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At least until they take it off of articles where it doesn't belong. Zionist occupied government is objectively true.

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cross-posted from: https://mander.xyz/post/31718037

Mr.Kraken’s Field Manual for the Modern Dissenter

How to Keep Your Eyes Clear, Your Feet Moving, and Your Ass Off a Watchlist

So. You’re protesting. Maybe for the first time, maybe the fiftieth. Either way: love that for you. Get out there and make yourself heard. This little field manual isn’t about vibes, it’s about not getting wrecked by the ever-creative arsenal of your friendly neighbourhood arm of state sponsored violence.

We’re talking tear gas, rubber bullets, sound cannons, drones, horses (yes, actual horses), and more. But here’s the good news: you don’t need military-grade gear. You need smart layering, a good grip, and maybe your roommate’s baking soda.

This guide walks you through how to defend yourself using common stuff - like the kind of gear you could throw in a tote bag and bounce in under five minutes. No cosplay. No cringe. Just street-tested tactics drawn from the last half-century of civil disobedience around the globe.

I. Chemical Irritants: Tear Gas & Pepper Spray

What Happens

Your eyes sting, your throat burns, you cry like you just watched a sad dog movie. It sucks. But it’s survivable.

Your Moves

  • Swim Goggles or Lab Specs – Use tight-fitting goggles that fully seal around your eyes. Avoid anything with vents—those let gas in. Test the seal at home by wearing them in the shower. If no water gets in, you're golden.
  • Damp Bandana + Baking Soda – Mix 1 tablespoon of baking soda into 1 cup of water. Soak a clean bandana or dish towel in it, wring it out slightly, and tie it over your nose and mouth. It helps neutralise the acidity in tear gas and pepper spray. Don’t breathe through it too hard—it’s just a buffer, not a filtration system.
  • Traffic Cone + Water – If a tear gas canister lands near you and you’re feeling brave: drop a plastic traffic cone over it, open end down. Pour water into the small top hole. The water cools and suppresses gas output. This only works if you move fast and use gloves or a jacket to protect your hands. Co-ordinated teams of two kept smoke and tear gas well under control in Hong Kong.
  • Oven Mitts / Gardening Gloves – Use these to handle tear gas canisters safely. Canisters are metal and reach up to 400°F (200°C). Leather gloves or heavy silicone kitchen mitts will keep your fingers unburnt.
  • Saline or Antacid Rinse – Carry a small squeeze bottle filled with saline solution or a 50/50 mix of water and liquid antacid (like Maalox). Use this to rinse eyes or skin after exposure. Do NOT rub your eyes. Blink rapidly to help wash out irritants.
  • Umbrella – Hold it open in front of your body to block incoming gas or spray. Tilt it downward slightly when facing a police line to create a visual barrier. Bonus: it also shields against rubber bullets and cameras and can be used to create a non-aggressive buffer zone between you and the swinging fists of the state.

This Worked For:

  • Hong Kong protesters in 2019 mastered the traffic cone + water tactic. The umbrella became a literal icon.

II. Brute Force: Batons, Rubber Bullets, Beanbags

What Happens

Police charge. You get shoved. Someone throws a can. A rubber bullet ricochets off a stop sign and clocks you in the thigh. Cute.

Your Moves

  • Bike/Skate Helmet – Use one that fits snugly and has a strap you can tighten. Skater helmets (like Triple 8 or Pro-Tec) offer side and back protection, not just the top. Stick some foam inside for added shock absorption.
  • Hoodie + Denim Jacket – Wear a thick hoodie under a jean jacket. If you're expecting heavy police presence, tape a small paperback book or folded towel over your ribs under the hoodie. It cushions hits without making you look like Iron Man.
  • Work Gloves – Leather (like for welding) or construction gloves let you grab fences, protect against broken glass, and help you move safely. Also useful for holding onto a protest buddy when things get chaotic.
  • Stuffed Backpack – Use a small or medium-sized backpack filled with soft but dense stuff—like clothes, towels or your protest gear. This acts as a makeshift backplate. Place heavier items (like a water bottle) toward the bottom for balance.
  • Tray/Bin Lid/Skateboard Deck – Use both hands to grip a lid or tray in front of your torso to absorb baton strikes. A plastic sled or old boogie board also works in a pinch, though can be unwieldy in a crush. Duct-tape a handle on the back if you have time.

