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Mad, Passionate Love -- and Violence: Occupy Heads into the Spring
When you fall in love, it’s all about what you have in common, and you can hardly imagine that there are differences, let alone that you will quarrel over them, or weep about them, or be torn apart by them -- or if all goes well, struggle, learn, and bond more strongly because of, rather than despite, them. The Occupy movement had its glorious honeymoon when old and young, liberal and radical, comfortable and desperate, homeless and tenured all found that what they had in common was so compelling the differences hardly seemed to matter.
Until they did.
Revolutions are always like this: at first all men are brothers and anything is possible, and then, if you’re lucky, the romance of that heady moment ripens into a relationship, instead of a breakup, an abusive marriage, or a murder-suicide. Occupy had its golden age, when those who never before imagined living side-by-side with homeless people found themselves in adjoining tents in public squares.
All sorts of other equalizing forces were present, not least the police brutality that battered the privileged the way that inner-city kids are used to being battered all the time. Part of what we had in common was what we were against: the current economy and the principle of insatiable greed that made it run, as well as the emotional and economic privatization that accompanied it.
This is a system that damages people, and its devastation was on display as never before in the early months of Occupy and related phenomena like the “We are the 99%” website. When it was people facing foreclosure, or who’d lost their jobs, or were thrashing around under avalanches of college or medical debt, they weren’t hard to accept as us, and not them.
And then came the people who’d been damaged far more, the psychologically fragile, the marginal, and the homeless -- some of them endlessly needy and with a huge capacity for disruption. People who had come to fight the power found themselves staying on to figure out available mental-health resources, while others who had wanted to experience a democratic society on a grand scale found themselves trying to solve sanitation problems.
And then there was the violence.
The Faces of Violence
The most important direct violence Occupy faced was, of course, from the state, in the form of the police using maximum sub-lethal force on sleepers in tents, mothers with children, unarmed pedestrians, young women already penned up, unresisting seated students, poets, professors, pregnant women, wheelchair-bound occupiers, and octogenarians. It has been a sustained campaign of police brutality from Wall Street to Washington State the likes of which we haven’t seen in 40 years.
On the part of activists, there were also a few notable incidents of violence in the hundreds of camps, especially violence against women. The mainstream media seemed to think this damned the Occupy movement, though it made the camps, at worst, a whole lot like the rest of the planet, which, in case you hadn’t noticed, seethes with violence against women. But these were isolated incidents.
That old line of songster Woody Guthrie is always handy in situations like this: “Some will rob you with a six-gun, some with a fountain pen.” The police have been going after occupiers with projectile weapons, clubs, and tear gas, sending some of them to the hospital and leaving more than a few others traumatized and fearful. That’s the six-gun here.
But it all began with the fountain pens, slashing through peoples’ lives, through national and international economies, through the global markets. These were wielded by the banksters, the “vampire squid,” the deregulators in D.C., the men -- and with the rarest of exceptions they were men -- who stole the world.
That’s what Occupy came together to oppose, the grandest violence by scale, the least obvious by impact. No one on Wall Street ever had to get his suit besmirched by carrying out a foreclosure eviction himself. Cities provided that service for free to the banks (thereby further impoverishing themselves as they created new paupers out of old taxpayers). And the police clubbed their opponents for them, over and over, everywhere across the United States.
The grand thieves invented ever more ingenious methods, including those sliced and diced derivatives, to crush the hopes and livelihoods of the many. This is the terrible violence that Occupy was formed to oppose. Don’t ever lose sight of that.
Oakland’s Beautiful Nonviolence
Now that we’re done remembering the major violence, let’s talk about Occupy Oakland. A great deal of fuss has been made about two incidents in which mostly young people affiliated with Occupy Oakland damaged some property and raised some hell.
The mainstream media and some faraway pundits weighed in on those Bay Area incidents as though they determined the meaning and future of the transnational Occupy phenomenon. Perhaps some of them even hoped, consciously or otherwise, that harped on enough these might divide or destroy the movement. So it’s important to recall that the initial impact of Occupy Oakland was the very opposite of violent, stunningly so, in ways that were intentionally suppressed.
