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 81 - 90 of 126
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Sigmarlin
A professor from the elite left gets it wrong again. As this Adbuster article points out, Occupy HAS adapted beyond camping out in tents. In SF, Occupy Bernal has managed to get the city to call for a moritorium on foreclosures since the bank paperwork is in shambles and illegal. This small group has been agitating and stopping auctions daily through direct action - helping countless homeowners and finally the Bay Area Mayors are acting. Yet some guy in Massachusetts says its over. These kind of condescending liberals who have NEVER down any real street activism (yet have a whole lot of opinions) are getting so old. This is why Occupy sprung up in the first place. Because people were tired of the bankruptcy of the top-down left. Your article simply made me tired; you managed to convince me of absolutely nothing.
Anonymous
A professor from the elite left gets it wrong again. As this Adbuster article points out, Occupy HAS adapted beyond camping out in tents. In SF, Occupy Bernal has managed to get the city to call for a moritorium on foreclosures since the bank paperwork is in shambles and illegal. This small group has been agitating and stopping auctions daily through direct action - helping countless homeowners and finally the Bay Area Mayors are acting. Yet some guy in Massachusetts says its over. These kind of condescending liberals who have NEVER down any real street activism (yet have a whole lot of opinions) are getting so old. This is why Occupy sprung up in the first place. Because people were tired of the bankruptcy of the top-down left. Your article simply made me tired; you managed to convince me of absolutely nothing.
Anonymous
What you are describing are small local happenings, not signs of life form a large national movement, so yeah the professor is right the movement is over.
Anonymous
Hey, if you want to claim to pretend things like city councils rethinking foreclousures is all because of OWS, by all means, be crazy. Next pretend that OWS makes the grass grow, the birds sing, and the sun shine.
"Hey, there wasn't a nuclear war today because OWS is changing, man, we're adapting, and if not for us then we would all be atomic dust, man."
Anonymous
"Occupy The Farm was notable for its sophisticated preplanning and careful execution" Right, except for when they destroyed years worth of work/research by pruning diseased fruit, that was actually part of someone's research project.
Anonymous
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/05/10/BA7A1OGFRK.DTL
From the article:
George Chuck, a U.S. Department of Agriculture researcher whose work is literally grounded on those same 2 acres, sees it much differently.
Chuck, whose work is affiliated with UC Berkeley, said protesters have claimed the site might be used for a new Whole Foods Market but plans for that development are adjacent to the farm, on land that's already been developed.
Some protesters, Chuck said, claim research at the Gill Tract is funded by large oil and other corporate concerns. But it just ain't so.
Chuck's research is funded by the National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy - and it's far more important to society than anything the protesters are trying to do.
For the past decade, he's worked on mapping corn genes to identify which ones produce energy. His work adding corn genes to switchgrass has more than doubled the yield of biofuels produced by the hybrid crop. His findings were published last year in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
That research, which has the potential to increase alternative fuel sources sounds more important than the desires of two dozen or so people growing 2 acres worth of anything.
"What's worse is that when I tried talking to (some of) these guys, they just started spouting slogans someone else told them," Chuck said.
And as far as the group's efforts to grow crops on land Chuck said is not yet ready for planting, "They have no idea what they're doing," he said.
Since protesters arrived, they've managed to destroy a fruit tree that was the subject of a research project, created a waste pile, built a rickety chicken coop and left the gate open allowing wild turkeys to escape or be killed by predators that entered the unlocked facility, he added.
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Do I really have to say it? What a bunch of maroons!
Anonymous
That Does It. Call in the SWAT teams.
It's time to show these Occupiers that we are no longer going to be fooled by their double-faced lies.
They act like they are well-intentioned. But we all know and we all see through it. Their only goal is to destroy all that is Good in the World, all Environmentalist good work and research, all social programs that help millions of people, and just pretty much everything there is that is productive and for the well-being of humanity as a whole.
It's time to send them back to the evil from whence they come.
Anonymous
This commenter sounds like it has a Military or law enforcement background.Yes?
Anonymous
Sounds like heavy sarcasm to me.
Anonymous
Sounds like heavy sarcasm to me.
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