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This skill is for communities doing explicitly political work — leftist, progressive, abolitionist, anarchist, socialist, anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist, or organizing communities of any stripe. Communities that are consciously oriented toward movement work, that understand themselves as part of something larger than community care alone.
This skill is not for "values-aligned" communities that are vaguely progressive. It's for communities where members organize, where some people have been arrested, where there are real debates about strategy, where the political landscape is something everyone is thinking about constantly. Where the question "what are we doing here" has an explicit political answer.
The dynamics this skill addresses are real and specific. State repression is real. Sectarianism is real. The weight of bearing witness to ongoing violence and injustice is real. These are not generic community tensions with a political flavor. They are their own phenomena, requiring their own analysis.
This is the deepest ongoing tension in explicitly political communities, and it doesn't resolve. You have to hold it.
Community as sanctuary means: this is a place where people can be human beings, not just organizers. Where you can be tired. Where you can disagree about strategy without it being treated as a moral failure. Where people are cared for across the full range of human need — grief, illness, joy, connection, rest — not instrumentalized toward political goals.
Community as political project means: this community exists because of a shared political commitment. The relationships are partly constituted by that commitment. People are here, at least in part, because they share an analysis of the world and want to do something about it. The community is a site of organizing, solidarity, and political formation.
These are not the same thing, and when they pull in different directions, communities fracture.
The tension becomes acute in recognizable moments:
A member burns out and needs to step back. The sanctuary function says: support them, hold them without expectation, let them rest. The political project function says: we have work to do and we're short-staffed and people are in danger and how can you rest right now? Both are real, and if the community resolves it entirely in one direction, someone loses.
A member's politics shift. If the community understands itself primarily as sanctuary, the shifted member is still a full member. If the community understands itself primarily as a political project, a significant political shift may change the relationship. Both framings are coherent. The problem is when communities are unclear about which frame is operating.
A campaign or action requires sacrifice that strains personal life. A member is facing an eviction campaign and needs help every weekend for six weeks. The sanctuary function pulls toward: of course, we show up, we hold each other. The political project function pulls toward: this is what we're here for. But people have children, jobs, health problems, other communities. The community's response to this moment reveals which function it's actually prioritizing.
Someone who was very politically active becomes very unhappy or is struggling. The sanctuary function says they need care, full stop. The political project function may generate subtle or not-subtle messages: they need to stay engaged, political commitment is the path through. This pressure — real or internalized — can be crushing.
The communities that survive this tension don't resolve it. They name it and keep naming it.
Concrete practices:
Make the tension explicit in community culture. "We are both a community of care and a political project. These sometimes pull in different directions. When they do, we'll say so and work it out."
Protect the sanctuary function actively. It will get eroded. Political urgency always feels more legitimate than rest or grief or personal need. Someone in the community has to be the structural guardian of the sanctuary function — not by demanding everyone be okay, but by insisting that human need is always on the agenda.
Let people be members of the community even when they're not active in the work. Not everyone can organize at the same intensity all the time. If membership in the community is contingent on political output, you will lose people to burnout and resentment.
Name it when the project is eating the sanctuary. If your community is becoming a deployment mechanism rather than a place where people belong to each other, someone needs to say it. This is not a betrayal of political commitment; it's a structural observation that will ultimately harm the work.
Name it when the sanctuary is losing connection to the project. Communities can also drift toward being primarily a social group that used to organize. If that's what people want, that's fine. But if it happens by drift rather than choice, people who still feel the political urgency will become quietly resentful.
The goal is a community where people can be full human beings and do serious political work. That requires conscious tending of both dimensions, not resolving the tension by abandoning one.
Left and progressive communities routinely contain people with genuinely different analyses of strategy, structure, and theory. Anarchists and Leninists. Electoral and non-electoral. Reformist and revolutionary. Accelerationists and people who think that's irresponsible. People with very different analyses of what's happening in the world and what to do about it.
This is not a problem to solve. Ideological diversity is present because people have genuinely different analyses based on their experiences, reading, and political formation. The problem is when communities can't hold that diversity without fracturing, or when they enforce political conformity so tightly that they exclude people with real political commitment but different analysis.
