It’s Now Easier to Recycle than Ever

Did you know that Brandeis introduced a new recycling program this year?  It’s a part of Brandeis’ efforts to become a more environmentally sustainable campus.  If you didn’t know, it’s called “Single Stream Recycling” and it’s designed to both increase recycling rates and decrease costs for the university.  In this new process, all sorting is done at the recycling facility.  For you this means that you no longer have to sort paper, metal, plastic, and glass.  You can now place all recyclable materials together.

As a reminder, these are the materials you can place in any of the blue bins on campus:

All Papers

Cardboard

Plastics Numbered 1-7

Glass

Metal

Please do NOT place the following materials in the recycling bins:

Styrofoam

Unnumbered Plastic

To Go Containers

Food & Liquids

Please spread the word about the new Single Stream Recycling system and remember to recycle whenever possible!

The Cops Are Armed… Now What?

Despite the best efforts of SODA and DFA, the campus public safety officers are now carrying handguns. Our good friend, and fellow blogger Phil, says “With Brandeis Police having guns, it makes guns a part of our campus life,” Lacombe said. “I like to think of Brandeis as a safe zone where we can keep certain things away from our community, but now guns are a part of it.”

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This was exactly why I involved myself with SODA. Guns are a tool of violence that have been introduced into the Brandeis community; and the decision was made without sufficient community input. Ultimately SODA lost, but that does not mean that the work is over. After it became clear that we were fighting a losing battle; I proposed that we hold a few trainings on knowing your rights. How many of us actually know what we are allowed to do when stopped by a cop? Now that the campus police are armed, it is absolutely critical that every student knows what their rights are when they are approached by an authority figure holding a weapon.

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While I know many of us will be busy campaigning for Obama this fall, I think that it is important that we still have a strong focus on the social justice issues closest to home. That’s why I intend to make ‘rights trainings’ one of my goals as a member of the Student Union Senate. We cannot let the administration and campus safety abuse their powers; and it is the responsibility of the Student Union to keep them in check.

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If anyone else is interested in this project let me know.

Welcome Back!

Hey everyone. Welcome back to Brandeis. I hope you had an awesome summer. I know I did. But not so awesome that we forgot to write for Innermost Parts! I encourage you to browse our summer archives.
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We have a lot of iniatives, announcements, etc to announce soon and I hope you’re pumped for a new semester.
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But for now, I have one question: How was your summer? And don’t just say “good” or whatever. Tell everyone in style.
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Did you do something to do with Social Justice this summer? Why don’t you tell us about it? Did you clothe the poor? Travel across the world to learn at the feet of tibetan monks? Maybe you had a special epiphany during the summer you’d like to share? Well, for the next few weeks, I’m pleased to announce that we here at Innermost Parts will be eagerly awaiting to read accounts of your (physical, emotional, personal, etc) journeys. Leave a comment to this post with your story or email us and we’ll post the best/most moving stories to the front page. I can’t wait to hear what kickass stuff you guys were up to.

The Best Speech John Kerry Ever Gave

Watching the Democratic National Convention with some DFA folks.

This is a night of kickass speeches.

Highlights:
-John Kerry wasn’t wearing a flag pin. Terrist!
-John Kerry calling McCain a flip-flopper.
-Big Dog Clnton talking about how all of America are all from the town called hope.
-Clinton tieing obama into his legacy. (There was a narrative back in the day that Bill was feeling an affinity between obama’s stroy and his own. They said he would be enthusiastically in the tank for obama ifhillary weren’t running. looks like we’re turning ful circle.)
-John Kerry referring to McCain’s “years on this earth”
-Katie Couric referring to ‘Vice president Biden” , and later ‘and here is joe biden” while nancy pelosi walked onstage.
.Biden: “I saw how Barack Obama touched people.” whoops.
And now the #1 best moment so far –
Brandeis Professor Peniel Joseph speaking on PBS. Lev and I were flipping out for a while after that.
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Update:
Thought -Joe biden refers to the tyranny of foreign oil.. Doesnt he mean the grip of all oil.
New thoughts: biden is like the first persn tonight to really focus on national security, despite it being foreign policy night tonight.
double update: holy shit obama just frenched jill biden. (well not really but that was a full on frontal kiss there. whoops.)

on a conference call w/Zach Exley

Key take-away point: “Online Organizing should allow you to create more personal connections, not less”

I asked him about internet organizing on a campus or very local setting. His response? Something along the lines of ‘yes, email etc is very efficient and use it, but if you’re within walking distance of your community, then go meet them in person.”

