this post was submitted on 14 Apr 2024
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[–] jordanlund 137 points 7 months ago (5 children)

For all their passion, they lacked focus.

I talked to one in Portland as the protest had gone on for a while.

"What can the big banks do to make you dust off your hands, go 'my work here is done!', and go back home?"

"I want them to fucking die!"

Well, clearly that's not going to happen, but he had no backup plan.

[–] TankovayaDiviziya 44 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I read an anecdote from Reddit about a protestor's experience in Occupy Wall Street. Some people just went along to the protests for the sake and experience of it. Many people didn't know what they were doing. I think this is why protests require some sort of organisation and leadership. The civil rights movement was so effective because they more were organised and had focus. Any movements after that haven't gained more momentum because of disparate structure and factionalism.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 7 months ago

I've attended a few pro Palestine protests here in the UK and I was so unaware of what I was attending for the first one. I'm in a very liberal city and had previously gone to pride marches and trans pride 'protests' that were effectively demonstrations for fun as it was largely preaching to the choir.

Showing up to the first pro Palestine protest and realising that it's a coordinated effort to block roads and generally financially harm the companies that support Israel made me realise how naive I was being by conflating peaceful demonstrations to drum up support with a coordinated effort to harm the opposition.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 7 months ago

Sounds like what happened at CHAZ, except with less murder investigations in the follow-up

That was just hilarious to watch, first the tanks were fawning all over it and clambering for their own AZ districts to institute tyranny of the faithful over, and then when it went bust suddenly it was anarchists and they all knew it was doomed from the start.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 7 months ago

Sounds like a typical lemmy.ml user.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Nothing has changed since then it seems. I constantly read comments with similar sentiment towards rich people here.

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[–] [email protected] 103 points 7 months ago

Personally, I think its because its message became diluted. At least here in Portland, it started off strong, in solidarity with the rest of the country. But as the days went on, it became unclear what anyone was actually protesting. Then as the week dragged on, it became less of a protest and more of an opportunity for vagrants to join in and camp. As all that happened, there was less discussion about the protest and more about the giant camp that was building downtown, the drug use, the fighting, etc.

So the message was just never strong and clear enough to cut through the problems that surrounded it.

[–] [email protected] 79 points 7 months ago (2 children)

Lack of centralized messaging and organized leadership

You probably can't name a single person who came to national prominence as a direct result of their participation in OWS, and that's exactly why it fizzled, movements don't need leaders necessarily, but absent that they absolutely need a gameplan, which OWS did not have, just a general anti-rich sentiment without many proposals for change other than "lock them up."

I think this is the broad issue with most would be revolutionary groups, they never plan further than "just do a revolution bro" beyond dreaming of the utopia they'll surely usher in when the enemy is defeated. Revolutionary movements need to operate more like John Brown, man didn't just go south and start shooting, he gathered a convention of black leaders to sign a new constitution to inaugurate in the event that he won. Granted it was a bit loco, part of it literally involved turning black America into a settler nation in the Appalachia's, but the point still stands, the man knew what victory would look like and that's how he was able to gather the following he did before his capture and death.

[–] phoneymouse 10 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I think this was because occupy was a product of the internet and there are very few leaders that come out of the internet in the social justice space. There are a lot of voices, but few stand above the crowd and even if they do manage to, when you’re dealing with controversial topics, there is a very good likelihood that such a person’s opponents would dig up some dirt on them or exaggerate something they did or said in an effort to cancel or make them into a joke.

[–] hanekam 9 points 7 months ago

It's a built-in feature of internet groups that they are bad at producing messages and leaders for a wider audience. The dynamics of facebook groups and internet forums reward preaching to the choir and punishes compromises, both with opposition, moderates and reality.

[–] Delphia 10 points 7 months ago (1 children)

The problem is that figureheads can be discredited and taken down. You need a figurehead who isnt only has an unimpeachable background, but so do their parents, their friends... they need to have the right education, the right job, the right EVERYTHING

I'd even go so far to say that you would almost NEED to have a woman of color because a few grand slipped to the right girl and all of a sudden "Occupy Spokesman John Smith"standing up to Wall st is "Alleged Rapist John Smith"

I have no doubt they would find a way to discredit them.

[–] Cryophilia 7 points 7 months ago (2 children)

The problem is that figureheads can be discredited and taken down

The problem is that Leftists always eat each other because of their ridiculous utopian ideals. Anyone who has even the slightest whiff of something wrong with them is immediately attacked and cast down, so no leader can ever emerge.