This Worked For:

  • Maidan Square protestors used wood and scrap metal to block rubber bullets. You can do the same with trash can lids and a little boldness.

III. Water Cannons

What Happens

You get blasted. You get wet. Sometimes you get hit with chemically spiked dye water and look like a rave gone wrong.

Your Moves

  • Rain Poncho / Bin Liner with Arm Holes – Take a large bin liner (55 gallon), cut holes for your head and arms, and wear it over your clothing. Layer with a hoodie underneath. If you're expecting chemical dye, wear old clothes you don’t mind ditching.
  • Goggles (Again) – Chemical dye water or water infused with capsaicin (pepper) can still burn eyes. A sealed pair of swim goggles helps prevent temporary blindness.
  • Umbrella (Still) – Point it downward, toward the stream. If you’re in a group, form a line of umbrellas side-by-side to absorb water and create a shield wall.

This Worked For:

  • Gezi Park, 2013. Protesters used household furniture to jam water cannon trucks. People also flipped shopping carts and filled them with debris.

IV. Flash-Bangs & Sound Cannons

What Happens

Big bang. Screaming ears. Panic. You forget how to walk in a straight line.

Your Moves

  • Earplugs or Big-Ass Headphones – Use foam earplugs (available at drugstores) or shooting range earmuffs to reduce the decibel shock. Insert earplugs before things escalate—don’t wait for the first bang.
  • Sunglasses / Tinted Goggles – Use wraparound glasses or ski goggles with a tint. These reduce the brightness of flash-bangs and help block small debris. Polarised lenses help with visibility in glare.

This Worked For:

  • During Standing Rock and G20 protests, earplugs and goggles were standard gear for frontliners. Protect your senses.

V. Horses and Vehicles

What Happens

Cops roll up on horses or SUVs. People panic. Shouting. Scrambling. You do not want to get trampled by either.

Your Moves

  • Whistle – Clip one to your backpack or hang around your neck. Blow short, sharp blasts to warn others of incoming charges or speeding vehicles.
  • Sidewalk Chalk – Mark safe exits, turnarounds, or places to regroup. If a known kettle zone exists, write it on the pavement. Useful for navigating when adrenaline kicks in and memory disappears.
  • Good Shoes – Wear lightweight, lace-up sneakers with a solid tread. Avoid sandals, boots with heels, or anything you can’t sprint in.

This Worked For:

  • Protesters in Belarus sat down en masse when police on horseback advanced. It stopped the charge cold. You can’t trample what doesn’t run.

VI. Surveillance

What Happens

You are being watched. By CCTV, drones, livestreamers, and unmarked police cameras. Facial recognition doesn’t care about your angles.

Your Moves

  • Scarf / Mask / Hoodie Combo – Use a plain black or patterned mask that covers your nose and mouth. Combine it with a hoodie and hat to hide your head shape. Tuck your hair in. No logos. Change clothes if you’re being followed.
  • Laser Pointer – Green lasers with high lumens can dazzle CCTV lenses or drone cameras. DO NOT shine them at human eyes or police—it’s illegal and dangerous. Use short pulses. Never hold steady.
  • Foil-Lined Pouch or Cookie Tin – Wrap your phone in two layers of aluminium foil or store it in a steel cookie tin. This blocks most signals. Turn on airplane mode too. Bonus if you remove the SIM card or use a burner.
  • Use Offline or Encrypted Tools – Use apps like Signal with disappearing messages for communication. For live coordination when cell networks go down, use AirDrop or Bluetooth-based apps like Bridgefy. Do not rely on Facebook groups or public Discords.