Interesting.

Other interesting thought: As the internet allows organizations to become less top-down and hierarchical, the rank-and-file is empowered, yes, but it’s also very helpful for the people at the top. Middlemen are more accountable, if someone in the hierarchy is messing up, the head honchos of the organization can now find out.

Introducing; The Brandeis Activist Calendar

Last Semester, I had a problem. I wanted to go to SEA or ARC or BLC meeting, but I kept forgetting when the meetings were.I also missed several events because I kept confusing Thursday and Tuesday, or if they were improperly advertised. Silly? Maybe, but I was operating on little sleep and so on,

Well, no more. I’m happy to introduce the Brandeis Activist Calendar, a service provided by InnermostParts.org. If you’re the leader or communications director or so on of a progressive activist club, email me at sahar ((at) innermostparts.org) and I’ll give you access to the calendar so you can add your events and meetings. update: in case it wasn’t clear – the calendar is shown as the “Upcoming Events” widget on the sidebar of Innermost Parts

This will be a great advertising opportunity for clubs and also a valuable resource for all students so I hope everyone takes advantage of this opportunity.

P.S. The coolest thing about google calendar is how easy it is to share. So you can export it to iCal format (for use on other calendar apps) with this link. You can also get the calendar as an rss feed.
Lastly, it’s really easy to share google calendars with other google account users, so send me an email and we’ll “share” the Brandeis Acitivist calendar with you.

On the Road

I’m at Hyde Park, the ancestral home of the Roosevelt Family. Don’t have much time to write, but I’d like to pass on some messaging tips:

“No one ever lost a race because their message was too strong.”

Your message is your core argument and strategic communication.

Your message is not a slogan. “Change you can believe in” is not a message.

A message isn’t a list of issues. “I will fix healthcare and the environment and also give tax cuts” isn’t a message.

The first test of messaging:

It must be Credible, Concise, Relevant, and Compelling. Note: Credible implies that you shouldn’t really cite facts and figures. If you say “foreign workers are paid 12 cents an hour and that’s bad,” someone could be like “oh really? Where did you get that statistic. Gosh’ and derail your argument whereas if you say “The workers making our clothing are being exploited unfairly”, that’s pretty credible (most everyone knows it’s true and it also gets your point across.

The second test of messaging:

It must take the form of Problem -> Solution -> Action.

Messaging takes time. If you come up with your message in 5 minutes you probably haven’t thought it through much.

idk, my bff jill?

“Obama will us his running mate! Text Vp to 62262”

Welcome the brave new world of youth politics. With texting costs ridiculously high in the US, however, one might wonder why would Obama spend the money to send millions of text messages for seems to be a sort of campaigning gimmick. Let’s explore.

You might know that the Student Union is sponsoring a large voter registration drive this upcoming semester. You might also know that Loki and I have both signed up to direct this whole effort. We’ll have different clubs competing to see who can register the most people, possibly a large scoreboard showing which clubs are ahead, maybe flash the names of the latest student to register, etc.

If you go out registering voters, on campus, off campus, in Ohio, wherever, please don’t forget to get their cell phone numbers and email addresses, if possible. Now, intuitively this makes sense, right? If you get someone’s contact info then you can email/text them on election day to remind them to actually go out and vote. Well, Garrett M. Graff, a former Webmaster for Howard Dean, just wrote an Op-Ed piece in the New York Times explaining the world of text-the-vote:

But announcing Mr. Obama’s running mate by text message has little to do with proclaiming the selection and everything to do with getting out the vote on Election Day in November. The move should add thousands — and more likely tens or hundreds of thousands — of cellphone numbers to what is already one of the most detailed political databases ever created.

A study conducted during the 2006 elections showed that text-message reminders helped increase turnout among new voters by four percentage points, at a cost of only $1.56 per vote — much cheaper than the $20 or $30 per vote that the offline work of door-to-door canvassing or phone banking costs.

