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Carrie Lou Hamilton's avatar

This is an interesting and educational post and timely for me as I'm planning a post on the pitfalls of political slogans myself for next month, to coincide with International Women's Day. I appreciate your points about the value of slogans, the work they do. It's made me think in particular about action slogans like "Ceasefire Now" in contrast to statement slogans. That's super helpful. Thanks!

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hershberger.1@gmail.com's avatar

Thanks, Juliana. This really set me thinking because I hadn't pondered the way that slogans can reflect so deeply our core ideas and goals, even though that is something that I have often "felt." No single slogan is enough for a movement, but, IMO, sometimes one slogan is needed to begin to organize diverse groups into a united demand for something vital to that movement. I was listening to a podcast with Rashid Khalidi yesterday when he segued into talking about the contested slogan, "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free." Khalidi pointed out that the emphasis in that slogan is on the word "free" because today, all Palestinians, no matter where they live in Israel/Palestine, are not free. This slogan declares that, whatever future political and national arrangements are formed in that region, Palestinians should and will be free in those arrangements. The slogan, Khalidi said, is not saying that non-Palestinians and Jews won't be free. It's declaring that, in any future arrangement, Palestinians should, and will be, free. As you said, slogans are criticized, often in bad faith, for over-simplifying. Khalidi's point about this slogan really clarified it for me. No wonder slogans like this arouse so much vitriol. They threaten current, unjust arrangements.

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