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'You Can Crush the Flowers, But You Can’t Stop the Spring'
Dream big. Occupy your hopes. Talk to strangers. Live in public. Don’t stop now.
Last Tuesday, I awoke in lower Manhattan to the whirring of helicopters overhead, a war-zone sound that persisted all day and then started up again that Thursday morning, the two-month anniversary of Occupy Wall Street and a big day of demonstrations in New York City. It was one of the dozens of ways you could tell that the authorities take Occupy Wall Street seriously, even if they profoundly mistake what kind of danger it poses. If you ever doubted whether you were powerful or you mattered, just look at the reaction to people like you (or your children) camped out in parks from Oakland to Portland, Tucson to Manhattan.
Of course, “camped out” doesn’t quite catch the spirit of the moment, because those campsites are the way people have come together to bear witness to their hopes and fears, to begin to gather their power and discuss what is possible in our disturbingly unhinged world, to make clear how wrong our economic system is, how corrupt the powers that support it are, and to begin the search for a better way. Consider it an irony that the campsites are partly for sleeping, but symbols of the way we have awoken.
When civil society sleeps, we’re just a bunch of individuals absorbed in our private lives. When we awaken, on campgrounds or elsewhere, when we come together in public and find our power, the authorities are terrified. They often reveal their ugly side, their penchant for violence and for hypocrisy.
Consider the liberal mayor of Oakland, who speaks with outrage of people camping without a permit but has nothing to say about the police she dispatched to tear-gas a woman in a wheelchair, shoot a young Iraq war veteran in the head, and assault people while they slept. Consider the billionaire mayor of New York who dispatched the NYPD on a similar middle-of-the-night raid on November 15th. Recall this item included in a bald list of events that night: “tear-gassing the kitchen tent.” Ask yourself when did kitchens really need to be attacked with chemical weapons?
Does an 84-year-old woman need to be tear-gassed in Seattle? Does a three-tours-of-duty veteran need to be beaten until his spleen ruptures in Oakland? Does our former poet laureate need to be bashed in the ribs after his poet wife is thrown to the ground at UC Berkeley? Admittedly, this is a system that regards people as disposable, but not usually so literally.
Two months ago, the latest protests against that system began. The response only confirms our vision of how it all works. They are fighting fire with gasoline. Perhaps being frightened makes them foolish. After all, once civil society rouses itself from slumber, it can be all but unstoppable. (If they were smart they’d try to soothe it back to sleep.) “Arrest one of us; two more appear. You can’t arrest an idea!” said the sign held by a man in a Guy Fawkes mask in reoccupied Zuccotti Park last Thursday.
Last Wednesday in San Francisco, 100 activists occupied the Bank of America, even erecting a symbolic tent inside it in which a dozen activists immediately took refuge. At the Berkeley campus of the University of California, setting up tents on any grounds was forbidden, so the brilliant young occupiers used clusters of helium balloons to float tents overhead, a smart image of defiance and sky-high ambition. And the valiant UC Davis students, after several of them were pepper-sprayed in the face while sitting peacefully on the ground, evicted the police, chanting, “You can go! You can go!” They went.
Occupy Oakland has been busted up three times and still it thrives. To say nothing of the other 1,600 occupations in the growing movement.
Alexander Dubcek, the government official turned hero of the Prague Spring uprising of 1968, once said, “You can crush the flowers, but you can’t stop the spring.”
The busting of Zuccotti Park and the effervescent, ingenious demonstrations elsewhere are a reminder that, despite the literal “occupations” on which this protean movement has been built, it can soar as high as those Berkeley balloons and take many unexpected forms. Another OWS sign, “The beginning is near,” caught the mood of the moment. Flowers seem like the right image for this uprising led by the young, those who have been most crushed by the new economic order, and who bloom by rebelling and rebel by blooming.
The Best and the Worst
Now world-famous Zuccotti Park is just a small concrete and brown marble-paved scrap of land surrounded by tall buildings. Despite the “Occupy Wall Street” label, it’s actually two blocks north of that iconic place. It’s rarely noted that the park is within sight of, and kitty-corner to, Ground Zero, where the World Trade Center towers crumbled.
What was born and what died that day a decade ago has everything to do with what’s going on in and around the park, the country, and the world now. For this, al-Qaeda is remarkably irrelevant, except as the outfit that long ago triggered an incident that instantly released both the best and the worst in our society.
The best was civil society. As I wandered in the Zuccotti Park area last week, I was struck again by how much what really happened on the morning of September 11th has been willfully misremembered. It can be found nowhere in the plaques and monuments. Firemen more than deserve their commemorations, but mostly they acted in vain, on bad orders from above, and with fatally flawed communications equipment. The fact is: the people in the towers and the neighborhood -- think of them as civil society coming together in crisis -- largely rescued themselves, and some of them told the firefighters to head down, not up.