Political disagreements in activist communities carry more weight than most community conflicts for several reasons:
They're often about life and death stakes. If you think the police are a reformable institution and I think abolition is the only viable path, that's not an abstract difference. It shapes what we do in response to people being killed. We're not just disagreeing about meeting process.
Political identity is deep. For many people, their political analysis is core to who they are — how they make sense of the world, who they trust, what their losses and commitments have been. Being told your politics are wrong can feel like being told you're a bad person.
There's a culture of political judgment on the left. Sectarianism is not new. There are long histories of organizations splitting over line questions, of people being denounced as class traitors or revisionists or adventurists or liberals. That culture is the water activists swim in. It shapes how political disagreements happen inside community even when people are trying to do better.
External political events change everything. A shift in the political situation — a victory, a defeat, a new crisis, a change in movement conditions — can suddenly make theoretical disagreements feel urgent and real. Community conflict often surfaces not from abstract argument but from concrete decisions about what to do in a changing situation.
These are genuine disagreements, not personality conflicts dressed up as politics:
Organizational structure. Anarchist and horizontalist traditions emphasize decentralization, consensus, anti-hierarchy, and direct democracy. Leninist and vanguardist traditions emphasize democratic centralism, clear organizational discipline, and the importance of a party or organizational structure capable of acting coherently. These are real strategic and ethical disagreements about how power works and how change happens. They will affect how people want to run the community and what organizational forms feel legitimate.
Electoral politics. Some people believe that electoral engagement is an important tool — that participating in elections, supporting candidates, or even running candidates is part of a broader strategy. Others believe that electoral politics is a trap, that the Democratic Party in particular functions to absorb and neutralize left energy, that the real work is outside electoral politics. These aren't just preferences; they're analyses that come with real political history and theory.
Reformist vs. revolutionary strategy. Do you win by incremental improvements that build material conditions and popular support, or by working toward fundamental transformation that reforms can't achieve? This is a genuine strategic question with long intellectual and political histories. It affects what campaigns you support, what demands you make, what victory looks like.
Accelerationism. Some people argue that making things worse in the short term might accelerate contradictions and hasten transformation. Others think this is a politics that abandons the people most harmed and reflects abstraction from material suffering. This is a live debate in some communities and a genuinely difficult one.
Tactics. Property destruction, confrontational protest, civil disobedience, direct action vs. permitted marches, community organizing vs. mass mobilization. These are disagreements with real stakes, real analysis on all sides, and real consequences for members depending on their legal situations, identities, and lives.
First, distinguish community from organization. A community of care is not the same as a political organization. You don't have to agree on strategy to live together, support each other, organize emergency care, or hold each other through crises. Many political communities try to do too many things at once — provide community, function as an organizational entity, and be a site of political formation — without distinguishing between these functions. When they collapse, it's often because organizational line-discipline norms get applied to community membership.
Second, name the difference between political argument and community conflict. These can happen at the same time, but they're different things. If you're arguing about electoral strategy and getting heated, that's political argument. If someone is using the political argument to exclude, shame, or exercise power over another member, that's a community conflict that happens to have a political surface.
Third, don't require political conformity for community membership. A community where members hold a range of left/progressive politics is not a community in chaos. Political diversity within a broad left commitment can be a feature — it exposes people to different analyses, prevents groupthink, and makes the community more resilient across changing political conditions. What you need is not conformity but shared commitment to having the arguments honestly, without trying to destroy each other.
Fourth, create containers for the political arguments. Political discussions without container eat everything. Have spaces — study groups, political education sessions, specific forums — where people can actually engage the strategic and theoretical disagreements. This doesn't mean all political argument has to go in the box. It means that the community should have some intentional structure for engaging the real intellectual and political work, rather than having it surface as ambient tension.
Fifth, watch for power being exercised through politics. People sometimes use political critique as a mechanism for exercising social power. "You're a liberal" can be a genuine analytical observation or it can be a way of dismissing someone, winning an argument, or enforcing in-group status. The same is true for "adventurist," "revisionist," "not sufficiently anti-capitalist," etc. These may be legitimate political observations. They may also be interpersonal power moves dressed in political language. This is hard to see, and even harder to name, but communities have to be able to do it.
Sixth, expect that this will be imperfect. You will have political arguments that get too hot. You will sometimes let political disagreement substitute for interpersonal honesty. You will have moments where someone's political shift feels like a betrayal. Naming that this is happening, and then having the harder conversation underneath the politics, is the work.
