Loomio

How we want to be with each other - Loomio Participation Guidelines

J Jackie Public Seen by 59

Let's use this space to align around some Participation Guidelines. Original text of discussion to be found on http://natgat2014.titanpad.com/57.

Have separated the discussion Create Loomio Group Participation Guidelines, Usage and Decision Making Processes out into 3. Please use this page for discussing and proposing How we want to be with each other - Participation Guidelines

the 3 discussions:
How we want to be with each other - Loomio Pariticpation Guidelines
https://www.loomio.org/d/CFlnIK31/create-loomio-group-participation-guidelines-usage-and-decision-making-processes
How we use loomio - Loomio Usage
https://www.loomio.org/d/tDwgb6L4/how-we-use-loomio-loomio-usage
How we make decisions - Loomio Decision Making
https://www.loomio.org/d/z4RIg1tK/how-we-make-decisions-loomio-decision-making

# Loomio Processes

Members

Removal

x complaints by one or more members of group
warning
in person or tele convo
bring to group
vote on loomio

Participation Guidelines: (these are from IO, for the calls; add others, your own or amend these) (The original call participation guildes can be found at: http://interoccupy.net/about/participation-guidelines/

GUIDELINES FOR PARTICIPATION + COMMUNICATION
- Be Curious and Open to Learning: Listen to and be open to hearing all points of view. Maintain a attitude of exploration and learning.
- Balance Advocacy and Inquiry: Seek to learn and understand as much as you might want to persuade. Conversations are as much about listening as it is about talking.
- Show Respect and Suspend Judgment: Setting judgments aside will enable you to learn from others and contribute to others experiencing being respected and appreciated.
- Seek Alignment rather than Agreement: Alignment is shared intention, whereas agreement is having a shared belief or opinion.
- Be Purposeful and to the Point: Notice if what you are conveying is or is not “on purpose” to the question at hand. Notice if you are making the same point more than once. Do your best to make your point quickly with honesty and depth.
- Own and Guide the Conversation or Process: Take responsibility for the quality of your participation and the quality of the work conversations by noticing what’s happening and actively support getting yourself and others back “on purpose” when needed.
- Be Excellent to Each other: Share what’s important to you. Speak authentically; from your personal and heart felt experience. Be considerate to others who are doing the same.
- Respect the subject threads: Since there's a lot of traffic here, keep the threads intact. Don't post something that mixes one thread with another. Better to refer to people, "I just posted about abc in the xyz conversation."

S

Sea Sat 10 May 2014 1:11AM

Another guideline is that if there is a discussion topic, which a person may or may not have complete (or merely adequate) knowledge about, making a proposal doesn't help, or if it does, it means that the proposal will lead to even more discussion, so that the result may bear little resemblance to the intent of the person who posted the discussion in the first place, who, though, didn't post the proposal, and the person who put up the proposal didn't inquire of the person who posted the discussion.

An example is the "Reparations for Native and African Americans" discussion. The proposal that is before it now, seems an odd proposal given my purpose in posting the discussion. Its possible if that proposal passes, that my purpose in starting the the discussion will be defeated. Yet maybe a new and better result will be achieved.

I don't know what the result will be if the current proposal is passed. So that discussion with its current proposal should be taken down. It would be hard to do an effective counter proposal.

I didn't expect the discussion to lead to a proposal. I was trying to narrowly open a big topic. It seems now we have a wide opening on an unknown topic.

T

Tricia Sat 10 May 2014 1:19AM

How about proposals of a 1st draft proposal be put on the on the discussion thread b/f putting it up for a decision?

S

Sea Sat 10 May 2014 3:03PM

Yes. More than one proposal might be good for a discussion. I think we know that merely through slick wording, or through electronic sabotage, our words and intents can be twisted. Perhaps the instigator of the discussion should have some say on the proposal and there should be opportunities for more than one proposal. Right now, because of the proposal in the "Reparations" discussion, the result could turn into a big embarassment for us.
Tricia, could you make space for more proposals in that discussion?
I think the discussion so far could help create the sensitivity we need. However I think the current proposal will booby-trap that.

