![]()
on April 14, 2026, 4:04 pm
14 Apr 2026
Lede: The Freedom Flotilla prepares to challenge the Gaza blockade once more
Following her time on remand, 65-year-old climate activist Alyson Lee shared her
insight into why people persist in seemingly futile struggles - hope in an
invisible tipping point.
"There's a tipping point that you are working towards," she explains, "and it's
only when you get to that tipping point that society's attitude changes... and
you never know when that tipping point's going to come. Its hard work. You must
grit your teeth and have faith that it will eventually get there."
Her words echo through history. It was seven years until Greenham Common's
missiles were removed, a decade for women's suffrage, over twenty years to begin
dismantling apartheid. Each victory required collective perseverance, activists
chipping away at indifference, silence and back turning, until something
shifted. Today as millions watch the genocide and devastation in Gaza
livestreamed across their screens, that same question haunts both older
activists and a new generation of protesters - when will the tipping point come?
For two years, demonstrations have grown globally while governments offer token
gestures and mainstream media remains largely silent. Faced with this
institutional inertia ordinary citizens are escalating from petitions to direct
action, risking arrest and the label of "terrorist" for refusing to look
away. Their persistence raises an uncomfortable question - how severe must the
psychological discomfort become before those in authority accept their
complicity?
The daily barrage of images - demolished hospitals, starving children,
journalists killed mid-broadcast - creates a peculiar kind of collective trauma
among distant witnesses. We feel powerless to affect change, guilty for not
living this reality ourselves yet still shaken by what we see. Many turn away
because the pain is unbearable - others seek refuge in distraction, protecting
their mental health from the relentless stream of atrocities. Can we blame them
for this self-preservation when genocide is livestreamed twenty-four hours a
day?
Yet resistance follows a familiar trajectory. First come petitions and letters
to MPs. Then street protests demanding sanctions and an end to arms sales. When
governments prove unmoved, and when pro-Israel lobbying's influence becomes
undeniable, activists escalate to non-violent direct action, targeting
corporations profiting from the conflict. The state's response is predictable -
protesters are imprisoned and labelled terrorists, their supporters arrested,
and new laws enacted to curtail the right to demonstrate. This is cognitive
dissonance writ large - those in power finding it easier to criminalize dissent
than acknowledge their role in enabling mass killing.
Cont'd ...
Responses
« Back to index | View thread »