Origins
and Principles of the Occupy Movement
c. Joel A
Feingold, 2011
Upon its
inception, Occupy Wall Street swiftly spread to numerous other cities and became
a broadly acknowledged social movement. Initially well received, its lack of a
clear message, a sound bite, rallying points, and a public policy message, has
created some frustration among a portion of its natural supporters. Occupations
have caused municipalities to absorb increasingly large financial costs, a real
concern to supporters and detractors alike. Thus, the lack of clearly
articulated policy advocacy has caused many to question the Occupy Movement.
But Occupy has created broad awareness of the widening income inequality in our
society. That in and of itself is a giant step.
The
motivations of Occupiers and their supporters emerge from the wide chasm
between the governmental actions and services citizens expect and those
actually delivered. Many people believe that our government has failed to
balance its rules and regulations with individual freedoms and societal norms
of fairness and equality. Naturally, when pressed too hard, people respond. With
trust broken, opportunities reduced, ability to be heard limited, and favoritism
observed, it’s no wonder that people look for a way to improve their situation.
Some may
react by forming new political parties, others by demonstrations. Some groups
may be led by a few forceful leaders. Alternatively, they may take the form of
mass uprisings with a chaotic and amorphous organization, if any, and an
inchoate message at best. Today’s major political movements fit these broad
brushstroke descriptions, the Tea Party being more hierarchically organized and
laser focused on the ballot box and Occupy diffuse, each camp self-governing
through general assemblies. As different as they are, both are the natural
result of the same problem, a ruling class disassociated from the general
public.
The
branding of the dissatisfaction from which Occupy has grown is well known.
“99%” now represents income inequality and a demand for it to be redressed. The
astounding increase in the income gap between rich and poor has driven Occupy
participants to action. Occupy’s signature demonstration, the formation of
communities functioning via general assemblies with no specific leadership,
promoting their message through 24/7/365 occupations of public space, has
captured the attention of millions who observe their daily demonstrations and
read or hear about Occupy in social media and the press. But the understanding
of how such income inequality arises and what might be necessary to correct it
has not.
There are
two entities that interweave to form the system about which the activists are
centered. The first is our government and its rules and regulations. It is highly
evolved from a government that provides merely national defense and domestic
security via a military, domestic police and a court system. Our government
also regulates financial and industrial business activity, resource
exploitation and environmental pollution, insurance, transportation, labor
rights and more. It also provides funding for housing and education, community
development, health care services, and manages the largest entitlement
programs, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
The
second entity is our market economy. A market economy sets pricing for
materials, goods and services. It allows banking to flourish thereby supporting
a system that has good access to capital. And it fosters a culture of
innovation, as people look for the next great economic opportunity. A market
economy also sets the price for labor and defines which skills are valuable, or
not.
The
market economy is inextricably intertwined with our government. Without
government to set limits on behavior and resolve disputes companies would be
wary about doing business with each other as a system for recourse would not
exist. Customers’ access to credit might be difficult, slowing or all but
eliminating growth. Established businesses would be able to employ unethical
tactics to destroy new competitors. Monopolies would be created stifling
innovation. Excessive pricing power might line some owners’ pockets at the
expense of placing a serious drag on a sector of the economy. So certain governmental
structures create an environment necessary for businesses to flourish.
Despite the
obvious benefits of rules and regulations businesses are engaged in a constant
state of combat with government. Milestones such as the creation of the
Interstate Commerce Commission in 1887, the Sherman Antitrust Act (1890,) The
Glass-Steagall Act (1932,) and the National Labor Relations Act (1935) all
limited the ability of business to act independently. More recently many
regulations have been added to protect the environment. In 1970, under
President Nixon, the Environmental Protection Agency was created to reduce air
and water pollution. Currently a host of new fishing regulations are being
implemented under NOAA Fisheries and there is tighter oversight of deep water
oil extraction by the new Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and
Enforcement. The history is clear: the government’s role has restrained
businesses activities. Whether such restraint is inadequate or excessive is
subject to much debate.
