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What's Behind the Scorn for the Wall Street Protests?
It's unsurprising that establishment media outlets have been condescending, dismissive and scornful of the ongoing protests on Wall Street. Any entity that declares itself an adversary of prevailing institutional power is going to be viewed with hostility by establishment-serving institutions and their loyalists. That's just the nature of protests that take place outside approved channels, an inevitable by-product of disruptive dissent: those who are most vested in safeguarding and legitimizing establishment prerogatives (which, by definition, includes establishment media outlets) are going to be hostile to those challenges. As the virtually universal disdain in these same circles for WikiLeaks (and, before that, for the Iraq War protests) demonstrated: the more effectively adversarial it is, the more establishment hostility it's going to provoke.
(Occupywallst.org)
Nor is it surprising that much of the most vocal criticisms of the Wall Street protests has come from some self-identified progressives, who one might think would be instinctively sympathetic to the substantive message of the protesters. In an excellent analysis entitled "Why Establishment Media & the Power Elite Loathe Occupy Wall Street," Kevin Gosztola chronicles how much of the most scornful criticisms have come from Democratic partisans who -- like the politicians to whom they devote their fealty -- feign populist opposition to Wall Street for political gain.
Some of this anti-protest posturing is just the all-too-familiar New-Republic-ish eagerness to prove one's own Seriousness by castigating anyone to the left of, say, Dianne Feinstein or John Kerry; for such individuals, multi-term, pro-Iraq-War Democratic Senator-plutocrats define the outermost left-wing limit of respectability. Also at play is the jingoistic notion that street protests are valid in Those Bad Contries but not in free, democratic America.
A siginificant aspect of this progressive disdain is grounded in the belief that the only valid form of political activism is support for Democratic Party candidates, and a corresponding desire to undermine anything that distracts from that goal. Indeed, the loyalists of both parties have an interest in marginalizing anything that might serve as a vehicle for activism outside of fealty to one of the two parties (Fox News' firing of Glenn Beck was almost certainly motivated by his frequent deviation from the GOP party-line orthodoxy which Fox exists to foster).
The very idea that the one can effectively battle Wall Street's corruption and control by working for the Democratic Party is absurd on its face: Wall Street's favorite candidate in 2008 was Barack Obama, whose administration -- led by a Wall Street White House Chief of Staff and Wall-Street-subservient Treasury Secretary and filled to the brim with Goldman Sachs officials -- is now working hard to protect bankers from meaningful accountability (and though he's behind Wall Street's own Mitt Romney in the Wall Street cash sweepstakes this year, Obama is still doing well); one of Wall Street's most faithful servants is Chuck Schumer, the money man of the Democratic Party; and the second-ranking Senate Democrat acknowledged -- when Democrats controlled the Congress -- that the owners of Congress are bankers. There are individuals who impressively rail against the crony capitalism and corporatism that sustains Wall Street's power, but they're no match for the party apparatus that remains fully owned and controlled by it.
But much of this progressive criticism consists of relatively (ostensibly) well-intentioned tactical and organizational critiques of the protests: there wasn't a clear unified message; it lacked a coherent media strategy; the neo-hippie participants were too off-putting to Middle America; the resulting police brutality overwhelmed the message, etc. etc. That's the high-minded form which most progressive scorn for the protests took: it's just not professionally organized or effective.
Some of these critiques are ludicrous. Does anyone really not know what the basic message is of this protest: that Wall Street is oozing corruption and criminality and its unrestrained political power -- in the form of crony capitalism and ownership of political institutions -- is destroying financial security for everyone else? Beyond that, criticizing protesters for the prominence of police brutality stories is pure victim-blaming (and, independently, having police brutality highlighted is its own benefit).
