4.9 • 1.8K Ratings
🗓️ 21 January 2025
⏱️ 74 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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One thing that has become quite clear in recent decades is that the best form of disaster preparedness is …community. Being plugged into an organized community can make all the difference when disasters hit. This is just as true for the slow violence perpetrated against all of us under capitalism as it is for responding to emergencies like hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, or wildfires.Â
In today’s episode, we’re going to be talking about organizing in our communities—specifically focusing on some of the organizing taking place in response to the LA wildfires—but also zooming out much more broadly to talk about organizing in general. It’s the inaugural episode of our organizing series here on Patreon, taking deep dives into a wide variety of different organizing spaces and issues, from immigration to labor to issues around abortion access and trans rights and much more.Â
Although we focus most of our political education work on upstream root causes—taking deep dives into many radical ideas and revolutionary theories—it’s crucial to also focus on the practice itself, the on-the-ground work taking place on the frontlines, so that we can, as Frank Chapman has so eloquently put it, also practice our way into correct thinking. And, of course, as Fred Hampton famously put it: "Theory's cool, but theory with no practice ain't shit. You got to have both of them—the two go together."Â
In this inaugural episode, we’ve invited on two friends and comrades from the incredible All Power Books in Los Angeles to talk about their involvement in the grassroots, community response to the fires whose impacts are still being felt—and will be for years—on the broader Los Angeles population.Â
Gage is a co-founder of All Power Books as well as an artist whose work is featured prominently at All Power. Sean is a co-founder and leader of the All Power Free Clinic. All Power Books is a radical bookstore and community space in the West Adams neighborhood of Los Angeles. They co-hosted our very first live episode last year with Abby Martin.
In this conversation we talk about Gage and Sean’s experiences during the first hours of the fires which erupted on January 7th. We talk about the emergence of mutual aid and survival programs which focus specifically on disaster response, the challenges and lessons that emerge from this kind of work, the role that disaster plays in capitalism, how to build class consciousness and infuse on-the-ground survival work with political education, the failure of the official response, All Power’s free clinic, and much more.Â
Outro music by Stick to Your Guns
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0:00.0 | A quick note before we jump into this Patreon episode. |
0:03.9 | Thank you to all of our Patreon subscribers for making upstream possible. |
0:08.7 | We genuinely couldn't do this without you. |
0:11.6 | Your support allows us to create bonus content like this |
0:15.2 | and provide most of our content for free |
0:17.7 | so that we can continue to offer political education media to the public |
0:22.4 | and help to build our movement. Thank you, comrades. We hope you enjoy this conversation. The response of my body felt similar to 2019, you know, when we're having the uprising. |
0:56.7 | It felt similar to 2020 when we were still in March figuring out what is this new virus |
1:03.0 | that we're dealing with. |
1:05.5 | But what was different this time, for me anyways, is I had my comrades and we had this |
1:10.6 | network to be able to immediately |
1:12.7 | start building. We already had this network built. So we were able to just make quick decisions |
1:18.6 | and figure out how to get items where they needed to go. Mass. Food, water even. Yeah, it was a very |
1:27.4 | stressful time, but luckily because of the network |
1:30.1 | pre-built and pre-used, we were able to respond quickly. You're listening to Upstream. Upstream. Upstream. |
1:38.8 | A podcast of documentaries and conversations that invites you to unlearn everything you thought you knew |
1:46.1 | about economics. I'm Della Duncan. And I'm Robert Raymond. One thing that has become quite |
1:53.0 | clear in recent decades is that the best form of disaster preparedness is community. Being plugged into an organized community can make all |
2:04.1 | the difference when disasters hit. This is just as true for the slow violence |
2:09.8 | perpetrated against all of us under capitalism, as it is for responding to |
2:15.0 | emergencies like hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, or wildfires. |
2:20.3 | In today's episode, we're going to be talking about organizing in our communities, |
... |
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