A Message Entangled With Its Form
As I walk through lush Brownstone Brooklyn at night, I try to reconcile the stillness that pervades these streets with the urgency of Liberty Plaza. I wonder, did I lose touch with the beauty of the wet bluestone and wrought iron gates somewhere along the course of one of my many feverish runs to the 4/5 station to get to Wall Street?
I know that I’m young, and sometimes it’s hard to tell whether the quaking I feel is the strength of my own heartbeat or the earth moving under my feet. I wonder if it’s impossible at any age to have perspective from the midst of something that resembles a movement; I imagine the view from the middle of the General Assembly looks dramatically different than the one from a calmer, more static place.
Yet the quaking earth hypothesis is supported by the fact that perhaps the sight from Liberty Plaza is similar to the one a person might have glimpsed from Tahrir Square, from Madison’s Capitol Square, from Ben-Gurion Boulevard, from among the indignados in Madrid and the protests in Greece. In Liberty Plaza, occupiers’ disaffection is part of a powerful surge of global discontent, a surge that is manifesting itself in the collective realization of bodies and voices as strategic tools for communication and collective action.
Many feel an immediacy springing from a loss of stability, an affordable education, a job, a home, a pension, health insurance, that we had taken for granted. Even those who don’t face immediately precarious situations are admitting to themselves that something has been terribly wrong for some time. We watched as our government deregulated the market and then bailed out the banks whose criminal activities led to the financial implosion; as they cut the taxes of the rich while 15% of American families fell below the poverty line; as they spent billions of dollars on imperial wars that divert money away from education and infrastructure and from any real solution to avert environmental degradation. If we’ve been apathetic, its because we’ve failed to see how to act. We have learned to be wary of “Change.” We lack faith in our politicians, entrenched as they are in the impotent theatrics of the two-party system.
Yet in Liberty Plaza people find themselves confronted with a radically inclusive new platform. In the horizontality of this platform, many who are disaffected now see a means of engagement that is immediate and real. If Occupy Wall Street has failed to use this platform to limit itself to a discrete set of demands, it is because it refuses to undermine the depth and breadth of what’s wrong. OWS’s message is entangled with its form, its self-sustaining structure in which the group provides for its own physical, social and intellectual needs. Given the group’s collective intelligence, it is becoming evident that its members can teach each other as much as, if not more than any, institution can.
Much has been made of the people’s microphone. When it works, its power is immense. People within hearing range chant each other’s words to convey them to those standing on the periphery of the larger group. Each person pits herself between the mouth of the speaker and the ear of the listener in a manner that is both self-affirming and egoless. Loudly echoing the voice of another feels a bit like cursing, a vigorous and strangely gratifying speech act.
Occupiers are learning to use their bodies in ways that break with the modes of moving circumscribed by our culture of efficiency and the near-total encroachment of privatized space. Its members are learning how to stay in one place, how to civilly disobey, how to dumpster dive, how to interrupt auction proceedings. They are also confronting their bodies and the bodies of others, the cold, the rain, the smells and needs that bodies have that we can deal with so quickly in the comfort of the office and the home.
Occupy Wall Street is streamed, tweeted, posted and reposted. It is a curiosity, a screen for projection, a spectator sport, everyone’s favorite and most hated child. Yet people continue to come daily who earnestly want to join or to aid the effort. OWS has become a receptacle for the lost progressive hopes of a previous generation. Despite the attempts of some media sources to caricature the occupiers, they constitute a diverse group that is attracting even more diversity. OWS has gained the support of many labor unions and community groups. Most importantly, its existence is enabling a necessary discourse to enter the mainstream.
Liberty Plaza can also be an immensely frustrating, anxiety-provoking and chaotic space. Sometimes the chaos threatens to prevail and dissolve the whole. This is a particular risk now: as its numbers grow, OWS must become capable of incorporating interested parties in meaningful ways and must begin a real conversation about its own future. Yet in this heightened unknown many sense something uncanny, something real that feels unreal because it has been suppressed by layers and layers of banal culture, farcical politics and corporate sterility. They see a spark of true, systemic indeterminacy, in contrast to the systems entrenched by the collusion of money and power.
Occupy Wall Street is still a writhing, inchoate entity, yet it has a structure that can and must beget more structure. Its future is totally unknown, but the commitment among OWS’s ranks, the resonance of its message, and the appreciation so many feel for the rupture it presents from the status quo, assures me that this occupation will persist, whatever this persistence looks like. Perhaps the group will recognize the naivety of the dreams of its most utopian members, and compromise soon to settle on a list of specific economic demands. Occupiers are smart and knowledgeable, and have big, open ears to those even more so. More probably the occupation will continue to grow, to spread to other cities, to protest, and to self-determine, choosing to partake in a society whose structure its members believe in, rather than one corrupted to the point of disrepair.
