The
occupation of Wall Street is now in its third week. Thousands of people
have worked and fought for it, have given it their time, their bodies,
their ideas, their blood. People have used their bodies as shields, sent
letters of solidarity, marched, slept out, donated, tweeted, and more.
There are thousands more still who have not been with us, whether
because of geographical reasons or because they are busy struggling
elsewhere.
I
have been involved, in some way, with the occupation on Wall Street
since the first planning meeting a number of months ago, and I have been
out there almost every day since the occupation actually began, though
mostly keeping quiet and working on the sidelines – often critically.
I
have participated in assemblies and working groups, done outreach to
community organizations, pushed demands, been to dozens of meetings,
gone hoarse from chanting about the banks, been bruised by metal police
batons while marching for Troy Davis, and had about a million incredible
conversations – at the occupation at Liberty Plaza itself, in other
political contexts around New York, and even in jail with the 87 friends
I made during the mass arrests of September 24. I am not
an authority, and others have struggled and sacrificed much more than I,
but I have learned a lot; enough, I think, to begin sharing some of it.
The
struggle is still very much underway; those of us who can, who have
that privilege, should be out in the streets, so now might not be the
time for the most thorough analysis. It is, however, important for
occupiers to be writing in our own words – to reach out to the many
around the world who want to be a part of this in some way, to offer our
own analyses (infinitely more powerful than those provided by pundits
from far away), and to counter the media black-out we are experiencing.
Though the press is now somewhat intrigued by us, and alarmed by police
brutality, it still has very little to say about the actual content and
processes of this occupation: the spontaneous working groups that emerge
to deal with any issue that comes up, the remarkable de-centralization,
the actions we have carried out in solidarity with labor struggles
around the city, the public education taking place at the occupation, or
the incredible display of direct democracy practiced in the camp.
Maybe
it’s because they don’t care, or maybe it’s because we are a threat to
their sponsors (and we are). But, honestly, maybe it is because we speak
a new language, one we have to translate it for them.
What We Have Already Won
I
have to admit, I was skeptical. I saw too many young white college kids
and not enough grassroots organizers from New York, not enough of those
communities hardest hit by neoliberalism and austerity. I was pushed
away by some of the cultural norms being adopted and found myself at
odds with the lack of demands, not to mention the sometimes
over-emphasis on process. Having helped organize Bloombergville (a
two-week occupation against the budget cuts in NYC) only a few months
earlier, I found it hard to believe this would be significantly larger
or be able to mobilize the kind of mass support it needed in order to
make an impact. I didn’t see how this would aid in the overarching aim
of building a movement, beyond a single uprising. But I was wrong about
some of those assumptions, and – though we are still far from being a
huge, unified movement with clear goals, led by the most oppressed
layers of society, with the capacity for long-term struggle – things
have steadily improved.
First
of all, the occupation has lasted more than two weeks and it’s growing
every day. Many tens of thousands of people have participated in this
occupation in some way or another – from the thousands who have slept
out or marched or stopped by, to the thousands of pizzas ordered for us,
the thousands of dollars sent our way, and the thousands watching the
livestream and emailing and calling and tweeting. Add this to
occupations being planned in something like 70 cities in the US alone,
not to mention those happening in other countries (both those in
solidarity with us, and those that were our inspiration). Labor,
student, and community groups from around the city are joining, and they
bring with them serious organizers and community members from the most
oppressed and marginalized communities in New York. They also bring
their own concrete demands, which are easy to support because they are
obvious, as they have always been.
Next,
we have taken steps to define ourselves, to write documents to that
affect, and to move toward a collective consciousness that is bold and
uncompromising. Those documents that define us take forever to write,
because we all participate in their writing (yes, it’s a bit of a drag,
but revolutions aren’t so easy when we are fighting for the type of
liberation that demands self-management). Now, to be clear, I have
always been a strong proponent of clear demands – because they help
define our struggle, point the way to actions we want to take, give us
tools for measurement, communicate with people outside of the
occupation, and represent those busy struggling elsewhere. However, I do
want to point out that we have been able to continue to grow and bring
new communities in despite a lack of demands, and that those people and
groups will bring their own. I also think our demands really aren’t as
mysterious as some people are letting on; I think our critics are
playing dumb. Let’s cut the crap. We wouldn’t be on Wall Street if we
didn’t already have an implicitly unifying message: We hold the banks,
the millionaires, and the political elite they control, responsible for
the exploitation and oppression we face – from capitalism, racism and
authoritarianism to imperialism, patriarchy, and environmental
degradation. We have a diversity of grievances, complaints, demands,
principles, and visions, but it is clear that we have planted ourselves
in the financial capital of the world because we see it as one of the
most deeply entrenched roots of the various systems of oppression we
face every day. Come on. The clue is in the title: OccupyWall Street.
Every
day, the occupiers see themselves more and more connected to a movement
– a movement around the country and the world, but also a movement
through time, stretching from the giants who came before us to the
future giants we will be. Every day more people from different
communities join, and in their attempt to represent themselves, they
bring their people, their demands, their languages, their struggles.
