Blackspot

#OCCUPYHOMES

We reclaim our property.

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Last week, tens of thousands of protesters at #OCCUPYOAKLAND shut down the nation's fifth largest port in a tremendous show of strength for the movement. It was a rare victory. Less well known is that a few hours later, a bit after midnight, a small number of occupiers may have stumbled across the movement's next great tactical breakthrough.

Walking amongst the crowd on its way to the port, a certain strident militancy was obvious in the way that people, some carrying shields, marched proudly forward. The tense mood quickly turned to joyousness once it became clear that the Oakland Police were not going to stand in the way. Multiple layers of human barricades were spontaneously formed within the port by roving musicians, some amplified by bike-powered speakers, whose indie music magically congregated people at tactically key intersections. A line of thirty vets in uniform protected the flank while elsewhere civilians set up fencing to secure the roads. Free water was brought in on #OCCUPYOAKLAND trucks and everywhere food was being shared with new friends. Most remarkable about this revolutionary moment is that it felt so easy.

Throughout the day, there had been talk of escalating #OCCUPY from being a movement to take the squares into a movement to reclaim foreclosed space. The tantalizing idea of turning bank-owned, dormant buildings into radical housing, squats and community spaces floated amongst the encampment. That night, a small group of occupiers took the initiative and reclaimed a nearby building that was once the Traveler's Aid Society, a non-profit that aided the homeless but had closed after cuts to government funding. "We had plans to start using this space as a library, a place for classes and workshops, as well as a dormitory for those with health conditions," they explained in a communique.

The state response was swift and ferocious: "hundreds of police officers, armed to the hilt with bean bag guns, tear gas and flashbang grenades" quickly suppressed the expansion of the movement while the corporate media ensured that the nation would awake to context-less stories of violence. But, as the protesters pointed out, this over-reaction betrays that they may have stumbled across our greatest strength. Isn't it strange that "the city spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to protect one landlord's right to earn a few thousand every month... whereas the blockade of the port – an action which caused millions of dollars of losses – met with no resistance"? Why did "the attempt to take one single building, a building that was unused, meet with the most brutal and swift response"?

While #OCCUPYWALLSTREET digs in for the winter at Zuccotti, with twenty military-grade tents costing upwards of $20,000, the rest of the movement is looking with trepidation towards the cold nights ahead. Let's learn from the people of Oakland for they have found a very simple and elegant solution: we move indoors, we reclaim foreclosed space.

Every city in America, even the richest areas, have empty storefronts and houses whose tenants have been evicted while their bank owners keep the spaces unused. Each of these empty buildings is a potential #OCCUPY, a future squat inviting us, waiting for us to come.

In a speech at #OCCUPYWALLSTREET, the philosopher Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak urged the movement to not let mere "survival count as enough of a victory." Her point was simple and profound: we do not win by hanging on. We win by continuing to innovate and escalate our myriad attacks until the beast of consumer-capitalism falls to its knees.

Micah White

181 comments on the article “#OCCUPYHOMES”

Displaying 171 - 180 of 181

Page 18 of 19

Anonymous

the answer is:
shrink the government
shrink the government budget
shrink the taxes to feed the obese government
let government stop borrowing
let people keep more of what they earn
let people be free of government parasite
let people make their own choices what they do with their own money
let People be responsible for their well being - not government

Government = people.
You want something? There is nobody out there to give it to you. You are your own government. You are source of your own wealth, nobody else.
You need school for your own children? Go and build it for your own money!
You need a teacher for your own children? Go, earn money, find any teacher you want and pay him/her!
You need a doctor? Go, earn your own money, find any doctor you like and pay him!
You want anything? Go, make your own money and get what you need. Don't beg! Earn it!
Don't ask somebody else to provide for you! It ain't but your own responsibility!

Just like I don't ask you to pay my bills, don't ask me to pay yours!!!