Most importantly, very few protest movements enjoy perfect clarity about tactics or command widespread support when they begin; they're designed to spark conversation, raise awareness, attract others to the cause, and build those structural planks as they grow and develop. Dismissing these incipient protests because they lack fully developed, sophisticated professionalization is akin to pronouncing a three-year-old child worthless because he can't read Schopenhauer: those who are actually interested in helping it develop will work toward improving those deficiencies, not harp on them in order to belittle its worth.
That said, some of these organizational/tactical critiques are valid enough as far as they go; the protests could probably be more effective with some more imaginative, concerted and savvy organizational strategies. The problem is these criticisms don't go very far -- at all.
* * * * *
There's a vast and growing apparatus of intimidation designed to deter and control citizen protests. The most that's allowed is to assemble with the permission of state authorities and remain roped off in sequestered, out-of-the-way areas: the Orwellian-named free speech zones. Anything that is even remotely disruptive or threatening is going to be met with aggressive force: pepper spray, mass arrests by highly militarized urban police forces, and aggressive prosecutions. Recall the wild excesses of force in connection with the 2008 RNC Convention in Minneapolis (I reported on those firsthand); the overzealous prosecutions of civil disobedience activists like Aaron Swartz, environmentalist Tim DeChristopher, and Dan Choi; the war being waged on whistleblowers for the crime of exposing high-level wrongdoing; or the treatment of these Wall Street protesters.
Financial elites and their political servants are well aware that exploding wealth inequality, pervasive economic anxiety, and increasing hostility toward institutions of authority (and corresponding realization that voting fixes very little of this) are likely to bring London-style unrest -- and worse -- to American soil; it was just two weeks ago that New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg warned that the unemployment crisis could trigger "riots." Even the complacent American citizenry -- well-trained in learned impotence and acquiescence to (even reverence for) those most responsible for their plight -- is going to reach a tipping point of unrest. There are numerous weapons of surveillance and coercion that have been developed over the last decade in anticipation of that unrest: most of it justified in the name of Terrorism, but all of it featuring decidedly dual-use domestic capability (illustrating what I mean is this chart showing how extensively the Patriot Act has been used in non-Terrorist cases, and how rarely it has been used for Terrorism).
In sum, there is a sprawling apparatus of federal and local militarized police forces and private corporate security designed to send this message: if you participate in protests or other forms of dissent outside of harmless approved channels, you're going to be harmed in numerous ways. As Yves Smith put it this week:
I’m beginning to wonder whether the right to assemble is effectively dead in the US. No one who is a wage slave (which is the overwhelming majority of the population) can afford to have an arrest record, even a misdemeanor, in this age of short job tenures and rising use of background checks.
This is all designed to deter any meaningful challenges to the government and corporate institutions which are suffocating them, to bully those who consider such challenges into accepting its futility. And it works. In an excellent essay on the Wall Street protests, Dennis Perrin writes:
The dissident children were easily, roughly swept aside. Their hearts are in a good place. Their bodies a minor nuisance. They'll stream back to prove their resolve. And they'll get pepper sprayed and beaten down again. And again.
I admire these kids. They're off their asses. Agitating. Arguing. Providing a living example. There's passion and feeling in their dissent. They're willing to be punished. It's easy to mock them, but how many of you would take their place? . . . .
Yet I have doubts. The class war from above demoralizes as much as it incites. Countless people have surrendered. Faded from view. To demonstrate or occupy corporate turf doesn't seem like a wise option. You'll get beaten and arrested. For what? Making mortgage payments is tough enough.
Given the costs and risks one incurs from participating in protests like this -- to say nothing of the widespread mockery one receives -- it's natural that most of the participants will be young and not yet desperate to cling to institutional stability. It's also natural that this cohort won't be well-versed (or even interested) in the high arts of media messaging and leadership structures. Democratic Party precinct captains, MBA students in management theory and corporate communications, and campaign media strategists aren't the ones who will fuel protests like this; it takes a mindset of passionate dissent and a willingness to remove oneself from the safe confines of institutional respectability.