Occupy Oakland began in early October as a vibrant, multiracial gathering. A camp was built at Oscar Grant/Frank Ogawa Plaza, and thousands received much-needed meals and healthcare for free from well-organized volunteers. Sometimes called the Oakland Commune, it was consciously descended from some of the finer aspects of an earlier movement born in Oakland, the Black Panthers, whose free breakfast programs should perhaps be as well-remembered and more admired than their macho posturing.
A compelling and generous-spirited General Assembly took place nightly and then biweekly in which the most important things on Earth were discussed by wildly different participants. Once, for instance, I was in a breakout discussion group that included Native American, white, Latino, and able-bodied and disabled Occupiers, and in which I was likely the eldest participant; another time, a bunch of peacenik grandmothers dominated my group.
This country is segregated in so many terrible ways -- and then it wasn’t for those glorious weeks when civil society awoke and fell in love with itself. Everyone showed up; everyone talked to everyone else; and in little tastes, in fleeting moments, the old divides no longer divided us and we felt like we could imagine ourselves as one society. This was the dream of the promised land -- this land, that is, without its bitter divides. Honey never tasted sweeter, and power never felt better.
Now here’s something astonishing. While the camp was in existence, crime went down 19% in Oakland, a statistic the city was careful to conceal. "It may be counter to our statement that the Occupy movement is negatively impacting crime in Oakland," the police chief wrote to the mayor in an email that local news station KTVU later obtained and released to little fanfare. Pay attention: Occupy was so powerful a force for nonviolence that it was already solving Oakland’s chronic crime and violence problems just by giving people hope and meals and solidarity and conversation.
The police attacking the camp knew what the rest of us didn’t: Occupy was abating crime, including violent crime, in this gritty, crime-ridden city. “You gotta give them hope, “ said an elected official across the bay once upon a time -- a city supervisor named Harvey Milk. Occupy was hope we gave ourselves, the dream come true. The city did its best to take the hope away violently at 5 a.m. on October 25th. The sleepers were assaulted; their belongings confiscated and trashed. Then, Occupy Oakland rose again. Many thousands of nonviolent marchers shut down the Port of Oakland in a stunning display of popular power on November 2nd.
That night, some kids did the smashy-smashy stuff that everyone gets really excited about. (They even spray-painted “smashy” on a Rite Aid drugstore in giant letters.) When we talk about people who spray-paint and break windows and start bonfires in the street and shove people and scream and run around, making a demonstration into something way too much like the punk rock shows of my youth, let’s keep one thing in mind: they didn’t send anyone to the hospital, drive any seniors from their homes, spread despair and debt among the young, snatch food and medicine from the desperate, or destroy the global economy.
That said, they are still a problem. They are the bait the police take and the media go to town with. They create a situation a whole lot of us don’t like and that drives away many who might otherwise participate or sympathize. They are, that is, incredibly bad for a movement, and represent a form of segregation by intimidation.
But don’t confuse the pro-vandalism Occupiers with the vampire squid or the up-armored robocops who have gone after us almost everywhere. Though their means are deeply flawed, their ends are not so different than yours. There’s no question that they should improve their tactics or maybe just act tactically, let alone strategically, and there’s no question that a lot of other people should stop being so apocalyptic about it.
Those who advocate for nonviolence at Occupy should remember that nonviolence is at best a great spirit of love and generosity, not a prissy enforcement squad. After all, the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., who gets invoked all the time when such issues come up, didn’t go around saying grumpy things about Malcolm X and the Black Panthers.
Violence Against the Truth
Of course, a lot of people responding to these incidents in Oakland are actually responding to fictional versions of them. In such cases, you could even say that some journalists were doing violence against the truth of what happened in Oakland on November 2nd and January 28th.
