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Today's Top News
Occupy America
Beginning with Occupy Wall Street in September 2011, a protest movement spread across the United States to 70 major cities and hundreds of other communities. Similar actions emerged in scores of other nations.
For the first two weeks, the corporate-owned mainstream media along with NPR did what they usually do with progressive protests: they ignored them. These were the same media that had given the Tea Party supporters saturation coverage for weeks on end, ordaining them “a major political force.”
The most common and effective mode of news repression is omission. By saying nothing or next to nothing about dissenting events, movements, candidates, or incidents, the media consign them to oblivion. When the Occupy movement spread across the country and could no longer be ignored, the media moved to the second manipulative method: trivialization and marginalization.
So we heard that the protestors were unclear about what they were protesting and they were “far removed from the mainstream.” Media cameras focused on the clown who danced on Wall Street in full-blown circus costume, and the youths who pounded bongo drums: “a carnival atmosphere” “youngsters out on a spree,” with “no connection to the millions of middle Americans” who supposedly watched with puzzlement and alarm.
Such coverage, again, was in sharp contrast to the respectful reportage accorded the Tea Party. House Majority Leader, the reactionary Republican Eric Cantor, described the Occupy movement as “growing mobs.” This is the same Cantor who hailed the Tea Party as an unexcelled affirmation of democracy.
The big November 2 demonstration in Oakland that succeeded in closing the port was reported by many media outlets, almost all of whom focused on the violence against property committed by a few small groups. Many of those perpetrators were appearing for the first time at the Oakland site. Some were suspected of being undercover police provocateurs. Their actions seemed timed to overshadow the successful shutdown of the nation’s fourth largest port.
Time and again, the media made the protestors the issue rather than the things they were protesting. The occupiers were falsely described as hippie holdovers and mindless youthful activists. In fact, there was a wide range of ages, socio-ethnic backgrounds, and lifestyles, from homeless to well-paid professionals, along with substantial numbers of labor union members. Far from being a jumble of confused loudmouths prone to violence, they held general assemblies, organized themselves into committees, and systematically took care of encampment questions, food, security, and sanitation.
Occupy Walnut CreekOne unnoticed community protest was Occupy Walnut Creek. For those who don’t know, Walnut Creek is a comfortable conservative suburb in northern California (with no known record of revolutionary insurrections). Only one local TV station gave Occupy Walnut Creek brief attention, noting that about 400 people were participating, average age between 40 and 50, no clowns, no bongos. Participants admitted that they lived fairly prosperous lives but still felt a kinship with the millions of Americans who were enduring an economic battering. Here was a contingent of affluent but rebellious “middle Americans” yet Walnut Creek never got mentioned in the national media, as far as I know.
The Occupy movement has promulgated a variety of messages. With a daring plunge into class realities, the occupiers talk of the 1% who are exploiting the 99%, a brilliant propaganda formula, simple to use, yet saying so much, now widely embraced even by some media commentators. The protestors carried signs condemning the republic’s terrible underemployment and the empire’s endless wars, the environmental abuses perpetrated by giant corporations, the tax loopholes enjoyed by oil companies, the growing inequality of incomes, and the banksters and other gangsters who feed so lavishly from the public trough.
Some occupiers even denounced capitalism as a system and hailed socialism as a humane alternative. In all, the Occupy movement revealed an awareness of systemic politico-economic injustices not usually seen in U.S. protests. Remember, the initial and prime target was Wall Street, finance capital’s home base.
The mainstream news outlets not only control opinions but even more so opinion visibility, which in turn allows them to limit the parameters of public discourse. This makes it all the more imperative for ordinary people to join together in demonstrations, hoping thereby to maximize the visibility and impact of their opinions. The goal is to break through the near monopoly of conservative orthodoxy maintained by the “liberal” media.
So demonstrations are important. They have an energizing effect on would-be protestors, bringing together many who previously had thought themselves alone and voiceless. Demonstrations bring democracy into the streets. They highlight issues that have too long been buried. They mobilize numbers, giving a show of strength, reminding the plutocracy perched at the apex that the pyramid is rumbling.
But demonstrations should evolve into other forms of action. This has already been happening with the Occupy movement. It is more than a demonstration because its protestors did not go home at the end of the day. In substantial numbers they remained downtown, putting their bodies on the line, imposing a discomfort on officialdom just by their numbers and presence.