So, yes, the people willing to engage in protests like these at the start may lack (or reject the need for) media strategies, organizational hierarchies, and messaging theories. But they're among the very few people trying to channel widespread anger into activism rather than resignation, and thus deserve support and encouragement -- and help -- from anyone claiming to be sympathetic to their underlying message. As Perrin put it:
This part of Michigan [where I live] was once militant. From organized labor to student agitation. Now there's nothing. Shop after shop goes under. Strip malls abandoned. Legalized loan shark parlors spread. Dollar stores hang on. Parking lots riots of weeds. Roads in serious disrepair. Those with jobs feel lucky to be employed. Everyone else is on their own. A general resignation prevails. Life limps by.
Personally, I think there's substantial value even in those protests that lack "exit goals" and "messaging strategies" and the rest of the platitudes from Power Point presentations by mid-level functionaries at corporate conferences. Some injustices simply need anger and dissent expressed for its own sake, to make clear that there are citizens who are aware of it and do not accept it.
In Vancouver yesterday, Dick Cheney was met by angry protests chanting "war criminal" at him while he tried to hawk his book, which prompted arrests and an ugly-for-Canada police battle that then became part of the story of his visit. Is that likely to result in Cheney's arrest or sway huge numbers of people to change how they think? No. But it's vastly preferable to allowing him to traipse around the world as though he's a respectable figure unaccompanied by anger over his crimes -- anger necessarily expressed outside of the institutions that have failed to check or punish (but rather have shielded and legitimized) those crimes. And the same is true of Wall Street's rampant criminality.
But for those who believe that protests are only worthwhile if they translate into quantifiable impact: the lack of organizational sophistication or messaging efficacy on the part of the Wall Street protest is a reason to support it and get involved in it, not turn one's nose up at it and join in the media demonization. That's what one actually sympathetic to its messaging (rather than pretending to be in order more effectively to discredit it) would do. Anyone who looks at mostly young citizens marching in the street protesting the corruption of Wall Street and the harm it spawns, and decides that what is warranted is mockery and scorn rather than support, is either not seeing things clearly or is motivated by objectives other than the ones being presented.
Read more at Salon.com
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145 Comments so far
Show Allglenn,
why don't we just call it something new, instead of imagining we live in a republic w/ a bill of rights and constitutional protections. hey why don't we just call it - inverted totalitarianism. sounds good. managed democracy and superpower combined.
oh right, that's hyperbole.
...peace...
"Exit goals' and "messaging strategies" define Team Obama's vote-getting machine.
Achieving action that results in progressive change requires a real grass roots movement that those camped out in Manhatten appear to be creating.
The hostility to the Occupy Wall Street protests reveals the authoritarian mindset of the MSM, as well as the country as a whole. This is also clear in the enthusiasm with which the media treats comparable protests by the Tea Party. The contrasting treatment of the two movements is a case study in what a leading scholar of authoritarianism, Robert Altemeyer, identifies as "authoritarian submission” and “authoritarian aggression.”
By "authoritarian submission," he means a high degree of submission to the authorities who are perceived to be established and legitimate in the society of which one is a member. "Authoritarian aggression" is characterized by hostility toward people who are perceived to be disapproved by the established authorities.
This double standard is at the crux of authoritarianism.
Anybody questioning the MSM's discounting the Wall Street demonstrators needs to ask themselves: What part of THE REVOLUTION WILL NOT BE TELEVISED did I not understand ?
A phenomenon related to authoritarian submission is victim identification syndrome whereby a torture victim over time begins to realign himself to identifying with the torturer's motives and accepting the acts of torture as just and deserved. This is understood as a means of finding some kind of social relationship and sense of belonging, even a perverted one like this, instead of hanging in limbo and being punished for no reason. This is probably the reason why solitary confinement is the worst torture of all, because the victim doesn't even have the human contact the torturer provides. Hellish, all of it.
