Occupy Wall Street and its kindred protests around the country are inept, incoherent and hopelessly quixotic. God, I love them.
I love every little thing about these
gloriously amateurish sit-ins. I love that they are spontaneous,
leaderless and open-ended. I love that the protesters refuse to issue
specific demands beyond a forceful call for economic justice. I also
love that in Chicago—uniquely, thus far—demonstrators have ignored the
rule about vagueness and are being ultra-specific about their goals. I
love that there are no rules, just tendencies.
I love that when Occupy Wall Street was
denied permission to use bullhorns, demonstrators came up with an
alternative straight out of Monty Python, or maybe “The Flintstones”:
Have everyone within earshot repeat a speaker’s words, verbatim and in
unison, so the whole crowd can hear. It works—and sounds tremendously
silly. Protest movements that grow into something important tend to have
a sense of humor.
I can’t help but love that House Majority
Leader Eric Cantor called the protests “growing mobs” and complained
about fellow travelers who “have actually condoned the pitting of
Americans against Americans.” This would be the same Eric Cantor who
praised the tea party movement in its raucous, confrontational,
foaming-at-the-mouth infancy as “an organic movement” that was “about
the people.” The man’s hypocrisy belongs in the Smithsonian.
Most of all, I love that the Occupy
protests arise at just the right moment and are aimed at just the right
target. This could be the start of something big and important.
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Revolutionary advances in technology and
globalization are the forces most responsible for the hollowing-out of
the American economy. But our policymakers responded in ways that tended
to accentuate, rather than ameliorate, the most damaging effects of
these worldwide trends.
The result is clear to see: A nation where
the rich have become the mega-rich while the middle class has steadily
lost ground, where unemployment is stuck at levels once considered
unbearable, and where our political system is too dysfunctional to take
the kind of bold action that would make a real difference. Eventually,
the economy will limp out of this slump and things will seem better.
Fundamentally, however, nothing will have changed.
Does that sound broad and unfocused? Yes, but it’s true.
The Occupy Wall Street protesters saw this
broad, unfocused truth—and also understood that the place to begin this
movement was at the epicenter of the financial system.
For most of our history, it was understood
that the financial sector was supposed to perform a vital service for
the economy: channeling liquidity to the companies where it could be
most effectively used. But the rapid technological, economic and
political change the world has witnessed in recent decades created
myriad opportunities for Wall Street to channel liquidity to itself,
often by inventing exotic new securities whose underpinnings may not
exist. The 2008 financial crisis demonstrated the urgent need for
reform.
It’s not that investment bankers should be
held responsible for all the ills of the world. It’s that Wall Street is
emblematic of an entire economic and political system that no longer
seems to have most Americans’ best interests at heart.
So a ragtag group—not huge, but idealistic
and determined—camps out in lower Manhattan. A similar thing happens in
two dozen other cities. And maybe a movement is born.
Already, after less than a month,
commentators are asking whether the Occupy protests can be transformed
into a coherent political force. For now, at least, I hope not.
We have no shortage of politicians in this
country. What we need is more passion and energy in the service of
justice. We need to be forced to answer questions that sound simplistic
or naive—questions about ethics and values. Detailed policy positions
can wait.
At some point, these protest encampments
will disappear—and, since the nation and the world will not have
changed, they’ll be judged a failure. But I’ve got a hunch that this
likely judgment will be wrong. I think the seed of progressive activism
in the Occupy protests may grow into something very big indeed.
Eugene Robinson’s e-mail address is eugenerobinson(at)washpost.com.
© 2011, Washington Post Writers Group
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