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Occupy Colleges: Student Supporters Of Occupy Wall Street Continue To Show Solidarity
NEW YORK -- Thursday afternoon, in concert with the Occupy Wall Street movement, students from nearly 150 college campuses across the country will participate in their second protest in as many weeks.
Occupy Colleges, which started as a Facebook page and Twitter handle less than two weeks ago, has quickly blossomed into a burgeoning movement bolstered by a groundswell of student-led support. As of Thursday morning, student organizers at 136 college campuses -- from Sarah Lawrence College to Boise State University to San Diego City College -- have pledged to participate in Thursday’s show of solidarity. As with the nationwide walkout held last Wednesday, the students will band together to make their voices heard -- with many expressing frustration over increasing amounts of student loan debt and the rising cost of tuition, in addition to a paucity of jobs for recent graduates.
“We’re planning to do these walkouts and shows of solidarity every two weeks until these issues are resolved,” said Natalia Abrams, 31, who helps to organize Occupy Colleges, a student-led grassroots group based in Los Angeles that helped facilitate both nationwide protests. “If Occupy Wall Street is indefinite, we’re indefinite as well. We plan to keep the solidarity protest going for as long as it takes.”
In many ways, today's protest marks a significant challenge for student backers of the Occupy Wall Street movement, not only in terms of coordination and organization, but also with respect to maintaining momentum.
“Participating in something that’s clearly ascendant is always something of a rush,” said Doug McAdam, a professor of sociology at Stanford University. While McAdam said it was inherently difficult to build on the momentum of a movement that's neither centralized nor coordinated, he cautioned against making too much of its diffuse nature.
“We like to talk about big, historic movements as if they were these spectacularly well-coordinated affairs. They almost never are,” said McAdam, who teaches a course on political movements. “Very broad, diverse efforts are generally more effective because you can speak to different constituencies. It becomes quite difficult to suppress a movement that doesn’t have one distinct leader or head.”
Occupy Colleges, which started as a Facebook page and Twitter handle less than two weeks ago, has quickly blossomed into a burgeoning movement bolstered by a groundswell of student-led support. As of Thursday morning, student organizers at 136 college campuses -- from Sarah Lawrence College to Boise State University to San Diego City College -- have pledged to participate in Thursday’s show of solidarity.
“Around the country, more and more high school students are foregoing a college education because their families can no longer afford it. So many more are graduating with inconceivable amounts of debt and stepping into the worse job market in decades,” reads a statement on Occupy Colleges’ website. “They take unpaid internships that go nowhere and soon can’t pay college loans. We represent students who share these fears and support Occupy Wall Street.”
Shay Berman, a 20-year-old junior at Michigan State University, is organizing his campus’s show of support later today. Based on rough Twitter estimates, Berman is hopeful that about 50 of his classmates will join him at the Rock, which is a common area on the East Lansing campus dedicated to free speech and protest.
“We’re worried about our future and that the middle class won’t exist once we get out of school. Also, the rising cost of tuition is a big concern,” said Berman, who said his participation in the Occupy Wall Street protests marked his first significant political involvement. “We’re just frustrated with America and the whole way our society is run. “
According to Gonzalo Vizcardo, 21, a senior economics major at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, Fla., 45 students plan to attend a general assembly on campus later this afternoon. Meanwhile, about 40 students at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas, are readying for a similar gathering.
Last night in San Marcos, a handful of students spent the evening making hand-painted signs in preparation. Later today, the same group plans to meet at the Stallion, a "free speech zone" at the center of campus. From there, the group will march to the nearby square in downtown San Marcos. Their aim: increased visibility and the dispelling of apathy.
“Student debt is a huge issue, with some students starting to question the wisdom of even having a degree anymore,” said Joshua Christopher Harvey, a 24-year-old junior who previously served in the U.S. Air Force prior to being discharged under Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. Harvey organized both last week’s walkout and today’s march. “The main thing that’s come up at our meetings is that there’s only a six-month grace period to start paying our loans back -- and we’re worried there won’t even be jobs available once we get out.”
