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Politics: How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the OWS Protests
Politics: How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the OWS Protests
By Matt Taibbi
November 10, 2011

I have a confession to make. At first, I misunderstood Occupy Wall Street.

The first few times I went down to Zuccotti Park, I came away with mixed feelings. I loved the energy and was amazed by the obvious organic appeal of the movement, the way it was growing on its own. But my initial impression was that it would not be taken very seriously by the Citibanks and Goldman Sachs of the world. You could put 50,000 angry protesters on Wall Street, 100,000 even, and Lloyd Blankfein is probably not going to break a sweat. He knows he's not going to wake up tomorrow and see Cornel West or Richard Trumka running the Federal Reserve. He knows modern finance is a giant mechanical parasite that only an expert surgeon can remove. Yell and scream all you want, but he and his fellow financial Frankensteins are the only ones who know how to turn the machine off.

That's what I was thinking during the first few weeks of the protests. But I'm beginning to see another angle. Occupy Wall Street was always about something much bigger than a movement against big banks and modern finance. It's about providing a forum for people to show how tired they are not just of Wall Street, but everything. This is a visceral, impassioned, deep-seated rejection of the entire direction of our society, a refusal to take even one more step forward into the shallow commercial abyss of phoniness, short-term calculation, withered idealism and intellectual bankruptcy that American mass society has become. If there is such a thing as going on strike from one's own culture, this is it. And by being so broad in scope and so elemental in its motivation, it's flown over the heads of many on both the right and the left.

The right-wing media wasted no time in cannon-blasting the movement with its usual idiotic cliches, casting Occupy Wall Street as a bunch of dirty hippies who should get a job and stop chewing up Mike Bloomberg's police overtime budget with their urban sleepovers. Just like they did a half-century ago, when the debate over the Vietnam War somehow stopped being about why we were brutally murdering millions of innocent Indochinese civilians and instead became a referendum on bralessness and long hair and flower-child rhetoric, the depraved flacks of the right-wing media have breezily blown off a generation of fraud and corruption and market-perverting bailouts, making the whole debate about the protesters themselves – their hygiene, their "envy" of the rich, their "hypocrisy."

The protesters, chirped Supreme Reichskank Ann Coulter, needed three things: "showers, jobs and a point." Her colleague Charles Krauthammer went so far as to label the protesters hypocrites for having iPhones. OWS, he said, is "Starbucks-sipping, Levi's-clad, iPhone-clutching protesters [denouncing] corporate America even as they weep for Steve Jobs, corporate titan, billionaire eight times over." Apparently, because Goldman and Citibank are corporations, no protester can ever consume a corporate product – not jeans, not cellphones and definitely not coffee – if he also wants to complain about tax money going to pay off some billionaire banker's bets against his own crappy mortgages.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the political spectrum, there were scads of progressive pundits like me who wrung our hands with worry that OWS was playing right into the hands of assholes like Krauthammer. Don't give them any ammunition! we counseled. Stay on message! Be specific! We were all playing the Rorschach-test game with OWS, trying to squint at it and see what we wanted to see in the movement. Viewed through the prism of our desire to make near-term, within-the-system changes, it was hard to see how skirmishing with cops in New York would help foreclosed-upon middle-class families in Jacksonville and San Diego.

What both sides missed is that OWS is tired of all of this. They don't care what we think they're about, or should be about. They just want something different.

We're all born wanting the freedom to imagine a better and more beautiful future. But modern America has become a place so drearily confining and predictable that it chokes the life out of that built-in desire. Everything from our pop culture to our economy to our politics feels oppressive and unresponsive. We see 10 million commercials a day, and every day is the same life-killing chase for money, money and more money; the only thing that changes from minute to minute is that every tick of the clock brings with it another space-age vendor dreaming up some new way to try to sell you something or reach into your pocket. The relentless sameness of the two-party political system is beginning to feel like a Jacob's Ladder nightmare with no end; we're entering another turn on the four-year merry-go-round, and the thought of having to try to get excited about yet another minor quadrennial shift in the direction of one or the other pole of alienating corporate full-of-shitness is enough to make anyone want to smash his own hand flat with a hammer.

If you think of it this way, Occupy Wall Street takes on another meaning. There's no better symbol of the gloom and psychological repression of modern America than the banking system, a huge heartless machine that attaches itself to you at an early age, and from which there is no escape. You fail to receive a few past-due notices about a $19 payment you missed on that TV you bought at Circuit City, and next thing you know a collector has filed a judgment against you for $3,000 in fees and interest. Or maybe you wake up one morning and your car is gone, legally repossessed by Vulture Inc., the debt-buying firm that bought your loan on the Internet from Chase for two cents on the dollar. This is why people hate Wall Street. They hate it because the banks have made life for ordinary people a vicious tightrope act; you slip anywhere along the way, it's 10,000 feet down into a vat of razor blades that you can never climb out of.

