EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- 'Beyond Orwellian': Outrage Follows Revelations of Vast Domestic Spying Program
- The Bill of Rights Exists: An Open Letter to Dianne Feinstein
- The World Economy Is a Ticking Time Bomb (and The Fuse is Burning)
- Major Loss to Organic Farmers as Court Rules in Favor of Monsanto
- Naomi Klein: 'Anti-Shock Doctrines' Show the Way to Resist
Popular content
Today's Top News
Occupy Toronto: They Can’t Evict a Conversation

Last time I checked in with the occupiers of St. James Park, word was they were going to fight for their ground.
If Superior Court Judge David Brown rules to evict them on Monday, they plan to reoccupy, they told me.
That would be a mistake.
The movement, from what I have seen, is not about the park. It’s about a deep conversation.
You can’t evict a conversation – even a brief one.
The mayor says “they’ve made their point,” by which he means “there is no point” to Occupy Toronto or anywhere else. “Where are the actionable deliverables?” is the repeated objection right-wingers have used to dismiss the movement outright.
But, in just a month, big things have come out of the conversation unfurling in St. James Park.
To name a few:
1. People affected by decisions should be at the table making them. That’s Occupy Tenet Number One. It seems basic at first blush, but look around your office, travel down to City Hall or pop into a Toronto Community Housing building for an afternoon. This is a radical idea.
2. Tenet Number Two: No one gets left behind. We Canadians define ourselves by our social support systems. It’s an outdated profile. A single person on welfare in Ontario lives on less than $600 a month. That would cover one room in the last student hovel I rented seven years ago. No food, no heat, no subway tokens… The occupiers have enacted this principal at St. James Park by clothing, housing, feeding and – most importantly – expanding their conversation to 100 homeless people daily.
3. The revival of volunteerism. Go down to St. James Park any day, and you will see people chopping wood, ladling soup, delivering water, picking up garbage. The motto here is: “Be the change you are asking for.” In today’s era of hyper-individualism, just joining a club is radical. Occupier Kevin Connyu described to me how this fits into a new needs-based economy the group has devised that ranks money last. “We have four resources,” said Connyu, a 33-year-old drywaller and photographer. “Volunteers, material donations, in-kind donations like our legal aid and trades people who offer their skills. The very last thing is money donations, which we rarely use.”
4. The medium for discussion they’ve developed at the general assemblies: the speakers’ microphone. This is sharing personified – each person gathered repeats the words of the speaker, so others can hear them. Have you tried it? It’s amazing, once you get over the embarrassment of participating so heartily. It’s like eating other people’s thoughts. It keeps you engaged – you have no time to whisper or interrupt. There is no yelling or clapping or shouting – just wiggling fingers or crossed arms to signal how you feel about what’s being said.
Over the past month, I’ve visited St. James Park a dozen times. I’ve always left inspired. So have other people. Last night, the Design Exchange hosted a discussion entitled “Occupied Economies.”
Occupiers should be spreading their conversation all over the city – to old age homes, on the subway (like they did in New York this week), to Dundas Square and high school classrooms.
They could change their venue every week. They’ve proven they have the organizational skills for that, and their web savvy media team could spread the word every week. That would not only draw different people into the conversation, but would expose them to different perspectives.
Why do they have to sleep there? Who thinks well when they are tired and sick? They say their camp is their power. I says it’s an albatross – exhausting their reserves and energy, and sparking fights with people they should be engaging.
Most Occupiers I’ve spoken say they are still all talk, no plans. Some fear a concrete plan would diffuse their movement. Token wins for everyone – the politicians and the protesters, so everyone goes home. But I can think of a few old ideas that fit their philosophy of the “commons”: food cooperatives; credit unions; community gardens; community kitchens; cooperative housing. Why not talk in the rests between building something permanent, rather than in between police raids?
Plus, it’s easier to think with a hammer in your hand.
I hope the Occupiers are evicted on Monday. So far, they’ve had an easy ride, as far as revolutions go.
Movements, like leaders, are made by how they respond to challenges. This might be just the challenge the Occupiers need.
- Posted in
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


14 Comments so far
Show AllYea sure, let's take the easy cheap way out. Porter seems to want to forget that the movement is called #Occupy Toronto not #Conversation Toronto. Lame.
Glad you think some good ideas are coming out of the Occupy Movement, Catherine, but I think you miss the point. YOU can not tell the occupiers what to do, where to go, or how they will be most effective. It's up to them to make these decisions. Sorry you don't agree with them, or with the process that seems to be so very, very effective. My heart is with them all.
Now why would those pesky street kids join an occupation movement? Occupation is much uglier than a lame free speech thingy. Look up the definition of occupy.
So the free speech of street kids hurts your ears? They are the very products of an unfair society you claim to protest. Is the free speech you seek the sweet caressing music of similar minds? Maybe the ugliness of public protest is too much for you. Perhaps you should retreat into the free speech world of like minded highbrows like yourself safely tucked away behind your keyboard..
Free Speech.
You get what you pay for.
"I hope the Occupiers are evicted on Monday. So far, they’ve had an easy ride, as far as revolutions go
Movements, like leaders, are made by how they respond to challenges. This might be just the challenge the Occupiers need.."
Try getting your spleen split, you silly little woman. Or try being homeless for a day.
Another stupid fucking article by someone who pretends to speak for the 99%, but remains comfortably ensconced behind a computer screen or an IKEA chair.
Unless there are some General Assemblies involved, what does this idiot have to offer? Let alone Toronto, the most multi-cultural city in the world?
How about STFU and LISTEN to the people rather than speaking on behalf of them? MMMkay?
The 99% includes conservatives, rednecks, progressives, bigots, professors, street people, the employed, managers, businessmen, tabloid rag journalists, and many others who may or may not be sympathetic to the occupiers and do not feel that the occupiers are speaking on behalf of them all that well. The listening and conversing is just beginning.
so-called "professionals" have NO RIGHT to speak on behalf of the homeless. This bitch, let her eat cake.
She does slight the homeless in the article in that she treats them as being separate from the occupiers who she thinks will be better off without the camp and should change tactics. When she suggests that the camp is an albatross for the occupiers she is is not thinking of those occupiers who are homeless and have had food and shelter for the past month. I can see that the homeless who are there because they support the movement will have major difficulty continuing that support if the camp is shut down and mostly will be split from the conversation and silenced.
WTF Durrutix? "Silly little woman"... "bitch"? Don't be such a douche! Like it or not the author is one of the 99% and she has the right to her opinion just as you or I do. You criticize her for speaking for the movement, but how dare YOU presume to speak on behalf of the movement? As someone who works for a living and has even attended GAs, her opinion is as legitimately "99%" as yours is. The movement is open to all. I've heard some crazy sh!t from the floor of the GA in Vancouver that I disagree with, but that doesn't mean that I attack the speaker... I trust that the GA will deliberate and reach consensus before we act on the crazy stuff. If the author believes that her vision for the movement is solid, she can bring it before the GA and decisions will be made - either in agreement or disagreement with her points. I DARE you to stand in front of a GA and spew the kind of misogynist and condescending BS that you write in your posts.