Occupy Wall Street Calls for May Day General Strike
At the General Assembly meeting last night, Occupy Wall Street’s dreamer contingent got a very special valentine: the GA endorsed the Direct Action Working Group’s proposal to call for a general strike on May Day—May 1, 2012. Occupiers celebrated with cheers and Valentine’s Day balloons.
The text approved by the GA is as follows:
May Day 2012 Occupy Wall Street stands in solidarity with the calls for a day without the 99%, a general strike and more!! On May Day, wherever you are, we are calling for: *No Work *No School *No Housework *No Shopping *No Banking TAKE THE STREETS!!!!!
The prospect of an Occupy general strike has been circulating for a while already. One of the several Facebook event pages devoted to it has more than 10,000 attendees. Occupy Los Angeles began calling for a May 1 general strike as early as last November, and Occupy Oakland joined at the end of January. Occupy Wall Street’s Direct Action group tried to take a strategic approach to the idea; though many of its members had little hesitation about calling for it, they took steps to ensure there was consultation, and therefore buy-in, among some of those whose participation would be vital. Since the beginning of the year, they’ve been holding twice-weekly meetings—with as many as 150 people crowded into a church or a union-office basement—which included labor organizers, immigrants’ rights groups, artists and anarchists.
Together, these stakeholders debated what a general strike could even mean in 2012, given the poor state of organized labor, and whether making such an ambitious call would turn into anything other than an embarrassment. “It has to happen on a huge enough scale that retaliation is unthinkable,” a person noted at one of the initial meetings on January 11. While one voice that night argued that “you use this tool to gain specific ends”—the tool of a general strike—another preferred to “not issue any demands, but rather take what is ours.” From these discussions, it was agreed that the more open-ended language of “a day without the 99 percent” should stand alongside that of “general strike.”
These meetings have focused at least as much on what to do during a day without the 99 percent as what not to do. In addition to forming committees devoted to shutting the system down, there are others for mutual aid, art, education and more.
Perhaps one of the most promising aspects of a May Day action is the overlap with the May Day Coalition for immigrants’ rights, which has already been planning actions that day, and which has tremendous mobilizing power around the country—as the massive protests of 2006 showed. At the end of the January 11 meeting, an organizer of laundry workers, speaking only in Spanish, told the Occupiers, “Any campaign you have is our campaign.” The Occupiers, in turn, will have to demonstrate that the immigrants’ concerns are theirs as well.
Everything depends on what happens between now and May. “I’m really excited about how much time we have leading up,” someone said at the January 11 meeting. It’s much more time, after all, than Adbusters gave between its initial call for Occupy Wall Street in July and the September 17 start date. Now, the Direct Action Working Group has already made May Day its biggest priority, and all actions it is planning in the meantime are being thought of as creating a narrative of escalation leading to that day—beginning with yesterday’s Times Square kiss-in. The challenge is to show people, in one form or another, that something like a general strike is even possible, and to practice what taking part in it would actually mean. Above all, perhaps, it’s a challenge to the imagination; as art critic and organizer Yates Mckee says, this is a chance to begin “imagining and dreaming what a city of and for the 99 percent would look like.”
After one of the meetings, an original organizer of Occupy Wall Street looked around at her friends and said, “Look at us! We all have crazy eyes!” It was true; no one looked quite sane. But to call for a general strike in New York City in 2012, and to even begin to follow through on it, probably takes a bit of crazy.
CONNECT













4 comments on "Occupy Wall Street Calls for May Day General Strike"
February 19, 2012 3:07pm
I stand in solidarity with GA Direct Action Working Group's decision to call for a general strike on May 1. This is the 'real' Labor Day. It's time that the corporate cadre of economic elites (the 1%'ers) and their bought and paid for lackeys in the US Congress be made aware that the silent majority (that's us - the 99%'ers) will be silent no more. No more warm p*ss trickle down. The system isn't working for the working class, and it hasn't been for the past 30 years.
February 19, 2012 5:07am
Unbelievable that we have this level of sexism going on in this century. Roll back the clocks to pre-sixties, or indeed Victorian era. Ban birth control when over-population is destroying the planet. Hell, who not let all of humanity die a slow painful death to save one egg from possible conception, even in cases of rape or child molestation. Outrageous! Now if it were men that got pregnant. . .
February 18, 2012 8:09pm
For the very first time since I started posting comments in the NationofChange a few months ago, I can actually get to say to another poster "I agree with you 100%". Thank you, my friend, for saying that that silly, old, has-been, second-rate actor was the start of it all.
Also, the Canadian documentary, The Corporation, made back in 2003 recognised the fact that corporations, evaluated as a psychiatrist would a person, were clinically psychopathic.
From Wikipedia: "The Corporation is a 2003 Canadian documentary film written by Joel Bakan, and directed by Mark Achbar and Jennifer Abbott. The documentary is critical of the modern-day corporation, considering its legal status as a class of person and evaluating its behaviour towards society and the world at large as a psychiatrist might evaluate an ordinary person."
February 18, 2012 1:49pm
This has been needed for several years ,It should have started when Ronald Reagan fired the air controllers . If it had a lot of this grief could have been avoided.Corporations are like children if they steal and get away with it they get worse and worse and they been stealing us blind for the last fifty years.