At a number of Occupy sites there have been civil disobedience actions, followed by arrests. In various cities the police have been unleashed with violent results that sometimes have backfired. In Oakland ex-Marine Scott Olsen was hit by a police teargas canister that busted his skull and left him hospitalized and unable to speak for a week. At best, he faces a long slow recovery. The day after Olsen was hit, hundreds of indignant new protestors joined the Occupy Oakland site. Police brutality incites a public reaction, often bringing more people out, just the opposite of what officials want.
Where does this movement go? What is to be done? The answers are already arising from the actions of the 99%:
- Discourage military recruitment and support conscientious objectors. Starve the empire of its legions. Organize massive tax resistance in protest of corrupt, wasteful, unlawful, and destructive Pentagon spending
- Transfer funds from corporate banks to credit unions and community banks. Support programs that assist the unemployed and the dispossessed. It was Giulio Tremonti, Italy’s embattled finance minister who declared: “Salvate il popolo, non le banche” (“Save the people, not the banks”). It would be nice to hear such sentiments emanating from the U.S. Treasury Department or the White House.
- Coordinate actions with organized labor. Unions still are the 99%’s largest and best financed groups. Consider what was done in Oakland: occupiers joined with longshoremen, truckers, and other workers to close the port. Already there are plans for a general strike in various communities. Such actions improve greatly if organized labor is playing a role.
- We need new electoral strategies, a viable third party, proportional representation, and even a new Constitution, one that establishes firm rules for an egalitarian democracy and is not a rigmarole designed to protect the moneyed class. The call for a constitutional convention (a perfectly legitimate procedure under the present U.S. Constitution) seems long overdo.
- Perhaps most of all, we need ideological education regarding the relationship between wealth and power, the nature of capitalism, and the crimes of an unbridled profit-driven financial system. And again the occupiers seem to be moving in that direction: in early November 2011, people nationwide began gathering to join teach-ins on “How the 1% Crashed the Economy.”
We need to explicitly invite the African-American, Latino, and Asian communities into the fight, reminding everyone that the Great Recession victimizes everyone but comes down especially hard on the ethnic poor.
We need to educate ourselves regarding the beneficial realities of publicly owned nonprofit utilities, publicly directed environmental protections, public nonprofit medical services and hospitals, public libraries, schools, colleges, housing, and transportation--all those things that work so well in better known in some quarters as socialism.
There is much to do. Still it is rather impressive how the battle is already being waged on so many fronts. Meanwhile the corporate media ignore the content of our protest while continuing to fulminate about the occupiers’ violent ways and lack of a precise agenda.
Do not for one moment think that the top policymakers and plutocrats don’t care what you think. That is the only thing about you that wins their concern. They don’t care about the quality of the air you breathe or the water you drink, or how happy or unhappy or stressed and unhealthy or poor you might be. But they do want to know your thoughts about public affairs, if only to get a handle on your mind. Every day they launch waves of disinformation to bloat your brains, from the Pentagon to Fox News without stint.
When the people liberate their own minds and take a hard clear look at what the 1% is doing and what the 99% should be doing, then serious stuff begins to happen. It is already happening. It may eventually fade away or it may create a new chapter in our history. Even if it does not achieve its major goals, the Occupy movement has already registered upon our rulers the anger and unhappiness of a populace betrayed.
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170 Comments so far
Show Alliowablackbird:
Excellent commentary!
I like this bit:
"the architects of the new world empire have used electronic gadgets, the spectacle commodifing life, and the infantilization of thought/expression to control the people. OWS movement is encouraging, but i don't see the mass of people (who are addicted to TV, car culture, consumerism) on board w/ this movement yet - despite the faltering economy.
5,000 people camped in nyc (as one example) out of a population of 7 million people. that's a fraction of a fraction of 1%.
i've asked myself what will emerge from the occupy movement. i wonder if anonymous or the folks who placed the ad in ad busters realized that an occupy movement that could go viral across america, inevitably drawing the homeless and extreme poor out of the shadows into public display - or if it was an unintended consequence.
this is what has happened in my community. about 1/3rd to 1/4th of the participants are political activists (of all ages) and students - the remainder are members of our homeless community who are using the opportunity OWS presents to camp safely (w/out police harassment) and access services (food, medical- supplies) that have been graciously provided by members of the community (here in olympia)."
