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Come Out. Destroy Fear. Unleash Power.

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News

All eyes on Rafah! Hands Off Rafah!

February 14, 2024

As Netanyahu and the Israeli state furthers their campaign of ethnic cleansing in Palestine by bombing the city of Rafah, we demand that President Biden call for an immediate and enduring ceasefire and to stop funding the war against Palestine. 

1.3 million Palestinians, many who have been displaced multiple times are trapped in what was once a safe zone. Since Sunday, occupation forces have been bombing the city leaving Palestinians with nowhere else to go.

In the U.S. South, it was Black and brown people, working people, queer and trans people who organized and mobilized to put Biden in office in 2020. This was a calculated decision made in order to shift material conditions towards our peoples’ best interests, not out of trust that he shared our justice agenda. Biden owes us — all of us, all oppressed and marginalized people who united in coalition to elect him — to immediately muster the spiritual and political courage to stop this ethnic cleansing.

From the US South to the Global South, we stand united against policing, incarceration, and militarization. Israel and the US facilities trade militaristic policing tactics and contract the same private prison companies, who profit off of Palestinian and US prisoners. The “terrorist” label has been used to promote Islamophobia and to justify the creation of criminalized categories like “Black Identity Extremists” and “Eco-Terrorists.” We know that if it were to be built, Cop City would facilitate the exchange of methodologies of domination used against Black and brown communities. 

We stand against authoritarianism. With the full support of Western powers, an extremist hard-right Israeli coalition is propelling Israel’s current escalation of genocidal rhetoric and deeds. In the actions of Israel and the repression of Palestinian Solidarity Movements, we see a window into possible authoritarian futures here at home. Authoritarianism is a slow creep. We cannot allow rampant media disinformation, aggressive censorship, the dehumanization of Palestinians, and the suppression of US-based groups like the US Campaign for Palestinian Rights, Jewish Voice for Peace, and Students for Justice in Palestine to be normalized. 

Anti-Zionism is not antisemitism. Anti-Zionism is opposition to the colonial political project to create a state with special rights and privileges for Jews. There have been anti-Zionist Jews organizing in resistance to Zionism for as long as Zionism has existed. Anti-Zionism is not antisemitism (discrimination and bigotry towards Jewish people). Our vision of safety for ourselves and our kin, who are Jews, Muslims, people of faith, and secular, is found in solidarity and resistance to all forms of oppression. 

All systems of oppression reinforce one another, and Israel’s origin has always been intertwined with both the imperial and antisemitic aspirations of Western powers. Today, we know that we cannot fight antisemitism, Islamophobia, homophobia, transphobia, or any number of other oppressions here at home without combating the unholy and mutually supportive alliance between US Christian Nationalists, themselves violently antisemitic, and the Israeli state. 

We stand in solidarity with the Palestinian people in resistance to Israeli colonial aggression and with all oppressed people struggling for self-determination. Since October 7, millions have taken to the streets across the globe to stop the genocide in Gaza. We must strengthen our strategies for resistance by learning from each other and building connections between our movements against authoritarianism and state violence. 

As a community of queer and trans people in the US South, we demand:

  • An immediate and permanent ceasefire 
  • An end to the $3.8 billion/year in U.S. military funding given to Israel
  • Delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza and an end to the siege
  • Guarantee of the right of return for all Palestinians who are fleeing Gaza
  • An end to genocide in Palestine, Sudan, Congo, and Haiti 
  • An end to the occupation and the liberation of all oppressed people in and beyond the Global South

Our righteous indignation and our grief are sacred. We honor it by catalyzing our emotions into courage as we lean into connection with others in our community who are willing to resist injustice at home and everywhere. Organizing with loyalty to what it takes to win means experiencing discomfort, humility, and endurance. We know that the work is not only to rally those who agree with us but to find, connect, push, and move increasingly more people to work with us. By joining or organizing local solidarity actions, divesting from systems and companies that further imperialism, and raising our voices against oppression, we can realize our vision of liberation in our lifetime.

Further resources to take action today!

  • US Campaign for Palestinian Rights
  • Southern Movement Assembly Solidarity with Palestine – #FreePalestine #CeaseFireNow
  • Palestinian Feminist Collective
  • Rising Majority
  • Black and Palestinian Solidarity Toolkit

A LOVE LETTER FOR TRANS DAY OF RESILIENCE

March 31, 2023

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This is a love letter for trans people, for everyone out there gender-bending—experimenting with and embodying radical possibilities for existing in this world. You are radiant in your truth, glorious in your power. 

Today, on Trans Day of Resilience, we are sending love in the midst of an onslaught of hate. In the last three months, lawmakers have introduced over 400 anti-LGBTQ bills. As usual, the South is the primary testing ground. 

