"Paid protesters" are all over the news recently, from Donald Trump's accusation that all the people attending anti-Trump rallies are secretly funded by his enemies to the evidence that Trump himself hired actors to pretend to be his supporters. Or maybe you've heard Elon Musk accused a disgruntled employee of being a paid union shill? So, what? Is this merely an attempt to discredit the other party, or is it a real job? We talked to "Matt" about all of it (he started as an unpaid protester, graduated to "Paid Protester" at the 2011 Take Back the Capitol event, and worked as an organizer for the Service Employees International Union) and he explained how a career in activism really works ...
5Paid Protesters Do Exist (And That's Not As Awful As It Seems)
A lot of people hold to the idea that grassroots activism has to be spontaneous. That thousands of people become so angry and so motivated by the same issue that they all simply happen to gather at the same place at the same time with thematically consistent signs to make their voice heard. But in reality, "spontaneous" protests are usually called riots. An actual protest needs organizers, and that's exactly what Matt became.
Clare Lovell
"Paid rioting" would have been more lucrative, but you take whatever job you can get.
His career started when a friend of his asked for a small favor, "Can you bring some food to our Occupy Wall Street Meeting?" Matt agreed and decided to hang out. While everyone was brainstorming protests, he had the bright idea to stage a "corporate wedding." Everyone loved it so much that they asked him to organize it. He did, and it flopped.
"We stood in the rain and pretended to marry a bunch of people in wedding attire with corporate logos. I don't think anyone even realized we were there."
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"What, is this a porno? No? OK, never mind then."
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