If y'all ever want to have any sort of influence, you need to reject the idea of purity tests. People are flawed, and people are different. Embrace it, don't keep hoping for a perfect messiah.

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[–] [email protected] 36 points 7 months ago (3 children)

Was part of a qualitative research study put on by a university and related to a local chapter of the Occupy movement.

My thoughts on 2 reasons why the larger movement died:

  1. No unified list of attainable objectives.
  2. The physical persecution ended.

While no one in the movement disagreed with the main tenants that the group stood for, when Wall Street came calling to know what the Occupy movement wanted, the distributed leadership model made it hard to form a coherent list that went beyond “overturn Citizens United”. It really was a leaderless movement for awhile there, and that has downsides.

Regarding the physical persecution, I first got interested in the movement because of the news coverage I was seeing from independent channels. US citizens were being beaten, gassed, and corralled in a way that infringed on civil rights and usually without incitement (Occupy was vehemently non-violent). Once those acts of injustice started to fade, I think people lost some of their zeal.

It was a wild time, though, and I’d be happy to talk about it further. From limited news coverage by US MSM, to folks coordinating carpools to NYC and DC, not to mention the unique style of communication at rallies to get around the ban of sound amplification by police… a lot happened.

[–] Orbituary 10 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

No unified objective is why we on the left tend to lose.

[–] BallsandBayonets 27 points 7 months ago

It's not a surprising issue; whenever we get a unifying leader, the FBI assassinates them.

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[–] RalphFurley 30 points 7 months ago (3 children)

Some anecdotes from my experiences during this time:

I lived and worked in downtown Chicago at the time, right next to the Board of Trade. The local OWS was set up right next to it. I remember the traders had dumped out a bunch of McDonald's job applications from the window onto them below. I would walk by them everyday for months and absolutely no one was paying them attention. It was a small group of people and eventually one day just like that, they were gone.

A week or so after OWS started I was visiting NYC and we ended up at Zuccotti Park where it all started. I think there were more people selling pins, buttons, and various arts and crafts than there were actual protesters. I remember my FIL asking each one if they were trying to supplement a living or if they were purely a for-profit capitalist venture taking advantage of an opportunity at an anti-capitalist protest. I just couldn't stop laughing. He was serious.

Went to a wedding in Tulsa a few months in the whole OWS movement and their main park had an encampment of tents with signs but didn't see any activity.

The big thing I noticed was there was virtually no people of color present, no organization, was a gathering of almost entirely white (mostly young) Leftists, that like usual, failed to cobble together a coalition from other demographics and really just seemed like a spectacle.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 7 months ago

Oh god, we missed the don't vote squad when they were at their least threatening!

[–] [email protected] 4 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I remember my FIL asking each one if they were trying to supplement a living or if they were purely a for-profit capitalist venture taking advantage of an opportunity at an anti-capitalist protest.

Out of curiosity, how would he draw that line? When does it stop counting as a living and start being a purely for-profit venture?

[–] RalphFurley 4 points 7 months ago

No idea. I tried to get him to just simply observe and either buy something or not. I still have my pin somewhere, I think I know where it is. I'll look for it tonight and post it.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 7 months ago

God, you nailed my experience of this protest. I was going to college in New York when they happened. It was a joke.

[–] [email protected] 26 points 7 months ago (2 children)

Their goal won't be accomplished without violence AND it won't start again until a major event makes people on both sides realize that they should be fighting together (like the economic crisis back then) against a common enemy.

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[–] [email protected] 20 points 7 months ago (1 children)

You can't build a revolution on top of slogans, they lacked unified ideology and goals. without palpable goals you can't achieve anything

[–] [email protected] 25 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

They actually had goals, some of which were achieved via the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. But that wasn't enough, and then it was repealed during the Trump era.

No, they were disbanded (at night, by force, with cameras off) because they were becoming too much of a problem for the ownership class, who was not willing to fix what caused the subprime mortgage crisis and was not willing to let too-big-to-fail companies collapse which they should have, according to common capitalist ideology.

Fear of the risk of collapse is supposed to encourage hedge funds to be cautious, and the bail-outs showed they don't need to fear, because the US government is in their pocket and will bail them out with taxpayer money. As things currently are, hedge funds can use other people's money to get rich, and when they fuck up and lose everything, the taxpayers take the hit instead. This is still the case, and at smaller scales is still a very common grift on Wall Street. (This is what Romney did before he went into politics, and how Toys-R-Us died.) We're looking at a number of markets that are now at risk of suffering the same kind of short-sell blowout leading to a market collapse which will tank the economy. Again.