If one
views this through the lens of pure business profit, companies have had one
lousy ride. Many people, both business owners and workers, buy into the belief
that US regulations are excessive, stymie business and employment growth, and
violate the Constitution. On the other hand, businesses frequently create
problems when they are unregulated, unsupervised, or otherwise behave without
regard to negative impacts. Sometimes the risk of an incident is very, very
low, but when a problem occurs it does so with dramatic harm, causing
substantial economic or physical injury and death.
As there
is no clear methodology for pricing in the consequences to catastrophic
impacts, and as businesses are concerned with profit, they tend to miscalculate
risk when viewed from the public’s perspective. But our government, in fits and
starts, has supported the general population’s needs for clean air and water, a
stable financial system, sustainable agriculture, conservation of energy and
food resources, safer automobiles and houses, collective bargaining, preventing
discrimination in the workplace and on public transportation, and innumerable
other societal needs.
It is
probably true that these regulations at least initially have increased costs or
other burdens, sometimes making it harder for a company to compete or make a
profit at all. In a global perspective, where other competitors may operate in
locations with far less regulation, this situation does put domestic companies
at a competitive disadvantage. On the other hand there are innumerable examples
of corporate excess or inaction causing terrible problems. Thus, governmental
action is viewed both as too little and too much, depending upon one’s
perspectives.
In our
society we elect our representatives to do the business of governing, pass
laws, set tax rates and distribute the proceeds to the entities that are
required. These include the military for defense, the justice system for civil
redress and criminal prosecutions, Social Security and Medicare for a safety
net, Medicaid and public education, and so many more. The government provides
permits for businesses to operate, leases mineral rights, provides industry
subsidies and tax breaks, and often these behaviors are perceived to be
inequitable. The government and economic system are so intertwined, so large
and powerful, that it takes a huge effort and a great deal of time to change
its course.
The
difficulty of achieving a more equitable society is exacerbated by the natural
tendency, indeed intense desire, of those that have the power not to relinquish
it. Having acquired money, status and contacts, the key influencers can
exercise their power to prevent everyone else from obtaining it. This, in a
nutshell, is the deeper meaning of the 99%. Not only does the 1% have the money
and opportunity but, according to Occupy, the 1% is doing whatever it takes to
increase their power and riches, and to the extent that they exploit the 99%,
deny the 99% their fair opportunities, that’s OK. The recent effort to reduce
the countervailing power of unions is one important example. Providing billions
of dollars to banks whose mortgage investments went bad while not delivering
similar relief to homeowners who lost their jobs during the following recession
is another. It is this excessive imposition of power that is no longer
acceptable to Occupy and, believing that they are truly oppressed, they have
decided to resist.
In
aggregate there may be tens of thousands of participants in Occupy tent cities
and demonstrations. As a plain statement of commitment, this is very
impressive. Some might even suggest that there might be the seeds of a
revolution in thought if not more. But due to Occupy’s philosophy of dispersed
power and self-government by unanimous agreement it seems unlikely that Occupy would
be able to take such action, even if many members wanted to.
Occupy is
run by General Assemblies and decisions are made by consensus. Each camp is
pretty much independent of the others, not so much by design as by philosophy.
One fascinating result of this is that not only are the inhabitants of each
Occupation diverse, but the Occupations are diverse too. There is no specific
spokesperson, nor is there an official and articulated platform. However, at
many General Assemblies and over the course of the weeks and months of camps,
Occupiers exchange their views.
Based
upon several informal conversations with Occupiers in Boston, and an interview
with one of Occupy Boston’s founders who must remain anonymous, as there is no
one person elected to speak upon the group’s behalf, Occupiers share a large
number of beliefs. It is very important to note that these beliefs are not
universal, but they are broadly held and have deep importance for the future of
our country. Some of these beliefs are:
1) The Government
does not represent the general public. And the Government is the same as
Elected Officials. Because Elected Officials’ primary consideration is to keep
their jobs, and in order to do so they need a great deal of money, they
represent their donors’ interests, not their constituents’. Our Elected Officials
do not respond to the general public about policy issues unless there is
critical mass that will cause them to lose office.
2) Occupy
sees government as supporting business over people in general and, more
specifically by:
· not restricting or further taxing
gigantic bonuses,
· not imposing higher taxes (or
closing tax loopholes) on corporations and the wealthy
· not increasing protections for
workers, and
· not regulating against pollution
3) Occupiers
generally believe that the financial industry was the principal cause of the
economic crises and that regulatory failure, in particular the repeal of the
Glass-Steagall Act of 1932, was a predicate of the financial catastrophe.
