Blackout Day Bustin’ Out All Over

Today, February 28, 2025, is Economic Blackout Day.

Youโ€™ve probably heard or seen something about this. At first an informal call for consumer pressure against rollbacks of DEIA (Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, Accessibility) programs in the US, from a grassroots movement called The Peopleโ€™s Union, Economic Blackout Day quickly went viral on social media. It is now growing more organized, with calls for more consumer actions throughout March and April, for starters.

It begins at 12:00AM and runs through 11:59PM. For this whole day, we are suspending all non-essential commerce. No shopping. No buying. Especially, no corporate brands or chains. If you must spend money, go to small, local shops, preferably in person, to avoid giving business to Google et al., and pay in cash, to avoid giving business to credit card companies and big banks.

You might think a single day of across-the-board economic shutdown wonโ€™t have any effect. But I happen to be a fan of consumer activism, so let me explain why I encourage you to get on board with Blackout Day.

First, this day is just the beginning. We might call it a โ€œshot across their bow,โ€ i.e. a warning to remind the people trying to dismantle our Constitution and way of life what leverage We the People of the United States really hold.

One inescapable fact of the USA is that it runs on money. For good or ill, the US is a mercantile nation. Money is the body and soul of our politics and our power structure.

And there is no money if there is no We the People. The US economy runs entirely on the labor and purchasing of millions of Americans. Thatโ€™s us doing the jobs and us buying the stuff. Anything that interferes with us showing up for work or us buying stuff from stores slows the economy immediately. If it keeps up a while, our โ€œenvy of the worldโ€ economy quickly starts to shrink.

And boy-howdy, do the billionaires start yelping when that happens.

Remember the 2008 crash, when the global economy very nearly collapsed and countless Americans lost their homes and were drowning in debt. Remember how the economic pundits and the billionaire CEOs were all over media complaining about the slow recovery after that crisis of their making. Remember how they blamed the American people for unpatriotically – yes, some of them actually invoked patriotism – saving our money instead of spending it like they wanted us to.

Remember the pandemic, when there were no jobs, no open shops, even the supply chains were shut down, but we individual worker-consumers were still getting scolded for not getting out there to lend it, spend it, send it rolling along. I will swear to my last breath that I heard multiple capitalists on US media literally declaring that keeping the economy going was more important than keeping ourselves alive, and we were betraying the nation by staying home just to stay healthy.

Were any of those pundits, capitalists, or CEOs on the brink of starvation from the faltering economy in those crises? No, they were not. So why did they care so much?

If I were an economist, it would be complicated to explain, but Iโ€™m not, so itโ€™s simple.

The heads of US industry, the leaders of our dominant businesses, our CEOs and Directors, our would-be American oligarchs are, at the end of the day, little more than glorified peddlers. Take a hard look at them, all those Big Corp brands. Theyโ€™re all basically hawking junk on street corners, just like a hundred-plus years ago when they were selling liver pills and miracle tonics off wagons and conning yokels into selling their land for wildcat oil drilling.

All these years, all these generations, these latter-day robber barons built their fortunes by conning – or extorting – the rest of us into giving them all our labor and all our money.

When we stop giving them those things, their house-of-cards empires start to shake. It never fails.

A dip in commerce means a dip in profit margins – a hiccough in line-go-up. It doesnโ€™t matter if itโ€™s just a one-day event. The blip will appear on the radar, and the voting shareholders wonโ€™t like it, since the only reason for any of these grifters to exist at all is to maximize profits for voting shareholders. Blips donโ€™t maximize.

So on February 28, we will do our best to put a blip on the radar.

If theyโ€™re smart, they will listen to our demands. They will back off their attempt to turn the US into a fascist client state to Vladimir Putin. They will restore order, funding, and staffing to the US federal government. They will obey the orders of the federal courts. They will pass a proper federal budget. They will restore our support for our traditional allies and trading partners in accordance with our treaties. They will quit fucking around with things they donโ€™t understand.

If theyโ€™re not smart, then there will be more blips. Bigger blips. More blackouts will follow, along with longer boycotts and labor actions. 

If they take away our rights from us, we will take away our money from them. If they take away our liberty, we will take away our work. If they take away our Constitution and our system of law and representation, we will take away the life blood of the economy and their industries.

And we shall see who wins the argument. Myself, Iโ€™m betting on We the People, because we have the numbers, and without us, they have nothing.

Now, as a movement, economic resistance is relatively slow and requires discipline, organization, and cooperation. It demands that we change long-accustomed habits, that we support each other in our communities, and that we all do some creative problem-solving.

But today is just one day. The first day. So letโ€™s try it out, and see how it goes. 

At the very least, not spending money for a day isnโ€™t going to hurt you any.

And remember, this is just for non-essential spending. There are people who would prefer a total shut-down of all transactions, but those people forget February 28 is the last day of the month. Itโ€™s Rent Day for millions of us. We must be reasonable. Do pay your rent, by whatever method you normally use. Pay your bills if theyโ€™re due. If you have to fill a prescription or keep a medical appointment, etc., take care of it. That is essential spending, not non-essential.

But stay the hell off Amazon. Stay away from the big box retailers. Donโ€™t log into your streaming services. Donโ€™t send money over the internet or pay for anything by credit card. Donโ€™t order in from a chain restaurant via a corporate gig-work delivery service. Just donโ€™t.


Now, donโ€™t get me wrong. I run a small business out of my studio. I would very dearly love for you to buy my work.

