“Occupy” - Another Point Of View
The Politics Of It All - UPDATED With Video
“If
you want to ensure that every Occupy protest gets broken up by
overwhelming force, while the rest of America applauds the forces of law
and order, just try really hurting a few law enforcement
professionals.”
By Dell Hill
Dan Beucke writes a regular column at Bloomberg Business Week.
I don’t always agree with Dan’s opinions, but he poses questions and
commentary honestly and accurately, therefore earning my trust as a
source for reaching my own opinions.
With
headlines blaring the latest “news” on the occupy protest, Dan takes a
look at the political ramifications from both sides.
“Depending
on your point of view, the Occupy Wall Street movement may be 1968 — or
1970 — all over again. And this week may mark the point where the bank
protests go viral — or take a dangerous turn for the movement and those
who support them. Such is the struggle by both sides to assign symbols
to OWS.
Police
attempts this week to clear protesters from encampments in Oakland,
Atlanta, and other cities, complete with tear gas and horse-mounted
police, brought to mind images from 1960s and ’70s era anti-war clashes.
Then, on Tuesday night, Scott Olsen, an Iraq war veteran, was seriously
injured after apparently being hit in the head by a police projectile.
(The San Francisco Chronicle reports this morning that
Olsen has been upgraded to fair condition.) Soon images of the bleeding
Olsen flew around the Internet and this Tweet went up from
#OccupyWallStreet: #occupyoakland=New Kent State. The comparison with
the 1970 shooting of students at that Ohio university by National Guard
troops—which left four students dead—seemed to draw mostly derision (“Not even close. No one is dead.”) and caution (“Let’s hope we never EVER get to that again.”).
Two
weeks before the Oakland mayhem, though, MSNBC analyst and ad executive
Donnie Deutsch made a direct reference to Kent State in explaining why
he thought the movement needed “a climax moment of class warfare.” And some right-wing critics of
OWS have been happy to point to any violence and to link it to with the
chaos of the Vietnam era — especially after President Obama said he understood the protesters’ frustration:
The
most important thing we can do right now is those of us in leadership
letting people know that we understand their struggles and we are on
their side, and that we want to set up a system in which hard work,
responsibility, doing what you’re supposed to do, is rewarded,” Obama
said. “And that people who are irresponsible, who are reckless, who
don’t feel a sense of obligation to their communities and their
companies and their workers that those folks aren’t rewarded.
The larger struggle is to make the protests more or less sympathetic to mainstream America. Supporters point to polls showing widespread agreement with the movement’s views on the income gap, while critics hammer home images of sleaze: the Boston couple arrested for dealing heroin in an Occupy encampment, and the photo of a man defecating on a police car.
Little
wonder that Republicans would be happy to see Obama tied closely to the
protests. They recall what happened in 1968 when student protests threw
the Democratic National Convention into chaos (photo above). That
spawned the radical theater of the Chicago Seven trial, with Abbie
Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, and Bobby Seale squaring off against the unbending
force of Judge Julius Hoffman. As all of this played out on national
television, many in Middle America were left with the impression of a
nation—under a Democratic President—in disarray. Just more than two
months later, Richard Nixon was elected president.
It’s
too early to tell how OWS will evolve and whether it will have much of
an impact on the 2012 election. There are potential dangers ahead for
all sides. For opponents of OWS, as one commenter points out below, more
violent crackdowns on protesters may just add to their support. For
Democrats, Doug Schoen, a former strategist for Bill Clinton, points out that
“the vast majority of Americans are centrists. While they may share
some of the sentiments that some of the Wall Street protesters express,
they don’t believe in radical redistribution of income.” And for
protesters, Atlantic blogger Megan McArdle, as part of a post that
questioned the need for the Oakland police raid, aptly framed the risks from the actions of a few:
If
you want to ensure that every Occupy protest gets broken up by
overwhelming force, while the rest of America applauds the forces of law
and order, just try really hurting a few law enforcement
professionals.”
You can follow Dan Beucke’s astute observations right here.
One
other reason why we just can’t afford to jump the shark when it comes
to the events of the day is the revelation that the man the OWS movement
had offered up as it’s poster boy - an Iraq war veteran - also owns and
operates a web site that berates the United States Marine Corps. I
doubt strongly the OWS folks really want this man as its spokesman; it’s
martyr or its “Kent State Moment”, but they - and much of the
sympathizing media - jumped all over this story without vetting their
star player.
And now, on top of all that...
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