Political trauma is distinct from other trauma. Communities need to be specific about this, not subsume it under general trauma frameworks. The source is political action, and the state is often the perpetrator.
COINTELPRO was the FBI's Counter Intelligence Program, operating from 1956 to 1971. It systematically infiltrated, surveilled, disrupted, and destroyed left political organizations in the United States — the Communist Party, the Socialist Workers Party, the civil rights movement, the Black Panther Party, the American Indian Movement, the women's liberation movement, Puerto Rican independence movements, and others. COINTELPRO tactics included: planting informants in organizations, forging documents to create internal suspicion and conflict, sending anonymous letters to create distrust between leaders, facilitating violence between organizations, directly working with local police to arrest or kill activists.
Fred Hampton was killed by Chicago police and the FBI in 1969. The FBI provided the floor plan of his apartment to police, who shot him in his sleep. This is not ancient history. It is the directly experienced history of many communities that are still organizing.
The Church Committee investigations revealed COINTELPRO in 1975. FBI surveillance of domestic political groups has continued in various forms. Post-9/11 counterterrorism authorities have been used against environmental activists, anti-war organizers, Muslim communities, Black Lives Matter organizers, and others. The tactics are different; the dynamic is continuous.
This is the history that politically conscious left communities are living in. It is not paranoia. It is historical awareness. Communities that don't have this awareness will be less able to protect themselves and their members.
Arrest and prosecution. Being arrested at a protest, charged with a felony, facing years of legal process — this is traumatic and isolating. The member navigating prosecution needs support that recognizes the political dimension: they were targeted for political activity, the state is the party causing harm, and their legal situation may constrain what they can say and do in community for months or years.
Grand jury subpoenas. Activists can be subpoenaed to testify before grand juries about themselves and others in their movements. Grand jury refusal, while protected, can result in imprisonment for contempt. The trauma here is not just legal pressure but the pressure to become an instrument against your own community.
Surveillance. Discovering you've been surveilled — that your phone has been monitored, your home watched, your organizing meetings attended by an undercover agent — is a specific kind of violation. It retroactively poisons everything. Every conversation you had becomes suspect. Your sense of what was private is destroyed.
Infiltration. Discovering that someone who was a trusted member of your community was an informant is devastating. It is a direct attack on the thing that made community possible: trust. The grief is unlike the grief of finding out a community member did harm on their own. The harm here was coordinated, strategic, and aimed at destroying the community from within.
Right-wing harassment and doxxing. Organized right-wing groups systematically dox activists — publishing home addresses, workplaces, photographs — and coordinate harassment campaigns. Being doxxed can mean losing your job, receiving death threats, having strangers show up at your home. This is terrorism designed to force people out of political activity.
Witnessing repression against others. Watching someone you organize with get beaten, arrested, surveilled, or targeted. Being the support person for someone being prosecuted. Carrying the weight of what happened to others in the movement.
Validation of the political reality. Political trauma is not something that can be helped by telling someone their fear is disproportionate. If someone is being surveilled, they're being surveilled. If their organizing partner was killed by the state, that happened. Care that centers "you're safe now" may not be accurate and will feel invalidating. The care has to start from: what happened to you was real, it was politically targeted, and the political context matters for how you move forward.
Collective holding, not just individual support. Political trauma is often collective — it happened to the community or to people the community cares about. Individual therapy is often insufficient. The community needs to be able to grieve and process together. Ceremonies of witness and acknowledgment, spaces where people can speak about what happened without sanitizing it, matter enormously.
Honesty about ongoing threat. Trauma frameworks often orient toward "returning to safety." For politically active communities, this may not be available. If you're continuing to organize, you may continue to be a target. The care framework has to be able to hold: what happened was traumatic, the threat is not necessarily past, and people can continue to live and organize with appropriate awareness rather than either denial or paralysis.
No pressure to get back to political work. Political activists are often pushed to get back up quickly — the urgency of the work, the politics of not letting repression win, the culture of toughness in organizing spaces. This pressure can retraumatize. The community needs to be able to hold someone who needs real time without making that need political.
Protecting the ability to trust. After infiltration or betrayal, trust becomes very difficult. The community needs to be able to rebuild trust intentionally, which requires both real security measures and also not letting paranoia take over. The dynamic is: legitimate caution can become paranoia, which itself destroys the community. The work is finding the calibration.