J

Jackie Sat 10 May 2014 4:13PM

It seems loomio only allows for one proposal at a time - I agree we need a mechanism to ask for a proposal to close so another may be proposed. Please add more concrete, specific ideas for how to do it, in a sentence or phrase. Here's mine:

Ask for a Proposal to End so a new Proposal can be made.
Use a phrase [I move to end this proposal]
3? people use the phrase, the owner of the proposal removes it unless they further clarify why it should stay up.

J

Jackie Sat 10 May 2014 4:16PM

Recap of new additions so far:

Additions:
The thresholds for consensus should be clearly defined, and the resulting decision should be posted.
I’m not against blocks if they are not given doomsday powers.
There should be some attempt to adjust the proposal to remove the reason for a block if possible.
I personally like 2/3 block overrides, without any promises to leave.
jmcg - loomiodisc 5-9

I would only share this thought, for me to do it, autonomy is important. I suggest that proposals only be made to the group that you are willing to do, coordinate and hold with or without the group’s blessing. NikiV loomiodisc 5-9

Do we need a process for adding new members? Tricia loomiodisc 5-9

blocks should not have doomsday powers - Julia loomiodisc 5-9

Blocker must really know the issues and the positions of each person and also must know the members generally and have a track-record of being involved in the particular issue, without being disruptive. Sea loomiodisc 5-9

http://natgat2014.titanpad.com/57

SG

Sally G Sat 10 May 2014 5:44PM

I still do not like percentages/fractions; I believe that blocks should only be used by someone who is finding the decision contradictory to principle, etc., and is willing to walk away from the group if it moves forward. It is then up to the group to decide if they can accommodate the objections or is willing to let the blocker walk away; either can be valid.

J

Justin Sun 11 May 2014 5:24AM

Levels of consensus & proposals can take all forms.

It should not be the last thing we use but a tool we can leverage when needed.

Seems to be working quite well as groups form around projects & ideas.

Discussions should be allowed to become proposals at any time..

But setting a min 7 day time frame would only be fair-

SG

Sally G Sun 11 May 2014 1:41PM

I understand the thoughts on a 7-day minimum, but would notice sent via e-mail/Facebook/etc. enable that to be cut down if needed without overly limiting people’s opportunity to participate?

C

Cal Sun 11 May 2014 8:56PM

I've been away at a mountain retreat for the last 48 hours. I meant to write up something at the beginning of this thread, but ran out of time before I left. I've added two things to the context at the top:
- Under "Usage" I've included some guidelines about starting off with discussions rather than proposals, levels of importance of proposal, and where to introduce a proposal (main group or a working grou).
- Guidelines for blocking in consensus. To me, this is what's always been missing (and why consensus hasn't worked so well in Occupy). The "I will leave the movement" thing has never worked for me. At the same time, overriding someone who has a principled block, IMO, is heinous. I like "Block means you’ve got serious objections and you’ll be extremely unhappy if this proposal goes ahead", although it's not our place to make sure every is happy or unhappy, so I'd prefer more concrete ways of determining whether a block is legitimate. I should be able to completely block a decision if my reasons are based on the decision violating a principle or principles we hold. The guidelines for blocking I've offered are form that intention.

T

Tricia Sun 11 May 2014 9:55PM

I like the 2/3 override on blocks

S

Sea Sun 11 May 2014 10:05PM

Does anyone have the text of the writer from Canada who invented the hand signals and the idea of a Block?

There have been 2 recent Blocks in the Sacramento GA. Both involved "racism".