But not today. Not online today. Today is for a different kind of work, without which I might not be able to keep doing my lifeโ€™s work.

You know what Iโ€™ll be doing today, instead of trying to sell you my art? Iโ€™ll be doing some creative problem-solving. For example, I think Iโ€™ll research alternatives to Paypal and Venmo (the same company) so I can offer you a more ethical way to do business with me. Might take some time, but itโ€™s a great day to start, donโ€™t you think?

And Iโ€™ll do some artwork, so thereโ€™ll be fresh stuff for you to buy as well.


Today is the first day of the economic part of the pro-democracy resistance in the US.

Today is also the last day of the last month of winter. Tomorrow, March 1, we begin barreling into spring. Is there a better moment to wake up? To dump the old in favor of the new? To clean our house?

I went for a walk before I wrote this and saw the first green shoots rising from the ice-soaked ground in a neighborhood park.

Thatโ€™s an allegory for you, right there.

This is how the weather changes. This is how the tides turn.

With the first push out of the frozen mud.

How it starts.


Illustrated with photos I took this week.

A new day comes: choosing hope at the crossroads

Hi, all.

Itโ€™s been almost half a year since I posted last, and the reason this time is that Iโ€™ve been pretty deep in the weeds, personally. There have been some developments in my work, some chronic health issues popping up, and some practical things that had to be addressed. But mostly itโ€™s been the same worry and stress that everyone has been feeling lately – politics.

Tomorrow is Election Day in the US, the last day for casting ballots and the first day of counting. Itโ€™s tomorrow as of the time of writing this blog post. By the time you read it, weโ€™ll be well into the process. I donโ€™t expect it to be quick, clean, or easy. It will likely be some time before we know for sure what path my country is going to take.

I wonโ€™t lie, Iโ€™m sick to my stomach about it, but in keeping with my personality, Iโ€™m more angry than scared. There are people I will never forgive for what theyโ€™ve taken from me and my world these recent years. Iโ€™ve lost friends and family connections to an ideological cult. My cynicism is a hot, inflamed mess. My capacity for trust is totaled, uncertain if it can ever be fixed. Iโ€™ve felt stuck, paralyzed, unable to commit to plans because I have no idea what conditions to plan for. The most fantastical and outlandish worst-case scenarios seem all too plausible now.ย 

Everything Iโ€™ve been doing, all the ways Iโ€™ve been presenting myself, the public image I project, itโ€™s all being second-guessed. Can I, like this, really operate in a new reality? Is this version of me even functional, let alone relevant, to any of the roads opening before me? And if not, how should I adapt? Which Jen should take over and where should she appear?

By 1:00AM, Tuesday, November 5, 2024 (though I guess itโ€™ll really be Wednesday morning), the last polls in the USA, in Alaska, will be closed and concepts will start transforming into things. Only then will we start to get a clear idea of what weโ€™re dealing with.

It matters tremendously, of course, but however it works out, Election Day is only the beginning. Itโ€™s just the day of making a choice. Doing things to realize that choice comes after.

Whether we end up regrouping to relaunch our opposition to ascendant fascism, or we celebrate democracyโ€™s win with sweeping actions to clean our house at last, we will need to dedicate the rest of our lives to curing the critical rot in our society. Iโ€™m coming around to the belief that this struggle will never end. It will return again and again, as outlined in an inspiring historical analysis by Heather Cox Richardson. And I kind of don’t mind that. I think this is what it means to โ€œfight the good fightโ€ and to โ€œkeep the faithโ€ โ€” to be willing to embrace that never-ending work as oneโ€™s self expression and the definition of oneโ€™s community. Thatโ€™s how โ€œAmericanโ€ should be defined, as a people who fight for freedom and stand against the forces of autocracy.

Iโ€™ve decided to get a bit of a jump on all the work, so to speak, with a series of blog articles on the topic of principles. Iโ€™ll get down to the granular texture on specific topics in later articles, but in this inaugural statement I want to make one thing clear.

I am a left-leaning, liberal progressive, and proud of it. I support progressive policies in the US, I give my vote to Kamala Harris for US President, and I want to state in as strong terms as possible that I provide no safe space – zero safe space – to haters and manipulators.ย 

If you are a racist, a sexist, misogynist, transphobe, homophobe. any kind of genderist, a corporatist of any kind, a fascist, an elitist, a denier of science, history, or simple facts, a warmonger or profiteer, or an extremist of any kind, you are not and will never be welcome here, because Iโ€™m done with all that crap. Thatโ€™s Point 1 in the post-election 2024 reality, whatever else it might be. It has always been what Iโ€™m about as a person, and it always will be. Simple as, end of.

I have only a tiny community right now, but it might grow – it could happen – and this statement will always be on this website, applicable to all people and situations. So if someday, someone has a problem coping with getting their bullshit called out, they were warned.

Iโ€™m going to wrap this up with words from the most famous American President ever to win a civil war, because I feel he captured that moment, this moment, and every similar moment more perfectly than I ever could.

And Iโ€™ll close my own words with one of my recent watercolors. Itโ€™s a very small painting of something very large. It is the sunrise.

It’s our turn now, all of us. Choose hope, people.

– Jen


The Gettysburg Address

Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.

But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate โ€” we cannot consecrate โ€” we cannot hallow โ€” this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us โ€” that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion โ€” that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain โ€” that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom โ€” and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.

Abraham Lincoln
November 19, 1863