This Worked For:

  • Hong Kong protesters used cookie tins, laser walls, and black umbrellas to confound surveillance. You don’t need to be Snowden—you just need to be annoying.

VII. Kettling & Arrest

What Happens

They box you in. You can’t leave. Then the arrests start. And they’ll take hours to get to you.

Your Moves

  • Sharpie on Your Arm – Write the number of a legal support hotline or trusted lawyer. Use black, waterproof ink. Test it before you leave.
  • Snack + Water – Bring a high-calorie snack that won’t melt (like trail mix or a granola bar) and a 1L water bottle. It’s enough to stay hydrated and rinse your face or eyes if needed. Anything bigger gets heavy. Eat small bites. Stay hydrated.
  • Buddy System – Pick one person to check in with every 10–15 minutes. If you get kettled, stick together. If one of you gets arrested, the other contacts legal support. Hold on to each other physically if things go sideways.

This Worked For:

  • Hong Kong’s “Be Water” model: constant movement, breaking up, reforming later. It kept kettling attempts from working.

VIII. Flip the Script

What Happens

They expect you to panic. You stay calm. You record. You go viral. You win the narrative.

Your Moves

  • Phone (Airplane Mode) – Film misconduct from a distance. Don’t film fellow protesters’ faces. Blur footage before uploading. Use Signal or encrypted backups to store files.
  • Power Bank – Keep your phone charged. Use a battery pack with at least 5,000 mAh. Put it in an inside pocket to avoid snatch-and-grabs.
  • Livestream Strategically – Livestream to a remote buddy who’s watching. Don’t broadcast your exact location or strategy in real time. Narrate with caution.
  • Use Legal Pressure – After the protest, use FOIA (Freedom of Information Act) requests to uncover surveillance plans or deployment logs. Document and share. File civil complaints for abuse of power, especially if injuries or detainment occurred.
  • Weaponise Reporting – If you spot unmarked ICE agents or other federal snatch squads, call 911 and report "armed, masked men detaining people without identification." Describe visible tattoos, clothing, license plates, or vehicle types. Frame the call in terms of public safety, not ideology.

This Worked For:

  • Black Lives Matter, Arab Spring, Standing Rock. Video documentation changed the public conversation. But only when it protected the people in it.

Fast Pack Checklist

  • [ ] Umbrella – Defence, camera block, impromptu group shelter
  • [ ] Swim Goggles – Protect eyes from gas, water, flash-bangs
  • [ ] Scarf/Bandana – Filter gas, hide your face, mop up messes
  • [ ] Bike Helmet – Brain protection, bonus intimidation points
  • [ ] Gloves – Hot canisters, fences, first aid
  • [ ] Layered Clothing – Padding, ID hiding, dramatic flair
  • [ ] Backpack (Stuffed) – Protection + snack carrier. Include a 1L water bottle—enough to stay hydrated and rinse your face if needed.
  • [ ] Sharpie + Notepad – Write a legal aid or lawyer's number on your arm before heading out. Use the notepad to record badge numbers, names, or vehicle details if anything goes down.
  • [ ] Phone in Tin or Faraday Pouch – Communication, documentation
  • [ ] Whistle – Signal and ward against horse or vehicle-based encounters

Final Notes

You don’t have to be fearless. Just prepared and co-ordinated. Get your kit together, stick to your buddy, know your exit routes, and remember: no one’s going to hand you change - you have to show up for it. You’re all in this together, and apes together STRONG. Damn the man.

And yeah, definitely bring snacks.

  1. Pack light. Move smart. Be water.
  2. Don’t give them what they want. Resist, don’t retaliate.
  3. Stay safe out there.
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/29587097

or direct link to Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rk3snANxYMY

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/249411

A lad told me today that he'll make a facebook account just to connect with me, gave me the address of the place he's couch surfing at and told me to come over anytime. He said "because you treat me like a human."

