Nathan Schneider
Published: Saturday 7 April 2012
“Potential allies expect more from the movement, I’d say, and so they should.”

How to Succeed in Reoccupation Without Really Trying

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I’ve lately been getting the feeling that Occupy Wall Street’s past successes are starting to go to the heads of some people in the movement. There were, of course, the glory days of Liberty Plaza, and now also the spurt of momentum during and following the brief March 17 six-month-anniversary reoccupation there. But as the NYPD and police departments across the country make it quite clear that occupations of any kind will not be tolerated, the mood has gotten sour. The good old days, it seems, are not coming back.

For lots of organizers, I’ve noticed, the operating presumption is that occupation — something comparable to last fall but somehow surely better — constitutes a prerequisite to further political action. Consequently, a considerable amount of the energy of the most talented organizers in New York (as well as, evidently, in Oakland and San Francisco) has been directed toward failed reoccupation attempts. Or else the movement is celebrating its own anniversaries, not making occasions for new ones. The more conversations I have with listless, frustrated organizers, though, the more I start to feel that right now this occupation-first logic is exactly backwards.

This is a new time; the movement and people’s perspectives on it are in a totally different place than they were last fall. Potential allies expect more from the movement, I’d say, and so they should. People I know who were wholeheartedly behind it a few months ago seem to think it’s over, or it should be. The encampments, which Occupiers know as well as anyone sometimes turned into rather unsafe spaces, lost much public support. YouTube clips and statistics of Occupiers behaving badly in them have become fodder for a right-wing smear campaign that is gearing up for any possible resurgence. This matters; in some sense, an occupation must always be earned with public support, support that makes the cost in legitimacy too high for the state to mount an eviction.

Remember the early morning that so many remember as the climax of OWS’s whole story? It was October 14, when thousands of people turned out before dawn to keep the paws of Mayor Bloomberg’s cleaning crews off of the park. The moment those crews were routed, when the announcement came to everyone through the people’s mic — that was amazing. But it took a lot of committedallies to make it happen, beyond the usual characters you’d see around all the time. And right now, apparently, that support simply isn’t there, because evictions keep happening and there isn’t much of an outcry.

So how can the movement recapture that support? How can it, even more than before, light up people’s imaginations and make them want it to stick around? Here’s a modest proposal (modest because this is not a movement that tends to take or need advice): Challenge the power that affects lots and lots of people’s lives.

Right now, there are a bunch of smart projects starting up in the movement, each addressing core issues directly related to why so many thousands of people began Occupying Wall Street to begin with. There’s Fight BAC, a project with the (not at all modest) goal of taking down Bank of America. There’s the effort to fight foreclosures and evictions through occupations, auction blockades or eviction defense. There are groups like Disrupt Dirty Power aimed at finally halting the corporate machine that’s driving climate change. How about a massive student debt strike?

All of these are already in the works in the Occupy movement, but they tend to attract relatively small numbers of people compared to re-occupation attempts and rowdy marches. What if these, for a while, were the main business of the movement and the main outlet of its huge creativity? What if the first thing people thought of when they heard the word “Occupy” was, “Oh, those are the kids trying to take down the most dangerous bank in America and who saved my friend’s home from foreclosure”? Do stuff like this, and you’re creating a dilemma for the whole society. You’re asking everyone to choose sides — not about a little occupation, but about major features of everyday economic life. Do I want Bank of America to foreclose on my neighbor or not? Do I want my kids to spend their post-college lives enslaved by debt or not? These are serious political questions, which will easily eviscerate the nonsense the presidential candidates keep spouting on the news. Suddenly the question of letting the movement have an occupation somewhere seems comparatively small.

In the meantime, and in the process, it’s hugely important to keep the spirit of occupation alive — though not necessarily in tents. Union Square in New York is serving that purpose right now (especially when Occupiers there sleep on sidewalks in front of banks), as are the occasional afternoon Occupy Town Square events. May Day might be a great moment for rallying along these lines. This sort of thing is really important, because it’s constructive rather than just disruptive, and it points the way toward a new, revolutionary society. Lots of people in the movement talk about wanting to see these occupations eventually evolve into sustainable worker cooperatives and serious, large-scale mutual aid networks. But what if it were all in the context of making unmistakable the most egregious, fundamental crises in the fabric of our society — in the banks, in the schools, in politics, in how we treat our planet?

Compared to those sorts of things, I bet, encampments in parks will seem like no big deal. Maybe the movement might even start getting them again without really trying. At the very least, there will be a whole lot more people standing up against the forces of repression for the right to occupy. Hey, they’ll say, we’re changing the world with this movement — why not let it have a park or a building somewhere if we can do some good with it?



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13 comments on "How to Succeed in Reoccupation Without Really Trying"

Harold

April 25, 2012 5:42pm

Say, I just went to that site Chuck mentioned,
http://empathysurplus.com
http://www.cognitivepolicyworks.com/resource-center/thinking-points/
and they have a free book to download that looks like it might be interesting.
I think the classes and education work is very important that occupy is doing. We need to be totally re-educated in so many things like how to be involved, answers to the false arguments, organizing, our own think tanks, planning groups, and whatever, don't we? There are already individuals out there forming groups for different purposes and linking up.

David from Our ...

April 08, 2012 8:52pm

I heard an idea the other day that would be a fine interim measure until a Constitutional amendment can be had: A 99% tax on PACs. Something similar was enacted during the Roosevelt presidency.

