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Why Occupy Wall Street Will Keep Up the Fight
On Tuesday, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg evicted the Occupy movement from its spiritual home near Wall Street. Soon afterward, a longtime Occupier sent us his testimony from the streets of New York:
A police officer uses pepper spray on an Occupy Portland protester at Pioneer Courthouse Square in Portland, Ore. (Randy Rasmussen/AP)“Lost my stuff, including power cord for my laptop, in the raid, something or someone cleared out my bank account, and it’s raining. I could just write a country song. I’ll tell you this: the resolve is still here. People I talk to are a healthy mixture of rage, comedy, resolve, and excitement. Also exhaustion. Maybe the raid was the best thing that could happen? Winning at last, winning at last, thank God Almighty, we are winning at last.”
For two heady months, the amorphous encampment in Lower Manhattan’s Zuccotti Park had been the symbolic heart of Occupy Wall Street, the birthplace of the greatest social-justice movement to emerge in the United States since the civil rights era. This primal cry for democracy sprang from young people who could no longer ignore the angst in their gut — the premonition that their future does not compute, that their entire lives will be lived in the apocalyptic shadow of climate-change tipping points, species die-offs, a deadening commercialized culture, a political system perverted by money, precarious employment, a struggle to pay off crippling student loans, and no chance of ever owning a home or living in comfort like their parents. Glimpsing this black hole of ecological, political, financial and spiritual crisis, the youth and the millions of Americans who joined them instinctively knew that unless they stood up and fought nonviolently for a different kind of future, they would have no future at all.
The Occupy Wall Street meme was launched by a poster in the 97th issue of our international ad-free magazine, Adbusters, the hash tag #OCCUPYWALLSTREET and a “tactical briefing” that we sent to our 90,000-strong “culture jammer” global network of activists, artists and rabble-rousers in mid-July. The movement’s true origins, however, go back to the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt. That was when the world witnessed how intransigent regimes can be toppled by leaderless democratic crowds, brought together by social media, that stand firm and courageously refuse to go home until their demands for change are met. Our shared epiphany was that America, too, needs its Tahrir Square moment and its own kind of regime change. Perhaps not the hard regime change of Tunisia and Egypt, but certainly a soft one.
Only a soft regime change can end the pervasive corruption at the heart of our political system, in which corporate money wins elections, drafts laws and trumps citizen desires. Only the plural voices of everyday Americans, the 99 percent, have the capacity to wake up the 1 percent to their greedy, self-serving ways, and to dismantle the global casino in which $1.3 trillion worth of derivatives, credit default swaps and other financial instruments slosh around every day without a hint of concern or regard for the millions of lives that such speculation can destroy.
Occupy was born because we the people feel that our country and our economy are moving precipitously in the wrong direction; that America has evolved into a kind of corporate oligarchic state, a “corporatocracy”; and yes, that what is needed is a regime change — a Tahrir moment of truth in America.
For several weeks Occupy Wall Street had a rare magic going for it. We held the high ground, stuck doggedly to our Gandhian, nonviolent ways and blindsided the cynical world with our optimism, our camaraderie and our determination to forge a way forward. It was a passionate, hopeful, democratic upsurge. Anyone who walked into Zuccotti Park was immediately captivated by the idealism of youth. Spectators of our direct-democracy process were drawn in and became politically engaged participants in our general assemblies. With nothing more than a commitment to consensus-based transparency, twinkling fingers that signal assent, “mike checks” that amplify our voices, an ethos of mutual respect and hope for the future, Occupy sparked a global democracy moment.
By mid-October, there were occupations happening in 1,000 cities around the world. Hundreds of thousands of us, mostly young people, were suddenly vibrantly alive, politically engaged and living without dead time in a way that the world had not seen since 1968. That was the year that an insurrection in Paris’s Latin Quarter suddenly exploded in cities and campuses around the world. The viral speed of that movement was uncannily similar to the way that general assemblies ricocheted around the Earth from Zuccotti Park. But whereas in 1968 we lost the thread and the movement fizzled out, this time the horizontal, open-source, peer-to-peer ways of the Internet-savvy generation, living in a much more dangerous era of multiple synergetic crises, just might be able to succeed.