The San Francisco Chronicle, for example, reported on the day’s events this way:
"Among the most violent incidents that occurred Saturday night was in front of the YMCA at 23rd Street and Broadway. Police corralled protesters in front of the building and several dozen protesters stormed into the Y, apparently to escape from the police, city officials and protesters said. Protesters damaged a door and a few fixtures, and frightened those inside the gym working out, said Robert Wilkins, president of the YMCA of the East Bay.”
Wilkins was apparently not in the building, and first-person testimony recounts that a YMCA staff member welcomed the surrounded and battered protesters, and once inside, some were so terrified they pretended to work out on exercise machines to blend in.
I wrote this to the journalists who described the incident so peculiarly: “What was violent about [activists] fleeing police engaging in wholesale arrests and aggressive behavior? Even the YMCA official who complains about it adds, ‘The damage appears pretty minimal.’ And you call it violence? That's sloppy.”
The reporter who responded apologized for what she called her “poor word choice” and said the piece was meant to convey police violence as well.
When the police are violent against activists, journalists tend to frame it as though there were violence in some vaguely unascribable sense that implicates the clobbered as well as the clobberers. In, for example, the build-up to the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City, the mainstream media kept portraying the right of the people peaceably to assemble as tantamount to terrorism and describing all the terrible things that the government or the media themselves speculated we might want to do (but never did).
Some of this was based on the fiction of tremendous activist violence in Seattle in 1999 that the New York Times in particular devoted itself to promulgating. That the police smashed up nonviolent demonstrators and constitutional rights pretty badly in both Seattle and New York didn’t excite them nearly as much. Don’t forget that before the obsession with violence arose, the smearing of Occupy was focused on the idea that people weren’t washing very much, and before that the framework for marginalization was that Occupy had “no demands.” There’s always something.
Keep in mind as well that Oakland’s police department is on the brink of federal receivership for not having made real amends for old and well-documented problems of violence, corruption, and mismanagement, and that it was the police department, not the Occupy Oakland demonstrators, which used tear gas, clubs, smoke grenades, and rubber bullets on January 28th. It’s true that a small group vandalized City Hall after the considerable police violence, but that’s hardly what the plans were at the outset of the day.
The action on January 28th that resulted in 400 arrests and a media conflagration was called Move-In Day. There was a handmade patchwork banner that proclaimed “Another Oakland Is Possible” and a children’s contingent with pennants, balloons, and strollers. Occupy Oakland was seeking to take over an abandoned building so that it could reestablish the community, the food programs, and the medical clinic it had set up last fall. It may not have been well planned or well executed, but it was idealistic.
Despite this, many people who had no firsthand contact with Occupy Oakland inveighed against it or even against the whole Occupy movement. If only that intensity of fury were to be directed at the root cause of it all, the colossal economic violence that surrounds us.
All of which is to say, for anyone who hadn’t noticed, that the honeymoon is over.
Now for the Real Work
The honeymoon is, of course, the period when you’re so in love you don’t notice differences that will eventually have to be worked out one way or another. Most relationships begin as though you were coasting downhill. Then come the flatlands, followed by the hills where you’re going to have to pedal hard, if you don’t just abandon the bike.
Occupy might just be the name we’ve put on a great groundswell of popular outrage and a rebirth of civil society too deep, too broad, to be a movement. A movement is an ocean wave: this is the whole tide turning from Cairo to Moscow to Athens to Santiago to Chicago. Nevertheless, the American swell in this tide involves a delicate alliance between liberals and radicals, people who want to reform the government and campaign for particular gains, and people who wish the government didn’t exist and mostly want to work outside the system. If the radicals should frighten the liberals as little as possible, surely the liberals have an equal obligation to get fiercer and more willing to confront -- and to remember that nonviolence, even in its purest form, is not the same as being nice.
Surely the only possible answer to the tired question of where Occupy should go from here (as though a few public figures got to decide) is: everywhere. I keep being asked what Occupy should do next, but it’s already doing it. It is everywhere.