Coordinate with trauma-informed-care for specific support. Political trauma requires all the trauma-informed principles — safety, trustworthiness, peer support, collaboration, empowerment — but applied with awareness of the specific political dimension.
Security culture refers to the practices and norms that protect activists and their organizing from state surveillance, infiltration, and disruption. It's a real and necessary thing. It is also possible for security culture to become a vector for paranoia, exclusion, and the destruction of the community it's meant to protect.
Security culture is not a specific set of rules. It's a set of principles and practices that vary with context:
Compartmentalization. Not everyone needs to know everything. Information about who's doing what specific action, who's considering specific risk, doesn't need to be distributed more widely than necessary. This is basic protection.
Careful communication. Being thoughtful about what you say over communications that can be monitored (phones, many digital platforms). Using encrypted communication for sensitive organizing. Not broadcasting plans publicly.
Need-to-know norms. Asking yourself before sharing information: does this person need to know this for the work? Not out of suspicion, but out of habit.
Vetting and trust-building. Being thoughtful about who is included in higher-risk activities. Trust is built over time through sustained relationship and demonstrated commitment, not assumed immediately.
Legal awareness. Understanding your rights. Knowing not to talk to police without a lawyer. Understanding what kinds of activities carry what kinds of legal risk.
Digital hygiene. Password security, device security, being thoughtful about what lives on what platforms.
This is the hard part: security culture operates on a logic of protection from external threat, but it functions through differential trust inside the community. And that differential trust, if poorly calibrated, reproduces exclusion, creates in-groups and out-groups, and can become a mechanism for exercising social power that has nothing to do with actual security.
The tension looks like this:
Specific dynamics to watch for:
Gatekeeping through security. "Security concerns" can be used to exclude people from community decisions or activities based on social dynamics that have nothing to do with security. If some people are consistently treated as security risks and those people are disproportionately people of color, women, disabled people, or newcomers, that's not security culture — it's discrimination with a security justification.
Security culture and community openness are in genuine tension. A community of care should be genuinely accessible to people in need, including people who are new and unknown. This creates real security vulnerability. There is no clean answer here. The community has to consciously navigate the tension, not pretend it doesn't exist.
Suspicion can be contagious. Once one person is under informal suspicion, it spreads. This is how COINTELPRO worked — not always by planting informants, but by cultivating suspicion that destroyed communities from within. The history means that suspicion itself, when uncontained, becomes a weapon against the community.
Paranoia is not security culture. It's a pathological state in which threat perception has become uncalibrated to actual threat.
Signs that security culture has become paranoia:
New people are systematically excluded or treated with hostility. Security culture requires appropriate caution with new people; it doesn't require treating everyone new as a probable infiltrator.
Accusations circulate without grounded evidence. "So-and-so might be a cop" travels as rumor, destroying trust in someone who has done nothing to justify suspicion.
Everyone is suspect. The logic has expanded from "be careful about sensitive information" to "I don't trust anyone."
Paranoia is used to short-circuit community accountability. Someone calls for accountability for a community leader and the response is: "That person is probably a cop/agent/provocateur." This is a classic COINTELPRO tactic — and it can also be reproduced internally without state instigation.
Security demands become a vector for controlling others. "Security culture" being invoked to silence criticism, to prevent people from speaking about their experiences, or to keep community members from forming relationships outside the community.
Real security culture requires:
Explicit norms that are written and discussed. Not informal and unaccountable. If the community has security norms, they should be legible and collectively held, not just the unilateral judgment of whoever decides someone isn't trusted.
Contextual calibration. Different activities require different security levels. A public community meeting about local housing has different security requirements than a direct action planning meeting. Applying maximum security culture to everything both fails to actually protect sensitive activities and creates a culture of suspicion everywhere.
Training that's accessible. Security culture should be taught, not just assumed as knowledge. New people can't operate within security culture norms they don't know exist.
Security and accountability are not mutually exclusive. A community cannot invoke security culture to protect leaders from accountability. If someone in leadership is causing harm, the security of the community requires accountability, not protection.
