I’m looking for places to work, and I’d love to find somewhere where I don’t have to hide my political or economic positions from people I interact with on a daily basis.

When I search for “communist businesses in the US”, I get a long list of historical organizations that were the targets of HUAC, plenty of articles about investigations by senators into Chinese military companies, and other unhelpful garbage propaganda.

Surely there are some companies or organizations that are looking for employees, not just volunteers, but man are they hard to find.

  • purpleworm [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    , practice talking about your positions a bit more vaguely or esoterically or based on simpler ideas that are universal in people’s education/familiarity/experience.

    The last one is good advice, the first two are bad. Don’t be vague, be specific, and don’t be esoteric, be accessible. Just use words that people actually know instead of words they don’t know. “Communists disdain to hide their views,” etc.

    Unless you’re in actual danger, in which case you may as well lie about it instead of being coy like this, so it’s still not helpful advice.

    • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]@hexbear.net
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      5 months ago

      Americans are so propagandized that if you lead with “communist”, a majority of even working-class people will put up mental defenses and pigeonhole or compartmentalize you.

      “The Communists disdain to conceal their views” was written a whole century before the Red Scare- or modern psychology, for that matter. People evolve their positions gradually by reflection instead of by leaps and bounds. To get a reasonably educated person to come around you will need to establish a philosophical foundation that you can then smoothly connect to altruistic values and socialist politics, rather than in the reverse order.

      The state apparata of the imperial core have 100 years of successful domestic strategy of making sure anyone identified as “Communist” is rigidly out-grouped and discounted, and they’ve been running circles around leftist parties that easily revert to the approach of 1848 or even 1917 as if organizing was mathematically solved. You’re not going to clear that hurdle by slamming into it.

      Note how successful the fascists have been by dissimulating as “reasonable conservatives” or even as “radical centrists”.

      • purpleworm [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        I said “words they actually know,” but maybe I should have phrased it as “words they actually know the meaning of,” i.e. the word communist isn’t very helpful with most audiences, but you should still explain the actual content of what you believe in a way that they understand.

        There is only a very limited symmetry between communists and fascists, and core to their asymmetry is that fascists must lie to the masses* but also have the wealthy forces of reaction on their side, paying to proffer versions of their views.

        *not in a “Germans didn’t know about the Holocaust” way but a “making people misunderstand economics and politics” way.

        • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]@hexbear.net
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          5 months ago

          Everybody starts out politically unaligned/indifferent, and the prevailing winds (hegemonic cultural ideas) push people into either of two different varieties of liberalism.

          I have met a lot of people in the workplace who consider themselves “progressive”, and I position myself as more than just that. Usually anti-establishment and radically egalitarian. I would rather aim to build up ideas and then connect them to a historical movement than to build up what is effectively a personal brand and subsequently play catch-up trying to defend that brand against people’s preconceptions.