Government doen't have its own money - the only honest way for any government to have money is by taxing. So, if "government " pays, that means I pay! And I am not 1%. I am regular guy who pays you OWS to get free money. Screw you!

arthurkukri

I have to agree with you on this one. I get what the Occupy protestors are doing, but I also don't see it going anywhere. What the Occupy backers see as a great movement, the rest of the nation sees as a bunch of people who are frustrated with the way things are and instead of continuing to look for a job, they instead are choosing to take a break out of their life to rally around a cause. It's really just a distraction to them. What type of change do they really expect to see?

I live in Texas and just the other day I was at the Jersey Village LA Fitness and saw a girl who used to be consistent in her workouts but hadn't been back in a while. I asked her if everything was all right and she said yes, but that she had taken some time off to join the Occupy protesters in CA.

It was at that point that I asked her what she expected to see changed by this movement without a way to reach their wide and varied goals. She didn't have an answer for me. Said she was unemployed, "fed up" and needed to "do something" about it. I don't think she really did anything.

arthurkukri

I have to agree with you on this one. I get what the Occupy protestors are doing, but I also don't see it going anywhere. What the Occupy backers see as a great movement, the rest of the nation sees as a bunch of people who are frustrated with the way things are and instead of continuing to look for a job, they instead are choosing to take a break out of their life to rally around a cause. It's really just a distraction to them. What type of change do they really expect to see?

I live in Texas and just the other day I was at the Jersey Village LA Fitness and saw a girl who used to be consistent in her workouts but hadn't been back in a while. I asked her if everything was all right and she said yes, but that she had taken some time off to join the Occupy protesters in CA.

It was at that point that I asked her what she expected to see changed by this movement without a way to reach their wide and varied goals. She didn't have an answer for me. Said she was unemployed, "fed up" and needed to "do something" about it. I don't think she really did anything.

Anonymous

They say they are the 99%. What a lie!

They are the 5% percent of punks who want to intimidate the 95 % of people. There is always trash in every society. Thats the OWS today.

I, instead of bitching and morning, get up in the morning and go to work. I expect my life to get better by my own actions, not by begging or extoring other.
You will be always broke if you waste your time by demonstrations. They do not bring any real benefit and value to anybody.

Occupy my ASS. Go, do something usefull for community and leave others alone.

Anonymous

They say they are the 99%. What a lie!

They are the 5% percent of punks who want to intimidate the 95 % of people. There is always trash in every society. Thats the OWS today.

I, instead of bitching and morning, get up in the morning and go to work. I expect my life to get better by my own actions, not by begging or extoring other.
You will be always broke if you waste your time by demonstrations. They do not bring any real benefit and value to anybody.

Occupy my ASS. Go, do something usefull for community and leave others alone.

Anonymous

we are actually trying to do something beneficial for community--bring it back. we are creating our own communities in which people care for people, help each other, communicate openly about ideas and issues to work together to form solutions that satisfy everyone, not just the few with the most money. many of us have jobs, homes, families. we are not asking for handouts, we are asking for a government that is truly representative of the PEOPLE'S needs--not the interests and wants of large corporations and wealthy donors. the political system in this country has been hijacked by money--unlimited campaign contributions, lobbyists, kickbacks, and myriad other perks and bonuses provided for our elected officials that destroyed the american dream. real people are losing jobs, homes, are unable to feed their families, keep them warm, etc. and there are people who get richer off of this--that is sickening to me and quite a few other people. human needs should always come before profits. there are millions of homes/offices/warehouses sitting empty, yet we have millions of people without shelter. food prices are skyrocketing (i dont know about your area, but milk alone has gone up 50% since last year here in PA--i have two kids who drink plenty of it, this adds up quickly), yet middle and lower class incomes have remained stagnant for the past 40 years. the same with clothing, energy (oil/natural gas/gasoline), etc. people are going to college, coming out thousands in debt, and cant find a job that pays more than $10/hr. we say we are the 99% simply because we open our group to anyone and everyone--we want national discussions on these issues and many others, we want to raise awareness about how the system has been skewed away from serving the people, we want to bring back community togetherness, the idea of people taking care of people rather than expecting government to take care of us, and change this idea that everything is about "ME" and "MINE" and set the focus instead on "US" and "OURS." these are hard concepts for a lot of people--it is much easier to go ahead and continue the status quo than it is to question it and try to change it. luckily, there are those of us who are up to the challenge, and we are here for you even if you are not here for us--when we succeed, we will not look back on those of you who did not support us and ostracize you, instead we will welcome you with open arms as brothers and sisters in humanity.

