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Where The 99 Percent Get Their Power

Why is this protest spreading when others have fizzled?

we love you signsYoung people locking arms, facing arrest on a cold, wet Seattle street—it could have been the WTO protests that rocked the city more than ten years ago. Only this time, Seattle is just one of dozens of places where the movement for the 99 percent is taking hold.

And, unlike the WTO protests—whose motivation was unclear to many Americans—the demonstrations now spreading virally from Wall Street immediately strike a chord: we all know that neither our economy nor our government is working for the benefit of the 99 percent.

Whatever issue you care to name, from childhood obesity (linked to agribusiness subsidies) to war (linked to the power of the military-industrial complex), from a watered-down health care bill (linked big Pharma and health insurance corporations), to a failing economy (which Wall Street and corporations have depleted in favor of global speculation), the power of the one percent is at the root of the problem. And the power of the 99 percent is key to the solution.

We’ve watched as urgent matters, like climate change, go unaddressed—in large part because powerful corporations fund think tanks, lobbyists, and Astroturf campaigns that spread confusion about the science and threaten the political fortunes of those who take leadership.

The #OccupyWallStreet movement is powerful because it is naming the source of the crisis—something that the political establishment had been unwilling to do.

The protests are giving the unemployed, the uninsured, the evicted, indebted students, homeless veterans, and would-be retirees a place to break out of their isolation. OccupyWallStreet shows that millions share their hardships and are standing up. Transforming shame, self-doubt, and isolation into solidarity unleashes enormous power.

But there's more that makes OccupyWallStreet powerful. It is respectful, inclusive, and egalitarian. Protesters invite police to join them, noting that they, too, are part of the 99 percent. When Troy Davis was executed, a rally of supporters marched to lower Manhattan to a warm welcome by the OccupyWallStreet protesters. Even former tea party members have gotten involved.

The scene in Zuccotti Square is radically democratic – different teams have autonomy to manage food, sanitation, media, comfort, and other tasks necessary for a protracted stay. But no one directs the whole group. Instead, decisions are made by consensus at General Assemblies. Cornel West, Michael Moore, and other celebrities show up to speak, and their words are appreciated. But at the General Assemblies, each person who wishes to speak has a turn, and each one can help shape events.

I did not witness a single incident of violence in the three sites I visited: Zuccotti Park on Wall Street, McPherson Square in Washington, DC, and Westlake Plaza in Seattle. Nor have I read any accounts of protester violence. Only the police have resorted to violence, using pepper spray and, during arrests, bloodying the mostly young protesters.

Some have criticized the occupiers for failing to come up with a list of demands. But demands can be easily co-opted and endlessly debated.

Instead, OccupyWallStreet is holding out principles and values that are widely viewed as just—and this is already shifting the political debate. Just in the last few days, the president and vice president of the United States and the president of the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank all acknowledged that the protesters had a point.

Powerful movements build not on a laundry list of policy demands, but on principles and values. OccupyWallStreet has a moral force that speaks to the urgency of the times. The 99 percent, and our future descendants, are losing out in a world dominated by the 1 percent.

Powerful movements create their own spaces where they can shift the debate, and the culture, to one that better serves. That's why showing up in person at the occupy sites is so critical to this movement's success. In hundreds of communities around North America, people are showing up to make a statement and to listen to each other. They are also teaching one another to facilitate meetings, to take nonviolent direct action, to make their own media. They are taking care of each other, gathering food supplies, blankets, and clothes that can allow people to remain outdoors even as the weather gets wetter and colder. Like the uprisings of the Arab Spring, they are using social media, and getting out their own story, even when the corporate media chooses to distort or ignore their message. And they are growing. According to the Personal Democracy Forum, the numbers "liking" a Facebook Occupy site is growing at the rate of more than 25 percent per day.

The Occupy Wall Street movement, the clarity of their demand for change, and their growing power may be the most important news of our time.


Sarah van Gelder bio picSarah van Gelder is co-founder and executive editor of YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions.

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YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Gelder, S. v. (2011, October 06). Where The 99 Percent Get Their Power. Retrieved May 16, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://cms.yesmagazine.org/blogs/sarah-van-gelder/where-the-99-percent-get-their-power. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

america's joining the world

Posted by aura at Oct 08, 2011 11:46 AM
i think that it's great that American's are finally moving forward with citizens' movements, and Wall St. hits the spot. the beautiful thing is that each person is there as a person - not a representative of an organization or political group. this is just people there speaking up for people, honest voices. this has been going on in Israel all summer and it's still happening. here they tried to force us to make demands as well - it's a copout. this is much bigger than specific demands. This is about creating honest democracy, taking back our voices!

