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Think Occupy Wall St. is a Phase? You Don't Get It
Like the spokesmen for Arab dictators feigning bewilderment over protesters' demands, mainstream television news reporters finally training their attention on the growing Occupy Wall Street protest movement seem determined to cast it as the random, silly blather of an ungrateful and lazy generation of weirdos. They couldn't be more wrong and, as time will tell, may eventually be forced to accept the inevitability of their own obsolescence.
Consider how CNN anchor Erin Burnett, covered the goings on at Zuccotti Park downtown, where the protesters are encamped, in a segment called "Seriously?!" "What are they protesting?" she asked, "nobody seems to know." Like Jay Leno testing random mall patrons on American History, the main objective seemed to be to prove that the protesters didn't, for example, know that the U.S. government has been reimbursed for the bank bailouts. It was condescending and reductionist.
More predictably perhaps, a Fox News reporter appears flummoxed in this outtake from "On the Record," in which the respondent refuses to explain how he wants the protests to "end." Transcending the shallow partisan politics of the moment, the protester explains "As far as seeing it end, I wouldn't like to see it end. I would like to see the conversation continue."
To be fair, the reason why some mainstream news journalists and many of the audiences they serve see the Occupy Wall Street protests as incoherent is because the press and the public are themselves. It is difficult to comprehend a 21st century movement from the perspective of the 20th century politics, media, and economics in which we are still steeped.
In fact, we are witnessing America's first true Internet-era movement, which -- unlike civil rights protests, labor marches, or even the Obama campaign -- does not take its cue from a charismatic leader, express itself in bumper-sticker-length goals and understand itself as having a particular endpoint.
Yes, there are a wide array of complaints, demands, and goals from the Wall Street protesters: the collapsing environment, labor standards, housing policy, government corruption, World Bank lending practices, unemployment, increasing wealth disparity and so on. Different people have been affected by different aspects of the same system -- and they believe they are symptoms of the same core problem.
Are they ready to articulate exactly what that problem is and how to address it? No, not yet. But neither are Congress or the president who, in thrall to corporate America and Wall Street, respectively, have consistently failed to engage in anything resembling a conversation as cogent as the many I witnessed as I strolled by Occupy Wall Street's many teach-ins this morning. There were young people teaching one another about, among other things, how the economy works, about the disconnection of investment banking from the economy of goods and services, the history of centralized interest-bearing currency, the creation and growth of the derivatives industry, and about the Obama administration deciding to settle with, rather than investigate and prosecute the investment banking industry for housing fraud.
Anyone who says he has no idea what these folks are protesting is not being truthful. Whether we agree with them or not, we all know what they are upset about, and we all know that there are investment bankers working on Wall Street getting richer while things for most of the rest of us are getting tougher. What upsets banking's defenders and politicians alike is the refusal of this movement to state its terms or set its goals in the traditional language of campaigns.
That's because, unlike a political campaign designed to get some person in office and then close up shop (as in the election of Obama), this is not a movement with a traditional narrative arc. As the product of the decentralized networked-era culture, it is less about victory than sustainability. It is not about one-pointedness, but inclusion and groping toward consensus. It is not like a book; it is like the Internet.
Occupy Wall Street is meant more as a way of life that spreads through contagion, creates as many questions as it answers, aims to force a reconsideration of the way the nation does business and offers hope to those of us who previously felt alone in our belief that the current economic system is broken.
But unlike a traditional protest, which identifies the enemy and fights for a particular solution, Occupy Wall Street just sits there talking with itself, debating its own worth, recognizing its internal inconsistencies and then continuing on as if this were some sort of new normal. It models a new collectivism, picking up on the sustainable protest village of the movement's Egyptian counterparts, with food, first aid, and a library.
Yes, as so many journalists seem obligated to point out, kids are criticizing corporate America while tweeting through their iPhones. The simplistic critique is that if someone is upset about corporate excess, he is supposed to abandon all connection with any corporate product. Of course, the more nuanced approach to such tradeoffs would be to seek balance rather than ultimatums. Yes, there are things big corporations might do very well, like making iPhones. There are other things big corporations may not do so well, like structure mortgage derivatives. Might we be able to use corporations for what works, and get them out of doing what doesn't?