In many cities, outside the limelight, people are still occupying public space in tents and holding General Assemblies. February 20th, for instance, was a national day of Occupy solidarity with prisoners; Occupiers are organizing on many fronts and planning for May Day, and a great many foreclosure defenses from Nashville to San Francisco have kept people in their homes and made banks renegotiate. Campus activism is reinvigorated, and creative and fierce discussions about college costs and student debt are underway, as is a deeper conversation about economics and ethics that rejects conventional wisdom about what is fair and possible.
Occupy is one catalyst or facet of the populist will you can see in a host of recent victories. The campaign against corporate personhood seems to be gaining momentum. A popular environmental campaign made President Obama reject the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline from Canada, despite immense Republican and corporate pressure. In response to widespread outrage, the Susan B. Komen Foundation reversed its decision to defund cancer detection at Planned Parenthood. Online campaigns have forced Apple to address its hideous labor issues, and the ever-heroic Coalition of Immokalee Workers at last brought Trader Joes into line with its fair wages for farmworkers campaign.
These genuine gains come thanks to relatively modest exercises of popular power. They should act as reminders that we do have power and that its exercise can be popular. Some of last fall’s exhilarating conversations have faltered, but the great conversation that is civil society awake and arisen hasn’t stopped.
What happens now depends on vigorous participation, including yours, in thinking aloud together about who we are, what we want, and how we get there, and then acting upon it. Go occupy the possibilities and don’t stop pedaling. And remember, it started with mad, passionate love.
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35 Comments so far
Show All"I don't think Occupy was the catalyst for either the Keystone re-routing away from water sources in the Dakotas or the Komen reversal. They occurred independently of it."
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I think you need to read more closely before you write! The author clearly portrays the keystone decision, the kommen reversal and Occupy as instances of a populist uprising. That is not the same as saying Occupy was the catylysr for the other two. the author is CRYSTALCLEAR on this point! It's why she can speak about a Golden Age of Occupy. She understands that Occupy is one face of an ongoing populist revolt and that it may need to change tactics and masques along the way to changing the world!
A lot of the same people we involved in Occupy and the Keystone CD.
I did miss the use of the word "catalyst," but the general tone of her article does agree with my summary above.
DreamJoeHill's got it right on that point, imo.
YES!!! I agree with you DreamJoeHill. Everyone needs to support the activists, whatever they name themselves, join in the fight- if you realize the "beast" never sleeps and the issues you mention are still in contest THEN take action!!! Go to the celebration of our liberation- hint: you will find out about both at the protest. Support OWS, support the resistance!!!!
Cardinal Devil Rat: “Don’t Sing” ePie February 21st, 2012
Do you have any chinks in your armor?
to let the light come through the chink accompanied by a clink
as you charge the windmills of think with a lance that don’t splinter
or hinder a knock off your horse of spent words filed in the cliche of:
“dark and stormy” along with “alone and horny”
Those thorns of revelation are the rat singers that ply devil prophecy
cloaked in flapping pennants as penance
for well healed indulgences
to reach for the stirrups of night and skies colored bright
Name me a color the sky can’t be and I’ll hang my pen for bended knee
Name me a color the sky can’t be platinum, grey, purple, brown
and I’ll paint my frown to a clown and wear the thorns of revelations
as Benedict us Rat singers do
Do you have any chinks in your armor?
to let the light come through the chink
"Prissy enforcement squad" makes me think of a gaggle of women sitting around in Lilly Pulitzer dresses at ye olde country club, sipping mimosas in the late morning shade near the golf course. : ) Thanks for making a distinction between a few creative punks and the real violent types - who manage not to look that way - who run the country.
Direct democracy is maximum freedom, justice, diversity, economic and environmental benefits for people and the ecosphere. Wonder why American politicians never mention the referendum kindly?
"the American swell in this tide involves a delicate alliance between liberals and radicals, people who want to reform the government and campaign for particular gains, and people who wish the government didn’t exist and mostly want to work outside the system."
No, it's not like that at all. What's new today is that that old narrative has finally been dealt the fatal blow that it has deserved for so long.