Why didn’t Bloomberg come down to talk to us? Or Goldman Sachs chief executive Lloyd Blankfein? Why didn’t President Obama acknowledge the protesters — largely the people who elected him — and mingle in the open-air town halls? What a grand gesture that would have been. How come our political leaders are so isolated, our discourse so rigid? Why can’t the American power elite engage with the nation’s young?
Instead, they stayed aloof, ignored us and wished us away. We wanted a Tahrir moment, an American Spring, a new vision of the future, and they attacked us in Zuccotti Park in the dead of the night.
Bloomberg’s raid was carried out with military precision. The surprise attack began at 1 a.m. with a media blackout. The encampment was surrounded by riot police, credentialed mainstream journalists who tried to enter were pushed back or arrested, and the airspace was closed to news helicopters. What happened next was a blur of tear gas; a bulldozer; confiscation or destruction of everything in the park, including 5,000 books; upward of 150 arrests; and the deployment of a Long Range Acoustic Device, the infamous “sound cannon” best known for its military use in Iraq.
When the youth in Tunisia rose up demanding change, Ben Ali scoffed. When they occupied Tahrir Square, Mubarak resorted to paternalism and mob violence. In Syria, Assad’s troops fire daily into the crowds. This kind of military mind-set and violent response to nonviolent protesters makes no sense. It did not work in the Middle East, and it’s not going to work in America, either. This is the bottom line. . . you cannot attack your young and get away with it.
Bloomberg’s shock-troop assault has stiffened our resolve and ushered in a new phase of our movement. The people’s assemblies will continue with or without winter encampments. What will be new is the marked escalation of surprise, playful, precision disruptions — rush-hour flash mobs, bank occupations, “occupy squads” and edgy theatrics. And we will see clearly articulated demands emerging, among them a “Robin Hood tax” on all financial transactions and currency trades; a ban on high-frequency “flash” trading; the reinstatement of the Glass-Steagall Act to again separate investment banking from commercial banking; a constitutional amendment to revoke corporate personhood and overrule Citizens United ; a move toward a “true cost” market regime in which the price of every product reflects the ecological cost of its production, distribution and use; and with a bit of luck, perhaps even the birth of a new, left-right hybrid political party that moves America beyond the Coke vs. Pepsi choices of the past.
In this visceral, canny, militantly nonviolent phase of our march to real democracy, we will “float like a butterfly and sting like a bee.” We will regroup, lick our wounds, brainstorm and network all winter. We will build momentum for a full-spectrum counterattack when the crocuses bloom next spring.
- Posted in



32 Comments so far
Show All"Obama and Blankfein didn't come down to talk to us" because Obama's singular focus is to be the first politician to amass a billion dollar campaign war chest funded by Blankfein and his cronies, while Blankfein is dependent upon Obama's payback in the form of continued serial regressive legislation that enriches the 1% at ever greater expense to the 99%.
Until all non-public money is taken out of political campaigns,and FDR's New Deal financial industry regulations are restored and enhanced, nothing will change.
With each passing day more people reach the point where they have been bled dry by the 1%, resulting in more people joining OWS. Many of us who have not yet been bled dry but see that event on the horizon, have already joined OWS.
How it happened and how we can change it: http://michael-hudson.com/2011/11/reforming-the-u-s-financial-and-tax-system/
Adbusters should not define this movement. Their list of reforms is grossly inadequate. Nor should we simply give up on the idea of occupation; if the tents go (which would be unfortunate, since they are providing essential services to the homeless), the occupations can still continue on a rotational basis. It is absolutely vital to maintain a constant presence, organized along directly democratic lines. "Flash mobs", though welcome, are not sufficient. That's my opinion, anyway. Since the movement is organic and rulerless (as opposed to leaderless), people can make these decisions on a community-by-community basis. I heart NY. Long live Occupy.
