Again with the short notice. Y'all, people have jobs, people have families. Arrangements have to be made and contingencies have to be planned. Where will you stay? What if you get arrested? Who's going to watch your kids?
If you want good participation, especially with such high numbers, you can't just give people two weeks notice.
tbf, I've been hearing April 5th for over a month now, but it still doesn't change the fact that without a highly coordinated movement, these protests aren't going to get close to the desired effects
Why do you expect people to just leave their jobs?
If I leave my job without notice, I get fired. Jobs are scarce where I live. If I have no job I lose my apartment. If I have no apartment, I am homeless. If I am homeless I can't get a job. If I can't get a job I'm dead because I can't afford my asthma meds.
Honestly, I've thought for a long time that this is one of the big reasons Republicans are against universal healthcare. If losing your job could likely end in homelessness or death it's so much harder to protest.
Well, it's a Saturday so many people (hopefully) don't need to work their typical Mo-Fr jobs
Also, you can give a notice. There is still quite some time until April 5th
Is there ever a time, where everyone would be available?
And your comment should actually put the blame on the current system, where it's seemingly a life or death sentence to leave work for one fucking day.
So I think, it's very much worth to fight for change here.
With your argument, unions are also a really bad thing, because people strike and maybe don't earn money.
It's the fucking system, where people live paycheck to paycheck, and are forced to just swallow every shit, because they can't afford to defend themselves.
If you can't defend yourself now, do you think, it will get easier in the future, when you didn't complain about changes now, that make your life even harder?
I only expect that you try to give more than you originally thought you could. It's up to you to understand the risks you face and how to deal with that. Maybe that means you need to figure out an alternative to this protest - like if you can't make it maybe focus on getting others to go. Or putting signs up around your neighborhood.
But we DO each need to do something and coming in here and being negative and discouraging is not helpful.
If you can't be one of the tens of thousands of people coming out, you can do your part online. Or at the very least, prep your family the best you can.
Me either. Not everything is "for" me. There are people who it is for. More publicity means it'll reach more poeple who it could be for. If you happen to know someone who's going, kick them some money to help cover gas, water, food, first aid, whatever.
That's why there are limited numbers. The solution is simple, get rid of the restrictions that stop most people. Once enough people lose their job and have their family in danger, they'll protest. They'll do more than protest.
If he cuts social security enough, he might generate the same impulse from seniors who have the time, and the ones who are able will show up quite livid. I don't think he realizes that you can't push people all the way and not have consequences, you do have to keep some semblance of bread and circus intact for control.
That's the only reason I'm not attending, I don't have anyone to watch my kids that weekend and it would be irresponsible to bring a 6 year old to something that could break into violence so easily. One cop or bad actor who pushes the crowd wrong...
I wish I could be there, but instead I'm going to teach my kids about what's going on and why the protests are happening. With video, if I can find any livestream of it.