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Aquarian
Weekly 10/12/11
REALITY CHECK
#OWS
Pissed
Populist Resistance Shifts Left
Some
is rich, some is poor
That's the way the world is
But I don't like lying back
Sayin' how bad your luck is
So
we came to jazz it up
We never loved a shovel
Break your back to earn your pay
Ah' don't forget to grovel
-
Joe Strummer
There's
a place in the heart of the world of commerce called Liberty Square;
lower Manhattan, NYC, deep in the money district - the trade market,
slipknot wink-wink wheel-greasing machinery. It's not far from
where a few weeks ago they laid their wreaths and said their prayers
for what went down on 9/11/01, when after a decade people were
still not quite sure how the hell that could have happened to
the richest nation on planet earth in its biggest city. For 20
days now this tiny patch of land in the bowels of the concrete
jungle has acted as an epicenter for the latest in street-theater
populist outrage aimed at a fixed system that, let's face it,
has been a pretty fair whipping post for this space lo these past
14 years. Weird how the slipped veil will occasionally reveal
the fragility of subsistence.
A
fair number of people have jammed the cross streets and bridges,
waving signs, wearing costumes, strumming tuneless guitars and
brandishing cheap bullhorns while they block traffic and are summarily
hauled off to prison. Some are there for the spectacle, others
for the sense of purpose, others to perpetuate the illusion of
filibuster, a slice of the rhetoric from the bottom up. Others
are making the same point, maybe, from a different political slant,
but nonetheless a very similar dissent to that of the TEA Party
enthusiasts of two years ago.
There
is a lot of fairly damaging shit that goes down without much democratic
voice.
To
the byways pour the jobless, disenfranchised, and the youth, who
are told there is no future, and the aging, who hear that what
they banked on is going bye-bye and it ain't comin' back. Voting
appears to be an annual joke and unless you can afford a lobbyist,
there is a corned animal vibe going down now; here, there and
everywhere.
The
left-leaning 99 Percenters, the Occupy Wall St. movement, which
began noisily enough in late September, has now reached into the
thousands over three weeks and has spread to cities across the
fruited plain. It's a splintered kind of mashed-up message of
middle class civil disobedience, worker's rights, and fed-up disillusioned
patriots protesting against the wealthy, influential and apparently
under-taxed one percent that we're reminded of in Washington daily;
by the president, the congress, and echoed through the news cycle
cable soap boxers. It is old-fashioned Have vs. Have-nots, the
class warfare crowd, demanding a share and exercising a voice
- real Woody Guthrie meets Emma Goldman angst.
Apparently
no one is safe these days.
The
Right is being pounded daily from the TEA Party that the broken
government needs to stand down and out. "Taxed Enough Already"
was grassroots at its finest, and although it at first appeared
naïve and then patently mean spirited, it had a signature resonance.
Of course, this has become a bit of a problem for those who call
government a career, whether they've achieve their position from
deriding it or not. Whatever the Grand Old Party throws its red
meat subculture, it comes back chewed up and spat out. Ask its
current presidential "frontrunner", who, by the way, keeps besting
all the TEA Party comers on by one.
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Now
the Left, feeling rejected and hoodwinked by its centrist,
Wall St. bailing president and a congress that passed the
buck for two years into the gnarled teeth of a freshman
class of neo-conservatives hell-bent on hacking chunks of
big government at its roots, has hurled itself into the
scene with a fervor not seen since the last president decided
to war it up.
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Now
the Left, feeling rejected and hoodwinked by its centrist, Wall
St. bailing president and a congress that passed the buck for
two years into the gnarled teeth of a freshman class of neo-conservatives
hell-bent on hacking chunks of big government at its roots, has
hurled itself into the scene with a fervor not seen since the
last president decided to war it up.
But
unlike the anti-war movement, the Democratic Party survivors don't
know what to do with these people; placate, lecture or exploit.
The present administration would love for their chants to echo
into the hinterland and rile up a fractured base to rekindle any
sort of independent fervor against what is sure to be a dozen
more months of putrid economic news. Yes, the faceless hordes
of shysters you handed over your retirement funds to so they could
gamble like drunken roulette addicts are the bad guys. Good, yes,
please.
But
that is a dream or a delusion not worth dissecting here. We're
talking about protests now, protests against this president and
this congress and the elite of this nation; the oil barons and
corporate masters, the huge conglomerates, who poison and pollute
and rack up massive profit margins to give out big bonuses to
the yacht boys at Christmas, and then have the audacity to not
ease the burden of our nine percent of employed. Protesting, I
guess, against the cold, hard facts: "Too fucking bad, pal. Tell
it to the judge!"
My
favorite sign is "Lost My Job, Found An Occupation".
Good
stuff. Very clever.
Of
course, as I kindly shared with the TEA Party gathering on Tax
Day, 2010 in Hackensack, NJ: What are you going to do once the
fist is unclenched, the cameras go away and you have miles of
The System staring you in the face? Well, the TEA Party did something
all right; they became part of The System. They got themselves
exploited and piggybacked, which has been both a blessing and
a curse. Someone legitimized and then politicized them. The power
suits they sent to the Virginia swamp started yakking it up about
deficits and federal debt and revisiting the legitimacy of entitlements
and opened up a slimy can of worms they can't seem to reseal.
How
come we had money to bail out the big banks? The auto industry?
Wall St. fat cats? How come we ran two wars over eight years off
the books? How come Homeland Security was needed when we have
a CIA, FBI, National Guard and supposedly the most powerful military
on the planet? What the hell is that pork-addled limp-dick stimulus
package doing for us now? Why all this foreign aid? Why all this
tax money going to belly-up green franchises? And, while we're
at it; where are the hovercrafts we were promised? Yeah, and where
are the cool laser guns?
Nobody
said indignation had to be coherent, but at least in America there
isn't major rioting and looting and the burning of neighborhoods.
Yet.
Well,
probably not in NYC. That's an L.A. thing. Too many interesting
distractions that you can get to on foot in the Big Town to waste
time running amok. But, shit, that shouldn't mean when this thing
becomes a maudlin exercise for the righteous, all that is left
us might be the reckless.
But
for now, fight the good fight, people. At the very least, you're
keeping the riot control units of the NYC police department busy
and there will be a host of jobs for those paid to clean up afterward.
It's
like we used to say around here…
NEVER
SURRENDER.
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