A month after the Occupy Wall  Street protest began, the movement has replicated on an international  scale. I live in Olympia, Washington, where our own Occupation began  this weekend. Wrapping up a year that began with massive labor protests  ignited by Wisconsin's union-busting, I have to say it is inspiring to  see people taking to the streets, speaking out, refusing to just sit  back and take whatever abuse AmeriCo feels like dishing out.
But  occupations are mostly doomed. In Iraq, the West Bank, Soviet  satellites, and on down the list, occupiers find themselves at odds with  local populations, trying to maintain order in places they do not know  or understand, stuck fighting an opposition when they'd rather be home.  Having chosen a military metaphor, the movement faces congruent  difficulties. In the US, occupying private property touches a deep  nerve; people in general may not care what you do on someone else's  property, but they sure as hell don't want someone camped out on their  private property, and will oppose on principal such action. Occupying a  public park, on the other hand, creates an insurgency among the usual  users and the municipal authorities charged with serving the general  public, which may feel no common cause with an occupation force  perceived as radicals and people with too much time and too little work  ethic.
This may not be a fair perception, but it is sure as hell  reinforced by corporate media, ranging from the all-out attacks by Fox  and other right wing organs on 'un-American' protesters to the regular  mention elsewhere of marijuana smoking, un-focused, and by implication  unlikely-to-succeed, occupiers. Evil or addled, or maybe just plain  naive as some pundits would have it, the story line rarely credits the  movement with potential to create real change, and drags before the  cameras an unending series of spokespeople who cite goals that are vague  beyond comprehension, or have to do with grinding a very specific and  odd ax, or betray ignorance. The resistance benefits greatly from the  fact that a leaderless movement that worships free speech and personal  autonomy can be "represented" on camera by the most idiotic among the  occupiers.
Another flaw lies in the territory being occupied. In  Manhattan, it is Zuccotti Park, which despite its name is not a public  space at all, but the property of the Brookfield Properties corporation.  Elsewhere, Occupy clones are popping up in public spaces, but it's not  the county or city or state that the occupiers have a grievance with.  Occupy a city park, and you may inconvenience the municipality, the  people who the week before had gone there to feed pigeons or play with  kids, but you do not hurt the corporations that looted our economy. In  fact, you do them a favor, setting in motion a conflict between citizens  who occupy the park and the civil servants responsible for maintaining  it. If I were a Wall Street banker, I'd be laughing all the way to the,  uh, my work, as city officials fretted and faced unplanned expenses  while occupiers focused sizable effort on avoiding eviction and the  remaining citizenry split into pro-, anti- and apathetic camps. Divide  and divert, and meanwhile very little corporate real estate is occupied.
I  support my family by working for money, which means I cannot go down an  take part in the Occupation, at least not in the sense of living there  day in and day out. I can lend support, bring supplies, write blogs and  comments lauding this patriotic antidote to the Tea Party. But my  occupation is something else, and I don't have time to occupy a city  park. Instead, I'll occupy my house, which is actually just a tiny  percentage mine, belonging as it does to the mortgage holder (in my  case, this is a local credit union, and not a Wall Street bank, so mine  is a peaceful occupation, nothing adversarial unless I chose to stop  paying the bill I willingly signed on to). As much as I support civil  disobedience and speaking out against our greedy, corrupted system, I do  find myself wondering who it is that will have the time to occupy a  park for weeks or months on end, and whether with all that time, they  might have something to do that would create more tangible progress.
It  will be interesting to see how this plays out. Will it devolve into an  extended dance party that accomplishes nothing? Will people lose  interest or hope and go home? Will the clampdown roll through like  MacArthur's tanks through Hooverville? Will corporations see the error  of unbridled capitalism and surrender?
I'm pessimistic enough to  think that those question were presented in descending order of  likelihood, but optimistic enough to think that beyond the Occupy  movement, there may be positive change. The protest may have some deep  flaws that keep it from being sustainable in its present form, but this  week people are talking about issues that were buried a month ago, and  maybe in a month they'll be taking more substantive measures. Occupation  may prove to be a vital step on a journey that leads to a better  nation.
Monday, October 17, 2011
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