On the twentieth day of the Occupation of Wall Street, I read a tweet that summed up my feelings for the burgeoning movement.
"The important thing about #occupywallstreet for me is that everything is on the table."
The limitations of the political discussion in the United States
have been insanely frustrating ever since I can remember. But something
has fundamentally shifted in just one month.
While candidates for president get into heated arguments about
who cut whose lawn, the 99 percent of Americans who cannot afford a
landscaping team, let alone a lawn, are getting down to business
reinventing the unjust systems of power that has governed our lives for
too long.
From day one, I knew something about this movement was different.
On day one, I found myself in Zuccotti Park, sitting on the ground in a
big circle with young, smiling people. Discussing the deep,
fundamental discussion of the horrifying ails of our country and our
world and the formulating a stunningly optimistic and intelligent list
of reforms. These ideas were then taken and synthesized and discussed
in a massive group meeting called a General Assembly, where anyone who
wanted to speak could be heard.
The model of this movement is its strength, elevated and
fueled by the platform of independent media who have been covering it
correctly since the beginning. This is what democracy looks like. And
it’s beautiful.
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