https://twitter.com/unitedworkersoc/status/1371531488450207749

  • lilpissbaby [any]
    ·
    4 years ago

    i agree with you here, for the most part. but even if the DSA's strategy isn't sustainable in the long-term you can still join one of the more radical caucuses and agitate in the DSA itself. a lot of people will eventually realize that taking over the Democratic party (if DSA leadership even plans on going that "far") is a pretty shitty plan and that the more radical people have had solid criticism of the DSA's strategy and tactics. that will lead to people joining/creating/splitting into better suited orgs for a socialist path.

    i'm not from the US but i truly don't see a better org for socialists to join other than the DSA: it's pretty big, its members are pretty open minded to ideas to the left of them, etc obviously keep in mind the limitations of the organization but most other organizations are pretty much irrelevant at the moment and i don't see that changing any time soon.

    • PM_ME_YOUR_FOUCAULTS [he/him, they/them]
      ·
      4 years ago

      I'm a DSA member currently, but I don't think I really want to spend my time and energy trying to push the DSA left. I'm already part of a giant, terrible union that is controlled by liberal ghouls with a deathgrip on power. The biggest problem I have is that it's an organization, not a party. It has no ideology (by design). The politicians they endorse and elect aren't accountable to the organization or its membership. There are good caucuses and good chapters, but I've just been feeling like I want an org with some discipline and ideological consistency.