Occupy Wall Street's brand new bumpy road - Order, chaos and a new world
Below is a slightly edited excerpt from an email written by a group facilitator participating in one of the urban Occupy actions (name withheld at their request). Their note reveals an emerging difficulty that could undermine the ability of such actions to hold their position and succeed in their mission. I then offer some thoughts on chaos and order that I hope will help them (and us all) deal well with such issues in these times of transition.
Following all that, I offer some new Occupy links, with excerpts from the linked articles. I hope you enjoy them. Blessings on this remarkable journey. Coheartedly,Tom ================ from a private communication:
Last night was my third night camping out at [my town's occupation site].... I am looking at holding a session - or series of sessions - on the matter of site safety and security.
Items have been stolen at our site, there are people who are drunk, high...noise continues late into the night...one person has already died near our site - it isn't clear if that person was connected to us. So, in a way this experiment in community is a mirror for the rest of the world - what happens to ideals if there isn't a strong, integral container* to give fruit to them.
In a way our GA (General Assembly) has been hijacked so that we cannot even address matters of security and safety. There is a small but vocal group that as i understand it believe that even if members of a Security Committee _suggest_ to others to consider matters of drunkenness, etc., this is just too much authority.
The good news is that there a lot of willingness to listen...and we've had a very good relationship with the police...thus far. I'm not sure we can even get to a conversation about what we want until there is something of a safe container to just live in - never mind dialogue about a future!!
Some definitions, offered by Tom Atlee:
- "Integral" in this case means including all parts and aspects of a whole in a healthy, functional way.
- "Container" in this case means a group environment whose characteristics and interactions influence the functioning of the group. Some facilitators talk about how to createstrong, safe or generative containers.
COMMENT BY TOM ATLEE
Chaos theory has interesting things to say about this familiar group dynamic - this resistance to "authority" in activist circles - that helps us look at it functionally instead of ideologically.
When a living system is too chaotic, it can't hold its form and dissolves into its environment - or, in other words, it dies. When a living system is too stuck in established order, it can't respond appropriately to changing circumstances and soon ceases to "fit" with its environment - and so it, too, dies. So Life - in its efforts to survive - tends to gravitate to various "middle paths" between the dysfunctional extremes of chaos and order. In relatively stable times, healthy living systems seek a functional level of order spiced with a certain amount of chaotic creativity and uncertainty. In times of change - when conditions are "far from equilibrium" - healthy living systems display a lot of openness, creativity, and responsive interaction, with just enough of the right kind of order to hold things together and channel the wildness productively.
If they do succeed at that, their innovations will be one of the most precious gifts possible to our emerging new world. ========== from Danny Schechter
The OWS Movement: More Than Meets the Eye
http://blog.buzzflash.com/node/13069 Al Jazeera spoke with Katie Davison, one of the activists who explained their way of looking at the world. "A candidate is sort of the old way of doing things," she said. "We're looking for a new way of doing things that is more participatory and more meaningful. What that looks like we're still figuring out." David Graeber, anthropologist, writer and protest organizer, told Al Jazeera why he thinks young people in the US have reached an especially frustrating point. "In making a demand, you're essentially recognizing the authority of the people who are going to carry it out," he said. "Our message is that the system that we have is broken. It doesn't work. People aren't even discussing the real problems Americans face." ============== from Eugene Robinson
http://www.registerguard.com/web/opinion/27011780-47/love-protests-economic-o... Occupy Wall Street and its kindred protests around the country are inept, incoherent and hopelessly quixotic. God, I love ’em. I love every little thing about these gloriously amateurish sit-ins. I love that they are spontaneous, leaderless and open-ended. I love that the protesters refuse to issue specific demands beyond a forceful call for economic justice. I also love that in Chicago — uniquely, thus far — demonstrators have ignored the rule about vagueness and are being ultra-specific about their goals. I love that there are no rules, just tendencies.... Already, after less than a month, commentators are asking whether the Occupy protests can be transformed into a coherent political force. For now, at least, I hope not. We have no shortage of politicians in this country. What we need is more passion and energy in the service of justice. We need to be forced to answer questions that sound simplistic or naive — questions about ethics and values. Detailed policy positions can wait. ============== from
http://news.yahoo.com/occupy-wall-street-protests-rankle-rich-193928054.html According to IRS tax data, anybody earning $380,354 or more qualifies for membership in the top 1 percent. That would include some of the better-paid traders at the Board of Trade. (IRS data shows, too, that the top 1 percent holds 35.6 percent of the nation's wealth...) =============== from a report on Occupy Seattle by William Dudley Bass
http://atthebrinkwithwilliamdudleybass.blogspot.com/2011/10/give-damn-occupy-... Guess where the largest concentration of police officers was positioned? Right in front of the entrance to Chase Manhattan. How ironic, too, as Bank of America just across the street was abandoned to the occupation. BoA didn’t seem popular with anyone today, not even the cops, especially after announcing its imposition of high debit card user fees after all that work to get people to switch from using credit cards to debit cards... No one stormed the bank, although the word was out the police in St. Louis, Missouri had to sent SWAT teams out to protect BoA from its customers.... I felt moved and inspired by my experience of Occupy Seattle. This is even so despite the at times chaotic and disorganized aspect of the protests, such as late starts, communication delays, and the lack of cohesion between some of the groups down there together. I experienced a wonder and an awe I had not felt in over a decade. Indeed, I felt hope, and I’m not one to usually waste time hoping. ================ from John Perkins
http://www.csrwire.com/blog/posts/168-the-sit-in-heard-round-the-world Some call for dismantling capitalism, but historically capitalism has proven to be a powerful tool for channeling creative minds into productive uses. However, in its current manifestation (the mutant form known as Predatory Capitalism) it has become extremely dangerous, a disaster—for everyone except those few who cling to the top of the economic pyramid. We must change this system and create a better world for the future. Instead of the current corporate goal of "maximizing profits regardless of the environmental and social costs," it is essential to insist upon a new goal for business: "Make a reasonable return on investment, but only within the context of creating a sustainable, just and peaceful world." ================= from We, the Ben & Jerry’s Board of Directors, compelled by our personal convictions and our Company’s mission and values, wish to express our deepest admiration to all of you who have initiated the non-violent Occupy Wall Street Movement and to those around the country who have joined in solidarity.... We realize that Occupy Wall Street is calling for systemic change. We support this call to action and are honored to join you in this call to take back our nation and democracy.