4) As it
is now configured, gamed against the 99% as it were, the capitalist system is a
large problem. But capitalism – or a market economy – as a broad generality, is
not necessarily a problem.
5) In
addition Occupy views the government as having let the 99% down by not doing
enough to protect the working class, via:
· Excellent education for all
· Job training for adults
· Failing to make the income tax
more progressive
6) Occupiers
generally believe that military spending is way too high. While perhaps not as
widely held as some of the other beliefs, still a large number think that some
level of active, or adventurous, foreign policy is acceptable but imposing our
will over others is, generally speaking, bad. (Some notable Tea Partiers agree.
"[W]e cannot stand against big government at home while supporting it
abroad. We cannot talk about fiscal responsibility while spending trillions on
occupying and bullying the rest of the world ... A return to the
traditional U.S. foreign policy of active private engagement but government
noninterventionism is the only alternative that can restore our moral and
fiscal health.” (See Paul, Ron (August 27, 2010), "A
Tea Party Foreign Policy", Foreign
Policy)
7) Looking
specifically at the last 10 years, Occupiers believe that our adventurous
foreign policy, so tied as it has been to the exercise of military power, has
caused us to incur huge
· Financial cost
· Human cost, and has
· Damaged our reputation and
· Diminished our ability to
influence policy and events elsewhere.
Even if the
last is not true then the distractions we have inflicted upon ourselves have
limited our ability to focus upon much larger problems, for example, the
refusal of the Palestinian Authority and Hamas to recognize Israel’s right to
exist as a Jewish state and Israel’s continued political domination by
ultra-religious minorities, resulting in its disastrous settlement policy.
8) A
significant portion of the defense budget should be reallocated, Occupiers
believe. A few numbers are illuminating:
2011
Federal Budget (in billions) (note that different sources #’s vary)
Total Spending 3,830
Total Revenue 2,531
Deficit 1,299
Defense (total)
903
Iraq War 51
Afghanistan War 119
Social Security
748
Medicare
494
Medicaid & Related 347
Other Social Related 361
Interest
230
Education
130
Unemployment Ins
121
Other 596
The cost
of the two current wars is 19% of the entire defense budget. It is 31% greater
than our education budget. It is half the Medicaid and related budget that pays
for health care for economically disadvantage families and children. How do we
rationalize this much money and this much suffering for what appear to be
modest or inconsequential gains in security? How do we rationalize this
spending instead of making an investment in the education of our kids and the
health of our working poor, many of whom provide crucial labor performing
menial but essential tasks such as harvesting fruits and vegetables or
performing sanitation duties? Occupiers ask those questions and answer, “You
can’t.”
9) Occupy supports a strongly
progressive system of taxation. They focus in on the richest one percent whom they
believe do not pay their fair share. Putting aside any characterizations of
what is fair or not, and merely examining the numbers, one can see that Occupy
has a point, at least from the perspective of practicality, as in get the low
hanging fruit. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities published a set of
charts illustrating the impacts of the Bush tax cuts on the economy. (cbpp.org)
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/08/how-bush-tax-cuts-economy_n_873245.html#s289289&title=Effect_On_Economic)
According to the CBPP
the Bush era tax cuts will
generate about 25% of our deficit in 2012, increasing to about 50% in 7 years
if projections hold. CBPP numbers also show that the increase in employment due
to the Bush tax cuts was less than 1 percent vs. nearly 3 percent for the other
post WWII economic expansions, and the GDP increase was perhaps 60% of other
post WWII expansions. It is
argued that the disparity is due to the Bush tax cuts disproportionately
benefitting the wealthy. So
making our tax system strongly progressive is an Occupy priority.