T

Tricia Sun 11 May 2014 10:22PM

It's been a while since some of us have been in an actual GA here's a refresher on hand signals. It's interesting to see how we are trying to use this non verbal language on a verbal platform. http://vimeo.com/m/30816750

C

Cal Sun 11 May 2014 11:04PM

I spend most of my life in full consensus groups and communities (cohousing, my men's group, collaborative teams, etc.). I would likely not be part of anything that would all a majority to run over a minority by overriding a legitimate block. (As far as I know, Philly has perhaps the weakest decision-making process in Occupy (I think you settled on 75% or 2/3; too much like Congress for me). (I heard that there were folks who were advocating for a 50+% majority, so that the higher nubmer was a stretch.) Consensus is consensus, and supermajority is not, no matter how you slice it.
In Oakland, I would watch in horror as 90% would roll over 10%, with that minority having no resources. In such a racially charged and violence-prone city, I held my breath, waiting for the day when that 10% turned out to be mainly people of color or women. IMO, the whole thing would have melted down bigtime if they had been rolled over like that. OO was lucky; that day never came, but at the same time, they escaped having the heinousness of a majority rolling over a minority be tested.
I will continue to advocate for guidelines for blocking, rather than just having some percentage that allows a large bunch people to force a small number of people to get in line with them.
(To me, this discussion warrants a call. The amount of time that I'd spend reading and writing on this subject could get out of hand.)

T

Tricia Sun 11 May 2014 11:16PM

So we can all agree that blocking is a serious decision and people need to listen to their conscience.

That said, we decided that a Loomio was going to merely inform decisions made on the Wed conference calls. So discussion on blocking is moot.

The nature of our online coordination of a one time event is qualitatively different than longstanding groups who meet around a shared value or identity.

Conssider a Loomio a Temp Check and no more.
Please let's not get lost in analysis paralysis.

Check!

C

Cal Sun 11 May 2014 11:31PM

I was speaking as if I were discussing it for decision-making in general. If we're just talking about Loomio temp-checking as just you described, I can hold off on that until another discussion on decision-making (which should be the area of focus of the process working group, but there wasn't a lot of juice in that group, but I imagine it will be resurrected at some point in the not-too-distant future.

J

Jackie Mon 12 May 2014 12:31AM

right this is for Loomio - though I imagined having done the work, we would have a basis for overall decision making.

I don't agree the block is a moot point. We've already seen it used several ways here, including "I will leave the group".

Tricia's right about Loomio being a temp check for decisions that effect the whole gathering and the wider planning group. But I see value in being able to make many smaller decisions or subgroup decisions here that are binding (to those who will do the work of the proposal).

SG

Sally G Mon 12 May 2014 3:33AM

Agreed with Jackie about subgroup decisions here, same as on as a subgroup call, but only those.

C

Cal Mon 12 May 2014 3:43AM

Seems to me that a subgroup would need its own Loomio group (consisting of just the subgroup's members) in which to make those decisions.

C

Cal Mon 12 May 2014 5:05AM

I've just added two new guidelines:

Under "Guidelines for Participation...":
- Respect the subject threads: Since there’s a lot of traffic here, keep the threads intact. Don’t post something that mixes one thread with another. Better to refer to people, “I just posted about abc in the xyz conversation.”

Under "Usage:"
- Proposals cannot be brought by one individual. At least three proposers are required, preferably at least one of them from a different Occupy, so as to encourage the spirit of collaboration among different Occupys. (If you as individual want to advocate for something, start a conversation, and if enough people get on board, then three or more of you can turn it into a proposal.)

J

Jackie Mon 12 May 2014 5:28AM

Cal - on the Home page - the one that comes up when you click Occupy National Gathering Organizing Group up top

right hand column, there are subgroups, previous decisions, group description.

re: the proposals, you mean 3 people on (x-group) who align on an idea make a proposal?

J

jemcgloin Tue 13 May 2014 1:36AM

If you don't have some kind of set threshold so that you know a decision has been made, it would take a real long time to get anything done. I mean, we have a lot of proposals up right now, and most of them have conflicting opinions. We need to make a million decisions by the end of August. If there is no percentage threshold a no vote is as good as a block.
How do we know when we have reached a decision?