I hadn't actually been down into the dark heart of Wall Street until last Friday when I attended a working group meeting attached to OWS. Working groups meet in an indoor public space located at 60 Wall Street. The sidewalks are open to foot traffic, but the street, itself, -- Wall Street -- is barricaded and caged, open only at the corners. I'm not sure who is allowed into the cages, except that on one block, the cages contain NYPD on horseback (three on Friday, two on Sunday) -- directly in front of the Trump Building located at 40 Wall Street. I have no idea how long the shifts are, but there they are, cops on horseback, penned in by barricades, watching pedestrians pass by them. The cavalry is here!
Of course, the horses pee and defecate -- as all animals do. Yesterday, Sunday, I attended 2 meetings at 60 Wall Street, and the stench was very strong, and no one was cleaning up after the horses. The people who do the cleaning must have Sundays off. So, right in front of the Trump Building were piles and piles of horse crap on the banksters precious Wall Street -- literally!
If the orders come from the top -- Bloomberg and Kelly -- they are doing a "heck of a job!"
We all knew it was never about sanitation or safety. That was pure theater for those watching TV, removed and distant.
Exactly!!
I couldn't help but chuckle a bit at the scene!
More than likely, this morning, someone has already cleaned up the area, before the banksters reported for work, so that they can continue the financial scams and the looting of the 99%.
Yes, as Nomi Prins reminded us that "it continues to be legal for investment bankers to do everything today that they could legally do a decade ago, NOTHING has changed". Until financial fraud is recriminalized, the 1% will continue to become wealthier and the 99% poorer with each passing day.
KRS-One - "Sound of da Police"
Take the word "overseer," like a sample
Repeat it very quickly in a crew for example
Overseer
Overseer
Overseer
Overseer
Officer, Officer, Officer, Officer!
Yeah, officer from overseer
You need a little clarity?
Check the similarity!
The overseer rode around the plantation
The officer is off patroling all the nation
The overseer could stop you what you're doing
The officer will pull you over just when he's pursuing
The overseer had the right to get ill
And if you fought back, the overseer had the right to kill
The officer has the right to arrest
And if you fight back they put a hole in your chest!
(Woop!) They both ride horses
After 400 years, I've _got_ no choices!
Look to Egypt. Did they go into focus groups and begin articulating demands? Perhaps. However, note that they are back in the streets, in Tahir Square, seeking the revolution many have already died for, a revolution that will eventually uproot an entrenched ruling elite and military machine. How will this be done? More and more people understand that SCAF is the old regime. Nothing has changed with the 'reforms' to date. The victory is still behind a clould of tear gas. Determination comes in waves; revolution is a process and a battle over space, a battle over existing property and property relations; revolution is the first step in social justice. Reclaiming everything so that a different world is possible--that is revolution--but so is the ongoing process to establish a longterm vision of equitable social relations, wealth, and a completely different way of being where the environment is central, where each person is valuable...
A revolution heading for a Civil War or an Islamist State that will crush women, gays, leftists etc.
I disagree. It certainly is NOT a civil war. It is virtually the entire population pitted against the remnants of the Mubarek regime. How could you not know this? Further the coalition of opposition groups spans the a wide political spectrum. All aspirations for a more egalitarian, less sexist society hinge on the success of the revolution. How could you not know this?
Review this article:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/nov/22/egypts-government-offers-resign-protests
...
At least 33 people have been killed and more than 2,000 injured following a third day of clashes in Cairo and beyond, with confirmation emerging for the first time that security forces have been firing live ammunition at demonstrators....
"The Scaf only have two choices – they obey the will of the people, or Egypt burns," said Ramy el-Swissy, a leading member of the April 6th youth movement which is one of several organisations that has announced plans for a 'million-man' occupation of Tahrir today.
