Why So Many People Care Deeply and Still Won't Show Up
If participation feels harder than it used to, that is not your imagination. It is what happens when civic life collides with economic strain.
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Authoritarianism makes daily life so expensive, so unstable, and so exhausting that there is very little left for civic life.
When work takes more and pays less, bills outrun wages, childcare is unavailable or unaffordable, schedules offer no flexibility, when one unexpected expense can unravel everything, people are left with very little room for anything else.
Participation requires wiggle room. It requires time, money, energy, mobility, and the basic sense that one more thing won’t hurt their way of living more than it’s already being attacked by this regime.
In March 2026, the Consumer Price Index rose 3.3 percent over the year. The energy index was up 12.5 percent. Gasoline was up 18.9 percent over the year, and the gasoline index jumped 21.2 percent in March alone, which the Bureau of Labor Statistics said was the largest monthly increase since that series began in 1967. Shelter was up 3.0 percent over the year, and food away from home was up 3.8 percent. Over that same year, average hourly earnings rose 3.5 percent, but average hourly earnings rose only 0.3 percent after inflation.
And even before this most recent spike, the latest annual Federal Reserve survey on household well-being showed how thin the cushion already was. Sixty-three percent of adults said they would cover a hypothetical $400 emergency expense with cash or its equivalent, which also means 37 percent would not. Thirteen percent said they would not be able to cover that expense by any means. Fifty-five percent said they had set aside enough to cover three months of expenses in an emergency. And in response to higher prices, 79 percent of adults said they had adjusted their behavior in the prior year.
We hear that all of us need to do more:
Stay engaged.
Show up.
Organize.
Keep going.
It’s all important and necessary. But calling people into action without acknowledging what they’re up against is pressure on top of pressure.
People who have stepped back from activism are not failing democracy.
Many are living inside a society that has made basic participation harder and harder for people to sustain.
The parent who can’t drive to an event because the cost of getting there is too high is not outside this struggle.
The worker with no schedule flexibility is not on the sidelines.
The person who went quiet after months of giving everything they had is not apathetic.
These people are already paying the cost of the conditions we are all trying to change.
A movement that treats exhaustion as a character flaw will keep misreading the moment. A movement that treats it as useful information becomes aware and tactful.
So what does this useful information tell us?
Participation has a price, and not everyone can pay the same price with their living situations. Movements need flexible ways to contribute, local options, mutual aid, shared resources, and pathways that do not require money, travel, or perfect consistency.
It tells us that civic strength does not always look like maximum visible output.
It can look like staying morally clear, bringing one more person into the conversation, making one call, sharing a verified resource, helping a neighbor, or contributing in a smaller way over a longer stretch instead of burning bright for three months and disappearing.
We should keep asking how to bring awareness to more people but we should also ask what’s making it hard for people who already agree with us to keep going.
Right now, under this kind of economic and emotional pressure, we need patience and understanding and to uplift the members in our community.
Democracy can’t be defended only by people with the most availability. It has to work for all of us. Building for that is not lowering the bar. It’s understanding what the bar requires.
For readers who do want a next step, but need one that fits your capacity, here are some practical entry points:
5 Calls gives people short issue-based scripts and the right phone numbers for elected officials.
Mutual Aid Hub helps people find mutual aid networks and community self-support projects nearby.
Resistbot lets users text RESIST to 50409 or use its web bot to send messages to elected officials in minutes.
Democracy.io lets people email their two senators and House member through a single website instead of contacting each office separately.
What has made civic participation more difficult for you lately? Time, money, burnout, caregiving, transportation, health, fear, something else? Tell us in the comments or share some tips that could help someone out. We should understand what people are carrying, and this is a space where that conversation can happen.
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Every day my email inbox and text messages get filled with (probably worthy) funding requests from organizations and candidates I've barely, if ever, heard of. So my contact info is getting passed around like a pocket comb on picture day. (Yes, I'm that old) Often they're masquerading as surveys, or petitions, or urgent requests from high profile persons that I'm sure don't even know I exist, but thier fundraising bots sure do. I put my boots on the ground at civil rights protests wherever I can, but I'm not made of money and my compassion fatigue has me tempted to block numbers and report them as spam. I want to fight the good fight, but stop bleeding me out.
"Start where you are. Do what you can. Use what you have." - Arthur Ashe. Every small action counts and pushes back against despair. We are all exhausted. Try to also be kind.