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“Convictions are beliefs strongly held. It’s responsibilities that have rebuilt societies.”
-Christopher Spicer
This week, Andy is joined by friend and neighbor Christopher Spicer — a writer, father, longtime human rights advocate, and recent candidate for Somerville City Councilor At-Large. He has served as Chair of the Somerville Human Rights Commission, participated in nonviolent protest and civil disobedience, and is deeply shaped by the Catholic Worker tradition. His work centers on community listening, local democracy, and what he calls a “responsibility ethic” rooted in relationship rather than ideology.
This conversation unfolds at the intersection of local politics and spiritual practice as Andy and Christopher explore what it means to practice democracy not just at the ballot box, but in the everyday acts of neighboring, listening, and showing up for one another in times of fear, instability, and profound social change. Christopher reflects on his decision to run for office amid rising authoritarianism, ICE detentions impacting families in his community, and a housing crisis reshaping the fabric of Somerville.
Drawing from his work on the Somerville Human Rights Commission, his Catholic Worker roots, and years spent interviewing his neighbors block by block, Chris offers a grounded vision of civic life shaped less by ideological purity and more by responsibility, relationship, and care.
Text within this block will maintain its original spacing when publishedfrom "The People, Yes" by Carl SandburgShow Notes:
“Bringing ‘perspective of human rights’ to council named as aspiration for at-large candidate Spicer” by Sydney Wise (Cambridge Day)
City of Somerville, MA Human Rights Commission
Catholic Worker Movement
Connect with Andy:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrewjcahill/
Instagram: https://instagram.com/wonderdomepodcast
What is your fiercest hope for humanity?
By Andy Cahill4.9
1717 ratings
“Convictions are beliefs strongly held. It’s responsibilities that have rebuilt societies.”
-Christopher Spicer
This week, Andy is joined by friend and neighbor Christopher Spicer — a writer, father, longtime human rights advocate, and recent candidate for Somerville City Councilor At-Large. He has served as Chair of the Somerville Human Rights Commission, participated in nonviolent protest and civil disobedience, and is deeply shaped by the Catholic Worker tradition. His work centers on community listening, local democracy, and what he calls a “responsibility ethic” rooted in relationship rather than ideology.
This conversation unfolds at the intersection of local politics and spiritual practice as Andy and Christopher explore what it means to practice democracy not just at the ballot box, but in the everyday acts of neighboring, listening, and showing up for one another in times of fear, instability, and profound social change. Christopher reflects on his decision to run for office amid rising authoritarianism, ICE detentions impacting families in his community, and a housing crisis reshaping the fabric of Somerville.
Drawing from his work on the Somerville Human Rights Commission, his Catholic Worker roots, and years spent interviewing his neighbors block by block, Chris offers a grounded vision of civic life shaped less by ideological purity and more by responsibility, relationship, and care.
Text within this block will maintain its original spacing when publishedfrom "The People, Yes" by Carl SandburgShow Notes:
“Bringing ‘perspective of human rights’ to council named as aspiration for at-large candidate Spicer” by Sydney Wise (Cambridge Day)
City of Somerville, MA Human Rights Commission
Catholic Worker Movement
Connect with Andy:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrewjcahill/
Instagram: https://instagram.com/wonderdomepodcast
What is your fiercest hope for humanity?