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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

On the People's Occupation Movement and the Dangers of Co-optation

A Brief Interpretive History

There is a genuine energy of justifiably impatient revolutionary zeal in the air, and it's been a long time coming.  The revolutionary conversations people are having together in the public squares, addressing subject matter that has been all but barred from public discussion for decades it seems, are all colliding to create the kind of social, cultural, and political shift that America and the world has been waiting on for a very long time.

As we all bask in the glow of our recently relocated courage to question authority, we must remember one stubborn thing: That this movement, however one chooses to identify it, is a people's movement; a movement spawned not, as some would have you believe, by Adbusters, George Soros, and especially not by Move On or any other front group for the Democratic Party, nor was it completely spontaneous for that matter.  It was brought up from the depths by a small group of people who have strategically worked for many months behind the scenes to develop the concepts that ultimately led to the movement we are now witnessing in its infancy.  Only when thousands of people decided to join these activists and organizers, I being one of them, in realizing their planned occupations that you witnessed the birth of what can only be called the Occupation Movement.

Regardless of what is reported in the American press, and for that matter, of what is being said by the protesters themselves at the various occupations around the country, the larger movement - beyond simply that of the Occupation Movement - has been in the making for a while.  There has been a long list of intense underground fights against our corrupt government ever since the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota in 2008.  Just look at the battles of the RNC 8 or all the activists from Minnesota's Anti-War Committee being strategically targeted by the FBI, which brought about a very strong Twin Cities based movement against FBI repression in the form of the Committee to Stop FBI Repression.  A very long list could be made of all the various grievances that have been increasingly attended to by affected American citizens, clearly leading up to this movement, which I would argue addresses many of those grievances, if not directly, indirectly.  What is truly spontaneous about this moment in history is the overwhelming convergence of interests that have coalesced around the occupations taking place across the country.

Another example of how this movement is not entirely one developed by those who coined the term Occupy Wall Street is that of the organization that called itself the October 2011 Movement, the organizers behind Stop the Machine! Create a New World!, which was a massive occupation of Freedom Plaza in Washington, DC beginning on October 6, 2011, which continues today.  In the interest of full disclosure, I was on, and continue to be on the steering committee for the October 2011 Movement, sometimes also referred to as the Stop the Machine Movement.  As was accurately reported on Truthout: "The October 2011 Movement - planned six months ago - is separate from, but wholly synergistic with the "Occupy Washington" movement in nearby McPherson Park."  Indeed, several months into our work organizing the occupation (a term we were using all along) of Freedom Plaza, the amazing uprisings in New York's Zuccotti Park started.  We felt from the beginning that the timing could have not been better.  Numbers is what we needed, and numbers we got, thanks in large part to the increasing presence of Occupy Wall Street.

On our first day at Freedom Plaza, there were well over 2000 people, and it was electrifying.  It was also completely non-violent, and we kept the door open for all the folks over in McPherson Park to come and join us, with the hope that our people could go join them too.  In fact, our only two real caveats were that we were not interested in "black shirts" or other groups who were more interested in sewing violence as a means of gathering attention than strategic organizing and civil resistance, and that there was to be no space given for the Democratic Party on our platform; this was to be completely by the people, of the people, and for the people.

As it turned out, Occupy DC became increasingly uninterested in working with the October 2011 Movement because, get this, they were thinking we were backed up by the Democratic Party, George Soros, Move On, etc.  In reality, one of our main pillars is that we refuse to be co-opted by the Democratic Party or any Democratic Party front group, like Move On.  And that is where we stand today, at least in regard to the Occupy Movement and the October 2011 Movement.

The Danger of Co-optation


Moving forward into the current conditions of the occupations and uprisings across the country, one thing is clear to me: that this movement is still a people's movement.  It is not owned by the Occupy Wall Street brand (I use that term on purpose), nor can they (whomever they are) claim to be the originators of the movement to take back this country from the oligarchic corporatocracy that we are all engaged in, regardless of what groups individual people choose to align with.  October 2011 does not claim to be the organizational leader of the movement either.  There is no one ideological, nor political theoretic basis that every participant in the occupation movement agrees upon.  There are socialists, anarchists, anarcho-syndicalists, libertarians, democratic socialists, and socialist democrats.  Therefore, it would be utterly naive for one particular wing of this new revolutionary movement to claim ownership, and even more naive to make the decision to coalesce under a "big tent" or to converge on the national level as a party apparatus in challenge to the Democrats and Republicans.  The system as we know it would never allow for that, unless of course the system - which in this case could be read to be the Democratic Party - were to take up public agreement and maybe even leadership of the Occupy Movement, something they are already clearly trying to do.  Articles abound on the Internet about the Democratic Party's public backing of the Occupy Movement.  According to Kevin Zeese, a core organizer with the October 2011 Movement:
"The Occupy Movement will only be effective if it remains independent of the two corporate-dominated parties.  We need to build an independent movement that pushes both parties for transformative change.  The tinkering that the best Democrats offer is insufficient.  The country needs much more.  We cannot allow oursevles to be co-opted by Democratic Party groups like MoveOn, Rebuild the Dream, Campaign for American's Future, Democracy For America and others.  We need an independent movement supported by independent media and if that is insufficient, than independent electoral organizations.  We must rely on the people not deeply corrupted political parties and their front groups."  

Perhaps fortunately, the October 2011 Movement has beaten the Democratic Party and its various assimilation droids back enough to not be publicly approached, and we want to keep it that way.

This is a critical time in the early development of a revolutionary movement in America.  The Occupy Movement and the October 2011 Movement, along with dozens of other movements worthy of being noted, must all be seen as the growing branches of the newly planted tree of revolution in America; a revolutionary movement against corporate control of our economy and our political apparatus.  If the Democratic Party, or any of its front groups manage to gain control or financial vestment in our movement, we might as well call it dead, or co-opted by the very machine we are strategically trying to stop.

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