Hello friends,
Today, the people of Minneapolis are engaged in the first city-wide strike in this country since 1946. Religious leaders and unions issued a united call for a day of “No Work, No School, and No Shopping” in response to the violence and cruelty ICE is inflicting on the Twin Cities. Thousands of people are rallying in the brutal cold, hundreds of small businesses shut down in solidarity, and dozens of clergy were arrested while protesting deportation flights at the airport.
Never convince yourself that people don’t care. This was Year 2, Week 4 - let’s talk about it.
The new podcast episode, “Defund Science, Distort Culture, Mock Education” felt very familiar to me when I encountered it. The repeated return to “but why is the administration doing this to science?” echoes what I hear almost every day. I usually redirect the discussion, but one quote in the interview has been sticking with me. “Autocrats engage in a mix of utopia and nostalgia,” says historian Ruth Ben-Ghiat. The discussion links the alternative reality she describes not only to ideological interference with science, but also to the manipulation or destruction of historical records.
Last week I mentioned the Smithsonian museums facing review for “improper ideology.” This week, the Unbreaking team published our Archives & History page. As I was writing this, I saw the news that the city of Philadelphia just sued the administration over the removal of exhibits about the people who were enslaved by George Washington there. And tomorrow, I’m leading a new workshop that weaves together concepts from individual and social psychology to help participants understand just how much our decision-making depends on our memories, and how we might mitigate powerful social pressures to conform. I’ll be sharing ideas like the spiral of silence and pluralistic ignorance.
Sometimes our memories fail us, our fears dull us, and our institutions fail us. But I can’t stop thinking about the role every single person can play in resisting the erasure of our past and distortion of our present. Whether they are deliberate manipulations, or merely side-effects of exhaustion, cynicism, or stress, we must not allow false social realities to control us.
Liz