We need memorials to the coworkers who carried their paraplegic accountant colleague down 69 flights of stairs while in peril themselves; to Ada Rosario-Dolch, the principal who got all of the High School for Leadership, a block away, safely evacuated, while knowing her sister had probably been killed in one of those towers; to the female executives who walked the blind newspaper seller to safety in Greenwich Village; to the unarmed passengers of United Flight 93, who were the only ones to combat terrorism effectively that day; and to countless, nameless others. We need monuments to ourselves, to civil society.
Ordinary people shone that morning. They were not terrorized; they were galvanized into action, and they were heroic. And it didn’t stop with that morning either. That day, that week they began to talk about what the events of 9/11 actually meant for them, and they acted to put their world back together, practically and philosophically. All of which terrified the Bush administration, which soon launched not only its “global war on terror” and its invasion of Afghanistan, but a campaign against civil society. It was aimed at convincing each of us that we should stay home, go shopping, fear everything except the government, and spy on each other.
The only monument civil society ever gets is itself, and the satisfaction of continuing to do the work that matters, the work that has no bosses and no paychecks, the work of connecting, caring, understanding, exploring, and transforming. So much about Occupy Wall Street resonates with what came in that brief moment a decade before and then was shut down for years.
That little park that became “occupied” territory brought to mind the way New York’s Union Square became a great public forum in the weeks after 9/11, where everyone could gather to mourn, connect, discuss, debate, bear witness, share food, donate or raise money, write on banners, and simply live in public. (Until the city shut that beautiful forum down in the name of sanitation -- that sacred cow which by now must be mating with the Wall Street Bull somewhere in the vicinity of Zuccotti Park.)
It was remarkable how many New Yorkers lived in public in those weeks after 9/11. Numerous people have since told me nostalgically of how the normal boundaries came down, how everyone made eye contact, how almost anyone could talk to almost anyone else. Zuccotti Park and the other Occupies I’ve visited -- Oakland, San Francisco, Tucson, New Orleans -- have been like that, too. You can talk to strangers. In fact, it’s almost impossible not to, so much do people want to talk, to tell their stories, to hear yours, to discuss our mutual plight and what solutions to it might look like.
It’s as though the great New York-centric moment of openness after 9/11, when we were ready to reexamine our basic assumptions and look each other in the eye, has returned, and this time it’s not confined to New York City, and we’re not ready to let anyone shut it down with rubbish about patriotism and peril, safety and sanitation.
It’s as if the best of the spirit of the Obama presidential campaign of 2008 was back -- without the foolish belief that one man could do it all for civil society. In other words, this is a revolt, among other things, against the confinement of decision-making to a thoroughly corrupted and corporate-money-laced electoral sphere and against the pitfalls of leaders. And it represents the return in a new form of the best of the post-9/11 moment.
As for the worst after 9/11 -- you already know the worst. You’ve lived it. The worst was two treasury-draining wars that helped cave in the American dream, a loss of civil liberties, privacy, and governmental accountability. The worst was the rise of a national security state to almost unimaginable proportions, a rogue state that is our own government, and that doesn’t hesitate to violate with impunity the Geneva Convention, the Bill of Rights, and anything else it cares to trash in the name of American "safety" and "security." The worst was blind fealty to an administration that finished off making this into a country that serves the 1% at the expense, or even the survival, of significant parts of the 99%. More recently, it has returned as another kind of worst: police brutality (speaking of blind fealty to the 1%).
Civil Society Gets a Divorce
You can think of civil society and the state as a marriage of convenience. You already know who the wife is, the one who is supposed to love, cherish, and obey: that’s us. Think of the state as the domineering husband who expects to have a monopoly on power, on violence, on planning and policymaking.
Of course, he long ago abandoned his actual wedding vows, which means he is no longer accountable, no longer a partner, no longer bound by the usual laws, treaties, conventions. He left home a long time ago to have a sordid affair with the Fortune 500, but with the firm conviction that we should continue to remain faithful -- or else. The post-9/11 era was when we began to feel the consequences of all this and the 2008 economic meltdown brought it home to roost.
Think of Occupy as the signal that the wife, Ms. Civil Society, has finally acknowledged that those vows no longer bind her either. Perhaps this is one reason why the Occupy movement seems remarkably uninterested in electoral politics while being political in every possible way. It is no longer appealing to that violent, errant husband. It has turned its back on him -- thus the much-decried lack of “demands” early on, except for the obvious demand the pundits pretended not to see: the demand for economic justice.
