That was in reference to McTraveller. Get out the vote, supporting candidates are about the most you can do in the macro sense. Unless you want to run for government yourself and be the change you want to see. That entails the average person completely devoting their life to politics since they lack the funds, connections, clout and experience to actually challenge incumbents.
I would say that organizing votes is probably the
minimum thing we should be doing. Actually holding our elected officials accountable is the next step - otherwise voting doesn't mean anything really.
What I meant by the culture thing is that most people are not even willing to vote, or if they do vote, they still "blame the system" by calling it things like "the most overbearing police state." Yes, there are overbearing systemic issues. Just talking about them isn't enough - talk and awareness helps, yes, but we do need to take action too.
Maybe we
should run for office ourselves. There is nothing wrong with starting locally. I mean look at New Hampshire - people did start collectively moving to that location with a common interest, sacrificing some of their own personal interests (e.g., preferred geographic location perhaps) to move to that state so they can start having a "Libertarian stronghold."
So that's the kind of action I mean - start organizing, etc. etc. I fully understand that we can't as individuals start fixing systemic issues or prosecuting war crimes. But we can't just delegate endlessly without accountability.
Also there is this unfortunate pesky thing - that because we delegate in aggregate (adj), unless we aggregate (v) intentionally, we'll end up with the type of representative-in-name-only government we have in the USA, because the interests of the people are too diffuse compared to the concentrated efforts of special interests.