Guest perspective by Ralph Nader
The question confronting the Occupy Wall Street
encampments and their offshoots in scores of cities and towns around the
country is quo vadis? Where is it going?
This decentralized, leaderless civic initiative has
attracted the persistent attention of the mass media in the past five weeks.
Television cameras from all over the world are parked down at Zuccotti Park in
lower Manhattan, two blocks from Wall Street.
But the mass media is a hungry beast. It needs to be fed
regularly. Apart from the daily pressures of making sure the encampments are
clean, that food and shelter are available, that relations with the police are
quiet, that provocateurs are identified; the campers must anticipate possible
police crackdowns, such as that which has just occurred in Oakland, and find
ways to rebound.
There are enough national polls showing broader support
for the Occupy people than for the Tea Party people. Additional communities are
installing their own Occupy sites right down to small towns like Niles,
Michigan (pop. 12,000) and Bethel, Alaska where Diane McEachern is occupying
the tundra. But, there is trouble ahead.
First, police departments in other cities will be observing
the nature and reaction of mass arrests in places like Denver, Chicago and
Atlanta. The plutocrats’ first response is always to push police power against
the people. The recidivist violations of the ruling class are rarely pursued,
yet the rumbles of the lower class are often stifled. With the onset of colder
weather and looming police pressure, the protestors need new venues for their
demonstrations
Activists need to vary their tactics. I suggest citizens
surround the local offices of their Senators and Representatives. The number of
Americans fed up with a gridlocked Congress, beset by craven or cowardly, both
marinated in corporate campaign cash, can motivate an endless pool of activists
who want their voices to be heard.
We know that the Occupy people want to keep their
opposition on a general level of informed outrage and not get to the specific
policy level. Fine. The 535 people in Congress, who put their shoes on every
day like we do, are quite susceptible to a fast rising rumble from the people.
They don’t need specifics. They know all about the savagely avaricious
corporate paymasters and their swarming lobbyists on Capitol Hill wanting ever
more varieties of goodies and less corporate law enforcement. What they need to
know is that you’ve got their number and that people are fed up and on the
move.
More members of Congress than one might expect, with
their finger to the wind, start readjusting their antennas when they sense
voter agitation. It is just that for years, there has been nary a breeze from
that crucial source, while the corporatists have had their party year after
year with their governmental toadies on both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue.
Make no mistake; support for the power shift espoused by
the 99 percent movement is now only a breeze but a windstorm is coming. The
protesters are feeling their way – demonstrating before big banks and closing
out their accounts in favor of smaller community banks. Protests in front of
the Manhattan mansions of the superrich from the big media and the big hedge
funds also make sense.
Each new protest gives the protesters new insights. The
protestors are learning how to challenge controlling processes. They are
assembling and using their little libraries on site. They are learning the
techniques of open, non-violent civil disobedience and building personal
stamina. They are learning not to be provoked and thereby win the moral
authority struggle which encourages more and more people to join their ranks.
In the Arab Spring of Cairo, Egypt earlier this year, it
was said that a million people in Tahrir Square lost their fear of the
dictatorship. It can be said that in this “American Autumn,” some 150,000
people have discovered their power and rejected apathy. They have come far in
so little time because the soil for their pushback is so fertile, nourished by
the revulsion of millions of their countrypersons moving toward standing up and
showing up themselves.
This vanguard of larger protests to come is building on
the personal stories of desperate but failed attempts to find work; stories of
heart-breaking inability to pay for healthcare for themselves or their
families’; stories of being defrauded of their pensions, their tax dollars,
their savings and their rights. They demand accountability for the culprits who
lied, stole and got away with it destroying the economy. And they want Congress
to never bailout the Wall Street crooks, swindlers and speculators with
taxpayer dollars.
Shining the light of the 99 percenters on the operations
base of the corporate supremacists and their Congressional minions in one
location after another both empowers and further informs those Americans who
are seeing that showing up is half of democracy.
1 comment:
it all seems so funny... I'm from LA, but currently living abroad with work. In Israel. And over the summer there was social unrest which took the form of a large tent-city "occupying" the heart of Tel Aviv. It lasted 3 months and then the tents folded; in other words, the original "occupy" movement ended up moving across the pond to the states... i wonder at what point it will move on from there as well?
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