And yes, some kids are showing up at Occupy Wall Street because it's fun. They come for the people, the excitement, the camaraderie and the sense of purpose they might not be able to find elsewhere. But does this mean that something about Occupy Wall Street is lacking, or that it is providing something that jobs and schools are not (thanks in part to rising unemployment and skyrocketing tuitions)?
The members of Occupy Wall Street may be as unwieldy, paradoxical, and inconsistent as those of us living in the real world. But that is precisely why their new approach to protest is more applicable, sustainable and actionable than what passes for politics today. They are suggesting that the fiscal operating system on which we are attempting to run our economy is no longer appropriate to the task. They mean to show that there is an inappropriate and correctable disconnect between the abundance America produces and the scarcity its markets manufacture.
And in the process, they are pointing the way toward something entirely different than the zero-sum game of artificial scarcity favoring top-down investors and media makers alike.
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Show AllOh, there's one more song that can help the people understand what they're up against, the Ojay's, "Give the People What They Want." This song talks about everyone around the world wants better housing, equality, food to eat... there should be a youtube video of this song as well.
I think if the organizers played some of these songs while waiting for the people to address the crowds, this would, or could put the people at ease, as well as help them understand what people did over 40 years ago. I think a clear mind, and people at ease can help bring better ideas, as well as keep the people more calm than anxious, or angry. BTW, don't know if everyone heard of this, but, most of the websites pertaining to these groups have been access-blocked.
The Wall Street occupation is the Phoenix rising from the ashes of hope and change. It's the first good political news since Obama came on the scene.
I'd say it's the first good political news since well before Bill Clinton and NAFTA.
Occupy St. Louis
Crossing the Threshold to the 21st Century
The fundamental difference between the 20th Century and the 21st Century lies in the architecture of change.
Change in the 20th Century was CENTRALIZED. It is represented by a triangle where power rests in the hands of the few at the top, and was dictated downward to the People.
Change in the 21st Century is DECENTRALIZED. It is represented by an inverted triangle where power rests with the people at the top.
The architecture if the Internet is one of DECENTRALIZATION. Now, each participating Citizen is a publisher. The DECENTRALIZED change process is vitalized by free and open communication. A VISION results from the free and open communication when the majority of the participants adopt an idea or concept ( VISION ) in their minds and hearts. VISIONS are FLUID and will change as the minds and hearts of the majority change.
The speed of change spikes complexity. CENTRALIZED entities lack the numbers of intellectual talent to compete with DECENTRALIZED intellectual talent when making decisions. In hyper-culture CENTRALIZED decision making derails and fails, whereas, DECENTRALIZED decision making brings order out of chaos. The fundamental difference lies in the great numbers of people participating and sharing their ideas and beliefs.
In a World of hyper-change decentralized decision making is essential not only for survival but also to thrive. Essentially more cooperation and less competition are needed in order to successfully change our visions as we are confronted with increasing rates of change and complexity. To thrive in the 21st Century we need each other in ways not necessary in the 20th Century.
Today’s media is entrenched in centralized organizations and 20th Century thinking; therefore, their reporting has been confused. They don’t get it! The OCCUPY revolution is deeply decentralized and every participant is a leader. This process is highly useful when attempting to change the status quo. If a leader is isolated or eliminated by the status quo it has little effect because each person is a leader and each person has adopted the vision, so the revolution continues.
Another advantage of a decentralized revolution is that no outside entity can take it over. This is important. Political organizations or infiltrators have little effect on the revolution because the vision is so widely understood and shared by the participants that the vision cannot be corrupted, even by propaganda and dis-information. A vision developed by the majority of people will survive traditional attempts to derail it.
Goals are a centralized decision making process. Visions are more complex and result from decentralized decision making. Many people feel that the current governmental and economic systems are so corrupt as to be unchangeable. Decentralized change can transcend the current system and establish a new system, and new pathways to better lifeways. One good example of this is the concept of sustainable living.
No one yet knows the shape of the future. What is sure is the pathway to that future. It is in the process of being envisioned by cooperating participating Citizens. As visions are developed and implemented the old will be transcended as the visions take hold. We are on a pathway to inventing the future, a future that will unveil itself as we proceed. Trust the young for the future is theirs.
