1. Learning from the Movement for a New Society: An Interview with George Lakey

    An interesting interview with Quaker activist George Lakey:

    One that weighed heavily with me was a sense of demoralization that came out of the ‘60s. Many felt it was all over and we’d failed. So how do you start something new in a largely demoralized bunch of activists? We needed confidence building measures. We needed to know that we could do something now, as well as project a vision and a strategy. Another impulse was making a living. We didn’t picture being a fundraising organization with that subsidizing the activists. Activists had to provide their own income. But, by living communally, the costs go way down. So some people said, “We love the idea of printing, so how about we start a collective print shop?” And that was employment for a lot of people. And a couple other people said, “The cheaper we can get quality food, the better, so let’s start a co-op.” Cheap food, that’s great, and livelihood for the people who’d be managers. So we had a chance to create something and make it work and provide some benefit to the neighborhood. So I think several agendas came together around prefigurative politics.

    I wrote about MNS back in April and was involved in a lot of the second-generation post-MNS culture (publishing house, food coop). My interest in this is partially preparation for the New Monastics and Convergent Friends workshop C Wess Daniels and I are going to lead at Pendle Hill this May.