This is the hardest case: the community has investigated, the evidence is inconclusive, and a decision still has to be made. This situation is not rare. State intelligence operations are designed to leave exactly this ambiguity — to create enough suspicion to be destabilizing without enough evidence for a clear decision.
The first thing to name: inconclusive is not the same as innocent or guilty. It means the community doesn't have enough information to reach a confident conclusion. The decision process has to proceed under genuine uncertainty, not under a false certainty in either direction.
The asymmetry of risk: Acting on false suspicion destroys a comrade and may destroy the community. Failing to act on real infiltration also destroys the community, potentially more thoroughly. Neither error is costless. The community has to be honest that it is choosing between two risks under uncertainty, not choosing between a safe option and a risky one.
Graduated response rather than binary decision: When evidence is inconclusive, a binary choice — full inclusion vs. full exclusion — is usually the wrong frame. Consider what partial measures protect the community without destroying the person:
Naming partial measures publicly and honestly is important. Hidden exclusion based on unspoken suspicion is often more corrosive than honest acknowledgment of unresolved concern.
The obligation to the accused: Even under genuine uncertainty, the person under suspicion deserves to know what the concern is, to have a chance to respond, and to understand what would rebuild trust. Informal exclusion without explanation — the social death of being gradually disinvited from things without anyone saying why — is a harm the community should be able to name and refuse, even when genuine security concerns are present.
Document the process: Communities often have no institutional memory of how a security concern was investigated and resolved (or left unresolved). This means the next generation of members faces the same situation with no understanding of the community's previous reasoning. Document what was investigated, what was found, and what decision was made — in a way that is secure and accessible to future stewards.
Accepting that the community may not know: Some situations remain genuinely unresolved. A community can decide to proceed with appropriate caution while acknowledging that certainty is unavailable. This is more honest, and usually more sustainable, than pretending to a resolution that wasn't actually reached.
In anarchist and horizontalist communities, the question of who holds security culture is contested by design. There is no formal leadership to make security judgments; there is no designated person whose assessment of trust is authoritative.
This creates genuine governance challenges: When a security concern arises, who investigates? Who decides? Who enforces the community's response? In formal organizations, these roles are assigned. In horizontal communities, they often fall informally to whoever has the most interpersonal influence — which is not the same as whoever is most security-conscious or most trustworthy.
What helps in horizontal contexts:
Left political communities exist within a broader movement culture that has its own dynamics — organizations, tendencies, publications, debates, splits, accusations, and histories. When those dynamics enter the community, they can be very destructive.
Sectarianism is not simply having strong political commitments or defending your analysis. It is the organizational and psychological dynamic in which the defense of a specific political tendency becomes primary — more important than the actual political work, more important than relationships, and more important than honest engagement with evidence.
Classic features:
The correct line exists and deviants must be named. There is a right analysis, and people who don't hold it are liberals, revisionists, adventurists, social democrats, ultraleftists — the vocabulary is large and specific to tendency. Naming deviation becomes more important than engaging with the analysis.
History is rehearsed as proof. Sectarian argument is often heavily historical — the failings of the Communist Party in 1935, the betrayals of social democracy in Weimar Germany, the errors of the New Left. These histories are real and worth knowing. They become sectarian when they're deployed primarily to dismiss current analysis rather than inform it.
Organizational loyalty over honest assessment. Defense of the organization or tendency becomes primary. Acknowledging that the organization made errors is experienced as betrayal.
Splits are purifying. The dynamic produces continual fragmentation — the organization splits because the correct line must be defended, and people who hold the incorrect line must be excluded.
Sectarian dynamics from the broader movement enter communities in recognizable ways:
A member is or becomes affiliated with a specific party or tendency and begins advocating the line. This may be genuine political education or it may be recruitment. The community needs to be able to hold the difference.
A split in a broader organization affects people in the community. Two members are on opposite sides of a split happening in an organization they're both part of. The split logic — you're with us or against us — starts to shape their relationship in community.
Accusations imported from movement culture. Someone is labeled a cop, an agent, or a provocateur by someone affiliated with a particular tendency. These accusations travel. The community gets them secondhand and may not have the context to evaluate them.
Recruitment into organizations that demand primary loyalty. Some political organizations expect members to prioritize organizational discipline over other relationships. When a community member joins such an organization, their relationship to the community changes in ways that may not be named.
