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'No. We will not pay for your crisis'...

Naomi Klein's speech to 'Occupy Wall Street' A church of dissent: trying to make sense of Occupy Wall Street

What to make of Occupy Wall Street? Judging by the media coverage so far, that question is still wide open. Journalists troop down to Zuccotti Park to hang out with the protesters and return with uncertain colour pieces ranging from the curious to the condescending. In the latter category is Ginia Bellafante of the New York Times, who concludes her report with this masterpiece of glibness: One day, a trader on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Adam Sarzen, a decade or so older than many of the protesters, came to Zuccotti Park seemingly just to shake his head. Look

at these kids, sitting here with their Apple computers, he said. Apple, one of the biggest monopolies in the world. It trades at $400 a share. Do they even know that? Im not surprised that he would make such a fatuous comment, as if anyone in Zuccotti Park doesnt realise that Apple is a publicly traded corporate giant. (What does he expect the protesters to do? Grow their own organic laptops?) But Im amazed Bellafante considered it enough of a logical death blow to end her article with it. Salons Glenn Greenwald singles out Bellafantes piece in his survey of negative coverage of OWS, but he acts as if any scepticism should be out of bounds. For one thing, WikiLeaks is a terrible example of an unfairly maligned group now that we know the extent of Julian Assanges reckless narcissism. For another, its not just the establishment that has doubts about OWSs efficacy some radical leftists such as Slavoj Zizek also worry that this style of protest, sans spokespeople or agendas, is doomed to failure. Zizeks argument resonated with me a few weeks ago but I was, I think, too pessimistic. OWS is Americas introduction to the new protest already witnessed in Spain and Greece: a miasma of disaffection with no obvious focus. The landscape of protest has been utterly transformed in 2011 and understanding it is a challenge for protesters and observers alike. In Zuccotti Park union activists and antiwar veterans mingle with Ron Paul supporters, 9/11 Truthers and the inevitable guys in V for Vendetta masks. Placards engage with student debt, Troy Davis, Wisconsin, Cairo. Slates David Wiegel is refreshingly candid: Whats the story? I hung out with Occupy Wall Street on Friday and Saturday, which wasnt enough time to figure out what the movement is about, because no one knows what its about. The model of protest that we know and understand is one with leaders and manifestos. Theres human drama in Martin Luther King stepping out of obscurity to lead the Montgomery bus boycott or Mario Savio leaping on top of a police car at Berkeley, and charismatic individuals are great mobilisers: the anti-apartheid movement outside South Africa was revitalised by the ANCs decision to focus on the little-known plight of Nelson Mandela. But its also about clarity. Outsiders knew that King wanted desegregation, that Savio wanted free speech on campus. A face, a voice, a simple idea: this is protest that makes immediate sense. But what exactly do the OWS crowds want? Or los indignados? Or Anonymous? How do they expect to get it? And whos in charge? The protesters allergy to hierarchy can be almost comical. According to one observer at OWS: The protesters make decisions in twice a day consensus-based general assemblies, where anyone is allowed to speak. No amplification is allowed, so the crowd has figured out a model to make sure everyone is heard. The speaker says half a sentence, and the crowd repeats it so it can be heard. This continues until the speaker is done. There are hand signals that allow others to express agreement and disagreement. I didnt spend enough time to really get into the nuts and bolts of the organization, but it doesnt seem very formal. Theres a deep fear of official spokespeople beginning to monopolize and misinterpret the non-hierarchical model of community protest.

