Anabella Campuzano sits on the shoulders of father Camilo as they
participate in an Occupy Miama protest on October 15. (AFP/Getty
Images)
Features » November 14, 2011
An Occupy Road Tripm

In cities and towns across the nation, protesters are rejecting the
status quo—but not necessarily capitalism.
BY Arun Gupta

The vagueness about demands allows everyone to see their particular
issue as equivalent to everyone else's, thus creating a broad movement
that even extends to the right despite the anti-capitalist
orientation.
The Occupy protesters have quickly altered the political landscape of
the United States. They are standing up for all those who find
themselves in thrall to a grasping and ever-more powerful oligarchy,
aka "the 1%." In its December 2011 issue, In These Times explores the
terrain of this all-American revolt—an uprising that may be the most
formidable challenge to neoliberalism yet. —The editors

Editor’s note: In October, journalist Arun Gupta spent a few weeks
traveling from New York City to Detroit to visit smaller Occupy sites
like Youngstown, Ohio, and Allentown, Pa. What he found was “a mix of
broad, even contradictory politics” united under the banner of the
“99%.”

A trope about mass movements is that they spring up from nowhere. That
appears to be the case with the Occupy Wall Street movement, which
went from an idea to a social force that reshaped the national debate
in barely a month.

It may appear to be rootless, but the occupation of the Wisconsin
state capitol in February and smaller successful episodes—like the
Republic Windows and Doors sit-in in Chicago in December 2008,
university students taking over part of a New School university
building in the same month and the three-week “Bloombergville”
encampment in New York City this past June—all influenced or shaped
the Occupy Wall Street movement, which sprouted out of Manhattan’s
Zuccotti Park on September 17.

With its anarchist social norms and emphasis on economic issues and
horizontal decision-making, the Occupy movement is also the heir to
the “alter-globalization” movement that came to prominence during the
1999 WTO ministerial meetings in Seattle.

Of course, the Occupy movement was most profoundly influenced by the
wave of democratic uprisings and public occupations that have
stretched from Egypt, Tunisia, Bahrain and Syria to Spain, Greece,
Chile and Puerto Rico over the last year.

This movement began as an anti-capitalist revolt, and at Liberty Park
the anti-capitalism current is strong. In other large occupations I
have visited, such as Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh,
anti-capitalism is also a recurring theme. But in each one there is
also a mix of broad, even contradictory politics. Many occupiers told
me they still see a central role for capitalism, and that the main
problem is the “system no longer works” and that the “American Dream
is dead.”

It is impossible to track every active occupation, but
Occupytogether.org listed 2,447 Occupy “meet-ups” at the start of
November. As to how many involve 24-hour encampments—one source is
Cryn Johannsen of the All Education Matters blog, who compiled a
database of city mayors to contact in case a specific occupation is
attacked. That list runs to about 350 cities, including 44 in
California, 12 in Indiana, six in Kentucky and four in Maine.

Many are small, a dozen or fewer people occupying central plazas in
rust-belt cities like Toledo and Youngstown, Ohio, and Allentown, Pa.
And they spread like a rhizome from town to town.

Adam Santo, a fresh-out-of-college resident of Allentown who was laid
off from his job at a local bank in February, used Facebook and
thousands of flyers to catalyze his city’s occupation in early
October. On the afternoon of October 18, about a dozen Occupiers and
supporters were stationed in central Allentown waving protest signs at
passing motorists who regularly responded with supportive honks and
waves. After Occupy Allentown began, Santo says, other occupations
sprang up in nearby Bethlehem and Easton, and farther away in
Scranton, Lancaster and Wilkes-Barre.

Many occupiers decline to offer specific demands, and that has helped
this movement succeed by focusing outrage at the concentration of
power and wealth among the 1%. The vagueness about demands allows
everyone to see their particular issue as equivalent to everyone
else’s, thus creating a broad movement that even extends to the right
despite the anti-capitalist orientation. In various cities, from D.C.
to Detroit, I have encountered occupiers who call themselves
Republicans or conservatives or sound exactly like Tea Party members
in espousing values of self-reliance, hard work, community and locally
based solutions, and declaring their opposition to centralized power
and government.

