3. Side Each Day in Every Way With Anti-Authoritarians
We can recover our self-respect and strength by regaining our integrity. This process requires a personal transformation to overcome our sense of powerlessness and fight for what we believe in. Integrity includes acts of courage resisting all illegitimate authorities. We must recognize that in virtually every aspect of our life in every day, we can either be on the side of authoritarianism and the corporatocracy or on the side of anti-authoritarianism and democracy. Specifically, we can question the legitimacy of government, media, religious, educational and other authorities in our lives, and if we establish that an authority is not legitimate, we can resist it. And we can support others who are resisting illegitimate authorities. A huge part of solidarity comes from supporting others who are resisting the illegitimate authorities in their lives. Walt Whitman had it right: "Resist much, obey little. Once unquestioning obedience, once fully enslaved."
4. Regain Morale by Thinking More Critically About Our Critical Thinking
While we need critical thinking to effectively question and challenge illegitimate authority - and to wisely select the best strategies and tactics to defeat the elite - critical thinking can reveal some ugly truths about reality, which can result in defeatism. Thus, critical thinkers must also think critically about their defeatism, and realize that it can cripple the will and destroy motivation, thus perpetuating the status quo. William James (1842–1910), the psychologist, philosopher, and occasional political activist (member of the Anti-Imperialist League who, during the Spanish-American War, said, "God damn the US for its vile conduct in the Philippine Isles!") had a history of pessimism and severe depression, which helped fuel some of his greatest wisdom on how to overcome immobilization. James, a critical thinker, had little stomach for what we now call "positive thinking," but he also came to understand how losing belief in a possible outcome can guarantee its defeat. Antonio Gramsci (1891–1937), an Italian political theorist and Marxist activist who was imprisoned by Mussolini, came to the same conclusions. Gramsci's phrase "pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will" has inspired many critical thinkers, including Noam Chomsky, to maintain their efforts in the face of difficult challenges.
5. Restore Courage in Young People
The corporatocracy has not only decimated America's labor union
movement, it has almost totally broken the spirit of resistance among
young Americans - an even more frightening achievement. Historically,
young people without family responsibilities have felt most freed up to
challenge illegitimate authority. But America's education system creates
fear, shame and debt - all killers of the spirit of resistance. No
Child Left Behind, Race to the Top and standardized testing tyranny
results in the kind of fear that crushes curiosity, critical thinking
and the capacity to constructively resist illegitimate authority. Rebel
teachers, parents, and students - in a variety of overt and covert ways -
have already stopped complying with corporatocracy schooling. We must
also stop shaming intelligent young people who reject college, and we
must instead recreate an economy that respects all kinds of intelligence
and education. While the corporatocracy exploits student loan debt to
both rake in easy money and break young people's spirit of resistance,
the rest of us need to rebel against student loan debt and indentured
servitude. And parents and mental health professionals need to stop
behavior-modifying and medicating young people who are resisting
illegitimate authority.






Why don't you fight the system from within?
For a couple $1000 anybody can open a Schwab account and buy stock in almost any corp which gives you a voice and a vote. A large group can pool their resources for more stock and influence.
The two essays on progressive populism certainly make me think: that with such thinking we are so screwed. Such cerebral BS reveals a stunning disconnect with the American working men and women. The language belongs to the “intellectual elite,” otherwise known as troublemakers unwilling and unable to do the hard work that defines the lives of most Americans. Most notable in what was written is what was not.
Religion, faith, hope, belief, honor, duty, responsibility; all ignored as either unimportant, or perhaps, part of the problem. I can not imagine a unified mass movement that ignores, or is repulsed, by the values that unite, define, and support the individuals and families that populate this troubled nation.
The antiauthoritarian argument is fatally flawed as a rallying cry for a majority of Americans. Working people do not have the luxury of the self-indulgence required to create their own faith or religion. They embrace, or are engulfed, by the existing churches or religions that require adherence to authority -- moral, spiritual, or religious authority. The workingman is also the body and soul of our military, brothers and sisters -- aunts and uncles, wear our uniforms and fill our cemeteries. Authority; whether hated or mastered, is recognized as essential, be it in the family, community, or nation.
The belief in authority is one of the guiding moral principles of perhaps half of the people on this planet. We are better served by attacking the hypocrisy, corruption, and other obvious abuses of authority rather than the principle itself.