😢

I've gotten in trouble at a few jobs for talking with poor people rather than just shuffling them through.

It helps that I have to walk through the hood frequently.

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BTW do we have any subs about fediverse/lemmy/privacy promotion?


Change wifi name to x

Chalk ads on sidewalks

Set up a free public booth and hand out food samples and pamphlets

Make song/art about fediverse

Cold emailing celebrities about x

x related shirt

Yelp reviews that are mostly positive and that "it would be nice if they had x"

holiday greeting cards

In bookstores, put privacy books in more relevant spots

When eating out, ask about their social medias, recommend x

Bumper sticker or paper printout inside of car with links

Facebook status, if have a fb

I used to live in a city with a big university library I went to often. Sometimes I left notes or hints in books I liked. Maybe one could leave a list of local instances or a pamphlet about how one can and should host their own in some admin or linux books.

Posters


cc0

Cross posted from https://lemmy.ml/post/73589

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I've noticed that activists (or just people who care about any public issue, even if they are not very active about it) fall into three categories.

  1. Individualist people. They want to make personal choices to change their personal impact on the world. Many strongly oppose taking political action at all. People who just avoid buying meat or petrol cars or nestle or products from occupied palestine etc. That is their way of making a difference.

  2. Social people. They are interested in the local/community level. They organise swap-meets, do bicycle repair workshops, they work together on allotments, they volunteer at charities.

  3. Political people. They want to make national or global changes. They go to protests, write to politicians, vote in elections.

Of course most people do a bit of all three. But everyone seems to be really focused on only one of them.


I will argue that #1 is three things:

  1. Ineffective.

  2. Counter-productive.

  3. Self-defeating.


Ineffective

The amount of impact you can have by tweaking your lifestyle is small. Even if many people do it, business will not. And most of the problems are caused by businesses.

You won't impact overfishing by refraining from fishing yourself, but people think that you can impact pollution by not driving a car yourself. In most cases it's the businesses which must change their ways, not the individuals.

Counter-productive

What if you stop buying fish? Even if 1 billion people decide to not buy fish, that still leaves 6 billion people who are still buying fish. This is the perfect situation for fishing businesses - despite massive opposition, their sales are barely affected. 1 billion people opposing fishing with political action would kill the industry.

But people think buying more tofu and less beef is worthwhile in the fight against farming malpractice, that buying a bike or electric car will help against pollution. This style of activism is very popular among the problem industries themsleves, and actively promoted by them. It is "activism by excercising consumer choice".

But we must be more than just savvy consumers, to really change anything.


Self-defeating

If you make a choice - you will use less water, heat your house less, eat less tasty food, spend more money on ethically produced products - you are making a small sacrifice. Others are not. Those others are at an economic advantage against you. Even if all you are spending is mental energy, they will have slightly richer lives than you. In aggregate, this type of action is self-limiting, self-defeating.

If the people who do the right thing suffer slightly, and the people who don't are unpunished, there is a strong disincentive to take action. This is the opposite of what is needed.


I made an earlier post about how everyone is divided - interested in different causes - so there is no critical mass to change any one thing - even though there is broad support for all of the causes. I won't repeat that here - it's a different problem.


So, to me this has all become obvious recently by talking to kinds of people I wouldn't normally talk to. Individualist action is very popular. There is even a taboo against political action. People want to avoid confrontaion, and they are jaded of the news cycle.

But does have a value - as the entry-level. To start people thinking about the greater good, ease people into being concientious. #1 is the easiest, so you can get satisfaction from making a small difference. And you don't risk big disappointments or uncomfortable confrontations, so it's accessible to more personality types, which is important. It also feels more democratic, more civilised.

But I'm convinced now, that these individualist people (the vast majority IMO) all need to be persuaded into more effective methods.