The news today is that that alliance between liberals and radicals is being broken because the radicals have finally realized the treachery of the liberals. This is big news. Huge news. The radicals are being vindicated today like never before. The radicals are ecstatic about this. Because it means their instincts have been right all along and that now they can trust their instincts. Now the radicals have utmost confidence in their very own instincts, their very own internal truth. The radicals are ecstatic that their own internal truth resonates with all the rest of the natural truths, and that liberalism is the grotesque lie that we've suspected all along. We know now that liberalism is the lie that diverts people of good intentions into supporting class hierarchy, mass oppression. Liberalism supports ekonomic growath as a diversionary lie to keep people distracted from the truths of economics. The economy is a means to an end, to support our better interests and we're learning how to do that, ourselves, without elite influences,thank you very much, but no thanks!
"If the radicals should frighten the liberals as little as possible, surely the liberals have an equal obligation to get fiercer and more willing to confront -- and to remember that nonviolence, even in its purest form, is not the same as being nice"
Liberalism is rapidly losing credibility and with that comes the loss of the luxury to be frightened by the truth, and to be deluded about superficial niceness against massive injustice. Emperors losing their clothes. Forget pride and pity. Liberals just need to face reality now. The radicals are taking the reigns.
The radicals are being sighted in the crosshairs of a remorseless techno-military state that will crush them with a brutality you can't imagine.
Occupy is the last, dying rasp of human decency before an imminent collapse into an age of rank authoritarian barbarism and global privation.
I like your pom-poms though.
I like them too, thank you rtdury- and no thank you to Fake. Occupy is just getting started, and all your chicken little imitations will not stop it. Radicals have been in the crosshairs all along, you are not scaring anyone with your bullshit Fakey- and by the way, we live in an age of rank authoritarian barbarism and global privation. Also you have no idea what my imagination or any other persons is capable, because you have so little of it your self everything is scary and divided into black and white. If you would only exercise your imagination you would begin to see the possibilities of color, of love, of change. But at least your not bitter.
Thanks to Rebecca Solnit for reaffirming the value of mad, passionate love which is usually under-rated and often villified. Enjoy your Spring.
More importantly, this piece offers an antidote to the poisonous discussion initiated by Chris Hedges' essay on the "cancer" of violence within the Occupy movement.
In its thoughfullness and its joy, the Solnit song embraces the passion of life, love and humanity, clearly contrasting with the dour hopeless and despair of Hedges moralism.
It demonstrates quite clearly and wonderfully that we don't have to abandon our human complexity to act ethically and decently -- however difficult that may be. In fact, the best of ethics and morals are revealed in the mad passionate struggle for love.
Solnit did a good job (except for the keystone, approval has only been delayed, I believe at this moment it is still being constructed). And the comment about the demise of liberalism is good but how demised is it when so many still think OilyBomber is an acceptable president. I would separate the violent and the non violent actions on the ground into separate non associated actions. A stringent commentary on USA society and it's near total absorbtion of the capitalist ethos, is that most citizens blithely accept the slaughter of fellow animals for eating pleasure while simultaneously condemning property damage done in the name of throwing off a genocidal ( Vietnam, Iraq, Climate Chaos, Starvation and death when food and medicine are available) yoke of repression. Keep in mind as we have seen the state will be violently repressive no matter how peaceful you are. And again the state supplies agent provocatuers when ever it wishes. Solnit did not mention wars in the functions of the state. One may argue that since the whole earth is being assualted by global entities who place material above life, then all resistence is defensive.
Can you leave the PETA propaganda out of this? While our industrial meat industry is abominable, condemning people for eating animals is like condemning Mother Nature (or God) for creating carnivores, omnivores and scavengers and a food chain that requires the consumption of other creatures.
No we cannot leave "that" out of it. Should we leave out your hagiography of the founding rebels? Just whose propaganda is acceptable? The poster was specific, you have generalized, why not be specific to the actual comment, content, and spirit of the comment? Using your sloppy logic we are left all alone at home, disconnected: Find Common Cause, Act On Our Mutual Need, Cause Mutual Solution. You are dislocating the topic- do you think love is a unifying force? do you think we need to continue a relationship with everyone working to end the oligarchy rule? If not love, what is your organizing principle?
