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From Occupy Wall Street to Occupy the Neighborhoods

The Occupy movement has done something amazing, getting Americans to start questioning our economic divides. It's created spaces for people to come together, voice their discontents and dreams, creatively challenge destructive greed. It's created powerful political theater, engaged community, an alternative to silence and powerlessness.

The Occupy movement has done something amazing, getting Americans to start questioning our economic divides. It's created spaces for people to come together, voice their discontents and dreams, creatively challenge destructive greed. It's created powerful political theater, engaged community, an alternative to silence and powerlessness.

But it also faces major challenges. I'm fine that this new public commons isn't offering detailed platforms for change. We can find plenty in almost any Paul Krugman or Robert Kuttner column. Instead, the movement has highlighted the destructive polarization of wealth while voicing what one young woman called “a cry for something better.” And that's a major contribution. The movement and its allies now need to keep spreading this message to that majority of Americans who are sympathetic, but have given up on the possibility of change. To reach those more resistant, who might respond if seriously engaged. To make the physical occupations not just ends in themselves, but bases where more and more people can participate and find ways to publicly act. To keep momentum building even in the winter cold and when media coverage fades. To find continuing ways for people to act without dissipating their energy in an array of fragmented efforts. And, although some participants would disagree, to become part of a broader movement that without muting its voice helps bring about a better electoral outcome in 2012 than the disaster of 2010, when corporate interests prevailed again and again because those who would have rejected their lies stayed home.

One solution, which is beginning to happen, is for the movement to move to the neighborhoods, building on its existing efforts in hundreds of cities and towns. This doesn't mean abandoning the current encampments. At their best, they've created powerful new centers for conversation, reflection and creative action. People talk; brainstorm ideas; make posters and banners; draw in the curious, including those just passing by. In Seattle, even tourists riding the amphibious tour buses broke into cheers as they drove past. Participants tell stories of lost jobs, medical bills and student debt, putting a human face on how they and so many others have been made expendable by a country that seems to care only for the wealthiest. Self-organized committees plan creative tactics, handle donations of food, address medical needs, reach out to the media, create innovative art projects, clean the occupation grounds and ensure physical security. Common meals become a form of communion. The gatherings also convey a sense of festival, inviting in those not yet involved with puppets; colorful banners; drum circles; radical marching bands; signs saying, “I'll believe corporations are people when Texas executes one”; and people dressed up as predatory billionaires, Lady Liberty and dollar-spewing zombies who chant, “I smell money, I smell money.” The spirit of play echoes the defiant folk and hip hop music of Tahir Square and the Gandhi-meets-Monty-Python approaches of the Serbian youth movement Otpur, who helped train the initial Tahir Square occupiers.

But for all the value of creating visible protest communities in the centers of our cities, for all the powerful stories and Dadaist humor, most Americans are still watching from a distance, at most, passive spectators. So maybe the rest of us. who are about these issues but aren't ready to sleep on the hard cold ground, need to build on the opening that this movement has created to consciously reach out to the rest of America. To the degree that the occupations have led the media to even briefly question America's fundamental divides is a victory. But it's not one that we can count on indefinitely. So, we need to find creative ways to take the key issues that the movement's placed on the public agenda to every neighborhood, community, workplace and campus, even those that don't seem natural hotbeds of change.

This could mean extending the existing protests to places they haven't yet reached. Bank of America, Chase, Wells Fargo and Citibank branches are everywhere. So are Exxon/Mobil stations, symbols to challenge that corporation's avoidance of taxes and massive funding of climate change denial. So are the offices of regressive elected officials and candidates. Local Harlem residents just met at a local church to launch Occupy Harlem. In my Seattle neighborhood, activists criss-cross a major intersection every weekend holding banners and talking about the Iraq war and unaccountable corporate power and our main Occupy encampment recently shifted from a downtown plaza to a community college a dozen blocks away, where their presence has grown to 150 tents and they've coexisted amicably with classes, campus events and a weekend farmers' market. For the movement to make progress, it's going to have to do more along these lines – not just hope that if they build enough tent cities and hold creative enough marches change will come.

The people camping don't have to be the same ones working in the neighborhoods. That may be a task best suited for long-standing activist organizations, whose participants have deeper local roots – organizations that might also help find resources to shelter the Occupiers in visible sympathetic churches or union halls as we head into winter. Whatever happens to the physical occupations if we're to build on the powerful momentum that they've created, we're going to need to take the issues they've raised into face-to-face communities, like local businesses and churches, cafes and clubs soccer leagues and Rotary associations. The occupations have played a powerful role in highlighting America's profound economic disparities. But it's up to us to take this message to all the diverse communities we ultimately need to reach. We can't trust capricious and compromised media outlets to adequately translate it, and relying on our own social media gives us far too narrow a reach.

Fortunately, models exist for the kind of systematic grassroots outreach that could fuel the movement's next stage. Here are a half dozen that might offer lessons:.

Many of us went door-to-door or made phone calls during the 2008 Obama campaign. Most who participated soon lapsed into becoming passive spectators and then retreated still further as cycles of disillusionment grew. Whatever Obama's flaws, the one-to-one conversations people had while working to elect him were powerful and we could begin to replicate them for a movement with goals larger than the platforms of any individual political leader or candidate.

