How the Occupied Became the Occupiers
By Tom Engelhardt
On the streets of Moscow in the tens of thousands, the protesters chanted:
“We exist!” Taking into account the comments of statesmen,
scientists, politicians, military officials, bankers, artists, all the
important and attended to figures on this planet, nothing caught the
year more strikingly than those two words shouted by massed Russian
demonstrators.
“We exist!” Think of it as a simple statement of fact, an implicit
demand to be taken seriously (or else), and undoubtedly an expression of
wonder, verging on a question: “We exist?”
And who could blame them for shouting it? Or for the wonder? How
miraculous it was. Yet another country long immersed in a kind of
popular silence suddenly finds voice, and the demonstrators promptly
declare themselves not about to leave the
stage when the day -- and the demonstration -- ends. Who guessed
beforehand that perhaps 50,000 Muscovites would turn out to protest a
rigged electoral process in a suddenly restive country, along with
crowds in St. Petersburg, Tomsk, and elsewhere from the south to
Siberia?
In Tahrir Square in Cairo, they swore:
“This time we’re here to stay!” Everywhere this year, it seemed that
they -- “we” -- were here to stay. In New York City, when forced out
of Zuccotti Park by the police, protesters returned carrying signs that
said, “You cannot evict an idea whose time has come.”
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