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What Is Occupy Wall Street? The History of Leaderless Movements
Occupy Wall Street has arrived. Facebook is all-aflutter, and Twitter is all-atweeter, as news of “occupations” and clashes with the powers-that-be spread like wildfire around the country.
Now entering its fourth week, the Wall Street occupation has become a national phenomenon. The president is interested, celebrities are popping by, and pizza shops are adding the OccuPie to their menus. There is even an Occupy video game in development. The movement has spawned hundreds of Occupy locales in a national Occupy Together network. And now there is talk of going global: Occupy the World.
Inquiring minds want to know: Who are these people? What exactly are they demanding? Who is leading this thing?
On these issues, the movement has been clear: This is a leaderless movement without an official set of demands. There are no projected outcomes, no bottom lines and no talking heads. In the Occupy movement, We are all leaders.
This is not just a charming mess. We are all leaders represents a real praxis, and it has a real history.
In the 1960s and 70s, feminists convened consciousness-raising meetings aimed at politicizing the various forms of women’s oppression that were occurring in private. Women in the ranks were tired of being excluded from the inner circles of leadership where the issues and demands were being decided. And, they were sick of the generalized hypocrisy regarding gender roles. For this reason, feminist consciousness-raising eschewed formal leadership because each woman’s experience and opinion had to be valued equally. The personal was the political.
Consciousness-raising was also the heart and soul of gay rights activism. The process of sharing coming-out stories in a free environment helped others liberate themselves from the closet of ill repute. Again, these stories were told in a non-coercive, leaderless environment that empowered gay men and women to fight for their rights and leave behind a debased life of sexual secrecy.
Both of these movements had enormous impacts on American life. Gay rights liberated our sexuality, and feminism fundamentally changed the way we relate to each other as men and women. All this, without a centralized leadership.
Fast-forward to the late 1990s when protest networks emerged around the world in opposition to the World Bank, WTO and G-8. This time uneven development, debt and neoliberalism took center stage, alongside environmental concerns and world poverty. The protesters were “Anti” globalization as well as “Alter”: Free flows of information as opposed to patenting, free movement of people as opposed to policed immigration, and free trade as opposed to NAFTA.
Alter-globalization networks created a veritable movement of movements, which was not led or controlled by any one of them. In the United States, anarchist-inspired spokescouncils convened hundreds of these groups to organize protest actions, conferences and community work. At the meetings, each group would position a single member upfront, in the inner circle, while the rest sat behind, like a human wheel with spokes. There were no leaders with long-standing assignments because every participant was, in essence, a leader. In lieu of a party line, this amalgamation of movements operated according to sets of core, procedural principles—called Principles of Unity—that reflected their anti-authoritarian, anti-discriminatory orientation.
The Occupy movement operates similarly, with each locale establishing its own set of organizational practices. Locales, and the virtual Occupy communities in cyberspace, are federated according to a simple yet powerful point of unity: “The one thing we all have in common is that we are the 99% that will no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the 1%”—an obvious reference to the well-known, yet still appalling, statistic that the top 1 percent of households in the United States own somewhere between 30 to 40 percent of all privately held wealth. And counting.
Occupy Wall Street’s organizational presence is the New York General Assembly or “GA,” which convenes numbers in the high hundreds at its squat-site in Zuccotti Park. Daily GA meetings are led by facilitators who rotate on a regular basis, and facilitation training is open to all. Specific issues, such as food, medical, legal, outreach, security and others are handled by working groups—also open and inclusive—that periodically report back to the GA. Instead of issuing top-down directives, Occupy groups use a consensus process in which anyone can join in the decision-making and propose an idea. Proposers must field questions, justify the hows and whys of their ideas, and engage a large-scale group discussion. Votes are then cast via an innovative system of hand signals, and proposals are revised until a nine-tenths majority approves.
Of course, all this requires a degree of good faith. Embedded in consensus process is an ethical assumption that decision-making is not a competition: It is not about converting other people to one’s way of thinking. It is about compromise. For every person involved, there is a new viewpoint to consider. This can get messy, but efficiency is not the measuring stick of success here. Democracy is.
Similar to the feminist and alter-globalization movements, these groups want to avoid replicating the authoritarian structures of the institutions they are opposing. This is part of what differentiates them from the Tea Party. Occupy will never become an arm of the Democratic Party because the Democratic Party is part of the problem. These protesters want to prefigure within their own organization the free society they seek to create. And they want to demonstrate against the corrupt and hypocritical culture in mainstream politics and Wall Street—by operating with integrity.
The Occupy movement is a laboratory for participatory democracy. It’s a massive crash course in leadership training. Most of these activists have a particular issue, problem or political idea that is meaningful to them, on which they have developed an expert knowledge. Occupy is both a concrete and virtual space for connecting these issues and expertise without any one position or issue taking precedence. This movement is not mired in the competitive mindset of “my issue is more important than yours” that appears to be stymieing Congress as the country slowly crumbles.
