The movement for mutual aid during disasters isn’t something we invented. But we are trying to act as a swiss-army knife for this growing movement of movements, as it becomes more and more critical for our collective survival. One way we are supporting and uplifting this tactic, and the larger autonomous disaster relief movement, of which we are only a small part, is curating a database of news articles about autonomous, liberatory, mutual aid efforts in the context of disasters.
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The Red and Black
A plate of food for a good cause — it’s an attractive model for creators and customers that pop-up projects like The Side Hustle are taking advantage of.
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Spectrum Local News
The pandemic has been challenging Miriam Soto. “You have to stay home,” she said during an interview on Broadway in Newburgh. “It’s very depressing.”
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D Magazine
All of the energy spent organizing in 2020 has allowed many local mutual aid groups keep people warm, housed, and fed during this weather emergency.
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Dallas Eater
As governments fail Dallas’s unhoused population, a collective of organizers across the city worked around the clock to feed the residents of Camp Rhonda, an encampment for unhoused people that’s been under threat of shutdown
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Houston Eater
These mutual aid funds, nonprofits, and community groups are getting hot meals and other supplies to people on the ground right now
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Dallas Eater
Sending limits on mobile payment platforms like Venmo and CashApp have made it difficult to distribute the hundreds of thousands of dollars raised for Dallasites in need this week
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Marie Claire
It’s about solidarity, not charity, and a lot of people you know are doing it.
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Maine Beacon
Once a week, the storeroom behind Gateway Community Services on Forest Avenue in Portland is transformed and the empty space becomes a cornucopia. By mid-morning, 50-pound bags of black beans, lentils, and rice are stacked high on pallets, alongside countless boxes of bananas, limes, fresh herbs, and vegetables. Volunteer “rationers” stand at tables spaced 10 feet apart, portioning the bulk foods into family-sized shares.
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Austin Eater
Where to donate money, food, and supplies to help the vulnerable in the city
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Vox
People have applauded local organizing efforts in cities like Austin, Dallas, and Houston, in the face of a lacking government response.
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NBC News
Black, Latino, Asian Americans are raising money and helping to escort senior citizens who might not feel safe.
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The Cut
Over the weekend, a massive winter storm descended upon the state of Texas, bringing harsh, unprecedented weather to the region: snow, ice, single-digit temperatures. The inclement conditions were punishing enough — most houses in Texas feature little insulation, which prompted many to crank up the heat in their living spaces.
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Rolling Stone
A list of organizations providing food, housing, and other disaster relief to people across the state
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Mother Jones
Texas residents filled in for an absent government by helping each other survive a devastating winter storm.
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Houston Eater
While the power grid struggled and Texas officials dithered, mutual aid groups demonstrated their capacity for fast, effective disaster relief
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Texas Tribune
Last week, an untold number of Texans who had lost power and heat, and in some cases water, took to social media platforms to ask for help — and be connected to those who could offer it.
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Alma
Faced with widespread power outages and water shortages, mutual aid organizations in Texas are stepping up in the absence of state leadership.
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The Suburban
I was recently collecting plastic containers for a friend of mine who said that a food bank or pantry or soup kitchen or someone needed them. I wasn’t sure of the details but I was excited to reduce my recycling and pass on containers from yogurt, olives, soup, etc.
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Billy Penn
Team up, talk to your neighbors, practice self care and don’t judge, say folks who’ve joined the local movement.
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LA Times
On Wednesday night, photos posted to Twitter appeared to show something borderline unthinkable: Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas boarding a flight to Cancun, Mexico. In the middle of a pandemic. And in the middle of a crisis that had left millions of his constituents without power or clean drinking water.
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CounterPunch
From the perspectives of Indigenous nations, the crises of 2020 have not been something entirely new, or even a significant historical departure from “normal.” Having previously experienced the ravages of violent colonialism, pandemics, environmental catastrophe, and forced assimilation, the current era has long been a dystopia for Native peoples.