Happy
Belated 2nd Anniversary, Occupy Wall Street
While
I was rebuilding my computer and repairing my Internet connection
these past few days, and as fall begins, I found myself reflecting on
the second anniversary of Occupy Wall Street and the fifth
anniversary of the financial collapse induced by Wall Street and the
mortgage industry. I was there for the first three days of Occupy DC
at Freedom Plaza in October 2011, and again later that month for a
day of Occupy Atlanta in Woodruff Park in the heart of downtown, and
I have some fond memories of being part of something much bigger than
myself or the sum of my experiences.
There
are reasons to celebrate Occupy, as well as the loosely affiliated
“We Are The 99%” Movement which is also still ongoing, despite
continued economic stagnation and growing debt. The culture
of resistance in the US is here, it’s having an effect, and
it's growing slowly but steadily. There are cracks in the pillars of
power, they're starting to get a little bigger, and it’s up to us
to pry
them the rest of the way open and shine the light on the lies and
corruption that have been used to steal our future. I look back over
the events of the past two years and feel cautiously optimistic,
because I see a movement that is steadily building momentum. As we
met at Freedom Plaza in Washington, DC, on Oct. 6th,
2011 there was a strong sense of suspense in the air. Some said that
Americans weren’t feeling enough pain, that we hadn’t reached the
tipping point. Similarly, the organizers of Occupy Wall Street acted
out of anticipation. They staked out a place in the heart of the
monster and held it. At first there were only a few hundred, but by
holding that space courageously, more people were inspired to join
them. Excitement and wonder were in the air. Could the people really
take on Wall Street? Obviously Wall Street thought so because they
ordered excessive and constant police protection. They must have seen
something brewing because Wall Street firms had donated unprecedented
millions to the NYPD over the previous year. It was police aggression
towards peaceful protesters that grabbed public attention and
sympathy. A few weeks after the start of Occupy Wall Street, an
amazing 43 percent of Americans supported Occupy, a figure that
remains largely undiminished to this day.
Two
years later, the physical encampments are gone, but the Occupy
Movement remains. Occupying public space was a tactic, not an end in
itself. It was a way to make the issues visible, a place for people
to gather, a model for a new way of doing things based on respect,
mutual aid and democracy and a metaphor for claiming what has been
taken. The ‘public’ is disappearing, not just public space but
also public services, research and resources have been privatized,
expropriated for the profits of a few. When the financial crisis hit
in 2008, there was an expectation that the government would respond
appropriately to stabilize the economy and that we simply had to
weather the storm. What we saw instead were massive bailouts of the
industry that caused the crash and greatly inadequate steps to secure
jobs, housing and health care. This turned some already catastrophic
financial crises caused by runaway private speculation into an
immense source of private gain for the same very financiers
responsible for the catastrophe to begin with. Even worse, it made
those catastrophes so much more catastrophic than they really needed
to be in the first place.
As
a result of all this mess, we’re not heading toward greater income
equality. We’re not building up the middle class or supporting
unionization. We’re not eradicating poverty and hunger. We’re not
expanding educational opportunity. We’re not rebuilding
infrastructure. Nothing we’re doing looks anything like the society
we built from the New Deal through the 1960s. We’re not doing any
of the things that would lead to a more stable and just economy. In
fact, we’re doing just the opposite, which means the billionaire
bailout society will become even more firmly entrenched. This means
that if left unchecked, the trends towards greater inequality and
suffering will not only continue, it will accelerate as well. But the
billionaire bailout society went too far. According to a Stanford
study, “animosity toward the financial sector reached its highest
level in 40 years in 2010” which probably fueled the Occupy and 99%
Movements, and anger remains high. A majority of Americans believe
that “not enough was done to prosecute the bankers.”