Occupying Wall St. Power

Posted by Alan N. Connor at Oct 08, 2011 12:57 PM
Dear Sarah,
I apaud and agree with the Wall St. occupyers. I occupied Wll . by Proxy at gathering last night on the Univ of Mich Diag. It was exciting and envigorating. But gathering and occupying ias not exercising power. The one percent that has the power now is watching and perhaps even hearing what is being said, but mass gatherings are not going to change their behaviors. They will look and listen and go on doing the same old same old....amassing personal wealth at the expense of the eco-systems, public health and the 99 percent.
Obviously the one percent's power needs to be drastically reduced and they are not going to share any of it voluntarily. It has to taken from them by a nonviolent moral force. Violence won't work because (1) the one percent has the guns which are highly orgasnized and (2) violence is just wrong.
However non violent action can be and has been r esponded to with deadly violence. We may have to brave that as Ghandi and M. L. King and Jesus did.
Al Connor

Thanks for the this article

Posted by Rev Billy Talen at Oct 08, 2011 01:15 PM

I hadn't thought of how the victims of corporatist economics are isolated from one another. You mention the veterans, foreclosed folks, the students and their debts, the veterans.. I have in my notes for CNN interview maybe I'll have a chance to mention this.

yes! leads the way

Posted by Connie Nagel at Oct 09, 2011 10:10 AM
I, with great joy support this grassroots movement and believe the focus on Wall Street is well placed. I also think “Occupy Wall Street” is descriptive for now, however I don’t think it has staying power and much prefer the “American Dream” Movement suggested by Van Jones in the fall issue of “yes!”. As Jones points out like “Tea Party” it can’t be copyrighted, its part of history. Not sure when exactly I got my Fall issue in the mail but I believe Jones' interview predates the demonstrations and speaks perfectly to the media criticisms. Pretty prophetic if the media care to notice!

Occupy

Posted by Stephen Poss at Oct 10, 2011 06:07 AM
Dear Tea Party;
Why do you and your ilk bother to put in your negative two cents on issues you obviously cannot comprehend? As if George Soros was some lone leader acting to lead us down a path to destruction to enrich himself. Get a life and an education, please. It is sad that you have fallen for the rhetoric of the controlling class which is socialistic (perhaps even closer to communist)for the rich. You should do some more research into the facts and in the meantime, save your comments for like minded fools.

Funny

Posted by T Ryan at Oct 11, 2011 06:06 AM
Viral?! LOL! OK, if a few small crowds around the country is what you call going viral, then so be it.

This "99%" is really about 1%. A bunch of whiners who give no answer to the question of what they want to occur as a result of these acts of immaturity. And naturally, they avoid answering because what they really want is not acceptable to the real 99%. Too bad the media gives attention to this childish activity....

What We Want

Posted by Les at Oct 16, 2011 04:31 PM
We had a meeting with 5 people in our little corner of the Right Wing World. We decided to phrase our occupation thus: We do not have a list of demands; we want to begin a global dialogue to address vast systemic problems which are inter-related and so far have not been addressed.

Unfortunately these folks do not repressent the 99%

Posted by Tom at Oct 17, 2011 04:25 PM
How can you follow a movement that has no plan, no agenda, no future as depending on handouts and charity?

What are the demands? Wipe out debt? And then what? Wipe out the banks? The big companies? Like apple (the largest company in the US)? Will the protestors stop using apple products? Facebook, valued at $100 billion, will they stop using facebook and giving their personal information for free?

These folks do not represent the 99%, I doubt if they even are a good representation of the unemployed, that is less than 10%. I would like them to stop talking how many people they represent, there is a silent majority that is against this group of agitators

Damned If They Do, Damned If They Don't

Posted by Harvey Asher at Nov 19, 2011 03:06 PM
The Occupy Wall Street protests that began in late September, 2011 belong to the American in-house economic reform tradition, and are subject to the same kinds of limits of other groups that employ similar tactics. Joiners pitted the 99% against the 1% who make a minimum of $516,663 per year and have a total average wealth per person of $14 million. However, participants were upset most not by the huge incomes of the wealthy but by the questionable means they used to make their fortunes, and tax policies that allowed them to avoid paying their proper share.
      What protesters want from Wall Street is greater fairness, better accountability, more responsibility, and help in creating jobs for the 99% that would raise hope for young people starting out who think the deck is stacked against them.
The strength and popularity of the movement come from its open-endedness, lack of hierarchy, and absence of a specific political agenda. Those are its weaknesses as well. Unless the movement politicizes, as did the Tea Party, it will have little, if any, enduring effect. But that kind of transformation risks turning Occupy Wall Street into just another narrow partisan group, and forsaking the sympathy it has aroused among many Americans who identify with its collective voice against Wall Street cupidity.

Harvey Asher, http://americatheownersmanual.wordpress.com

Issues stemming from the 1%

Posted by Teresa DeKoker at Nov 22, 2011 12:12 PM
Thank you for mentioning the many issues that stem from the 1% including their recklessness with human and environmental health. Childhood obesity and its diseases are of grave concern if we are to have a future at all. Doing away with Wall Street pressures and farm subsidies which favor large corporate farms would do a lot for our state of health.

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