Folks, it's time for our first Guest Blogger! My new friend Charles Young was a star of the panel at the Revolutionary Recovery meeting we held at Left Forum 2012 this year. He made these amazing connections between radical politics, anarchism and the robust vibrant democratic practices of recovery, AA and sobriety. One of my fave quotes? A rough paraphrase is: "People feel disempowered and turn to drink and drugs not just for psychological reasons. People feel disempowered because they lack power."
Now, he emails me this amazing piece about the Democrats trying to skim energy off Occupy. How gross! What hypocrisy. And what a fine piece of writing this is - upfront, honest reporting of some oily, disempowering practices.
Originally this was published at Charles' blog, Thiscantbehappening.net.
Now, he emails me this amazing piece about the Democrats trying to skim energy off Occupy. How gross! What hypocrisy. And what a fine piece of writing this is - upfront, honest reporting of some oily, disempowering practices.
Originally this was published at Charles' blog, Thiscantbehappening.net.
Yes, The 99% Spring Is A
Fraud
Created 04/13/2012 - 11:44
by
Charles M. Young
With hindsight
gained by googling “MoveOn” and “co-opt” after the fact, I can’t claim that
nobody tried to warn me. Many websites with left and even liberal politics had
said in so many words, “Be wary of this organization called The 99% Spring. It
is a Trojan horse for the Democrats.” I just didn’t read that anywhere in a
timely fashion. I’ve had a lot of stuff on my plate lately. That’s my excuse.
And in my ignorance, I responded to some spam about “nonviolent direct action
training” organized by MoveOn and got invited to this 99% Spring thing on April
10 at the Goddard Riverside Community Center in Manhattan. Somebody even called
me all the way from San Francisco to make sure I was a sincere seeker on the
left and would be attending, along with 120,000 others in training sessions
around the country.
Which I did. The
meeting was a few blocks from where I live. The spam said it was “inspired by
Occupy Wall Street.” I wasn’t sure what that meant, but I was vaguely hoping
that whatever The 99% Spring was, it would start a chapter of Occupy Wall
Street on the Upper West Side, conveniently near my abode, and agitate for the
Democrats and MoveOn to move left.
The first clue
that my evening might go otherwise was the sign-up table, where there were a
bunch of Obama buttons for sale and one sign-up sheet for the oddly named
Community Free Democrats (are they free of community?), which is the local
Democratic clubhouse. That killed the “inspired by Occupy Wall Street” vibe
right there. No piles of literature from a zillion different groups, as there
had been in Zuccotti Park. No animated arguments among Marxists, anarchists,
progressives, punks, engaged Buddhists, anti-war libertarians and what have
you. Just Obama buttons, which didn’t appear to be selling.
This
is what co-optation looks like
Inside the hall,
it looked like an alumni reunion for the 1966 Fifth Avenue Vietnam Peace
Parade. Almost all the 150 or so people were 55-80 years old. The ones I talked
to expressed curiosity about Occupy Wall Street and enthusiasm about
“nonviolent direct action” but didn’t have the knees or the ears for full
participation in OWS activities in the financial district.
A large man with
long wavy hair combed back started the presentation with a stirring call
for...the meeting to be off the record. He didn’t want any stories that would
violate anyone’s privacy, and if there were any lurking journalists, they
weren’t allowed to use any names and they must see him afterwards for further
instruction on the ground rules. This struck an even more dysphoric note with
the crowd than the Obama buttons.
WTF Thought #1:
This was a public event ostensibly to convince members of the public to
engage in behavior that challenged the legitimacy of government authority in
public and might cause angry police to beat the public crap out of them. Why
would anyone risk that without trying to get publicity for their cause?
Nonviolent direct action that no one knows about is like jerking off. It might
make you feel better, but you’re not changing the world.
WTF Thought #2:
Transparency is the only protection that nonviolent people have against police
spies and provocateurs and other infiltrators. Occupy Wall Street does a pretty
good job with transparency. An organization claiming to be inspired by OWS but
shunning transparency is deeply suspicious.
WTF Thought #3: Washington press corp rules for a meeting on nonviolent direct action?
WTF Thought #4: I
actually wasn’t there with the idea of writing about it, but neither did I
agree to anything, so there was no agreement.
WTF Thought #5: The name of the large man with the wavy hair was Marc Landis.