A brilliant, deeply felt article that helps us to understand that Occupy is one aspect of a much wider upsurge of popular initiative that embraces people from Egypt and Syria, Greece and Spain, Oakland to New York and many other places in between.
Whether Occupy was directly responsible for the reversals by Obama and Komen is less important than the fact that popular initiatives were responsible for both, Trying to discover which particular group within this upsurge of popular activism is really rather pointless.(Obama did block the smooth progress of Keystone through the bureaucracy, enraging Big Oil, the Conservative Canadian government, and the Republicans.)
I welcome Solnit's thoughtful comments on violence, and share her view that the violence inflicted on millions of people by a capitalist society far exceeds in danger and destructiveness the violence of people who vandalize property during a demonstration.
Such vandalism is to be expected a society where violence is pervasive, whether in economic relations, in culture, in military aggression, and, of course, in widespread gun violence. It is surprising that people in rebellion against the injustices of everyday life have, up to now at least, confined themselves to minor property damage, even when viciously attacked by the police.
I hope that people contemplating violence -- even on the spur of the moment -- will try their best to think strategically, and ask themselves whether they are being drawn into a game which the police and the authorities are likely to win. They should ask themselves if their actions might endanger people who don't wish to take part in violence. And they should ask themselves if they are likely to be singled out by the cops as examples to be beaten, arrested, and possibly imprisoned if they engage in violence. I realize this is a lot to ask of someone inflamed by the brutality of the police, or driven to desperation by the violence of society. But nobody said this was going to be easy.
Great piece, except for the naivete about violence. Why does the author omit discussion of the agents provocateurs? In an insurgency like the ows, in which peer pressure against violence is enormous, we shd always carefully consider the motives of those who agitate for violence.
I've read a lot and listened a lot to stories of the labor and peace movements, as well as been part of them, and I have yet to find an instance which was free of the disgusting creatures. If any here knows of one, please post the info here.
duhTokvil
I think it is worth marking out the very clear lines between random acts of property damage (use of force, portrayed as 'violence' by the Corporate media) that some may feel is justified in the face of gross inequity and 'normalized' use of excessive force (violence) by the state and it's organs, and the use of force (violence) in acts of self-defense in the face of state sanctioned and supported oppression.
Until that discussion on the definition of what 'violence' is and who is using it in what manner, can be held in a meaningful way the Elite and their collaborators in the Media will use the boogyman of 'violence' as a wedge issue to divide and conquer. Again.
Yet, you also oversimplify the issue. Strategically, it must be recognized (if not accepted) that most Americans perceive acts of property destruction as a form of violence. No matter how detached one tries to be from personal property, it still feels like an assault on one's being when one's property is attacked or destroyed or stolen. The feeling is real, regardless of its legitimacy. So it's disingenuous to pretend that property destruction is an acceptable tactic within a non-violent strategy that attempts to engender popular support and minimize public alienation. And Solnit recognizes the need to outgrow such adolescent behaviors.
Robert,
I agree with your comment. I don't give a damn what someone is protesting, you destroy my property, I would consider it an act of violence and act accordingly. Also, I feel the same with regard to public property.
Thomas Gilbert-
Your comment says that attacks on property in the US "feel like" and "are perceived" as acts of violence. I absolutely agree. (Unlees of course they are committed against the poor, ethnic and religious minorities and/or non-US citizens.
But then then it goes on to say: "...it's disingenuous to pretend that property destruction is an acceptable tactic within a non-violent strategy that attempts to engender popular support and minimize public alienation."
I am not sure that minimizing public alienation is a strategically sound goal. In plain language that means that acting to create change should be "popular."
Bull Connor was (and remains) popular. Joe Arpaio is popular. Ronald Regan was popular. They were standard bearers for the status quo -- what we call the 1% -- not for revolutionary change.