This leaderless model isnt entirely new, of course. OWS was conceived by veteran Canadian activists Adbusters the style of protest harks back to the Stop the City demos of the early 80s and flowered in the 90s with Reclaim the Streets and the anti-globalisation movement. Like OWS, the people who protested at G8 summits and WTO conferences didnt have figureheads (I can only think of Naomi Klein, and she certainly didnt appoint herself one) and were an amorphous coalition of moderates, socialists, anarchists, single-issue activists and random kooks. They were mocked by the predecessors of Bellafantes trader for raging against capitalism while wearing trainers and using cellphones. And even supporters worried about the diffuseness of the movement. As one writer retrospectively noted: The movements lack of solutions started to count against it. In its earlier days, the global resistance movements relativist philosophy worked strongly in its favour. Anyone with a grudge against liberal economics, patriarchy, the scientific establishment or liberal democracy could join in; all that was needed was some kind of critique of Enlightenment universalism. But as time went on, the movement started to suffer from its lack of big ideas for solutions. When there was discussion at all of what should be started (as opposed to stopped like dams, IMF conditionality, nuclear power, GMOs or whatever), the solutions were either fuzzy (global justice now!) or parochial. Sound familiar? But these protests took place in an era, as Time magazine put it, of triumphant capitalism, of planetary cash flows and a priapic Dow. And they were cut short in their prime by 9/11: increased security made protests more difficult while war and terrorism sucked up most of the political oxygen. So questions about what this form of protest meant and where it might lead were put on hold for a decade. Now theyre back and made way more complicated by the engulfing economic crisis. Those who accuse OWS of lacking solutions need to accept that solutions are in pretty short supply everywhere. I subscribe to the standard progressive wishlist: Keynesian stimulus spending, cuts in defense budgets, tax rises for the wealthy, bank regulation and a Tobin tax. But none of those measures are magic bullets. The deep anxiety that manifests itself in OWS or the indignados cannot be cured by specific policies. One OWS protesters placard announced with admirable frankness: Im Here Cuz This Shit is Fucked Up. So it makes sense that people who have negligible faith in the capacity of political leaders to turn around the economy would choose not to have leaders of their own. Disappointment in Obama, the most compelling politician of his generation, feels like the last straw for some people when it comes to putting trust in charismatic individuals. Matt Stoller has an interesting take on the slippery nature of OWS: You can tell this is a somewhat different animal than other politicized gatherings. No one knows what to expect. There are no explicit demands. Its not very large. And yet, celebrities are heading to Zuccotti Park. Wall Street traders are sneering and angry. The people there are getting press, but arent dominated by it. People are there just to be there, because it feels meaningful. The camp is clean and well-organized, and it feels relevant and topical rather than a therapy space for frustrated radicals. What these people are doing is building, for lack of a better word, a church of dissent. Its not a march, though marches are spinning off of the campground. Its not even a protest, really. It is a group of people, gathered together, to create a public space seeking

meaning in their culture. They are asserting, together, to each other and to themselves, we matter. This is an overdue development. After watching the right-wing successfully harness the enduring power of economic populism via the Tea Party its a relief to see a left-wing version taking shape. David Wiegel calls it post-Obama left-wing populism. When New York magazine asked 100 OWS protesters what they thought of Obama, 23 were sympathetic, 27 said they never believed in him and 40 agreed with the statement, I believed in him and he let me down. It looks as if the youthful energy that helped sweep him to power in 2008 has migrated to the streets. This is bad news for the Democrats and for leftists who think the battles for Congress and the White House are the only ones that really matter. While Nicholas Kristoff at the New York Times suggests some moderate, achievable goals that OWS could adopt, whats happening in Zuccotti Park is more about radical, sweeping dissent than pragmatic policy checklists. Wiegel again: On Saturday, before the arrests happened, the volunteer organizers of the protest handed out a four-page newspaper called The Occupied Wall Street Journal. They had raised more than $10,000 to quickly print 50,000 copies. There is a worldwide movement of resistance and rebellion building, write Eric Ribellarse and Jim Weill in the papers lead story. A timeline starts the movement on Dec. 17, 2010, when Mohammed Bouazizi poured gasoline on his head, then sat in public in Sidi Bouzid, Tunisia, then lit a match. The Tea Party has always been ostentatious in its American exceptionalism, starting rallies with recitations of the Pledge of the Allegiance. The loudest mic-checkers in Occupy Wall Street want the oppositea mind-meld with the developing world. I find it hard not to have reservations and unanswered questions about OWS even as I admire it. Is it the birth of a new kind of 21st century protest or a false start? How will it funnel all this energy into concrete change? Is it just too diffuse and hyper-democratic to move forward? But the important thing right now is to give it time and not to expect it to run before it can walk. Many strong, successful movements have evolved out of colourful chaos and if this one seems more colourful and chaotic than most, well, thats a sign of the times.

Update: McKenzie Wark on the Verso Books blog argues very eloquently that the leaderless quasi-utopianism of the occupation is the whole point it represents a radically different kind of politics. The will-it-work? question remains but I think this is one of the best arguments yet for the new school of protest.

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