Agree the economic/political/media establishment is authoritarian but disagree with the divide and conquer bullshit, a lot of "tea partiers" are FAR more supportive of occupy Wall St. than the worthless Dimocraps many here STILL shill for even at this late hour:
http://venturacountyteaparty.ning.com/profiles/blogs/occupy-wall-street-is-going-nationwide?xg_source=facebook
Also a contingent of Marines is heading their to PROTECT the protestors from police. Grass roots Americans are not the enemy, the suits in the suites are, many of whom probably identify as "Democract" which is no different than Republican.
This mindset was operating during the early Vietnam war protests. The response of the authorities and the media was to blame it all on the protesters, arrest them and abuse them. But they just wouldn't go away. Gradually the protesters developed effective spokespeople, strong messages, and public supporters from the religious, professional, and sports worlds. It became impossible to ignore their message. And eventually the weight of public opinion tipped in their favor. We should all be supporting these early protests and hoping they will take a parallel path. One of the best tools to bring legitimacy is the hand-held video. Anyone who viewed the slow-motion film of Deputy Inspector Bologna pepper-spraying defenseless women already held behind a barrier would find it difficult to blame the victims this time, no matter what the media say.
Great comment, Old Blue.
Old Blue
I,. also, remember when during the Vietnam conflict ... "the protesters developed effective spokespeople, strong messages, and public supporters from the religious, professional, and sports worlds." Unfortunately the same thing cannot be said today. Every so often I have Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses come to my door in an attempt to force their religious beliefs upon me. When I ask them why they are not doing what religious leaders such as the Berrigan brothers and William Sloan Coffin and MLK Jr. did when they protested against the Vietnam conflict they feebly tell me that they are supposedly speaking out against what the U.S. military is doing to the people of the Middle East by pointing out passages of the bible to the various people who live in the neighborhood.
As for the sports world there were probably more athletes who spoke out against the war back then as compared to the overwhelming majority of athletes today, both amateur or professional, who are conservative and who are pretty much in lockstep with the authoritarian mindset who rule both their world as well as the one that exists outside their sphere of influence. The military certainly is aware of this as evidenced by the plethora of military commercials that one sees on the networks that broadcast football, both on the professional and the collegiate level.
Errol--
The big difference between the 60s-70s and now is that then we had a draft which made every young American man likely to be shipped off to die "knee-high in elephant grass" as I believe Ike put it. The result of those protests was not lost on the MICC, and immediately after the US bailed out of Vietnam Congress ended the draft. The result of that was as the MICC expected: young Americans do not have an unwilling conscript, or the threat of one, in any of our wars for empire so they just don't get fired up the way their grandparents did.
The fact that the MIC now controls Congress so thoroughly with the kind of money that couldn't even be imagined just 30 years ago is the icing on the cake.
Rainborowe
I certainly do not disagree with the first part of your point as I was one of those people who was subjected to that draft those many years ago and as a consequence did end up in that place called Vietnam. And because these young Americans do not have, as you correctly note, an unwilling conscript that then means that they do not have to worry about being shipped over to fight in Afghanistan. But the example that you give also points to yet another reason why so many Americans do not act and that is because it would not be in their own self-interests to do so. Of course if they had an ounce of integrity they would be protesting against America's foreign policy because they would be against the idea of the U.S. slaughtering many innocent civilians overseas for absolutely no justifiable reason whatsoever. In other words, it would be the right and moral thing for them to do. But that would mean that they would have to actually engage in the art of critical thinking and to have [gasp!] empathy for those who have been the victims of American aggression. That, unfortunately, is something that very few Americans are willing to do these days because they probably think that it would not be viewed as being patriotic in these conservative times that we live in.
The draft wasn't the only difference by a long shot.
But they do blame the victims. Read the comments at youtube on some of these videos. They generally fall into two categories. One group is outraged at the police, and the other insists that these protesters had it coming, either for generally being "dirty hippies," or because they must have done something that provoked the police. Some commenters go so far as to say that these hippies deserve far worse. The sentiments are strikingly authoritarian.