That, to me, is what Occupy Wall Street is addressing. People don't know exactly what they want, but as one friend of mine put it, they know one thing: FUCK THIS SHIT! We want something different: a different life, with different values, or at least a chance at different values.

There was a lot of snickering in media circles, even by me, when I heard the protesters talking about how Liberty Square was offering a model for a new society, with free food and health care and so on. Obviously, a bunch of kids taking donations and giving away free food is not a long-term model for a new economic system.

But now, I get it. People want to go someplace for at least five minutes where no one is trying to bleed you or sell you something. It may not be a real model for anything, but it's at least a place where people are free to dream of some other way for human beings to get along, beyond auctioned "democracy," tyrannical commerce and the bottom line.

We're a nation that was built on a thousand different utopian ideas, from the Shakers to the Mormons to New Harmony, Indiana. It was possible, once, for communities to experiment with everything from free love to an end to private property. But nowadays even the palest federalism is swiftly crushed. If your state tries to place tariffs on companies doing business with some notorious human-rights-violator state – like Massachusetts did, when it sought to bar state contracts to firms doing business with Myanmar – the decision will be overturned by some distant global bureaucracy like the WTO. Even if 40 million Californians vote tomorrow to allow themselves to smoke a joint, the federal government will never permit it. And the economy is run almost entirely by an unaccountable oligarchy in Lower Manhattan that absolutely will not sanction any innovations in banking or debt forgiveness or anything else that might lessen its predatory influence.

And here's one more thing I was wrong about: I originally was very uncomfortable with the way the protesters were focusing on the NYPD as symbols of the system. After all, I thought, these are just working-class guys from the Bronx and Staten Island who have never seen the inside of a Wall Street investment firm, much less had anything to do with the corruption of our financial system.

But I was wrong. The police in their own way are symbols of the problem. All over the country, thousands of armed cops have been deployed to stand around and surveil and even assault the polite crowds of Occupy protesters. This deployment of law-enforcement resources already dwarfs the amount of money and manpower that the government "committed" to fighting crime and corruption during the financial crisis. One OWS protester steps in the wrong place, and she immediately has police roping her off like wayward cattle. But in the skyscrapers above the protests, anything goes.

This is a profound statement about who law enforcement works for in this country. What happened on Wall Street over the past decade was an unparalleled crime wave. Yet at most, maybe 1,500 federal agents were policing that beat – and that little group of financial cops barely made any cases at all. Yet when thousands of ordinary people hit the streets with the express purpose of obeying the law and demonstrating their patriotism through peaceful protest, the police response is immediate and massive. There have already been hundreds of arrests, which is hundreds more than we ever saw during the years when Wall Street bankers were stealing billions of dollars from retirees and mutual-fund holders and carpenters unions through the mass sales of fraudulent mortgage-backed securities.

It's not that the cops outside the protests are doing wrong, per se, by patrolling the parks and sidewalks. It's that they should be somewhere else. They should be heading up into those skyscrapers and going through the file cabinets to figure out who stole what, and from whom. They should be helping people get their money back. Instead, they're out on the street, helping the Blankfeins of the world avoid having to answer to the people they ripped off.

People want out of this fiendish system, rigged to inexorably circumvent every hope we have for a more balanced world. They want major changes. I think I understand now that this is what the Occupy movement is all about. It's about dropping out, if only for a moment, and trying something new, the same way that the civil rights movement of the 1960s strived to create a "beloved community" free of racial segregation. Eventually the Occupy movement will need to be specific about how it wants to change the world. But for right now, it just needs to grow. And if it wants to sleep on the streets for a while and not structure itself into a traditional campaign of grassroots organizing, it should. It doesn't need to tell the world what it wants. It is succeeding, for now, just by being something different.

Related
Photos: Occupy Wall Street**
Photos: Rock Occupies Wall Street**
Photos: Occupy Wall Street Timeline**
Obama, Occupy Wall Street and the Rebirth of the Left
Matt Taibbi's Advice to the Occupy Wall Street Protesters

This story is from the November 24, 2011 issue of Rolling Stone.