C

Cal Tue 13 May 2014 3:32AM

John, first of all, we don't need to make as many decisions as would appear. IMO, people are making things into proposals that ought to start out as discussions (not as proposals), some (many?) of which, perhaps ought to stay as discussions Further, many of the smaller decisions need to be made by subgroups and should not be brought to this main group. (The subgroups can use any tool to make their decisions.)
Second, I don't know what you mean by threshold. In consensus, you build alignment. You know you've reached consensus when everyone is sufficiently aligned that there are no remaining objections (which depends on having a well-crafted set of guidelines for blocking). (Funny how even many Occupiers are still stuck in the old model of "democracy" wherein some majority runs over the rest; that's not what consensus-building is.)

T

Tricia Tue 13 May 2014 9:56AM

The people who block can offer solutions - and make another proposal. Just blocking with no solutions is holding us back

SG

Sally G Tue 13 May 2014 11:50AM

Only problem with that process on Loomio is that the new proposal would have to go to a new page, unless the original proposer closes the first one early. Maybe that is not a bad idea—a block that includes “I have a suggestion to make this work; see it on [name of new proposal page]”.

J

Jackie Tue 13 May 2014 6:23PM

One of my suggestions is that we decide on a phrase, like
"I move to end this proposal". and if 3?5? people copy the same phrase, the proposer must close it within 24 hrs.

that way the proposals for one discussion will stay under the one discussion.

plus we haven't decided if a block STOPS a proposal from going forward. If we go with the loomio version, it means serious objections, and the proposal can be changed to accommodate.

S

Sea Tue 13 May 2014 6:47PM

Sacramento has made really good decisions and it has been hard and there have been very few Blocks, and the two recent ones concerned ethnic sensitivity, and the Blocks have worked. Our GA is now amenable to ethnic sensitivity/anti-racism training.

Another Block happened about 2 years ago and it concerned a presumed police mole who was about to convince the group to do something which ultimately didn't happen because of the Block.

We have a member named Faygo who facilitated the two Blocks regarding sensitivity. In both cases he said the Blocker should explain their moral reason for Blocking.
We get consensus, unanimity on the things that seem to pan-out to really matter. So far we allow a Blocker to prevent any further action until the Block is resolved. I think this was the intent of the Canadian writer who taught OWS about the Block and the hand-signals.

Cal said, "Funny how even many Occupiers are still stuck in the old model of “democracy” wherein some majority runs over the rest; that’s not what consensus-building is."

We need to be smart enough and patient enough to arrange everything so that we foresee problems, and so that we can get unanimity. No majority rule. If a person Blocks and seems to be disrupting (not just at that moment but that the Block might seem to continue to disrupt weeks later), it is our (the GA's) fault, for being hasty. I'll say this for Faygo. He's not hasty.

J

Justin Tue 13 May 2014 9:57PM

I think the key is in writing the proposal clearly, defining the level of consensus with each and allow at least one full week for group to weigh in- maybe making sure it is announced on the phone call?

Blocks can be addressed as they happen & how they are defined in the proposal.

C

Cal Wed 14 May 2014 1:16AM

Last year, Occupy Kalamazoo brought out one of their facilitators to facilitate one of the GAs in which a proposal was brought. Someone blocked and the facilitator didn't seem to know how to handle it. I don't now for sure, but it seemed that they'd never had blocks there.

C

Cal Wed 14 May 2014 1:18AM

IMO, it's unreasonable to require everyone who objects to provide a solution. Solutions can come from anywhere in a group -- indeed that's one of the advantages of groups, to be able to tap into its collective wisdom. What is important is to articulate clearly what the block is and why it's a legitimate block. (Hence the guidelines for blocking I've suggested in the context part above.)

J

jemcgloin Wed 14 May 2014 1:52AM

I really don't think Occupy would have ever happened if those that disagreed with certain directions the majority wanted to take didn't decide to go along with the majority for the greater good.
For example, there were many of us that thought thought there should be a defined message from day 1, but 2/3 said we should leave that for after the initial event.
There is still no consensus in Occupy on that point. If we had not been willing to go with the majority, we would still be trying to reach consensus instead of Occupying Wall Street.

