeable conviction.

She carries forward the torch of Gene Sharp, the quiet revolutionary whose writings, like From Dictatorship to Democracy, which the Gaslit Nation Book Club read in March, have armed movements from Serbia to Syria. His ideas are dangerous, not because they incite chaos, but because they illuminate how to take power back without bloodshed. And dictators fear that more than any rifle.

This is militant nonviolence. It’s strategic. It’s disruptive. And when practiced with precision, it brings regimes to their knees.

Blueprint for the Battle Ahead

Raqib outlines a crucial truth: power is not monolithic. It comes from the obedience of people, workers, civil servants, police, students. Withdraw that obedience, and even the strongest tyrant collapses.

Take Serbia. Take Bangladesh. The world keeps giving us proof that nonviolent action isn’t weak; it’s lethal to authoritarianism when wielded with discipline. These movements succeeded not because they were polite, but because they were strategic. Organized. Defiant.

This is how repression backfires. Every crackdown becomes fuel. Every jail cell, every bullet, every propaganda campaign becomes a rallying cry, if activists know how to use it.

Weapons of the Peaceful Warrior

Raqib reminds us that art is a weapon. Culture is armor. Community is infrastructure. And technology is a battlefield. Whether it empowers or undermines you depends on how well you understand it. Movements rise and fall on logistics, not just slogans.

Fear will always be there. That’s normal. But as Raqib insists, fear doesn’t mean stop. It means go smart. Fear is a compass, if it scares the regime, you're probably doing something right.

Nonviolence is Not Passive. It's Precision.

This conversation isn’t about kumbaya. It’s about battle-readiness. It’s about studying the terrain of power, exploiting the cracks, and toppling giants with the slow, grinding force of disciplined resistance.

Nonviolence doesn’t mean surrender. It means refusing to give your enemy the war they want. It means winning on your terms. And in a time of rising fascism, digital surveillance, and global despair, we must turn to the tools that have worked, again and again.

So study Gene Sharp. Listen to Raqib. Organize like your life depends on it, because it does.

This is not the time for feel-good hashtags. This is the time for public education, mass mobilization, and strategic action. Nonviolent resistance is not soft. It’s the hardest fight there is.

But it’s the one that wins.

EVENTS AT GASLIT NATION:

  • NEW DATE! Thursday July 31 4pm ET – the Gaslit Nation Book Club discusses Antoine de Saint Exupéry’s The Little Prince written in the U.S. during America First. 

  • Minnesota Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. 

  • Vermont Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. 

  • Arizona-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to connect, available on Patreon. 

  • Indiana-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to join, available on Patreon. 

  • Florida-based listeners are going strong meeting in person. Be sure to join their Signal group, available on Patreon. 

  • Have you taken Gaslit Nation’s HyperNormalization Survey Yet?

  • Gaslit Nation Salons take place Mondays 4pm ET over Zoom and the first ~40 minutes are recorded and shared on Patreon.com/Gaslit for our community

Want to enjoy Gaslit Nation ad-free? Join our community of listeners for bonus shows, exclusive Q&A sessions, our group chat, invites to live events like our Monday political salons at 4pm ET over Zoom, and more! Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit!

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to Gaslit Nation.

0:22.5

I am your host, Andrea Chalupa, a journalist and filmmaker and the writer and producer of the journalistic thriller, Mr. Jones, about Stalin's genocide, famine, and Ukraine.

0:33.5

The film The Kremlin doesn't want you to see, so be sure to watch it.

0:36.7

Today, we're honored to sit down with a woman on the front lines of peaceful resistance.

0:42.3

Jamila Rakeb, executive director of the Albert Einstein Institution, trained under the legendary

0:48.1

Gene Sharp, the author of The Gaslit Nation Book Club pick earlier this year from dictatorship to democracy,

0:56.7

that that jean sharp, Jamila has spent years empowering people worldwide with the tools to

1:02.1

resist oppression without lifting a weapon. Get ready for an eye-opening conversation about power,

1:08.3

resistance, and the strategic art of nonviolence. Welcome to Gaslit

1:14.1

Nation, Jamila. Thank you so much, Andrea. It's great to be with you. So let's start at the beginning.

1:19.4

What first drew you to the work of Gene Sharp and nonviolent resistance? Well, you know, a lot of people

1:26.2

are surprised to hear that I didn't really know who

1:29.2

Jean Sharp was before I applied for a position to work with him. Actually, I came to this work with a lot of

1:36.3

misconceptions. I thought nonviolent resistance was, well, let's say something that people in

1:43.5

privilege suggest for those living under

1:45.7

oppression and that it was really a conversation non-starter for people facing difficult

1:50.1

circumstances, that it was a nice idea but not really workable in a world with real problems.

1:56.7

And that's because I was born in Afghanistan.

1:59.1

My family fled during the Soviet invasion and

2:01.2

occupation of the country. And I was really angry. And I felt that there was a really strong

2:07.7

need for people to be able to defend their communities. And I thought just rejecting violence

2:12.8

because it was somehow someone decided it was morally wrong was really not very compelling for me.

...

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