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Any Given Sunday
Last September, I was at some off-the-record Washington dinner and happened to be at the table of a Democratic Congressman. He'd just gotten back from recess in his district, where he'd been subjected to the full Tea Party treatment. As he described the rage he'd witnessed, it was clear he was spooked. I remember thinking he was more scared of voting for the healthcare bill than he was of voting against it, and that was going to be a problem.
I thought about that Congressman this past Sunday as I watched more than 700 protesters from National People's Action gather on the front lawn at the home of Gregory Baer, deputy counsel for the Bank Regulatory and Public Policy Group at Bank of America. NPA was coming from the other end of the spectrum from the Tea Party, and was there to demand a meeting with Baer's boss, the bank's CEO, Brian Moynihan. They were black and brown and white, senior citizens and little kids sitting on shoulders and lots of teenagers. They had bullhorns and signs and chanted "Bank of America! Bad for America!" (which, I promise, sounds better as a chant than it reads on the page). To hush the crowd, organizers would raise their clenched fists, and instantly it would fall silent. This was disciplined bedlam: like some crazy hybrid of a hip-hop show and a picket line.
At first, it appeared that Baer was not home. But then one of his neighbors pointed him out, sitting in his car anonymously watching the proceedings. Once identified, Baer darted up his driveway and into his house, as the crowd chanted, "Shame! Shame!" He refused to meet or speak with the small leadership team or to call his boss to ask for a meeting.
I'm dispositionally inclined to cringe at actions like this: I don't like conflict; I feel bad for the dude who's having his Sunday ruined. But I got over that real quick when Trenda Kennedy of Springfield, Illinois, took the bullhorn on Baer's steps. "In America, every seven seconds one of our homes goes into foreclosure," she said. "My home is one of those!"
After losing her job in 2008, Kennedy fell behind on her payments, and last summer Bank of America foreclosed on her home. "Last November," Kennedy said, "my 20-year-old son died...tragically in a car accident. Thirty minutes after the coroner left, I got a phone call from Annette at Bank of America. I told her about the tragedy that had just happened to our family. Annette did not offer her condolences. Instead she said, This call is from a debt collector, and it may be recorded or monitored."
Sunday wasn't the first direct action NPA and its allies have undertaken, and it wasn't the last. The next day, as part of the "Showdown on K Street," activists stalled traffic on K Street and entered the office of Democratic lobbyist Tony Podesta. A hundred people from a Massachusetts group called the Alliance to Develop Power occupied Senator Scott Brown's office after his staffers had ignored repeated requests for a meeting to discuss foreclosures and financial reform. All of this is part of a nationwide series of direct actions called "Showdown in America," spearheaded by NPA, the People Improving Communities through Organizing (PICO) network and the Service Employees International (SEIU). The campaign aims to dismantle the entire Wall Street-Washington corporatist axis, which gave us the financial crisis, the bailouts and 7 million foreclosures since 2008, a million of which have ended in repossession.
It's about damn time. We have witnessed the greatest implosion of American capitalism in nearly a century, and the only grassroots movement the cataclysm seems to have birthed is a right-wing populist backlash. When the country suffered a trauma that massively discredited the establishment rulers, the Democratic Party became the establishment. And progressive groups in DC, under stern White House orders not to cause trouble (don't show up at his door! he's a donor! we might nominate him for something!), descended into what one organizer calls "grotesque transactionalism."
"Showdown in America" is a rebuke to that tactic. Choosing direct action does not mean abandoning legislative mobilization, but it articulates a broader vision than just support for this or that amendment. "Now is not a time for tinkering," said NPA's executive director, George Goehl, at the organization's conference earlier that day. "We're not here to eke out a few victories along the margins. To make suffering a little less worse for people.... The brutal facts are that we cannot begin to build an economy for all of us when we have a democracy that works only for corporations and members of Congress."
If we're going to get reform on the scale we need, bank lobbyists and members of Congress alike have to be confronted with the terrifying thought that the system from which they profit might just be run over-that 700 angry protesters might show up on their lawn any given Sunday.