In my more lucid moments, I know that Occupy Wall Street is a lichen that is preparing the intractable political ground for more substantive plant growth. In my dreams, however, Occupy Wall Street will evince its true self not when the media and well-meaning liberals tell it to produce a message, nor when it hands over its momentum to sympathetic, institutionalized political groups, but when the egalitarian entity it has created itself yields some kind of answer.
78 comments on the article “A Message Entangled With Its Form”
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Tax Payer
Get a job.......and stop stinking up MY PARKS. Yes MY PARKS. As I pay for them and you don't. Please put down your Starbucks latte, close your laptop. Go home and get a JOB because I am tired of supporting you and your kind. You are NOT the 99%.....
Tax Payer
Get a job.......and stop stinking up MY PARKS. Yes MY PARKS. As I pay for them and you don't. Please put down your Starbucks latte, close your laptop. Go home and get a JOB because I am tired of supporting you and your kind. You are NOT the 99%.....
Anonymous
YES, BECAUSE ALL OF US ARE HOMELESS, JOBLESS AND SMELLY. GET A CLUE- AND A NEW ARGUMENT.
I HAVE A JOB, I PAY TAXES AND RENT. YOU ARE CORRECT IN ONE THING HOWEVER, THE OCCUPIERS DO NOT REPRESENT THE 99% AS A HOMOGENOUS WHOLE. THE % OF PEOPLE WHO UNDERSTAND WHAT THIS ARTICLE TRULY MEANS IS A MUCH SMALLER YET EVER GROWING #.
PEOPLE WHO COMMENT LIKE THIS ARE FULL OF SUCH BLIND RAGE AND CONFUSION. OPEN YOUR MIND- YOU MAY BE SURPRISED WHAT GETS LET IN.
Anonymous
YES, BECAUSE ALL OF US ARE HOMELESS, JOBLESS AND SMELLY. GET A CLUE- AND A NEW ARGUMENT.
I HAVE A JOB, I PAY TAXES AND RENT. YOU ARE CORRECT IN ONE THING HOWEVER, THE OCCUPIERS DO NOT REPRESENT THE 99% AS A HOMOGENOUS WHOLE. THE % OF PEOPLE WHO UNDERSTAND WHAT THIS ARTICLE TRULY MEANS IS A MUCH SMALLER YET EVER GROWING #.
PEOPLE WHO COMMENT LIKE THIS ARE FULL OF SUCH BLIND RAGE AND CONFUSION. OPEN YOUR MIND- YOU MAY BE SURPRISED WHAT GETS LET IN.
libra
saddened to read this. seems that you have closed both your heart & mind. you are not aware (awakened may I say?) to the way you are, yourself, is sold to a system that requires only a few hours of true thinking to figure out how wrong it is for you. every American thinks he is just temporarily poor/suffering/.. but soon he/she will be rich, or his/her children. so justice, moral or economic, is not a real issue to deal with, and pushed, in the best case, to weekly church/synagogue talk - the good ones, not the mega.
and btw, i'm a 66 yrs old retired person who belongs to the upper 10% (i think - didn't check the statistics) and still moved and support the OWS because the true global message.
seems that you are the spoiled kid who wants an immediate gratification - specific actions, demands, spelled out plan, 'right now and fast', TV type, who cannot be involved, appreciate or understand some more global, larger, abstract, deep and long term humane thinking.
so i would suggest to you, in a very friendly manner, go rethink your life, the world you live in, the environment, the future - your and the world's. i believe you will then join this movement.you are already following it and thinking about it even though disagreeing with it. so join and IMPROVE it in a way you think it should go. don't sit at home. you will be surprised how many smart, good heart selfless and deep young thinkers you will meet.
yes, along with the normal % of those who are on the fringes. remember, OWS reflects the society at large and same % of fringes can be found in every group. if i were to follow 'your' thinking i could apply your words to the whole American society - spoiled, etc - based on the fringes you choose to focus on or rather to parrot what other write about.
