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The 12 Most Hopeful Trends to Build On in 2012

2011 was full of surprises, many of them the good kind. But which ones will matter in the coming year? Here's our pick of trends to watch.

Fireworks, photo by bayasaa

Photo by bayasaa

Who would have thought that some young people camped out in lower Manhattan with cardboard signs, a few sharpies, some donated pizza, and a bunch of smart phones could change so much?

The viral spread of the Occupy Movement took everyone by surprise. Last summer, politicians and the media were fixated on the debt ceiling, and everyone seemed to forget that we were in the midst of an economic meltdown—everyone except the 99 percent who were experiencing it.

Today, people ranging from Ben Bernake, chair of the
Federal Reserve, to filmmaker Michael Moore are expressing sympathy for the Occupy Movement and concern for those losing homes, retirement savings, access to health care, and hope of ever finding a job.

This uprising is the biggest reason for hope in 2012. The following are 12 ways the Occupy Movement and other major trends of 2011 offer a foundation for a transformative 2012.

1. Americans rediscover their political self-respect. In 2011, members of the 99 percent began camping out in New York's Zuccotti Park, launching a movement that quickly spread across the country. Students at U.C. Davis sat nonviolently through a pepper spray assault, Oaklanders shut down the city with a general strike, and Clevelanders saved a family from eviction. Occupiers opened their encampments to all and fed all who showed up, including many homeless people. Thousands moved their accounts from corporate banks to community banks and credit unions, and people everywhere created their own media with smart phones and laptops. The Occupy Movement built on the Arab Spring, occupations in Europe, and on the uprising, early in 2011, in Wisconsin, where people occupied the state capitol in an attempt to block major cuts in public workers' rights and compensation. Police crackdowns couldn't crush the surge of political self-respect experienced by millions of Americans.

After the winter weather subsides, look for the blossoming of an American Spring.

2. Economic myths get debunked. Americans now understand that hard work and playing by the rules don't mean you'll get ahead. They know that Wall Street financiers are not working for their interests. Global capitalism is not lifting all boats. As this mythology crumbled, the reality became inescapable: The United States is not broke. The 1 percent have rigged the system to capture a larger and larger share of the world's wealth and power, while the middle class and poor face unemployment, soaring student debt burdens, homelessness, exclusion from the medical system, and the disappearance of retirement savings. Austerity budgets just sharpen the pain, as the safety net frays and public benefits, from schools to safe bridges, fail. The European debt crisis is front and center today, but other crises will likely follow. Just as the legitimacy of apartheid began to fall apart long before the system actually fell, today, the legitimacy of corporate power and Wall Street dominance is disintegrating.

The new-found clarity about the damage that results from a system dominated by Wall Street will further energize calls for regulation and the rule of law, and fuel the search for economic alternatives.

3. Divisions among people are coming down. Middle-class college students camped out alongside homeless occupiers. People of color and white people created new ways to work together. Unions joined with occupiers. In some places, Tea Partiers and occupiers discovered common purposes. Nationwide, anti-immigrant rhetoric backfired.

Tremendous energy is released when isolated people discover one another; look for more unexpected alliances.

4. Alternatives are blossoming. As it becomes clear that neither corporate CEOs nor national political leaders have solutions to today's deep crises, thousands of grassroots-led innovations are taking hold. Community land trusts, farmers markets, local currencies and time banking, micro-energy installations, shared cars and bicycles, cooperatively owned businesses are among the innovations that give people the means to live well on less and build community. And the Occupy Movement, which is often called "leaderless," is actually full of emerging leaders who are building the skills and connections to shake things up for decades to come.

This widespread leadership, coupled with the growing repertoire of grassroots innovations, sets the stage for a renaissance of creative rebuilding.

5. Popular pressure halted the Keystone KL Pipeline—for the moment. Thousands of people stood up to efforts by some of the world's most powerful energy companies and convinced the Obama administration to postpone approval of the Keystone XL Pipeline, which would have sped the extraction and export of dirty tar sands oil. James Hansen says, "If the tar sands are thrown into the mix, it is essentially game over" for the planet. Just a year ago, few had heard of this project, much less considered risking arrest to stop it, as thousands did outside the White House in 2011.

With Congress forcing him to act within 60 days, President Obama will be under enormous pressure from both Big Oil and pipeline opponents. It will be among the key tests of his presidency.

6. Climate responses move forward despite federal inaction. Throughout the United States, state and local governments are taking action where the federal government has failed. California's new climate cap-and-trade law will take effect in 2012. College students are pressing campus administrators to quit using coal-fired sources of electricity. Elsewhere, Europe is limiting climate pollution from air travel, Australia has enacted a national carbon tax, and there is a global initiative underway to recognize the rights of Mother Nature. Climate talks in Durban, South African, arrived at a conclusion that, while far short of what is needed, at least keeps the process alive.

