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Paul Cienfuegos
Author
How Dare We?
Do you care deeply about the state of our society and don't see yourself as an activist but want to do something powerful to make a difference? Or maybe you are an activist and are frustrated that your efforts aren't bearing fruit? This book is for you! No more pleading with government and corporate power-holders who don't care what you think. No more testifying at public hearings where the law requires that they ask for public input but the decision has already been made. It's time to breakout of the "cage of allowable activism" and learn how We the People can become a more powerful force for good. (Yes, you belong to that group!) Don't give up. It's not hopeless. Read this book and get more active in a way that brings real change!
Reviews
This impassioned guide to the reclamation of civilian power stands as a culmination of Cienfuegos’s four decades of activism and leadership. The founder of Community Rights US, which “works with communities to pass locally enforceable laws protecting people and nature from destructive corporate practices,” Cienfuegos has dedicated himself to fighting against corporate “personhood.” Currently, he believes we face “the largest social and economic and environmental emergency since the Civil War.” Crafted to help inspire “we the people” to realize the principles on which the nation was founded, How Dare We? compiles speeches, podcast scripts, articles, and essays Cienfuegos has written throughout his career, illuminating the political history of how we got here, and the perennial promise of America itself.

Cienfuegos’s passion is to drive social change by encouraging citizens to stand up corporate governance—“to make this democratic republic live up to the ideals that we were taught about in school.” Chapters examine how to campaign for change, a multifaceted and highly practical approach to how Democrats could handle the issue of logging, and a deep dive into the “two national constitutions” of the U.S., starting with the Articles of Confederation, a “profoundly more democratic document” in contrast to what was later ratified, “a constitution that is all about the rights of property and says almost nothing about the rights of people.” His prose is inviting, crafted to be persuasive to open-minded readers rather than just to rouse the spirits of longtime fellow travelers, and he’s deft at incorporating historical argument and precedent.

Cienfuegos writes with hope in the national spirit but also clear eyes: though he holds pride in America’s revolutionary history, he simultaneously also condemns the country’s “assaults on the world’s people and nature.” How Dare We also emphasizes the practical, especially “place-based and scale-sensitive” organization and activism. Cienfuegos offers concrete, achievable steps citizens can take to bring about change and hold elected leaders accountable.

Takeaway: Rousing, clear-eyed dispatches from the fight against corporate dominance of American government.

Great for fans of: Paul Starr’s Freedom’s Power, Stephen Duncombe and Steve Lambert’s The Art of Activism.

Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A

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