In case you needed a playbook for responding to would-be dictators. From the NYT:

"The funny thing is that there’s a playbook for overturning autocrats. It was written here in America, by a rumpled political scientist I knew named Gene Sharp. While little known in the United States before his death in 2018, he was celebrated abroad, and his tool kit was used by activists in Eastern Europe, in the Middle East and across Asia. His books, emphasizing nonviolent protests that become contagious, have been translated into at least 34 languages."

“I would rather have this book than the nuclear bomb,” a former Lithuanian defense minister once said of Sharp’s writing."

"A soft-spoken scholar working from his Boston apartment, Sharp recommended 198 actions that were often performative, ranging from hunger strikes to sex boycotts to mock funerals."

“Dictators are never as strong as they tell you they are,” he once said, “and people are never as weak as they think they are.”

"The Democrats’ message last year revolved in part around earnest appeals to democratic values, but one of the lessons from anti-authoritarian movements around the world is that such abstract arguments aren’t terribly effective. Rather, three other approaches, drawing on Sharp’s work, seem to work better."

"The first is mockery and humor — preferably salacious."

"Wang Dan, a leader of China’s 1989 Tiananmen Square democracy demonstrations, told me that in China, puns often “resonate more than solemn political slogans.”

"The Chinese internet for a time delighted in grass-mud horses — which may puzzle future zoologists exploring Chinese archives, for there is no such animal. It’s all a bawdy joke: In Chinese, “grass-mud horse” sounds very much like a curse, one so vulgar it would make your screen blush. But on its face it is an innocent homonym about an animal and thus is used to mock China’s censors."

"Shops in China peddled dolls of grass-mud horses (resembling alpacas), and a faux nature documentary described their habits. One Chinese song recounted the epic conflict between grass-mud horses and river crabs — because “river crab” is a play on the Chinese term for censorship. It optimistically declared the horses triumphant."

http://nytimes.com/2025/05/21/opinion/authoritarianism-democracy-protest.html

Opinion | ‘Dictators Are Never as Strong as They Tell You They Are’

Dissidents around the world have plenty of experience challenging authoritarian regimes. Here are their secrets.

The New York Times
@briankrebs Apparently NYT has no appreciation of irony given their role in bringing Biden down and sanewashing Trump. Fuck them
@lawyersgunsnmoney I think maybe it's okay to take the good with the bad, given the alternatives.
@briankrebs I’m familiar with Sharp and the OSS guide - don’t need them for a goddam thing. NYT WaPo are dead to me. They trot out a marginally useful piece of information along with a torrent of misinformation, propaganda and dreck just try to maintain relevancy. People are on to Sulzberger and Kahn’s scam. I hope Pam Bondi and Ka$h lock their asses up and ship them both to El Salvador. Fucking Quislings both of them
@lawyersgunsnmoney Okay. I understand your position. But please don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. It's foolhardy to expect the media to disrupt everything and then get upset at them not being able to pull that off. IMHO, a lot of protest energy is wasted on stuff that has zero impact. Lampooning and ridiculing this president resonates, if not with POTUS then with protesters.
@briankrebs To be clear, I’m not rejecting commercial news organizations - that would be throwing the baby. NYT and WaPo, CNN, NBC (remember MSNBC hiring Ronna McDaniel) CBS, are all fucking *collaborators* that put a Fasicst in charge. They are the *same* as Dudek the inside shill for doge at SSA. They are fucking Quislings that sold us all out. They are the bath water and I’m not drinking it. If you can’t see it, that’s on you but people here do.