Occupy will rise or fall IMO depending on whether the the more privileged "activists" with the means of outreach like facebook, etc, cooperate with and help the mass of of MILLIONS of homeless and just barely making it people to create an actual Latin American style non violent revolution of the poor. If the activists replicate the current class structure and treat the campers poorly then we will fall from infighting, and driving away the actual mass of poor people who are FAR more numerous than nicey nice campus radicals and post campus bourgeois "activists." In short when well meaning but privileged people like Chris Hedges urge us to turn our back on the actual OCCUPIERS we need to tell them to go to hell (and I say that as atheist :)).
Guitarist you misunderstand Chris Hedges. He did not say people who want social change should exclude the "actual occupiers". In fact the title of one of his essays reads: "Occupiers have to convince the other 99 Percent" This essay begins: "The occupation movement’s greatest challenge will be overcoming the deep distrust of white liberals by the poor and the working class, especially people of color. Marginalized people of color have been organizing, protesting and suffering for years with little help or even acknowledgment from the white liberal class." Chris Hedges is saying we have to include the poor and disadvantaged. As an actual Occupier and a member of the middle class I see our movement as seeking to be as Chris Hedges encourages inclusive. In fact the Occupy Movement also has the challenge of convincing the very wealthy, those close to the 1% that they should align with the Occupy 99 Percent.
“… publicly owned nonprofit utilities, publicly directed environmental protections, public nonprofit medical services and hospitals, public libraries, schools, colleges, housing, and transportation--all those things that work so well in better known in some quarters as SOCIALISM.”
Rather than socialism, I like to call these things “legitimate functions of government”. The services are needed by the public, but can not be efficiently operated or financed as a business. They need to be provided by the government and are thus the legitimate functions of government.
Speaking of provocateurs and police infiltrators, i urge all concerned to read up on Judy Bari and Darryl Cherney to see just how far these thugs will go to discredit and/or destroy any movement that challenges the authorities.
fred c dobbs:
I remember what happened to Bari and Cheney.
Thanks for reminding the readers.
the media that predominates the cable channel line up no longer holds the kind of sway in public opinion that it used to. the internet...a smart phone...give all the information one needs...we don;t need the media that tells us what to think ...we are quite capable of forming thoughts and opinions without them...though they may not like what we have to say...
The idea that OWS is a SOCIAL movement requires more debate to settle on some general understandings. SOCIAL does not mean a lack of directed actions. The participation in the BofA Bank Transfer Day was a worthy effort; but in very specific terms it was not POLITICAL. By POLITICAL I mean political parties. We should NOT in any way associate with a political party or a party function. OWS should remain independent and distant from politics. The movement would be greatly diminished in scope and purpose if it were a mere anti-tea party movement. That would identify Occupy as a divisive movement, something the 99% does not want. We speak of unity when we refer to the 99%, and only through unity will it prevail. Unity means casting a broad net, one that is inclusive, and one that respects the ideas and participation of each person. The Occupy movement is currently identifying itself as a SOCIAL consciousness raising and educational movement. We are in the process of growing the movement and the actions taken should be non-political and widely seen as necessary, such as the Big Bank transfer of funds day. This was a successful and greatly unifying activity that brings people onboard Washington should be showcased as an increasingly pro-1% corrupt system that is anti-American and anti-people. We should not touch it with a ten foot alcohol soaked pole. A corrupt system is incapable of providing quality legislation for the benefit of the People. It will die of corruption and neglect if we allow it to. Transcend Washington Politics and build a NEW SYSTEM from the ground up that works FOR the American People in the 21st Century.
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“You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”
Richard Buckminster Fuller
+ 1
Nicely argued, Stone. Great posts by you on this thread! As of now, the term "99%", though brilliant, still remains somewhat of a hopeful and presumptuous choice. It is counting on the awakening of the 99%, or even a large part of it, whereas current reality is that a significant portion of this 99% population still believes in the lies of the 1% and is ready to do their bidding. Bridging this divide is necessarily going to require a raising of consciousness. Those who are already part of the OWS movement are pioneers in that sense. Even keeping the door open for the Tea Party supporters is an act of courage, an act carried out from a higher consciousness or a better understanding. How easy it would be to attack them as morons? And tempting, too? But what would be the point? And the insistence on non-violent confrontation is of enormous significance too, as the means adopted for change will have an effect on the kind of change it produces. Everyone here knows we cannot bomb another country into democracy. The logic is the same. Even in Egypt, despite the inspiring show of solidarity by the people, religious differences sometimes break into violent acts, whereas these groups should be fighting something else. And the divisions within the US are just as strong and the people are much more armed. So having a common "enemy" is just the start, but that alone is not enough. And then there is the other threat due to runaway climate change, so any change that results should RESPECT this threat as the biggest of all. Otherwise, everything else will be of little consequence.
