Don't forget Berkeley, Santa Cruz, or UC Davis.
 
Billy
 
------------------------
 
 
10/14/2011 12:53:55 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  writes:

 
Eugene has to be  one of the better breeding grounds for #Occupy.  I 
imagine that Madison  and Ann Arbor are not far behind.  New life for the old 
hotbeds of the  ‘60s. 
Chris 
 
 
From:  [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]]  On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Friday, October 14, 2011  12:59 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc:  [email protected]
Subject: [RC] # Occupy  news

 
Two very interesting articles.  The first points out the dilemma of 
Democrats
 
who need and depend upon Wall  Street money, who therefore need to
 
at least in a de facto  sense  oppose the OWS movement, but who  simply
 
cannot throw away the votes of  everyone who supports the cause.
 

 
The second is a spoof, along the  lines of George Wills' supposedly serious 
article
 
of yesterday in which the looney  fringe of the movement was characterized
 
as the essence of the  movement.
 

 
BTW, the #Occupy movement has  now hit Eugene. Not quite every day
 
but several protest  demonstrations already.
 

 
Billy
 

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

 

 

 

 
Occupy Wall Street protests reveal liberal  tensions
By Peter Wallsten, Published:  October 13, 2011
The _Occupy  Wall Street protests_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/newssearch/search.html?st=occupy+wall+street&submit=Submit+Query)
  spreading across 
the country are mobilizing liberal  activists who have been largely sidelined 
in the national debate since helping  to elect President Obama three years 
ago. 
This should be a relief to the White House,  which is eager to excite a 
Democratic base that has grown disappointed in the  president and less excited 
about reelecting him.  
But it is unclear whether this sudden burst of  energy on the American left 
will help Obama and other Democrats. The protests  are gaining steam around 
a set of economic grievances and a wariness of both  parties’ reliance on 
corporate campaign money — and Democratic officials are  wondering how, or 
whether, they can tap into a movement that seems fed up with  all brands of 
partisan politics. 
That tension has been evident in recent days in  debates raging online and 
in person at demonstration sites across the country.   
An Obama strategist from Florida, Steve Schale,  posted on his Facebook 
page that “clamoring for change is hollow unless you  vote.” He linked to _an 
image_ (http://yfrog.com/18dwrzgj)  from the liberal Think Progress  blog 
calling on activists to “Occupy the Polls.”  
A former Obama volunteer from central Florida,  Madison Paige, retorted on 
Schale’s page that voting alone couldn’t fix the  system, saying, “We have 
to be willing to do the hardest work — and that means  taking a look in the 
mirror when necessary.” 
At Occupy D.C., the McPherson Square encampment  inspired by Occupy Wall 
Street, a shouting match erupted this week when a  woman describing herself as 
a longtime Democratic campaign worker encouraged  the young protesters to 
express their concerns by voting, only to be told that  voting wasn’t enough. 
Those contentious moments help illustrate the  difficulty facing Democratic 
officials as they try to capitalize on the sudden  emergence of liberal 
energy that is growing fast — but expanding largely  separate and apart from 
traditional party institutions. 
Some party allies are trying to help. Unions are  providing legal advice, 
food and Internet service in some locations, with  labor leaders intervening 
late Thursday on behalf of protesters in a dispute  with New York City Mayor 
Michael R. Bloomberg (I) over the use of a Wall  Street park. 
Party and White House officials are watching  mostly from the sidelines.  
“We don’t know: Is this a sustaining movement or  is it a flash of anger?” 
said one House Democratic leadership aide, who spoke  on condition of 
anonymity to discuss internal thinking.  
John Podesta, who as president of the liberal  Center for American Progress 
is a close White House ally, said the party  establishment is waiting to 
see what happens next. “They’ve opened up an  important space for a national 
conversation, but where it goes from here  depends on the staying power of 
the organizing effort,” he  said. 
The dilemma mirrors the choice that confronted  Republican Party officials 
in 2009 as the tea party movement found its footing  and began challenging 
establishment figures in the GOP hierarchy. Over time, a  series of 
establishment groups such as FreedomWorks began coordinating with  the 
activists, and 
the tea-party insurgency began to more closely resemble the  energized GOP 
base.  
Liberal activists, though, see the Occupy groups  as a potentially more 
unwieldy phenomenon resistant to traditional politics  and skeptical of a party 
hierarchy criticized from the left as too cozy with  Wall Street. 
That distrust prompted an awkward moment at an  Atlanta demonstration last 
week, when Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), a legendary  protester in his own right, 
was denied the chance to speak. A _video_ 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QZlp3eGMNI&feature=player_embedded&noredirect=1)
   of the incident, in which 
Lewis looked on uncomfortably as activists rose to  debate whether allowing 