Let’s take a look at this study, shall we? Believe it or not, texting is really cheap. Here’s the relevant passage:

Canvassing is more effective than text messaging on a person-by-person basis, but the contact rate during canvassing is much lower than that for text messaging. When considering the treatment-on-treated effect, text messaging is twice as effective as three physical mailings (Gerber and Green 2000), and about as effective as a professional, quality phone call made in the week before Election Day.

So texting is cheap and effective, but not as effective or cheap as face-to-face contact. Then again, texting can reach a lot of people faster than canvassing can.

In general, one thing to realize is that cell phone numbers are very valuable to campaigns. Cell phones can’t be robocalled or polled. The Yellow Pages and Election Boards don’t have them. In order to get on a cell phone texting list, you have to opt in by texting to a specific number yourself.
Continue reading “idk, my bff jill?”

Looking back six years ago (part two)

This is part two of a series that aims to take a look at the fall 2002 state of the union address by then-president Ben Brandzel. Hopefully, by going through each section and comparing it to the situation today, we can have a more nuanced look at the present situation at Brandeis, as well as learn from the past hopefully.

What I’m trying to do is go through this speech and summarize each section, after which comes some analysis. We’re doing sections 6-10 now, and then going back to section 4 and concluding thoughts in the upcoming part three post.

To read part one, click here.
To read a copy of the speech, click here.

To read the annotation and analysis, click “read the rest…”

Continue reading “Looking back six years ago (part two)”

Looking back six years ago (part 1)

In the first day of my 8th grade social studies class, our teacher, Mr. Durkee, put up a poster of Michael Jordan in the act of making a slam dunk. We couldn’t tell whether Mr. Jordan was going up or falling down, Mr. Durkee told us, just by looking at the picture. We had to understand history in order to predict the future or whatever.

Now, first of all, that piece of advice did not need to take up three days of class time. Secondly, if you looked at his shoelaces, you could tell that Michael was clearly on the descent of his jump.

That said, there’s value in that perspective. To that end, let’s take a magical history tour and review the Fall 2002 State of the Union address, given by noted Brandeis Alumn and all-around kickass person, Ben Brandzel.

The Fall 2002 State of the Union address is hosted on the Student Union Website. I’m going to be referring to it quite a lot, so make sure you keep it open in another tab or something.

Why are we focusing on this address in particular? Simple. This speech has been floating around the Brandeis Progressive Community for ages now. It should have a bigger audience. Also, if you’ll follow me below the fold, I think you’ll agree with me that ther eare many parallels between the time of that speech and right now. Let’s see what has changed (or hasn’t) in the course of six years…

Hey, I just realized something. Fall 2002 was when I started 8th grade. So this speech was given at around the same time as I was in Durkee’s class. Weird.

This is Part ONE of the analysis of the speech.

Continue reading “Looking back six years ago (part 1)”

Carl Levin – A Retrospective

It’s been quite a long time since I made good on my promise to confront the Senior Senator from Michigan with homemade signs and a heartfelt plea. It was perhaps the first time I’ve met with someone of such power, and certainly the first time I did so alone.

Mr. Levin met with a bunch of people – probably adminstrators and suchlike – in a room on the third floor of the Shapiro Campus Center. A room, mind you, with a fully glass wall facing into the hallway. I had the bright idea of writing “Sen. Levin please protect the constitution” and “stop the FISA sellout” and so on on huge pieces of paper (procured from the student union office) and plastering them right against that glass wall, so that he could read them.

Let be clear on how bootleg the whole arrangement was. Once I got his attention, I pulled out a marker and wrote another message on the backs of one of those earlier messages and posted *that* on the glass wall. No real planning, no real coordination.

Well, it turns out that due to lighting and so on he couldn’t actually *read* anything I was saying but I guess I captured his attention long enough to be invited inside to state my case.

So here I am, with little sleep and preparedness and so on, trying to argue with a US Senator to get him to vote a certain way on a pretty important bill. I don’t remember the whole conversation (it was pretty brief and I was probably incoherent with terror) but I do remember one exchange that went something like this:

Carl Levin: You really feel deeply about this issue?

