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Forum Post: Matt Taibbi: How I Stopped Worrying And Love the OWS Protests

Posted 13 years ago on Nov. 11, 2011, 10:07 p.m. EST by MonetizingDiscontent (1257)
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Matt Taibbi: How I Stopped Worrying And Love the OWS Protests

http://occupyamerica.ning.com/profiles/blogs/matt-taibbi-how-i-stopped-worrying-and-love-the-ows-protests?xg_source=activity

I have a confession to make. At first, I misunderstood Occupy Wall Street.

The first few times I went down to Zuccotti Park, I came away with mixed feelings. I loved the energy and was amazed by the obvious organic appeal of the movement, the way it was growing on its own. But my initial impression was that it would not be taken very seriously by the Citibanks and Goldman Sachs of the world. You could put 50,000 angry protesters on Wall Street, 100,000 even, and Lloyd Blankfein is probably not going to break a sweat. He knows he's not going to wake up tomorrow and see Cornel West or Richard Trumka running the Federal Reserve. He knows modern finance is a giant mechanical parasite that only an expert surgeon can remove. Yell and scream all you want, but he and his fellow financial Frankensteins are the only ones who know how to turn the machine off.

That's what I was thinking during the first few weeks of the protests. But I'm beginning to see another angle. Occupy Wall Street was always about something much bigger than a movement against big banks and modern finance. It's about providing a forum for people to show how tired they are not just of Wall Street, but everything. This is a visceral, impassioned, deep-seated rejection of the entire direction of our society, a refusal to take even one more step forward into the shallow commercial abyss of phoniness, short-term calculation, withered idealism and intellectual bankruptcy that American mass society has become. If there is such a thing as going on strike from one's own culture, this is it. And by being so broad in scope and so elemental in its motivation, it's flown over the heads of many on both the right and the left.

The right-wing media wasted no time in cannon-blasting the movement with its usual idiotic cliches, casting Occupy Wall Street as a bunch of dirty hippies who should get a job and stop chewing up Mike Bloomberg's police overtime budget with their urban sleepovers. Just like they did a half-century ago, when the debate over the Vietnam War somehow stopped being about why we were brutally murdering millions of innocent Indochinese civilians and instead became a referendum on bralessness and long hair and flower-child rhetoric, the depraved flacks of the right-wing media have breezily blown off a generation of fraud and corruption and market-perverting bailouts, making the whole debate about the protesters themselves – their hygiene, their "envy" of the rich, their "hypocrisy."

The protesters, chirped Supreme Reichskank Ann Coulter, needed three things: "showers, jobs and a point." Her colleague Charles Krauthammer went so far as to label the protesters hypocrites for having iPhones. OWS, he said, is "Starbucks-sipping, Levi's-clad, iPhone-clutching protesters [denouncing] corporate America even as they weep for Steve Jobs, corporate titan, billionaire eight times over." Apparently, because Goldman and Citibank are corporations, no protester can ever consume a corporate product – not jeans, not cellphones and definitely not coffee – if he also wants to complain about tax money going to pay off some billionaire banker's bets against his own crappy mortgages.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the political spectrum, there were scads of progressive pundits like me who wrung our hands with worry that OWS was playing right into the hands of assholes like Krauthammer. Don't give them any ammunition! we counseled. Stay on message! Be specific! We were all playing the Rorschach-test game with OWS, trying to squint at it and see what we wanted to see in the movement. Viewed through the prism of our desire to make near-term, within-the-system changes, it was hard to see how skirmishing with cops in New York would help foreclosed-upon middle-class families in Jacksonville and San Diego.

What both sides missed is that OWS is tired of all of this. They don't care what we think they're about, or should be about. They just want something different.

11 Comments

11 Comments


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[-] 4 points by Lockean (671) from New York, NY 13 years ago

"This is a visceral, impassioned, deep-seated rejection of the entire direction of our society, a refusal to take even one more step forward into the shallow commercial abyss of phoniness, short-term calculation, withered idealism and intellectual bankruptcy that American mass society has become. If there is such a thing as going on strike from one's own culture, this is it. And by being so broad in scope and so elemental in its motivation, it's flown over the heads of many on both the right and the left."

Exactly. Taibbi is one of the greatest young minds of our time.

[-] -2 points by Frankie (733) 13 years ago

Actually, if it took him that long to figure that out knowing that OWS came out of Adbusters, then he's really not all that bright. lol

Plus, he was involved in the planning and on the e-mail group himself. You'd think that he would have picked up on that from the correspondence among the group.

[-] 0 points by Frankie (733) 13 years ago

Naaa... I'll stick with the real stuff.

[-] 3 points by powertothepeople (1264) 13 years ago

Taibbi is great as usual.

"Supreme Reichskank Ann Coulter" hahahahahaha

[-] 3 points by Lockean (671) from New York, NY 13 years ago

"Supreme Reichskank Ann Coulter"

I need a new troll handle. Hmm :)

[-] 3 points by buphiloman (840) 13 years ago

I. LOVE. this. thanks.

[-] 2 points by PublicCurrency (1387) 13 years ago

“Banking was conceived in iniquity and was born in sin. The bankers own the earth. Take it away from them, but leave them the power to create money, and with the flick of the pen they will create enough deposits to buy it back again. However, take it away from them, and all the great fortunes like mine will disappear and they ought to disappear, for this would be a happier and better world to live in. But, if you wish to remain the slaves of bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, let them continue to create money.” – Sir Josiah Stamp, Director of the Bank of England (appointed 1928). Reputed to be the 2nd wealthiest man in England at that time.

[-] 1 points by ZenDogTroll (13032) from South Burlington, VT 13 years ago

Supreme Reichskank Ann Coulter

I like that. I might even steal that, I like it that well. Thank you Matt Taibbi.

But I think that in Matt's nervousness over whether OWS stays on message or even has one, he has over shot the mark just a bit. It isn't that we "just want something different" - although if you examine the characteristics of the culture he says we have rejected he is dead on point:

"This is a visceral, impassioned, deep-seated rejection of the entire direction of our society, a refusal to take even one more step forward into the shallow commercial abyss of phoniness, short-term calculation, withered idealism and intellectual bankruptcy that American mass society has become. If there is such a thing as going on strike from one's own culture, this is it. And by being so broad in scope and so elemental in its motivation, it's flown over the heads of many on both the right and the left."

I don't think we "just want something different all" - we want something that is in fact very specific, something that upon reflection seems to have been so common place that it was once taken foregranted; something that is in fact ours; and that is the promise that America offers by contract to each and every one of us. It results in a sense of basic fairness in our day to day lives and in our dealings with each other.

And by comparison with today that would be something very different indeed.

[-] 1 points by GarnetMoon (424) 13 years ago

Brilliantly stated!!

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