Here are some money quotes from the article:
“I don’t see any opportunity inside electoral politics this year,” long-time activist and former Ralph Nader spokesperson Kevin Zeese remarked.
“There’s always this emphasis on winning,” Occupy Wall Street’s Ian Williams said. “But do we want to win or do we want to transform the world?”
“The Democrats are a graveyard for progressive movements,” labor organizer Mark Dudzic said. “To think that you can somehow transform that party into something that it’s not designed to do is a fools errand,” he said, dismissing the Tea Party’s approach to remaking the GOP.Wow, big surprise. A Nader spokesman doesn't think we should help someone who is a political rival to Nader. Or are we supposed to pretend as if Nader isn't a political player who has interests that might not necessarily coincide with our own?
“[Do] not get involved in the Obama campaign this year,” Zeese made it clear. Follow Martin Luther King’s advice, Zeese, suggested — “never endorse a candidate.” “He didn’t want to be master or servent of either party. … And that’s, I think, where Occupy should be.”
And let's remember: The problem with the Tea Party's approach to remaking the GOP isn't that the GOP isn't responsive to these changes, but exactly the opposite: They are TOO responsive and are making themselves unelectable and destroying the party in the process. And that's exactly the sort of thing Nader is after as well. He'd rather be right than win, and prefers symbolic victories over real ones. Unfortunately, symbolism never got anyone good health insurance or food on the table.
As much as they are loath to admit it, pragmatism beats idealism when it comes to getting shit done, every time.
Transcending Reality
The rest of this is from a post I made at Facebook, in regards to the quote above about choosing to win versus transforming the world.
What?? This has been a big problem with the Occupy Movement all along: Because they refuse to believe that real change within our system is possible, they reside in a fantasy world in which they can transcend politics in accordance with no known rule of human behavior. As if politics is some evil thing that can be defeated, rather than the means humans use to cope with the fact that we can't all be dictators.
The quote above is like someone arguing that they can do better than winning the Superbowl if they stand outside the stadium and demand that the rules of football make it easier for people like them to win. Sure, sure, politics is hard work, but at the end of the day, you HAVE to win political battles or you're just wanking off.
Plus, reading this comes off as more of the same bullshit whereby they insist that they don't need a plan because their movement transcends plans. When the reality is more simple: They can't agree to a plan because there IS no obvious plan they can agree upon, which is why we use politics in the first place to determine what we should do.
I mean, that's the whole purpose of democracy: We can't all agree on what we should do. Yet these people have decided to skip the whole process of deciding what they should do, as well as pretending as if we don't even need leaders; not because that makes sense, but because that's the hard work they're avoiding in the first place.
It's easy to be self-righteous and condemn inequality and injustice. Figuring out the solution is the hard part, and persuading other people to follow your solution is even harder. And that's what politics are for.
1 comment:
I always enjoy your posts, and wish you would post more often! This has been my issue with the Occupy movement from the beginning. They compare themselves to the Arab Spring uprisings and/or the Civil Rights movement, but people in those movements have a clear goal and their protests are directed toward achieving that goal. The Occupy movement refuses to have a goal, so their chance of changing the world is pretty much zero.
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