Me: Yes I do, and several of my friends feel the same way. We hope that you’ll not only vote against this bill but also join Chris Dodd and Russ Feingold’s filibuster against it. We’re tired of spineless Democrats in Congress.
Carl Levin: Spineless? Do you really think we’re spineless? Like on what?
Me:
(Flabberghasted and at a loss for what do say) Well there’s the War. SCHIP. Everything really.
Carl Levin: Hm.. Well in any case I doubt it’ll come to a filibuster
Me: Um… yes it will.
Carl Levin: Well thank you very much young lad out you go.

And that was that. Turns out that Carl Levin not only voted the right way on the FISA bill of February but also on the bill of July (which eventually did get passed into law). So that’s hopeful.

So what can we learn from this encounter?

Continue reading “Carl Levin – A Retrospective”

Election Reform Update

There has been some progress from Beacon Hill (the State Capitol) on the Election Reform front since Adam last reported on it. Good! The lowdown is this: the State Leg adjourned before they could take either proposal all the way to being signed by the Governor, which is bad. The good thing is that each piece of legislation moved forward.

The National Popular Vote bill was ratified by the State Senate, and, having been previously approved by the house, must be sent to the Governors desk (by a separate vote, since MA is strange like that) when both chambers get back into session. The National Popular Vote bill, you’d recall, would give all of MA’s electoral college vote to the winner of the national popular vote, but only if enough states also passed the bill so that  >270 electoral college votes would be covered by this pact.

The Election Day Registration legislation was also approved by the Senate. Now it must move to the State House. Some members of the House are opposing it on fiscal grounds. They think that letting more people vote would cost too much. These people don’t have their priorities straight.

All in all, good news everyone.

Evolution, Cancer, and Society

I would like to open this post with a quote from Governor Bill Richardson:

“I’m not a scientist.”

Well, I’m not a physical scientist, anyway. I am a social scientist, and as a social scientist, I believe that all of human history is a record of the tension between desire for individualism and simultaneous desire for society, for the collective. That tension has been at the heart of American politics since the Puritans, and remains one of the main sources of conflict between Liberals/Progressives and Conservatives today. This tension even exists within the progressive vision. Our most fundamental Progressive ideals are centered around an effort to create and maintain a delicate balance between the collective– without which individualism cannot thrive– and the individual– without which the collective has no meaning.

A new scientific study on the evolution of cancer shows that those two desires are at war on a microscopic yet fateful scale within the body of a cancer patient.

Continue reading “Evolution, Cancer, and Society”

300 Feet High

Checking my email today, after deleting a letter from Hillary asking me to help pay off her campaign debt, one from the ACLU of Texas asking me to yell at Governor Perry, and one from Sahar nagging me to write a blog post, I opened a message from Young People For altering me that I had been nominated for a fellowship. Young People For (or YP4) is a leadership program designed to motivate and empower the newest generation of progressive leaders to make change in their communities and further a progressive vision for America. To quote Bill Richardson, “I love change!” and to quote Mitt Romney, “Gosh I love America!” so I decided to click on the link and find out what exactly a YP4 fellowship would entail.

The program kicks off with a week-long summit in DC where I would get to connect with fellow progressive activists from across the country and talk strategy with some big-shot progressive leaders. Sounds good. So I clicked on the video of last years’ summit.  At first I thought I was watching one of those John McCain ads in which he tries to make fun of Barack Obama’s “hope and change” mantra. The video featured clips of speakers proclaiming to hundreds of students that this is their moment, they have the power, they are the ones they have been waiting for. It was completely over-the-top. One starry-eyed student took a microphone and gushed that what he had gotten out of the conference was “hope” and that he was going to “take that hope back home” and spread it. One girl screamed “democracy! justice! change! WEEEEW!” Another repeated the over-quoted-on-high school-graduation-day phrase “What lies before us and what lies behind us are small matters compared with what lies within us” as if she had just come up with it herself. And on and on. Suddenly I realized a visceral feeling of disgust was taking over me. What the hell is wrong with you? I scolded myself. This is inspiring! This is people getting excited about improving their world, about helping others, about politics! You’re supposed to love stuff like that! But I couldn’t help it– I was completely turned off.

