A Moment of Clarity.
Words.
"I have a confession to make. At first, I misunderstood Occupy Wall Street.
...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.
...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.
...That, to me, is what Occupy Wall Street is addressing. People don't know
exactly what they want, but as one friend of mine put it, they know one
thing: FUCK THIS SHIT! We want something different: a different life, with different values, or at least a chance at different values.
...People want out of this fiendish system, rigged to inexorably circumvent
every hope we have for a more balanced world. They want major changes. I
think I understand now that this is what the Occupy movement is all
about. It's about dropping out, if only for a moment, and trying
something new, the same way that the civil rights movement of the 1960s
strived to create a "beloved community" free of racial segregation.
...It is succeeding, for now, just by being something different."
ROLLING STONE: How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the OWS Protests
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