Changing the paradigm is not about putting a different person in power; it is about awakening a different power in people.

–Michael Nagler, Metta Center Founder

 

 

Nonviolence is a great power which, when used correctly, can overturn empires.  You will be drawing on that power, the full extent of which comes into our hands when we adopt it deeply and consistently, not because it’s our only option but because it’s the only option that allows us to preserve our humanity in the process of struggle, i.e. to not further create the problem we’re trying to solve.  Just ends and nonviolent means are a powerful combination, and that becomes clearer the longer the struggle goes on.  We also get closer to the full potential of nonviolence when we have trained ourselves to the point where nonviolence is practically a way of  life, offering unyielding resistance to injustice but never hostility to the true well-being of any person.

 

 

 

 

new to nonviolence? get started at this link.

 

building the world we want: a framework for occupy

(read at this link) 

 

 

Nonviolence is strategically the most effective approach in any situation of oppression particularly; however, its full power comes out when we:

  • have set a determination to identify core issues for which we are willing to make great sacrifices (and compromises on everything else);

  • have a well developed program of self-improvement and constructive work, building the world we want without demanding that others give it to us;

  • have a strategic plan that can carry us forward for the long term, using constructive program whenever possible and active resistance when necessary.

 

 

 

Nonviolence is a form of power and it harnesses “anger under discipline for maximum effect.”

Nonviolence is not passivity; it is a power in and of itself. There are three faces of power, according to Kenneth Boulding: threat power, exchange power and integrative power. Threat power is the power of a military force; exchange power is the power of money. Unlike military/threat or economic power, nonviolence is integrative power or love in action. In order to use its power on any scale–small or large–we must as Dr. King said, “harness anger under discipline for maximum effect.” 

  

Nonviolent struggle has three primary dimensions (at this link)

 

 

Nonviolence as seen in the Occupy Movement (at this link)

 

Examples of the practice of nonviolence concepts in Occupy (at this link)

 

Tips for a Long-Term Nonviolent Strategy (at this link) 

 

 

 

 

 

Useful Occupy Links (off site)

Occupy Together

Occupied Media

Occupy Solutions

Occupy Cafe

October 2011

10 Reasons Why This Changes Everything

Al-Jazeera

Adbusters