In 2004 I watched the Democratic National Convention at home in Fort Worth, Texas and was overjoyed when Howard Dean declared that “never again” would liberals be ashamed of their values. I literally cried when John Edwards said “hope is on the way.” I watched Barack Obama’s key-note address over and over and over. And when John Kerry proclaimed that “for America the hope is there, the sun is rising, our best days are still to come,”… well I think the fact that I can still quote that from memory speaks for itself. Had YP4 contacted me back then I would have jumped at the opportunity. What was different now? At first I thought I was agreeing with Goethe: “I hate everything that merely instructs me without augmenting or directly invigorating my activity.” But that wasn’t really it. After all, the YP4 summit did seem to “invigorate activity” in its participants; they took what they learned in DC and brought it back to their campuses and communities, didn’t they? Then I remembered the student who said that what he would take from the conference and bring back was “hope.” “Hope”? Seriously?? And I put my finger on the element that I hated so much not just in the YP4 conference but in the modern progressive movement in general.

To quote Karl Marx (because its convenient but also perhaps to establish my credentials as a real left-wing believer in change despite my attacks on the progressive movement in this post), I believe the students at the YP4 conference and other events and organizations like it are just “theoretical bubble-blowers.” Speakers at the events preach to the choir, the participants try and out-do each other in self-congratulation about how great the movement is, they come up with intellectual progressive proposals for intellectual progressives to read, and any talk of strategy and action is theoretical and relies on the assumption that students will have an army of activists on their campuses just waiting to be organized as soon as the YP4 student returns from the Mountain with the Knowledge. And what are these progressives being trained to train other progressives for, anyway? To hold meetings of progressives where they can discuss the movement? To write policy proposals read by other progressives? To spread “hope”?

With this realization I became depressed. A certain question bothered me: For all my claims that I would have just loved to be alive during the excitement and activism of the 1960s would I really just have been as disgusted with the self-congratulation and futility of, say, Abbie Hoffman (with all due respect!) “levitating the Penon” as I am with the self-congratulation and “theoretical bubble-blowing” of today’s progressive youth movement?

Yes and no. I would have been thrilled with CORE and SNCC and sit-ins and boycotts and Freedom Riders and registering black voters and “the torch is passed” and “I have a dream.” These were actions that actually shook the world. And I would have cheered when Mario Savio jumped on the car and cried that “there comes a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you cant take part . . . You’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels . . . And you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it — that unless you’re free the machine will be prevented from working at all!” That movement (the 1964 Free Speech Movement) over-turned a university decision to outlaw political activism on campus and set the percent for student movements across the country. And I would have been thrilled in 1971 when the Vietnam Veterans Against the War marched on Washington, flooded the halls of congress,testified before the Senate, and showed the nation that it was time to “bring their brothers home.” Now, Abbie Hoffman declaring that he would, through mind-power, levitate the Penon 300 ft. and that the “evil spirits” would rise out from under it– this I would have been disgusted with. Ridding the Penon of evil spirits couldn’t change American foreign policy anymore than “hope” or a bunch of progressives repeating inspirational quotations to each other can get us universal health care.

So, is our modern YP4 hope-and-change fest Abbie’s levitation of the penon? This obviously stretched but not completely unfair analogy got me thinking: the people levitating the Penon wanted to “tune in, turn on, and drop out.” But today’s students don’t seem to want that. What do they want? They want jobs. They want connections and resumes. Look at the YP4 summit– its completely centered around the promise of networking. The students connect with other student activists and potential employers. And I’m sure it doesn’t escape the thoughts of the YP4 fellows that their participation in such a program will look nice on their resumes.

In this way, the YP4 program and others like it are actually very smart; they play to what students today want. We are wasting our time if we focus all our efforts trying to get students to show up to an event modeled after the New Left of the 1960s. But the problem is not entirely that the same enthusiasm isn’t there– its just directed in a different way. Like the YP4 summit, if we can just harness what students want (networking, resume building, internships, jobs. . . in addition to having fun and making a difference) we can have a better shot at almost recreating the energy of the 1960s, even if the events have to be a little less creative and “far out.”

