hot take, social media
@KFears I think it's a bit of a "trial by fire" situation; people learn organizing because they *have* to, and in the process learn (some) community building skills.
Unfortunately that's learning to build a *very particular kind* of community, one that aims to fight something that already exists. But once the problem is solved you need a different kind of community, one that *builds things up* and sustains them for the long term, and that requires very different skills.
I don't have concrete data to back this up, but my suspicion is that this might play a role in the tendency for revolutions in dire circumstances to result in decades of misery afterwards; because the revolutions are carried out by battle-minded folks, and they are not prepared to do the second, constructive part of the process.
hot take, social media
@joepie91 I fear there's not much that can be done here. If people are consistently denied every ability to organize constructively - destruction is the only future remaining.