This raises the question: is Occupy a real social movement or one still struggling to be born? The answer to this question helps determine what strategy the Occupy movement should take, what demands it should fight for and the level of confrontation of its actions. If you believe that the Occupy movement is still struggling for a mass base, as this writer does, then you’ll likely agree that Occupy needs to immediately focus on broadening its base and wage militant struggles for demands that will bring in the wider working class community.
Such a campaign may not at first appear as radical as some Occupy actions, and will likely draw accusations of “reformism” (the Democrats cannot be lumped into the reformist category, because they are not advocating pro-worker reforms; they are basically for maintaining the corporate dominated status quo by rolling back previously won reforms). Some “reformist” demands might include: a massive public Jobs program, Save Social Security and Medicare, End the Wars, Tax the Rich and Corporations, Medicare for All, etc.
This is the reformist-revolutionary paradox. It may seem bizarre to many radicals that previous revolutionary movements were won on the basis of a few basic demands: the Spanish revolution in the 1930s mobilized the 99% over land and freedom. The Russian revolution of 1917 aroused virtually the entire population with the demands for bread, peace, land and rule by the majority.
Countless other revolutionary movements united around a few, seemingly modest demands. This is because there are few things that directly effect the majority of working people enough that they will assemble in the streets to fight. In times of economic crisis these types of demands have revolutionary potential, since they are not freely granted by the employers nor their government, but must be fought for.
Occupy has yet to win over the majority of the population, or even one-third. There have been several nationwide polls that support this. And although polls are not a perfect way to measure public support, they cannot be ignored (as President Bush insisted on doing). The following conclusion was drawn from a recent USA Today/ Gallup poll:
“Americans’ views about the Occupy Wall Street movement have changed little since mid-October, with most Americans taking a neutral stance toward it.”
Polls aside, it seems obvious that most people in America are on the fence as to whether or not to support or reject Occupy. These people cannot be dismissed as Conservatives or “apathetic.” Many of them will be willing to fight with Occupy in the streets, as some unions have, if they see Occupy’s fight as their own. Occupy must demonstrate to the 99% that it is serious about waging a real struggle for working class demands, since tens of millions of working people are suffering and would rally to a movement they saw as providing real hope, not merely moments of bravery combined with anti-1% rhetoric.
The USA Today poll also showed a concerning shift of support against the tactics employed by the Occupy movement, as did a poll by Public Policy Polling (PPP). A pollster for PPP concluded:
“I don’t think the bad poll numbers for Occupy Wall Street reflect Americans being unconcerned with wealth inequality… [but]The controversy over the protests is starting to drown out the actual message.”
This is almost certainly true, and may soon become critically important. Since the majority of people in the U.S. are still waiting to see if their interests will be represented by Occupy, organizing smaller confrontational/radical actions over more radical demands that do not connect with most working people may only deepen the above divide. Such concerns may seem naturally repulsive to many Occupiers, who deeply want “change now” — an understandable frustration. But this impatience can be self-destructive if more radical acts separate the current Occupy activists from the wider community. The media is doing its best to drive a wedge between the radical occupiers and the wider population of working people, giving them opportunities to use this wedge tactic should be avoided.
The police are also driving this wedge deep, using an excessive police presence combined with excessive force to frighten average people from attending demonstrations that include civil disobedience or other confrontational tactics. And although the police deserve total blame for their tactics, Occupiers must out-flank them with a political strategy that leans towards organizing massive events, so that the police’s power is muted and the media cannot portray Occupy as a minority of “extremist” activists playing cat and mouse with the police.
The police and politicians are basing their level of repression against Occupy on the level of popularity that the movement has with the wider population; many of the Occupy camps were torn down only after demonstrations became smaller and anti-Occupy coverage influenced the still-indecisive majority of people. Occupy must use the same barometer as the police and politicians for the opposite purpose: successful actions should be judged by whether or not they connect with the majority of the population and increasingly draw them into rallies and actions of massive numbers. By implementing this approach to organizing it will become unmistakable that working people stand with Occupy and Occupy with them. Together they are one.