Welcome to America, many of us have been dealing with this mindset for a long time. many of our leaders Fred Hampton, MLK, Medgar Evers gave their lives at the hands of these people. Sorry to quote a song but I can't help thinking of the Talking Heads as i write this........................"this ain't no disco, or CBGB's,this ain't no fooling around"
Check out the Longshore article today.
For all their good intentions, the Wall Street protestors are getting their asses kicked.
Out on the pacific Coast, the ILWU is kickin ass, but only 15 comments on that one.
I guess the noble losers are far more interesting than the militant working class.
The Longshoremen are great.
It helps to have background information about the machinations of the Wall street crime syndicate, and since most people dont have a lot of time to read books, documentary style video presentations are indispensible to getting the message out.
_____________________________________________________
This http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QG9yDpfNzWo
______________________________________________________
is very informative if you can just ignore the presenter's bombastic style. Really guys, you want good synoptic overviews of what the financial terrorists are doing, videos like this are good tools. It aint "perfect" but dirty water in the desert is better than no water at all. Pass it on.
BTW, Matt Taibbi and Nomi Prins appear in this, and if they think this is a worthwhile vehicle to use to get the message out, that is good enough for me. How about all of you? Wouldnt sneering at this message-vehicle be the same thing as sneering at the Wall St. protesters because it isnt "perfect?"
I don't know about JV. He might be as serious and sincere as bad angina, but I can't help but think he's got to be a part of the big lie. Its not his 'bombast' that bothers me, its the hyper-sensationalism of all mainstream media — which he is now a part of — and the hyperbole he and folks like Alex Jones bring to their 'conspiracy' presentations which force me to believe they can't be fully in earnest.
If Mr. JV and AJ were honestly trying to awaken the populace to real dangers and real corruption, instead of steering them according to some unspoken agenda, (ostensibly pre-approved by the media's masters on Wall Street), would they really act and behave like they do? I may be wrong, but somehow I don't think so. They come across to me as people just selling something, not as active and concerned citizens — and if it were really a danger to the power- hierarchy, would this be a product that would be allowed to be promoted?
Thanks for posting anyway, Kitaj. I did watch most of it, and actually found it to be generally accurate and informative. However, my concerns about JV remain. Is he just omitting some key piece of information? Is there a witness who is dropping 'the necessary puzzle piece', which will ultimately protect the interests of Wall Street in court? I honestly can't say I know.
To summarize, I don't believe valid news makes it into the mainstream media. I've learned to trust *nothing* which is approved for general American audiences.
Cheers Kitaj
Excellent comment old blue. that's where I'm at on this. You are quite accurate in your description of the genesis of the mass protests that took place during the Vietnam War. Also all one has to do is look at pictures of the Marches down south by the Reverend Martin Luther King across the bridge in Selma to see it was just a handful of people. Prairie Fires start small.
Excellent article. We shouldn't be surprised at the hostility the protest has generated among so many Amereichans and the MSM - as a poster above stated re. authoritarian submission, the number of "good Germans" in this country as it becomes more and more overtly fascist will continue to rise. We are brainwashed from the earliest age to worship at the altar of Capitalism, which - by extension - means we worship corporations and thus the Plutocratic Elite that run this country.
I respect the hell out of these principalled souls facing the beatings and pepper spray there on Wall Street. Shocked at the amount of backlash they are getting, even from fellow Ameriechans that are being raped by the very Wall Street gangsters they are protesting? Not at all.
