by Mike Davis, Los Angeles Review of Books
Who could have envisioned Occupy Wall Street and its sudden wildflower-like profusion in cities large and small?
John Carpenter could have, and did.   Almost a quarter of a century ago (1988), the master of date-night terror (Halloween, The Thing), wrote and directed They Live,  depicting the Age of Reagan as a catastrophic alien invasion. In one of  the film’s brilliant early scenes, a huge third-world shantytown is  reflected across the Hollywood Freeway in the sinister mirror-glass of  Bunker Hill’s corporate skyscrapers. 
They Live  remains Carpenter’s subversive tour de force. Few who’ve seen it could  forget his portrayal of billionaire bankers and evil mediacrats and  their zombie-distant rule over a pulverized American working class  living in tents on a rubble-strewn hillside and begging for jobs. From  this negative equality of homelessness and despair, and thanks to the  magic dark glasses found by the enigmatic Nada (played by “Rowdy” Roddy  Piper), the proletariat finally achieves interracial unity, sees through  the subliminal deceptions of capitalism, and gets angry.  
Very angry.  
Yes, I know, I’m reading ahead.  The Occupy the World movement is still  looking for its magic glasses (program, demands, strategy, and so on)  and its anger remains on Gandhian low heat.   But, as Carpenter foresaw,  force enough Americans out of their homes and/or careers (or at least  torment tens of millions with the possibility) and something new and  huge will begin to slouch towards Goldman Sachs.  And unlike the “Tea  Party,” so far it has no puppet strings. 
In 1965, when I was just eighteen and on the national staff of Students  for a Democratic Society, I planned a sit-in at the Chase Manhattan  Bank, for its key role in financing South Africa after the massacre of  peaceful demonstrators, for being “a partner in Apartheid.”   It was the  first protest on Wall Street in a generation and 41 people were hauled  away by the NYPD.
One of the most important facts about the current uprising is simply  that it has occupied the street and created an existential  identification with the homeless. (Though, frankly, my generation,  trained in the civil rights movement, would have thought first of  sitting inside the buildings and waiting for the police to drag and club  us out the door; today, the cops prefer pepper spray and “pain  compliance techniques.”) I think taking over the skyscrapers is a  wonderful idea, but for a later stage in the struggle.  The genius of  Occupy Wall Street, for now, is that it has temporarily liberated some  of the most expensive real estate in the world and turned a privatized  square into a magnetic public space and catalyst for protest. 
Our sit-in 46 years ago was a guerrilla raid; this is Wall Street under  siege by the Lilliputians. It’s also the triumph of the supposedly  archaic principle of face-to-face, dialogic organizing.  Social media is  important, sure, but not omnipotent. Activist self-organization — the  crystallization of political will from free discussion — still thrives  best in actual urban fora. Put another way, most of our internet  conversations are preaching to the choir; even the mega-sites like  MoveOn.org are tuned to the channel of the already converted, or at  least their probable demographic. 
The occupations likewise are lightning rods, first and above all, for  the scorned, alienated ranks of progressive Democrats, but they also  appear to be breaking down generational barriers, providing the common  ground, for instance, for imperiled, middle-aged school teachers to  compare notes with young, pauperized college grads.
More radically, the encampments have become symbolic sites for healing  the divisions within the New Deal coalition in place since the Nixon  years.  As Jon Wiener observed on his consistently smart blog at www.TheNation.com: “hard hats and hippies — together at last.”  
Indeed.  Who could not be moved when AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka,  who had brought his coalminers to Wall Street in 1989 during their  bitter but ultimately successful strike against Pittston Coal Company,  called upon his broad-shouldered women and men to “stand guard” over  Zucotta Park in the face of an imminent attack by the NYPD?