a congressman to speak violated the spirit of the  protest, became an 
Internet sensation.  
“It’s not a danger — if [Obama] handles it  properly,” said Steve 
Hildebrand, an architect of Obama’s 2008 grass-roots  organization who is not 
affiliated with the reelection effort. “I would  encourage him to carefully 
listen to the people who are passionately  protesting Wall Street, big 
corporations and CEO pay.” 
Van Jones, a longtime liberal organizer and  former Obama aide, offered a 
caution as well. Although the protesters may have  helped Democrats by “
breaking the monopoly” owned by conservatives who  prevailed in the 2010 
elections and then pushed Washington toward a focus on  deficit reduction, he 
said, 
Obama has to prove himself to the activists  through a more populist 
approach.  
“The fact that Obama has been so close to Wall  Street makes this tough 
going for him,” Jones said. 
Jones said the Occupy demonstrations are  happening alongside a renewed 
push by more established groups on the left to  operate more independently from 
the White House.  
An early galvanizing moment for the left came  over the summer, as hundreds 
of activists were arrested outside the White  House gates to protest the 
proposed Keystone XL pipeline that would connect  Canada’s oil sands to the 
Gulf Coast. Pipeline opponents are now organizing a  Nov. 6 demonstration at 
the White House and have asked Occupy Wall Street  activists to converge on 
Washington for the event.  
Obama and top Democratic officials have so far  taken a cautious approach 
to the demonstrations. 
The president said last week that the protesters  were “giving voice to a 
more broad-based frustration about how our financial  system works.” But he 
also defended his past support for bailing out  distressed banks after the 
2008 financial crisis, saying he “used up a lot of  political capital, and I’
ve got the dings and bruises to prove it, in order to  make sure that we 
prevented a financial meltdown and that banks stayed  afloat.” 
Even if Occupy activists do not directly back  the president, he can 
benefit from a national focus on the issues they are  trumpeting. Recent polls 
show that deep anger at Wall Street spans the  ideological and partisan 
spectrum, with a _new  Washington Post/ABC News survey_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/behind-the-numbers/post/public-ire-hits-wall-street-and-government/
2011/10/11/gIQAB5iGdL_blog.html)  finding that seven in10 Americans 
distrust  Wall Street financial instutions. That includes 68 percent of 
independents and  60 percent of Republicans. And Obama aides say they see a 
fertile 
target in  GOP frontrunner Mitt Romney , a former investment banker who the 
president’s  campaign is likely to try and brand as a product of Wall  Street. 
Romney, no doubt anticipating the attack, sought  to show solidarity with 
the demonstrators during this week’s GOP candidates  debate, saying that “
the reason you’re seeing protests . . . is middle-income  Americans are 
having a hard time making ends meet.”  
Obama and his campaign, meantime, have promoted  the president’s support 
for new Wall Street regulations and the creation of a  consumer protection 
agency — legislation that most GOP candidates have pledged  to repeal. A 
campaign e-mail urged supporters to pressure the Senate to  confirm former Ohio 
attorney general Richard Cordray to head the new bureau.   
The note did not directly mention Occupy Wall  Street, but it was 
distributed last week as the demonstrations gained momentum  and seemed 
designed at 
least in part to reassure movement sympathizers.   
“The goal of this campaign — and this President  — is to make sure people 
who work hard and play by the rules get a fair shake,  whether that means 
being able to get a loan to buy a house and send your kid  to college, or not 
having to go bankrupt when you get sick,” the e-mail  said. 
Jeremy Varon, a historian at the New School for  Social Research in New 
York City and a liberal activist, described his  participation in last week’s 
Occupy Wall Street march as the most exciting  moment in politics for him 
since Election Night 2008 — and now, he said,  liberals are breaking free from 
Obama. 
“I do feel a generation of young progressives  has come out of the 
mystifying shadow of the Obama administration and said to  itself, ‘We have 
values 
that this presidency isn’t going to advance,’ ” said  Varon, 44, a vocal 
critic of Obama’s anti-terrorism  policies. 
Several activists camped out in McPherson Square  this week expressed a 
range of feelings about Obama, from indifference to  disgust. 
Christina McKenna, 26, quit her waitressing job  in Richmond and drove to 
Washington with her 4-year-old twins to remain at the  demonstration.  
Seated on a blanket in the grass as her son and  daughter frolicked nearby, 
McKenna recalled canvassing and phone-banking for  Obama four years ago. 
“But I was younger and more naive then,” she  said. She said she would not 
vote for the president this time and doubted he  could ever win back her 
support. 
“How good can Obama be when he needs so much  Wall Street money?” she 
asked. “We’re not stupid.” 
=================================================== 
Richmond Times  Dispatch 
October 14,  2011  
#Occupy Wall Street: A  Manifesto for [Insert Date]
By _Barton  Hinkle_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/?author=Barton+Hinkle&id=19885)  
 