Excellent article, Glenn. One of the best essays on the importance and necessity of street protests I've read. And the importance of the fact that he really gets how the fascist elite has been planning for hungry, angry, and dispossessed Americans for a long time cannot be overstressed. That was really what the PATRIOT Act was all about, coercion and control of the US populace, not protection of that populace from the phantom menace of "Islamic terrorism." And yes, the worse the economy gets, the more courage it takes to get arrested, because it could impair your employment prospects--although here it should have been pointed out that if you are arrested in a mass action and you are all in solidarity in not giving your real names, it will never go on your record. That should be the aim.
re: "In sum, there is a sprawling apparatus of federal and local militarized police forces and private corporate security designed to send this message: if you participate in protests or other forms of dissent outside of harmless approved channels, you're going to be harmed in numerous ways. "
In sum, indeed. Welcome to the oligarchic dictatorship of the USV (upside down A). In sum, this is pretty much *all that's left* of our national identity. Give in, give up, love and obey your corporate masters, or rot in hell.
And don't forget to vote Democratic so we can put Vmerica back on its head and stop those mean and greedy Republicans (wink wink nudge nudge)!
March on, there are many with you in spirit.
I wonder why he bothered to mention the New Republic. Of course it is not sympathetic to the "occupation." After all, it has been a right-wing rag for decades.
The dirty f#@*ing hippies were right!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKEZoY-TMG4&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Howard Zinn, in his book Peoples History of America showed how True Change happened outsde the 2 parties and was pushed by so-called fringe parties until critical mass was reached and the dems specifically were FORCED to accept progressive change -
Expecting to 'take the party over from the inside' as one 'not as smart as he thinks he is' progressive talking head continually pushes is disenginuous at the very least - and proves the authors contention that No one is allowed to be to the left of the dims.
Zinn showed that working with the dims was akin to throwing your energies down a black hole - energy gone and no change - Believe in that!
If the dems were actually responsive to We the People they would push for Instant Runoff Elections which would increase turnout favoring the dems - but they don't because they are the 'acceptable' face of fascism -
Aka - the good cop in the good cop/bad cop scam -
mtdon
What an excellent video! Unfortunately, the likelihood that this irreverent but accurate clip will ever be shown on the corporate airwaves is slim to none, with slim having departed on the train days ago. Perhaps Democracy Now! may allow its audience to see this gem of a video.
Thanks again for the link. Power to the people!
Here's another great protest video
The 1st video above showed the cause of our problems -
This video shows the answer - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yge311sFhC8&feature=youtube_gdata_player
mtdon
Do you have any idea who the narrator is on the first video?
Joeyess is his youtube name - he plays all the instruments, wrote the words and music and narrates.............
Still waiting for another gem from Joeyess but that one is my favorite 'new song'
And thosr who say Protest Songs don't exist in todays world haven't heard that song.
Well, you can try to be left of the Dems, but then you'll just lose even worse. The only people who want the pseudosocalism of the far left is the 29% or whatever of die hard 'progressives' in the US who are somehow certain that it just needs to be done right with the right smart people, and that way you can overcome human nature and the innate contradictions and flaws of attempting to avoid the information problem outlined by Hayek and reproven every day everywhere it's attempted.
Bullshit. Mixed economies function best. there are many examples from all over the world. You are spewing ignorant right wing lies.
The type of unregulated capitalism that you espouse always results in a highly stratified society and an economy warcked by booms and busts. Capitalism, with or without regulation, leads to imperialism and wars of empire.
Finally, recent polls show over half of young people favor socialism. Your leftover Reaganite rhetoric no longer carries the day. What you consider self evident truths, young people in America see as obvious lies.
dreamjoehill
Very well said.
I like what I'm hearing from you dreamjoehill. It would help me if you could post a link to the recent poll about young people and socialism. In my group of daily contacts, socialism is still a bad word, though I doubt anyone knows why they detest the sound of the word. I am alone in seeing that in our modern society, probably 1 in 4 adults need to actually be "working" as nurses, street cleaners, etc. Tech can do much of the rest if we were to cooperate instead of worshiping competition. And take away the stigma of not mindlessly "working". In our technological society, some organization would make life altogether pleasant for most everyone on this planet. It is within our grasp. If we were to collectively value human life and not just how much value can be extracted from a life to serve corporate profits.
