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Posts by Justyn Kase Huckleberry, PhD

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Using Games To Help Students Reclaim Spokane’s Empty Spaces | Photo: NUMO We know games are a powerful way to reimagine urban space and mobility systems. But what if cities started building more playful and accessible spaces inspired by the imagination of kids? ...

New blog 🚨 about @numoalliance.bsky.social's youth planning workshop with 5th graders in Spokane, WA that used Minecraft!

thecityfix.com/blog/using-g...

@wrirosscities.bsky.social #activemobility #publicspace #youthparticipation #engagement

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“I Have Lost Everything”: The Toll of Cities’ Homeless Sweeps Cities often take belongings — including important documents and irreplaceable mementos — when they conduct sweeps of homeless encampments. ProPublica gave notecards to people across the country so…

We asked people who lived in homeless encampments that were cleared out in city “sweeps” to write about what object was the hardest for them to lose.

“They took my baby pictures and my moms obituaries,” a 29-year-old in California wrote.

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My favorite 🧡

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Here Is Everything That Has Changed Since Congestion Pricing Started in New York Fewer cars. Faster travel. Less honking. And some questions we still can’t answer.

Fewer cars. Faster travel. Less honking. Here are the things that have shifted since congestion pricing went into effect in New York.

11 months ago 1158 182 35 17
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The Poseidon clematis is blooming

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What can the world’s most walkable cities teach other places? Researchers show how more urban areas could become 15-minute cities

Out of thousands of cities across the world, not a single U.S. city makes the "most walkable" list. Sprawl doesn't age well. www.economist.com/graphic-deta...

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Great work from my former colleague, Leah Lazer. Better transportation data can lead to better outcomes. #micromobility

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You mean to tell me we have a higher GDP per capita than this and still our communities are unwalkable and filled with strip malls and no third places? What’s the point?

(📷 utrechtalive)

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The photo version 🤭

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I just want to watch this clip of Tulip getting excited to see me with a big stick over and over…

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In case you want to read the Articles of Impeachment--
(thank you Kathy Biehl)
thanedar.house.gov/imo/media/do...

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This summarizes my feelings for many NYTimes articles these days quite well

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These steps might need to evolve more for this current moment. Regardless, this book really struck a cord for me. If you're still here--thanks for reading.

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--Finally, we must provide material and moral support (mutual aid) for the persecuted groups, which can include a moral, political, and material boycott of the fascist government.

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--Since the forces of fascism are organized internationally. It is also important that the fight against fascism be organized internationally. We are currently seeing a rise in fascism around the world.

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--Labor parties/orgs of every tendency must form a special body for leading the struggle against fascism. This body should compile facts of the fascist movement, educate the working class of its hostile nature through mixed-media, organize through self-defense, & special antifascist youth education.

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--First we can recognize that fascism contradicts itself. We've seen Trump say he will help the working class, but he is actively taking steps to undermine the economy the lower class depends on. This will hopefully lead to U.S. fascism's undoing, but likely not before we see much more violence.

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Zetkin maintains that the character of fascism will be different country to country. But there are some key steps we can take to fight fascism:

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In 20th century Italy, anti-nationals were disciplined through violence–facilities burnt to the ground and people murdered.

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--With the power Trump has accumulated, he is deploying brutal and violent terror by way of the El Salvadoran prison, mass layoffs, stripping away the protections our government has provided that has made us free–safe food, clean air, bespoke approaches to health for rare diseases.

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This almost requires no explanation of how Trump has deployed these tactics–his rude oversimplifications and pithy, hateful one liners do the work itself. By leveraging the moods and interests of the social masses, Trump was able to rise to power.

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-- In Italy in 1921, Zetkin recounts that “[f]ascism won the masses through sham revolutionary demands advocated through unscrupulously demagogic agitation. Its pompous verbal radicalism was aimed above all against the government of Giolitti, ‘betrayer of the nation.’”

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--The Trump administration is deploying key methods of fascism to cement the power of the ruling class. Exploitation of the working class, dissolving the federal workforce, and subjugating Trans humans, migrants, women, and people of color, are means to a broader goal: to weaken the lower classes.

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--Now you've got a billionaire squad leading the country who are, as Zetkin wrote, “striving for the reconstruction of the capitalist economy…the maintenance of [the bourgeoise’s] class domination.”

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--This left a lot of folks feeling politically homeless. Trump harnessed feelings of disillusionment and democratic progress.

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--Fascism arises when capitalism fails the lower classes. The upper class might disintegrate or conditions can worsen for lower/middle classes. In America, by 2016 economic inequality was worsening. The 2008 recession left many families worse off and neither party truly represented lower classes.

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While the U.S. has a much different capitalist context than the manufacturing-centered economies of early 20th century Italy/Germany--including many more intellectuals that would be considered part of Zetkin's working class--there are lessons to be learned from this history. In particular -

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
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I recently finished Clara Zetkin's book, 'Fighting Fascism: How to Struggle and How to Win.'

It is striking how many comparisons we can draw between the fascist movements of the 1920s across Europe and Trumpism. A thread🧵

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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Don't call it a Substack. - Anil Dash A blog about making culture. Since 1999.

Articles about substack’s nazi problem:

www.anildash.com//2024/11/19/...

www.thehandbasket.co/p/substack-a...

thehypothesis.substack.com/p/heres-why-...

www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archiv...

(Free link: archive.is/uyugO)

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