A broad coalition of revolutionary movements from across the political spectrum, including leftist, liberal and Islamist organisations, also threw their full weight behind the protests. "We confirm our readiness to face all the forces that aim to abort the revolution, reproduce the old regime, or drag the country into chaos and turn the revolution into a military coup," said a joint statement by 37 groups....
I was glad to read this write-up in the Washington Post. First of all, I am not one of those people, who like some in the left and many in the right, claim that you folks do not know what you are doing, because you have not articulated any demand! Any one paying attention should know what OWS is all about, people who have organized this brilliant movement, those who are participating in it, making enormous sacrifices, know what is required. When the crocuses bloom, the time you have given yourselves to regroup and rethink the next step, I hope you take the following into consideration: the changes that the 99% demand, and why those demands have forced themselves out on Wall Street is fundamentally due to failure of the current political system –as OWS has vocally stated again and again. The question then is what is to be done? Surely, we cannot expect those who are beholden to Wall Street, finance capital, mega-banks and big-business in general to accept changes that require giving up the powers and privileges they have usurped. Neither is the violent overthrow of those in power is possible; clearly, OWS is not about violent overthrow, in spite of what the pimps of Wall Street would like people to believe. It would seem that the only option is to take advantage of whatever opportunity, however limited it might be at the present, American democracy offers: and that is the electoral process. The best available alternative calls for and the current situation, both the negative, i.e., dismal state of the economy, corrupt but powerful politicians and lobbyists, and the positive, i.e., emergence of the OWS movement, demands that those of you who have demonstrated clear comprehension of our current conditions, displayed incredible organizational acumen, saint-like patience in the face of deadly provocations and incitement to violence, need to carry on your work into the political arena and take on the mantle of leadership the country desperately needs. You men and women are the future, and like it or not the burden of what comes next are on you, and you might as well embrace it. Please consider running for the House and the Senate as independents from wherever you are: you are known for your vision in you communities, and you will be supported. If not for national office, consider running for state offices, county office, whatever you think you are ready for, but ready for politics you have to be. Unfortunately, this is a long journey and patience is definitely a virtue in this case, but even if only a few of you get elected initially, I am convinced that you will be noticed and change will begin. When the crocuses start to bloom, hope you will too, in the wide field of national politics that is now barren, or at best populated with poisonous weeds.
After two stolen elections Bush Florida, Bush Ohio, we are clearly in a state of "Catch 22". There is no state authorized method too succssfully reclaim the commons,that why revolution is demanded. Revolution is always demanded when there is no state mechanism that allows the alterations necessary for the welfare of the populace.Three State counterattacks are in progress now, Number one attack, Divisiveness, Dirty Voilent Homeless, Effete Snobby Bourgeois, Number two attack Brutal Police, Number three attack, Oh just go out and vote etc.Cooption back into a failed fixed state/corporate political system.Agreed Adbusters may have sparked Occupy but their perspective is much too narrow. I believe horizontal, agenda free resistance, is still the most accomadating for participatory growth and strength in numbers and amorphousness. How does a State go about strangling AIR?
For those of us who are sure that the OWS movement is not only not going to go away but grow for many years and eventually become the basis for a political organization to challenge the two political parties know as Capitalism One and Capitalism One-A, there is a free book we should be reading.
The website is www.aeinstein.org and the title is FROM DICTATORSHIP TO DEMOCRACY by Gene Sharp. It shows how non-violent methods can bring down almost any government, political party or corporation.
At the end there is a list of 198 methods of non-violent action that will weaken and eventually change or dismantle the intended target.
If you are in a rural area look for OWS branches in college towns and see if you can assist them in some manner.
This is the only way we will create a life where humanity is allowed to flourish in an atmosphere of justice and democracy. That life will not happen under corporate rule.