Socialism should only be a bad word to those who are seriously mentally ill (sick enough to bathe in money while babies starve). It really is time to move on.
I love your comment:
What you consider self evident truths, young people in America see as obvious lies.
peace.
I want to say that, while I support these protests fully, and their message is dear to my heart, I don't think we will ever have success through actions in which we go sit on the doorsteps of the "powerful" and beg them to change their ways. To beg for change from the very politicians and financiers who made the current system, and made themselves rich with it, is to assume that the power to shape the world is in their hands. This is simply not true. The only reason the "powerful" have power is that the rest of us, from the highly paid CEO down to the bank teller at the window in your local branch, right down to the janitor, are actively and willingly going out every day and doing the work of perpetuating their system. Until that stops, no amount of railing at their doorstep will be effective, because the mechanisms that keep them powerful will still be intact.
What, then, will work. I say it is nothing short of a mass shift in consciousness among the people who actually do all the work. The power of the "powerful" would simply dissolve if the apparatus by which is maintained were to simply grind to a halt. Just think how impotent the dreaded Hitler would have been without a huge number of other people, bureaucrats, soldiers etc. who were willing to do the actual work of the holocaust. That is the key for us: we the people are the ones who actually do all of the work, and until we all decide, together, to do that work differently, nothing will change.
I rather doubt that these protesters are "...sit(ting) on the doorsteps of the "powerful" and beg(ging) them to change their ways..." I don't think they expect to evoke any change in the behavior of the Wall-Streeters. They are throwing their vulnerable selves on the harsh, uncompromising cogs and wheels of the machine under the coldly amused eyes of those very people in hopes of attracting the attention of the rest of us...who, seeing this, might be aroused to join them and make it a mass movement.
Which is what you seem to be saying is what you want to happen. The way you're characterizing them, you sound like the disdainful progressives that Greenwald is describing.
I mostly agree with your post; however, the question is how to change the opinions and beliefs of the masses.
These things don't happen by magic. Organization and action is required. Unfortunately, many feel that they can just wave around the words "change in consciousness" and that will be enough.
Events like OccupyWall St are the beginnings of this change in consciousness, but the fight against Wall St must be taken into every union, church, PTA, - everywhere!
There's too much magical thinking about consciousness change and not enough nuts and bolts oragnizing, but magical thinking takes a lot less work, I suppose. Where are the armies of the unemployed, the Nat'l Organization of Dispossesed Homeowners?
It seems that the most of people of the US have lost their ability to engage in mass actions in defense of their own interests. This is the "consciousness" that needs to change.
It's unfortunate that all you can see is "railing at the doorstep". You speak of "a mass shift in consciousness among....the people" as if this just comes about by some sort of magical "decision" on the part of everybody, presumably all around the same time more or less. I don't disagree with the fantasy as far as the fantasy goes. But thats all it is. Real change NEVER comes about in the way in which you have described it here. Not even within a single individual. You make a decison one day, I'm going to make a resolution, never to do such and such ever again. How far does it get you? If you're honest, not far at all. It takes extreme effort and commitment and persistence just to change one little bad habit within one's self. Now you're saying we could just all decide to "work differently" and this will create the change necesary here?. You're wanting the end of the journey before you've taken the first necesary steps to get anywhere at all. Then one still has to take all the necesary steps along the way. All the while doing some pretty difficult things, Nobody knows what that might be. There might be some wise people, there's certainly a whole lot of people with a ton of information. BUT NOBODY KNOWS WHAT THE NECESARY STEPS ALONG THE WAY WILL BE A PRIORI. This is not a simple calculus problem. There is much I could write here, instead I'll just say this, I guarantee you every single person would have a different interpretation of what "work differently" means. But the way you get people to stop doing the work of the oppressors must start somewhere. There must be a movement within and without. It doesn't just come from nowhere. Now whether it comes from here in NYC? I don't know. You don't either. Nobody does. Thats why we call them fools when they just leap in. So please, don't try to crush a seed before it even has a ghost of a chance to sprout, even less of a chance to grow a few inches, much less mature. Unless of course this is your true aim here? Perhaps whether you know it or not.