Parenti a true leftist with an inclusive class analysis and calls fro bold action, that's what I am talking about. More Parenti and Chomsky please CD!
wow! a fantastic bit o' writing from michael parenti followed by an excellent discussion! i took afew notes from the article and then a whole bunch of notes from fellow common dreamers. THANKS TO ALL! centered at the top of my note page, i placed a phase from the last paragraph: "people liberate their own minds"
"Perhaps most of all, we need ideological education—"Michael
another phrase that caught my eye because as thomas jefferson said and i agree, "knowledge is the true currency of DEMOCRACY!" several advise to "blow up your t.v.!" not bad advice at all. i watch democracy now! every day on my computer, plus seek out several other trusted sites. thank you, commondreams.org for bringing so many sources to our attention! in the evening i do catch news sponsored by GE munitions--not as a "trusted source"--but to note those glaring omissions plus get a heads up on latest propaganda schemes. ie, a few days ago here we discussed an bit from an anonymous military source fearing the "israel may act unilaterally against iran (persia). well, well, well, a couple of nights ago brian williams warned us about the growing nuke threat from ahmadinajad. i know some feel this sabre rattling as nothing more than a harem-scarem back under the established protective wing. i dunno. this so brings up the fear mongering over the threat from iraq. this leader-of-the-empire nation, with a few close business buddies, illegally invaded a small nation. i know code pink with jesse jackson & co. held a huge demonstration but "the near monopoly of conservative orthodoxy maintained by the 'liberal' media" (michael's phrase) got busy flag waving to generate the subconscious pavlovian patriotic response.
"The occupy movement isn't about Wall Street and politics (or even America) as much as it is about social consciousness."—cosmobilly
i sure do like what i've read from you, cosmo! as several pointed out, "capitalism creates such a stress-filled competitive atmosphere that suggests in pausing to reflect one may lose "the rat race" or paper chase" in his discussion of hand-made signs parenti says, "Some occupiers even denounced capitalism as a system and hailed socialism". how refreshing to see that the movement inspires open discussion of philosophies long held as so dangerous and "taboo" for "real americans"! "Perhaps most of all, we need ideological education—" and one very positive result is that "we the people" feel empowered to educate one another! what next? parenti wrote that this movement, "may fade away or it may create a new chapter in our history." i "c & p'd" that to bring up the fact that those events from written history reflect what's important to the established class of "leaders" leaving most history marginalized beneath the sight-lines.
"Menominee of Wisconsin have lived upon this earth in sustainable and Life enhancing ways for 10 thousand years-- something to think about, now given the brink we have all been brought to by the Western model??"--vaialdiavolo
YES! YES! YES! yesterday in one c.d thread a member stated that "capitalism has a proven success record" and i thought to respond--but didn't. my joke is "capitalism has proved to be a 'crashing success' because the market crashes every 15 to 20 years. our "exceptionally american" version has brought us into moral and financial bankruptcy in a mere 230 years. environmental concerns have always topped my list so the phrase, "LIVING IN HARMONY WITH NATURE" states a worthy goal. unfettered growth cannot be sustained. like a cancer capitalism feeds from the host organism, GAIA until we see it's a psycho suicide pact. i remember on old documentary from about 1930 something about exploring the dark continent, africa. the safari meant to shed light into areas never seen by "white man" eyes. now, consider the sad shape of this entire depleted continent, taking capitalists a mere 82 years to demolish.
p.s., thanks, vaialdiavolo, for the grace boggs url. she's one of my "heroes"!
"the next trans formative revolution on the planet will be global in nature and will occur w/in the next generation"—iowablackbird
We are 99% of the world, OCCUPY EARTH—newGuardia
you know, blackbird, from arab spring and on "we the people of EARTH" now begin to awaken to the uniting common cause of all life's membership. yet, because of "civilized" attack on natural resources, we must continue to pull together, poll our resources, share knowledge and skills. the Time is NOW and we can ill afford "politics as usual". we're fighting, peacefully, for preservation of our only home in the cosmos.
