Washington Post
 

Mad as hell, at the corporate powers that be

 
 
By Bill McKibben, Published: October 7

 
 
< 
For the cable news networks, the “political calendar” this year has meant 
a  (seemingly endless) series of debates between the various Republican 
worthies.  But in hindsight, an alternate series of dates seems at least as 
important,  foreshadowing the next great convulsion in the country’s politics: 
●Feb. 14: Thousands begin descending on Madison, Wis., to protest attacks 
on  _union bargaining rights_ 
(http://www.wisgov.state.wi.us/journal_media_detail.asp?prid=5622&locid=177) . 
The demonstrations begin with  the labor 
movement but soon expand to include environmentalists, church groups  and the 
rest of the progressive spectrum. Soon the demonstrations are the  largest in 
the state since the Vietnam War. 



 
●Aug. 20: _Two weeks of sit-ins_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/a-watershed-moment-for-obama-on-climate-change/2011/08/16/gIQAGX3zJJ_story.html
)  begin at the White House; before  they’re over, 1,253 people have been 
_arrested_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/celebritology/post/daryl-hannah-arrested-at-white-house/2011/08/30/gIQAAQy6pJ_blog.html)
  for protesting 
the _proposed_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/01/23/AR2011012303411.html)
  _Keystone XL oil pipeline_ 
(http://www.keystonepipeline-xl.state.gov/clientsite/keystonexl.nsf) , the 
biggest civil  
disobedience actions since the 1980s. 
●Sept. 17: The first few hundred protesters arrive in New York for _Occupy 
Wall Street_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/blogpost/post/occupy-wall-street-protests-what-do-the-one-percent-think/2011/10/07/gIQAMpPsSL_blog.html
) , their numbers and visibility soon  surging and sympathy occupations 
eventually popping up across the country. More  than _700 are arrested_ 
(http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2011/10/occupy-wall-street-more-than-700-arre
sted-after-protesters-block-traffic-on-brooklyn-bridge-during-rush-hour/)  
in a single day. 
Something fresh is afoot in this country, drawing its inspiration from the  
Arab Spring. It’s what Van Jones, head of _Rebuild the  Dream_ 
(http://rebuildthedream.com/) , has taken to calling “_the American Autumn_ 
(http://www.theblaze.com/stories/van-jones-warns-america-hold-on-to-your-seats’
-because-the-progressive-fight-back’-is-coming-in-october/) .” Yes, that Van 
Jones, 
the  one the White House _unceremoniously dumped overboard_ 
(http://voices.washingtonpost.com/44/2009/09/06/van_jones_resigns.html)  after 
Glenn Beck  
(preposterously) called him a _communist_ 
(http://www.glennbeck.com/content/articles/article/198/29967/) . Now Jones is 
back on stage — and so is a  
strain of American populism that many have been waiting to see emerge. No one  
knows if it will turn into political action, à la the Tea Party, or morph 
into  something altogether new. But the energy is undeniable — even Federal 
Reserve  Chairman Ben Bernanke said he _understood the anger_ 
(http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2011/10/04/bernanke-signals-some-sympathy-for-wall-street-prote
sters/)  of Wall Street protesters. 
In certain ways, this kind of protest is long overdue. Wall Street in 
recent  days has had the feel of Seattle amid the huge World Trade Organization 
 
demonstrations of 2000, a nascent movement against concentrated wealth whose 
 fires were banked by the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. That anxiety might 
have  erupted again amid the financial crisis of 2008, but many were willing 
to put  their trust in Barack Obama and on the wings of a campaign that 
promised  transformative change. Many of us were waiting for him to take 
decisive 
action —  action that has never come. One reason may be the Supreme Court’
s 2010 _Citizens United decision_ 
(http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/09pdf/08-205.pdf)  that allowed Wall  
Street, and the rest of corporate America, 
to, well, occupy the public square.  When that decision came down, it was 
almost as though big business said:  We’re not even going to pretend any 
more. We run this country.  
So this American Autumn is a push-back against the ever-expanding powers of 
 the elite. Take the Keystone pipeline battle: The administration 
outsourced the  environmental review to a firm that had worked for the pipeline 
builder. As  e-mails released recently under the Freedom of Information Act 
revealed, a State  Department official was cheering on the pipeline project, 
perhaps because  Secretary _Hillary Rodham Clinton’s former deputy campaign 
manager is its  chief lobbyist_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/transcanada-pipeline-lobbyist-works-all-the-angles-with-former-colleag
ues/2011/09/16/gIQAYq3BnK_story.html) . A few days ago, reporters uncovered 
evidence that the  Koch brothers, the third- and fourth-richest men in this 
country, had _“direct and significant” ties_ 
(http://insideclimatenews.org/news/20111004/koch-brothers-koch-industries-flint-hills-financial-interest-c
anada-energy-board-keystone-xl-pipeline)  to the pipeline. In other  words: 
The game was wired. Wired for pipelines, for bank bailouts, for benefit  
cuts, for all the things that corporate America has ever wanted, and none of 
the  things that people suffering in a dead economy on a heating planet need 
and  deserve.  
Some have complained that the movement is inchoate, that it hasn’t issued a 
 list of demands, that it has no leader. Perhaps those will emerge in time; 
more  crucial is the debate underway in occupied downtown parks and engaged 
Internet  forums, about how to shoulder aside connection and privilege and 
reinstall a  democracy that works for “the other 99 percent.” It owes a 
little something to  the Tea Party, but it identifies the real enemy less in 
government than in the  corporate power that so easily manipulates that 
government. And if the Tea Party  speaks to an older generation deprived of the 
America its adherents remember,  this new movement speaks to a younger 
generation robbed of the future it had  been led to expect. 
It would be folly to predict how all this will evolve. But there are a 
couple  of dates you can put on the calendar: 
●Nov. 6: Pipeline protesters will return to the White House, one year 
before  the next election, to encircle it with thousands of activists. We’ll be 
carrying  signs with Obama’s words from the 2008 campaign (“time to end the 
tyranny of  oil”). This may be one of the president’s last chances to make 
peace with this  emerging force. 
●Nov. 17: The Rebuild the Dream campaign promises thousands of “visible,  
urgent actions,” modeled on Occupy Wall Street, around its “jobs not cuts”  
theme. Notice the Twitter hashtags already springing up: #occupyphoenix,  
#occupyindianapolis. It’s spreading. 
And after that, who knows? Which is the point. By the time autumn is over 
and  winter descends, our politics may look very  different.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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