Don't Sleep Through the Revolution
Winning the Class War
by Rev. JESSE JACKSON
Occupy Wall Street protests have now spread to some 800 cities.  It’s spreading 
like a fire on a 
strong wind over a dry field.  The heat is likely to keep on building.
Conservatives have fallen over themselves rushing to 
side with the top 1% against the rest.  Eric Cantor, House majority 
leader, denounces “mobs” and “the pitting of Americans against 
Americans.”  Herman Cain dismisses the demonstrators as 
“anti-American.”  Mitt Romney accuses them of waging “class warfare.”
But class warfare is the reason Occupy Wall Street 
has sounded such a chord.  Sure there’s class warfare, one of America’s 
richest men, Warren Buffett, concluded, “and my class is winning.”
Last week just before I left for Europe, I joined the Chicago “wing” of the 
Occupy Wall Street movement last week.  I spoke 
to students who dropped out of school because they couldn’t afford 
tuition; now they are left with guaranteed student loan debt.
Students graduate with average student loan debts of 
over $20,000, and the bankers lobby passes a law that forces payment of 
those debts, even after bankruptcy.  Now students are graduating from 
college laden with debts and without a job.  Any wonder they are 
protesting.
I spoke with professors and teachers who have lost 
their jobs, as state’s face declining revenues – driven in part by the 
foreclosure/housing crisis and resulting loss of property tax revenues.
These protests pose a clear indictment to an economy 
that has been working for the few and not the many. The richest 1% of 
Americans now makes as much income as the bottom 60%.  They control as 
much wealth as the bottom 90%. With that wealth comes political power, 
as they can afford the campaign contributions and the high priced 
lobbyists needed to rig the rules in Washington.  They have had their 
way.
The results are unconscionable.  Hedge fund 
billionaires carve out a “carried interest” tax dodge that enables them 
to pay a lower tax rate on their earnings than teachers pay.
Wall Street bankers pocket millions in bonuses 
inflating a housing bubble, marked as the FBI warned by “an epidemic of 
fraud” Then when the bubble explodes, they get bailed out – and go back 
to paying themselves million dollar bonuses – and hiking charges on 
credit cards and bank accounts.  And while the banks are saved, 25 
million people remain in need of fulltime work.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/william-k-black/the-two-documents-everyon_b_169813.html
Similarly, homeowners get no relief.  When workers 
are laid off and can’t sustain their mortgage payments, they lose their 
homes.  When their homes are underwater, worth less than the mortgage, 
they can’t get banks to return to their phone calls, can’t refinance to 
get some relief from lower interest rates.  Instead, the bankers lobby 
passes a law that allows the rich to readjust the mortgages of vacation 
homes in bankruptcy courts, but does prohibits homeowners from doing the same.
The obscene decision of the Supreme Court’s 
conservative gang of five in Citizen’s United adds insult.  They declare 
corporations are persons, with the same right to free speech as 
American citizens.  Since they think money is speech, they open the 
floodgates to corporate purchase of our elections.
Movements grow not because of the specifics of their 
agenda, but because of the truth of their protest.  Occupy Wall Street 
protests outrages that all of us see.  Their protest is too valid to be 
ignored; too pressing to be suppressed.
The Rainbow PUSH Coalition has been on this case for 
nearly years now:  we protested the attempt of the banks to privatize 
social security and to abolish the Glass-Steagull Act.   We challenged 
the corruption of the “overseers” responsible for regulating the 
financial services industry, many of whom were raising money from Wall 
Street for their campaigns, or working for Wall Street upon leaving 
Congress.
Rainbow PUSH  joined with Attorney General Lisa 
Madigan to expose the targeting and steering of Blacks and people of 
color into sub-prime loans, and to demand appropriate remedies from 
Countrywide and other banks that engaged in discriminatory lending 
practices.  We’ve marched and protested with homeowners facing 
foreclosure, and rallied with a broad coalition of conscience at the 
annual shareholder meetings of Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Bank of 
America and others – decrying their policies and practices that led to 
the global economic crisis.  Most recently Rainbow PUSH testified to 
oppose the merger of the Capitol One merger.
The protests will spread; others are already joining, because there is a need 
for economic security.    Too few own and 
control too much, while too many are left out of the economic 
equation.  This week, the AFL-CIO, the international labor federation, 
will spark protests demanding “jobs, not cuts,” across the country.  On 
November 17, a range of groups under the banner of the American Dream 
Movement is planning the largest mobilizations since the mass movement 
that opposed the War in Iraq.
This citizen protest will face increasing 
opposition.  Local officials will try to shut demonstrations down.  Fox 
News and conservative talk radio will slander and decry.   Politicians 
will deplore.
We celebrate Dr. Martin Luther King’s memorial this 
week in Washington.  But when the Civil Rights Movement was building, 
Dr. King was reviled as an outside agitator, slandered as a 
“communist.”  The FBI wiretapped him and tried to drive him to 
suicide.  Non-violent demonstrators were arrested, beaten, and 
murdered.  Nixon developed a Southern strategy based on race-bait 
politics to consolidate Republican strength in the South.
Entrenched privilege does not surrender its privilege easily.  Occupy Wall 
Street is taking on the most powerful interests. 
But nothing, as Victor Hugo wrote, is more powerful than an idea whose 
time has come.  As Dr. King urged, “Don’t sleep through the revolution.” It is 
time to take a stand.   So 99’ers, maintain your disciplined 
focus, your peaceful nonviolent approach to protest and demand 
change.  In the end we will win.
Rev. Jesse L. Jackson is founder and president of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition.

http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/10/11/winning-the-class-war/


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