If you're disillusioned, depressed or downright furious at the state of politics today, this episode is for you.
Eric Liu, founder and CEO of Citizen University, says that you're more powerful than you think. We discuss the stories, strategies, and ideas raised in his timely new book, "You're More Powerful Than You Think: A Citizen’s Guide to Making Change Happen"
The key to fighting back successfully is to have a strategy and know how to read and write power,” but most people have no understanding of power and how to use it.
Political illiteracy is one reason we feel so powerless. “I think the reality of American life, right now, is that so many people have neither the motivation nor the ability to read or write power,” Eric tells us. “They lapse into this “House of Cards” or dark conspiratorial vision that all politics are like "Scandal,” and out of that are born people like Donald Trump as President.”
The truth is that ordinary people are able to accomplish extraordinary things. We learn about Communities Creating Opportunity, a Kansas City-based campaign against predatory payday lending and the Coalition of Immokalee Workers - a surprisingly powerful movement for farmworker justice.
For decades, poor and often illiterate migrant workers picked tomatoes in rural Florida, "laboring essentially under conditions of indentured servitude." Instead of an hourly wage, growers paid them pennies per bucket of what they picked, says Eric. The Immokalee farmworkers successfully demanded higher wages and better labor conditions. "In 2001, they organized the first-ever farmworker boycott of a fast-food company, against Taco Bell," writes Eric in his book. Four years later, Taco Bell's parent company agreed to raise wages and reform its power chain.
Eric's solutions:
Learn how power is organized. His book has nine strategies for changing the game.
Vote. In his book, Eric Liu writes that voter turnout (in general) is rarely above 60 percent (at best).
Exercise your "we muscle.”Join a club or group and learn how to work with others on game-changing ways to improve the odds for a cause or a hobby that you care about.
Keep it local. Eric argues that too much attention is given to power politics in Washington D.C. Often the best way to bring about change is in the neighborhood or city where you live.
Schools and colleges should improve civics education, giving students a much clearer understanding of grassroots democracy.
Learn more about citizenship and civic power from these online Citizen University videos.
Read a review of Eric Liu's new book, "You're More Powerful Than You Think," by New York Times journalist David Bornstein, co-founder of Solutions Journalism Network. David is one of our "Fix It" show guests, listen to Episode 47.