The Occupy movement has inspired people around the country and world by opening debates about inequality that were shut before. But in order to grow into a democratic revolutionary movement, the working majority of the population must join in, requiring that Occupy broadcast a message based on concrete working-class demands. Working people instinctively know that their demands can only be won by a massive movement, that the power of the 1% can only be challenged by the prolonged mobilization and militant action of the majority of the 99%.
Working people also want “change now,” since they are deeply affected by the jobs, housing and health care crisis. They are not apathetic, just not convinced that Occupy is fighting for them; they want to see if this fight is a serious fight or just a symbolic one.
Shamus Cooke is a social service worker, trade unionist and writer for Workers Action (www.workerscompass.org)
Notes
http://www.gallup.com/poll/150896/support-occupy-unchanged-criticize-approach.aspx
http://www.publicpolicypolling.com/main/2011/11/occupy-wall-street-favor-fading.html Public Policy Polling



12 Comments

shamuscooke,
“This raises the question: is Occupy a real social movement or one still struggling to be born?”
What you are witnessing is the beginning of a “real” revolution in this country, just as in all the world over.
Then you write several graphs about how the democracy movement has failed to encompass the concerns of working people, is polling poorly, and is doing an even worse job of messaging.
This is not a social movement, this is not a political campaign, this is not a Madison Ave. “Reach Out and Touch someone moment”. This is the beginning of a revolution born organically out of need and spread instantaneously and spontaneously across the country, by the very working people you cite.
It needn’t worry itself about being found wanting when measured by your metrics or your political analysis. In point of fact, such faults as you cite should be worn as a badge of honor IMO.
“The controversy over the protests is starting to drown out the actual message. This is almost certainly true….”
Actually, that declarative statement doesn’t even have a passing acquaintance with “the truth”.
“Working people also want “change now,” since they are deeply affected by the jobs, housing and health care crisis. They are not apathetic, just not convinced that Occupy is fighting for them; they want to see if this fight is a serious fight or just a symbolic one.”
Here’s an idea Shamus, rather than expending such prodigious effort composing concern troll-like soliloquies…..go Occupy something.
Regardless of where your “trade-unionist” sensibilities and the pontifications engendered there from, lead you to attach your endorsement……know this……….the revolution isn’t going to require your endorsement……..it will move forward. You Shamus, are the one who is running out of time to do the right thing here in mid December of 2011.
Fellow FireDog Daveparts once ended a piece by saying “Pick a side, or one will pick you.”
The revolution has begun. It has already become a long cold winter, and the trolls have morphed into undercover plants, and the weakest among us have fallen into fraternization and then subversion…… simultaneously the most transfixingly repulsive thing I have ever witnessed.
No matter. The Spring will see us rise up a thousand times stronger.
If any of this sounds angry Shamus, that is because it is angry. I was a “good” union hand. Worked in the underground mines for 18 years. After that on big infrastructure topside, all across the country. I have watched in disgust as the unions repeatedly failed me and my brethren for thirty years now through shear ineptitude, or lack of balls…..but most often because of corruption.
“The irony is that only a truly mass movement of working people has the potential to achieve the various demands of the Occupy movement.”
I think you must be irony impaired Shamus. This is what irony looks like :
From Richard D. Wolff in The Guardian UK on Monday:
“Consider the irony: governments today impose austerity on the rest of us because “the markets” demand no less to keep credit flowing to those governments. Behind this dubious abstraction – “the markets” – hide the chief lenders to governments. Those are the same global banks that received the government bailouts paid for by massive government borrowing since 2007. “Thieves,” mutter the Occupy Wall Street folk – and who can blame them?”
Stay Strong and take care of one another.
