So here’s the next chapter in my tentative foray into
democratic participation. I have been
putting together an event with an organic farmer, Chris Krucker (Manorun Farm). We come from different spheres but we share the
opinion that Brian McHattie is an ethical and talented leader whom the city
would be wise to elect, but who likely needs a ramped up effort from his supporters
to do so. Together (with some encouragement
from Mixed Media owner Dave Kuruc) we have quickly hashed out the basics of a
bare bones event: Testify! Amplify!
Multiply! It happens in less than two
days-- this Wednesday October 22, 7pm, Melrose Church (on the corner of
Homewood and Locke). There will be a coffee and a microphone. And pure, unfettered belief.
Chris’ vision for this evening is, I think, more sophisticated
than mine. He wants to use this event to
encourage the notion of ‘connectors’ (with a nod here to Malcolm Gladwell’s
“The Tipping Point”); that there are at least ten people who straddle divergent
social spheres within this city who can push the urgency of this election onto another
ten people, who in turn can, push another ten and so forth. It’s the idea of stoking one’s own conviction
and then making it public, and in turn infectious. The good kind of infectious. I like it
because at its core is a fairly non-technological, non-gimmicky desire to
simply connect people, have them speak, and collectively build their magnetic
charge. A good thing to do, election or not.
My vision is more bombastic I think. It rests on a fantasy where a bunch of people
get together in a space, make testimonials which get video recorded by people’s
phones and then uploaded to social media, hopefully going viral in such a transformative
way that the city becomes happy forever.
The unrealistic kind of infectiousness.
The kind you see in uplifting Hollywood film montages where people get their
shit together in the three minutes it takes for a saccharine pop song to play
out.
Yes. I believe with my
whole heart that Brian McHattie should be our mayor. But I’d be a liar if I
didn’t also admit that I desperately want to be part of one of those feel good pop-song
montages of people getting their shit together. It’s because of the twelve-year old inside
me that will never mature, or adjust his expectations in a reasonable way. In other words, an urge for civic
participation that relies on delusion.
But who cares. It’s the effort
that matters. You can come on Wednesday
and knit yourself into a fabric of people who want better things from their city,
or come and fall headfirst into my happy and cliché-riddled fantasy.
Or do a little of both.
Go McHattie Go! Run hard
and free like a mighty stallion! See you Wednesday!!
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