Still, Ms. Civil Society is not asking for any favors: she is setting out on her own, to make policy on a small scale through the model of the general assembly and on a larger scale by withdrawing deference from the institutions of power. (In one symbolic act of divorce, at least three quarters of a million Americans have moved their money from big banks to credit unions since Occupy began.) The philandering husband doesn’t think the once-cowed wife has the right to do any of this -- and he’s ready to strike back. Literally.
The Occupy movement has decided, on the other hand, that it doesn’t matter what he thinks. It -- they -- she -- we soon might realize as well that he’s actually the dependent one, the one who rules at civil society’s will, the one who lives off her labor, her taxes, her productivity. Mr. Unaccountable isn’t anywhere near as independent as he imagines. The corporations give him his little treats and big campaign donations, but they, too, depend on consumers, workers, and ultimately citizens who may yet succeed in reining them in.
In the meantime, a domestic-violence-prone government is squandering a fortune on a little-mentioned extravagance in financially strapped American cities: police brutality, wrongful arrest, and lawsuits over civil-rights violations. New York City -- recall those pepper-sprayed captive young women, that legal observer with a police scooter parked on top of him, and all the rest -- you’re going to have a giant bill due in court, just as you did after the 2004 Republican convention fiasco: New York has spent almost a billion dollars paying for the collateral damage already done by its police force over the past dozen years.
The desperately impoverished city of Oakland paid out more than $2 million in recompense for the behavior of the Oakland Police at a nonviolent blockade at the Oakland Docks after the invasion of Iraq broke out in 2003, but seems to have learned nothing from it. Surely payouts in similar or larger quantities are due to be handed out again, money that could have gone to schools, community clinics, parks, libraries, to civilization instead of brutalization.
Out of the Ruins
Maybe the teardown of Zuccotti Park last Wednesday should be seen as a faint echo of the attacks of September 11, 2001. Structures, admittedly far more flimsy, were destroyed, violently, by surprise attack, and yet resolve was only strengthened -- and what was lost?
The encampment had become crowded and a little chaotic. There was the admirable bustle of a village -- bicycle-powered generators on which someone was often peddling; information, media, and medic sites whose staff worked devotedly; a kitchen dispensing meals to whoever came; and of course, the wonderful library dumpstered by the agents of the law. There were also a lot of people who had been drawn in by the free food and community, including homeless people and some disruptive characters, all increasingly surrounded by vendors of t-shirts, buttons, and other knick-knacks trying to make a quick buck.
One of the complicating factors in the Occupy movement is that so many of the thrown-away people of our society -- the homeless, the marginal, the mentally ill, the addicted -- have come to Occupy encampments for safe sleeping space, food, and medical care. And these economic refugees were generously taken in by the new civil society, having been thrown out by the old uncivil one.
Complicating everything further was the fact that the politicians and the mainstream media were more than happy to blame the occupiers for taking in what society as a whole created, and for the complications that then ensued. (No mayor, no paper now complains about the unsanitariness of throwing the homeless and others back onto the streets of our cities as winter approaches.)
Civil society contains all kinds of people, and all kinds have shown up at the Occupy encampments. The inclusiveness of such places is one of the great achievements of this movement. (Occupy Memphis, for instance, has even reached out to Tea Party members.) Veterans, students, their grandparents, hitherto apolitical people, the employed and unemployed, the housed and the homeless, and people of all ages and colors have been drawn in along with the unions. And yes, there are also a lot of young white activists, who can be thanked for taking on the hard work and heat. We can only hope that this broad coalition will hang together a while longer.
It Gets Better
And of course just as civil society is all of us, so some of us have crossed over to become that force known as the state, and even there, the response has been more varied than might be imagined. New York City Councilman Ydanis Rodriguez got scraped up and arrested by the NYPD when he tried to walk past a barricade two blocks from Wall Street while the camp was being cleared. And retired New York Supreme Court judge Karen Smith got shoved around a little and threatened with arrest while acting as a legal observer.
A councilwoman in Tucson, Regina Romero, has become a dedicated advocate for the Occupy encampment there, and when the San Francisco police massed on the night of November 3rd, five supervisors, the public defender, and a state senator all came to stand with us.
I got home at 2 a.m. that night and wrote, “Their vows to us felt like true representative democracy for the first time ever, brought to us by the power of direct democracy: the Occupy Movement. I thought of the Oath of the Horatii, David's great painting in the spirit of the French Revolution. The spirit in the plaza was gallant, joyous, and ready for anything. A little exalted and full of tenderness for each other. Helicopters hovered overhead, and people sent back reports of buses and massed police in other parts of town. But they never arrived.”
Former Philadelphia Police Captain Ray Lewis actually came to Wall Street to get arrested last week. "They complained about the park being dirty," he said. "Here they are worrying about dirty parks when people are starving to death, where people are freezing, where people are sleeping in subways, and they’re concerned about a dirty park. That’s obnoxious, it’s arrogant, it’s ignorant, it’s disgusting.”