One ongoing network to plug into is the AFL-CIO community organizing affiliate Working America. Drawing on a mix of volunteers and paid canvassers they've been reaching out in culturally conservative working-class neighborhoods for the past eight years, focusing particularly on the unemployed. They talk with people about core economic issues, offer practical resource information and give ways to act on issues like unemployment benefits and investment in job-creating infrastructure. By connecting previously isolated individuals with a broader, engaged community, they both give them a voice and leave them far more resistant to greed-driven lies.
Since the economic crisis hit, the Boston community group City Life Vida Urbana began using official foreclosure lists to engage people at risk of losing their homes or apartments. They offer free legal advice as a way to encourage people to come to their meetings, then invite participants to join their protests at foreclosure auctions and the offices of mortgage-holding banks, mustering enough public pressure to repeatedly force these institutions to write down loans that people owe.

Another fertile approach comes from Seattle peace activists. Shortly before the Iraq war, people from all over the region met in the gym of a local high school and divided themselves up by neighborhoods, including those in far-flung suburbs and smaller outlying cities. The local groups then met together to find ways to act in their specific communities, under the umbrella of what they called The Snow Coalition. Eight years later, many of these groups continue raising issues in contexts where people are more likely to know them as neighbors, coworkers, or friends.
Odd as it may sound, the Tea Party also offers lessons in balancing outrage and organizing, though for a vision that would give the top 1 percent even more power and control. Of course, the Occupy movements don't have the Fox News echo chamber or the dollars of billionaire backers. But the Tea Party's impact was propelled by the impact of its ordinary participants, and their actions unquestionably shifted America's political dialogue. They began with visible public protest – first at the health care town halls and then with local vigils and rallies on issues they cared about. Their arguments often denied reality, from their obsession with Obama's birth certificate to warnings of nonexistent “death panels” to calls to “Get the government out of my Medicare.” But they showed up and voiced what they believed in communities throughout the country, while Obama supporters largely stayed home, doing little beyond clicking on email letters and petitions. After the Tea Party's initial public launch, members kept organizing through house meetings, networks of friends, gun clubs, neighborhood groups and conservative churches. Much like the Occupy movements, their groups were intensely decentralized, even as their talking points mysteriously matched those of Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh. As the excellent book “The Backlash” explores, each group made their own decisions, took their own initiatives and ran or supported a mix of their own candidates and more established Republicans who supported their views, with their volunteer participation playing a key role in the 2010 Republican victories.

The movements that brought us the New Deal had a similar mix of intensely local actions, intense community building (including powerful mutual aid institutions) and engagement in local and national politics – even as they remained independent enough to push Roosevelt to take his most powerful stands. The civil rights movement mixed courageous direct action with door-to-door community organizing and voter registration, pushing an initially sympathetic, but resistant Lyndon Johnson to put all his political skill and capital into passing the Voting Rights and Civil Rights Acts, even as he acknowledged that the Democrats would consequently “lose the South for a generation.” The anti-Vietnam War movements started with small groups of people having the audacity to challenge their government, then began to make an impact when people in every community began to participate. All these successfully melded protest and witness with organizing.

If the Occupy movement is going to find a similarly fertile path as these movements, it's going to have to let go of grandiose revolutionary dreams like the sentiments of a student who told me, “If we're following the Arab Spring model we have to demand that all the politicians step down. Then Americans can meet and decide what to do.” Except that Egypt didn't have real elections and we do, however compromised by wealth-driven lies. So, while the encampments and marches need to maintain their independent voice, enough of us are going to have to engage the messy electoral terrain to overcome the millions of dollars that will be pumped in for anonymous attack ads by people like Karl Rove, the Koch brothers, the predatory banks and the oil and coal companies. If the Occupiers stay too contained in their familiar enclaves, or steer people away from electoral participation, they risk helping those at the top prevail even more.

That's a real possibility given the blanket dismissal of voting by far too many of the Occupy participants I've spoken with, or at least of voting within the two-party system. The constantly repeated phrase “they're all corrupt” has its truths, but it also slams the courageous along with the compromised and masks the major difference between politicians who disappoint us because we haven't pressed them hard enough and ones who've been doing their best to make the entire country and planet available for open season plunder. If we want to avoid permanently enshrining the reign of the 1 percent, we might remember the Citizen's United decision, where five Republican justices opened the floodgates for money to dominate politics as never before. If any of the current Republican candidates get to appoint one more justice, we'll lock in similar decisions for the next 30 years. We might also remember the Disclose Act, which would have at least required corporations and wealthy individuals to visibly put their names on ads and mailers that they funded. Every Democratic senator voted for it, even those most compromised with corporate dollars, but it fell one vote short when it couldn't get a single Republican backer. The result, combined with a massive drop-off from a disillusioned Democratic base, was a wave of anonymously funded attack ads that swung election after election, from legislative, Congressional and Senate seats to electing governors like Scott Walker, Rick Scott and John Kasich, who promptly disenfranchised voters, gutted education and social service budgets, busted unions, stripped away environmental protections and handed out ever-more massive tax breaks to the rich.

I'm not suggesting the Occupy movement subordinate itself to Obama, the Democrats, or any other party or individual. Part of the tragedy of the past three years is that we didn't have vital independent movements pushing both parties to deal with unemployment, foreclosures and America's massive economic divides. But nothing stops the Occupiers and their supporters from raising their key issues as clearly and powerfully as possible, while reminding people that showing up at the polls still matters. The alternative is a revolutionary purism, where instead of registering voters like the Tea Party did and reaching out to engage those on the fence, Occupy participants and their supporters stay home and hand the 2012 election to people who represent everything they loathe.

As with participants in previous movements for justice, the Occupiers need to avoid the false choices between protest and organizing, community building and electoral involvement, surrealist theater and the grunt work of change. The criticisms they raise go beyond any single election, Congressional bill, or policy shift. They need to keep raising them, but in ways that keep spiraling out. If they can trigger enough conversations in communities as yet untouched by their voices, they have a chance to prevail. But they have to recognize that the powerful public presence they've created is just a beginning.

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