Portland Walks: utility Pole politics

I’ve been doing a lot of silent screaming lately. Maybe you have, too. Things in the United States are bad, overwhelmingly so, and are bound to get worse before we either pull ourselves out of this authoritarian pit or fail to. I can’t tell you anything you don’t already know about the coup, right? About the fact that fascism is very, very much here? That we are living under an authoritarian regime already? That the constitutional crisis has happened and we’re now barreling toward constitutional collapse?

Right. I know… We all know…

That doesn’t mean that we give up. It’s nowhere near over. But the organizing and community building we need to do isn’t going to happen, for the most part, online. We need people in our local communities to join together for the fight, and we sure as hell will need people in our local communities for support and mutual aid as things get worse. I’m not going to give you a lecture on how to build community; you don’t need that from me. I just want to say… Yeah, it’s scary. It’s bad. I see you. I’m here in it, too. It sucks. Gather your people. Let’s fight.

As I walk around Portland each day, I keep an eye out for signs and stickers and posters on utility poles. They’re a way for people to speak to the community in a kind of shorthand, and because of that you can get a decent sense of the current mood. I thought I’d share some of what I’ve seen recently.

I’m a big fan, in particular, of whoever is leaving the embroidered quotes around town.

Sticker that reads Fascism is a loser's ideology. Image is based on Goya's Saturn Devouring His Son. The body being eaten is painted like the American flag/
Bubble fabric paint on faded fabric stapled to a wooden utility pole says You Are Wonderful
Black and white photo of a torso and hands holding a cup of ice cream and a spoon, taped to a rusted metal power pole on a city street.
Red letters embroidered onto black fabric stapled to a wooden utility pole reads LOVE IS THE ULTIMATE OUTLAW. IT JUST WON'T ADHERE TO ANY RULES. --TOM ROBBINS
White lettering embroidered onto black fabric stapled to wooden utility pole reads KINDNESS IS RADICAL REVOLUTION IN A HOSTILE WORLD. --JAIYA JOHN
A delightfully strange, surrealist sort of painting in a sort of comic book style, with a figure in a triangular hat folded from newspaper and city buildings in the background. There are text bubbles but I can't read what's in them. There are splashes of read around the figure. Maybe meant to represent blood, but it isn't clear. It's a canvas nailed to a utility pole.

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