Surviving Changes Podcast

What If Annoyance Is A Civic Duty


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If you’ve ever looked at a corrupt local government and thought, “Nothing I do will matter,” we challenge that belief head-on with a tactic that’s almost absurdly simple: make corruption too uncomfortable to keep doing. I’m Heidi, and I’m walking through how sustained, nonviolent pressure can push bad actors to leave without threats, without fights, and without giving them the martyr story they want. 

We dig into Puerto Rico’s 2019 pots-and-pans movement and why a “noise protest” or cacerolazo works when petitions and complaints get ignored. The idea is to create a public spectacle that attracts attention, grows participation, and turns routine power into an ongoing embarrassment. When thousands of people show up consistently, the calculus changes fast. We also talk about using what most people overlook: public records requests and FOIA-style tactics to force transparency, drain time, and document patterns that institutions prefer to bury. 

Then we get personal and local. We talk about the culture that props up corruption, the way communities celebrate flashy wealth and excuse harm, and why that social approval keeps the worst people comfortable. The through-line is accountability: organize small, name your group, use the tools you already have, and accept some discomfort as the price of real change. 

If this hits a nerve, subscribe, share it with one person who’s fed up, and leave a review so more people find practical, nonviolent ways to demand government accountability. What would you do first in your town?

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Surviving Changes PodcastBy Heidi Hunt

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