Time’s Person of the Year…
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/12/14/the-protester-named-times-person-of-year/
Shamus, what happened in Oakland on Monday where 1,500 people marched at 5:30 AM in the rain, followed by upwards of 10,000 that same afternoon to shut down the morning and evening shifts at the Port of Oakland puts the lie to much of what you said. In spite of massive efforts on the part of local media to convince people not to participate, we were able to draw significant numbers to this action and to similar actions up and down the West Coast and inland as well. This is just a prelude, a way to gear people up for a general strike. Can you think of a better way to address the needs of working-class people?
Oh, and like Robert said: The revolution has begun. And it is going to be radical.
Shamus cooke, I agree with one of your points, and that is that it will take massive numbers of us to make this nascent revolution grow into a full-fledged one, and that, as Robert Dumas says, will likely come in the spring as the depression deepens so far that the media won’t be able to distract us from knowing it, feeling it, and resenting the fuck out of it, as they sell us newer or bigger enemies in any of the fabricated ‘wars-on-anything’ that sell news.
You make a case for simple ‘demands’ having fueled other successful revolutions, but in a way you are making the case for the bumfuzzled media and talking head pundits who seriously don’t get what is most brilliant about this movement: there are no leaders, everyone has a voice in a GA (cumbersome as that’s proving), and that as soon as there are a few people ‘in the movement’ who write manifestos or make lists of demands, the media grab all the oxygen by reporting, for instance, that ten NYC Occupiers will soon meet with the House Progressive Caucus, and declare them ‘reasonable’, tra la la…and willing to ‘negotiate’ within the framework of the same government whose corruption, immorality and utter disregard for honest, struggling citizens makes this uprising a *duty* to see through to the end. Retreat is unthinkable; a chance won’t come again in our lifetimes.
http://news.firedoglake.com/2011/12/13/congressional-progressive-caucus-introduces-restore-the-american-dream-for-the-99-act/
I read at Black Agenda Report a lot, and there are some pretty smart Leftie writers there. But lately they have focused on how #Occupy must make it clear to people of color (red, black and brown) that the movement not only addresses, but makes center, their struggles. And I agree that Occupying Harlem and fighting gentrification and spotlighting the incarceration-to-silence so many political prisoners of color, and the ubiquity of blacks being killed and beaten by police while the white world largely doesn’t notice… could be great, and needs to happen as the movement gets its bearings more thoroughly.
But I also wonder if those people of color shouldn’t just *choose themselves* to join the movement, help guide it, and show us the many ways we of the 99% are quickly becoming The Disregarded that people of color have been since this continent was accidentally ‘discovered’. How many are still wedded in Stockholm Syndrome to Obama and the Democratic Party that no longer gives a fig for their welfare?
Did rank and file union members allow themselves to be sold out by the national bosses and their unshakeable allegiance to the power circles of the Democratic Party? I dunno, but I sure am glad to see the locals raising a ruckus now, and enjoying the support of Occupy! They are *choosing themselves* to rise up and fight back.
Shorter: IMO, it’s not a ‘demands’ movement; it’s a democracy/justice movement; a right v. wrong movement; a *moral* movement that’s not just about wealth inequality per se, but about the extractive economic practices of a government tied with multinationals that are choking the life out of the rest of us. And more will be choked come spring, and will *choose themselves* to resist. Some already feel that they have nothing left to lose, or they are acting for others in empathy. Or both.
Were I you, and this concerned, I’d spend my time and organizational efforts creating a system of economic support to aid striking workers in the national strikes that will happen later. In the 1930s it was said that it took three or four families having the backs of each striking worker.
And by the way, I read four or five pieces at your website. One vocabulary quibble: ‘cavalry’ are mounted soldiers; ‘calvary’ was the hill on which Christ was crucified…just sayin’…it’s a pet peeve of mine, but just one of many. ;o)
And I’m recommending this so more folks might join the discussion.