Many of these bills target trans youth—our babies, our futures, and our promise of liberation. They attack books and drag shows as cover to strip us of our rights and our humanity. They are coming for our people locked up inside and our people on Medicaid. They are coming for our most vulnerable because they are gearing up to come for all of us. 

It is hunger for power, not transphobia, that is the primary motivator for the people who are behind these bills. They are exploiting deep-seated cultural fears around gender to make an opportunistic power grab. Our rights and bodily autonomy are being gambled with to fuel rising authoritarianism. The impacts will not just be on trans people.

Their laws seek to write us out of existence, but these hate tactics aren’t new, and neither are we. We are birthed from a rich history, a legacy inherited from the trans elders and ancestors who came before us. Our existence is a birthright, passed down through generations who have learned to survive and thrive.

Our Black and brown, queer, and trans elders threw bricks that sparked a revolution. They built bonds of kinship and kept each other safe. And that is just what we’ll continue to do. We’ll take care of each other. We’ll speak up. We’ll fight for one another. We always have, and we always will. Our very existence is resistance, and we will exist long after the structures that oppress us have crumbled. 

They cannot erase us. We will continue to fill the world with our sweet, sparkling trans magic. We will continue to dream of a world beyond the binary. Of liberation from all forms of oppression. Of a world where visibility isn’t tempered with fear but with power and love. 

So today, on Trans Day of Resilience, remember, we will not stop loving you; we will not stop fighting.


Una carta de amor por el Día de la Resiliencia Trans

Esta es una carta de amor para las personas trans, para todxs quienes andan por ahí transformando el género, experimentando con, y encarnando, las posibilidades radicales de existencia en este mundo. Ustedes son radiantes en su verdad, gloriosxs en su poder. 

Hoy, en el Día de la Resiliencia Trans, estamos repartiendo amor en medio de una avalancha de odio. En los últimos tres meses, lxs legisladores han presentado más de 400 proyectos de ley contra la comunidad LGBTQ. Como siempre, el Sur es el principal laboratorio de ensayo. 

Muchos de estos proyectos de ley tienen como blanco a la juventud trans: nuestrxs bebés, nuestros futuros, y nuestra promesa de liberación. Atacan libros y shows de drag, utilizándolos como excusas para quitarnos nuestros derechos y nuestra humanidad. Vienen por nuestra gente encerrada tras las rejas y por nuestra gente que tiene Medicaid. Vienen por lxs más vulnerables de nosotrxs porque se preparan para venir por todxs nosotrxs. 

La principal motivación de las personas que están detrás de estos proyectos de ley es la sed de poder, y no la transfobia. Están aprovechando temores culturales profundamente arraigados en torno al género para acumular más poder de manera oportunista. Están apostando con nuestros derechos y nuestra autonomía corporal para alimentar el creciente autoritarismo. Los impactos no los sufrirán sólo las personas trans.

Sus leyes pretenden borrarnos de la existencia, pero estas tácticas de odio no son nuevas, y nosotrxs tampoco. Nacimos de una rica historia, del legado que nos dejaron las personas mayores y antepasados trans que nos precedieron. Nuestra existencia es un derecho de nacimiento, transmitido a través de generaciones que aprendieron a sobrevivir y a prosperar.

Nuestrxs mayores trans, queer, negrxs y de color lanzaron ladrillos que desataron la chispa de una revolución. Construyeron lazos de hermandad y se protegieron mutuamente. Y eso es precisamente lo que seguiremos haciendo. Nos cuidaremos mutuamente. Levantaremos nuestras voces. Lucharemos lxs unxs por lxs otrxs. Siempre lo hemos hecho, y siempre lo haremos. Nuestra existencia misma es resistencia, y seguiremos existiendo mucho después de que se hayan derrumbado las estructuras que nos oprimen. 

No pueden borrarnos. Seguiremos llenando el mundo de nuestra dulce y brillante magia trans. Seguiremos soñando con un mundo más allá de lo binario. Con la liberación de todas las formas de opresión. Con un mundo donde la visibilidad no sea forjada con miedo sino con poder y amor. 

Por eso, hoy, en el Día de la Resiliencia Trans, no dejaremos de amarte, no dejaremos de luchar.

We Believe The Old South Will Fall

November 6, 2020

As we forge a New South that is about all of us, what do we want to see?

Spaces that honor folks that we lost in this process. Folks whose names we don’t know but use passcodes. Who had to meet up in juke joints or barns or back rooms. Had to connect in any kind of way they could for abolitionist work or just to throw down and be magically queer together. Anyway, they could to just show love and Be Loved: those are the spaces and folks I want to honor. Folks who created Good Trouble and it built us and we’re here, organizing and throwing down, and we wouldn’t be here if it were not for those folks who sacrificed sometimes life and limb for us to be in this place.