When
drowning in so many crises it is sometimes hard to see above the
surface of the water, but the anti-globalization movement and its
offspring, the Occupy and “the 99%” Movements, are having an
effect. Since 2000, the World Trade Organization has been unable to
advance its agenda and 14 free trade agreements have been stopped by
public pressure. The Trans-Pacific Partnership and its sister the
Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership known as TAFTA, are
being negotiated in secret as a way to pursue the WTO agenda through
the back door. A recent study found that the TPP will reduce wages
for the bottom 90 percent of people in the US while significantly
increasing the wealth of the top 1 percent. The AFL CIO passed a
resolution opposing the TPP and Teamster President James Hoffa wrote,
“Workers on both sides of the deal get screwed while corporations
rake in record profits. Like low-wage workers in the fast food and
retail industries, workers must join together to let Congress know
that the TPP is not the right path for the U.S.” A broad coalition
of groups have come together to stop the TPP. At the Occupy Wall
Street protests recently in New York, the TPP was a top theme. In
addition to marches and teach-ins focused on the TPP, the Money Wars
street theater group performed its epic battle of Princess Laid-Off
and the rebels against the TPP Death Star, Emperor Pipeline and Dark
Banker. Actions are taking place this weekend and next week in
Washington. If we are successful, this will be a huge victory against
transnational corporate power.
There
have been a number of wins recently against top corporations. The Nez
Perce tribe and their allies took on General Electric and won a case
to stop truckloads of tar sands from crossing their land in Idaho.
Exxon was charged for illegally dumping toxic fracking waste in
Pennsylvania. And JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon admitted that the bank
broke the law. Another important win that is inspiring many in the US
took place in Colombia where farmers went on a prolonged strike to
win back the right to use their own seeds. The anti-Monsanto and
anti-GMO movement is strong here. Thousands of people marched this
week in Kauai for a law to protect themselves from pesticides. And,
despite an outpouring of money, a vote to label GMO products in
Washington State is still holding strong. And stopping the imminent
attack on Syria was a win for people everywhere and a loss for the
military industrial complex. Raytheon and Lockheed Martin in
particular were set to make hundreds of millions from it. We must be
vigilant though because the current diplomatic path could be used to
justify an attack in the future.
It
is important to recognize these wins and to build from them. It is
also important to remember that we never know how close we are to
achieving significant change. The occupy movement spawned the “idle
no more”, workers’
rights and climate change movements. Our eyes are open and we
can’t ignore what we now see; we know that it is the plutocratic
system, not individual inadequacy that is causing poverty in America.
We know that the $1 trillion given by the Federal Reserve to private
banks could have created 20 million desperately-needed jobs. We know
that the 400 richest people in the US have more wealth than the GDP
of entire countries like Canada and Mexico. And we know the names of
those who control the wealth and exploit people and the planet for
it. We no longer expect “leaders” to create the change we need.
We are all leaders and change depends on our actions and ours alone.
The
culture of resistance necessary to create the kind of world we want
to live in is here. Actions are taking place daily in the US and
around the world. You won’t hear about most of them in the mass
media. This week alone, more than one hundred women, most of them
undocumented, were arrested in Washington, DC to protest the ways
that immigration policies harm their families. Dairy workers in New
York protested their abusive working conditions. Protesters in
Vermont, ages 65 to 94, chained themselves to the entrance of the
Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power plant to demand its immediate closure
and Marylanders protested outside an ‘arms bazaar.’ The Cascadia
Forest Defenders scaled the capitol building in Oregon to drop a huge
banner to protest clear-cutting.
Resistance
is not all protesting, it also includes building alternative systems
to meet our basic needs. Many who are active in OWS have been hard at
work at this since the physical occupation was shut down. This week
the Occupy Money Cooperative announced its launch with a fund raising
campaign. They will provide low-cost financial services to the
millions of Americans who are unbanked and under-banked and who are
preyed upon by banks, check cashing services and payday lenders. It
will be an opportunity for all to opt-out of big finance. Just as OWS
created the infrastructure that was used to organize Occupy Sandy and
continues to provide services to those affected by Superstorm Sandy,
occupiers in Colorado responded to the needs of people in the Boulder
area who were hit by massive flooding.
Hard
work is being done every day to take on entrenched corporate power
and create a new world based on principles such as mutual aid,
community, equity, solidarity and democracy. It is appropriate to
stop and celebrate this work and what has been accomplished so far.
Things are changing. Justin Wedes of OWS writes, “Sure, we face an
uncertain future, but we embrace the chaos that defines our time.
Because, there is no alternative but to challenge the status quo of
ever-increasing debt, shrinking job opportunities and disappearing
civil rights.” We can’t say what the outcome will be or whether
we will live to see the world we hope to create. Can there even be an
endpoint? Perhaps the most important piece of social transformation
is not a goal but rather is the process of living in a way that is
consistent with our values. We live in the culture of resistance
which requires constant nurturing to bend the arc of time towards
justice.
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