To spend any energy, time, money on activism through personal consumer choices, it undermines the very cause you are working for. These methods are championed only by the very industries who want nothing to change.

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Quit Social Media (quitsocialmedia.club)
submitted 4 years ago by yxzi@lemmy.ml to c/activism@lemmy.ml
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** The problem **

Everybody wants to improve the world but we are all divided. Some are interested in global warming, farming practices, modern slavery, mass extinction, abuse of political power, inequality of wealth, inequality of rights, etc, etc … even though most people agree that these are all very important and need addressing. Most people will even agree on what steps need to be taken.

But nobody has the energy, time or money to be active, or even interested in everything.

So we each pick a campaign. We are divided into small groups with little power.

** The idea **

Even when there is a large group of activists focused on one issue, we always disagree about the details (because there are always many small contentious choices) so we again become divided.

The business interests which oppose us are united and organised. Then nearly always win. We need to be more like them.

** The solution **

I propose an activist group with no particular cause. Its work will be divided into one-year campaigns, and the cause will be decided by vote at the start of each year. If you believe in any of the relevant causes (there can be dozens) you should join.

Each one-year campaign can be more successful than those of any specialist activist groups, because of the number of people involved. It will be large, and better funded, have more experience, have more diverse people and connections than and special interest group could have.

One the year’s cause is decided by vote, the organisation decides the details. The members are expected to support both, neglecting their personal activist interests and preferred methods. They get only the satisfaction of achieving somebody else’s goals, and to wait another year for their turn.

This works on the assumption that most people agree on most activist causes. The die-hard anti-meat or anti-wheat, anti-car or anti-bicycle, pro-springfield or pro-shelbyville, this organisation will not serve them. Only issues with a broad consensus of support will ever become campaigns.

**

 The conclusion **

There are many resourceful and energetic people working in activism. If they can all be persuaded to work together on one thing at a time, backed by the combined numbers and power of all their supporters, they can achieve all their individual goals much faster.

By having a strong, united activist movement to match that of businesses, we the people can gain control over our world, and take it back from them.

** The details **

A typical campaign could be about caged hens, UBI, restoring forests, zero hours contracts, pesticides, influence-trading in politics, anything important enough to mobilise the most effective activists, and with very broad societal support.

The methods could include boycotts, street protests, writing to local politicians, media interviews, meetings with key political/industrial figures. All the usual stuff.

...But this time, instead of these people being blasted with one million different things, getting pressured different ways ... they are getting plasted about one thing, constantly, for a year.

They will budge.


An example of how the organisation could be structured:

Those who have been members more than one year get more voting power. Those who donate money get more voting power (I suggest a threshold of 1% of the average salary). The idea is to encourage people to join even in years where the campaign is not interesting, and remain members for many years after their campaign is finished. The number of votes per person should be capped too, so that every member’s vote is important. There is a balance to be struck here.

Run on campaigns are possible, if this year’s campaign is making progress but more work is needed to reach the objective. The members will decide.

Maybe members must register with their special interest. When it becomes a campaign, their voting rights are reduced. This will stop the same campaign winning every year.

So if you really have no interest in this year's issue then don't go to the protests, but keep paying your fees. I think most people will go anyway though if all their peers have voted that this is the most important thing of all.

These things might also be important to you, like they are important for everyone. If the campaigns achieved real progress on all those issues, year after year, you'd still be very happy about that.

If you register as predominantly a human rights advocate, each year no human rights issue is selected your voting rights increase. If you stick with it (and especially if you keep paying your dues) then your voting power will eventually increase until your cause is selected.

Unless your cause is really niche. Then it will never be selected by the vote. But that's a feature not a bug. It's hard to know if your cause has real support, and it's important to know that. The media projects an image of society uniformly believing one thing - everyone who disagrees is a radical. Knowing what has real broad support already, stopping politicians from pretending that nobody is on your side, is half the battle.

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