Martin King, Malcom X, Cesar Chavez, Emma Goldman, Angela Davis and on and on are hated by the majority of US citizens to this day -- at least the people who care enough about anything to either love or hate -- which is fewer people in the US all the time.
Unlike Solnit, we have become dispassionate, disinterested and increasingly murderous as a nation.
Popularity is, in the end, a small factor. Effectiveness, ethics and the correctness of poisition are much more important considerations.
"Popularity is, in the end, a small factor. Effectiveness, ethics and the correctness of poisition are much more important considerations."
I don't think you can separate populist appeal and effectivenes (or effectiveness and ethics). They all go together.
=And remember, it started with mad, passionate love.=
To which not a few persons would reply: John 3:16.
Trylon
Precious few in the #Occupy movement.
Trylon,
Thank you for uplifting our view heavenly, so true and powerfully :
"For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life."
John 3:16
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
I find it so callous and banal, that there are so many who so vehemently are insistent, that spiritual connectivity, inspiration, and ineffable belief -- is completely absent -- in supposedly atheistic-only leftist activists.
As if successful social activism, is completely at odds with higher consciousness and awareness of how each part reflects upon the whole, and back at us.
Rebecca's passion and detailed observations, demonstrably provide far greater evidence of peace-loving, vulnerable, and compassionate equals, acting and living in collective and mutual strength building, to affirm the dignity and greatness of everyone.
The 'Golden Rule' lived out loud.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The national security state spends billions supposedly keeping us all safe -- sure -- like 'keeping us safe' from 19% reductions in Oakland's violent crime rate, by eliminating occupy's barely acknowledged ability to coincidentally (?, no -- synergistically) solve seemingly intractable complex social problems, of itself.
For more, watch Tom Shadyac's profoundly transformative movie " I Am "
Here, http://iamthedoc.com/
What he provides, is inescapable proof that mammals are inherently democratic, and egalitarian -- not vicious selfish consumptive material vessels (vassals), battling for smidgens of dominance, crumbs of existence, and always jostling for bloody superior positionality.
I am madly and passionately in love with Rebecca and her article, eloquent and as pleasant a read as the subject matter permits. Thank you
Thank you, Rebecca, for deconstructing the past, present and future identities of Occupy. The movement has become such an interesting manifestation of both social unification and divergence. As you have described, individuals from all walks of life are coming together to demonstrate their popular power. Over the next few weeks, Inside Out | Occupy Oakland is turning Oakland into the home of a historic urban exhibition of larger-than-life black and white portraits of Occupiers. We are participating in the global art project, Inside Out, along with over 200 projects worldwide. These documentary photographs solidify the diverse stories of Occupiers onto their city walls. The goal of this project is to facilitate discussion and alternative perspectives. Inside Out | Occupy Oakland has already spread through networks in countries including Belgium, France, the UK, and Mexico. We urge you to visit our Kickstarter page at http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/insideoutoccupy/inside-out-occupy-oakland and share the project throughout your networks. Thank you for your work.
I support the Occupy Movement with all my Heart:
http://www.youtube.com/user/drmoe2000#p/u/5/pLueKpyqf-0
Good article! Still as in most articles about love carrying a lot of Eurocentric, ethnocentric baggage. but Western brain washing is hard to overcome. We have a hard time visualizing a world of the indigenous people of the Pacific or else where completely untouched by European silliness and ethnocentricism as well as colonization. But such a world exists and has existed, and is far superior to the savagery of Western "civilzation." People still live that way and do much better than we do. They know how to live. As Martin Luther King Jr would say the West can "learn from them." Western arrogance needs to end. No love isn't about some legally mandated or formally sanctioned relationship. It's about people being attracted to each other and making love and all that goes with that for however long it is right for them. That's the real traditonal way, not the con servative way! Stop the con. Stop being the servant or the owner.
Regardless all said, the writer used the term "love" as metaphor, thus I will allow that even with the Eurocentricsim we all have all so shoved up our booties and stuffed into our brains.