Brayden King, an assistant professor of management at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, sees college students as a natural constituency in the Occupy Wall Street movement.
“If, say, you’re a middle-aged investment banker, you might look around your social group and think the economy isn’t doing all that bad,” said King. “But if you’re a college student or a recent graduate, you’re thinking the exact opposite when all of your friends are either unemployed or working in jobs that are much lower paying than what they expected to be doing after they graduated.”
Michael T. Heaney, an assistant professor of organizational studies and political science at the University of Michigan, also sees the college protests as a natural part of the movement’s evolution.
“For young people in particular, it’s an opportunity for them to learn about activism and politics for the first time,” said Heaney. “While the 2000s were an intense period of protest, the current generation in college wasn’t really exposed to the earlier period of activism of the last decade. And for a lot of these students, this is their first movement.”
Heaney is currently studying how the first time an individual participates in an activist movement later reverberates throughout the course of their lives. “The point is that first experience with activism will have a long-lasting effect, affecting the way they think about activism, the tactics they think are important and even affecting their social networks,” said Heaney. “But it also has the opportunity to put them off.”
In terms of Occupy Wall Street's ultimate impact, McAdam notes that while early participation in a movement can help shape young activists, equally important is the historical context of the movement itself.
McAdam studied participants in Freedom Summer -- the 10 week-period in 1964 when civil rights activists, many of them college students, traveled to Mississippi to register black voters -- who later became more politically engaged members of society as a result.
He found that it wasn’t simply their activism that mattered, but the fact that they participated in the movement during the beginning of sixties-era radicalism.
“In many ways, this particular moment looks a lot like a Freedom Summer moment," said McAdam. "With our economic woes likely to continue, or perhaps even deepen, for some time and the election coming up next year, it is very likely that we are entering a period of escalating economic, political and social turmoil.
“For students, it won’t have a long-term impact simply because they went to an Occupy Wall Street demonstration a few times, but because it began a process that carried them in the way that Freedom Summer started a process for the Mississippi volunteers.”
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25 Comments so far
Show AllAlmost continuous protest action, occupations, sit-ins, teach-ins and so on have been going on in California campuses ** for over two years! ** Despite actions of solidarity in other campuses elsewhere from time to time, somehow this never made it to the news beyond certain blogs and it's very surprising. I suppose there's a time for everything to happen.
Days of Action Against the Tuition Hikes
California is Occupied
The author's bio on HuffPo says "Amanda M. Fairbanks is an education reporter at the Huffington Post...". It's funny the article does not mention the almost regular protests at some California campuses at all, despite these protests going on for 2+ years.
The California protest actions during the past two years were narrowly focused on tuition and loans, issues that are symptoms and subsets of the larger problem, corporate control of government. OWS has been a catalyst for giving the campus groups an opportunity to address corporate control of government and I hope these groups take advantage of that and start connecting dots, thereby realizing that the tuition, debt and jobs issues cannot be resolved until FDR's New Deal financial industry reguilations are restored, and private money is completely removed from political campaigns.
Students also need to realize that they have more to lose than any other demographic if Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are not expanded and Obamacare isn't replaced with single-payer medical insurance for all Americans. Corporations and the politicians they own are preventing tens of millions of older workers from retiring and opening their family wage jobs up to young Americans.
Now that students can elevate their protest from their esoteric issues to thinking and acting globally, they may start seeing some progressive results for them, their nation and the world.
^ What he said! ^
Students ought to be screaming bloody murder. The debt we're forcing them to assume is obscene.
this is not going to be a good time for the young, unless we use this time to forge new ways...
those trying to maintain historical notions of life-paths (school, job, career, house, family) will find the planet is no longer able to fund such things...
if the ego is reliant upon success in such matters, esteem will suffer...
we will need to content ourselves with a planet bearing enough fruit to keep one living...
that is the goal, now...
not college...
