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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Institutions of the Left Did Little: How Occupy survived despite a lack of union support
from In These Times:
The Institutions of the Left Did Little
How Occupy survived despite a lack of union support.
BY Cole Stangler
Last April for In These Times, I wrote that the Occupy movement marked the maturation of the Obama generationa collective realization that our generations problems have far more to do with a rotten political and economic system than they do with the individual in office or the party in power.
Occupy wasnt just what Slavoj Zizek warned ofa kind of 21st century Human Be-In that we now get to reminisce about over beers and joints. While the revolt was short-lived and limited, we gained the sense of participating in a mass-movement expressing a basic level of class solidarity absent from American political life for generationsthe kind of thing you can only learn if youre there in the streets. And as OWS veterans continue their lives beyond the movement, many of us card-carrying members of the precariat, we retain the common experience of struggling together, fueled by the conviction that, organized together, we represent the interests of the majority of this country.
The movement itself was, of course, deeply flawed. And its fizzling out had as much to do with its own structural inadequacies as it did the deficiencies of the American political landscape.
Police repression should not be easily dismissedreports have revealed that city police departments colluded with the Department of Homeland Security to monitor and shut down protests, and one can only shudder at the levels of surveillance we have yet to learn of. But successful movements have dealt with worse. ......................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://inthesetimes.com/article/15915/the_institutions_of_the_left_did_little/
Warpy
(111,292 posts)Police unions did not and that's tragic.
The movement didn't fizzle out, it evolved. Too bad this moron never heard of Rolling Jubilee.
starroute
(12,977 posts)I don't know if anything will come of it -- Anonymous has not done as well getting people out on the streets as they have with their hacking. But they've set next April 4 to July 4 as a period for multiple local protests.
http://snuproject.wordpress.com/2013/11/21/anonymous-call-to-action-inspiration-a-call-for-a-crowdsourced-worldwide-wave-of-action-www/
zeemike
(18,998 posts)Not the structure of the movement.
You don't see the right failing to support the Tea Party even when they go nuts on them...and they still support them
But our left organizations ether ignore Occupy or actively criticize them...and in so doing divide us.
Brickbat
(19,339 posts)shaayecanaan
(6,068 posts)they actually turned up, got off their arse (and their computers) and actually did something.
Unfortunately, they can only go so far. It was quite stupid to brush off the unions while at the same time attempting to call a general strike.
Worth a read:-
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-battle-for-the-soul-of-occupy-wall-street-20120621?print=true
Shemp Howard
(889 posts)Three cheers for OWS for trying, but IMHO they picked the wrong target.
It might be true that Wall Street pulls the strings, but power resides in Washington, DC. Few average Americans can grasp the shady dealings of Wall Street, but almost everyone understands the corruption of Congress.
If only OWS had focused on Congress instead...