rom: Arun Gupta <ebrowniess at yahoo.com>

I've been going down to the Wall Street protest nearly every day.Not
only is it growing, it is amazing to see how the protesters have
managed to create a non-commodified radical democratic space in the
heart of global capital.

There is genuine potential in this occupation for revitalizing radical
left movements and perhaps even achieving a historical victory.

But it will take a concerted effort from every single one of us.
Please take a few minutes to read this -- it's short!

More important, please forward this to all your contacts asking them
to join in and likewise pass along the call.

Best, Arun

The Revolution Begins at Home By Arun Gupta

What is occurring on Wall Street right now is truly remarkable. For
over 10 days, in the sanctum of the great cathedral of global
capitalism, the dispossessed have liberated territory from the
financial overlords and their police army.

They have created a unique opportunity to shift the tides of history
in the tradition of other great peaceful occupations from the sit-down
strikes of the 1930s to the lunch-counter sit-ins of the 1960s to the
democratic uprisings across the Arab world and Europe today.

While the Wall Street occupation is growing, it needs an all-out
commitment from everyone who cheered the Egyptians in Tahrir Square,
said "We are all Wisconsin," and stood in solidarity with the Greeks
and Spaniards. This is a movement for anyone who lacks a job, housing
or healthcare, or thinks they have no future.

Our system is broken at every level. More than 25 million Americans
are unemployed. More than 50 million live without health insurance.
And perhaps 100 million Americans are mired in poverty, using
realistic measures. Yet the fat cats continue to get tax breaks and
reap billions while politicians compete to turn the austerity screws
on all of us.

At some point the number of people occupying Wall Street -- whether
that's five thousand, ten thousand or fifty thousand -- will force the
powers that be to offer concessions. No one can say how many people it
will take or even how things will change exactly, but there is a real
potential for bypassing a corrupt political process and to begin
realizing a society based on human needs not hedge fund profits.

After all, who would have imagined a year ago that Tunisians and
Egyptians would oust their dictators?

At Liberty Park, the nerve center of the occupation, more than a
thousand people gather every day to debate, discuss and organize what
to do about our failed system that has allowed the 400 richest
Americans at the top to amass more wealth than the 180 million
Americans at the bottom.

It's astonishing that this self-organized festival of democracy has
sprouted on the turf of the masters of the universe, the men who play
the tune that both political parties and the media dance to. The New
York Police Department, which has deployed hundreds of officers at a
time to surround and intimidate protesters, is capable of arresting
everyone and clearing Liberty Plaza in minutes. But they haven't,
which is also astonishing.

That's because assaulting peaceful crowds in a public square demanding
real democracy -- economic and not just political -- would remind the
world of the brittle autocrats who brutalized their people demanding
justice before they were swept away by the Arab Spring. And the state
violence has already backfired. After police attacked a Saturday
afternoon march that started from Liberty Plaza the crowds only got
bigger and media interest grew.

The Wall Street occupation has already succeeded in revealing the
bankruptcy of the dominant powers -- the economic, the political,
media and security forces. They have nothing positive to offer
humanity, not that they ever did for the Global South, but now their
quest for endless profits means deepening the misery with a thousand
austerity cuts.

Even their solutions are cruel jokes. They tell us that the "Buffett
Rule" would spread the pain by asking the penthouse set to sacrifice a
tin of caviar, which is what the proposed tax increase would amount
to. Meanwhile, the rest of us will have to sacrifice healthcare, food,
education, housing, jobs and perhaps our lives to sate the ferocious
appetite of capital.

That's why more and more people are joining the Wall Street
occupation. They can tell you about their homes being foreclosed upon,
months of grinding unemployment or minimum-wage dead-end jobs,
staggering student debt loads, or trying to live without decent
healthcare. It's a whole generation of Americans with no prospects,
but who are told to believe in a system that can only offer them
Dancing With The Stars and pepper spray to the face.

Yet against every description of a generation derided as narcissistic,
apathetic and hopeless they are staking a claim to a better future for
all of us.

That's why we all need to join in. Not just by liking it on Facebook,
signing a petition at change.org or retweeting protest photos, but by
going down to the occupation itself.

There is great potential here. Sure, it's a far cry from Tahrir Square
or even Wisconsin. But there is the nucleus of a revolt that could
shake America's power structure as much as the Arab world has been
upended.

Instead of one to two thousand people a day joining in the occupation
there needs to be tens of thousands of people protesting the fat cats
driving Bentleys and drinking thousand-dollar bottles of champagne
with money they looted from the financial crisis and then from the
bailouts while Americans literally die on the streets.

To be fair, the scene in Liberty Plaza seems messy and chaotic. But
it's also a laboratory of possibility, and that's the beauty of
democracy. As opposed to our monoculture world, where political life
is flipping a lever every four years, social life is being a consumer
and economic life is being a timid cog, the Wall Street occupation is
creating a polyculture of ideas, expression and art.

Yet while many people support the occupation, they hesitate to fully
join in and are quick to offer criticism. It's clear that the biggest
obstacles to building a powerful movement are not the police or
capital -- it's our own cynicism and despair.

Perhaps their views were colored by the New York Times article
deriding protesters for wishing to "pantomime progressivism" and
"Gunning for Wall Street with faulty aim." Many of the criticisms boil
down to "a lack of clear messaging."

But what's wrong with that? A fully formed movement is not going to
spring from the ground. It has to be created. And who can say what
exactly needs to be done? We are not talking about ousting a dictator;
though some say we want to oust the dictatorship of capital.

There are plenty of sophisticated ideas out there: end corporate
personhood; institute a "Tobin Tax" on stock purchases and currency
trading; nationalize banks; socialize medicine; fully fund government
jobs and genuine Keynesian stimulus; lift restrictions on labor
organizing; allow cities to turn foreclosed homes into public housing;
build a green energy infrastructure.

But how can we get broad agreement on any of these? If the protesters
came into the square with a pre-determined set of demands it would
have only limited their potential. They would have either been
dismissed as pie in the sky -- such as socialized medicine or
nationalize banks -- or if they went for weak demands such as the
Buffett Rule their efforts would immediately be absorbed by a failed
political system, thus undermining the movement.

That's why the building of the movement has to go hand in hand with
common struggle, debate and radical democracy. It's how we will create
genuine solutions that have legitimacy. And that is what is occurring
down at Wall Street.

Now, there are endless objections one can make. But if we focus on the
possibilities, and shed our despair, our hesitancy and our cynicism,
and collectively come to Wall Street with critical thinking, ideas and
solidarity we can change the world.

How many times in your life do you get a chance to watch history
unfold, to actively participate in building a better society, to come
together with thousands of people where genuine democracy is the
reality and not a fantasy?

For too long our minds have been chained by fear, by division, by
impotence. The one thing the elite fear most is a great awakening.
That day is here. Together we can seize it.

-------------------------------------------- Arun Gupta is the editor
of The Indypendent.

http://www.MitchelCohen.com

Ring the bells that still can ring, Forget your perfect offering.
There is a crack, a crack in everything, That's how the light gets in.
~ Leonard Cohen
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