Nonetheless, outside the major cities, concrete demands percolate to
the surface. In Toledo, a city rich in abandoned housing, Candice
Milligan, a 30-year-old trans woman who lost her job as an auto
mechanic two years ago, says jobs and home foreclosures are important
issues.

In Youngstown, Chuck Kettering Sr., 56, calls himself “the poster boy
for the rust belt.” He says NAFTA was “one of the biggest blows to our
local economy.” In 1973, he started working for U.S. Steel, laboring
in the blast furnace area at two different plants that shuttered. That
was followed by auto-parts maker Delphi, which he left in 2008 after
his pay was due to be slashed from $28 an hour to $16.

His son, Chuck Kettering Jr., opposes Republican Gov. John Kasich’s
privatization plan for the Ohio Turnpike, hydrofracking in Mill Creek
Park—what he calls the “jewel of the area”—Issue 2, a ballot
initiative that would strip public sector employees of collective
bargaining rights, and Issue 3, an initiative that would exempt Ohio
from the pending national healthcare law.

Karen Joseph, a 59-year-old Youngstown native, mentions the new
national healthcare law as a major concern, explaining that her family
spends about $800 a month on health insurance, one-third of their
income. Joseph is one of many who say good-paying jobs need to return;
she has been unsuccessfully trying to find work for the last five
years.

In both Youngstown and Allentown, occupiers say some of the only jobs
available are in call centers, but high unemployment means companies
prefer to hire college graduates to answer phones.

I ask occupiers if the government should provide jobs. In Baltimore,
Joe Yingling, a 40-year-old software developer, supports the local
occupation but maintains, “I don’t think we can rely on the government
for everything.” In Philadelphia, 28-year-old Adam Hill who referred
to himself as “a failing contractor,” said the problem was “jobs being
shipped overseas and tax breaks for corporations. “

At Occupy Detroit, I talk to Jane, one of the main organizers in the
kitchen. “If we had people giving us jobs, we wouldn’t be here,” she
says. She suggests that the Occupy movement could provide employment.
In a city where empty storefronts and shells of skyscrapers litter
downtown, the need for work is extreme. A 2009 estimate puts Detroit’s
real unemployment rate at 44.8 percent. Homeless and poor people form
a large contingent in the camp at Grand Circus Park.

Jerry Edwards, 58, says he started working as a teenager in factories,
including 14 years at the Ford Saline plant in Ypsilanti making
dashboard panels. Leaning on a cane and with limited work prospects
because of kidney damage he suffered as a child, Edwards’ story is not
unusual, but through the Occupy movement he now has a space to tell
it—and to be heard.

In visiting 10 occupations in the Northeast and through the Great
Lakes, I have met homeless veterans, Latina mothers, gay activists,
African-American youth, retired professors, anarchists, nurses,
unemployed union members, students, families, socialists, Native
Americans, conservatives and full-time workers representing dozens of
different occupations. We should thank the ruling elite: They have
made class relevant again. What is so powerful about this moment is
that so many different groups of people have banded together under the
banner of the “99%.”

At Liberty Park, L.A. Kaufman, a long-time activist and parent of two
children, says, “What this movement has done in a short period of time
is astonishing. It’s sparked a national conversation about the
concentration of wealth, and has the plutocrats quaking in their boots
and Obama nervous. Who needs demands when you can do that?”
ABOUT THIS AUTHOR

Arun Gupta is co-founder of the Occupy Wall Street Journal and a
founding editor of the award-winning grassroots NYC newspaper The
Indypendent. A regular contributor to Salon and Alternet, he is
writing a book on the decline of the American empire for Haymarket
Books. His reporting on the national Occupy movement can be found at
occupyusatoday.com.

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