Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Yield and Persistence: The Water Strategy

Water as activist model: appearing weak while being persistently transformative; yielding to pressure while fundamentally changing landscapes.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Water, Laozi's favorite metaphor, appears soft and yielding yet over time erodes mountains. For technology activists, this strategy means accepting tactical defeats while maintaining long-term persistence, working within systems while gradually transforming them, and avoiding direct confrontation that provokes suppression. Water doesn't fight obstacles; it flows around them, accumulates, and eventually changes everything. Activists practicing this strategy might work within regulatory frameworks, participate in standards committees, or engage with technology policy while simultaneously building alternatives and shifting cultural understanding. Yielding doesn't mean surrender—it means choosing battles strategically and recognizing that lasting change often emerges from gradual shifts rather than revolutionary moments. This approach particularly suits technology activism, where direct confrontation with well-resourced corporations typically fails. Instead, sustained pressure from below—through cultural shifts, regulatory work, alternative building, and persistent criticism—gradually shifts what's considered acceptable. The strategy requires patience, faith in long-term processes, and willingness to appear ineffectual in the short term while working toward fundamental transformation. Water eventually wears through anything.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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