Robert-John Hinojosa, West Columbia, SC

This election cycle SONG Power fought on the frontlines of South Carolina and Georgia. In Georgia, following the leadership of GLAHR Action and Mijente, we fought to unseat two racist sheriffs and change the organizing conditions to #MeltICE and #EndMoneyBail in Gwinnett and Cobb counties. And … we won! Our immigrant comrades led the charge and we are so honored to have knocked over 150,000 doors of Black and brown Georgians to secure this victory and to flip the state of Georgia blue.

In South Carolina the fight to #CrackGraham called our name, and we answered the call to send Senator Lindsey Graham home. Graham is the ultimate poster boy of rightwing (internalized) homophobes, union busters, and rape apologists, who’s nevertheless held his seat for 17 years and counting. Since Trump’s election, Graham has doubled down on his ass-kissing and renewed his commitment to a regressive vision of South Carolina and the nation, including fast tracking the appointment of a new conservative Supreme Court justice. We couldn’t be prouder of our members and team in the field in South Carolina, riding dirty on country highways to get out that last yard sign, wearing two sweatshirts in the first cold snap of fall in the South to make sure voters in line have hand sanitizer, hunkered down to stay safe at home and making calls using not the cutting edge political data tools, but a basic ass spreadsheet to make sure our last 900 contacts get the info they need, startling a bit when a huge military jet flies overhead while out here knocking doors in the apartment complexes and mobile home parks where we find our sweet queer family, sheltered under Spanish moss and oaks.

We organized and continue to organize in a state and a region ravaged by coronavirus and in a state currently ruled with an iron fist by many who outright long for the days of chattel slavery. Our wins are rarely guaranteed here. But our longing, our legacy, our courage, and our vision hold us steadfast in our drive to build a New South where all can live free from fear.

I’m thinking a lot about the communities, the strong Black communities that have insulated themselves and were self sufficient and did the education of the community. The communities I grew up in and my grandparents grew up in and the knowledge and sense of self that they tried to pass on and that sustains the Movement in a different way. I am a South Carolinian and my roots run deep here. One of my family members is in the lynching museum in Alabama; since then, I have been learning more about my familiy and our legacy — the tenacity and resistance and fight it takes to survive generations and generations and generations in a hostile place like this.

It seems hard now but we’ve been through so much worse; it gives me a different type of hope for the future. We are closer to a New South than our ancestors were. It’s exciting to be part of a Movement and a people who want to keep being resistant and keep being troublemakers. In the New South I want to keep uplifting trouble making, resistance, and resilience and what it really takes to have all those things and how amazing it is to really survive.

Auburn Wideman, West Columbia, SC

In South Carolina, like so many other states where the Rightwing has run unopposed for decades, we experience the concentrated effects of white supremacy, capitalism, misogyny, and homophobia every day. Resilience runs deep here as does pain and cynicism, after so many decades and generations of neglect. At SONG Power, we believe that both the barriers to justice and the potential wins are greater in states in the Deep South like South Carolina. These wins will only come with long term investment. As we know from community organizing, especially in marginalized and under resourced places, transformation isn’t immediate but takes time and investment beyond the electoral calendar.

We launched SONG Power because we believe we must build political power to take what we want and what our communities deserve. In this moment, the Right has more consolidated power than we have seen in our lifetime. The South bears the brunt of their experiments — many of the places we live are the testing ground for policies that harm, sicken, divide, disenfranchise, and kill our communities. We believe we must work to change the rules to alleviate the suffering of our communities. We believe we must turn up the heat on the targets who are getting in the way of the public pressure campaigns we are building, running, and winning to #EndMoneyBail and #MeltICE. Our targets are elected. Those who will not do the people’s will can and must be held accountable. We believe that we must build our base and invite more and more people into the Movement in this time. Our constituency (the people impacted by the issues we organize around) is huge, even though at times our numbers may seem small. And we are clear: engaging in electoral fights is a tactic to build our power as we continue to demand, vision, and fight for complete and utter societal and political transformation far beyond the ballot box.

We are changed by this fight. The #CrackGraham campaign gave us the opportunity to connect with more Black, Latinx, rural, queer and gay folk throughout South Carolina. We were able to build collaborations and relationships with other organizations that we hadn’t had access to prior to this. We ran a statewide organizing strategy engaging elements of a traditional field program with cultural and community events, direct actions and relational organizing (aka community organizing). As coronavirus ravaged South Carolina our strategy had to shift. Coronavirus and widespread unemployment were key issues in our campaign the entire time. We made over 30,000 calls and had over 11,000 deep canvass conversations with Black, brown, and white poor and working-class women in South Carolina over the summer and fall. We started with common ground of how we are all being impacted by the pandemic — what did folks need? We spoke about shared values of helping out each other’s communities before ever asking what they thought of Lindsey Graham. At the end of these conversations we saw a 15 point shift to people not planning to vote for Graham!