Although I didn't write this poem, I wish I had -- but I have said
these things. Several of us have said these things and thought these
things. Nevertheless, this is a great poem and should be read in
public places at least twice a day, every day until everyone has heard
it and understood what it is saying. I say, with thousands of friends,
in the words of The White Rose, "We will Not Be Silent." We must not
be silent. love, Eliz

HOW FASCISM WILL COME
"When fascism comes to America it will be wrapped in the flag and
carrying a cross."
- attributed to Sinclair Lewis

When fascism comes, it will greet us with a smile.
It will get down on its knees to pray.
It will praise Main Street and Wall Street.
It will cheer for the home team.
It will clap from the bleachers when the uninsured
are left to die on the street.
It will rally on the Washington Mall.
It will raise monuments to its heroes and weep for them and
place bouquets at their stone feet and trace with their fingers the
names engraved on the granite wall and
go on sending soldiers to die in the mountains of Afghanistan, in the
deserts of Iraq.
It will send doves to pluck out the eyes of its enemies,
having no hawks to spare.

When fascism comes, it will sit down for tea with the governor of Texas.
It will pee in the mosques from California to Tennessee, chanting,
"Wake up America, the enemy is here."
It will sing the anthems of corporatization, privatization,
demonization, monopolization.
It will be interviewed, lovingly, on talk radio.
It'll have talking points and a Facebook page and a
disdain for big words or hard consonants.
It won't bother to read. It will shred all its books.
It will lambast the teachers and
outlaw the unions.

When fascism comes, it will look good. It will have big hair, pressed
suits, lapel pins.
It will control all the channels.
It will ride in on Swift Boats.
It will sit on the Supreme Court. It will court us with fear.
It will woo us with hope.
When fascism comes, it will sell shares of itself on the stock market.
It will get rich, then it will get obscenely rich, then it will stop
paying taxes.
It will leave us in the dust. It will kick our ass.
It won't have to break a sweat to fool us twice.
It will be too big to fail.

When fascism comes to America, it will enter on the winds of our silence
and indifference and complacency.
And on that day, one hundred thousand poets will gather.
In book stores and libraries, bars and cafes,
in their houses and apartments, in schools and on street corners, they
will gather.
In Albania, Bangladesh, Botswana, Bulgaria, Chile, China, Czech Republic,
Finland, Guatemala, Hungary, Macedonia, Malawi, Qatar,
crying, laughing, screaming.
They will wrap the sad music of humanity in bits of word cloth
and hang them, like prayers, on the tree of life.

- Terry Ehret

Traveler123

April 08, 2012 10:36am

We want money out of politics. Occupy movements are broken up by the police, who do NOT want money out of politics. When the occupy movements include so many people that the police can't break them up, things may change.

David from Our ...

April 08, 2012 8:52pm

I heard an idea the other day that would be a fine interim measure until a Constitutional amendment can be had: A 99% tax on PACs. Something similar was enacted during the Roosevelt presidency.

roriegle

April 08, 2012 10:13am

Hey, folks! Look at Occupy Chicago for examples of intelligent, committed hard-working folks who are really making a difference as they prepare for the arrival of NATO in "the city by the lake" on May 20. See especially http://chicagospring.org/. Their Freedom Festival in the Butler Field section of Grant Park yesterday was spectacular.

Chuck Watts

April 08, 2012 3:57am

http://empathysurplus.com

Rich Stevenson

April 07, 2012 11:56pm

http://cs2pr.us/hamco/Leader.html . It seems to me we are not doing enough for building a political structure that can take financial corruption out of politics. The Independent Voters Alliance can accomplish that goal for the 99%. The large problem is the sweat equity needed to occupy politics. The no cost means to build the structure has begun the occupation in Hamilton County, OH. (Cincinnati). Elect 99% candidates. No Ds or Rs at this time.
Occupy your Hamilton County Precinct, Ohio County, or State. No cost but sweat equity.
Rich Stevenson, Meet the IVA, http://cs2pr.us/hamco/MeetTheIVA.html ;
Elect 99% Leaders: http://cs2pr.us/Voter_Pledge.html . :-)

Gerry Chamberland

April 07, 2012 9:11pm

The challenges of the occupy movement are many and varied. First and foremost is the lack of focus. Second is leadership. And finally an action plan that is doable and clearly understood. There are plenty of very bright people within the movement. There are also many who own small businesses, unions who are being affected by economic and social change, educators who know what is going on. Every day working people. What has to be brought to the fore is a plan that alleviates fear. Fear of change. Fear of something different. Fear of not knowing. They have to see a vision that makes sense and in which they can see themselves.I am soon going to be retiring and look about me and see the sheer devastation. The incomprehensible damage done to millions of families and great difficulties in which young people find themselves. While I am a Canadian, I full well understand the great American dream. Unfortunately, it can only be had by the 1%.

jumperl

April 07, 2012 3:34pm

As Ghandi and Martin Luther King, Jr. learned; picketing and waving signs accomplishes a little, civil disobedience accomplishes everything. We need to decide what it is we want from our government and the companies that write the laws protecting their investments. Facing them with intelligence and determination and never backing down until our needs are met or our demands are faced, will be the only way to exact change from those in power.

M Munn

April 07, 2012 2:21pm

I think we all know what we want, and with the internet, BOYCOTT, is the tool with the most potential to bring power to the people.

Occupy (and others) can organize and target which bank and how to divest (or other target/action).

There are moderate to large cities across the country that are on board with buying local, keeping money local, but they are entrenched and need to be help so they can take safe, fiscally conservative, action. The regional banks are aware of the scams as well - even some of the federal reserve bankers are appalled.

We can drop "Too Big To Fail" like a bad habit.

M Munn

April 07, 2012 2:25pm

fix the double posting...

Traveler123

April 08, 2012 10:38am

It's not double posting. Your posts are filtered and sent to Big Brother who is watching all of us. He's very very frightened that Truth may prevail, costing him lots and lots of money.