Maybe instead of "Occupy Colleges" it would be better to "Boycott Colleges". There are some very troubling aspects to the way higher education is set up and its influence on the social structure of our society. Until the 'paper chase' is open to all, there is no fairness in the system. Beyond that, the prejudice against those who are not degreed is instututionalized. No other group would accept it. Imagine denying someone employment because he was gay, or black, or disabled. or.... A system that values all people and grants employment based on talent and knowledge would be a big improvement. It is amazing how many progressives and liberals fail to recognize this type of prejudice. The stereotyping of those without college degrees is unfair, unethical, and illogical. Many of the most brilliant people I know are self-educated.
Perhaps it would be better to simply not repay the loans.
I know people who have tried that. Student loans cannot be wiped out by bankrupcy. Not repaying them means never owning a house, maybe never owning a car, having a bad credit rating which limits employment, etc. The system is rigged. Some college graduates with debt consider themselves to be indentured servants of the big business/educational system. There is no way out other than self-education. Please let all young folks considering college understand this.
After 20 years the debt is forgiven and if all you will ever do is work for minimum wage at a pizza place what difference does it make?
Good for the students. It doesn't get much coverage in the news here, but students in Chile have been demonstrating in huge numbers for months and are supported by a large majority of the population and strong solidarity in other Latin American countries. And now students in Colombia are following their example, with large demonstrations yesterday against government plans to privatize education. And students, professors and staff in the Dominican Republic began a 48-hour strike today, with the probability of more actions later.
Yes that is quite a historical movement in Chile. They have longer history of protest and exploitation so they are well versed in the finer points of protest.
Two things: Point No. 1. Most universities in faster poo-food Amerika... are nothing more than $ports franchises for footballing, basketballing , etc.). The coaches are regularly paid seven figure annual $tipends... while non tenured faculty end up on food $tamps. Hey! I have ten years of college education... and a briefcase full of diplomas. Been there! Done that! Both as '$tewedent' and as a faculty member, I know the $core! And I also see how 'acadamnia' has devolved, especially since the Reagan regime. Point No. 2. '$tewedent' loans are clever $cams... invented by the Amerikan ruling class to create a perpetual debtor class. It would be better to learn a practical trade that could be employed for making a living anywhere. Even in North Korea... they need electricians and plumbers. I no longer recommend college... because 'acadamnia' no longer makes $ense. Give it some thought.
I have two children who have graduated form university in Canada.
They both have student debt and I too have debt from helping them through university. I can get out of debt and they can not serving tables for only 20 hours a week and testing video games( yes, that is a job).
>>>>Did President Bush pass a law saying you could not go bankrupt in 2006? If so, the government and banks knew the bubble burst of 2008 was coming two years in advance,
Only corporations are allowed to go bankrupt, get welfare and get bailed out in the Dubya/Obama era. Everybody else needs to fight for space under a bridge...its the American way !
Its good to see large groups of diverse interests converging in the spirit of collective protest. I believe we are seeing the very beginnings of a Rennaissance of democracy taking place worldwide, in spirit and in the process of participation. Down with Greed, Up with People!
Lots of things going on...
First, what the heck are you being taught? Is it something that you will never use? Just curious.
Are you being taught to be a citizen, and to work with other citizens? That could be useful.
Are you being groomed for one particular job? Who is doing the hiring?
Why aren't you being groomed to be a boss? Is it because you were born into the hereditary peon caste?
For that matter, why aren't you being groomed to be a climate change inventor? Or an energy healer? Why weren't you being groomed from the tender age of 9 to be a front woman in a political band? Can you double on sax?
Or were you being groomed to be an ice dancer or a ballerina, and those careers are a million to one? A male ballerina is called a basketball player. You bounce a round ball around and jump a lot.
Did the local huge corporation approve what you could be taught? Did the military approve how you lined up in high school gym class?
