long term?
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Replying to @matrixgoth
S9 is v vulnerable & depends on tenants having political power at the federal level which is impossible to do from 1 state; all s9 governance rights are carried over plus additional board representation; the ability to opt-out of *any* conversion incld RAD which doesn’t exist now
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Replying to @ceaweaver
got it. i have more trust specific questions that cld be off twit but mainly 1) who decided the impossibility of nationwide S9 organizing at federal level and why 2) who is deciding that this can’t be done and why 3) who is deciding organizing timelines & setting expectations
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Replying to @matrixgoth
1) no one decided - anyone can do it if you want. I believe it’s impossible bc there isn’t much S9 housing left outside of NYC so it’s hard to build the national coalition
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Replying to @ceaweaver @matrixgoth
2) to some degree , it’s been that s9 was irrevocably set up to fail and defunded 40 years ago and we have been hanging on since. Not purporting to speak for tenants here, just my analysis that s9 is not a particularly strong socialist horizon
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Replying to @ceaweaver
if “anyone can do it” yet we aren’t all doing it, then how is our organizing effective? what is our leverage if we are divided and fighting for different things? we know that public housing has been defunded and set up for fail—that’s not disputed
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Replying to @matrixgoth @ceaweaver
what is a strong socialist public housing vision then? i’m confused we look weak as hell if we’re conceding already
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Replying to @matrixgoth
I don’t think we have built mvmt consensus around that fully, but my opinion: 1) publicly and robustly funded 2) democratically managed by residents 3) available and accessed widely/universally
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4) is publicly owned
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