(I was impressed by the following incisive, patient, commentary on OWS by Fred 
Feldman, a former SWP leader, on Lou Proyect's Marxism list.)

This is a letter that I sent to the public NY Solidarity and Friends mailing
list today.  It includes the information included in the short item I
submitted here right after participating, along with some aspects of a
broader assessment of the role of OWS in our present situation.

I estimated there were about 30,000 people (maybe more) participating.  The
whole time I was at the gathering point by the Foley Square courthouse,
people were continually pouring in from Chambers St. and Park Row.

Unions' role
There was a modest trade union participation, although the TWU had called
the action and others sponsored it.  The turnout was overwhelmingly, but far
from exclusively young.  

We should keep in mind about this that trade unionists are unfortunately at
this time only the 7 percent or less.  The working people who make up this
movement and respond to it are largely in the 92 percent who are not
organized today.  That's a general point, though, and doesn't let the
officials off the hook for their unwillingness or hesitation to bring out
the ranks to a demonstration with such a strong anti-establishment
character.

By the way, in the whole course of my time with OWS and supporters, I never
ran into a single person I knew except for a lone Militant salesperson,
-although I knew quite a few of them had to be around. (Certainly,
Solidarity and ISO people at least.)  To me, that was a sign of a real mass
demonstration going vastly beyond the usual suspects, who include ourselves,
of course.

I left Foley Square (I did not participate in the march) in search of
Zuccotti Park and the OWS center. It was easy to find, to my surprise as I
am an expert at getting lost (people consult me about how to get lost) -
straight down Brpadwau, past Cortlandt St. to Liberty St. The park is right
there.

Zuccoti Park
I think there were about a thousand people  "hanging around" as part of the
action.  I had been prepared for a somewhat "hippy-looking" crowd (whatever
that really means) but I didn't see it. Looked pretty much like regular
peope, overwhelmingly young, and appearing and acting the way young people
do. Long hair was not predominant among the men, nor super-short hair among
the women, and whatever. 

Of course, they may have been urged to rein it in by the very competent
leaders, organizers, guides, or whatever, to be on best behavior because
lots of supportive folks were coming in that day. Frankly, they looked to be
a lot of regular folks.

I checked out the library which they maintain to help the participants. (In
any new environment, the first thing I check out is the library, and since
these people had one, I did so.)  It was full of  good stuff to pass the
time with.  But the only item that could be designated Marxist that I saw
was Jack Barnes "Capitalism's Growing World Disorder."  I saw no anarchist
literature --- no Emma Goldman, Murray Bookchin, Prince Kropotkin, or other
names I am used to seeing when those folks are about.

Bob Avakian's Revolutionary Communist Party seems to maintain a not-well
supplied book table at the park. There was no other such direct propaganda
intervention by left groups at the park (noone selling newspapers and so
forth).. 

They had a lot of water and coffee available - I availed myself of the
coffee, which was a needed waker-upper. There was a  medical area that  I
clumsily stumbled through, and a  food area.\

The leadership spent a lot of time preparing people for the arrival of the
vast numbers of supporters. A young woman helped orient people about the
need to make room for the people who were coming. Then she oriented us on
the people's mike, in which people in front shout out whatever a speaker is
saying to people  behind them, who do likewise for the people behind them.
Of course, when the crowd arrived, many layers of this process were needed.
She estimated it at 20,000, which seemed right to me,  but I could see as I
headed home that thousands of people had not even made it into the park,
which was packed

I enjoyed the people's mike a lot and  participated to the best of my
limited ability. It reminded me a lot of the  0ld Original  Saturday Night
Live which had a regular routine called "News for the Deaf," in which a
reporter just screamed at the audience. Having moderate to severe hearing
loss myself, I would not have been able to hear clearly almost anything that
was said in the platform area (just a raised part of the park on the
Broadway side.

Role of union officials
I have read a number of items that refer to the desire of the trade union
officials who spoke to the rally to "coopt" the demonstrators.

Its hard to imagine that they could conceive of doing anything else. I mean
what else are they capable of doing today. 

At the same time, I think they were inspired on a certain level. OWS is the
first development (I don't think Wisconsin quite pulled it off due to the DP
weight) since Obama's election (which was a false dawn, of course) to seize
the initiative from the far right wing, and they are screaming in agony
about it (as is -Bloomberg and many other right-thinking citizens.

I think the officialdom feels isolated and vulnerable tirhgt now

Despite the radical character of this protest and its confrontation with the
whole range of powers and principalities, I think they see this as a force
that they can use use to save the  Democratic Party from simply becoming a
pure and simple party of finance capital, and conceiving of going  a little
to the left now and them - giving them a little something they can boast
about having won, say at least once every four years.  