10) Occupiers generally believe
that lack of appropriate regulation contributed to or caused the recession,
thus leading to large numbers of the working class losing their jobs, their
retirement savings, their homes, and their dignity. They have much heavy weight support in this
matter. Many renowned economists assert that the major factors in the crash
were the collapse of the housing bubble and the repeal of the Glass Steagall
Act, which principally prohibited commercial banks from engaging in securities
transactions. When Glass Steagall was repealed in 1999 many banks entered the
investment and brokerage businesses as a way to increase profits without
significantly increasing their reserves. When the housing industry started to
collapse the tens of thousands of at risk loans, many of which had been written
with fraudulent documentation, then repackaged as securities and held by arms
of the giant banks, became worthless. Banks had insufficient capital to operate
and the Federal government became the last (and best) source of operating
capital. Occupiers may be understood to view better (and sometimes more)
regulation as necessary in order to prevent an economic (or natural resource)
disaster.
11) Occupy has embraced a
philosophy of multiculturalism and has welcomed people of all faiths, but the
boundary between religion and government is uncertain. However, there is a strong sense that placing
religion before government is problematic.
12)
Occupy is not likely to become a functioning political party. Tea Party voter
enthusiasm propelled a number of candidates to office for the first time and
there is now a Tea Party Caucus in the House of Representatives. It has 62
members, all Republicans. Occupy seems to be the opposite. It uses a General
Assembly to achieve consensus rather than a majority vote system, and as such
it is rather unusual for a Western political organization. The most prominent
example of something similar is the Loya Jirga used by tribal leaders in
Afghanistan. And Occupy, rather than forming a political organization, seems to
be committed to publicizing their key concerns as a group by regular and very
public demonstrations. On top of that, due to the focus upon the efforts of the
group, it is unlikely that Occupy would endorse a candidate. And putting an
exclamation point on some early Occupy supporters’ concerns about where Occupy
is going and what it might accomplish (or to put it a different way, how they
might benefit from it,) it is also unlikely that Occupy could find a
spokesperson to make such an endorsement.
So where does this leave them, the
Occupiers, and the huge unrepresented middle of America? If the 99% is no
longer represented, will it remove its consent to be governed? And if it is no
longer willing to give consent to be governed, is the United States nearing an
end. I don’t believe that, and from my observations, Occupiers have strong
patriotism at their roots. It’s a love of country, appreciation of democracy,
willingness to participate and advocate, to demonstrate and to vote, which
binds the Occupiers.
The next steps are complex and
involve laws made both by Congress and the Court. Key systems will need to be
changed to break the connection between donors’ interest and elected officials’
interest in election and/or reelection. At a fundamental level, only by
changing the system so that elected officials’ interests better align with the
broad general public will inequality of income and opportunity be reduced. The
most obvious ways to break the connection are campaign finance and the
revolving door. Along with political donations, big business and the wealthy
influence regulatory, environmental, other policy matters and taxation through
scores of lobbyists.
For many years the laws have been
relaxed to allow more money from a wider set of donors to finance political
campaigns. This culminated in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010)
in which the US Supreme Court held that the First Amendment prohibits the government from
censoring political broadcasts in candidate elections when those broadcasts are
funded by corporations or unions. One can imagine a system in which only public campaign funds are legal
to use and where collecting a certain reasonable number of signatures is the only
way to access public campaign funds, thus removing financial donors entirely. A
second way to address the issue of campaign finance is to eliminate politics as
a career, thus removing the problem of funding reelection campaigns.
Implementing a set of term limits would partially address this problem.
Another practice that must be
changed or eliminated is the all too common step from the Hill (or State
Legislatures) to the comfy confines of the 1,000+ lobbying firms who represent
(mostly) the interests of big business and their wealthy owners. No less than
Jack Abramoff (see http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-11-18/-willing-vassals-in-congress-do-lobbyist-bidding-jack-abramoff.html)
has advocated for “a lifetime ban on members and staff lobbying Congress or associating
in any way with for-profit lobbying efforts.” Perks both during and after Elected
Officials and Staff serve must be removed. At least that would level the
playing field somewhat.
Both
these systemic changes have the potential to yield elected officials that
better represent the interests of the working people, the 99%. In the long
term, perhaps one or more generations, such changes might take place. But that
would require the significant application of organized political will with
leadership both motivated and motivating, willing to engage the media with
slogans, to debate with sound bites, to get dirty in the trenches. Occupiers
have shown themselves ready to get dirty in the parks. Bet on leaders emerging.
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