How?
Seriously. I've tried to get into politics. It's useless. So, how? I would really like a way to act, that won't get me hit.
I've been hit enough, thanks.
I don't think politics, particularly local politics, is as useless as you think it is. Like, take CRT in particular - a lot of that can happen (and be fought against) at the local level. One of the school boards in my (fairly conservative!) area is trying to push CRT in (I think not under that term, but it's the same thing), and my local GOP is fighting back. On a broader level, I don't think there's any solution that doesn't involve some politics on some level, and in particular I don't think third parties or somehow flipping the parties is viable, so that means the Republican party. A lot of stuff is built up from the grassroots, and a lot of that is free for the taking to whoever shows up.
Other ways include legal defense / lawfare, lobbying, and reporting. First is... basically nonexistent, right now, as far as I can tell, but there's no reason it has to be - the left has plenty of organizations doing this sort of thing. Why can't we have a White ADL (WDL?), for instance, to fight anti-White CRT? Second has a fair number of single issue organizations, of varying quality, but nothing that has access that's explicitly advocating the interests of the Historic American Nation. Unfortunately, right now an organization like that probably can't get access nationally, but many of those single issue organizations are still doing good work. Third also has a fair number of organizations doing good work - for instance, the immigration patriots at VDARE. Part of the problem is that the left's stranglehold on the media allows them to set the narrative and means that even moderate right-wingers frequently buy into their framing, so alternative narratives are important.
All of those are *jobs* are require certain skills that not everyone has (and in fact most people don't), but there's plenty of stuff people can do that isn't. Going to the single-issue marches (i.e. March for Life, March for Our Rights, etc.) is pretty safe. Calling and writing your representatives about the issues you care about is perfectly safe (just don't be a retard about it and
threaten them or something) and yes, this does work for tipping the swamp critters when they're on the fence, if they're getting a ton of calls. Postering and stickering is also fairly safe (might depend on area), and a good way to start out with IRL action. Another thing you can do is write to our political prisoners. I'll admit I haven't done this last one - I'm concerned that it's not safe against doxxing (since at least my current understanding is that the letters would have to be non-anonymous and would be read by other people). Maybe this is cowardice on my part.
Organizing and collectivizing starts with just getting others doing the above too, together. You have any IRL right-wing friends? If not, make them. Then, you're going to a March for Life? Why not go as a group? You're doing some postering? Can one of them watch your back? Are you calling your republican representative to ask them why they're stabbing the country in the back on immigration? I'm sure your friends would like to know too - you should all call. You're writing one of the men behind the wire? Great, your probably a better person than I am, but there are a lot of them after Jan 6th. You know anyone in a position to do so as well?
Also, think about any groups you may be involved with already, and whether there's going to crossover in political leanings. Part of the reason the left has been successful with certain movements in the past is that members co-opted churches. That's also one of the reason March for Life reliably gets a huge turnout - they get whole churches going. Here's where local politics can come in again, as well. Lotta old retired people in local politics. They don't exactly have anything better to do.
Additionally, you can support organizations that do all of the above work, and give mutual aid to your national comrades. I'm not saying give money to grifters, but IMO there are plenty of non-grifters who do good work. IMO this itself is a big part of the capability gap between the organized left and the organized right - fringe left wing organizations are well funded and supported by their "moderates" whereas an awful lot of right wing money goes to talking heads like Shapiro and nowhere else. But on our issues where we do get involved and do fund organizations, we can win. You see this particularly with gun rights. There are also people who have been burned for their political opinions and activism, or even just need a helping hand, and another problem with the right has been it's tendency to turn on it's own when under media attack. We need to be better about looking after our own.
One admission here is that while I've engaged in some of the above activities (most of them, in some capacity, although I'm young and most of them not extensively), I have not done so in any kind of
leadership role. If someone IRL with experience is giving you advice that contradicts mine, particularly on specific issues where I am general, I'd trust their opinion over mine -
they probably have more experience than I do. The big exception here is not necessarily to trust anyone and if you think someone is acting like a fed or trying to get personal information that they could use to dox or harm you, always err on the side of caution.
I don't have any magic bullets for our current situation. I don't think they exist. But I think there's a lot that can be done. "If the situation was hopeless, their propaganda would be unnecessary" and all that. I think it's going to be a lot of slow work, a lot of it
boring work. It's like that saying about planting a tree - the best time to secure our nation and a future was twenty years ago, second best time is right now.