Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
15 September 13
wo
years ago the "Occupy" movement roared into view, summoning the
energies and attention of large numbers of people who felt the economic
system had got out of whack and were determined to do something about
it.
Occupy put the issue of the nation's savage inequality
on the front pages, and focused America's attention on what that
inequality was doing to our democracy. To that extent, it was a stirring
success.
But Occupy eschewed political organization,
discipline, and strategy. It wanted to remain outside politics, and
outside any hierarchical structure that might begin to replicate the
hierarchies of American society it was opposing.
So when mayors, other public officials, and university
administrators cleared the Occupy encampments by force - encampments
that had become the symbol of the movement - nothing seemed to remain
behind. Some Occupiers made plans for further actions, but a movement
without structure, discipline, and strategy proved incapable of
sustaining itself.
All major social-change movements in American history
that widened opportunity and made this a more just society - women's
suffrage, the labor union movement, the civil rights movement, the anti
Vietnam War movement, the environmental movement, the gay rights
movement - have depended, to some extent, on leaders who helped guide
them, and decision-making structures that provided discipline and
strategy for those who joined.
These movements could sustain themselves over many
years, sometimes many decades, because they consciously maintained hope
on the basis of small but concrete victories, built their numbers by
choosing their battles carefully, and kept their eyes on the big prizes.
They educated the public about what was at stake, and then used public
pressure to push elected representatives.
Occupy served an important purpose, but lacking these
essentials it couldn't do more. Inequality is worse now than it was
then, and our democracy in as much if not more peril. So what's the next
step?
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