fukn occupy
i feel like people really detest occupy, it's like that name you don't dare invoke. and if you were associated with it by peoples and the state? you might as well be walking around with a toe tag. whenever i try to write about it i'm fucking angry as fuck.
like radicals who initially were ousted or who rejected the development of occupy were never encouraged to continue to develop their analysis of the movement, how it was white privileged etc. and how those dynamics played out. instead of hearing the analysis and reflections of people who were within that experience (which granted, weren't alienated or pushed out completely by the dynamics of privilege that were at the camps NAMELY at the General Assemblies by the first week) they get dismissed in favor of the same radical analysis of occupy that was present by the first two weeks and stagnant. instead of growing or reflecting, you know, praxically, that same analysis just repeated. And we know- we know that to be 'accepted' by radical organizing we have to dissociate ourselves. But let me tell you- all the people that experienced that shit and i mean not like drop off some food every now and then, are forever fucking changed, for better or worse.
Newsflash though shit changes, it wasn't just a white liberal privileged college movement. there were so many goddamn tribes that formed out of a rejection of the process of the general assembly, so many poor, houseless and pushed out disenfranchised people. but who gets representational power?
the fucking white lib college educated people who THE MEDIA focused on completely. yeah, and just like that it's all wrapped up for you huh? homogenizing all the tactics, experiences, erasing all the people of color who fought liberalism and who ousted the unions. who fought for an anti capitalist framework. all the students, the youth who came out and lived there, who left their homes and who ditched school.
that shit wasn't homogenous- it was global. it was a bajillion different things and the dynamics between liberals and rads played out differently in every fucking region. i went in anti partisan and i emerged anti capitalist and for autonomy and abolition of the entire social order. that's not something to fucking ignore. if you were there, if you were present, and if you fought, don't let the state erase your entire experience on their terms. it's fucking suffocating, it's like experiencing a loss and everyone just looks at you like you are traumatized and angry and urgently anti state for no reason.
all the people came from their different organizations trying to get a piece. the OLA action committee was just a bunch of different groups initially trying to get OLA social capital to endorse actions for their orgs. initially there was not 'occupy' actions because all the different groups were just using it as a platform. and when we fought that conservative (liberal) camp we were targeted as the 'provocateurs'. and when they ANNOUNCED the camp was closing (with their city liason committee bullshit) the media followed suit, and so did the people, and all the people who had some sort of organizational safety net just retreated back into their organizations completely able to dissociate from occupy and leave the autonomous peoples holding the bag and the reputation that those organizational FUX built.
i mean im not really bitter, i'm just sick of the stigma. part of movements is you do things wrong, but you do things. first, do no harm. and we failed at that by how the initial police brutality committee was targeted, but we followed that shit up by ousting those managers and literally exposing how SEIU was manipulating the city and the movement. you probably don't even know what i'm talking about but THATS THE PROBLEM. The herstory is erased because of the stigma surrounding it, because of the EFFECTIVENESS of repression and misinformation by the state apparatus and their capitalist media machine. and it has only been a couple years.
They say it's dead, but then the state invokes it on their terms when they want to serve their ends. They don't want occupy to die, they want resistance to be associated with it because they were able to successfully navigate and marginalize the narrative that emerged from it. I'm sick of feeling shame for having participated in something. I'm sick of feeling like i shouldn't talk about it because it will affect my revolutionary credibilty.
fuck credibility, they only win when we erase and censor ourselves. it's SO IMPORTANT we speak out about our experiences directly. I liked the article about 5 ways Occupy failed to attack liberalism or whtever, but all that article demonstrates is how much REMAINS TO BE WRITTEN. i want to hear criticism from people who participated so we don't leave the representation in the hands of those who would have us slandered and erased.
i mean lets' be clear, everything we do here is temporary and has unknown lasting effects. everything we do is an ATTEMPT, but to build, we cannot forget our attempts. that being said, i think we're daring to do a radio discussion on occupy. i dig criticism, send it, whatever, but if you're going to be dismissive and mocking i'll probably eat your face.