That is Don Eggleston, above, in a picture captured from his Facebook page, online. At the bottom is an image from the May 7, 2025, edition of the Santa Cruz Sentinel, featuring a "Letter to the Editor" in which Don says, "Action Creates Hope." The image of that clipping from The Sentinel is probably too small to read. I was surprised, when I read it in the original, to see that Don sources his statement about how "Action Creates Hope" to a speech he says that I made "a few years ago."
I don't specifically recall what speech that might have been, and if it was during the time that I served as a County Supervisor in Santa Cruz County, California, it was a least thirty years ago. Could have been fifty. At this stage, I think credit for the "Action Creates Hope" statement can properly go to Don!
I do, though, whatever role I may have played in Don's formulation, believe that this statement, that "Action Creates Hope," is right on target. That may not be a law of physics, but it is an absolutely accurate description of a reality that merits our attention.
Let me say something about "reality." When we look around, and see the world in which we live (including not only the "World of Nature" but the world that we have made, ourselves, through human action) we tend to think that what we see is not only "real," but that it is "inevitable." I call this predisposition the "Is Fallacy." If something exists, it is a pretty natural reaction to believe that what "exists" is "permanent," that it's "inevitable," that what we see when we see the world is just "the way things are."
And think about it. If we look around, today, we can get pretty discouraged about what we might denominate as "the state of the world." Lots of people are writing things like, "Democracy is Dead," and "Fascism has taken over." I have been making commentaries, in this daily blog, contesting the idea that we should, or even "must," grant some enduring "reality" to our current political, economic, and social situation.
Still, our tendency is to attribute "permanence" to what we see out our window. And if what we see is discouraging; well, then, we get discouraged.
Let's cue up "Action." As we all know from our personal experience, we are all capable of "Action." If you tell the boss what you really think of the bosses' newest idea, you may get fired, but you can take action and do that, and changes will likely follow. You can get married, get divorced, go back to school, or quit school. Whatever. And when you take action, change does occur. Organized action, particularly, can change the world.
In other words, IF you are discouraged or dispairing about the way things are, "Action" is the antidote. That's Don Eggleston's point! Let's listen to what Don has to say in his "Letter to the Editor."
Since World War II, our democracy has been the envy of the world, and our standard of living has been consistentyly rising. That is over (as we will see in the coming months) and now we have to fight just to preserve freedom of speech and the rule of law.
Are you feeling worried, stressed and angry about what Mr. Trump is doing to our beloved country? I've been feeling that way for nine years, and I have a partial solution...
It's time to DO something [and]...
Action Creates Hope
oooOOOooo