I am so glad that this writer addresses violence and the comments about it here is interesting. One might consider what is "violent" and what is not. Is it or is it not "violent" that the homeless are considered "mentally ill" in spite fact they are traumatized and severely psychically injured by the so-called "services" that do little but give huge tax breaks to the rich to become gate-keepers of resources they pretend they have a right to mete?
Is it "violent" to criminalize a homeless person shivering in a doorway when there are literally thousands of properties that are lying empty by these same rich landowners and banks that are meting out those resources while reaping the tax breaks and profits from thousands of properties that could house these people and create vibrant neighborhoods instead of the blight they are now? Considering the homeless automatically mentally ill instead of admitting our "help system" is damaging them horribly. is a form of violence because it uses mental illness to marginalize them and criminalize them instead of listening to them and giving respect to their insight as to what needs to be done.
When Reagan's proxy wars in South America taught and supported soldiers who raped and killed nuns, dropped them from airplanes, burned entire villages, and tore up their country because of liberation theology that gave power to the common people out of the hands of the elite, is this or is this not more violent than breaking a few windows?
Eldridge Cleaver and Archbishop Tutu address violence when Cleaver wrote in the 1960s and Tutu said in the 1990s a few things I have thought about a lot over the decades, myself who believes in non-violent citizen protest and I have no answer to what they had to say. Cleaver said (not direct quote) that when you have done all you can "within the System" and non-violently protested "outside the System" and nothing happens, perhaps then it is time to, "Burn baby burn"
Archbiship Tutu (Nobel Prize winner) was asked why he supported the Tutsis who resorted to violence in South Africa instead of non-violent protest? He said that what the Tutsis were forced to do was unlike Gandhi who non-violently protested (with the death of hundreds of non-violent protesters by violent occupiers). This was because the Tutsis were fighting an immoral government who were not embarrassed at all by the violence they inflicted on non-violent protesters whereas the occupiers that Gandhi fought against had enough of a conscience that they were humiliated by their own actions.
This is something to consider when it comes to what is "violent" and what is not and perhaps when "violence" is needed ~ of course at never the cost of human life but maybe with a few broken windows at the very least.
Cat in Seattle
C.H.A.O.S. Direct*Action Communique
Citizens Helping Atone Our System
Open*Letter to Occupy,
"Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital, and deserves much the higher consideration." - 'Abe Lincoln'
Occupy is an action, NOT an issue, it's an effective action that demands attention to many issues, and it embodies both those of Civil and Human Rights, of Labor and Capital, and calls to everyone concerned with these issues.
Your efforts are valiant, yet failing to fully engage the 99% while some of your actions provide a fertile environment for violent agitators.
There is a simple yet powerful way to create positive change in those aspects of the movement, while simultaneously bringing about many of your goals.
We propose a single action that creates equitable funding solutions for all these issues, one that draws everyone, Tea Party, Coffee Party, Any Party into the debate, an action that everyone can partake in and none could deny is both a basic civil and human right of every individual and group.
The right to direct the capital of their labor toward developing the world of our future.
This action would create both immediate and long term results, while setting the stage to change everything, empowering The*People to begin a paradigm shift toward Direct Democracy.
An action 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 for both immediate & long term change, N.O.W.
The time has come to convene The*Peoples Court, Nonviolent Vigils and Marches to every Court House in your State, every Court in the Nation and every City & Town Hall in the World.
The Justice System has FAILED and The*People DEMAND + JUSTICE.
Join*Us, Display your Heart 4 Peace & We*Will + Systematically Stop The Machine...
One*Demand
Individual Directed Capitalization
Power 2 The*People
Unite the C.H.A.O.S. + N.O.W.
Citizens Helping Atone Our System
No Opportunity Wasted
Convene The*Peoples Court
The Charges are many...
The Trial is Over...
The-System is Guilty...
The Sentence, Relinquish Power.
One*Demand
Individual Directed Capitalization
Power 2 The*Peaceful
Transition to Direct*Democracy