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  1. Embed this notice
    Ricki Bowie Knives Tarr (rickitarr@beige.party)'s status on Friday, 04-Jul-2025 21:09:04 JST Ricki Bowie Knives Tarr Ricki Bowie Knives Tarr

    Okay, I've mentioned this a few times, but let's talk about The Orange Alternative. It's Poland in the 80's and an art history student noticed that when someone would paint an anti-authoritarian message, it would very quickly get painted over by the government. He decided to paint a dwarf with an orange hat any time he'd see the white paint that covered these messages. Soon other people were doing the same. They embraced this kind of absurdism, what the government was doing was ridiculous, so they leaned into it. The paintings of dwarves soon became organized street parties. They would all wear orange pointy hats and walk through the streets with banners, chanting Dwarf Dwarf Dwarf! They would pool what little extra funds they had together and buy things that people needed like toliet paper and tampons, and would have street fairs with food and dancing, and hand them out. At Christmas, they would dress as Santas, and do the same. The police were flummoxed by what to do, if they arrested people for wearing hats and giving out tampons, they looked foolish and would be embarrassed, not sure what to do with these surreal forms of protest.

    There is so much more to this, definitely read up on it, but it was an effective form of protest, creating community, spreading joy and absurdism, because authoritarian governments are absurd. Protests are going to look like a lot of different things, and this is just one of them.

    In Russia, they have created Little Picketers, tiny rough clay figures holding banners, that they press into people's hands to remind them, that they aren't alone.

    So, don't believe the propaganda, you aren't alone in caring, you aren't alone in wanting a different world, put on your goofiest hat, and let people know they aren't alone either.

    In conversation about 6 days ago from beige.party permalink

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    • Steve's Place repeated this.
    • Embed this notice
      Derek Caelin is writing a book (derek@social.coop)'s status on Friday, 04-Jul-2025 23:51:01 JST Derek Caelin is writing a book Derek Caelin is writing a book
      in reply to

      @RickiTarr reminds me of Srdja Popovic's book "Blueprint for a Revolution". He talks about how Serbian activists released accessorized turkeys into the square and the authoritarian state's goons would look ridiculous chasing after them.

      In conversation about 6 days ago permalink
    • Embed this notice
      TopKnot (topknot@mas.to)'s status on Saturday, 05-Jul-2025 09:32:01 JST TopKnot TopKnot
      in reply to

      @RickiTarr
      Remember, in some places in the United States, it is #illegal to hand out bottles of #water to people waiting in line to #Vote

      Even in 1980s Poland, the government was more progressive, in that they wouldn't fathom arresting someone for wearing orange pointy hats.

      ** "The police were flummoxed by what to do, if they arrested people for wearing hats and giving out tampons, they looked foolish and would be embarrassed" **

      https://www.kgw.com/article/news/verify/elections-verify/georgia-voter-poll-lines-water-biden-fact-check/536-704802f4-251b-491f-a564-5d4774963b2e

      In conversation about 6 days ago permalink
    • Embed this notice
      David Penfold :verified: (davep@infosec.exchange)'s status on Saturday, 05-Jul-2025 13:39:02 JST David Penfold :verified: David Penfold :verified:
      in reply to

      @RickiTarr Thanks. It's incredible https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orange_Alternative

      In conversation about 5 days ago permalink

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      1. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: upload.wikimedia.org
        Orange Alternative
        The Orange Alternative (Polish: Pomarańczowa Alternatywa) is a Polish anti-communist underground movement, started in Wrocław, a city in south-west Poland and led by Waldemar Fydrych (sometimes misspelled as Frydrych), commonly known as Major (Commander of Festung Breslau) in the 1980s. Its main purpose was to offer a wider group of citizens an alternative way of opposition against the authoritarian regime by means of a peaceful protest that used absurd and nonsensical elements. By doing this, members of the Orange Alternative could not be arrested by the police for opposition to the regime without the authorities becoming a laughing stock. The Orange Alternative has been viewed as part of the broader Solidarity movement. Sociology professor Lisa (Lisiunia) Romanienko has argued it was among the most effective of Solidarity's factions in dismantling anxiety and fear surrounding the dictatorial regime, in order to bring about the labor (and later social and cultural) movement's success. Initially they painted ridiculous graffiti of dwarves on paint spots covering up anti-government slogans on city walls. Afterwards...
      RamenCatholic 🐢 🌈 repeated this.
    • Embed this notice
      lonely extrovert (rothko@beige.party)'s status on Saturday, 05-Jul-2025 13:39:02 JST lonely extrovert lonely extrovert
      in reply to
      • David Penfold :verified:

      @davep @RickiTarr see also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tactical_frivolity

      In conversation about 5 days ago permalink

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      1. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: upload.wikimedia.org
        Tactical frivolity
        Tactical frivolity is a form of public protest involving humour; often including peaceful non-compliance with authorities, carnival and whimsical antics. Humour has played a role in political protests at least as far back as the Classical period in ancient Greece. However, it is only since the 1990s that the term tactical frivolity gained common currency for describing the use of humour in opposing perceived political injustice. Generally, the term is used to denote a whimsical, nonconfrontational approach rather than aggressive mocking or cutting jokes. History of humour in political protest The study of humour by social historians did not become popular until the early 1980s and the literature on this subject studying periods before the 20th century is relatively sparse. An exception is the frequently cited Rabelais and His World by Mikhail Bakhtin, a Russian scholar considered by some to be the most important thinker of the 20th century. The work discusses the life and times of the writer and satirist François Rabelais with emphases on what the author considers to be the powerful role of humour...

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