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bluescribbler

(2,521 posts)
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 11:44 AM Yesterday

General Strike May 1?

I see that the organizers of the No Kings days are calling for a General Strike on May 1. No work, no school, no shopping. That's their plan. My question is, how effective will it be? It seemed to be easy to convince people to gather with signs. Will people join a general strike? It just seems ambitious to me.
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EYESORE 9001

(29,731 posts)
1. Give it time
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 11:49 AM
Yesterday

Things may be so much worse on May 1st that a general strike may not seem so overly ambitious by then.

walkingman

(10,862 posts)
2. I will be participating...as a retiree it involves little or no sacrifice so not bragging.
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 11:50 AM
Yesterday

I think anything we can do is worthwhile...we have normalized corruption and that is bad for everyone.

Tree Lady

(13,282 posts)
12. Same here retired
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 08:47 PM
15 hrs ago

I have a zoom senior class that day, but will tell teacher why I am skipping that day.

No shopping for one day? If we can't do that we have major problems beyond Trump.

It's actually a easy ask but if millions do it, it will make a difference especially with school and work.

leftstreet

(40,674 posts)
3. If only 20 people show up, it's a start
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 11:50 AM
Yesterday

non violent DISRUPTION of the system is the next step

WhiskeyGrinder

(26,955 posts)
4. .
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 11:56 AM
Yesterday
My question is, how effective will it be?
What's your benchmark for "effective"?

It seemed to be easy to convince people to gather with signs.
Organizing is a pain in the ass and while there's certainly a point where momentum takes over, "easy" is not a word I would use.

Will people join a general strike?
Will you?

It just seems ambitious to me.
You don't get what you don't aim for.

bluescribbler

(2,521 posts)
6. My benchmark for "effective" is...
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 12:48 PM
23 hrs ago

Enough participation that the Damn Liberal Media has to pay attention.

bluescribbler

(2,521 posts)
9. I did, too.
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 03:51 PM
20 hrs ago

But it's easy to haul a camera or two to the center of town and take pix or shoot footage of the signs and costumes. I just question whether there will be enough visual stuff to grab the MSM' attention. I would love to be proven wrong.

WhiskeyGrinder

(26,955 posts)
10. I'm saying I saw coverage in the mainstream media. What more attention are you envisioning?
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 04:06 PM
20 hrs ago

bluescribbler

(2,521 posts)
11. I'm just sayin that it's easy to get photos or footage when there's a huge crowd in the state's capitol city.
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 06:47 PM
17 hrs ago

How do you get footage of people staying home. Believe me, I'd love to be proven wrong.

Ocelot II

(130,528 posts)
5. Check this out:
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 12:37 PM
Yesterday
General strikes have a rich history in the United States. A wave of citywide strikes in the 1940s proved so threatening to the prevailing order that Congress passed the Taft–Hartley Act, banning unions from striking in solidarity with workers at other companies. For the past few decades, the general strike has seemed more like the fanciful hope of the anarchist bookstore poster than a real possibility. Online, much the same has happened. Modern-day social media calls for mass strikes have rarely translated to collective action in the material world.

Then came Minneapolis.

On January 23, roughly 75,000 people flooded the streets on a workday, in sub-zero temperatures, demanding that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) leave Minnesota. Hundreds of businesses and cultural institutions in the Twin Cities closed their doors; one in four Minnesota voters either participated in the shutdown or knows a loved one who did, according to Blue Rose Research. A motley coalition led the charge: labor unions, racial justice groups, faith-based organizations.

The remarkable success of Minnesota’s “Day of Truth and Freedom,” as it was billed by organizers, inspired student groups at the University of Minnesota to call for another day of action. One week later, on January 30, tens of thousands of protesters across all 50 states took to the streets. Students held walkouts on high school and college campuses. Many businesses in major cities either closed for the day or committed to donating their proceeds to immigrant advocacy groups. More than 1,000 organizations signed on in support of the “national shutdown.”

“We want to bring it to the national stage and see it happen all over the country,” Austin Muia, vice president of the University of Minnesota’s Black Student Union told my colleague, Nate Halverson. “We want everyone to feel that solidarity that we felt last week.”

https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/02/minneapolis-minnesotas-general-strike-ice-border-patrol-trump/

The article goes on to explain what needs to be done:
1) A general strike needs to involve both organized labor and a broad coalition.
2) Ask your employers to close.
3) Building community power takes time—so start now. (The Day of Truth and Freedom was made possible by Minneapolis’s decades of organizing history and the existing fabric of community groups.)
4) Effective organizing happens at the micro level. (I saw this personally - everything that worked in Minneapolis started out with neighborhood organizing.)
5) Offer ways to get involved for people who can’t strike.
6) Understand how movements are connected so you can keep building power.

Amaryllis

(11,291 posts)
7. INdivisible has weekly calls called What's the Plan where people ask question and Leah and Ezra (founders) answer.
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 12:50 PM
23 hrs ago

Up until recently, when people would ask about strikes, they would say that we didn't have the numbers yet. They are no longer saying that. Minnesota was an inflection point.

See this post by Usonian: https://www.democraticunderground.com/10115083

PeaceWave

(3,383 posts)
13. A march on a Saturday is one thing. Asking folks to pass up income is quite another...
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 08:52 PM
15 hrs ago

This falls into the same realm as the nonsense that was the Economic Blackout.

Torchlight

(6,824 posts)
14. You then believe general strikes a nonsensical fiction in other nations?
Wed Apr 1, 2026, 12:17 PM
26 min ago
Piecewave: "This falls into the same realm as the nonsense..."
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