**This content is not available on the mobile site. Click here to view it on the website.
Post Comment
Millions of civillian casualties at the hands of Americans? You are playing fast and loose with some numbers. Just slipping that into the article? What's your source journalist?
Posted by Remy December 1, 2011, 8:14 pm
EE0305 - You're completely generalizing the movement as a whole. Sure, there are plenty upper middle class, college-attending brats involved.. as there were in the counterculture of the Vietnam Era, as well as the Civil Rights Movement, and even the abolition of slavery. There has always been a moral gentility that gets involved only to feel good about themselves or to prove how much they care about others. This is not all-encompassing of the demographic of OWS. Oklahoma, for example, is surprisingly active, with 7 publicized Occupations to date. I have seen a few privileged, whiny degenerates but far more middle and lower class folks - some with kids, some retired, some in the fire department, some who teach, some who are just sick of being exploited by the credit industry, the housing market, the false promise of financial security from so-called sound investments, and the list goes on. As a college student, I realize that we aren't the most important part of the 99% we herald. I am involved with OWS not because I hope to get my loans forgiven or because I demand free education (though it would be nice) but because these folks don't have the time or the resources to dedicate to OWS and they're the ones who need it the most. They need policy change, I want a shift in American thought, and OWS is the beginning of both. We all win when we work together for one another - that's the point of all of this.
Posted by KirstenOccupy November 22, 2011, 8:53 pm
Too many within society today are in a survival mode, opportunities are grim except for a privileged few, and community is breaking down. OWS is the restoration of a sense of community, the breaking down of barriers, and a movement which says we will no longer accept oppression and we will challenge apathy. -Dan L. Edmunds, Ed.D. http://selfgrowth.com/experts/dan_edmunds.html
Posted by DrDanLEdmunds November 15, 2011, 8:40 am
The cops have always been the Praetorian Guard. There duty is to the Emperor plain and simple. From shooting coal miners, to Bull Connor and his dogs, to the Oakland Police of today, it remains the same.
Posted by NastyHabits November 13, 2011, 8:18 pm
Protest is an effect tool of expression.Executing a plan of action is a tool of change. OWS has made a point, Tea Party made the same point. DIFFERENCE: The Tea Party jumped into the system and in short order affected the change it wanted (to what degree is up to history.) OWS need to shed the Woodstock nostalgia crap and find candidates that will galvinize the populace,this time not based on the shallow meaningless metric of race but rather ON A PLAN OF ACTION TOWARDS A FAIRER SOCIETY. The first candidate that will, in a meaningful way, rein in the Banks and Corporations AND the entitlement Mess will be the truest expression of what America could be.
Posted by pskurnick November 13, 2011, 10:45 am
This article captures very succinctly what disaffection ails the West and why. There *are* stages to grief and confronting our collective shadows and the first may well be to just say F**k this s**t! From there, we can move on to constructive means to remake ourselves. But awareness is a huge first step. Btw, clearly @EE0305 doesn't understand the article. The author makes it perfectly clear that this isn't about entitlement other than perhaps the entitlement of the overlords to f**k us 99% in as many ways to Sunday as they--the 1%--can. Grow up and stop spouting right-wing tea party drivel, will ya? Talk about a capitalist TOOL!
Posted by BC November 13, 2011, 6:08 am
In summary from this article OWS is looking for change in general? No political parties, no big business, free food and services for everyone, no law enforcement, no formal currency...did I miss anything? So basically OWS is protesting to develop an anarchistic, utopian society? Why would you worry when you look at it like that? Its basically like living with your parents and they provide you food, shelter, health care and you get to do whatever you want without harsh consequence. Hmmm. First,there are things that need to be changed with our society but anarchy will not work. There will always be law whether we want it or not. You take away what's in place now and it will simply be replaced with fear born tyranny. It would be nice to imagine that we would all settle in to a new system and immediately be nice and neighborly to one another but it won't happen. Second, Utopia will not exist on this earth, either. This society would provide free everything and anything for all people while living a village type camaraderie? Again, its a nice idea but there is a percentage of the 99% that aren't protesting and a large number of those people are just as morally corrupt as the 1%. OWS needs to really analyze the core issues at hand - human morality. You're never going to have an idealistic society when more than half of the society have morals that are less than ideal. There are far too many people with vastly opposing views to ever have a society with no law and where we can live by trading goods and services. I'm sorry but this article has not changed my opinion of OWS protesting. I still see it as a movement born out of a notion of entitlement. I see a movement of people who want everything but don't want to have people organize it for them or tell them what to do. I see people who have gone through hard times and feel that our lack of societal compassion can be cured by forcing people to implement a socialist society. Its really hard to feel compassion for someone who is forcing me to live a certain way...do you hear the hypocrisy? When I see a Harvard undergrad complaining about the elitist behavior and attitude of the 1%, I cannot help but find this amusing. How likely will it be that this Harvard undergrad will be working at a non-profit after graduation. Not to mention he's getting a degree from a highly prestigious school which I am more that certain he chose to attend. How elitist is that attitude and behavior?
Posted by EE0305 November 12, 2011, 4:20 pm
Good aticle, and yes, we're sick and tired of what has happened to Main St because of Wall St's greed and the politicians that let it happen!
Posted by greydove November 11, 2011, 9:34 pm
Thank you for this article!
Posted by Taschmal November 11, 2011, 8:20 pm
I've been following the Occupy Wall Street protest for a while now, and even visited the protest site once myself. This is easily the most insightful, thoughtful, and interesting article of the protest I've read yet.
Posted by ChangeCraver November 11, 2011, 7:12 pm

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