It’s true that old radicals like me are quick to declare each new baby  the messiah, but this Occupy Wall Street child has the rainbow sign. I  believe that we’re seeing the rebirth of the quality that so markedly  defined the migrants and strikers of the Great Depression, of my  parents’ generation: a broad, spontaneous compassion and solidarity  based on a dangerously egalitarian ethic.  It says, Stop and give a  hitch-hiking family a ride.   Never cross a picket line, even when you  can’t pay the rent.  Share your last cigarette with a stranger.  Steal  milk when your kids have none and then give half to the little kids next  door — what my own mother did repeatedly in 1936.  Listen carefully to  the profoundly quiet people who have lost everything but their dignity.   Cultivate the generosity of the “we.”
What I mean to say, I suppose, is that I’m most impressed by folks who  have rallied to defend the occupations despite significant differences  in age, in social class and race.   But equally, I adore the gutsy kids  who are ready to face the coming winter on freezing streets, just like  their homeless sisters and brothers. 
Back to strategy, though: what’s the next link in the chain (in Lenin’s  sense) that needs to be grasped?  How imperative is it for the  wildflowers to hold a convention, adopt programmatic demands, and  thereby put themselves up for bid on the auction block of the 2012  elections?   Obama and the Democrats will desperately need their energy  and authenticity. But the occupationistas are unlikely to put themselves  or their extraordinary self-organizing process up for sale. 
Personally I lean toward the anarchist position and its obvious imperatives.
First,  expose the pain of the 99 percent; put Wall Street on trial.  Bring  Harrisburg, Loredo, Riverside, Camden, Flint, Gallup, and Holly Springs  to downtown New York.  Confront the predators with their victims — a  national tribunal on economic mass murder.
Second,  continue to democratize and productively occupy public space (i.e.  reclaim the Commons).  The veteran Bronx activist-historian Mark Naison  has proposed a bold plan for converting the derelict and abandoned  spaces of New York into survival resources (gardens, campsites,  playgrounds) for the unsheltered and unemployed.  The Occupy protestors  across the country now know what it’s like to be homeless and banned  from sleeping in parks or under a tent.   All the more reason to break  the locks and scale the fences that separate unused space from urgent  human needs.
Third, keep our eyes on the real prize.  The  great issue is not raising taxes on the rich or achieving a better  regulation of banks.  It’s economic democracy: the right of ordinary  people to make macro-decisions about social investment, interest rates,  capital flows, job creation, and global warming.  If the debate isn’t  about economic power, it’s irrelevant. 
Fourth, the  movement must survive the winter in order to fight the power in the next  spring. It’s cold on the street in January.  Bloomberg and every other  mayor and local ruler is counting on a hard winter to deplete the  protests.  It is thus all-important to reinforce the occupations over  the long Christmas break.  Put on your overcoats. 
Finally,  we must calm down — the itinerary of the current protest is totally  unpredictable.  But if one erects a lightning rod, we shouldn’t be  surprised if lightning eventually strikes.  
Bankers, recently interviewed in the New York Times, claim to  find the Occupy protests little more than a nuisance arising from an  unsophisticated understanding of the financial sector. They should be  more careful.  Indeed, they should probably quake before the image of  the tumbrel.
Since 1987, African Americans have lost more than half of their net  worth; Latinos, an incredible two-thirds. Five-and-a-half million  manufacturing jobs have been lost in the United Sates since 2000, more  than 42,000 factories closed, and an entire generation of college  graduates now face the highest rate of downward mobility in American  history.
Wreck the American dream and the common people will put on you some  serious hurt.  Or as Nada explains to his unwary assailants in  Carpenter’s great film: “I have come here to chew bubblegum and kick  ass…. and I’m all out of bubblegum.”
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Wednesday, 26 October 2011
No More Bubble Gum
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Mike Davis,
The Wall Street Occupation
On the Wall Street Occupation
by Richard Pithouse, SACSIS
In The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck's novel about the Great Depression, Tom Joad, the novel's central character, a man who has been made poor and who is on the run from the law, tells his mother in the climactic scene that: “I been thinking about us, too, about our people living like pigs and good rich land layin' fallow. Or maybe one guy with a million acres and a hundred thousand farmers starvin'. And I been wonderin' if all our folks got together....”
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