The goal is not to make the community a politics-free zone. The goal is to prevent organizational discipline and sectarian logic from replacing community relationships and honest political engagement.
Name sectarian dynamics when they appear. "This is starting to feel like we're being recruited to a position rather than working through a political question together" is a legitimate thing to say. So is "I notice we're spending more time labeling each other's politics than engaging the actual argument."
Don't import organizational discipline into community process. If a member is part of an organization that tells them how to vote in community decisions, that's a problem. Not because political organizations are bad, but because the community can't function if some members' participation is dictated from outside.
Maintain the distinction between political argument and personal attack. Political disagreement is welcome. Using political labeling to dismiss, exclude, or attack community members is not. "Your analysis has problems and here's why" is political argument. "You're a liberal and therefore your perspective doesn't count" is not.
Be specifically careful about accusations from outside the community. If someone in the broader movement claims that a community member is an informant, cop, or agent, that claim deserves to be taken seriously and investigated — and also not to be treated as settled truth because it came from an outside political authority. COINTELPRO used exactly these accusations to destroy organizations from within. The history cuts both ways: take the threat of infiltration seriously and take the use of infiltration accusations as a weapon seriously.
Hold space for people who have left organizations. People leave political organizations for many reasons — disagreement with direction, organizational abuse, burnout, political shift. A community should be able to hold people who have left without requiring them to perform loyalty to a tendency or explain themselves to people who stayed.
Activist burnout is distinct from general burnout. Communities that treat them the same will miss what's specific and will fail the people in it.
Political urgency as internalized demand. The stakes of political work are, genuinely, very high. People are dying from conditions that organizing is trying to change. Resting feels like abandonment. This internalized urgency doesn't let up the way ordinary work stress does. There is always more to do, and what doesn't get done has consequences that feel, and sometimes are, life and death.
Moral injury at scale. Activists regularly witness, document, and respond to large-scale harm — police violence, housing displacement, deportation, environmental destruction, ongoing wars. The sheer scale of what they're holding, even just in awareness, creates a specific kind of injury that isn't depression exactly but resembles it. The psychological burden of being consistently informed about serious harm and oriented toward addressing it is substantial.
Grief about the world. This is different from grief about a personal loss. It's the grief of watching what's being destroyed — relationships, communities, ecosystems, lives — and working to stop it without always being able to. It's the grief of the gap between the world as it is and the world being worked for.
Political community as total environment. For many activists, their political community is also their social community, their family of choice, their neighborhood, their professional network. Burnout from political work is burnout from the total environment. You can't leave work; work is where all your relationships are.
The feeling that rest is betrayal. This is cultural and it's devastating. In many organizing cultures, rest is suspect. Taking care of yourself when people are suffering is framed as selfishness. Stepping back is framed as abandonment. The person burning out has often deeply internalized this logic, so they experience their own need for rest as a kind of moral failure.
Losses specific to organizing. Campaigns that failed. Organizations that collapsed. Relationships destroyed by political conflict. People who were comrades who became enemies. The specific losses of political work accumulate in ways that don't get named as grief.
Self-care frameworks — taking baths, going for walks, setting better boundaries with your phone — are entirely inadequate to activist burnout. Not because they're wrong but because they address the symptom (exhaustion) rather than the structure.
Name the culture. Activist burnout is partly cultural. If the community's culture treats rest as weakness and constant availability as virtue, individual members cannot self-care their way out of a structural problem. The community has to look at its own culture and name what it's doing.
Make rest legitimate politically. This is not a personal argument; it's a political one. Sustainable organizing requires sustainable people. Communities that burn through people reproduce a model of political work that is structurally exploitative, regardless of its values. This argument sometimes reaches people who won't be reached by permission to rest for personal reasons.
Actively redistribute the weight. Burnout is rarely evenly distributed. In most organizing communities, a small number of people are carrying the majority of work and emotional weight. Redistribution requires structural change — actually mapping who is doing what, naming the inequity, and changing it. Individual conversations about boundaries don't fix structural inequity.
Hold the grief. Community needs to be able to hold the political grief specifically — not fix it, not reframe it as inspiration, but actually hold the weight of what members are bearing witness to. Political grief that isn't allowed to be grief becomes depression, cynicism, or burning out in silence.