The grievances Occupy explicitly expressed to their elected representatives were never addressed, and confidence in the US economy and the US government (in doing its job serving the public and not corporate or plutocratic interests) has suffered, leading to the election of trump and the rise of fascist movements such as the transnational white power movement and the closely-aligned Christian nationalist movement. Without big money fueling the propaganda machines that keep these movements alive, discontent would turn against the ownership class, who would tremble before class war.

Would that class war turn into a communist revolution? Probably not, but after a dozen or so dictatorships and overthrows across a century (and a lot of war casualties) or so we might see the US stabilize. If the internet and interpersonal communications are preserved that will improve the chances that we'd see more public-serving models get implemented. This is the part of how we get there from here for which we don't have sound theory. But we also don't know yet how to stop fascist movements from redirecting outrage from the ownership class to marginalized population demographics, hence the genocides currently developing.

But Occupy absolutely had a legitimate grievance and some specific demands, many of which were not unreasonable or out of the scope of US state and federal governments. It's just that the plutocrats that control our officials didn't want to do those things, kinda like universal healthcare.

[–] Ultragigagigantic 18 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

When Occupy was huge, I had wished they had not focused so heavily on camping in parks and instead bought cheap land in the middle of nowhere and built “Occupy town”. Somewhere people can come and join the movement with their family and not worry about living in a tent.

Make our own jobs in federated worker co-ops like Mondragon our own community defense organizations, our own public housing, our own city government. If we had picked a state like Wyoming, it would only take about 15k people from each state to move there to take over the entire state government.

I get people were trying to do that in every park and also stay visible in the media, but I felt like it was just to limiting to stay in such locations.

As for what should be the focus, clearly it needs to be electoral reform. While stuff like campaign finance reform and changing the electoral college is important, we absolutely must do something about First Past The Post voting.

Switching away from first past the post voting allows people to vote for who represents them best while still counting their vote against those they dont want to win. Just search for videos on FPTP voting if you want an explanation on how and why the spoiler effect exists.

Electoral reform is possible in each individual state (for now), we dont need federal reform! Maine and Alaska have already passed electoral reform.

Republicans are moving to make alternative electoral systems illegal in their states. Why would you want to use the same voting system republicans prefer?

More political parties means a higher percentage of the population is representedby their choices in the voting booth. More people involved in the electoral process, more people engaged.

Its a win win win all around for not just the people, but also for the democratic party. More people voting means more democratic votes. The numbers dont lie. So what’s the hold up blue states?

You believe it’s critical to vote for the democrats to beat the Republicans, thus you should 100% be fully invested in passing electoral reform in your state.

Electoral reform needs to be the number one priority for every democrat. This is a existential threat to our nation, so we must use EVERY tool at our disposal. No more waiting. This especially goes for those in blue states.

Consider starting a campaign to change how we vote in your own state! Force our representatives to compete with fresh outside ideas. We deserve the best representation, not excuses.

I usually prefer people to seek out information about electoral reform on their own, but today I come with some of my favorite videos on the topic.

First Past The Post voting (What most states use currently)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s7tWHJfhiyo


Videos on alternative electoral systems we can try out.

Alternative vote

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Y3jE3B8HsE

Ranked Choice voting

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Z2fRPRkWvY

Range Voting

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3GFG0sXIig

Single Transferable Vote

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8XOZJkozfI

STAR voting

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-mOeUXAkV0

Mixed Member Proportional representation

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QT0I-sdoSXU

Edit: don't put ourselves down for things not working out yall. This is all our first lives, and we're up against a ton of cultural momentum. Plus things were heated in the moment with the banks getting bailed out. In such emotion, it's hard to see the bigger picture.

Like in Minneapolis, when the police station fell... imagine if people were deputized and the community just did their own policing.

But in the moment, after the police lit the fuse by using chemical weapons against the crowd. After such a lack of justice in the world, day after day of injustice and wrong in the world... you just wanna fucking have a fire. I get it. Hell, I wanted that to back then. But it didn't fix anything, as cathartic as it was.

Sorry about the rants. Hope we find our way. Peace.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 7 months ago (2 children)

OWS existed because banks were getting bailed out and ordinary people weren't.