Despite corporate-funded climate change deniers, most people know climate change is real and dangerous; expect to see many more protests, legislation, and new businesses focused on reducing carbon emissions in 2012.

7. There's a new focus on cleaning up elections. The Supreme Court's "Citizens United decision," which lifted limits on corporate campaign contributions, is opposed by a large majority of Americans. This year saw a growing national movement to get money out of politics; cities from Pittsburgh to Los Angeles are passing resolutions calling for an end to corporate personhood. Constitutional amendments have been introduced. And efforts are in the works to push back against voter suppression policies that especially discourage voting among people of color, low-income people, and students, all of whom tend to vote Democratic.

Watch for increased questioning of the legal basis of corporations, which "we the people" created, but which now facilitate lawlessness and increasing concentrations of wealth and power.

8. Local government is taking action. City and state governments are moving forward, even as Washington, D.C., remains gridlocked, even as budgets are stretched thin. Towns in Pennsylvania, New York, and elsewhere are seeking to prohibit "fracking" to extract natural gas, and while they're at it, declaring that corporations do not have the constitutional rights of people. Cities are banning plastic bags, linking up local food systems, encouraging bicycling and walking, cleaning up brown fields, and turning garbage and wasted energy into opportunity. In part because of the housing market disaster, people are less able to pick up and move.

Look for increased rootedness, whether voluntary or not, along with increased focus on local efforts to build community solutions.

9. Dams are coming down. Two dams that block passage of salmon up the Elwha River into the pristine Olympic National Park in Washington state are coming down. After decades of campaigning by Native tribes and environmentalists, the removal of the dams began in 2011.

The assumption that progress is built on "taming" and controlling nature is giving way to an understanding that human and ecological well-being are linked.

10. The United States ended the combat mission in Iraq. U.S. troops are home from Iraq at last. What remains is a U.S. embassy compound the size of the Vatican City, along with thousands of private contractors. Iraq and the region remain unstable.

Given the terrible cost in lives and treasure for what most Americans see as an unjustified war, look to greater skepticism of future U.S. invasions.

11. Breakthrough for single-payer health care. The state of Vermont took action to respond to the continuing health care crises, adopting, but not yet funding, a single-payer health care system similar to Canada's.

As soaring costs of health insurance drain the coffers of businesses and governments, other states may join Vermont at the forefront of efforts to establish a public health insurance system like Canada's.

12. Gay couples can get married. In 2011, New York state and the Suquamish Tribe in Washington state (home of the author of this piece) adopted gay marriage laws. Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Marissa Gaeta won a raffle allowing her to be the first to kiss her partner upon return from 80 days at sea, the first such public display of gay affection since Don't Ask Don't Tell was expunged. The video and photos went viral.

2011 may be the year when opposition to gay marriage lost its power as a rallying cry for social conservatives. The tide has turned, and gay people will likely continue to win the same rights as straight people to marry.

With so much in play, 2012 will be an interesting year, even setting aside questions about "end times" and Mayan calendars. As the worldviews and institutions based on the dominance of the 1 percent are challenged, as the global economy frays, and as we run headlong into climate change and other ecological limits, one era is giving way to another. There are too many variables to predict what direction things will take. But our best hopes can be found in the rise of broad grassroots leadership, through the Occupy Movement, the Wisconsin uprising, the climate justice movement, and others, along with local, but interlinked, efforts to build local solutions everywhere. These efforts make it possible that 2012 will be a year of transformation and rebuilding—this time, with the well-being of all life front and center.


Sarah van Gelder wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. Sarah is YES! Magazine's co-founder and executive editor, and editor of the new book: "This Changes Everything: Occupy Wall Street and the 99% Movement."

Interested?

Follow YES! Magazine's ongoing coverage of the Occupy Movement.

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YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Gelder, S. v. (2011, December 30). The 12 Most Hopeful Trends to Build On in 2012. Retrieved May 16, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://cms.yesmagazine.org/blogs/sarah-van-gelder/12-most-hopeful-trends-to-build-on-in-2012. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

Clarifications about Vermont and Canada

Posted by Bob Haiducek, Bob the Health and Health Care Advocate at Jan 01, 2012 05:37 AM
It's fine to recognize that Vermont has made a little bit of progress that shows a little bit of hope. That is good to recognize a small "breakthrough". But it is important for people to know that there is a huge mountain of work / effort to be done in Vermont before they might establish single-payer. And, in parallel with those years of effort, the opposition could once again demonstrate its ability to instill fear and have 80% opinion against single-payer.
See: http://www.mforall.org/p/Media

It's excellent to refer to Canada. It's one example of a free-market country that has health care for all. The United States remains with health care NOT for all, compliments of the Affordable Care Act of 2010. But we do not want what Canada has. We can do better than Canada. We can do better than all the other free-market countries. We can be the best.
See: http://www.mforall.org/p/Best

Clarifications...

Posted by Shannon at Jan 08, 2012 08:19 PM
Bob, if you are truly buying the malarkey @ mforall then you may want to get some investment advisement. The first thing that scares me about mforall is having a FORCED DOWN MY THROAT GOVERNMENT RAN INSURANCE. Let's do some comparing. Government ran Medicare for every single person in the U.S., if we're going to be fair we can't leave out the immigrants either after all they are part of all right? Now, what else does the government run for every single person in the U.S? Ahhh, that's it! THE I.R.S. the single most inefficient portion of our government, the cost to run the I.R.S. is more than that of Medicare, social security, and the Dept. of defense COMBINED!!!
The second part of mforall I don't like is a FORCED DOWN MY THROAT GOVERNMENT RAN INSURANCE. I'm sorry as a U.S. citizen I prefer to have the right to CHOOSE! Simple fact is, once you allow the government to start choosing for you they will continue to do so until the only choice you have left is to keep breathing or die. This, my friend, is an historical FACT!

There are two simple solutions:
1) Begin with getting some backbone back into Congress, after which these men and women of character and integrity can start demolishing the liberalization of corporate American and begin instilling once again prudent and practical laws that REGULATE how the insurance and medical businesses operate, minimizing the risk of corporate gluttony through vampirism of the consumers wallet. If these whiny little yuppies running these companies want to take their greedy selfish act on the road and leave our wonderful country, fine; we can certainly find some decent folk to step up and claim their spot while making a better life for hundreds instead of only the few at the top!
2) Please don't take this personally, but if what you want, and if what so many want is to have a government that speaks, decides, shops, and makes choices for them there are enough of those around for all of you to choose from. Feel FREE to find the one that best fits your needs, and CHOOSE to make a life THERE! I, for one, would prefer to be FREE to make a CHOICE in what type of HEALTHCARE I have. It's certainly awful enough knowing that the spineless jerks in office in this country are willing to risk our entire nations heritage, and what our Constitution; especially the Bill of Rights, stands for, for a few million dollars. I certainly don't want to consider what would happen if we as a people just turned over another part of our lives to the government for them to decide what's is best for whom. You're talking about communist health care. Ask the soviets how that worked out for them, or how about the German's during Hitler's Nazi regime?

I will return to the most simplistic statement. Men and women of character and integrity, willing to risk their lives to stand FOR THE PEOPLE, AGAINST CORPORATE AMERICA AND HIGH PAYING SPECIAL INTEREST LOBBIESTS, to CREATE legislation that REGULATES how certain BUSINESSES get to DO BUSINESS with John Q. Public.

Re:Shannon

Posted by Sachi McFarland at Jan 11, 2012 02:30 PM
Care to provide a link to a reputable source where it says the IRS costs more than the department of defence?

I live in the UK and myself and my family have never had a problem with our communist nazi health care system. Also, if you are rich enough (99% of us aren't apparantly) you can always go private if you want more 'choice'.

regards from England.

Dreams of the 99%

Posted by Maryriver at Jan 02, 2012 03:09 AM
I was not surprised at the appearance of the Occupy movement. No one who watched the so called Arab Spring uprising could have been untouched by the power of crowds calling for their freedom. History has shown time and time again that the human spirit can only tolerate oppression for so long. Here in the U.S. our oppression has been cloaked in our current myth of democracy for some time and we have been so busy filling our roles as serfs that we failed to see what was really happening until someone noticed Bernie Madoff (and several others) had no clothes!
So now we know and Occupy has begun. As an old paganish Celt I think it is appropriate to get inside someplace warm and dry during the winter season and make plans for the seeding we will do in the spring. However as I live in Bremerton I wish there were a way to participate without driving 40 some miles round trip. I wonder if a Bremerton circle can start? Perhaps at the UU Fellowship: I’ll volunteer to make arraignments if folks are interested.
My personal agenda is campaign finance reform and my frustration with Occupy has stemmed from a lack of focus on that issue. I realize Occupy is in a kind of “brainstorming” phase but the way corporations control our elections has been driving me nuts for more than 50 years! I think it is impossible to make lasting change in this nation unless we restore democratic campaigns. Individual good deeds here and there will be crushed as soon as they are noticed just as the Occupy camps were attacked and razed. I think a focus on campaign finance reform must become a priority with thinking sub-groups across the country to draft new ways for candidates to reach their potential constitutes; ways that allow any member of the 99% to run for office and present their platforms to the public. I think it will be a wonderful season of growth come spring.

Occupy Planning in Kitsap County

Posted by Sarah van Gelder at Jan 02, 2012 10:20 AM
Hi Maryriver,
There is a small Occupy Bremerton group I can connect you with if you like. But I hope you will join us for a planning meeting for the North Kitsap 99 Percent. I know it's a bit of a drive from Bremerton, but maybe you can connect there with folks from South/Central Kitsap. Here's the information: https://www.facebook.com/events/144190919024630/
-- Sarah

Suquamish Tribe in Washington state threatens tribal sovereignty

Posted by Rod Van Mechelen at Jan 02, 2012 04:30 PM
Personally, I feel that the government should not be involved in marriage at all. I am not opposed to same sex marriage and I am a member of a federally recognized tribe. Same sex couples have been getting married since the 1970s. The “equal marriage” issue is about the marriage license. Obviously, tribes did not traditionally issue marriage licenses. This has nothing to do with tradition; it’s a mainstream political issue. Tribes that defy federal law (in this case, the Defense of Marriage Act) on mainstream issues that have nothing to do with Indian Country, threaten the sovereignty of all 565 federally recognized tribes for the sole purpose of political grandstanding. How? Tribes are federal entities, subject to all federal laws, and that includes DOMA. Violating federal law invites a federal lawsuit. Not under the current Administration, but administrations change and the next one might be less tolerant. The ultimate consequence will be an erosion of tribal sovereignty for all tribes. Tribes do not have to defy DOMA to extend benefits to non-member same-sex couples: that can be done under the principle of “close socio-economic ties.” So it is nothing more than a political gesture that could erode the sovereignty of all tribes. No tribe should do that.

Edit !!

Posted by Kathy at Jan 02, 2012 08:05 PM
Hello,
I plan to subscribe to your magazine.... that said, would appreciate the executive editor's exact editing..... ie, 'powerful ideaS'..... plural.... :-)

"Sarah van Gelder wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful idea with practical actions. Sarah is YES! Magazine's co-founder and executive editor, and editor of the new book: "This Changes Everything: Occupy Wall Street and the 99% Movement."

Additional info

Posted by Dave at Jan 04, 2012 03:33 AM
I want you to know that there are some very interesting developments in the Alternative Energy field happening as well. Look up E Cat , LENR, PlasmERG engine, and www.PESwiki.com for more information.

The 12 Most Hopeful Trends to Build On in 2012

Posted by Paul Baker Hernandez at Jan 27, 2012 10:10 AM
Wonderful to find Yes! Thank you for fine articles and good reporting. Privileged as I am to live in Nicaragua, I would like to offer a thirteenth Hopeful Trend, one that we here experience every day in ordinary life. ALBA (neatly, DAWN in Spanish) and CELAC (Community of Latin American and Caribbean States) are together building a Fair Trade block, where commerce between peoples is based on cooperation, solidarity and eco-responsibility. I've searched in vain for a serious report on this wonderful alternative to catastrophic consumerism in the mainstream news media. Yet this block (33 out of the 35 countries of the Americas - Canada/the USA were not invited to join for obvious reasons) had a growth rate of over 6% in 2010 despite what we northerners call the 'global' crisis, that it's the world's largest exporter of food, and that it has rescued millions savaged by rampant capitalism from profound poverty, one has to wonder why it goes unmentioned. As with little Nicaragua in the '80s, it's once again the 'threat of a good example' one suspects. Whatever; above all it's profoundly life-enhancing, offering as it does genuine hope not just to 600,000 Latin Americans but indeed to the entire planet. Please see: http://www.towardfreedom.co[…]bean-bloc-defies-washington

Your 13th tool

Posted by Gary Brumback at Jan 27, 2012 05:09 PM
Thank you Mr. Hernadez for mentioning the 13th tool. I didn't know about it. I will follow up and see if it gives me any ideas for launching The Democracy Coalition here in America to help rid her of her own worse enemy, her corpocracy.

Best regards,

Gary Brumback, PhD
www.uschamberofdemocracy.com

cap and trade

Posted by chris smith at Mar 01, 2012 02:09 PM
having a corrupt, bankrupt and desperate federal govt. taxing it's citizens for a gas that is exhaled by every mammal on earth, under the scam over global warming, (which was proven so filled with flawed data that it is now called "climate change"), is not anything to be happy about. Unless you are set to make alot of money of this corporate greed driven movement, like say, Al Gore.

Health Care in Canada

Posted by rik at May 15, 2012 12:32 PM
i hope that most are aware that health care in Canada is not 'free'. the health system here, is not the model that should be replicated. there are others that are better. the key ingredients for any form of governance, are transparency and accountability. good luck, and don't give up! hopefully one day soon, the world will be looking at the American system, and saying, "we want what they've got!"

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