Folks,

Here is part of a talk I gave at the James Connolly Forum in Albany last Friday 
night. I've attached a link to the longer version.

Jodi

The Meaning of Occupy Wall Street for the Left:

Occupy Wall Street, for all its talk of horizontality, autonomy, and 
decentralized process, is recentering the economy, engaging in class warfare 
without naming the working class as one of two great hostile forces but instead 
by presenting capitalism as a wrong against the people. It’s putting capitalism 
back at center of left politics—no wonder, then, that it has opened up a new 
sense of possibility for so many of us: it has reignited political will. In a 
way, it’s returning to the left its missing core or soul, what has been 
displaced or denied since we turned our back on the communist horizon. It’s 
reactivating the Marxist insight that class struggle is a political struggle. 
As I mentioned before, a new Pew poll finds a nineteen percentage point 
increase since 2009 of the number of Americans who believe there are strong or 
very strong conflicts between the rich and poor. Two thirds perceive this 
conflict—and perceive it as more intense than divisions of race and immigration 
status (African Americans see class conflict as more significant than white 
people do). 

My claim, then, is that when occupy wall street speaks the language of 
capitalism and the “no left,” when it disavows representation, exclusion, 
dogmatism, and utopianism, it’s at its weakest; it’s no different from the left 
we’ve had from the last thirty years or from its larger setting in 
communicative capitalism. But, when it re-centers the economy and class 
struggle, when it focuses on capitalism—Wall Street—on opposition, on 
collectivism, and on walking new paths, creating new practices, opening up new 
common modes of producing and distributing, that’s its heart, that’s what 
brings it to life.

How Occupy Wall Street is re-centering the economy is an open, fluid, changing, 
and intensely debated question.  It’s not a traditional movement of the working 
class organized in trade unions or targeting work places, although it is a 
movement of class struggle (especially when we recognize with Marx and Engels 
that the working class is not a fixed, empirical class but a fluid, changing 
class of those who have to sell their labor power in order to survive). 
Occupy’s use of strikes and occupations targets the capitalist system more 
broadly, shutting down ports and stock exchanges (I think of the initial shut 
downs in Oakland and on Wall Street as proof of concepts, proof that it can be 
done). People aren’t being mobilized as workers; they are being mobilized as 
people, as everybody else, as the rest of us, as the majority—99%--who are 
being thoroughly screwed by the top one percent in multiple parts of our lives: 
education, health, food, the environment, housing, and work. Capitalism in the 
US has sold itself as freedom—but increasing numbers of us feel trapped, 
practically enslaved. It used to be that people went to college to get a good 
job, so they wouldn’t be stuck flipping burgers and waiting tables. Now people 
go to college and are told they have to work without pay in order to get a good 
job—so they flip burgers and wait tables to try to pay their college debts 
while working for free as interns. 

Because people aren’t mobilized primarily as workers but as those who are 
proletarianized and exploited in every aspect of our lives—at risk of 
foreclosure and unemployment, diminishing futures, increasing debts, shrunken 
space of freedom, accelerated dependence on a system that is rapidly failing 
(I’m thinking here of the ways corporations file for bankruptcy and thus shed 
their obligations to pay people their earned and expected pensions as well as 
the ongoing threats to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid)—because people 
are mobilized as the 99%, the attack on capitalism takes different forms, forms 
loosely associated with the ideological span of the contemporary left.
1.  Progressive/left-liberal Democrat:  constitutional reform, legislative 
goals (abolish corporate personhood; money out of politics); locate problem in 
political process.
2.  Left Keynesian: jobs for all demand, tax the rich; locate problem in the 
economy
3.  Anarchists—see the state as well as hierarchical and centralized power as 
the primary problem (capitalism depends on the state); solution is to 
constitute alternative practices, alongside or outside the mainstream; a 
politics of refusal and creative production; any attempt to seize the state 
will just reproduce the structures of power and patterns of behavior in which 
we are caught.
4.  Communists/ revolutionary socialists—see the economy as the primary problem 
(state as instrument of class power); goal is over-throwing capitalism and 
establishing communism. Rather than emphasizing specific local practices, more 
interested in general strike, growing the movement, questions of strategy. To 
be frank: finding themselves in the position of not having been able to achieve 
in the contemporary US—mass mobilization—when the anarchists, with their 
emphases on autonomy, horizontality, inclusion, and consensus have. This is 
occasioning a great deal of though and reflection among socialists. Some are 
concerned with positioning themselves in the vanguard of the movement. Others, 
rightly, recognize that the movement is itself the vanguard; the movement is 
itself ushering in something beyond capitalism, even as it isn’t sure what this 
is (indeed the movement’s very multiplicity makes this sentence pretty awkward 
and misleading; the movement isn’t singular, it’s divided in itself).

At the same time, faced with multiple evictions (according to Firedog Lake 
there are 62 remaining encampments in the US), the Occupy movement itself is 
reflecting, thinking on what has worked, what hasn’t, what’s next for the 
movement. A number of people, groups, and occupations are addressing problems 
with the General Assembly structure and consensus. Many GAs have become 
dysfunctional; attendance is declining. Or, the combination of working groups 
and GAs is so demanding that the very people for whom the movement is fighting 
can’t participate—they got a day job and a night job or two or three.  A 
currently circulating memo from a member of the Tech Ops and Outreach groups of 
OWS highlights the ways this nominally inclusive movement has actually produced 
barriers to involvement—it’s hard for people to know how to get more involved.

Anyway, back to the different ideological strands: it doesn’t make sense to 
think of these as a coalition. Rather, the movement is a convergence of the 
people who bring with them ideas and suppositions that loosely fit under one or 
two of the four categories. Some are experienced activists with movement and 
party experience; others have inclinations and intuitions. What unites them 
right now is the sense that capitalism is not working—but some think it can and 
should be fixed and others don’t. And this means that there is a primary 
division at the heart of the movement.  

It might be that this division is generative—enabling a division of labor and 
an attack on our current political and economic system at multiple levels. Yet, 
it could also be the case that working for some goals precludes working for 
other goals, not only taking away energy and focus but actually buttressing 
institutions and practices that some of us think should be destroyed and 
replaced. For example, on the issue of corporate personhood: there are 
different constitutional amendments in play and these differences matter. The 
version offered by the group Move to Amend aims to constrain all 
corporations—including non-profit. The version supported by Bernie Sanders 
focuses on for profit corporations.  Another example: some in the movement are 
pushing for a massive jobs program; libertarians and anarchists oppose this 
because they don’t want to see that kind of state power.  So the question that 
Occupy poses for all of us right now is where we want it to go and how we want 
to get there. Does a wide array of dispersed actions/campaigns/interventions 
entail a dilution of force and effort, such that they all get lost in the 
overall flow of images and issues in communicative capitalism? Or does it 
entail something else entirely: perhaps the establishment of multiple 
beachheads, the infiltration of multiple issues, the political linking of 
multiple sites such that their underlying commonality in opposition to 
capitalism becomes apparent (the red thread)?  


link to longer text available here: 
http://jdeanicite.typepad.com/i_cite/2012/01/occupy-wall-street-and-the-left.html

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