And the Army, or some of its most honorable veterans, are with the occupiers, too. In the Bay Area, members of Iraq Veterans Against the War have been regular participants, and Occupy Wall Street has had its larger-than-life ex-marine, Shamar Thomas, clad in worn fatigues and medals. He famously told off the NYPD early on: “This is not a war zone. These are unarmed people. It doesn’t make you tough to hurt these people. It doesn’t. Stop hurting these people!”
To my delight, at Occupy Wall Street I ran into him, almost literally, still wearing his fatigues and medals and carrying a sign that said, “There’s no honor in police brutality” on one side and “NO WAR” on the other. Which war -- the ones in the Greater Middle East or on the streets of the U.S.A. -- hardly seemed to matter: they’re one war now, the war of the 1% against the rest of us. I told him that his tirade was the first time I ever felt like the U.S. military had actually defended me.
Right now everyone is trying to figure out what happens next and quite a few self-appointed outside advisors are telling the Occupy movement exactly what to do (without all the bother of attending general assemblies and engaging in the process of working out ideas together). So far, the Occupy instigators and Occupy insiders have been doing a brilliant job of improvising a way that civil society can move forward into the unimaginable.
As for me, the grounds of my hope have always been that history is wilder than our imagination of it and that the unexpected shows up far more regularly than we ever dream. A year ago, no one imagined an Arab Spring, and no one imagined this American Fall -- even the people who began planning for it this summer. We don’t know what’s coming next, and that’s the good news. My advice is just of the most general sort: Dream big. Occupy your hopes. Talk to strangers. Live in public. Don’t stop now.
I’m sure of one thing: there are a lot more flowers coming.
- Posted in


27 Comments so far
Show AllExcellent piece! Well said! A must read.
"Ordinary people shone that morning. They were not terrorized; they were galvanized into action, and they were heroic."
And they weren't armed or in "uniform".
And the comparision of today's society to a marriage of convenience is brilliant.
All seasons may disappear if we don't stop using our breathing air for a garbage dump.
Mother Nature will always seek a balance and level. We may not like how she gets there, but she will and something will sprout and grow in that new norm. We may not exist but she will.
this writer talks a lot about flowers
flowery
but what gets me about this analysis is its childlike view of the occupy process, which is not to impune her sincerity in any way
she says things like no one could foresee the arab spring
the council on foreign relations were planning for the removal of the arab dictators 3 years ago - just read their policy statements. they were to be removed not because the cfr is devoted to democracy, it isn't, they just felt the usefulness was tapped out
they were managed movements - like the colored revolutions of eastern europe
not one of them has resulted in a break from the us military backed control structures, if fact the opposite is true
just look at egypt - the military is killing more people than ever but obummer sees no humanitarian need there anymore
these movements are not about democracy at all - they are about lack of jobs and opportunity
if you think that the arabs are looking at the corrupt amerikan nightmare and thinking they want to be like us you're crazy
amerikan prestige is dead, no one wants to be like us
in fact they want us to dismantle our military bases and go home, which will never happen - to hell with the will of the people
chomsky has pointed out again and again - MOST people in the world identify 2 terrorist states - those being the united states and israel
as for occupy - they can and will be "dealt with" when they become too threatening to the powers that be here in the fascist homeland
just take 2 minutes and read about how brutal our government was in killing the labor movement in the 30's, or the assassinations of the black panthers in the 60's
they killed 90 branch davidians for who knows why...
amerikans are into occupy to the extent that they are for one main overwhelming reason: like the arabs we have no jobs, no cash and no future
same for the europeans
what are we chasing - democracy - hell we got one of those mutants already
howz it working for ya
"the council on foreign relations were planning for the removal of the arab dictators 3 years ago - just read their policy statements. they were to be removed not because the cfr is devoted to democracy, it isn't, they just felt the usefulness was tapped out"
I don't think that's the part of the "Arab Spring" she was talking about that people didn't foresee. I think even the CFR was surprised by the number and manner in which the protest was carried out. The fact that Christians stood guard while Muslim's prayed, the protestors protecting the museum and private merchants, the fact that the protestors stayed non-violent even though provocateurs were used, the military refusing to resort to extreme measures, the social civility of whole thing was what was surprising. refreshing and inspirational.
You missed the point entirely.
America has become a corporation. Obama is the CEO. Congress is the Board of Directors. Wall Street is Research and Development. The media is its Public Relations Department. The military is its Legal Department. The universities are the Human Resources Department. Hollywood is its Marketing Department. Lobbyists are the Sales Department. The Judicial System are the shareholders. And the Supreme Court is the father of the first corporate citizen. This is what the OWS movement is up against. Even if the OWS movement could convince the police to join the movement the corporations have many more means of defense available. The police are just the first method to be used. The people of Egypt were happy when they thought the military would protect them and that they were on the side of the people. Now they see the truth. Corporations will use their military against their own country.
Hoa binh
Thank you, Rebecca Solnit. You see clearly and write accurately. Once the naked and ugly truth is out, there is no going back, even should we wish to. The rapacious and brutal old world is crumbling all around us and we must find a new way of respect and cooperation among peoples and for and with Mother Nature if we are to survive these perilous times. It's now a matter of finding the wisdom and the courage to change --or we perish. OWS shows the way to begin the new quest.
In depicting Civil Society as an abused wife and government as the battering husband whom she has walked out on, Rebecca Solnit has forgotten a dangerous part of this scenario: the reaction of the husband once the wife takes up with a new mate. As any divorce lawyer or beat cop will tell you, that situation is explosive to say the least. Considering the tools the abusive husband has its' disposal should he feel cuckolded, the battered wife would be well advised to know exactly what she is getting into.
I think this battered wife is well aware of what happened to Nicole Brown Simpson.and Ronald Goldman. Hopefully she can take precautions to prevent the same fate befalling her. Especially since this husband is every bit as much a protected celebrity or more so than OJ.
It would be a shame for all battered wifes to succumb to a reality that since OJ got away with it they must all continue to accept an abusive relationship without complaint or recourse.
Great piece!!!
from the article:
~ It’s rarely noted that the park is within sight of, and kitty-corner to, Ground Zero, where the World Trade Center towers crumbled.
What was born and what died that day a decade ago has everything to do with what’s going on in and around the park, the country, and the world now. For this, al-Qaeda is remarkably irrelevant, except as the outfit that long ago triggered an incident that instantly released both the best and the worst in our society. ~
what a strange word to use: crumbled...
the World Trade Center towers crumbled...
crumbling sounds so, um, natural...like they got old, or tired...like they all suffer this problem, in time...they just, sort of, fell apart into heaps...
deadly, toxic heaps...
al-Quaeda triggered the crumbling Towers...
so little critical thought required to accept such a sentence...
tall buildings crumble...
they can be triggered to do so (by holding open a certain door near the bottom? by farting next to, or inside, them? by saying the magic word?)...
al-Qaeda triggered two to do so...or was it three?
she doesn't say...nor how they did the triggering...
acknowledging such disparities invites the ugliness of reality into the harmony of belief...
better to be grateful to the military that al-Qaeda hasn't been able to attack us since...
even though they didn't stop the attack on 911, so they probably wouldn't stop the next one, either...if you believed in the attack, anyway...or the drill our defenses were allegedly engaged in on 911 that were based on thwarting such an attack...drills that prevented them from accepting that the 'real' fake attack was a 'real' attack, which, of course, it wasn't, and so responding, and thwarting, in a timely fashion...
no, don't think...just say 'box cutters', and leave it at that...
The best way to predict the future is to invent it.
Alan Kay
Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity.
George S. Patton
Wisdom is always an overmatch for strength.
Phil Jackson
Always forgive your enemies - nothing annoys them so much.
Oscar Wilde
Forgive your enemies, but never forget their names.
John F. Kennedy
It may be hard for an egg to turn into a bird: it would be a jolly sight harder for it to learn to fly while remaining an egg. We are like eggs at present. And you cannot go on indefinitely being just an ordinary, decent egg. We must be hatched or go bad.
C. S. Lewis
You can crush the flowers, but you can’t stop the spring.
Alexander Dubcek
Forgiveness is the fragrance that the violet sheds on the heel that has crushed it.
Mark Twain
My advice is just of the most general sort: Dream big. Occupy your hopes. Talk to strangers. Live in public. Don’t stop now. I’m sure of one thing: there are a lot more flowers coming.
Rebecca Solnit
All the forces in the world are not so powerful as an idea whose time has come.
Victor Hugo
It would be much better if all those folks in "occupy" groups around the country participate in democracy on a daily basis by learning what their local governments do and how their tax money (unless they are too poor to pay real estate and sales taxes and other fees in their cities and counties) is being often given to 1% under the guise of "development" and "core values". All the politics is local and if those guys voted on November 8 perhaps we can make some inroads in our local oligarchies that keep fleecing us.
In my City, which evicted Occupy folks from the local park, only 35% of registered voters came to vote for this very Council that evicted the people from the park and a week later some $30 millions of taxpayers money. were silently given fro "development" boondoggle, with nobody from the Occupy folks present to protest.
Democracy should not be limited to creating a lot of hot air and public nuissance, but it needs to be informed daily effort at our city halls in which local politicians are serving the interests of 1% while fleecing 99%. The flowers are nice, but nothing doing unless people VOTE and participate with open eyes where decisions are made rather then singing coumbaya...
It would be nice if we could count on our votes actually being counted. We know--or we should know by now--that voting machines are anything but reliable in these days of political thuggery, theft and brazen lies. People are tired to death of voting and getting nothing in return. We are not in control. There is no end to the mischief that has been responsible for sabotaging our rights and our freedoms. Much has been carried out behind closed doors while the public has been busy working and caring for their families. We're still learning how deep are the deceptions. Normal people do not think like sociopaths, so we've been out-smarted.
Where do we start? By first stripping the blindfolds from voters' eyes and the protective armor from those in control. We are only in the first stages. We need more bodies to get the full attention of the decision makers. That number is building and strengthening. I am very hopeful. We can all do what we can to support and encourage if we cannot join.
It is only the frailties of age or the pressure of trying to support families that keep many more of us away. The deterioration of a democracy and the morphing of government into empire didn't happen overnight. We are trapped in a web of deceit
largely because we thought much better of our government and are still having difficulty understanding how tight is that web the 1% has woven. It's all sewed up and strangling the life out of the rest of us. It must be unraveled, not with haste, but with forethought.
We have been treated like children. We should respond like adults.
It would be much better if all those folks in "occupy" groups around the country participate in democracy on a daily basis by learning what their local governments do and how their tax money (unless they are too poor to pay real estate and sales taxes and other fees in their cities and counties) is being often given to 1% under the guise of "development" and "core values". All the politics is local and if those guys voted on November 8 perhaps we can make some inroads in our local oligarchies that keep fleecing us.
In my City, which evicted Occupy folks from the local park, only 35% of registered voters came to vote for this very Council that evicted the people from the park and a week later some $30 millions of taxpayers money. were silently given fro "development" boondoggle, with nobody from the Occupy folks present to protest.
Democracy should not be limited to creating a lot of hot air and public nuissance, but it needs to be informed daily effort at our city halls in which local politicians are serving the interests of 1% while fleecing 99%. The flowers are nice, but nothing doing unless people VOTE and participate with open eyes where decisions are made rather then singing coumbaya...
You remind me of all the people who consider non-voters stupid.
Don't you get it yet?
Right or not, for better or worse, (and I think they're right and it's for the better) the people involved in the Occupy movement have lost all hope (if they ever had any) that electoral politics are anything but a thin veneer of lies and distraction over the utter corruption of our rotten, slimy, maggot-covered corpse of a political system, and all decisions are already made by those with money and power, even the colors of the balloons dropped after one of their own is ratified by 25% or so of the supposed adults in the country.
Having no hope of changing things by elections they are doing the only things they can think of, as all people have when this situation has arisen. It is to their credit that they are not bringing bullets and bombs into the streets. Despite the ready availability of them and the unarguable fact that the opponents deserve far worse than simply to be at the termination point in the arc of both, those derelict non-voters are still there, choking from gas, absorbing the blows of clubs without responding in kind, and reforming again and again and again to restate, peacefully but forcefully, their righteous case; that they will not stop demanding the return of stolen property, a renewal of democracy and a reprieve for the natural world.
The people I know who are in and supportive of Occupy are the most informed ones I know. It is not that they have no hope; it is that they realistically and with wisdom, experience and education have no faith in a process that has proven itself over decades to be so obviously and irredeemably twisted.
We get so used to this Alice in Wonderland world that we think it ordinary and unremarkable when monstrous criminality and huge, destructive, raging insanity is revealed behind the veneer.
Just as an example, take a few moments and let this sink in. We are led by people who are so out of touch with reality or so inconceivably uncaring about the fate of billions of people and septillions of other beings that they are perfectly willing to lie and direct the biosphere to be literally destroyed.........because a few hundred white men stand to lose 10 or 20% of their multi-billion dollar fortunes if we act to save the rest. Voting has had no effect on this for the decades we've suspected it and known the easy and multi-beneficial cures, and there is little sign that that will change soon enough to avoid unimaginable calamity. The increasingly dire warnings from what is essentially a unanimity of those who are trained and who study the problem, has been drowned out by the most utterly nonsensical babbling of idiots (I give you Senator James Inhofe and TVMOB) and the manipulative use of symbols and emotions by a few psychopaths with a drug to sell that has given them godlike power and ubermensch pretensions.
it would be much better if people who vote simply stopped, joined the Occupy movement and massed in large enough numbers outside--and inside--buildings that the business of both government and business simply could not be done--until the entire rotting corpse was buried and a more wise, gentle, effective, responsive and egalitarian living being born in its place.
J4zonian
Your post is chock full of understanding, your conclusion interesting, is the cup half-empty? What can bring us to the place you describe and how would you seperate the political? Politics at its highest level of practice will produce a workable but imperfect result. What, are we left to do?
Fortunately, TA,
It’s not my responsibility to come up with all the answers, because like all of us in isolation, I’m woefully inadequate to the task.
But since you asked, he said, puffing up a bit….If you’re asking how we get there I’d say yer lookin at it. We just need more of what’s happening, from more people more convinced that it’s our last chance to avoid calamitous climate change, to more allowance of the question from those who aren’t sure it’s right. More people, more commitment, more money, more time, more consideration...
Above all, we need more awareness, more fearful/brave examination of our deepest selves, individual and communal. Our government is flawed above all by its founders’ refusal or inability to confront the effects of their rage and lack of connection—slavery, Native American genocide, repression, and violence in general. The Senate and the electoral college are proof of that—structural wet blankets on our national ability to become aware and change readily as required. Just as Freud came to an early (1896) realization of the prevalence and dire effects of child abuse, but when he went public with it, released a firestorm of denial and traded truth for fame and status. Everything he came up with after that—seduction theory, id/ego/superego structural theory, etc.—was corrupted by his subsequent lifelong refusal to face the truth again, and the healing power of our psychology has been corrupted by it ever since. Only with the inclusion of other voices in the 1960s—women’s, racial minorities’, colonized and indigenous peoples’—and the return to the truth and essential oneness of individual and systemic societal/political abuse as the basic generator of civilization, did we start to recover our ability to heal people on an effective scale and depth. Those voices were only incorporated because of bravery, fortitude, faith in internal wisdom, and momentous struggle.
It’s hard to free ourselves from those structural internal and external biases, but courageous self-examination, with help, is the way to start. The alternative is what Jung called evil: failure to face the shadow. (M. Scott Peck said the same thing differently: evil is unwillingness to face the pain of self-examination). We have to be firm enough, but loving enough, to make the whatever percent (.01, 1, 17…) feel both pressured and safe, to examine themselves. If we make it clear that the results of their courageous self-examination will be violence and recrimination and what they see as theft of what’s rightfully theirs, THEY WILL NEVER DO IT. (I’m as guilty here as many.)
William Penn, one of England’s 1%, had an inherited ceremonial sword he loved. When he became a Quaker he expected to have to give up the sword, as Quakers believed in neither violence nor ceremony. He hated the idea, so he talked to founder George Fox, who eventually came to say “Wear it as long as thee can.” So Penn did; he wore it until he didn’t want it anymore because the wisdom he was reaching through faith, practice, community and elders permeated him core to surface and made him whole rather than split. It became easy to give up the sword.
Once you start that integration process there is no separation between psychological, personal action, political action, community action, national action, international solidarity… You do what you need to become one with yourself and other beings, because you find your hunger for money, sex, things, TV, alcohol…everything… is only the cheap imitation of hunger for oneness, and you can actually get the real thing if and only if you give up those distractions.
I’m on my way down to Occupy Oakland today to help plan food production and take part in the most exciting manifestation of true democracy in… I don’t know how long. Ever, maybe. (because despite our terrible ignorance, the common people of the US are closer to knowing history, psychology and ecology than any mass of people before.)
The formation of the US government, out of the ruins of an empire and a (probably not tried hard enough) confederation of states, was a remarkable advance at the time despite its faults. One might say advance to the past, since Iroquois and other societies were already better than anything the US has ever had or been, though they too were hardly perfect. But we see now the problems with it, and it’s time to dissolve it and move on to the next, better experiment. If there’s an Occupy near you, go. If there’s not, start one. And
“Work in the invisible world
at least as hard as you do in the visible.”
Rumi
"Occupy-worship ignores so much of the weight of history, as if all of a sudden all the decades since the 60s have magically disappeared, and it's magic mushrooms and drum circles that are to lead this empire to a new dawn of spiritual purity."
I don't think she said that at all. Anymore than an abused wife thinks the abusive husband's promises to "never do it again" are anything more than empty promises. I think what she is celebrating is the awaking of the abused wife to that fact, and that she is taking action to prevent the abuse from ever happening again.
Yes, an excellent article, Ms Solnit - always enjoy reading you. Rises almost to petry at times. I would suggest though, that a little adjustment in the narrative be undertaken, fort the gravest of reasons. The adjustment is in any reerence to or descrition of what happened on 11, September, 2001. (it's irritating, isn't it, when someone doesn't refer to it by its brand name - '9/11'?) While there is a very active gang of '9/11' truth deniers/Bush administration mind-controlled zombie supporters/military fetishists out there who will still claim that someone like me saying something like this is a 'terrorist-sympathising nutcase', or some such bullshit label, there is a much larger group working to reveal the truth of what happened ten years ago to advance the 'fascist shift', as Naomi Wolf puts it, in America. It was an inside job, and there is mountainous hard evidence for this, and it is time that everyone, including Ms Solnit, who fancy themselves progressive and real, get real about this, and cut the shit about how the U.S. was attacked by outside terrorists. That is the narrative mind-control that they want you to continue repeating to justify all this jack-booted fascism and wealth theft. You must help shift the narrative by stating that 9/11 was the most suspicious of events, and far more evidence exists to support the allegation that Bush and his gang of puppetmasters and his puppets did a Pearl Harbor and quite deliberately, than exists to support the so-called '9/11 Commission Report', which is fiction. Get the story out. And the gravest of reasons is that the country won't be saved until the minds of the people are unchained and changed,
Future Home Of Something Quite Cool
Good blog, and good comments here. As for the 'Occupy' movement: I like the 'Sitting in the Unknowing' of it - that they're not letting themselves be boxed into a simple left-wing, smelly-hippy throwaway package; that this is about something more than that, more fundamental than just the old action-reaction level of 'right' and 'left' politics-as-usual. I would, however, suggest a specific way for 'it' to go. And that is Up.
That direction certainly is out of the current capitalist paradigm; which -demonstrably now - contains the seeds of its own destruction. (Betting on stocks to fall is a good example of the genre. That's like a wolf licking a knife for the taste of blood.) But it's not into the classical socialist paradigm; which has occasioned some hotshot Masters of the Universe to smirk about TINA (There Is No Alternative). It's about going for Synthesis: elements of both parts of the civilizational process, as analyzed - with a high degree of accuracy, in my opinion - by Hegel; raising the matter to a new, higher level. I submit that that level - by the nature of things being 'globalized' now - is a crowning level, not just another stage of the underlying dialectical dynamic. And that means that we can now do away with money: move courageously, and with banners dedicated to Truth flying, into a moneyless society, where we are all, humanity is, living in community on, and in harmony with, Planet Earth.
The step to get there is a simple, although large, one. It involves recognizing our true identity. Which can, in part, be expressed as that we are 'spiritual beings having a human experience'. And further can be expressed as that We Are One Another. That through the mechanism - the Plan - of reincarnation, that sentiment is literally true. That we have been but playing parts, in a drama with a Purpose. Now a prince, now a pauper; now a male, now a female; now of one race or nationality or religion, now of another. In order to do something. In order, logically, to grow. To gain wisdom. Raise our consciousness levels. Individually. And collectively. Collectively, as the race of Humanity. And more specifically, as the souls incarnating into that form. That sense of - experience of - separation. In order, through the training tool of free will, to choose freely to return to the house of our Father, in terms of the biblical parable of the Prodigal Son.
Which brings in the last piece of the picture of the future community on Earth. Which will be accessed by a higher motive than that of the profit motive. Been there. Done that. Now let's go for the Full Monty: sharing our goods and services with one another, and giving of our best in the process of doing so, out of gratitude to our Creator for life with meaning.
Our Creator, with which We are One.
And so those banners flying as we step into the new could read: One Planet - One Humanity - One Destiny.
Certainly not the ignoble one we are heading for at present, in our current state of separation from our true selves.
Having read every quote and warning from our founder i could find i am astonished at their foresight and wisdom. It is because their warnings have been ignored that we find the America we have today. Our nation in no way resembles the nation they envisioned.For those who claim our founders didn't have God in mind when they started this once great nation need to read their quotes. I realize i was off topic but i see this as the root of most of our problems today. I would like to ask one question. Why did George Soros fund the new Constitution of Egypt?
Apropos to this do see “Jefferson’s Advice to Occupy Movement?” at Open Salon. http://open.salon.com/blog/f_arouete/2011/11/26/jeffersons_advice_to_occupy_movement
Eye's on the prize... Occupy*Spring coming soon...
Want to shake the system to it's ROTTEN - CORE ??
Occupy Hearts & Minds... With One*Demand... Individual Directed Capitalization... 65% of YOUR TAX contribution directed to areas of funding of YOUR CHOICE... Power 2 The*People, A Single Step to begin all the change required, A Single Action to jump start the creation of global Equality and Fairness, One*Demand to Change Everything N.O.W.
"Right now everyone is trying to figure out what happens next and quite a few self-appointed outside advisors are telling the Occupy movement exactly what to do (without all the bother of attending general assemblies and engaging in the process of working out ideas together)."
Careful... Ms. Solnit,
Many of your so called "self-appointed advisors" have indeed participated in this action and others... and as the Occupy Movment is a self-appointed action by nature, it seems you should not be discouraging others who have advice to offer, by calling them "outsiders"... As ALL Members of the 99% have just as much right to advise and comment about those claiming action on their behalf as YOU*DO...
C.H.A.O.S.