Anonymous

we are actually trying to do something beneficial for community--bring it back. we are creating our own communities in which people care for people, help each other, communicate openly about ideas and issues to work together to form solutions that satisfy everyone, not just the few with the most money. many of us have jobs, homes, families. we are not asking for handouts, we are asking for a government that is truly representative of the PEOPLE'S needs--not the interests and wants of large corporations and wealthy donors. the political system in this country has been hijacked by money--unlimited campaign contributions, lobbyists, kickbacks, and myriad other perks and bonuses provided for our elected officials that destroyed the american dream. real people are losing jobs, homes, are unable to feed their families, keep them warm, etc. and there are people who get richer off of this--that is sickening to me and quite a few other people. human needs should always come before profits. there are millions of homes/offices/warehouses sitting empty, yet we have millions of people without shelter. food prices are skyrocketing (i dont know about your area, but milk alone has gone up 50% since last year here in PA--i have two kids who drink plenty of it, this adds up quickly), yet middle and lower class incomes have remained stagnant for the past 40 years. the same with clothing, energy (oil/natural gas/gasoline), etc. people are going to college, coming out thousands in debt, and cant find a job that pays more than $10/hr. we say we are the 99% simply because we open our group to anyone and everyone--we want national discussions on these issues and many others, we want to raise awareness about how the system has been skewed away from serving the people, we want to bring back community togetherness, the idea of people taking care of people rather than expecting government to take care of us, and change this idea that everything is about "ME" and "MINE" and set the focus instead on "US" and "OURS." these are hard concepts for a lot of people--it is much easier to go ahead and continue the status quo than it is to question it and try to change it. luckily, there are those of us who are up to the challenge, and we are here for you even if you are not here for us--when we succeed, we will not look back on those of you who did not support us and ostracize you, instead we will welcome you with open arms as brothers and sisters in humanity.

dsolnit

The success of the occupy movement depends on shifting the narrative from 'violent protesters' to 'we, the 99%, vs the rich 1%'. We have to tell a new story about who we are and what our societal values are, one that a majority of people will identify with, even when the media tries to counter it. Our actions have to tell that story, using tactics and symbols that resonate with most people. We do need to broaden our tactics beyond public encampments, but squatting will alienate many of the folks we are trying to win over, and be met with more police repression. I think defending individual family homes from foreclosure and eviction sends a stronger, clearer message - that we are defending working folks from the banks and wealthy interests. It shows courage and solidarity, and is much harder to portray as vandalism.

dsolnit

The success of the occupy movement depends on shifting the narrative from 'violent protesters' to 'we, the 99%, vs the rich 1%'. We have to tell a new story about who we are and what our societal values are, one that a majority of people will identify with, even when the media tries to counter it. Our actions have to tell that story, using tactics and symbols that resonate with most people. We do need to broaden our tactics beyond public encampments, but squatting will alienate many of the folks we are trying to win over, and be met with more police repression. I think defending individual family homes from foreclosure and eviction sends a stronger, clearer message - that we are defending working folks from the banks and wealthy interests. It shows courage and solidarity, and is much harder to portray as vandalism.

Anonymous

It is absolutely wrong to occupy private space. Squatting just causes trouble. If they want to move this protest forward then they need to be more articulate in their demands. The fact is, the media will get bored with them and in a month or two the Occupy Movement will have no coverage and therefore no way to spread and soon they will have to go home. Do something productive or get off the lawns of private property.

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