Finally, this is not a political movement to be exploited by media types for profit. This revolution derives from a deeper place, is broad based, and cannot be used to divide us. Mother Nature wired us all differently to achieve a balance. If respect is accorded to all then her natural balance will be achieved. Everyone is welcome to participate in this revolution and the greater the participation the more meaningful and balanced will be the results. Seek to act with peace and harmony as the system is transformed. It is not necessary to respond to negativism because one’s response only strengthens the negative. The power of this decentralized transformation is too strong to waste time responding to negativism. Instead, welcome the negativism for it too is a part of the balance.
One caution, history suggests that a blackshirt or brownshirt movement may emerge in an attempt to seize power and negate the revolution. The difference today is that the speed of communication allows for quick mobilization to counter and defeat such actions. A readiness to do so is important.
I stand in solidarity with the courageous young people of this Nation in support of the 99%.
What the system does not yet want to recognize is that it is subject to macro laws of the universe - some call quantum physics - with which neither corporate technocracy, science or any individual is master. The true master knows that corporate "product" is another word 'I have my head up my ass and because it is there I'm going to make you put yours there too" -
What the system needs to realize is that world is and has been consciously watching the ersatz willful ignorance of a global criminal operation for over five hundred years. So acclimated to short circuited modes of dysfunction, it has finally reached the tipping point in every dimension.
Humanity in the omnipresent collective is experiencing an immune response.
On the newtonian level - every action begets an equal and opposite reaction. What the system is unaccustomed to is the process of consciousness. Really quite lovely to witness.
Douglas , your kidding right, your not a journalist , or a reporter , you are a paid shill for the corporate main stream media. You are no different that all the other reporters who have ignored the American people, who have been fighting an economic depression for 3 years , not a recession. The main stream media does no home work on the FED, and report to the rest of the country what happened in 1913, when and how the FED was created , and how the FED has robbed Trillions of dollars from Americans. Free trade agreements that have moved millions of jobs to cheap labor country's, and how American tax dollars paid for that move.
You dont understand the occupy movement , not because you are lazy , not because you are paid to ignore real American issues, but because you are not a real journalist. Freedom of speech, freedom of the press dont mean anything to you, because writing about the truth does not pay, does it?
Douglas , your kidding right, your not a journalist , or a reporter , you are a paid shill for the corporate main stream media. You are no different that all the other reporters who have ignored the American people, who have been fighting an economic depression for 3 years , not a recession. The main stream media does no home work on the FED, and report to the rest of the country what happened in 1913, when and how the FED was created , and how the FED has robbed Trillions of dollars from Americans. Free trade agreements that have moved millions of jobs to cheap labor country's, and how American tax dollars paid for that move.
You dont understand the occupy movement , not because you are lazy , not because you are paid to ignore real American issues, but because you are not a real journalist. Freedom of speech, freedom of the press dont mean anything to you, because writing about the truth does not pay, does it?
You know what? I think the corporate types are afraid that the Tea Party will wake up and find common ground with Occupy Wall Street. Drudge is doing his best to make it appear that Occupy Wall Street is a branch of the Obama re-elect campaign (and using the Unions as a sort of bogeyman). Occupy Wall Street Occupy K Street is being reported all right but they are dropping the part about K Street, which is a shame because that would resonate with the Tea Party types, perhaps leading many to shake off the DeMint stupor.
"Freedom of speech, freedom of the press dont mean anything to you, because writing about the truth does not pay, does it?"--bornfreemen
really?
i think the writer grasps that the "leaven is in the bread" perhaps you might use your "freedom of the press" and "free speech" to tell us about your vision for the earth's inhabitants.
strawman tactics are so last century.
"There were young people teaching one another about, among other things, how the economy works, about the disconnection of investment banking from the economy of goods and services, the history of centralized interest-bearing currency, the creation and growth of the derivatives industry, and about the Obama administration deciding to settle with, rather than investigate and prosecute the investment banking industry for housing fraud."
Amazing isn't it. If nothing else comes from this movement. At least education and enlightment of the masses will. These are this country's real "heros".