Since then, an alternative money supply with no bailouts has gained tremendous momentum.

So we're still protesting, just in a way that's harder to shut down for "public safety" reasons. And instead of participation making you worse off, it makes you better off. Over time, adverse selection will leave only bailout recipients using bailout money.

[–] RememberTheApollo_ 17 points 7 months ago (1 children)

People are still getting hosed with that “alternative money system”. It’s the rare person that makes enough and bails out with profits, even rarer gets enough to be wealthy. It’s the “influencer” of money. Everyone thinks they can be the winner, but there’s tens of thousands of failures for each person on the top.

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[–] hark 15 points 7 months ago (3 children)

If you're referring to bitcoin for that alternative money supply then I regret to inform you that it's manipulated to hell and back, from "stable"coin printing to now ETFs.

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[–] undergroundoverground 12 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I'd have a look at David greabers interviews on the subject. He was heavily involved and part-mastermind behind it.

Contrary to what a lot of people seem to think, a lot of it was about become too specific in their aims. The powers that be want to whittle away the numbers with infighting. So, they ask the sort of duck or rabbit questions to make that happen.

When they made specific demands, they stopped being a scary, faceless and uncompromising mob.

Theres more too and he's very honest in his self critique imo.

[–] Jtotheb 7 points 7 months ago

He’s also pretty candid about how the authorities came up with a bullshit excuse to shut the camps down (claiming health and safety over bathroom conditions when that had been figured out for ages) and then came and beat people up. Big omission

[–] PP_BOY_ 8 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

Because it was one of the only time the "racists" and the "communists" (before they were called that) actually came together against the only people holding them down.

how can we start it back up again

Stop buying into petty, culture-war "Parade of Politics." This goes for both sides.

[–] Hobbes_Dent 8 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Normally yes - agreed and upvoted - but the current petty, culture-war "Parade of Politics" has ramifications that will make Occupy, protest, and rights in general a lot harder or more dangerous to fight for.

It seems shit to fight the politicians instead of the money driving them, but they don't intend to stay subservient to the money once the choices are gone.

[–] hark 7 points 7 months ago

It's hard to keep a protest going when you don't have focused power behind it. The general messaging of economic inequality carried on and we've been talking about the 1% vs the 99% since, but the key advantage that the billionaires have is that even though there are far fewer of them, the system is structured such that they can use their money to direct the focus. The raw numbers of people mean nothing without that focus.

It takes an extraordinary event to bring out the sheer number of people, so I'm afraid something like it won't start back up unless something catastrophic happens (e.g. popping of the everything bubble leading to a new great depression). Sustaining it will be a matter of organization which is much more difficult to figure out, especially when individual resources are scarce.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 7 months ago

(From someone who was there)

[–] [email protected] 6 points 7 months ago

I feel like my first major advice into programming best somes up this to. "Knowing whatyour are wanting to do is way more important than the how, you learn or make up the how later"

Occupy Wall Street was a movement that wanted to protest the banks and financial markets actions that lead to the recession.

They did that, successfully, they protested the heck out it, they occupied wall street for a while really. The question is what do want to actually do? I mean the sentiments they raised made Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump more viable in 2016 presidential election, is that it, debate facism vs socialism again?

[–] [email protected] 6 points 7 months ago (2 children)

The most potent spiritual successor I've seen is the whole GameStop thing: an attempt to exploit a recursively over-leveraged predatory derivative scheme. Over-leveraged derivatives are the characteristic underpinning of most of the Wall Street fuckery that the Occupy movement was fighting.

I don't have any particular love for the company, but it's impossible to overlook the similarity. If I was going to hit Wall Street where it hurts, I'd pile onto an exploit like that. The more people on board, the better.

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[–] 3volver 6 points 7 months ago

Simple straight forward true answers:

It faded away because of a lack of clear concise achievable goals.

We can start it up again by creating a list of clear concise achievable goals which everyone involved agrees strongly upon.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 7 months ago

I'm going to guess is that part of it was left wing people are less likely to fall in line with the group than right wing authoritarians.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 7 months ago (3 children)
[–] [email protected] 10 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (6 children)

Let's not take our analysis from ancaps please. They are not anarchists, not leftists, and the only problem they have with banks is that they're too regulated.

Also, they were ignorant enough to become ancaps, which should also disqualify them if their aims weren't already so abhorrent.

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[–] recapitated 4 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Because it got co-opted and no because it's gonna get co-opted. It's too vague yet appealing.

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