How large is ParSoc movement?
How many people total are involved in ParSoc activism? On the one hand, Parecon: Life after Capitalism sold quite well and, at APPS, whenever we put out an open call for new members, we get people who have long been interested in the subject coming out of the woodwork to show up at our meetings. On the other hand, the active world of people participating in Parsoc activism seems almost vanishingly small, perhaps no more than 100 people worldwide–way smaller, say, than the number of people involved in neighborhood councils here in our little town of Austin. The same people write chapters in Real Utopia, show up on the IPPS mailing list, are Z sustainers, and show up at Z functions like the parecon/parsoc classes over the summer.
This isn’t meant to be discouraging; for me, this realization was the opposite. For a long time, I was discouraged about the state of Austin Project for a Participatory Society because I kept getting the impression that around the world, PPS activism was a large and growing force, and we must be doing something wrong to not be growing like weeds. When I realized how small the parecon world really was, it was like a great burden lifting off of me. Not just because of the creeping insecurity that I was doing something wrong, a bad activist, but because it showed that a small group of people can come together to build something pretty big.
Since then, our focus at APPS has not been reaching out and getting new people to hear about Parecon. We still do that to some degree, but not so much. It has instead been on coming up with projects that we could carry out which we think will showcase the great benefit of thinking strategically. Perhaps it’s delusional–having failed to bring masses of people to our meetings, we’re pretending that the goal is undesirable. But I don’t think so. I think that it’s more delusional the other way around–at the beginning of our group, having succeeded in getting lots of people to our meetings, we deluded ourselves into thinking we had accomplished something.
February 8th, 2009 at 3:48 pm
Hi! For Planet Parecon, could you please either put a “(read more)” link for each blog entry, or publish them in full? I’m wanting to link to Planet Parecon, but I think people will get the impression that everyone’s making really short blog posts and miss the meat of the posts.
I know that was my belief until I tested it by clicking…
February 8th, 2009 at 4:43 pm
Hi Tayssir,
Thanks for the comment! It’s pretty jarring to find somebody commenting on your little half-awake diary, but nice to know it’s being read.
I really suck at HTML templates, especially early in the morning. But I updated the planet template to be more functional, if also a bit more ugly. Does it look like an improvement? Maybe I’ll find somebody to help make me templates that are both beautiful and functional.
February 9th, 2009 at 11:26 am
I don’t think it’s ugly at all; it’s clean and spare like a blog aggregator should be. Looks fine to me. (I mean, if you enjoy tweaking, I might suggest removing the black lines around the blue headers. And the other black lines could be grey or dashed. I get this from Edward Tufte’s idea to minimize the amount of “ink” you use, so your information stands out, and the structure you have in place doesn’t distract the eye more than it needs to.)
I stumbled on your blog during some googling, and am just glad to know that there actually are Parsoc/Parecon blogs out there; I’d been looking around for such things, and really worried that Z was the only place. I’ve been really looking for day-to-day lessons from Parecon-like groups, and so far all I’ve really found is NewStandard and an old article on Mondragon Cafe…