Thanks for the link to the Gene Sharp book. "HOW TO START A REVOLUTION," an award-winning documentary about Gene Sharp and the Albert Einstein Institution, will be broadcast on Tuesday, November 22 at 9:00 pm (8:00 pm Central). (Not sure what channel cuz I don't own a TV)
Considering that almost every news article is about Wall St., protests and general world angst I thought it would be fitting to share a link to a documentary that a friend of mine just shared with me. It is really worth watching and I'm thinking there are people who will want to stifle the truths it reveals. Please, check it out and share with others.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cOeYdKjyEA&feature=related
http://youtu.be/4cOeYdKjyEA
www.thrive.com
I accessed it through the first link, but the second is the official address that was given at the end of film, along with the third address, which I have not been to yet. A very confirming appraisal of what and who is behind the New World Order and how it is being implemented.....along with some very good thoughts on how to effect positive change in the world. A film all should see.
Those kooks recommend privatizing the judicial system, and shrinking government down - ala Grover Norquist's ideas. The support the school voucher and charter school nonsense - they favor totally privatizing education.
They promote a "free market" approach to food health and safety issues - privatizing that completely.
They favor privatizing environmental protection.
That is the weirdest mix of New Age lunacy and libertarianism I have ever seen.
Your links don't work, by the way.
http://thrivemovement.com/
"Thrive" is a mix of kooks, New Age lunacy and libertarianism? Or am I misinterpreting your comment? Either way, would you please explain your appraisal. I only watched the documentary (which I thought was excellently done and full of info we should learn even more about). I did not explore the main site, so maybe I'm missing something. And thanks for putting the official site address up, though I still wonder how long the documentary will be accessible.
http://thrivemovement.com/
Read their "solutions" at their website.
Crop circles combined with Tea Party political positions is what I am calling a mix of New Age lunacy and libertarianism.
QUESTIONS:
"Why didn’t Bloomberg come down to talk to us? Or Goldman Sachs chief executive Lloyd Blankfein? Why didn’t President Obama acknowledge the protesters — largely the people who elected him — and mingle in the open-air town halls? ..... How come our political leaders are so isolated, our discourse so rigid? Why can’t the American power elite engage with the nation’s young?"
ONE ANSWER:
Guilt. They cannot look at themselves in the mirror. They know that they reside on the MORAL LOW GROUND on this major conflict. They can see and they understand the economic numbers, the economic facts. They can see the people in revolt. They know that something is wrong. OWS's peaceful, rational strategy places the OWS movement on the MORAL HIGH GROUND and prevents the 1% from shouting "foul" and labeling them as, say, "terrorists". Result? The 1% and its compensated lackeys are trapped in guilt, right where they belong.
If only they really were capable of feeling guilt. At least that would mean there is a human somewhere inside that could be appealed to. But then if they were human they wouldn't be acting as they do anyway.
Having worked in both settings for decades, let me assure you that in corporations and government, people who are capable of feeling guilt are weeded out long before reaching the levels that Bloomberg, Blankfein, Obama and others have achieved.
Each of them have more money than they will need if they live to be 200 years old. Their endless pursuit of more money is solely to solidify their positions among the 1% and achieve greater power over the 99%.
“First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.”
-- Ghandi
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Keep on truckin', OWS!!!
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I wish I could go to my local OWS and join in protesting, but my fear of crowds prevents me. I want to go, but I just can't, so I support in other ways, by donating coats, mittens, hats, etc..
I have no money to spare.
I have no healthcare,
I have no retirement,
I'm up to my ears in debt,
and I have absolutely no faith that I will ever see a penny of my Social Security that I've worked for since I was 16.
From what I understand, it's actually solvent through 2032 or thereabouts...
I will be 65 in 2034.
So OWS is fighting for my future, too.. not only young people's futures.
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I want to say THANK YOU to the OWS people that put themselves on the line and get pepper sprayed and bloodied and arrested. I'm ashamed that I can't muster the courage to do so myself.