"We meet every day to decide what our demands  are." 
— Hero Vincent, a Wall Street Occupier, quoted  in The New York Times.
We are the union members, students, teachers,  veterans and activists who 
make up the 99 percent of America, if you don't  count everybody who is at 
work right now. We are the unemployed and the art  majors and the interns for 
Rainforest Action Now! 
Also we are the firefighters and the police  officers and the paramedics, 
except none of them could be here on account of  their fascist shift 
supervisors, but we know they are with us in spirit.  (First responders, you 
guys 
rock!) We are the lost, the slightly disoriented,  and the people who are 
pretty sure they know where they are if you'd just be  quiet for one second and 
let us think, okay? Jeez. 
Where were we? Oh yeah. We are the makers of  homeopathic medicines. We are 
also the Druids. There's a couple of  Zoroastrians around here somewhere, 
too (or at least that is what some of us  think the tattoo on the one dude's 
neck means). 
Also, we are that long-haired welder guy who  makes bird sculptures out of 
rebar and old gardening equipment. We are  Slightly Creepy Hippie Lady in a 
Van Who Sells Healing Crystals. We are the  young woman with the piercings 
and the pink hair who just came from the D.C.  Slutwalk. We are the guys in 
goatees and motorcycle boots who can't ride a  motorcycle, who are hoping to 
score with Pink-Hair Girl. 
We are the 99 percent. And we are Here to  Stay. 
The Corporate-Owned Media has been misleading  people by telling everyone 
our objectives are unclear. That is a lie. We have  been very clear. 
Superduper clear, in fact. Can't you, like, read our signs?  Some of them are 
really 
witty, too; you should check them  out. 
Anyhow. Just to make sure there is NO MORE  misunderstanding, here are our 
demands as of about 9 A. to the M.  today. 
(1) End corporate greed. Corporate greed is  responsible for most of the 
poverty and suffering on this planet. (The bubonic  plague and the Cambodian 
killing fields? Don't use your patriarchal "logic" on  us, fascist.) 
(2) No one is allowed to make more than the  median income. 
(3) Free health care for everybody. Starting . .  . riiiiiight . . . NOW! 
(4) Also: Free Mumia! 
(5) Cancellation of all debts, but especially  student debts. Corporations 
have no right to expect anything just because we  agreed to pay the money 
back. 
(6) Immediate regulation of Wall Street. Real  regulation this time, like 
what Roseanne Barr said: Hand over the money or we  cut off your head, pig. 
(7) Universal peace, love, tolerance and  understanding. 
(8) Echinacea and bee pollen for  everyone. 
(9) No more offshoring. 
(10) Also, no more racism. 
(11) Or pollution. 
(12) Or war. 
(13) (Except for against the Zionist  Entity.) 
(14) In order to increase domestic manufacturing  employment, repeal NAFTA 
and all other free-trade  agreements. 
(15) Also, outlaw interstate  trucking. 
(16) In fact, everybody should probably make  everything they need at home. 
(Not counting iPads and stuff like that, because  c'mon.) 
(17) Democracy now! 
(18) In union organizing campaigns, unions  should be able to sign people 
up unless they specifically object in writing.  (Certified letters only, in 
solidarity with the USPS. No  email.) 
(19) Take down the bull sculpture and replace it  with a big pot of 
sunflowers, a sculpture of a koala bear (koalas = peace) or  a sculpture of a 
guy 
in a business suit stepping on the face of a small child,  because that is 
what corporations do. (We sort of split over which of these  should be put in 
place of the bull. You guys decide.) 
(20) Repeal Citizens United, which is, like, the  weirdest decision ever.** 
(21) A social wage. (Social wage = you get money  just for being alive.) 
(22) Fair taxation of rich people so they pay  their fair share. ("Fair" = 
2(n), where n = top marginal rate, whatever that  happens to be at the 
moment.) 
(23) Five dozen pizzas: four pepperoni, seven  pepperoni and sausage, one 
double cheese, 11 chicken and pineapple, 37 veggie  lovers, and we have a 
Groupon for this. 
(24) The Councils of Workers', Soldiers' and  Peasants' Delegates must at 
once take every practicable and feasible step for  the realization of the 
Socialist program. 
(25) Housing is a human  right. 
(26) Justice for Troy Davis. (Pretty sure we're  too late on this, but Dana 
from Eau Clair insisted.) 
(27) Eight hundred trillion dollars in public  infrastructure investment, 
to be paid for by a windfall profits tax on the  banking industry. 
(28) Education is a human  right. 
(29) Stop offering to sell us stuff and then  agreeing to take our money if 
we agree to buy it. Everything should be  free. 
(30) Something about Glass and Steven Seagal and  Graham-Leach-Blakely. We 
think. Willow was taking notes at this point and she  has the worst 
handwriting ever. (Sorry, Willow! ) 
(31) Wi-Fi is a human  right. 
(32) This list is not all-inclusive, but it's  munchie time. 
(33) (P.S. — Doughnuts are a human right,  too.)  

--


-- 
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

<<inline: image001.jpg>>

Reply via email to