Every day more grassroots organizations – struggling around housing or
healthcare, for adjunct professors or postal workers – join the fight,
bringing with them the clear message that this movement must be grounded
in the hard organizing work that took place before this occupation and
will continue after it. This deepening of consciousness and realization
of the connection between the different struggles we wage will be among
the most important things to come out of this.
We
have already taken back some space – space for new forms of democratic
participation, for the type of initiative and creativity discouraged by
the status quo, for autonomy within solidarity, for experiments of
self-management and equity and solidarity, for a type of rebellion that
rejects permits, pens and sidewalks, one that demands streets and
bridges instead – someday also buildings and governments. It will be
hard, I hope, for us to go back to the pens in the future, having tasted
what it’s like to stand among thousands in the pouring rain on the
Brooklyn Bridge, and that’s quite a liberating step forward.
These
are enormous victories not only in the consciousness of a new
generation of fighters, but also in the creation of a new narrative –
one that refuses to accept the myth that Americans don’t struggle, that
we can be bought off with TVs and iphones, that things really aren’t so
bad and we’re willing to let injustice happen because we get a bigger
piece of the bounty our military and capitalists extract from others.
No, we are rewriting the story, telling it ourselves, tweeting and
tagging it, filming and singing it, writing it with our arrests and the
bruises we get from the terrified and bewildered police who will
eventually have to either join us or get the hell out of the way. And
the story will be an important force not only in this struggle, but in
the many to come. We will tell the story while we are at work and
school, on the picket lines, in marches, at our next occupations and
sit-ins, in jail when the bosses get frightened enough to tell their
henchmen to arrest us in the hundreds as they did on October 1st, and the story will help us remember and imagine our boundless potential while we fight on.
Battles to Come
Occupations
are an incredibly important mode of resistance, an expression of a dual
power strategy. On one hand, they give us the space and time with which
to create an alternative, to practice, to learn, to create new
relations, to become better revolutionaries, and to experience
community. At the same time, they serve as a base camp from which to
wage a struggle against the institutions that oppress us, to knock down
the oppressors, to protect that alternative, to liberate more space.
Both are important. And yes, we face challenges in each realm.
Internally,
we have to make sure we are modifying our structures to meet the needs
of the people participating in them as we change and grow. We have to
make sure that the de-centralization we are fostering actually empowers
those who aren’t already conditioned by this society to speak a lot and
lead and give directions. We have to find and create a new and diverse
ways for people to participate, especially those too busy or too
threatened by the daily brutalities they already face to be able to join
us in occupations or marches. We have to continue to work to formulate a
message together – not only because it will attract and represent
others or clarify our multitude of voices for the outside world, but
also because the process will be educational for us and it will ground
us in the real struggles we have inherited from being part of a movement
together. Above all, perhaps, we must continue to educate ourselves and
each other – about everything from the systems of oppression we face,
to the history of various peoples and struggles, to strategies for
winning and practical skills to carry them out.
And
perhaps even more important than learning about the ways we are kept
down, is learning and exploring the world we might want instead, one
without capitalism, racism, patriarchy, and authoritarianism – an
economic, political, and social model that is solidaristic, equitable,
self-managing, ecologically sustainable, liberating, intimate, warm, and
creative. We have to spend some of this precious time developing the
values of the society we are fighting for, so that we can imagine the
institutions we will need to build in order to live them out. We have to
do this because that’s what it will take to defeat the age-old mantra
that there is no alternative; we have to do it because imagining that
alternative will give us hope and strength to struggle, because it will
define the different ways we can fight and the different institutions we
need to build for ourselves now, because it will give us the foundation
on which to build a movement beyond one or even a hundred occupations.
We must do it because dreaming is part of what gives us the strength to
actually create those institutions we want to live in, as we fight to
knock the rotten ones down.
Externally,
then, it is simple. We have to draw clear lines from the oppression
heaped on this society to the agents responsible for it. If Chase bank
is foreclosing on homes, we need to foreclose on Chase Bank. If the city
government is cutting schools and homeless shelters, we need to shut it
down. They want quiet streets, un-interrupted work-days, pristine bank
branches, functional government institutions, productive workplaces,
docile schools, and lines of unflinching shoppers. They want business as
usual, and that’s what we have to take from them. Liberty Plaza is not
the struggle; it is the home for the creation of the alternative, and
the staging ground for the fight that takes us out into the streets, to
make business as usual truly untenable.
We
win when we build diverse movements led by the most oppressed people in
society, capable of proposing an alternative, laying the seeds for it,
and taking the power necessary to transform it from the alternative to
the norm. We win when we raise social costs to the point that those
hopeless few elites find themselves left with no carrots to wave before
us and no sticks big enough to do us any harm. We win when we show no
signs of weakening, when we refuse to go home. We win the movement grows
and grows and grows with no sign of letting up. We win when losing is
not an option, when winning is the only way to really be human.
Yotam
Marom is an organizer, educator, musician, and writer. He is a member
of the Organization for a Free Society, and can be reached at.
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