Chris Hedges: A Movement Too Big to Fail
Chris Hedges in Times Square, October 15, 2011
On October 15th Occupy TVNY met with Pullitzer prize-winning author and journalist Chris Hedges in Times Square, New York City where tens of thousands of people assembled on a global day of action. Chris shares his feelings on where the Occupy movement has come from and where it is heading.
Journalist Chris Hedges pulls no punches in his recent article in TruthDig, "A Movement Too Big to Fail".
There is no danger that the protesters who have occupied squares, parks and plazas across the nation in defiance of the corporate state will be co-opted by the Democratic Party or groups like MoveOn. The faux liberal reformers, whose abject failure to stand up for the rights of the poor and the working class, have signed on to this movement because they fear becoming irrelevant. Union leaders, who pull down salaries five times that of the rank and file as they bargain away rights and benefits, know the foundations are shaking. So do Democratic politicians from Barack Obama to Nancy Pelosi. So do the array of “liberal” groups and institutions, including the press, that have worked to funnel discontented voters back into the swamp of electoral politics and mocked those who called for profound structural reform.
Resistance, real resistance, to the corporate state was displayed when a couple of thousand protesters, clutching mops and brooms, early Friday morning forced the owners of Zuccotti Park and the New York City police to back down from a proposed attempt to expel them in order to “clean” the premises. These protesters in that one glorious moment did what the traditional “liberal” establishment has steadily refused to do—fight back. And it was deeply moving to watch the corporate rats scamper back to their holes on Wall Street. It lent a whole new meaning to the phrase “too big to fail.”
Liberals will find passages such as the following insulting or infuriating. Or both.
The corporate state forced the liberal class to join in the nation’s death march that began with the presidency of Ronald Reagan. Liberals such as Bill Clinton, for corporate money, accelerated the dismantling of our manufacturing base, the gutting of our regulatory agencies, the destruction of our social service programs and the empowerment of speculators who have trashed our economy. The liberal class, stripped of power, could only retreat into its atrophied institutions, where it busied itself with the boutique activism of political correctness and embraced positions it had previously condemned.
Although openly contemptuous and disdainful of the "faux liberal reformers", as he calls them, Hedges has nothing but unabashed admiration and praise for the Occupiers.
What took place early Friday morning in Zuccotti Park was the first salvo in a long struggle for justice. It signaled a step backward by the corporate state in the face of popular pressure. And it was carried out by ordinary men and women who sleep at night on concrete, get soaked in rainstorms, eat donated food and have nothing as weapons but their dignity, resilience and courage. It is they, and they alone, who hold out the possibility of salvation. And if we join them we might have a chance.


From almost the outset the NYPD WhiteShirts have been out front .. they, or their handlers, KNOW the BlueShirts are 99 percenters. Some of the most amazing video from the Times Square "Rodeo" occurred late, after everyone was tired from holding onto their side of the barricades, and the protestors on one side were talking to the BlueShirts on the other side. Almost person to person!
The non-hierarchical democratic process the Occupations use is modelled directly on Native American practices. It's the perfect antidote to the hierarchical structure imposed on society by corporate culture.
My own two cents. The REAL message of the Occupations is the Occupations themselves. Occupying public space. Exercising the right to assemble. To air grievances. To share community. To come out of the isolation the corporate state imposes upon us to make us vulnerable, frightened, alone. To think that there will be some "end" to the process, and then everyone goes back to their previous "normal" life is to miss the point. The Occupations are the beginning of a new way of being. I expect to see Occupations taking over living space in abandoned buildings, in foreclosed homes. Continuing to organize kitchens and medical centers and childcare arrangements and schools and .. the imagination is the limit.
When will government of the people, by the politicians, for the corporations perish from this Earth?
Not soon enough!
Thank you. I get it also, and you delivered it perfectly for all of us.
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