Politics

10 ways the Occupy movement changes everything

Looking beyond encampments, a new book highlights the political and social change Occupy Wall Street has brought to the United States.

10 ways the Occupy movement changes everything
Sponsorship

by

Ashli Blow

Looking beyond encampments, a new book highlights the political and social change Occupy Wall Street has brought to the United States.

Before the Occupy Wall Street movement, there was little discussion of  the outsized power of Wall Street and the diminishing fortunes of the  middle class.

The media blackout was especially remarkable given that issues like  jobs and corporate influence on elections topped the list of concerns  for most Americans.

Occupy Wall Street changed that. In fact, it may represent the best  hope in years that “we the people” will step up to take on the critical  challenges of our time. Here’s how the Occupy movement is already  changing everything:

1. It names the source of the crisis.
Political insiders have avoided this simple reality: The problems of the 99% are caused in large part by Wall Street greed,  perverse financial incentives, and a corporate takeover of the  political system. Now that this is understood, the genie is out of the  bottle and it can’t be put back in.

2. It provides a clear vision of the world we want.
We can create a world that works for everyone,  not just the wealthiest 1%. And we, the 99%, are using the spaces  opened up by the Occupy movement to conduct a dialogue about the world  we want.

3. It sets a new standard for public debate.
Those  advocating policies and proposals must now demonstrate that their ideas  will benefit the 99%. Serving only the 1% will not suffice, nor will  claims that the subsidies and policies that benefit the 1% will  eventually “trickle down.”

4. It presents a new narrative.
The solution is  not to starve government or impose harsh austerity measures that further  harm middle-class and poor people already reeling from a bad economy.  Instead, the solution is to free society and government from corporate dominance. A functioning democracy is our best shot at addressing critical social, environmental, and economic crises.

5. It creates a big tent.
We, the 99%, are people  of all ages, races, occupations, and political beliefs. We will resist  being divided or marginalized. We are learning to work together with  respect.

6. It offers everyone a chance to create change.
No  one is in charge; no organization or political party calls the shots.  Anyone can get involved, offer proposals, support the occupations, and  build the movement. Because leadership is everywhere and new supporters  keep turning up, there is a flowering of creativity and a resilience  that makes the movement nearly impossible to shut down.

7. It is a movement, not a list of demands.
The call for deep change—not  temporary fixes and single-issue reforms—is the movement’s sustaining  power. The movement is sometimes criticized for failing to issue a list  of demands, but doing so could keep it tied to status quo power  relationships and policy options. The occupiers and their supporters  will not be boxed in.

8. It combines the local and the global.
People  in cities and towns around the world are setting their own local  agendas, tactics, and aims. What they share in common is a critique of  corporate power and an identification with the 99%, creating an  extraordinary wave of global solidarity.

9. It offers an ethic and practice of deep democracy and community.
Slow,  patient decision-making in which every voice is heard translates into  wisdom, common commitment, and power. Occupy sites are set up as  communities in which anyone can discuss grievances, hopes, and dreams,  and where all can experiment with living in a space built around mutual  support.

10. We have reclaimed our power.
Instead of looking to politicians and leaders to bring about change, we can see now that the power rests with us. Instead of being victims to the forces upending our lives, we are claiming our sovereign right to remake the world.

Like all human endeavors, Occupy Wall Street and its thousands of  variations and spin-offs will be imperfect. There have already been  setbacks and divisions, hardships and injury. But as our world faces  extraordinary challenges—from climate change to soaring inequality—our  best hope is the ordinary people, gathered in imperfect democracies, who  are finding ways to fix a broken world.

This article is adapted from the book, This Changes Everything: Occupy Wall Street and the 99% Movement edited by Sarah van Gelder and the staff of YES! Magazine and published November 2011 by Berrett-Koehler Publishers.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal