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'We're Not Broke': The Movement That Helped Spark Occupy Wall Street
Back in February 2011, I started reporting on a movement called US Uncut that formed in opposition to the practice of tax-dodging. As it turns out, corporate tax evasion is a huge, huge problem. In fact, the United States loses an estimated $100 billion in revenue every year as multinational corporations hoard their cash overseas in havens.
It’s true that no one movement or cause is solely responsible for the birth of Occupy Wall Street, and protesters list an impressive spectrum of issues and events that inspired them to get involved in OWS, ranging from the Arab Spring to tuition debt to the corrupt political system. However, US Uncut was definitely at the forefront of framing the “99 percent” narrative seized upon by Occupy. Except, back then, US Uncut referred to America’s woes as being “The Corporations versus Everyone Else.”
Quite simply, major companies (GE, Apple, FedEx) were robbing the country blind during a time when the 99 percent were being asked to sacrifice their already meager means. As teachers were fired, and firefighters laid off, US Uncut tried to alert the public to the presense of one percenters shovelling buckets of cash offshore. For example, General Electric paid no federal income taxes in 2010, even though it raked in $14.2 billion in profits (and another $3.2 billion in tax benefits.)
Nearly a year after the birth of Uncut, the movement is chronicled in We’re Not Broke, a documentary (and official Sundance Film Festival selection) about the meteoric rise of the group. Filmmakers Karin Hayes and Victoria Bruce are the recipients of the duPont–Columbia University Award for excellence in broadcast journalist for their first film, The Kidnapping of Ingrid Betancourt, and also produced and directed Held Hostage in Colombia, a documentary about three American contractors captured and held hostage by FARC guerillas in Colombia.
We’re Not Broke, which follows a group of activists from the start of US Uncut in February 2011, piqued my interest. I was curious as to why the issue of tax-dodging appealed to directors who previously dealt with the considerably sexier issues of hostages and guerillas.
“Neither one of us had any experience in this type of high finance prior, so we thought it was a great challenge to dive into,” says Hayes.
Bruce had some early reservations. “I was totally unconvinced. I usually end up finding a good story, but this was a very hard one, and I felt totally unprepared to go into this world. Fortunately, the story tells itself,” she says. “At first, we thought we’d make it about the Swiss whistleblower, and individuals who dodged taxes, but every time we sat down with an expert, they’d say, ‘Oh, no. The big problem is what corporations do offshore.’”
And as it turns out, the problem is not a small one. Every time Bruce would ask an expert to name some of the major corporations that steal tax revenue, the experts would reply, “All of them!”
“And then your world closes in on you, and you realize everything you do: your phone bill, and your electricity, and the gas for your car, everything is owned by one of these multinational corporations that’s actually screwing you all the time,” says Bruce. “That was the hook of the film, because it hit me in my gut. Once people know this, then maybe things can change.”
Three of the US Uncut protesters featured in the film are Carl Gibson, 24, from US Uncut Mississippi, Chris Priest of US Uncut Boston, 24, and US Uncut D.C.’s Ryan Clayton.
It’s impossible to talk about US Uncut without also talking about Occupy Wall Street. Just three weeks before OWS starting camping at Zuccotti Park, Clayton told the filmmakers that he believed US Uncut would prove to be “the spark” that started a much larger movement.
“He said we sparked a dialogue that no one else was talking about.… Then the whole world exploded,” says Bruce.
I ask Clayton if he thinks US Uncut was absorbed by OWS. “That’s like asking if the tadpoles were absorbed by the frogs,” he responds, adding he thinks it’s all part of a natural, healthy evolution. “The work of many organizations in the early months of last year, including US Uncut, We Are One, and Rebuild the Dream, was really the proving ground for a new progressive movement that burst onto the scene in a powerful way with OWS.”
The targeting of corrupt corporate influences made it easy for many Uncut protesters to transition into the OWS movement.
“I’ve been heavily involved in Occupy Houston since late September,” says Gibson. “I’ve been arrested twice in the last three months during actions. Occupy has a lot of respect from both inmates and prison guards, it turns out.”
Clayton agrees. “I have been spent nights at Liberty Park at Occupy Wall Street and have been apart of the local community at Occupy D.C. More importantly, many of my friends (and fellow Uncutters) were some of the first people on the ground at OWS from day one, and many Uncutters organized local chapters of Occupy around the country.”
That includes Chris Priest, who was instrumental in the founding of both Occupy Boston and Boston Uncut. “Literally every US Uncut organizer I know has been deeply involved with their local Occupy chapter since the beginning. That’s no coincidence,” says Priest. “Occupy Wall Street provided a priceless opportunity for every progressive organization to unite and fight on multiple fronts.”
Priest sees US Uncut as merely one of many events that snowballed into Occupy. “US Uncut began in February 2011, and shouldn’t be discounted as an influence for OWS. The same can be said about Wisconsin, Tunisia, Egypt, Spain, Libya, Syria, Bahrain and Yemen,” he says.
As Priest mentioned, Occupy’s strength is in its broad appeal. Whereas US Uncut was devoted to a very narrow, albeit highly important, issue, Occupy can mean almost anything to anyone, and it’s that all-inclusive nature that appeals to many disillusioned individuals.
“I know there are a lot of people out there who have different agendas that are more pertinent to them, so perhaps Occupy appeals to them in that way,” says Bruce.
This shouldn’t give anyone the impression that US Uncut is by any means defunct, though the group has appropriated the language of Occupy.
“We’re kicking things back up, ironically the week Sundance is happening, teaming up with grassroots groups in over a dozen major cities for actions against corporate tax dodgers,” says Gibson. “Specifically, ones that paid their lobbyists more than they paid in taxes. These allies consist of every facet of the 99 percent, from organized labor, to unemployed and underemployed workers, interfaith groups, clergy, the uninsured and Occupiers. Look for us to hit the streets with national days of action each month leading up to tax day. We’ve got some fun things planned for spring shareholder meetings, too.”
Bruce and Hayes hope to seize upon what they see as a very easy-to-understand, populist message that should outrage the majority of Americans, if only they were properly informed about what’s going on. Corporations, flush with cash, have been very successful in running disinformation campaigns and shielding themselves by claiming they’re not doing anything illegal by tax-dodging, which unfortunately is true.
“Since they have lobbyists, and they have this huge amount of money that they’re able to donate to candidates, and Congress people and presidential campaigns, they have influence over the politicians, and they’re able to basically walk their laws that they want passed into the hands of the Committee members who are writing the tax code. In that way, the extent of influence that the corporations have over politicians is massive. A lot of it has to do with the huge amount of campaign costs, and that’s where the candidates go. They go to the corporations. It’s like a you scratch my back, I scratch yours type of thing,” says Hayes.
Bruce sees the issue of tax-dodging as a morally repugnant thing. “Slavery was legal. Child labor was legal. Now, these corporations are here, they’re using all of our public services, they’re putting a lot of pressure on our infrastructure, all their [employees’] kids use public schools. Don’t they owe something back to the country that’s been making them wealthy?”
The official We’re Not Broke website can be found at: werenotbrokemovie.com.
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17 Comments so far
Show All"no one movement or cause is solely responsible for the birth of Occupy Wall Street,"
Wrong. OWS was started by Adbusters out of Vancouver, Canada. I must assume American exceptionalism combined with historical revisionism makes that impossible?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adbusters
Quite right, aided and abetted by Anonymous, which grew out of 4chan.
If I recall correctly, US Uncut itself was modeled after Britain Uncut, which began as protests against the Conservative governments austerity program in the face of rising misery in Britain.
The 1%'s great corporate economic and political power grab keeps on going, seemingly immune to popular sentiment in the US and Europe.
The tax thieves, like GE, aren't punished. Instead, they reap political rewards as well along with their loot. Obama appointed GE's CEO as a blue ribbon economic policy adviser on job creation??!! WTF! GE is a major US job destroyer.
In the meantime, Occupy seems stalled, unable to make the leap to a truly mass movement that can challenge the 1%'s proxy (cop) rule of the streets. Occupy has taken the first steps by creating an activist core. Labor, ie Trumka and some of the larger unions, needs to step up and fund a solidarity committee along old CIO lines, that includes massive organizing among the unemployed.
US Labor cannot continue with its petty bourgeoisie "business" approach that treats unions as a kind of service industry. Even if organizing among the unemployed doesn't "pay" from an economic revenue perspective, it could provide exactly the institutional support and focus to propel Occupy to a greater level of political power and shift the political power equation.
One problem with the activist Left is a lack of understanding of the need to create and take political and economic power as a precursor to revolutionary change. The unions are ripe for radicalizing. Some dead wood needs to go, but this would be a great opportunity for a rebirth of rank and file activism and union democracy!
The first and most urgent GOAL, in my opinion, is to THOROUGHLY INVESTIGATE, INDICT, PROSECUTE, FINE and IMPRISON...THE CRIMINALS!!!
If and only if THAT happens, can any of us go about restoring some semblance of law and order, basic civility, a measure of justice.
The fact of the matter is that, as it stands, the U.S. Department of Justice, along with any and all other "law enforcement" agencies, do absolutely NOTHING; In fact, the worst of the worst habitual, serial Felons, the filthy criminals, get FULL Pardons, Full ASYLUM, right here in America; None are ever investigated, indicted, prosecuted or punished. In fact, each of them are ABOVE ALL LAWS.
And Just Remember: It was President Obama that clearly stated that he would not get involved in prosecutions of these (war crimes and financial terrorism) crimes; He said, "I want to look forward, not go backward."
Well, I say to him, I want to move forward by upholding both the U.S. laws and the world's laws. If we continue to totally ignore SERIOUS CONSTANT crimes and the criminals walk away scott-free every time, it only gives both the criminals and the would-be criminals license to behave as if they're above the law. And that is exactly how they conduct themselves. Indeed this is a travesty...
Each one of these horrid miscreants in this JOKE of a "government" can kiss my ASS; The United States of America is a SHAM!!!!!!!!
I agree more than you could imagine but, if we prosecuted every law maker that broke the law we would have no one left in congress, OH I Get it, never mind.
Welcome to corporate capitalist financier Imperialism!
The CRIMINALS that you want to prosecute are key players in late stage monopolistic capitalism. They are the State, as in "Go ahead and call the cops sonny. We are the cops)" And we might beat the shit outta ya if ya keeps up yer whinin
The last three decades of US legal history have been an onslaught against the masses. The Law collapsed long before the towers.
Mitt Romney has spoken straight as a arrow since he changed his mind, this afternoon, oh what time is it, never mind.
People will be shocked as I was when I just recently found out that the 1% - committee of 300 is sitting on hundreds of quintillions of dollars- thats 1,000 times a trillion. Mind boggling. - and the Queen of England and the World Bank Group are the signatories! There is more money in their offshore accounts that could make everyone in the whole world wealthy. They are hording the wealth of the world. THIS is what the OWS movement is about and should grow until we pry the wealth form these greedy sick souls. Oh yea, the Vatican, US, IMF, etc. are all involved and get a piece of the action. To the tune of trillions every quarter. The US is wealthy! And it was made off the backs of the PEOPLE! It is OUR money- not the queens.
Go to www.benjaminfulford.typepad.com to see documents.
Yes nearly all the money in the world. Greedy bastards. Who do you think makes money off the super packs ads, well Murdock does, news corps. Republicans, They just keep the money between them. Wall street speculators, banks, pharmaceuticals, insurance corporations, corporate farms, the list goes on and on but the money stays with the one percent, around the entire world. Greedy bastards.
Im 56, and mid February I got a notice of "Uncut" to protest outside Bank of America in Philadelphia. I leave about 60 miles away and drove up. There was about 8 of us, and a young College Student was the organizer and leader of the event. My 1st protest from a Social Media Site. On to summer and I attended a Protest to stop Changes and cuts to Social Security and Medicare, organized by AFSCME which Im a member. 2 days after that another Protest in Front of the Capital and it's organizer Van Jones. Onto October and I help set up "October2011.ORG". I have been back to Freedom Plaza and also marched with oct 2011 and Occupy DC. I never imagined back in 1971/72 as Vietnam was winding down and protest were fading, that I would be protesting to save our country in my late 50s. Hope more turn out in the future. I said to the person standing next to me that all it takes is one person to start a movement.
Allison Kilkenny, I know you know that US Uncut was inspired by the much more massive UK Uncut, because you've talked about it, so why no mention of UK Uncut?
"Don’t they owe something back to the country that’s been making them wealthy?"
Umm, no they don't. Das Korporations play by a different set of rules: Winner take all. The author wants to pretend that Das Korporations (and elites) play by the people's rules. By pretending so, the author can avoid the inevitable conclusion: That 75% of liberal philosophy, and activity over the past several decades, is bogus and defunct. That includes the "go along to get along" stuff. When liberals learn to accept that Das Korporations play by their own rules, they will have to then join the people on the far left who are boycotting Das Korporations. A more comprehensive boycott is the only way to stop the parasites that do not play by the people's rules. The way to participate in the boycott is to engage your local economy, with your market demands, to build local production that will displace Das Korporations. Get to practicing localism. Walk into your local mom/pop shops and start demanding stuff. Eventually, they will deliver it. Tell them that as long as they remain independent, you will continue to trade with them. I'm really sorry this does not resonate too well with the liberal message. The liberals are still out to lunch. Petro-fried.
You're quite right. We should all boycott products made by large, especially multi national corporations and buy locally. It's the only power we have against these leaches. Cut up your credit cards and send them back. Don't take out any more loans. In general, consume less and buy only necessities. Use credit unions, drive a lot less and show the 1% corporations that you still have that clout. If they want to sell goods made in China and elsewhere,let 'em do it there. Let's see how long they last!
in response to the statement:"no one movement or cause is solely responsible for the birth of Occupy Wall Street," Sanctuary said: "It was started by Adbusters"
I understand that Adbusters suggested it and suggested the date and inspired a lot of people to show up, but no one from Adbusters attended.
I think the: "No one movement or cause is solely responsible" is correct
Grant
in response to the statement:"no one movement or cause is solely responsible for the birth of Occupy Wall Street," Sanctuary said: "It was started by Adbusters"
I understand that Adbusters suggested it and suggested the date and inspired a lot of people to show up, but no one from Adbusters attended.
I think the: "No one movement or cause is solely responsible" is correct
Grant
OCCUPY IS NOT THE ISSUE...
IT'S THE ME$$...AGE.