What now for  Occupy Wall Street?      
 
As the 'Occupy Wall St'  protests grow, many wonder about the specific 
goals of the movement,  writes commentator. 

_Danny  Schechter_ 
(http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/opinion/profile/danny-schechter.html)  
Last Modified: 10 Oct 2011  






What now for Occupy Wall Street? 
    What now for  Occupy Wall Street?      
 
As the 'Occupy Wall St'  protests grow, many wonder about the specific 
goals of the movement,  writes commentator. 

_Danny  Schechter_ 
(http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/opinion/profile/danny-schechter.html)  
Last Modified: 10 Oct 2011  



As the 'Occupy Wall St' protests grow, many wonder  about the specific 
goals of the movement, writes commentator. 
 
October 10, 2011
 
The park is small, just one tiny block, a sliver of earth reclaimed from 
the  destructive fury of the 9/11 building collapses. It was brought back to 
life,  complete with flowers and pink marble seating areas by a real estate 
baron who  had it rebuilt and named it after a former head of a global real 
estate company.  

The rich love to build monuments such as Zuccotti Park, to people like  
themselves.

Halal food trucks line its south side while police vans park  near a 
surveillance tower that is closely monitoring the action below on the  north. 

Occupy Wall Street, as it calls itself, sits in the middle across  the 
street from venerable financial firms on one end, while a new tower rises on  
the other on a far larger empty field called Ground Zero. 

There's the  din of non-stop traffic and construction noise on the outside, 
while inside  activists assemble as they have for nearly a month in a 
beehive of activity,  some of it intensely political, much of it dealing with 
the 
more personal issues  of survival like finding a sleeping bag as the nights 
get colder.

Some  deal with cleaning or cooking or disseminating information on 
websites and  Twitter while others plan direct action forays into other parts 
of 
the city to  confront financial power or find new recruits. 

The New York  Times reports that many of those drawn to this improvised 
encampment have  never been politically active before. Tourist buses now pull 
up on the Broadway  side to gawk, take pictures and sometimes engage in 
shouted exchanges of  opinion, most of it very friendly.
 
It isn't always that way. On Wednesday night, after a solidarity march with 
 as many as 30,000 community activists and trade union members arrived to 
cheers  and flag waving, a small group broke away to breech the barricades 
onto Wall  Street, which has been declared a no-go area by police, in much the 
same way as  protests were not allowed in parts of Northern Ireland during 
the "troubles".  

Constitutional or not, the cops have more power than the First Amendment  
in some locations, proving the validity of Mao's dictum that "power grows out 
of  the barrel of a gun".

The police response was vicious. They pepper  sprayed non-violent activists 
and, in all, arrested 28 and injured scores.  Still, this was nowhere as 
bloody as it had been in the 1960s when the Nixon  Administration incited 
construction workers, known by their hard hats, to attack  anti-Vietnam War 
protesters with pipes and fists. 

On Wednesday, many  unions in New York were out en mass to back "the kids", 
as they called them, for  standing up and admitted they were embarrassed 
into action. Their style was very  different, union leaders spoke through 
loudspeakers shouting slogans like "Wall  Street Was Bailed Out, We Were Sold 
Out." 

Sterling Roberson, vice  president of the United Federation of Teachers, 
explained why workers were  there. He said union members shared the ideals of 
activists who have been camped  out in sleeping bags. "The middle class is 
taking the burden, but the wealthiest  of our state and country are not," was 
his explanation. 
The 99 per cent
 
In the park, amplified sound is not permitted and there are no leaders.  
Wannabe speakers shout "mic check" and when the phrase is repeated, those  
assembled stop what they are doing and listen in while the whole crowd repeats  
what is said in bursts so everyone can hear. The occupiers argue they are 
part  of the 99 per cent of Americans who are being victimised by an elite 1 
per  cent.

The media coverage went from ignoring the protest to ridiculing it  to 
admiring it, that's with the exception of far right Fox News that has never  
seen a progressive protest it likes. Its on-air nastiness is almost a  
predictable knee-jerk reaction. 

Some on the right go further. Author Ann  Coulter compares the protesters 
to Nazis in another attempt to call attention to  her extreme views. The more 
outrageous she is, the more attention she  gets.

Jon Stewart's Daily Show has had a field day _lampooning the critics_ 
(http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/wed-october-5-2011/parks-and-demonstration?xrs=
eml_tds)  who called the marchers "muddled"  because they have outlined no 
programme for fixing Wall Street. He showed news  clips on how Congress and 
the government had been unable, or perhaps unwilling,  to make reforms.

Actually, many sympathetic economists are being  consulted by the activists 
for suggestions about what the demands should be.  There are three groups; 
one proposes a detailed agenda, while others boil it  down to a few message 
points. Still others feel the time is not right and that  the focus should 
now be on building the movement first. 

Similar protests  are spreading to as many as 70 cities. They have ignited 
a spirit if resistance  often citing Tahrir Square in Cairo as their model. 
Many observers don't  remember that that occupation was years in the making.

Perhaps that's why  so many global media outlets are also camping out in 
the park too, and, it  seems, interviewing anyone that moves (there are also 
activists from many  countries taking part).

China's Xinhua News Agency that has just  taken out a billboard in Times 
Square and opened a fancy bureau, caught up with  me for an explanation for 
their global audience:

"I think this is  speaking for the tremendous frustration that so many 
people have," Schechter  said, "With the growing economic crisis around the 
world, and even a new  recession or depression threatening, people identified 
Wall Street as  responsible for it. So this is the way they try to target 
people who created the  crisis." 
(I was surprised that, in his press conference, Thursday, President Obama  
echoed my words of a day earlier, saying: "I think people are frustrated and 
the  protesters are giving voice to a more broad-based frustration about 
how our  financial system works.")
 
In the spirit of new media, everyone can become a journalist or be pressed  
into action as a pundit (next, I answered questions in fractured Spanish 
for a  Latin American media outlet). The men and women of Wall Street have 
been silent  although one prominent executive was quoted expressing fears about 
his personal  safety. I can't imagine that the firms who spend millions on 
advertising their  brands can be happy with all this anti-capitalism in the 
air. 
So what now? Occupy Wall Street will soon face what Napoleon faced at the  
gates of Moscow. 
The New York cold is not as bad as a Russian winter but it will test the  
occupation, if the Mayor and the police allow it to go on. The park's owner 
is  reportedly going to Court to evict them, no doubt the bidding of the city 
 fathers. When demonisation doesn't work, authorities invariably resort to  
criminalisaton.

Paranoia is growing in some circles, too, with fears that  the Democrats 
may try to co-opt the movement. 
One journalist wrote, "Wall Street and hedge fund tycoon George Soros sent 
a  signal to his minions and infiltrators when he stated that he sympathised 
with  the Occupy Wall Street movement. Soros's statement dovetailed with 
David  Plouffe, President Obama's Senior Adviser, making contact with certain  
newly-minted 'leaders' of the 'Occupy' movement across the United States to 
 ensure that they are as politically-manipulated by the White House as a 
vast  majority of 'Tea Party' members have been manipulated by senior 
Republican Party  officials and the billionaire Koch Brothers."

This "divide and conquer"  fear seems wildly exaggerated given the 
bottom-up democratic sensibility of the  activists, but what's a protest these 
days 
without a conspiracy theory to  question it, whether or not the facts get in 
the  way.

-- 
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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