Many of you were pushed before the world's best researchers. Actually, they're only a bunch of backbiting overworked cowards playing petty cutting politics to keep their jobs and enhance their prestige, and they'll never discover anything real, come on. The worst of these, freeway faculty, are just financially abused peons really.
Now can we get to the big cash sting? You've been sunk with monstrous debts that some of you can only pay off by working for the Man for decades. Some education! It keeps you politically in line and your hair short and your breasts pushed in or else you're thrown onto the street. Your parents were seriously duped into thinking massive wealth lies in this direction. P.S. they are still hiring trained welders if you need a survival job.
"They're still trying to get an education - INCREASE THE DISINCENTIVES!!!!"
"But Master, we can't. The costs are already astronomical. The price of a diploma is maxed out..."
"There is no max you fool! Do as you're told! We must stop them from getting an education! An educated population would never stand for what we've got planned! Raise the costs now!"
"Yes Master."
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
"U.S. Department of Education
Institute of Education Sciences
FAST FACTS
Question:
What are the trends in the cost of college education?
Response:
For the 2009–10 academic year, annual prices for undergraduate tuition, room, and board were estimated to be $12,804 at public institutions and $32,184 at private institutions. Between 1999–2000 and 2009–10, prices for undergraduate tuition, room, and board at public institutions rose 37 percent, and prices at private institutions rose 25 percent, after adjustment for inflation.
SOURCE:U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. (2011). Digest of Education Statistics, 2010 (NCES 2011-015), Chapter 3 .
http://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=76
ALL student loan debt should be forgiven.
America needs to reconsider the importance of a college education. I don't think my undergraduate History degree will have been worth it. Thankfully, my debt will be less than $10,000. I'll likely get a job working with disabled people; something in which I can help others with and feel good about. When I have kids and it comes time to consider career paths, skilled trades and technicial schools (along with military and Catholic vocations) are going to be on the table. I have friends with $30,000+ debt and a liberal arts degree to show for it. The arts are certainly important, but spending so much is impractical.
Speaking as a World War II vet, and a member of the older generation, I say that we in the older generation owe the young generation an education. Therefore, you who have been unfairly stuck with an education debt, DO NOT EVER PAY IT BACK. Let the cost come out of the obscene profits of the banks that are too big to fail. That will cut them down to a reasonable size.
When higher ed was free at California's excellent university system anyone, without money, could earn a degree and go on for a master's or PhD if they wished. The result was a creative explosion in Silicon Valley and the arts and a burgeoning California economy. All of America could see results like these if taxpayer funds were used to cover all post-high schooling training and education.
I saw a FB photo of a young woman with a sign saying she works hard to put herself through college, pays her loans by working and lives beneath her means to save some money and goes without gadgets in order to do so. She says she is working hard to scrape by and doesn't need help or a handout.
She forgets that a person of her evident strength of character and fortitude should not be scraping by, but thriving. And fine, many of us are comfortable enough. But two things:
What about other people? And:
What about ten years from now?
Drivers need to look ahead so they can respond to what is *coming*. If we keep going the direction we are headed, where will we end up? Most people who don't understand OWS or occupy colleges forgot to look ahead. Some people can see beyond the ends of their noses to see other people and the future.
Keep 'the masses' uneducated, subordinate, and enslaved so that the 1% can maintain their control of America!
Of the 4 classes in French society, 1781: the nobles, the clergy, the military, and everyone else.. the unwashed masses, it was only when the young men of the clergy choked on the hypocrisy of the official church and the elite that the revolution could begin. When the young idealists of the religious class became critical, turned against the abuses of the rich, then the military found it acceptable to rebel. Isn't it about time to hear something loud and clear from our own young members of the church? Where is there moral outrage? Why are they not looking at the tenets of their faith and judging the elite as criminals? The oath to poverty has its good merit for all of mankind, for it kills greed, usury, waste, and promotes frugality, and assures that there is enough for all our fellow travelers. Where are the young whose interest is in the actual benefits of religious teaching? Make your faith live because we need you now.