Obama's latest news conference shows his deep resistance to any such shift,
whether or not it results in his electoral defeat.  He is the man of the
banker rulers over US and much of world industry. He's happy there and does
not intend to play any Rooseveltian games. And most of the Democratic
senators and reps seem similarly at home with the status quo. So this is a
pretty uphill battle for the union officialdom.

Anarchist leadership?
I have been told, and it seems logical that it might be true, that this
whole thing was initiated by anarchists. If that is true, I want to stress
that the leadership (and yes, Virginia, there is a leadership) they are
intelligent, responsive both to the  ranks and also to those outside the
ranks). They are not adventurist, which does not mean that they cannot smell
openings to expand the narrowing freedom which has been available to
protesters in NYC and elsewhere.  They do not stand before the masses as
dictators and masters, but as leaders of the oppressed and exploited working
people to find their way. But frankly, that does not mean to me that these
people are not leaders. They just don't seem to be assholes.

Of course, it has also been shown that they can be set up by the cops in the
totally engineered coming wit (which does not mean that the cops cannot
trick them into things like the engineered confrontation on the Brooklyn
Bridge, which a comrade on the Marxism List (totally sympathetic to these
new forces) noted that the late Fred Halstead, a revolutionary who was an
important leader of the anti-Vietnam war movement, would have known how to
avoid despite the cops 

This is inexperience. And in the long run, the only cure to inexperience
that can be counted on to  stick is experience. (The Marxmail contributor
offered the same conclusion.)

If this is anarchism (and I don't deny it - I just don't KNOW it), it is a
different kind than we have confronted for a long time. This would be
anarchism attempting to function as a guiding current in the actual
struggles of working people - related to the IWW and the revolutionary
syndicalist trend in the international workers movement which was very
influential before ANY of us were born.

This is not the anarchism of the Black Bloc types who basically try to raise
again the fallen banner of \Weatherman.

No demands? No problem.
The lack of demands is basically very positive.  This is a deeply rooted
(though not super-massive revolt against the whole attack on working people)
expression of until now largely unexpressed outrage at the whole range of
attacks on the working people. This is an assault on Wall  Street brpadly
defined - Wall  Street as the governing power of the USA, financial
capitalists who represent the ever-deeper merger of financial and industrial
capital on a world scale. This is not just financial spetzes. This is the
ruling class.

In fact, the rulers know exactly what OWS represents and what it demands. It
is opposed to their course against working people - the slashing of  Social
Security, medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, housing, heating, water, and, of
course, human rights on every level. These are also the makers of today's
permanent war, whether it is the war in Iraq or the Liberation Bombing of
Libya.

So I agree with OWS that adopting specific demands would be a mistake under
present circumstances. It would trivialize, not deepen, their impact.

And especially if the demands were for "tax the rich," as a number of
friendly critics of the protest have suggested. At this point, I think tax
the rich demands would be as big a trap for  OWS politically as being
hustled onto the auto lanes on the Brooklyn Bridge by the cops was on the
immediate physical level.

A "tax the rich" axis is a trap today
Today, it points toward the propaganda of Shared Sacrifice, even though no
tax proposal is going to threaten the rulers' old age security, medical
care, food, housing, and so on as the attacks on working peole do. 

We should remember that Obama (in his more left posture, after it turned out
that his eagerness to throw the elderly and the sick iinto the meat grinder
to produce more wealth for big capital was destroying his chances of
re-election and possibly the Democratic Party as well) insisted that he
would support slashing social security and all the rest only if there was
some modest new tax imposed on the rich so they would pay their "share."
Some of the union officials who spoke at Zuccotti Park sought to sell the
myth that taxes are the central issue that faces us today. By no means.  The
defense of working people of all kinds against this brutal, life-destroying
assault.

Personally, I don't think anybody who is not rich should pay any taxes at
all.  This is their society, not ours. It is their deficit, nours. If anyone
has to tighten their belts, well, a lot of them could afford to lose weight.
But I will not fall for covering slashes in basic human needs by little or
even medium-sized tax increases on the rich.

OWS is the deepest mass-based or mass-responding mobilization against the
whole assault on working people. They don't need to get tangled in
developing their own tax plan, or picking one up from the liberals who
advise them.

OWS as inspiration for other struggles
OWS in Zuccotti Park or elsewhere in the country is not the "final
conflict," assuming there will ever be one. (I have no clue.) One of the
most important aspects is the capacity of OWS to inspire and legitimize
other struggles in workplaces and on the streets or schools or wherever. In
the long run, this may be its biggest and most important  impact. It is
really not important whether OWS leads directly to the "final conflict.."
I rather doubt it. But its impact will live on.

Meanwhile we should support and  spread  OWS wherever we are. This is our
fight. Perhaps more importantly in this case, this is 
US, finding our half-strangled voices at last.
Fred  Feldman
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