For one, I am skeptical that there will be sufficient motivation
to see protests or outright challenges to Obama from within the
Democratic Party in 2012,  but for what it is worth,
The Nation has raised the possibility.
 
BTW, about 1000 people took part in an Occupy demonstration
here in Eugene on Saturday.
 
Billy
 
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-
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 









 
The 99 Percent Rise Up 
_John  Nichols_ (http://www.thenation.com/authors/john-nichols)  
October 12,  2011   |    
_This  article appeared in the October 31, 2011 edition of The Nation._ 
(http://www.thenation.com/issue/october-31-2011)  


 
How did Occupy Wall Street suddenly become Occupy Los Angeles? Occupy  
Cleveland? Occupy Janesville? Occupy Pocatello? How did a sleep-in beneath the  
skyscrapers of Lower Manhattan inspire kayakers clad as Robin Hood to paddle 
up  the Chicago River under a banner reading, Wall St. Takes From the 99%. 
Gives to the  Rich? And how did those giant cutouts of JPMorgan Chase CEO 
Jamie Dimon  end up dancing with all those San Franciscans chanting, “Make 
banks pay”?  Despite what Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain 
suggests, it was not  some “orchestrated” attempt to deflect blame from the 
flawed 
policies of the  Obama administration. It was not the media looking for a “
left-wing Tea Party.”  And it certainly was not a poll-tested, focus-grouped 
PR campaign that  billionaire-funded front groups employ to gin up 
movements. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
America is not broke. But it has broken priorities. The Congressional  
Progressive Caucus has the right fix: save trillions, put Americans back to 
work 
 and protect Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. How? End the wars in 
Iraq  and Afghanistan, tax millionaires, negotiate Medicare drug  prices.







