TLDR: The question "Is nonviolence working?" is urgent in political spaces today. Nonviolence, when understood as a disciplined craft rather than passive acceptance, is the most powerful tool available to movements resisting authoritarianism and state violence. It functions strategically by refusing to meet violence on its own terms, preventing movements from becoming what they fight against, and instead modeling the beloved community they seek to build. Evidence from recent movements demonstrates how nonviolent resistance exposes the contradictions of authoritarian systems while preserving the moral and spiritual integrity of the movement itself.
Why the Question "Is Nonviolence Working?" Matters Now
The query itself signals a moment of doubt and recalibration in activist spaces. When violence becomes the dominant language of state actors—whether through immigration enforcement, police action, or authoritarian administration—movements face a critical choice about which tools to employ and which values to protect. This is not a theoretical question; it is being asked in rooms across the country where people are organizing resistance. The very presence of the question indicates that nonviolence is being tested, scrutinized, and reconsidered as a strategic response to escalating state repression and institutional violence.
What Makes Nonviolence Strategic, Not Passive?
Nonviolence is frequently misunderstood as weakness or acceptance of injustice. The speaker reframes it entirely: nonviolence is disciplined, strategic, powerful, and morally grounded. When treated as a craft—developed with skill, intention, and clear strategic objectives—nonviolence becomes the most powerful tool available. This distinction matters because it separates nonviolence from passivity. A disciplined nonviolent movement has clear demands, tactics, coordination, risk assessment, and adaptive strategy. It is not about being nice; it is about being effective while maintaining integrity.
The strategic power of nonviolence lies in refusing to play the opponent's game. When an authoritarian regime or oppressive system relies on violence as its primary language, meeting that violence with violence grants the regime legitimacy, justification, and the terrain it prefers. By contrast, strategic nonviolence operates in a different register: it exposes the disproportionate force being used, it demonstrates moral clarity, and it creates asymmetrical pressure that violence alone cannot generate.
How Minnesota Exemplifies Nonviolent Resistance
Minnesota is cited as a concrete example of nonviolence working. While the speaker does not elaborate extensively in this excerpt, the reference points to specific recent movements in Minnesota that have employed coordinated, disciplined nonviolent action in response to state violence and authoritarian policies. By studying this example, movements can identify which tactical decisions, community coordination, and strategic choices made nonviolent resistance effective in that context. The implication is that nonviolence is not abstract—it produces measurable results when executed with clarity and discipline.
Violence as the Language of Authoritarianism
The speaker identifies violence as the chosen language of authoritarian systems: the language of "this administration," of ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement), of authoritarianism itself. This diagnosis is crucial. When a regime speaks primarily in violence—detention, deportation, police force, coercion—it is because violence is the mechanism through which power is maintained. To respond in that same language is to accept the regime's frame and to fight on terrain where it holds structural advantage. The state has greater access to instruments of violence. A movement cannot outviolence a state apparatus.
The strategic question then becomes: How does a movement respond to state violence without mirroring it? The answer is not to absorb violence passively, but to shift the register entirely. Nonviolent resistance refuses the regime's chosen language and instead speaks in the language of moral authority, community solidarity, public witness, economic pressure, and coordinated action. This shift in language changes what the conflict is actually about and who can participate in it.
The Core Function: Not Becoming What You Fight Against
One of the deepest insights in nonviolent practice is this: nonviolence is how we do not become what we are fighting against. This speaks to the spiritual and moral ecology of movements. When a movement adopts the tactics of its opponent—violence, coercion, dehumanization—it absorbs those tactics into its own practice and identity. Over time, the movement risks replicating the very oppressive structures it set out to dismantle. Nonviolent discipline prevents this contamination. It maintains a clear boundary between the means and the ends, ensuring that the methods used to build the beloved community are consistent with the values of that community.
This is not naive. It is a recognition that movements shape their participants and their futures through daily practice. The habits, reflexes, and relationships built through nonviolent resistance are different from those built through violence. A movement that practices nonviolent discipline develops different capacities—negotiation, collective decision-making, patience, relationship-building across difference—than one that relies on coercion. These capacities are what sustain a beloved community over time.
Modeling Beloved Community Through Nonviolent Action
Nonviolence does more than resist oppression; it simultaneously models an alternative way of being. When executed with clarity and discipline, nonviolent resistance shows and feels like what a beloved community actually is. This is not separate from the political struggle—it is integral to it. When people gather in nonviolent action, they experience what it feels like to be in community with others, to coordinate without coercion, to face power with dignity, to support one another through risk. These experiences are themselves transformative and radicalizing.
The beloved community is not a distant ideal to be achieved after victory. It is partially realized and made tangible through the very practices of the movement. People can feel, in their bodies and relationships, what liberation looks like when it is practiced in the present moment. This has profound spiritual and political significance. It addresses one of the deepest questions movements face: How do we know the world we are building is better than the one we are resisting? The answer, in part, is that we build it now, in how we organize.
Where to Go From Here
The question "Is nonviolence working?" requires ongoing study, honest assessment, and adaptation. Movements should examine concrete cases where nonviolence has shifted power, exposed injustice, and built durable change. They should also ask: Are we treating nonviolence as a strategic craft, or as a slogan? Are we developing the discipline, coordination, and clear objectives that make nonviolence powerful? And at the deepest level: Are we using our methods to model the world we want to create? The answers to these questions will determine whether nonviolence becomes, for a new generation, the most powerful tool in the service of justice and beloved community.