“I would like to uplift South Carolinians like Eartha Kitt and people who did the unglamorous and perhaps the most important work of just surviving long enough to get all of us here. I want to see more of those normal stories captured and honored in history.”

Brittany Washington, Walterboro, SC

Votes are still being counted in South Carolina and voter suppression is alive and well. 2,500 ballots alone were thrown out because of the requirement to sign the outside of the envelope. 14,000 ballots are being hand counted in Dorchester County now from a printing error. 47,000 residents cannot vote due to felony disenfranchisement, including over 38,000 Black people (4% of the Black population in South Carolina).

Through this campaign we have work to seed the ground for a New South. To reach into pockets, counties, and communities that have been structurally neglected and pushed to the margins. Last weekend knocking doors a Black couple told our canvassers “screw Lindsey Graham, let’s build a different South. But we can’t take one of your yard signs because we don’t want anyone to burn our house down. So I won’t be putting that in my yard but I’m with you.”

“I would like to honor those who are frontliners, teachers, educators, those that are also fighting up against the pandemic and having to alter their lives around the region and the community. A lot of everyday people, teachers and those that are dealing with fronthand and everyday, I would like to see a continuance of caring about them as well. A continuance of non-profit organizations volunteering and getting out here and doing what we need to do to get our hands dirty. That’s the only way we will see change.”

Deborah, Columbia, SC

Much of Jaime Harrison’s strategy relied on the losing Democratic establishment formula. This formula is: Don’t rock the boat, keep the message vague to try and please everyone. Buy more and more advertisements, but don’t put a cent into organizers on the ground. We believe our people are not stupid and they are not weak. We believe it is essential to have organizers from and of the communities we are organizing in, on the ground, setting strategy and talking to as many folk as they can about the actual conditions of our lives. Our folk want real, material, transformative change. If only grassroots organizing were invested in here like Harrison’s campaign was — to the tune of over $100 million.  If we had those resources, imagine what we could do in our communities. Help folks get flu shots for free, dental checks or eye checks. Partner with groups in the community so we could get access good clean water and safe places to sleep. Food drops and blankets and reliable transportation.

“We made Graham fight for his seat and call in favors he will have to owe,” said one of our members. “Our ancestors endured so much more, more than we can even imagine,” reminds Robert-John Hinojosa, SONG Power Campaign Lead. “The blood, the sweat, the struggle for liberation, these aren’t just chants. This is the lifeline that connects our Beloved Community.”

We here. We been here. We’re not going anywhere. This is our home. What South Carolina needs beyond this election is bread-and butter community organizing. Organizers who know their community and can forge relationships across communities. Organizing to create Beloved Community is the antidote, and we plan to do just that. And don’t think we aren’t coming for your neck Graham. Queers, Immigrants, All Of Us.

Check Out Our Graham Crackin’ Hoedown!

September 28, 2020

On Friday, September 25, 2020 from 7-9 pm, SONG Power had a Graham Crackin’ Hoe Down, a virtual Country music fest.

SONG Power is working to take down Lindsey Graham, break up the power of the right and organize towards a South Carolina where Black, Brown, rural, LGBTQ, and working class South Carolinians can live free from fear.

Featured in Hoe Down line up are: Chloe Smith, of Rising Appalachia, Narissa Bond, Lucas Sams/Pray for Triangle Zero, Ken Gregory, H.C. McEntire, Aaron Kemmerer, Nana Grizol, Grace Nichols, Loamlands, Leila McCalla and Lee Bains of Lee Bains + Glory Fires.

The event was live at 7 p.m. and was hosted on SONG Power’s Facebook Page and YouTube channel.

Check Out Our SONG Power Launch Webinar!

May 5, 2020

On May 4, 2020, SONG Power officially launched with a live webinar on our Facebook page! We want to thank all of our members and supporters for attending, with a special thank you to Mijente and GLAHR for helping us share what our #MeltICE work looks like in Georgia. We are so excited to be embarking on this journey with anyone who is invested in the liberation of our people. We truly believe that organizing work requires a diversity of tactics and we are excited to take on Lindsey Graham in South Carolina and #MeltICE in the state of Georgia.

You can find the notes from the call here. Learn more about our conversation from the beautiful graphic notes illustrated by Radical Roadmaps.

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songpowerc4 avatar; songpowerc4 @songpowerc4 ·
26 Feb 1894799920239988928

Join us for SONG’s New Member Orientation on Wednesday, March 26th, from 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM EST / 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM CST!

RSVP here: RSVP @ http://songsouth.info/MarchNMO

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