The following was written by Charles Blum, founder of the IAS Group Ltd. and a Director of the Coalition for a Prosperous America.
ACTIVISIONARIES
My recent post on Slacktivism struck a responsive chord with some readers. In fact, one called with feigned defensiveness to ask whether he should take the criticism personally. I assured my friend that I had others many others in mind, not him.
Ever since, Ive been pondering what the opposite of a slacktivist
might best be called. After all, Eastern philosophies teach that
everything has, and is partly defined by, its opposite. I was
momentarily triumphant when I thought I had coined the term
activisionary. An activisionary, I reasoned, was one who had a clear
vision of the future and was acting now to realize it.
Unfortunately for my writers ego, a brief Web search resulted in a hit
on just that made-up term. Its not someone who works for Activision,
Inc., the video game producer. The company recently merged with
Vivendi, a French company, so its workers and game addicts might
properly be called vivendistes.
No, the word apparently originated with a Filipino group that with the
help of Nokia seems to be advocating text messaging as a form of, or at
least a means to, joint action. According to the supeme.ph Web site,
activisionaries are a new breed of activists who have discovered
that change can come from anywhere and everywhere.
That makes change sound awfully easy. As an American alternative, Id
suggest that activisionaries are those who know the direction they want
society to take, believe in Barack Obamas campaign rhetoric that
change happens from the bottom up, and are dedicated to working with
any and all like-minded allies to effect that change.
So, activisionaries of America, unite!
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