This Occupy movement is interesting from an organizational development point
of view.  I was equally fascinated at the early stages of the Tea Party.
The Tea Party also started with an odd bunch of loosely aligned groups with
somewhat compatible missions.  And, yes, with more than a few wingnuts in
the mix.  Perhaps the Occupy movement is sprinkled with some anarchists like
the early Tea Party was scattered with racists.  (I recall some 'go back to
Nigeria' placards in an early local march.)

 

The question is, will Occupy ever hit a critical mass when it gets quasi
institutionalized like the Tea Party, with a Sarah Palin darling to help
unify the disparate interests?  From a social science perspective, it will
be fun to watch.

 

Chris 

 

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Monday, October 10, 2011 1:55 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [RC] another take on the Occupy Wall Street movement --solid
reporting...

 

At least three groups are now identifiable, the labor unions in addition to

the Occupy Party and #Occupy.  Also at least a few Christian activists,

probably from Left-leaning churches, but so far no reliable data about this.

 

There now have been protests in Oregon, besides Portland, here in Eugene

( found out after the fact ) and Salem.

 

This also reminds me of the anti-globalization demonstrations in Seattle a
decade ago.

That also featured a coalition including unions. But when Anarchists are
involved

it spoils everything. Hence the violence reported in NY  ( as in Seattle )
and

property damage. The Anarchists can never run the show or provide serious

leadership, even on the Left they are often in bad odor, but they sure in
heck

can ruin things for everyone else. Take my word, this city has perhaps

the highest % of Anarchists of any town in the US.

 

Billy

 

--------------------------------------------------------------

 

 

 

10/10/2011 12:27:07 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]
writes:

Interesting analysis.  If true, it bolsters the analogy with the Arab
Spring, which was seeded by educated people who felt locked out of the
future. 

 

Makes me worry who might play the role of the Muslim Brotherhood if they
"win"....

 

E

On Oct 10, 2011, at 12:24 PM, [email protected] wrote:





 

Frum Forum


The Tea Party of the Left? Sort Of.


October 10th, 2011 at 1:00 pm 


 <http://www.frumforum.com/author/elilehrer/> Eli Lehrer


More than a few commentators and reporters have tried to brand the Occupy
Movement as a  <http://www.omaha.com/article/20111010/AP/710109945> Tea
Party of the Left. On its surface, the analogy has some compelling aspects:
both movement emphasize rage over a rational, forward-looking policy agenda.
Both claim to speak for the "little guy" but are actually populated by
people with above average levels of education and (at least in the case of
the Tea Party-there are no surveys I know of that related to the Occupy
Movement) income. Both are also, best as I can tell, authentic grass-roots
movements without any sinister puppet-master behind them. As opposing
political forces, the two groups may well be a good pairing. But, already,
some real differences are apparent. Three stand out:

Tea Party Supporters are self-interested in the macro-sense, Occupy
supporters are self-interested in the micro-sense: All people involved in
all political movements believe they are acting at least partly in
self-interest. The Tea Party rallies and meetings I've attended have focused
on "macro self-interest." There's lots of talk (much of it ill-informed)
about the future, the national debt, the fate of individuals' children, and
the direction of the country. Personal concerns-everything from
I-can-barely-resist-laughing "keep the government's hands off of my
Medicare" rants to well-informed complaints about small business
regulation-are present but secondary in my experience. Nearly all Occupy
Supporters I've seen interviewed, on the other hand, exalt personal
testimony over any macro concerns about the economy: "I am afraid I won't
have a job when I graduate," "my classmates don't have jobs," "I,
personally, don't feel secure right now," "the bank is foreclosing on my
house," "I am afraid my unemployment insurance will run out." ...

The Tea Party Movement has been peaceful, the Occupy Movement appears to be
turning violent: In the last two weeks, Occupy Movement efforts to close
bridges leading to Manhattan and The Air and Space Museum have already
caused more distraction and annoyance to people not involved in politics
than the Tea Party has the last three years. If things escalate this
quickly, there's a good chance that Left-wing violence of a kind the United
States hasn't seen in 40 years-could well evolve out of the Occupy Movement.

Tea Partiers work, Occupy Movement protesters choose not to: Protesting,
particularly if it's the full-time job many Occupy protesters seem to want
it to be, requires both resources to survive without a job, a lack of family
members to support, and a degree of political concern. People from the
bottom levels of society can almost never protest full time. (This isn't
necessarily an attack on the Occupy movement; just a statement of fact.
Reasonably well-educated working-class urban dwellers like Rosa Parks, not
impoverished sharecroppers from rural areas, made up the core of the
American Civil Rights Movement.) Tea Party events, almost always, have taken
place on weekends, after work, and on national holidays because the
overwhelming majority of non-retired Tea Party members work full time.  If,
as appears to be the case, many Occupy protesters are college students or
recent graduates, then their unemployment is, to some extent, voluntary.
True, it may be hard to find the types of jobs that college grads think they
deserve, but hardly anyone with a college degree is going to be unable to
find any type of job particularly if they are willing to move. The presence
of a large Occupy movement in the Washington, D.C. area is more proof of
this: the recession has largely ended in the region and the two biggest
suburban jurisdictions (both of them more than twice the size of the
District)-Fairfax County, Virginia (4.3 unemployment) and Montgomery County,
Maryland (5.5 percent unemployment)-are both actually pretty close to full
employment.

The Occupy Movement is, in may ways, an left-wing answer to the Tea Party.
But it's not the same thing.

 

 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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