Occupy Wall Street started small, took a beating from the cops and 
struggled  for weeks to get the attention of the political class, the media and 
even 
its  own natural allies. The only thing going for this unlikely 
intervention has been  the pitch-perfect resonance of its founding premises. 
The 
American people  understood Occupy Wall Street, and began to embrace its 
promise, 
long before the  mandarins who presume to chart our national discourse 
noticed that everything  was changing. That’s because the generators of this 
movement—and it is a  movement—have gotten three things right from the start: 
The target is right. This has been a year of agitation, from  Wisconsin to 
Ohio to Washington. It has seen some of the largest demonstrations  in 
recent American history in defense of labor rights, public education, public  
services. But all those uprisings attacked symptoms of the disease. Occupy Wall 
 Street named it. By aiming activism not at the government but at the 
warren of  bankers, CEOs and hedge-fund managers to whom the government is 
beholden, Occupy  Wall Street went to the heart of the matter. And that 
captured 
the imagination  of Americans who knew Michael Moore was right when he 
finished his 2009  documentary Capitalism: A Love Story with an attempted 
citizen’
s arrest  of the bankers who not only avoided accountability after crashing 
the economy  but profited from a taxpayer-funded bailout. Like the 
populists, the socialists  and the best of the progressive reformers of a 
century 
ago, Occupy Wall Street  has not gotten distracted by electoral politics; it 
has gone after the  manipulator of both major parties—what the radicals of old 
referred to as “the  money power.” 
The numbers are right. If Thomas Frank’s What’s the Matter With  Kansas? 
taught us anything, it was that the great accomplishment of the  money power 
in contemporary politics has been to divide the overwhelming mass of  
Americans over social and cultural issues, thus deflecting attention from  
fundamental economic debates. The brilliance of Occupy Wall Street’s message,  
“We 
are the 99 percent,” is that it invites just about everyone who isn’t a  
billionaire to recognize themselves as members of the class that has suffered 
 what Thomas Jefferson once described as “a long train of abuses and  
usurpations.” For all the efforts of Wall Street’s media and political 
defenders 
 to dismiss the persistent protesters as somehow un-American, the vast 
majority  of Americans recognize that kids in sleeping bags did not shutter 
this 
country’s  factories, mangle our mortgage markets or create a pay-to-play 
system. The 99  percent did not ask for or approve a system that always has 
money for wars and  bank bailouts but won’t, as former Congressman Alan 
Grayson notes, help the 24  million Americans who can’t find full-time work, 
the 
50 million Americans who  can’t see a doctor when they’re sick, the 47 
million Americans who need  government aid to feed themselves, the 15 million 
American families who owe more  on their mortgages than their homes are worth. 
The demands are right. The most comic complaint about Occupy Wall  Street—
not just from critics but even from some elite sympathizers—is that it  lacks 
well-defined demands. In fact, the objection of the occupiers to a system  
of corporate domination and growing inequality, and their desire to change 
that  system, makes a lot more sense to a lot more Americans than anything 
being said  by politicians. Polling confirms this point: Barack Obama’s 
approval ratings are  dismal, but the approval ratings for the Republicans in 
Congress are  dramatically worse. The American people desperately wanted this 
movement. That  is proven not only by the polls but by the practical embrace 
of the Occupy Wall  Street ethos in more than a thousand communities across 
the nation. Some are  already occupying public spaces, others are marching 
and rallying. Beyond Wall  Street, there will be more specific complaints, 
more adventurous alliances, more  practical politics, but there’s no reason why 
a diversity of issues and tactics  cannot build the movement that was 
invited when the call to Occupy Wall Street  was issued. 
The key word is “invited.” The genius of Occupy Wall Street is that it is 
not  a traditional political project. It did not arrive with a set of 
talking points  and an organizing template. Its evolution has already taken it 
far 
from where it  began, physically or politically. Its alliance with unions 
and other progressive  groups will in all likelihood transform the movement 
as it spreads across the  country, just as the movement has the potential to 
transform its allies. There  will be ongoing occupations, but there’s also 
the prospect of  countrywide—indeed, worldwide—days of action, like the one 
planned for October  29, in American capital cities and cities around the 
world, the weekend before  the G-20 summit in France. The prospect of massive 
demonstrations like the 1969  anti–Vietnam War Moratorium, the immigrant 
rights demonstrations of 2006 and  last winter’s mobilizations in and outside 
the Capitol in Madison, Wisconsin,  has already unsettled mainstream 
politicians and the pundit class that serves as  their stenographers. New York 
Congressman Peter King told right-wing radio host  Laura Ingraham, “It’s really 
important for us not to be giving any legitimacy to  these people in the 
streets…. I’m old enough to remember what happened in the  1960s, when the 
left wing takes to the streets and somehow the media glorifies  them, and it 
ends up shaping policy. We can’t allow that to happen.” 
But it is happening. That’s exhilarating, and necessary. Our  political 
culture, as dysfunctional as it is disappointing, will change only if  those in 
power feel threatened by movements that are impossible to manage.  Already, 
the reactions to the threat are clarifying. The Republican Party, with  
rare exceptions, has rallied to defend the banksters, with Representative Paul  
Ryan fretting about “sowing class envy” and Representative Eric Cantor 
warning  that Americans might become a “mob.” 
Democrats have been more nuanced. President Obama says he understands the  
frustration of the protesters, and since advancing his jobs bill in 
September,  he has moved in a more populist direction. But he still promotes 
free-trade  deals that will exacerbate the unemployment crisis, which fuels so 
much 
of the  99 percenters’ frustration. Other Democrats have been more 
consistent. Members  of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and the 
Congressional 
Black Caucus have  been predictably warm in their embrace of a populist 
movement that strengthens  their hand in party debates, and House minority 
leader 
Nancy Pelosi has risen  repeatedly to defend the protesters, declaring, “I 
support the message to the  establishment, whether it’s Wall Street or the 
political establishment and the  rest, that change has to happen. We cannot 
continue in a way that is not  relevant to their lives.” 
Pelosi’s stance is commendable, yet it is an inadequate counter to the 
nearly  universal Republican demand for more tax cuts, privatization, raging 
income  inequality and healthcare policies that tell the poor to die quickly. 
The  Democratic Party is anything but united on behalf of a fair economy. In 
2008,  when everyone was ready to end the Bush era, Obama could cobble 
together a broad  coalition to win the presidency. But that won’t work now that 
the battle lines  are drawn. “This is no time to hang back,” says former 
Senator Russ Feingold.  “One of the biggest problems Democrats have is that 
they forget the power and  the passion that the base of the party has.” 
The president can no longer satisfy both the CEOs (some of whom will see 
him  as their best defense against the rabble) and the single moms; if he 
tries, the  single moms will run out of patience. So it is that the Occupy Wall 
Street  movement might well develop into a virtual primary challenge to 
Obama. Instead  of coasting to renomination, the president could find himself 
confronted by  protests from Iowa to New Hampshire to Nevada to California—
protests that would  require him to move to the left just as a credible primary 
challenger might have  done, protests that could make next year’s 
Democratic convention in Charlotte  more than just a coronation. 
Getting Obama to take the side of 99 percent of Americans is smart politics 
 for the Democrats. But that ought not to be the goal of the Occupy Wall 
Street  movement. This fight is too important to be about one politician, one 
party or  one election. “Some people say we are the Tea Party for the 
Democratic Party,”  said Emilio Baez, a 17-year-old high school student who 
joined 
the Occupy  Chicago protests. “That’s bullshit. We are the working class 
for a mass movement  of democracy.” Baez is right. America needs a new 
politics, as much of the  streets as the polling place, a politics that, like 
the 
labor movement of the  1930s, the civil rights and antiwar movements of the 
1960s, the environmental  movement of the early 1970s, forces both parties 
to transform. Anything less is  more of the same—more poverty, more 
inequality, more economic injustice. And if  Occupy Wall Street is anything at 
all, 
it is a shout from the 99 percenters: “We  have had it!”

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