When will the really huge crowds come out to the streets?
Super-rich
Don't hear our woes;
They attend,
To cars and clothes.
Don't hear our woes;
They attend,
To cars and clothes.
The Occupy
movement seems somewhat subdued these days. That's largely because the 1
percent is ready for them. Consider how Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel prepared for
the May NATO conference in the Windy City, which drew countless Occupy
protesters: He outfitted his troops with new laws, new military equipment, and
new surveillance gear — and authorized them to make old-fashioned trumped-up
arrests.
And while Occupy
Wall Street and other branches of this new movement have brought attention to
our nation's rampant inequality, where do you go next to address the
concentration of extreme wealth in the hands of too few individuals? It's
shattered both our economy and our democracy. But there's no congressional
committee in charge of that.
Sure, President
Barack Obama himself has dipped into the debate over inequality.
First, he called for every American to have what he called "a fair
shot." More recently, he ridiculed Mitt Romney's tax proposal during an
address to supporters in Stamford, Connecticut as "Robin Hood in
reverse," or "Romney Hood."
But really tackling the problem? That's probably above his pay grade.
In an earlier
era, we had a president born to privilege who helped weave the fabric of
America's safety net. But unlike Franklin D. Roosevelt, Romney isn't interested
in addressing the challenges our nation faces because of extreme inequality.
He'd rather hide behind's his wife's saddle, complaining that the media is
picking on her for being into million-dollar, Olympic-contending dressage
horses.
The Occupiers
smartly chose to first camp out on Wall Street, rather than Pennsylvania
Avenue. The big banks are the center of the problem, so why not simply confront
them on their own turf?
Activists rightly guessed that the coverage would be
better in Manhattan, where the media is less inured to protests than their
jaded brethren in Washington. By now, however, the Big Apple's reporters are
bored with flamboyant efforts to shine a light on the power our outsized banks
wield.
Of course, the
scourge of inequality harms all Americans, not just activists residing in media-saturated
cities. And it's only one of a panoply of crises.
Median family income is
declining, the foreclosure epidemic rages
on, we're still exporting manufacturing and service-sector jobs at a brisk rate, health insurance remains out of reach for millions, highly profitable companies like
Caterpillar are declaring war on their unions,
Romney's advocating a tax plan that would cut taxes on the rich and raise them on the rest of us, and public schools and college students are
being squeezed by spending cuts.
No wonder
thousands of disgusted citizens have taken to the streets. Since young people
are the best-equipped to camp out in the rain, they tend to lead the charge,
especially if they're stuck with big college debts and no job prospects. In
fact, total college debt now exceeds total credit card debt. Can you imagine
what would happen if a movement grew to stop paying?
Anyway, to foment
serious change in the face of militarized police departments and a media that increasingly caters to the 1
percent, the Occupy movement needs more allies. Even peaceful revolutions require
song writers, bloggers, political operatives, and upper-crust dissidents. Not
to mention more people on the streets.
But most
Americans aren't yet comfortable on the streets. They have no sufficiently
hated target like Egypt's Hosni Mubarak or Syria's Bashar al-Assad.
And while
millions are suffering, most of us haven't been evicted or foreclosed on. This
spring, preparing for the day when we will finally be ready, Occupy and its
allies ran hundreds of activist training sessions, getting the protest infrastructure
all lined up and fired up.
But when will we
see really huge crowds out there? How impoverished will we have to be before we
join in? Beats me, but Occupy has beaten the trail for us, mapped the course,
and is impatiently waiting.
OtherWords Columnist William A. Collins is a former state
representative and a former mayor of Norwalk, Connecticut. OtherWords.org