| ▲ | Grombobulous 3 hours ago | |||||||
The process of lobbying Congress involves physically showing up to the congressional offices in Washington DC, meeting with congressional staff, and often submitting draft legislation, which essentially requires a law degree to have the technical ability to write something of that sort. Walmart is the largest private employer in America and they are have the most employees in America who receive SNAP benefits due to their lower income status. I think we can’t create the step-by-step plan and budget for someone who works at Walmart as a cashier for how they’ll engage in the lobbying system. It’s just not possible. Sure, there’s a lot of free things you can do to be an activist and make your voice heard, but it’s not at the same amplitude. We can’t blame apathy and leisure when so many people don’t even have the budget for most forms of leisure. | ||||||||
| ▲ | wwweston 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
You’re correct that time is the fundamental challenge. It’s also really what the money is always a proxy for at some level. Meetings in DC are probably not the right focus. Every congressional officeholder has offices in the region they represent, most have multiple. Most people don’t use them for the same reason they outsource their understanding of current events to Fox News or Rogan & guests. Some people do contact offices by phone or message, but fewer band together with others who care about a policy topic and leverage collective influence. Sure it’s hard and time consuming. I’m not speaking from a position of full ability or particular privilege (though I have enough time to post on HN). But it’s also a bit like the old saw about meditation — 10 minutes a day, and if you’re too busy, 20 minutes. The activities themselves don’t always produce immediate leverage but once they lock in the return is powerful. | ||||||||
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