"And we need to take responsibility for our consumer choices."-- Kathy Moi
right you are kathy! too many have been lured into debt by the pssssuductive "psssnake oil" taktics. for three decade i've practice a one-woman boycott of wall★mart who with other monopolistic mass merchindisers have destroyed vibrant local economies. btw, mall wart, is a subsidiery of goldman sachs.
"I like to call these things 'legitimate functions of government.'”-- Ceric55
yep, i enjoyed the discussion over revisiting, maybe revising the u.s. constitution. in my opinion this nation never established a DEMOCRACY. we have in that document a wonderful plannogram, and i have a few minor tweaking ideas. government policy must be decided by a majority or plurality, but all need to remember that the majority has no official authority to interfere with the rights of any single person or minority. mob rule ain't democracy!
"Live and learn and all that."—tj
As usual, Michael Parenti is right on the mark.
Great posts by many of you and I'll add my two cents worth.
Several of us went to Oakland on Nov 2nd to support Occupy Oakland and the General Strike. Out of all of the marches and demonstrations I've ever been on, that action is my favorite, and I'm proud of everyone who took part in taking off of work, marching, closing businesses...whatever. The vibrations were high, and so many people were focused on the things which adversely affect society, and the awareness of how working people are getting screwed by the super-rich and the political hacks in government who enact laws and regulations for the benefit of the few at the top of the money heap.
On labor unions not able to call a "general strike", the answer is they couldn't, as our hands are tied by Taft-Hartley (which, by the way, no Democratic politician in the 40 years they controlled the House and the Senate ever thought about repealing, as it literally handcuffs unions), but on an individual basis, unionized workers took off on their own to support the GS.
We marched from 14th & Broadway down to the Port of Oakland, and each time I turned to look back, the procession was longer as more people joined the march. A meditor saw the large number of protestors, and decided it was "unsafe" for the "longies" to cross the picket line, and the 7:00 pm shift didn't work. I left the Port about 9:00 pm.
I certainly agree with Parenti about discouraging militarry recruitment and supporting conscientious objectors. I do not support the troops in overseas invasions and occupations.
When linguist George Lakoff talks about reframing the discussion or word usage, how about calling the "riot police" thugs what they really are: "storm troopers." As in Fascist Italy's black shirts or Nazi Germany's brown shirts, beating, killing, and terrorizing the progressives of the day. And don't forget our Pinkertons and the police goons beating men and women on strikes (and killing some) during the late 19th century and early part of the 20th century. This part of American history you won't learn in public or private schools.
Workers of the World...Unite!
Most radical action the U.S. has seen in generations, thanks for participating and your report!
Hmmm! Reminds me of a previous empire. When Cicero was first introduced to a fledgling religious movement called Christianity, he declared them: " ...a dark, formless mass!"
U.S. Bill of Rights: "Amendment One - Congress shall make no Law respecting an establishment of Religion, or prohibiting the Free exercise thereof; or Abridging the Freedom of Speech, OR OF THE PRESS; or the Right of the People peaceably to Assemble, and to Petition the Government for a redress of Grievances."
Wall Street v. Elizabeth Warren
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Elizabeth Warren needs our support. See the article over at Baseline Scenario:
http://baselinescenario.com/2011/11/10/wall-street-v-elizabeth-warren/
Wall Street v. Elizabeth Warren
(comments) http://baselinescenario.com/2011/11/10/wall-street-v-elizabeth-warren/#comment-87767
The Baseline Scenario
What happened to the global economy and what we can do about it
Wall Street v. Elizabeth Warren
An Alternative to Capitalism (if the people knew about it, they would demand it)
Several decades ago, Margaret Thatcher claimed: "There is no alternative". She was referring to capitalism. Today, this negative attitude still persists.
I would like to offer an alternative to capitalism for the American people to consider. Please click on the following link. It will take you to an essay titled: "Home of the Brave?" which was published by the Athenaeum Library of Philosophy:
http://evans-experientialism.freewebspace.com/steinsvold.htm
John Steinsvold
Perhaps in time the so-called dark ages will be thought of as including our own.
--Georg C. Lichtenberg