Implicit in this structure is also a rejection of the narcissistic, “I know what’s good for you” form of leadership, now pervasive in this country, in which lawmakers fail to consider the needs and desires of the people they claim to represent. The failure of representative democracy in the United States is perhaps one of the most serious problems of our time, and the Occupy movement is a symptom of this crisis of legitimacy. The people no longer trust their leaders and are even starting to indict the system itself. They think we can do better. We are all leaders.
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19 Comments so far
Show AllDon't follow leaders, watch the parking meters.
And keep in mind that the pump don't work 'cause the vandals took the handles.
first, occupy yourself. wherever you go, whatever you do, be in the service of the new paradigm. keep learning, expanding personal horizons. cultivate qualities of leadership in daily life, with friends, family and local issues.
as importantly, occupy the world. see the bigger picture in everything. give whatever support possible to wider struggles. be a builder of bridges.
I agree. Beautiful words. But–if I may...and when some stupid prick shows up with a shitload of bling dangling around his stupid neck claiming 'brotherhood', strip him, take his gold and kick is ass onto the street. (You can sell it and buy some magic makers, poster board & stuff, or, food for the people down there that need it.)
So as a supporter of OWS, and one planning to go to an Occupy [Your City] event this Saturday, I wonder, how does this translate into legislation? At some point, OWS will have to come up with a list of demands. It will have to field candidates for federal office. Otherwise, winter is coming, and I fear this energy we see now may fizzle out. It's hard to see hundreds occupying Wall Street in a blizzard with 20 degree temperatures.
It is all well and good to bask in our new found voice and the fact that people are FINALLY doing something en masse. My hope is that a consensus on a list of demands is gradually being hammered out, based on the Declaration of the General Assembly that came out a little more than a week ago.
What an endless occupation can do is effect relatively immediate change - even with those already in office. Seeing how far apart the two classes are it's going to be a while before anything resembling progressive legislation exists/ They can start in spring again if winter drives them off. It's not like they're gonna find work.
In the long run obviously it would be ideal for this to get new people. And, the money (else your new people will disappoint).
"So as a supporter of OWS, and one planning to go to an Occupy [Your City] event this Saturday..."
Please. Go every night and camp out the entire weekend. Don't wait for Saturday.
"...I wonder, how does this translate into legislation?"
We don't need to worry about that yet. Keep to immediate goals like attending and resisting eviction. Then make signs. Then get warm. Then make friends.
"At some point, OWS will have to come up with a list of demands."
If you still haven't identified at least 100 demands I invite to to head down and read the signs everybody is holding. We've got LOTS of demands. If you mean that the demands have to be formally prioritized you can forget about it, because it's not going to happen.
"It will have to field candidates for federal office."
No it won't. If it does, it will have just about as much success as the Libertarians or the Greens. Just because you fervently believe that the movement has to go that route doesn't make it so. Just because you can't imagine the movement has a future without playing the old games doesn't make it so. OccupyBoston has gone from fielding marches numbering zero to marches numbering 10,000 in less than a week. We're doing just fine without candidates for federal office.
"It's hard to see hundreds occupying Wall Street in a blizzard with 20 degree temperatures."
You're right, there. The NYC folks are inspirational, but let's face it - they're softies. Luckily for them, OccupyBoston and OccupyBuffalo are already giving them winterization tips! Here's one: The Mongols have been placing a smaller tent inside a larger one for thousands of years, and it's perfectly adequate for Siberian winters. We're already scrounging stuff up. Got any tents to donate?
If you really feel that it's necessary to achieve consensus on a list of demands, go down and join that discussion in your city's GA. But understand that there will be an even bigger crowd who feels we shouldn't, and even if your GA decides on something it doesn't mean our GA is going to abide by it.
In my opinion, we are in the midst of a new kind of awakening. As a nation, we're starting to grope our way toward the finest form of government invented - Anarcho-Syndicalism.
"The NYC folks are inspirational, but let's face it - they're softies."
Why would you write something like this?
To me, you completely undo your entire post with a remark such as the one I copied and pasted. Why would you want to marginalize those who are occupying Zuccotti Park/Liberty Square in NYC? Don't divide us -- especially if you've already joined us!
Already, those who are camping out in Liberty Square have slept in pouring rain several nights. And, we have already had some cold weather, too, amongst the nice days we've enjoyed. Granted, winter weather in the city can be very brutal, but those in the square are committed. Ask them! And, I'm certain that the activists at Liberty Square are very grateful for your winterization tips!
"The NYC folks are inspirational, but let's face it - they're softies."