Protect members who step back. A member who needs to step back from organizing needs the community to remain a community for them — not to follow them around with guilt, not to replace them in the community's affection because they're less useful, but actually to remain present to them as people. This is hard when the community is thinly staffed and urgently working. It is nonetheless what community means.
Connect activist burnout to what's actually happened. Burnout is often the accumulated result of specific losses and harms — the campaign that was crushed, the arrest that was traumatic, the relationship that was destroyed in an organizational split. Treating burnout as a depletion of energy misses that it's often a grief response. Holding it as grief, with all the care that grief requires, is different.
Coordinate with caregiver-support for community stewards who are themselves experiencing burnout and still holding others.
Political change in an individual member is one of the more difficult dynamics in explicitly political communities, and it's often handled badly — either by denial, by forced renegotiation of community membership that the person doesn't want to have, or by quiet exclusion that doesn't get named.
People's politics change for many reasons, none of which are moral failures:
Experience. Something happened that changed how they see the world. This might be personal, political, or both.
Intellectual development. They read, thought, talked, and their analysis evolved. This is what political education is supposed to produce.
Trauma and demoralization. Sometimes people shift toward less radical politics not because they're convinced but because they're exhausted and hurt and this is the shape demoralization takes. This is different from intellectual change.
Life circumstances. A new job, a child, a health problem, a relationship, a financial crisis. The political intensity that was possible at 25 may not be possible at 35 with three kids and a sick parent.
Disillusionment with specific organizations or tactics. Someone can stop believing in a specific approach without having abandoned their broader commitments.
Don't require political confession. A member who has changed doesn't owe the community an explanation or a defense of their new positions. The community can be curious — genuine curiosity, not interrogation — but demanding that someone justify their political evolution to retain community membership is coercive.
Let people name what they're going through. Some people want to talk about their political shift. Some want to be in community without the politics being the subject. Some aren't sure. Ask rather than assume.
When the shift touches live political questions, be honest about what changes. If a member shifts on something that's an active organizing question — they no longer believe in non-cooperation with law enforcement, or they've become supportive of something the community is actively opposing — that's real. It affects what can be done together and what can be said in their presence. The community can name this honestly without making it a verdict on the person.
Distinguish shift from betrayal. Betrayal requires an act. Someone informing on the community, actively working against what the community is doing, using relationships built in political community to cause harm — that's betrayal. Changing your mind is not betrayal, even when it's painful.
Political communities often don't name political loss as loss. When someone who was central to the political work steps back or shifts, the community loses something. That loss is real and can be named as such, without requiring the person who left to carry it.
The community can grieve: the loss of a political partner, the loss of the future they were building together, the loss of a certain relationship that was partly constituted by shared political commitment. This grief is legitimate and doesn't have to be expressed as anger at the person.
The relationship itself doesn't have to end. But it may change, and being honest about how is better than pretending it hasn't.
What might change:
What doesn't have to change:
Some relationships will survive significant political divergence because they're grounded in more than politics. Others were more fully constituted by the political work and will naturally thin. Honesty about which is which is better than performing closeness that isn't there.
Some political differences touch directly on member safety. These require specific care because they're not purely strategic arguments — they have material stakes for specific people in the community.
This is one of the most fraught areas in many left communities. Someone's home was burglarized. Someone was assaulted. Someone is experiencing stalking. The default in the broader society is: call the police. Many explicitly political communities have significant reasons not to.
The analysis that some members hold is: police are an instrument of racial capitalism, their involvement creates more harm than it resolves, and calling police into community conflict puts members at risk — especially members who are Black, undocumented, have outstanding warrants, or have prior interactions with the system that make police contact dangerous.
The analysis that other members hold is: the person who was harmed deserves the protection that is actually available, and imposing a political framework on someone in crisis is itself a form of harm.
Neither of these analyses is wrong. They are both true simultaneously.
The community cannot resolve this in advance by having the right policy. What it can do:
Center the harmed person's agency. The person who was harmed gets to decide what resources they want to access. The community's job is to support them, not to make their decisions for them.
Make non-police options genuinely available. If the community holds a position against police involvement, it has to actually provide alternatives — a network to respond to safety concerns, conflict resolution capacity, material support for people in crisis. A politics against police that doesn't provide alternatives is a politics that abandons vulnerable members.