To those who say that this job-centered idea is just perpetuating “the system,” think about this: the New Left failed when its participants wanted back in the system anyway. You cant put “tuned in, turned on, and dropped out” on a resume and you cant get a job in Levitation of Important Government Buildings. So the students of the New Left dismissed their beliefs and actions as a “youthful fling” and became doctors and accountants just like their parents. However, today’s progressive movement is sustainable because it opens career paths. You can put your participation in progressive conferences and student think-tanks on your resume, and get a job in community organizing or with an organization like YP4 or People for the American Way. This makes our movement more boring than the movements of the 1960s, but at least it holds the potential to be more sustainable.

So let some other kid take my place as a YP4 fellow. I’ve outgrown my need for gimmicky inspirational and self-congratulatory “bubble-blowing.” But it certainly has a place somewhere. There might be a 16 year old girl stuck in Fort Worth, Texas (or some other red state) desperately needing to meet other people who share her excitement for progressive ideas. For my part, I will try and convert the bubble-blowing that I scoff at so much in to deeds that have an impact on the right people. But from now on I’ll go forward with this new idea about what students today want and “hope” that this will be more successful!

Apply for a Young People For fellowship:
Here

1967 Penon levitation button!:
penon

Mario Savio on “the machine”:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FPG1WfcJRo&feature=related[/youtube]

American Actvists Abroad

Hi, my name is Tim and I am the newest addition to Innermost Parts. I plan on writing about issues related to Brandeis, Latin America, and how the arts can be a tool used to achieve social justice. I appreciate any and all feedback on posts. Enjoy!

While in San Jose, Costa Rica this summer doing an internship, I volunteered to run the sound board for a community theater group in San Jose. We’ll call them American Theater Group (ATG), in order to protect the guilty. My more important duty quickly became translating between the lighting technician who spoke only Spanish and the director who had attempted to learn only a few words of Spanish while living in Costa Rica for years. The experience made me aware of the large variety of Americans who come to Costa Rica and why they are here. It also made me wonder how Americans can affect Costa Rica in distinct ways without even realizing it.

Not only did the director of the ATG show not speak Spanish, neither did most of the cast, the majority of whom live in one of two wealthy suburbs outside of San Jose (Santa Ana and Escazu). This fact surprised me because it is the opposite of what Americans expect of immigrants to the U.S., and because I can’t imagine why someone would willfully immigrate to a country without attempting to absorb and educate themselves about the culture and traditions of the country. The thing that really confuses me about the Americans in ATG is that the reason the left the U.S. can be summed up in one word: Bush. So, really it’s not so much that they decided that they wanted to live in Costa Rica as much as it is that they gave up on the U.S. because of a stolen election. Not exactly model Americans if you ask me.

However, not all gringos here are fair-weather Americans. For example, the guy I’m doing an internship with, we’ll call him James just in case he doesn’t want to become famous, came here about 5 years ago with his wife and two kids, and they now live on a farm outside of San Jose (not in a wealthy suburb). Although they chose to start a homeschooling program rather than send their kids to public school, the entire family speaks fluent Spanish and they are dedicated to helping the local community. James has three part time jobs teaching sociology in universities here, but when he’s not tending to his farm he spends his free time helping poor, indigenous and imprisoned communities find ways to resolve their conflicts peacefully and through theater (which is why I’m here). His kids are involved in activities (dance, gymnastics) that Costa Ricans participate in, not just Americans. Although I’m sure that James is happy to no longer be under the rule of Bush II, his family is a good example of how Americans can contribute to the social capital of communities they move to in foreign countries. (Another good example are the Quakers who moved to Monteverde, Costa Rica in the 1950’s.)

As an activist and citizen of the richest and most powerful country in the world, I would be embarrassed if I didn’t do my best to improve any country that I decide to live in. (I’m not talking about studying abroad. Living somewhere for a semester barely allows you the opportunity to find your way around.) Okay, so maybe the people in ATG aren’t activists and don’t feel that kind of an obligation to Costa Rica. What about respecting the language and culture of the people? You have to go out of your way to not learn Spanish here. And that’s exactly what these people are doing. They’re basically thumbing their nose at the native Costa Ricans who have lived here all their lives: “Your language and culture don’t deserve my time and effort.”

As progressive activists, we have to do more than just avoid mimicking the behavior of ATG members. Alternatively, when living in a foreign country we have no choice but to maintain our progressive principles by committing ourselves to helping poor communities break the vicious cycle of poverty caused by American companies overseas.