"Why would you write something like this? To me, you completely undo your entire post with a remark such as the one I copied and pasted."
Kay, you're being very, very silly.
Now go tell Fox News and Glen Beck what we are all about.
I about wet my pants because I was laughing so hard hearing GB say....wait for it....wait for it....( in a low booming voice)...
"THE LEFT IS COMING TO KILL YOU." AH....HA...HAAAAA!
Is it legal to meet en mass without a permit on Hallowe'en?
Just going door to door officer.
"In the Occupy movement, We are all leaders."
Oooh I like that. Notice how it prevents bumblers and liars from being your boss. I guess you'll have to be your own boss. Heh heh.
"In the Occupy movement, We are all leaders."
Oooh I like that. Notice how it prevents bumblers and liars from being your boss. I guess you'll have to be your own boss. Heh heh.
"It is not about converting other people to one’s way of thinking. It is about compromise"
Wrong. Absolutely wrong. The people will not compromise with the predatory elites. The predatory elites will be doing all the compromising. The 99% need not compromise when they enjoy only 1% influence at this point. What the hell, Washington Post? Notice how the Washington Post is there to confuse you, sabotage you, help the predatory elites prey on you. Read the elite media with a grain of salt always.
It is about comprimise WITHIN the occupiers' community. Or more descriptively, it is about synthesis and development of processes and plans. Nobody in their right mind would ever believe that the bankers and traders of Wall Street are ready to comprimise.
Couple things.....Like already mentioned, or asked......Who is Wall Street ? Wall Street is a........well it's a STREET ! Yes, isn't the NYSE there ? What else exists on this street ? Maybe someone high up in the OWS movement should actually list what or who exists on This Street. Names of corporations. Who are the high ups, in said corporations ? Who's CEOs are making what on the backs of their peons ? Who's Top traders and money shakers are doing what with who's money ? Personally, I would like to know just who on this street is the target ? Second point comes in a second post. To not make it too long to read in one.
Second point.....Who hasn't read about Netflix recently ? Man, what a statement that was ! Funny how easy it was for me to cancel my subscription on the designated day ! My personal way of saying, "No, your not getting 6 more of my dollars !" Funny how it unfolded and the squirming began and then came the back peddaling. A minor skirmish, granted. Is anybody getting my point ? Apparently, the high ups on that STREET really only focus on ONE thing. Can't we arrange a REAL Netflix on one of them ? Personally, (and they may not be on the STREET), It would not break my heart at all if not one person stepped foot in a BP station for.....say, like a month. Bring them to their frikkin knees in an offshoot and statement of OWS. In that month, or maybe sooner, a new target is decided and the let the Netfilxing begin again. I don't know, maybe a statement with $$ attached to it would get their attention quicker. Police cannot beat you or arrest you for not spending your $$ somewhere, can they ? Don't Occupy their wallets, with your money will be an offshoot of OWS. Done now ! Thanks.
==The Occupy movement is a laboratory for participatory democracy. It’s a massive crash course in leadership training. Most of these activists have a particular issue, problem or political idea that is meaningful to them, on which they have developed an expert knowledge. Occupy is both a concrete and virtual space for connecting these issues and expertise without any one position or issue taking precedence. This movement is not mired in the competitive mindset of “my issue is more important than yours” that appears to be stymieing Congress as the country slowly crumbles.==
No, it's not some laboratory. It's a tricycle race - around and around a circular track in stead of mono-directional from A to some a desired B. Weak thinkers think that if we just ride around the oval track the proper number of times we will save This Country. This country is not worth saving; it is in fact a late country.
Have the brains and courage to start a New One. OWS is wasting time and energy.
Trylon
"This country is not worth saving; it is in fact a late country. Have the brains and courage to start a New One."
At this point, Trylon, we're willing to. What are you doing toward that end and what evidence do you have that it will work?
I think it's a great idea to keep this movement as "leaderless" as possible for as long as possible for two reasons: One, as other posters said, we need to learn or re-learn as a people how to have a truly participatory democracy and Two (more importantly) avoid the pitfalls of the movements of the 1960s, in which very strong and clearly identifiable leaders of progressive movements were then effectively targeted by the establishment's servants in the media, law enforcement, and the intelligence agencies (as well as the Dim Party) for whatever was needed to silence, co-opt, or neutralize them. The methods included assassination, harrassment and prosecution, blacklisting them from employment in their field, smearing their reputation to the point they would no longer be taken seriously, or simply blacklisting them from ever getting any further coverage in the mass media unless there was some scandalous material-legit or fake-to run about them.
Those methods worked very effectively, as Michael Moore has publicly admitted, and that's another reason why, besides personal corruptibility and the desire to remain a part of the political elite, is why almost no pols in DC are willing to actually challenge the system.