Although it is good to work towards complete agreement, I still don't see it is practical under our time constraints,

J

jemcgloin Wed 14 May 2014 2:02AM

Additionally, it seems to me that demanding absolute consensus can be more divisive than modified consensus.
If when I blocked the Move On proposal last year, we had used a 2/3 modified consensus, after the first vote, I would have said, "I think this is a mistake. I tried, I lost, but I'll go along with it because there are other important things to do."
But because the facilitator considered blocks absolute, the whole thing turned into a @#%$ fest.
Yes there are times when majorities are abusive, and when that happens the minority can appeal to to facilitation and to the more fair members of the majority to understand how they are being abused. But to demand that everyone agree on every action means that 1 person can keep anything from happening, or at least slow everything to a snail's pace.
Shouldn't our enemies at least have to show up with 50% of our numbers to block our proposals?

C

Cal Wed 14 May 2014 4:07AM

John, your use of the phrase "absolute consensus" doesn't describe what I'm talking about. In consensus (in for example, cohousing communities), the by-word is "can you live with it?", not "do you agree with it?" (though I personally think that "can you live with it?" tends to result in lower-quality decisions. Agreement/disagreement may be okay for temp-checks (which, from what I can see, generally aren't binding on the group), but doesn't really capture the spirit of consensus.

One of the participation guidelines is "Seek Alignment rather than Agreement: Alignment is shared intention, whereas agreement is having a shared belief or opinion."

And I would further description it as "sufficient alignment". When I facilitate (not the Oakland GAs because that was supermajority not consensus), I often say indicate if you are aligned with this..." (which is usually taken as "if you are sufficiently aligned with this...". I can align with something that I don't agree with (or at least don't fully agree with) or even like. I care less whether you agree with me than whether you "can" sufficiently align. We're not looking for perfection but enough alignment from everyone that we can move forward.

J

Jackie Wed 14 May 2014 4:42AM

thanks for bringing up time constraints John.

While in theory and heart I go with Cal's pure consensus model, in practicality, for the purposes of putting on an event, we have to have the means to move on and do what we can do. I don't like strict percentages either, but would go with the group. the important thing is to have that agreement. I appreciate that you would have stuck by a consensus agreement had ng2 had one.

we're a small planning/organizing/coordinating working group with a limited amount of time to produce an outcome. working is key.

the purpose of this group is to make natgat happen, physically, logistically, food, supplies, reasonable attempt at housing. financially - fundraise! outreach, media, messaging. etc.

So, next steps?
get draft proposals together to agree to.
how
separate discussions
add to pad:
Loomio
http://natgat2014.titanpad.com/57
3? people agree to post proposal [another decision that would have to come first]

Cal suggested at one point there are really three discussions here.

I agree, and will create 2 more discussions to focus the work towards proposals and hopefully agreements.

SG

Sally G Wed 14 May 2014 5:43PM

I think Cal’s point is important; it is reflected in John’s post: “I really don’t think Occupy would have ever happened if those that disagreed with certain directions the majority wanted to take didn’t decide to go along with the majority for the greater good. ” That choice, NOT to continue the block, may appear after the fact as unanimity, but it is not necessarily 100% votes in favor, not necessarily 100% agreement—it is 100% “this is acceptable to me; I do not have a reason that THE GROUP should not go ahead with this”. With that as the understanding of what consensus means, I stand by “absolute” consensus—that does not feel absolute to me.

S

Sea Wed 14 May 2014 5:50PM

Awesome!

C

Cal Wed 14 May 2014 9:53PM

I will take some time to write up the OWS process, modified to include the guidelines for blocking, and post it on the decision-making discussion, after Jackie has has had a chance to separated out the threads.

J

Jackie Wed 14 May 2014 10:29PM

done - read the description - probably was doing the same time you were writing last reply.

T

Tricia Thu 15 May 2014 1:32PM

This article is germane to this topic because it outlines the pitfalls of these discussions about "process" http://roarmag.org/2014/05/occupy-resisting-liberal-tendencies/

J

jemcgloin Thu 15 May 2014 6:17PM

Sally, I see where you and Cal are coming from, but what is the mechanism for ending the discussion, having people realize that they might have to live with a different direction than they want to go, declare a decision, and move on?