And will you visit the thread? Or did you just blanket post it all over the web? Inquiring minds…want to know…
Morning, Wendy – I was wondering the exact same thing. And I appreciate your analysis of the relationship of Occupy and people of color. That’s a thorny issue but I have faith that people of all colors will “choose themselves” as the real options for justice continue to dwindle.
Does #Occupy really need to prove anything to Black people? There are quite a few of them at Occupy LA.
In Oakland, the narrative goes that white anarchists from outside Oakland started the movement and that it is not inclusive; we’ve had big, ugly debates about renaming it “Decolonize Oakland” and doing more outreach to communities of color. My personal observation (from my acknowledged place of white privilege) is that most gatherings of OO reflect the demographic of our city pretty well. And one of the most active and radical of our affinity groups is the Tactical Action Committee, composed of several young, intensely committed African American men and a young Latina, among others. They have become one of the most prominent faces of our group and it was because, as Wendy said, they chose themselves to be.
Shamus, you must have missed my diary over at the Kos about this matter:
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/11/22/1038927/-Some-questions-for-the-reformist-Occupiers?via=user
No “truly mass movement of working people” or “militant campaign fighting for these immediate demands” is going to succeed against the obtuseness of the 1% and their paid servants in Congress and the White House. The entire government is against us, and the symbolic opposition is restricted to a few “nice” people like Barbara Lee or Bernie Sanders. The point of the demonstrations appears to be showing just that — that mere revolt is not going to change them.
So forget the dream of immediate reformism prompted by #Occupy. It’s all very fine to be supportive of the reformists and their demands, and definitely keep doing what you’re doing in that regard (insofar as it brings more people in), but none of that is actually relevant.
The only thing about #Occupy that lays the real ground for a better future is its enactment of a better society now. This starts with consensus process and the projects for an alternate society that come along with #Occupy — withdraw your money from the banks, occupy foreclosed homes, begin a People’s Collective University, and so on. The ideology thing will sort itself out when people figure out how bad it really is.
There is no dichotomy: when the Establishment is utterly, inalterably reactionary, what was reformist before becomes revolutionary. Look at Wisconsin.
Right.
Atlanta, too; I think New Jersey. Uh-oh; just checked their new site, and they have eight demands for Congress. Ooops. ;o)
‘Prove anything?’ I didn’t say so, cassiodorus.
But I can see that people of color have been pretty thoroughly marginalized by ‘Liberals’ over the decades, and in the putative ‘Lefty’ blogosphere except for the Outrage du Jour. I may have written diaries about minority issues and events twenty or twenty-five times over the past few years, and that’s probably more that most anglo diarists and bloggers; dunno for sure., and it’s not enough, although many issues affect us across the board.
Native American issues are woven through my life, reading, music, and family, so I know those better, and how their degradation is becoming OUR cavalier degradation and de facto *punishment* by the greater Vampire Squid. Thus, I loved it sooo much when the Tohono O’odom and their sister tribe Occupied the ALEC annual conference in Scottsdale, AZ recently. It was far, far smaller than they’d hoped, but grand nonetheless. Buffy says it best here:
“Money junkies all over the world
Trample us on their way to the bank
They run in every race
Windego
Third-worlders see it first:
The dynamite, the dozers, the cancer and the acid rain
The corporate caterpillars come into our backyards
And turn the world to pocket change
Reservations are the nuclear frontline;
Uranium poisoning kills
We’re starving in a handful of gluttons
We’re drowning in their gravy spills”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hX_AhL2SsUs
And I think that now it’s clearly *all of us* who are being dynamited and dozered, some acknowledgement of that might just be in order.
I’d like to see this movement take on a flavor of Social Gospel that was so prevalent during the civil rights movement; I plan to write about it a bit in my next Tipping Points to Revolution piece. To MLK and Malcolm, morality was key to positive change, and we’re working on it, but need to extend it, IMO. Like the Gas working on homeless and hungry issues.
Oops; just got a call, and I have to sign off.
wd