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10 Comments so far
Show All700 angry protesters who won't get 5 seconds on network or cable TV. People I know rail against the liberal media; if there is such a liberal bias, why don't protests such as these get any air time? Progressives cannot win. Every aspect of the body politic is stacked against anyone who isn't rich. Want something to do on a Sunday? Find out where the bigwigs play golf.
"I'm dispositionally inclined to cringe at actions like this: I don't like conflict; I feel bad for the dude who's having his Sunday ruined."
WTF?!?!? Christopher Hayes, whoever the hell you are, you are a fucking coward! I feel bad for the people these motherfuckers are throwing out of their homes. Get a fucking spine, you witless twit!
When corporatists and pol's cross the line by destroying lives we are required by conscience and decency to intervene. This is just the kind of preliminary action that is needed. Top criminals in business and government must feel the presence of the people in their immediate lives and understand that they do not exist apart from the people they are destroying. By continuing their criminal behaviors do they place their lives at risk? That is the exact question they must ask themselves.
Thank you, Stone. I can't wait to see top CEOs in their orange jump suits marched off to court. Meanwhile, they are people too. We all are. They do need to be held accountable for their actions and we can heal them by doing just that (and they do need healed big time).
I am reminded about the transformation of Tyco CEO, Dennis Koslowski, who was transformed by his incarceration into a genuine human being. We need that.
These people are real people too, just like us. They need healing even more than we do. They need to own up to what they have done, just like us (even if at a much smaller level). We need to stop blaming, blaming blaming.... We need to unite as humans in a tough place.
So many of these CD entries of late have become, blame, blame blame. So many blame Obama for what has not been his fault. He is not in charge; the corporations are. He has no say - we can hope his "better angels" speek though him, but ...do they speak through us?
Doll
Whether the media covers these in-your-face protests against the enemies of the people-which we all know they won't-is not as important as whether those scum feel any real fear that they might be physically harmed, go to jail, or at least be publicly harassed and disgraced in front of their community, which is what the article's author and Stone, are getting at.
By the same token, the reaction to more of these protest/confrontations against corporate scum and the pols they own will more likely be, as Michael Moore found out over time, the villains simply retreating behind gated communities and private security to prevent these protests from even happening in the future.
YES.
It is SO gratifying to hear the clarion call for direct action.
What I HATE the most about the left is the passivity and armchair whining.
FINALLY.
I can't help but wonder how many of the people who were protesting had voted for the Republican and democratic conservative politicians who support the right of the corporate crooks to lie , cheat, and gamble all the protesters money and living wage jobs away? And how many of the demonstrators support the immoral, illegal wars that kill innocent people and drain our economy?
We should begin circling the White House by the thousands, 24-7, carrying signs that read ARBEITEN MACHT FREI. But the asshole Harvard Law graduate inside would need to ask some aide what those signs mean.
Act soon. What's left of the frightened middle class will quickly accept status as turnkeys while the neighboring poor they are ashamed to look in the face will be herded into railroad cars. I can already hear the steam whistle on the locomotives as HUD is placed on the auction block and knives are sharpening to geld Social Security.
Heads up, Congress.
Jesse Ventura, what do you have to say about these last new revelations?
YES! I like this. One corporate household at a time. Yes, it would be terrorizing to see a mob of angry people outside of one's home, but guess what? These people were organized and controlled and they had personal stories to tell.
That is what will stay in this B of A guy's head, and what needs to be in his head. You CEOs made a lot of money out of the populace. What part of "we are a nation, and what happens to the least of us will eventuallly happen to the most?".....do you not understand?
No homes, no tax base, = no public services. CEOs, I hope you never need an ambulance, or have a fire, or diss public schools because your kids are going to private ones. Without the "people' there is no tax base, no bank accounts. NO CUSTOMERS. One can't exist wiothout the other.
Corporations, your Golden Goose, it seems, has been warming an empty shell.