Good New Year [Happy is not something we want. Happy is illusive - marketed merchandise].
libra
saddened to read this. seems that you have closed both your heart & mind. you are not aware (awakened may I say?) to the way you are, yourself, is sold to a system that requires only a few hours of true thinking to figure out how wrong it is for you. every American thinks he is just temporarily poor/suffering/.. but soon he/she will be rich, or his/her children. so justice, moral or economic, is not a real issue to deal with, and pushed, in the best case, to weekly church/synagogue talk - the good ones, not the mega.
and btw, i'm a 66 yrs old retired person who belongs to the upper 10% (i think - didn't check the statistics) and still moved and support the OWS because the true global message.
seems that you are the spoiled kid who wants an immediate gratification - specific actions, demands, spelled out plan, 'right now and fast', TV type, who cannot be involved, appreciate or understand some more global, larger, abstract, deep and long term humane thinking.
so i would suggest to you, in a very friendly manner, go rethink your life, the world you live in, the environment, the future - your and the world's. i believe you will then join this movement.you are already following it and thinking about it even though disagreeing with it. so join and IMPROVE it in a way you think it should go. don't sit at home. you will be surprised how many smart, good heart selfless and deep young thinkers you will meet.
yes, along with the normal % of those who are on the fringes. remember, OWS reflects the society at large and same % of fringes can be found in every group. if i were to follow 'your' thinking i could apply your words to the whole American society - spoiled, etc - based on the fringes you choose to focus on or rather to parrot what other write about.
Good New Year [Happy is not something we want. Happy is illusive - marketed merchandise].
Anonymous
Get a job and stop stinking up MY SITES. Yes MY SITES. As I pay for them and you don't. Please put down your Miller High Life, close your laptop. Go home and get a JOB because I am tired of supporting you and your kind. You are NOT the source of all wisdom and knowledge in the world and do not have the answers to everything, you aren't American, you aren't even intelligent, you aren't intellectually capable of arguing against a policy so you shout ridiculous assumptions about how you don't think people have a job. Somebody should take your voter ID away... maybe Republicans!?
Anonymous
Get a job and stop stinking up MY SITES. Yes MY SITES. As I pay for them and you don't. Please put down your Miller High Life, close your laptop. Go home and get a JOB because I am tired of supporting you and your kind. You are NOT the source of all wisdom and knowledge in the world and do not have the answers to everything, you aren't American, you aren't even intelligent, you aren't intellectually capable of arguing against a policy so you shout ridiculous assumptions about how you don't think people have a job. Somebody should take your voter ID away... maybe Republicans!?
Anonymous
I think my comparison about a child holding its breath is valid. The occupy movement is trying to defeat economic inequality by camping out in public parks. This makes no sense. They seem to feel that if they hang out and complain long enough then somehow things will change. Much like a child who holds their breath, their methods of protest are irrational, ineffective, and have no potential to actually change anything. By comparison look at the Tea Party. They petitioned the government, supported candidates they agree with, and protested in a way that was respectful, logical, and effective. No arrests, no drug use, no rape, no murders, no suicides. The Flea Party, on the other hand, has been plagued by all theses problems. Or have they!? (let me guess, its all just propaganda to make you side look bad). As far as the 'everybody gets a trophy culture', I think its a very real thing. The cult of unearned self esteem has led a generation of young people who don't know how to cope with failure and/or adversity. I won't go into detail, because I don't think you would ever agree with me anyway. I'm sorry my comments made you so angry.
Merry Christmas! (Am I allowed to say that on a leftist website?)
Happy non-denominational, winter-based, nothing-to-do-with Jesus, Day!
Happy Kwanzaa?
Anonymous
I think my comparison about a child holding its breath is valid. The occupy movement is trying to defeat economic inequality by camping out in public parks. This makes no sense. They seem to feel that if they hang out and complain long enough then somehow things will change. Much like a child who holds their breath, their methods of protest are irrational, ineffective, and have no potential to actually change anything. By comparison look at the Tea Party. They petitioned the government, supported candidates they agree with, and protested in a way that was respectful, logical, and effective. No arrests, no drug use, no rape, no murders, no suicides. The Flea Party, on the other hand, has been plagued by all theses problems. Or have they!? (let me guess, its all just propaganda to make you side look bad). As far as the 'everybody gets a trophy culture', I think its a very real thing. The cult of unearned self esteem has led a generation of young people who don't know how to cope with failure and/or adversity. I won't go into detail, because I don't think you would ever agree with me anyway. I'm sorry my comments made you so angry.
Merry Christmas! (Am I allowed to say that on a leftist website?)
Happy non-denominational, winter-based, nothing-to-do-with Jesus, Day!
Happy Kwanzaa?
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