Flash Encampments
PETER LEEMAN
Hey all you wild cats, do-gooders and steadfast rebels out there,
Our movement is living through a painful rebirth… “There has been a unfortunate consolidation of power in #OWS,” writes one founding Zuccotti. “This translates into ideological dominance and recurring lines of thought. We are facing a nauseating poverty of ideas.” Burned out, out of money, out of ideas… seduced by salaries, comfy offices, book deals, old lefty cash and minor celebrity status, some of the most prominent early heroes of our leaderless uprising are losing the edge that catalyzed last year’s one thousand encampments. Bit by bit, Occupy’s first generation is succumbing to an insidious institutionalization and ossification that could be fatal to our young spiritual insurrection unless we leap over it right now. Putting our movement back on track will take nothing short of a revolution within Occupy.
The new tone was set on Earth Day, April 22, in a suburb bordering Berkeley, California when a dozen occupiers quietly marched a small crowd to a tract of endangered urban agricultural land, cut through the locked fence and set up tents, kitchens and a people’s assembly. Acting autonomously under the banner of Occupy, without waiting for approval from any preexisting General Assembly, Occupy The Farm was notable for its sophisticated preplanning and careful execution — they even brought chickens — that offered a positive vision for the future and engendered broad community support. While encampments across the world were unable to re-establish themselves on May Day, this small cadre of farm occupiers boldly maintained their inspiring occupation for nearly four weeks.
In Minneapolis, a core of occupiers have launched an Occupy Homes campaign that is unique for its edgy tenacity. “What is unusual, in fact utterly unprecedented, is the level of aggression and defiance of the law by these activists,” a spokesperson for Freddie Mac, a U.S. corporation that trades in mortgages, told a local paper. “Over the past week … the city has tossed out protesters and boarded up the house, only to see the demonstrators peel back the boards and use chains, concrete-filled barrels and other obstacles to make it more difficult to carry them away,” the article reports. Last Friday, police were so desperate to prevent a re-occupation of the foreclosed home that they surrounded the house with “30 Minneapolis police officers with batons” and “over two dozen marked and undercover squad cars and a paddy wagon.” Occupiers responded by laughing and signing songs… joyous in their struggle to elevate the home into an symbol of democratic resistance to the banks.
In its own sweet way, our movement is now moving beyond the Zuccotti model and developing a tactical imperative of its own: Small groups of fired up second generation occupiers acting independently, swiftly and tenaciously pulling off myriad visceral local actions, disrupting capitalist business-as-usual across the globe.
The next big bang to capture the world’s imagination could come not from a thousand encampments but from a hundred thousand ephemeral jams… a global cascade of flash encampments may well be what this hot Summer will look like.
Meanwhile, tents are up once again in Tahrir Square and youth from Quebec to Auckland to Moscow to Oakland are rising up against a future that does not compute.
Stay loose, play jazz, keep the faith … Capitalism is crashing and our movement has just begun.
for the wild,
Culture Jammers HQ
126 comments on the article “Flash Encampments”
Displaying 111 - 120 of 126
Page 12 of 13
Anonymous
Well, many African Americans I've discussed the occupy movement with think it's amusing that a bunch of white people now know what being poor is like and are boohooing. Basically, welcome to their working week. Apathy for years from young people regarding people of colors' lack of jobs, education, etc, but suddenly whites are experiencing it and we're all in it together. Once that view was explained to me, I understood why many blacks in the US don't give a crap about the "movement." Hearing middle class white kids singing We Shall Overcome sent them into fits of laughter. Word.
Anonymous
Yes but you have competition in the form of poor working class anarchist white kid tradition, who laughs at both of you.
The blacks for boohooing while they play the victim, of a holocaust that every race has gone through, and the rich middle-upper class white kids who think they are miss and mr. universal.
Anonymous
Like an African American Capitalist will be any better than a white Capitalist.
Anonymous
There's something you all have to understand about the poor british working class.
They are the one's laughing the most that the English upper class was able to dupe the entire world into believing in the so-called English Honour System.
Anonymous
There are like 100 white kid anarchists...I mean like in all the world...only 100...the rest cannot spell anarchist and are listening to Snoop Doggy Dog while sipping on a 40.
Anonymous
Sorry but that's absolutely bullshit. Its not Obama that is keeping African-americans out of the Occupy movement, its the style and attitude of Occupy that is a turn off itself. How many African- americans do you know that would go out of their way to confront police officers? There is enough grief in our communities without looking for methods to interact with cops all the while calling them "pigs and "murderers", no thanks better leave that to the privileged white kid who will get bailed out of jail without getting his ass whipped. Also African-americans have a history of strong leadership, the anarchist model where there is no one inspirational leader at the helm doesn't ring as culturally germane for Black people. Also did you know that unemployment among blacks is 16%? Yes, 16%. With that being the reality no one really has time to either back Obama nor waste their time marching. You really want to help blacks in their own community? Teach them how to become self-sufficient, co-op food markets, planting vegetables on rooftops, bartering for goods and services, learning how to cultivate herbal medicine (health care is lacking in our neighborhoods). Ask them to go and march and get beat? Nah. Been there done that and the t-shirt is in a museum.
Anonymous
You are kinda mixed up and old school, half capitalist, half emancipationist:
"Teach them how to become self-sufficient, co-op food markets, planting vegetables on rooftops, bartering for goods and services, learning how to cultivate herbal medicine (health care is lacking in our neighborhoods)"?
what do you think the Establishment is trying to destroy? That's right, the very thing you want to teach.
And you thought you were being hunted and killed for the color of your skin?
No, black people are just unlucky enough into being forced to be the defacto representation, the ideal, of what this American society has always tried to suppress and destroy. The alternative. The other.
So you can keep on running around in circles, building just to supply the Establishment with something to destroy, someone to inflict suffering on. Hoping that the capitalist in the plantation house will notice your wonderful invention, and bestow honors on you, or even your own plot of land and then leave you alone.
But that day will never come.
Not under this system, not in it, and not next to it.
So you can go on playing the old classics.
Or you can play jazz.
Anonymous
And don't gimme that crap about the African-American community needing strong leaders and the anarchist model not being germaine either.
You are prime sellout target with that attitude.
Anonymous
everyone in the occupy movement knows that the "minorities" just weren't born with the intellectual tools to take any part in the Occupy leadership, so don't expect them to be there. But we will be glad to welcome them to cook for us and to keep the place clean, also no one really wants to do latrine duty but they were born to be good at it.
Anonymous
Yet, as with the western-back "civil revolts" in Libya & Syria, who is to say that the 'Moscow Spring' is not being staged managed? Iraq, Libya, now Syria, then Iran, and then...? New World (dis)Order.
Pages
Add a new comment