The many voices on stage are good. The amount of people who are angry (and frightened and wanting to stop the coup) is massive. The movement, I think, is going to be like a murmuration, constantly on the move, adjusting, but always there.
The many voices on stage are good. The amount of people who are angry (and frightened and wanting to stop the coup) is massive. The movement, I think, is going to be like a murmuration, constantly on the move, adjusting, but always there.
I like the murmuration analogy and it is starting slowly and steadily. My concern is it’s to slow considering the pace of change/damage he is doing.
Yes, the fault in the murmuration analogy is the one predator it responds to vs the massive destruction happening. That said, the murmuration is agile and responsive and massive...and succeeds at protecting the collective. I like the idea of a collective dance, aware and attending and resisting.