SG

Sally G Fri 16 May 2014 12:35AM

Ask the blocker to explain per concerns. Open the discussion as to whether those concerns are valid for others, how the decision might be amended to take those concerns into account. If suggestions are raised, temp check them and then revisit the decision, now amended. Yes, it can take a long time; impractical for very large groups; but we could be doing it here and on the calls without setting a percentage, I think.

J

Jackie Fri 16 May 2014 12:41AM

OK, so now that we have separate threads for these discussions, this one is the most simple.

1.Can we agree upon the the above participation guidelines.
Yes - make a proposal
No - add more, edit, suggest

  1. what is process for complaint, resolution or removal. this needs more development.

Please take decision making discussion to
https://www.loomio.org/d/z4RIg1tK/how-we-make-decisions-loomio-decision-making

J

jemcgloin Sat 17 May 2014 4:05PM

If there is no percentage 100%, 90%, 67%,... how does a temp check decide anything?
And if you insist on 100% buy in on every decision, doesn't that mean that one or two saboteurs can keep every decision in limbo for weeks?
An intentional community of people living together is different from a movement of people trying to change the world paradigm. Trying to achieve perfection in decision making, and entertaining the destructive impulses of any member of the group has been one of the main obstacles to Occupy. I watched it destroy Occupy Staten Island and the NYC GA and the OWS Spokes Council.
If 2/3 or 3/4 want to follow a course of action then everyone else can either get on board or split off.
The majority of people that have left Occupy left, not because they were overridden in a decision, but because they see an inability to move foward, or deal effectively with obviously destructive individuals.

C

Cal Sat 17 May 2014 8:04PM

Can we avoid duplicating the same posts in multiple places? (This is already time-consuming enough with so many discussions happening.) I thnik it's better to post in one place (and if you really feel there's a need to, then refer people to where you posted it). We can all see all the discussions, and we're pretty much the same people in most of these discussions.) Thanks.

O

oswgwhe Sat 14 Jun 2014 4:54AM

Cal, What happened on Fridays Structure Working Group call? Why is Donna so hurt?

C

Cal Sat 14 Jun 2014 6:27PM

Actually, I felt hurt on Friday's Structure call, on the verge of tears.

O

oswgwhe Sun 15 Jun 2014 5:34PM

There are serious hurt feelings in Sacramento, in Southern California, and happening on our conference calls. More importantly there are very serious hurt feelings amongst outside groups that find it hard to participate with us. Those groups, are who, are going to make or break our gathering.

If the authorities in Sacramento respond positively, they will, because they pick up that we have risen above what they are incapable of rising above.

We're strong enough to withstand anything. And we're smart enough to stop doing bad stuff to ourselves.

SG

Sally G Sun 15 Jun 2014 6:32PM

Well said, Sea! TOGETHER We Rise!

J

Poll Created Wed 18 Jun 2014 1:15AM

Form a Loomio Working Group to Develop Set of Suggested Practices Closed Mon 30 Jun 2014 6:10PM

Lots of great discussion going on & solid ideas seem to be emerging from the pains our long term (and long distance) organizing.

This Working Group would have NO power but to continue the conversation about using Loomio & then present to the entire community at Nat Gat 2014.

The working group would coordinate an informal skill share on Loomio during Nat Gat which would be live streamed.

We're already using the platform so trying to set community practices & standards now would just confuse things.

Justin

PLEASE READ THE OPTIONS

YES= I like this idea & I will help make it happen
ABSTAIN= I like this idea but cannot help out personally.
NO= I don't care about this idea either way.
BLOCK= I don't like the idea & will not be involved.

By Voting YES I will start a subgroup & invite you to it so we can continue the work, together.

Results

Results Option % of points Voters
Agree 50.0% 3 J T SG
Abstain 33.3% 2 DH CD
Disagree 0.0% 0  
Block 16.7% 1 O
Undecided 0% 48 M J FW J LS TL JH P JC KAF L C CG K LRR UB CM CS DB A

6 of 54 people have participated (11%)

J

Justin
Agree
Wed 18 Jun 2014 1:17AM

I can help with this.

