Battle for the Soul of Occupy
KARNEY HATCH
Occupy’s May Day General Strike was a surprising and bold success for the visceral side of the movement. While most of Occupy put its energy into building coalitions with “legacy progressive groups”, labor unions and immigrant rights organizations, these efforts did not yield the anticipated results. In New York, for example, despite amassing a coalition of over a hundred organizations and rallying a crowd of more than 30,000, occupiers were thwarted in their attempts to shut down banks or re-occupy Wall Street. And some Zuccottis have complained that union representatives actively blocked an attempt to lead the crowd toward direct action at the end of the night. Meanwhile in Seattle, Oakland, San Francisco, New Orleans and elsewhere, anarchists using Black Bloc tactics stole the show.
On websites and forums, anarchists are rejoicing the spectacular showing of Black Bloc. “American anarchists haven’t experienced this much positive public attention since the euphoria and aftermath of N30 in Seattle,” writes one commentator. For many, the Black Bloc represents a tactical innovation that suggests the future of Occupy. “Occupy is dead, long live the Black Bloc,” writes another. An anarchist in New Orleans described how the status quo was unprepared for their tactics: “the Anti-Capitalism march caught the police off-guard and has the media dumb-founded. A full 24-hours later the Times Picayune has said nothing about the Anti-Capitalist March, only making mention of the permitted march that happened earlier in the day.”
In Oakland, the Black Bloc, which made up a large portion of the May Day General Strike, displayed a coordinated tactical philosophy – including the de-arresting of comrades, throwing eggs filled with paint, using homemade smoke-creating incendiaries to confuse police, and the rejection of media – that suggests prior planning, ongoing innovation and increasing sophistication. And Black Bloc tactics are just one aspect of the overall rejuvenation of anarchism that is happening right now including the increase of infoshops (there are two near Occupy Oakland: The Holdout and The Longhaul); the creation of bottom-up solidarity networks to replace top-down unions; providing free food on the model of Food Not Bombs; offering a compelling DIY aesthetic.
Anarchist occupiers are energized and their visceral tactics are attracting members. Now, the power of the Black Bloc is growing within Occupy and pushing the movement in unexpected directions.
Round 7 goes to the Black Bloc – now let’s see what we can do for the rest of May!
316 comments on the article “Battle for the Soul of Occupy”
Displaying 21 - 30 of 316
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Anonymous
Depends on how you view it.
Try looking through everyone else's eyes save your own.
Go on, I'll wait.
Anonymous
occupy is and will always be multiple factions united in a battle against a common enemy. we have support from unions, immigrants rights activists, churches, communists, anarchists, environmentalists, neo-nazi's, and many others. everyone will have their own idea of how to fight back, and i think we should let people be free to do as they please. occupy the parks, all 12 fed reserves, every capitol building, block bridges, the internet, and most importantly the MIND. bitching about who's in the highlight will do nothing but divide us further. black bloc tactics got people's attention, people can look at the cover and they can see the rest of the book as well, you just have to make each page pop out as well as the cover to get the full message across. and that message is that we are all the 99%. no matter how different we all are, we are all the same in the eyes of the 1%. the time has come to rise up, because for so long this 1% has dominated and decimated our lives as well as this entire planet. we are sick of their presence upon the earth, and their time is over... VIVA LA REVOLUCION!!!
Anonymous
So since this article is the continuation on a series calling to fight against those trying to co-op the movement, this is a call to fight against Black Bloc, right?
Anonymous
In a way you could see it as more as a philosophy followed by a group of tactics that is trying to co-opt the Occupy movement not a particular organization or political group( though I'm sure there are political groups who fancy black bloc ways of protest), but then anyone can get into an argument as to whether black bloc is or ever was a part of the fabric of the occupy movement.
Anonymous
Anarchy is exactly why people fell in love with Occupy, the GA is anarchy, and it is this horizontal power structure that people love. Anarchy certainly is not pushing people away from Occupy. Black Bloc plays a crucial role in the movement, people like Chris Hedges just do not understand.
Anonymous
As of late, though, Occupy GAs across the country have proven to be very ineffectual, from the NYCGA to the Occupy SF GA.
Anonymous
Yes. Black Bloc won't go away. They need a place to go and a thing to do and goals to achieve to achieve those goals, be those goals official or not, no matter how big those goals are.
Lets End Capitalism Together.
Anonymous
In the SF Bay Area, the May Day actions by nonviolent protesters, which were really lovely and had a large attendance, did not get covered. Instead what got covered in the media was how 100 people dressed in black badly damaged small businesses and cars indiscriminately in the Mission, a working class district of SF, on the eve of May Day. We are still reeling from the effects of this. The SF Commune failed and resulted in a mentally ill man getting charged with a felony for throwing bricks and things off of the roof of the commune. Several occupiers were arrested, and two are still being held. Many people have left Occupy SF to form a separate group and it still remains to be seen what will come of this. "Diversity of tactics" has failed OSF big time.
Anonymous
In Seattle Black Bloc had a whopping 10 or so members and sticks that could only break about 10% of the windows the were trying to break. Makes for hilarious tv watching some douche in Nikes beating on a Nike Store window, to little effect. What a joke of a 'movement.'
Anonymous
We can in truth only be called the 99% after 99% of everything is broken.
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