[BTW, OWS will soon have to get beyond camping. It's getting cold and
the authorities are getting impatient (cf. Oakland). Teach-Ins, mass
discussions with non-OWS folks, etc. see in order.]

[from Juan Cole's blog]

Sefat: Top 10 ways OWS can Excel: Counsel from Iran’s Green Movement

Posted: 27 Oct 2011 09:12 PM PDT

Kusha Sefat writes in a guest column for Informed Comment

Following the disputed Presidential election in Iran, our Western
compatriots gave many suggestions on combating state oppression.
Various tactics and strategies were devised for Iranian protesters,
some on this very blog. It seems that most of those recommendations
were ineffective within Iran’s particular social and political
context. It may be worth outlining some of the tactics that were in
fact useful to Iranian protesters particularly as the OWS movement
kicks into high gear (assuming these tactics make sense within the
American socio-political context). The following are the Top 10 most
effective tactics for the OWS, stemming from the experience of mass
social movement in Iran.

1) Pick a color to represent your movement and wear it daily in public
places (work, restaurant, etc.). Remember, this is a numbers game. You
want maximum visibility, and to bring your movement into everyday
life.

2) Have an all-inclusive strategy. Accept people with different views
who are willing to join you in protest. Contrary to popular belief,
you don’t have to know what you want as a movement yet. The goal at
this stage is to point to your opponents and say that they have been
lying to you; that the show they have constructed is false and that
you are sick of it.

3) Demonstrate peacefully. Committing violence during demonstrations
leads to ruptures within your movement, diminishes public sympathy,
and gives the security forces a reason to violently suppress your
protest.

4) Be rigorous. Security forces, dressed as civilians, may commit
public acts of violence in order to have an excuse to squash protests.
Find footage of those that police accuses of acting violently. Make
sure they are legitimate protestors. Expose them if they are not.

5) Be creative. During demonstrations in Iran, security forces dressed
a male protester in female attire in a bid to embarrass him. The next
day, hundreds of male protesters came out in female attire.

6) Record protests with your mobile phones and send to television
stations. Many broadcasters are owned by the very people who are in
the 1%. But every now and then, there are producers and news workers
who are willing to get in trouble for showing the truth. This happened
in Iran on many occasions. News websites have an e-mail address and
they generally ask you to send them footage. Do IT.

7) Send your footage of acts of violence committed by the police to
foreign television broadcasters like Al Jazeera, RT, etc. When they
show the footage, it puts pressure on American broadcasters to do the
same. (Iranian protestors used BBC very effectively, even though it is
a British outlet).

8) Write, “I am 99%” or “OWS” on all dollar bills that you circulate.
Remember, you are fighting on the plane of the symbolic, and cash
circulates widely and quickly.

9) Do not let politicians co-opt your movement. Many politicians,
domestic or not, may hope to use your movement to their advantage.
Allow them to join your movement, but DO NOT let them lead or act as
spokesperson.

10) Write arguments and op-eds that aim at the logic of the system
that has robbed you of opportunities and comfort. Do not aim at a
particular person. People can be replaced; it is the system that is
hurting you.

——–

Kusha Sefat was a media consultant in Iran and is now a Doctoral
Student in Sociology at Queens’ College, University of Cambridge


-- 
Jim Devine / "In an ugly and unhappy world the richest man can
purchase nothing but ugliness and unhappiness." -- George Bernard Shaw
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