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this post was submitted on 06 Nov 2024
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askchapo
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Hi comrade! You asked a very good question. If you aren't already involved in some kibd of organizing it can be difficult to know where to start or what it looks like. Or how to join a good org vs. a bad one and everything in between.
For theory, people will usually make recommendations relevant to their tendency. I recommend working towards understanding Marxism, which rewuires carefully reading multiple books several times, eventualky leading to reading Marx's Capital. The Communist Manifesto can be a good place to start with Marx but it will mean something different when you return to it having read a larger canon, so keep that in mind on your first read. It is typical to "get" 50% of it, think you get another 30% even though you don't, and knowingly not understand 20% (these are hand-wavy numbers). I also recommend readinh Blackshirts and Reds. Let me know if there is a particular topic that most interests you and I can try to come up with reading recommendations.
For organizing, the real goal is to get involved in improving or growing an organization and developing its aporoach to taking action. I am saying this in a vague way because there are many perfectly good ways to organize, it doesn't need to be all Lenins and field organizers. But this fact also has the downside of not being soecific enough for many people to know where to start, so they just don't. And as you mention, some aspects of the most common forms of organizing may not mesh with where a person is socially or will require an onramp.
I think a good way to get started is to identify a local action that ticks the right boxes for the cause and positions on it and to ask if anyone there is an organizer and if they know how to get involved. This may be socially awkward or stressful for you but it is the best way to take a first step locally. The work needed for organizing is often not very theory-heavy and comes down to things like making schedules and surveys, taking notes, writing an agenda, making sign in sheets, picking up bulk coffee orders, etc.
If that also sounds like too much, you can also help by doing just one of those things and only occasionally. Good groups will appreciate any offers to help that you follow through on, even if it is just one thing per month.
To find local events, you'll want to use social media or leverage well-known events to get plugged in. For example, May Day happens every year and if you search Twitter and Instagram you will certainly be able to find announcements of marches. You can probably find actions before then by looking for anti-imperialist events in your area, such aa pro-Palestinian protests.