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I cry with empathy when I see on the news old ladies and students and veterans being sprayed and bloodied for my sake, and I know no words I say will make a difference, except THANK YOU for doing for me what I cannot do for myself.
OWS participants on the front lines will succeed as a result of the support they receive from Martha and many others.
The simple act of removing Social Security's $106K annual earnings cap will assure that the program is as solvent for those turning 65 in 2134 as it is for those turning 65 in 2034. Unfortunately, Obama's "payroll tax holiday" defunds the program by more than 100 billion dollars each year. Not what I would call "hope". Definitely what I would call regressive change.
As my daughter would say, "No sorry, Martha." We need your heart and support. You are doing what you can. One thing that you can do is post to the OWS wall on Facebook. The people out there are strengthened by knowing that there are people like us behind them. I visited Occupy Boston and was grateful for the non-judgmental attitudes. My friend and I were welcomed, not as tourists but as comrades in support of #Occupy. The Occupy movement knows that not everyone can camp out or send money. But then, it's not really all about that alone. Bless you.
Thanks you for what you shared, Martha.
Instead of encampments, which are easily surrounded and crushed , we need to be more flexible and adapt a flash mob guerrilla warfare mentality. Pick soft targets and focus our energy on them. We have to let go of fetish type behavior like the human mic merely an adaptation of the moment and realize we cannot get hung up on such momentary devices. The GA however is central and we need to concentrate on opening them everywhere, every town, every neighborhood ever factory and school. Spread the idea of occupying the POLITICAL space not just the physical space. If we fill the room with our own form of democracy everywhere and keep it going we can enact REAL change.
In reviewing the sequence of events that emboldened average people to stand up against the powers that be, I have to include the Green Revolution in Iran as a courageous and astounding event that must have effected the Arab Spring protesters. In addition, the spectacle of Wikileaks and Julian Assange defying the U.S. military and government was a paradigm shifter. Why are these left out?
Not every article can include everything.
I believe OWS is the ultimate battle between the "people and the corporatocracy" and WE THE PEOPLE WILL WIN IN THE END!!!
We are now living in a Plutocracy crafted over the years by big business. Plutocracy is defined as "government by the wealthy/a controlling class of the wealthy - exactly what our "Democracy" has morphed into.
The proof is in the fact that our president is a multi-millionaire, over half of our Congress are multi-millionaires, and over half of the Supreme Court are multi-millionaires. These facts can be verified right here on the internet.
Who in their right mind would ever call sucn a conglomeration a "democracy - rule by the people"????? When a government declares that businesses are now "people," no further proof is needed for the decimation of our government into a "bastard republic" that serves only the rich.
At 68, I cannot personally participate in the OWS, but my heart and mind is right there in their midst. Please keep up your demands for a return of our democracy TO THE PEOPLE WHO ACTUALLY OWN OUR GOVERNMENT!!!
"... to dismantle the global casino in which $1.3 trillion worth of derivatives, credit default swaps and other financial instruments slosh around every day... "
Good article here by Ad Busters.
I'd like to know what you cite above as $1.3 trillion per day "sloshing." I am interested in getting a better handle on the macro economics of our bankrupt capitalism of casino bankers. I've seen various figures for the losses off loaded by banksters, congress, and Obama. Here's one: $11 trillion so far in direct equity losses to homeowners. Here's another: $11.8 trillion has been "guaranteed" (loans, promises, etc.), mostly by the FED to be available to cover possible further losses. And also: BoA holds some $56 trillion in derivatives (largely unhealthy one they acquired from Merrill Lynch).
What do these figures represent, what do they mean? Here is one yardstick: annual US GDP is $14.plus trillion. One can only wonder what pool of assets the fed can cash out to cover the almost one year of GDP. BoA's toxic pool of ''assets'' is five years of GDP.
If anyone here and at Ad Busters can forward helpful macro economic info please email mconnel5@rochester.rr.com