Be honest when alternatives don't exist. In some situations, the alternatives to police are genuinely unavailable or inadequate. The community needs to be able to hold this honestly rather than demanding that harmed members hold a political position against their own safety.
Don't make the harmed person defend their choice. If a member decided to call the police after an assault, they don't owe the community a political defense of that decision. This is true even if the community has norms around non-cooperation with law enforcement.
Communities with undocumented members have specific obligations to those members' safety. Political activity — arrests at actions, being in spaces surveilled by law enforcement — creates specific risks for undocumented people that it does not create for citizens.
Explicit security culture around documentation status. Who knows that specific members are undocumented should be carefully held. This is not because it's shameful but because it's information that, in the wrong hands, can destroy someone's life.
Political decisions that affect risk exposure require consultation. If the community is considering participating in an action with a high arrest risk, or a campaign that will draw police attention, undocumented members need to be part of that decision in a way that doesn't require them to publicly disclose their status. The community cannot make risk decisions for its undocumented members; it can and should ensure those members have genuine voice in decisions that affect their safety.
Legal support as community infrastructure. The community should have, or have access to, legal support that knows how to work with undocumented people. The ACLU knows things that an immigration attorney knows that a criminal defense attorney knows. These aren't always the same person, and you should know who to call.
Don't expose members in post-action documentation. Photos, social media posts, video from actions — these are security vulnerabilities for members who cannot afford to be identified. The community needs norms around what gets posted and what doesn't.
This skill works in direct connection with several others:
trauma-informed-care — for political trauma specifically. The five trauma-informed principles apply to political trauma, and the application requires the specific knowledge in this skill about what makes political trauma distinct: state perpetrators, ongoing threat, the collective dimension, the political context that must not be erased by generic trauma framing.
caregiver-support — for activist burnout, and particularly for community stewards who are themselves burned out while still holding others. The specific exhaustion of political caregiving is addressed there.
organizational-stewardship — for governance under political stress. When political disagreement is straining community governance, when decisions are being contested on political grounds, when organizational structure is itself a political disagreement — organizational-stewardship has the governance tools. This skill has the political analysis that makes them applicable in explicitly political community.
safety-planning — when threats are real. Right-wing harassment, doxxing, state surveillance, or threats to specific members may require concrete safety planning that goes beyond anything this skill addresses. Safety-planning holds the operational side. This skill holds the political and community side of the same threat.
Name what kind of community you are. Explicitly political communities face specific dynamics. Naming that you are an explicitly political community, with the tensions that entails, is better than trying to manage those tensions silently.
Hold the community/project tension consciously. The pull between community as sanctuary and community as political project is real and ongoing. It doesn't resolve. Name it, tend it, protect both functions.
Political disagreement is not a threat to the community. Ideological diversity within a broadly left commitment is normal. The threat is when political argument substitutes for community relationship, when political labeling becomes a mechanism for exercising power over people, or when organizational discipline replaces community trust.
Political trauma is specific. It is not generic trauma with a political surface. The state as perpetrator, the collective dimension, the ongoing threat, the political context that must be held alongside the trauma response — these specifics matter. Generic trauma support is inadequate.
Security culture is a practice, not a personality. Real security culture requires explicit, legible norms; contextual calibration; and accountability. It cannot be the informal and unaccountable judgment of whoever decides someone isn't trusted. Paranoia is not security culture.
Sectarianism enters through the door of legitimate political argument. You have to be able to distinguish genuine political engagement from organizational line discipline, and both from the use of political language to exercise social power. This requires vigilance and willingness to name what you're seeing.
Activist burnout is political and structural. It cannot be addressed by individual self-care. It requires community culture change, redistribution of work, and the ability to hold political grief as grief. The community has an obligation that individual people cannot fulfill for themselves.
Political change in individuals deserves care, not judgment. People's politics change. Holding that with honesty about what changes in the relationship, without requiring confession or imposing a verdict, is the work.
Safety overrides politics. When political disagreement touches on member safety — who can call the police, who is exposed by political activity, who is undocumented — the harmed or at-risk member's agency and safety come first. Political frameworks cannot be imposed on people who are in danger.
You can name COINTELPRO. The history is real. The ongoing practices are real. Communities that know this history are better equipped to protect themselves and to hold their members through the specific weight of organizing under surveillance. Naming it is not paranoia; it is historical awareness.