T

Tricia
Agree
Wed 18 Jun 2014 11:29AM

I'd help with this - but not bottom-line it. I could be a person who can help answer questions or demonstrate we used Loomio during the planning

SG

Sally G
Agree
Wed 18 Jun 2014 7:46PM

Good to analyze what we have done, what has worked and what hasn’t, and present this developing tool to a larger group.

CD

Carolyn Dixon Sat 21 Jun 2014 11:24PM

On the subject of Blocking, I agree that it is important to work to really understand the reasoning of the person who is Blocking and hopefully this will be easier to do with the help of the conflict resolution people who have been asked to come.

J

Justin Mon 23 Jun 2014 1:39AM

I disagree.

If you read the proposal it defines what the block is in this situation.

Folks either want to support the effort or not. There is not an option of stopping others from stepping up to do the work. #nicetry

T

Tricia Mon 7 Jul 2014 12:22PM

@NatGat2014: The most important thing is to remember the most important thing.

We Are The 99%!

Don't take the "bait" of inflammatory or distracting statements by others; keep coming back to the main point; we can deal with those other issues later - if ever. Obviously, be open to discovering that there is something even more important to talk about than what we first thought. But let's always be clear what our priorities are, even if they change.

SG

Sally G Mon 7 Jul 2014 8:16PM

Mostly agreed, Tricia, but in most Occupy groups if one took a poll he/she would find that we are but a segment of the 99%—large parts of the 99 are uninvolved, distrustful of Occupy, etc. I think we should be open to hearing from those folks how we can be more inclusive—but I completely agree about the need for real focus on our priorities and letting distractions go by.

O

oswgwhe Mon 7 Jul 2014 8:41PM

Obviously the whole gathering is the priority and the dates are July 31 to Aug 3. However does that have to mean that July 30 isn't a priority?

SG

Sally G Mon 7 Jul 2014 9:49PM

No, once we have the go-ahead from Delphine, we will promote the heck out of it !

O

oswgwhe Mon 7 Jul 2014 10:05PM

I'm not saying that you have resisted promoting it.

But do I take from your above comment that what I have been saying about the training, isn't sufficient to get action? The on the ground and camping arrangements have been made by me. You know the name of the trainers, which Delphine supplied. Tricia asked me to provide food for and I said yes.

Is there a credibility gap?

SG

Sally G Tue 8 Jul 2014 3:13AM

We are taking instructions from Delphine, who we thought was bottom-lining. We are including the fact of the training almost everywhere—hmm, will check the flyer I made; cannot remember—and only recently got the name of the organization doing the training. Please talk to Delphine and e-mail what to say in a newswire post or press release to [email protected] and we will take it from there. If someone can add a few sample Tweets to our titanpad for samples (which is http://natgat2014.titanpad.com/40) or send them to the same e-mail address, that would help, too.

J

Jackie Tue 8 Jul 2014 2:30PM

Sea, I had no idea that on the ground and camping arrangements have been made. Delphine didn't know there was a venue and asked we look at the Capitol for Thurs. as well.

One way to promote things is to start getting concrete info out. have you seen the In Sac map? It has each of our locations (needing update for Sat and Sun. If you would like to add those Wed. locations, send me an e.

O

oswgwhe Wed 9 Jul 2014 1:27AM

Jackie, yes, I'll give you the locations. Where are the maps so I can look at them?

J

Jackie Wed 9 Jul 2014 3:05AM

look on front page of hub and of website.

http://interoccupy.net/natgat2014/

http://natgat2014.net/

after the schedule discussions/decision, I'll be able to do more updates.

we can put all sorts of stuff on the In Sac map - like favorite coffee shops or spots for internet, food,etc. alternative meeting spots.

Would love to have a section on the FAQ for Occupy friendly zones, businesses, etc. Support movement/activist friendly establishments.

Satellite/Solidarity spaces. Occupy, movement friendly zones.
https://natgat2014.titanpad.com/22

other Sac questions there if Sacramentoans want to take a stab.