@YarHarSuperstar@lemmy.world
Thanks for your kind and motivating words :)
@chilicheeselies@lemmy.world
You bet!
@ToiletFlushShowerScream@lemmy.world
I love this! I’m not sure, I will see how today goes and let you know what additional things would help me!
@BroBot9000@lemmy.world Absolutely! I will write up something tomorrow on how it went :)
@adarza@lemmy.ca thanks, it’s a concern I have for sure. I’ll be wearing my Sunday finest and no face coverings/sunglasses so people can see my happy face. I can deal with lip from people but any physical threats and I will back out and just come back the next day.
I am lucky enough to be able to afford some hours every day to this activity and not everyone can do this, but I am posting my small act of civil disobedience to show it’s not crazy to be thinking about it.
I live in South Brooklyn, Bay Ridge Neighborhood represented by GOP member Nicole Malliotakis. This is a purple district that has a conservative leaning population aided by Staten Island gerrymandering. Where I protested is also not her main office because that office is on Staten Island too far away for me to conveniently travel without a car, not to mention a $13 charge to cross the bridge to the island.
The office location is on a commercial avenue surrounded by businesses topped by residential units. There was steady foot traffic and with the morning commercial drop offs there was a good number of people to hear my protests.
Occasionally, perhaps every 10 minutes from the start of my protest, the car’s alarm parked closest to the office would erupt for about 5 minutes, a suspicious action I could only assume was to deter my protest and drown out my voice. I used this opportunity to demonize the Party for not allowing different view points or dissent.
The worst I received was angry individuals that said I should “go get a job” or “democrats started it first”. One objector broke out singing “America the Beautiful”, which I joined in, to which he said I don’t actually love America and to thank God for the Republican Party. Though these words are hard to hear, I kept a level head and mostly ignored the off-hand comments:
One older man on a bike stopped and thanked me for taking the time to do this. Another, a Clove-smoking store owner gave me some looks after which I politely confronted him and asked if my yelling was bothering him, he said no and he supports my free speech but doesn’t want to personally get involved with politics.
I gave myself breaks, like a marathon I was checking the time to see how long each of my sermons went and for how long I was taking a water break. The silence between sermons felt awkward to me, for the people that walked by and didn’t hear me speak I felt like I missed out on an opportunity. Once I hit the 2 hour mark, I felt exhausted, proud, but yet not completely fulfilled yet.
For the future, I think having something distributable for the people that stop and thank me so they can stay connected with my protest. I also realize how hard to fill the hours with stuff to stay so I think I will need to rotate some themes better and have more people to join when I get tired!