Landis is a District
Leader for the Democrats, who were paying for use of the meeting room. He is
running for City Council. According to his law firm’s website his areas of
experience are: “Real Estate, Banking & Finance, Corporate & Business
Law, Securities & Private Placement, Fund Formation & Investment
Management Group...” His Facebook page, which is geared for his City Council
campaign, makes it sound like his specialty is pro bono community work. I don’t
know. He might be a nice guy, but it doesn’t take a lot of intuition to wonder
if he’s really been finding a lot of inspiration in Occupy Wall Street. He’s a
corporate lawyer. I can think of no reason for him to demand that the meeting be
off the record other than he and his party don’t want to be publicly associated
with anything radical, even it’s a pseudo-radical front group meant to steer
people away from the truly radical Occupy Wall Street and into pointless
activities that don’t embarrass Obama.
Next they showed a
video that invited us “to tell our story” so that The 99% Spring could post us
online along with hundreds of other people who had been foreclosed, bankrupted,
lost their medical insurance or whatever. It appeared they all wanted to raise
taxes, so that the rich would “pay their fair share.”
It was
sanctimonious. It was supplicating before power. The audience looked like it
wanted to puke.
Next some guy
whose name I didn’t catch gave an astonishingly simple-minded lecture on the
history of American radicalism since the populists. “This might be okay for
Iowa, but not the Upper West Side,” said a woman near me.
That’s an insult
to Iowa, but let me explain about the Upper West Side. It used to be a
liberal-to-radical neighborhood that was ferocious in its support for civil
rights and the anti-war movement. Its nickname was the Upper Left Side, and
people here could read three biographies of Leon Trotsky before breakfast.
Disastrously, it has become the most desirable living space in Manhattan, and
Wall Street/corporate/real estate weenies have been taking over. But a
significant radical remnant remains, thanks to rent control laws that Democrats
seem to understand are necessary to preserve their voters.
“And then in the
50s, we had the civil right movement...” the guy droned.
“ Uh, I think we
should conclude the lecture and break up into groups to discuss our nonviolent
direct action training,” said Landis. “We seem to be losing people.” A lot of
them, too.
So the hundred
remaining Upper Left Siders split into four groups for discussion. My group
happened to be led by Landis, who directed the 35 of us to sit in a circle and
identify ourselves with an explanation of why we were there. I was about #15 in
the circle and the people who preceded me all appeared to have no experience
with Occupy Wall Street and wanted to get involved. When it was my turn I said
that Zuccotti Park was the most entertaining place to be in Manhattan for a
couple months last fall and I hoped it would revive. And I said that the other
thing I liked was that it was to the left of the Democratic Party and was
pushing it from outside. There had been some mention of “the repeal of the
Glass Steagall Act during the 90s” and I pointed out that it was Bill Clinton,
a Democrat, who deregulated Wall Street.
“Excuse me,” said
Landis. “We have a limited amount of time and a lot to discuss. We need to let
everyone speak.”
I’ve thought about
that a lot. I don’t believe I spoke for more than a minute, but I habitually
obey the rules in a group, so I shut up. In retrospect, I was censored. I
should have demanded a discussion of the true purpose of The 99% Spring and why
Obama’s Department of Homeland Security orchestrated the violent destruction of
hundreds of nonviolent Occupy camps around the country last fall.
As it was, we
finished going around the circle. Everyone was a teacher or writer or connected
with the labor movement. Wisconsin came up a few times. Landis asked what kind
of a world we wanted to see. Someone said, “Socialism” and Landis said the
topic for discussion was now how to plan for a “hypothetical direct action.”
Every time somebody brought up something that was actually happening, Landis
insisted that our agenda was set and we were only discussing hypothetical
situations. So we talked about hypothetically withdrawing money from a
hypothetical evil bank, or hypothetically stopping the hypothetical fracking in
the Catskills that is going to poison New York City’s hypothetical drinking
water.
“What about May
1?” said a retired professor.
“What about it?”
said Landis.
“I heard that
Occupy Wall Street was calling for a general strike. They’re planning actions
all around midtown and they’re saying that nobody should go to work that day.”
“I don’t know
anything about that,” said Landis. “We’re talking about hypothetical situations
here.”
And so it went
from 6:30 to 9:30 last Tuesday night. Over half the crowd left early. Most of
those who stayed appeared to be angry and mystified that they had received no
training whatever in nonviolent direct action. I doubt that the Democrats or
MoveOn succeeded in co-opting anyone, and I predict that they will be inventing
more dreary front groups as the election year grinds onward. "Front
groups, not issues!" should be Obama's rallying cry.
“I’m taking the
subway to Wall Street,” said a guy in his 20s (probably the only guy in his
20s) as he walked out the door. “That’s where the action is. People are
sleeping on the sidewalk there. Apparently the police can’t arrest you if you
take up less than half the sidewalk. Go to Maydaynyc.org [1] if you want
to find out about the general strike.”
Source URL: http://thiscantbehappening.net/node/1126
Links:
[1] http://www.maydaynyc.org
[1] http://www.maydaynyc.org
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