for the most part, I endorse your direction...
this sentence, however, is a problem for me:
~The only reason the "powerful" have power is that the rest of us, from the highly paid CEO down to the bank teller at the window in your local branch, right down to the janitor, are actively and willingly going out every day and doing the work of perpetuating their system. ~
why do people actively and willingly work?
you would need to address property laws, the Sheriff, and his gun...
Well written article by one of the best, Glenn Greenwald. " Its unsurprising that establishment media outlets have been condescending, dismissive and scornful of the ongoing protests on Wall Street"
The same thing happened with the whore MSM during the Vietnam debacle, but unlike Vietnam where the average American was brainwashed into believing the MSM BS that the protesters, whom they demonized as chicken hawks and long haired, violent, commies who were guilty of treason for not supporting the troops, the Wall Street protesters probably have a majority of the average Americans empathetic to their protests. Hang in their Wall Street protesters, you have millions of Americans behind you!
Thanks Glenn,
As the late-stage looting of everything, continues toward its inevitable collapse, the elite powers who run this economy have an intense interest in nurturing feelings of hopelessness and despair among the looted majority, to override any combustible feelings of anger that might develop.
Anyone willing to recall all the Common Dreams commenters who jumped in at the start, to deride and make fun of the Occupy Wall Street protest?
Some of these commenters are genuinely feeling hopeless and disheartened.
Some of these commenters are, in the very well-chosen closing words of Glenn Greenwald's essay, "motivated by objectives other than the ones being presented."
Keep heart, support protest, and keep your ears tuned against the voices that deride and belittle people who try to stand up.
I believe the "scorn" arises from the patheticness of the protest. Pathetic. No other word can decribe the tiny number of people attending the protest.
How many unemployed people are there in NYC? Nearly a million? Even if 1 in 10 of those unemployed turned up to protest then maybe people would sit up and pay attention.
Nope. It's pathetic.
Some of these commenters are genuinely feeling hopeless and disheartened.
Some of these commenters are, in the very well-chosen closing words of Glenn Greenwald's essay, "motivated by objectives other than the ones being presented."
: )
I think that YOU need to think of these actions as SPARK, and not yet the PROTESTS that we actually will soon see. WTF. There is nothing pathetic about this spark.
I look at how quickly the spark ignited during the Arab Spring, and the speed with which the riots in England and Greece grew.
Granted, there may be a spark in Liberty Park, but the material that is being ignited is both green and wet.
This may be pretty similar to how the Vietnam protests started (based on Chomsky's and Zinn's talks about it), often just a dozen people or so, but it grew eventually. I think that's normal for more "organic", errr, organisation. We're probably just too used to the short term, super massive but fake effects of marketing and PR propaganda crap.
Go to hell.
The only thing that's pathetic are the sorry trolls who sit behind their keyboards and demean people who are making a sincere effort at changing our situation, even if there aren't many of them. Maybe if one in ten of your lot would get out of mom's basement, mow some lawns, and buy a bus ticket to NYC things wouldn't be so "pathetic".
say it brother Ben from Eugene. I'll repeat it
"The only thing that's pathetic are the sorry trolls who sit behind their keyboards and demean people who are making a sincere effort at changing our situation"
trolls is the only word I don't agree with you on. I think some folks are just negative. ANY movement, any action be it one or two people against those champagne sipping, coke snorting wall street, money addicted hooligans is reason enough for me to feel better than I did yesterday. ACTION! I'm off to NY tomorrow from California and I'm headed to Wall STreet to join my rag tag, maginificant bastard crew in that park in the Financial district.
Trolls or not well said, Ben.
You have absolutey no right to be a critic of the N.Y. protests unless you have been there!