A Special Guest Commentary by Renowned Activist Ted Glick
Future Hope column, May 18, 2012
An International "Occupy" Manifesto
By Ted Glick
Several days ago a document, the "GlobalMay Statement," showed up in my email inbox. In the website where this statement can be found, http://www.peoplesassemblies. org/2012/05/may-12th- globalmay-statement/,
it is explained that "this is an attempt by some inside the [occupy]
movements to reconcile statements
written and endorsed in the different assemblies around the world. The process of
writing the statement was consensus based, open
to all, and regularly announced on our international communications platforms, which are also open to all.
It was a hard and long process, full of
compromises. This statement is offered to people's assemblies around the world for discussions, revisions and
endorsements."
Several days ago a document, the "GlobalMay Statement," showed up in my email inbox. In the website where this statement can be found, http://www.peoplesassemblies.
One of the things which struck me was how strong
the statement is on the climate and environmental crises. The first sentence of
the first general point says
that, "The economy must be put to the service of people's welfare, and to support and serve the
environment, not private profit." Four of the ten bullet points under that
first general point deal in some way with
environmental issues.
This was striking given the serious weaknesses
in this area as far as Occupy Wall
Street's first overall statement of what it was calling for last fall. In that document, released on September
30th, there were two sentences about a
monopolized, poisoned and cruel-to-animals food system and a sentence about the
1% "continuing to block alternate forms of energy to keep us dependent on oil." That was it.
It is good to see this positive evolution of the
international "global spring/Occupy/Take
the Square" movements, and to see, once again, the positive impact on the movement in the
U.S. that comes from international connections.
Another recent example is the way in which the international World Social Forum movement, begun a
decade ago, stimulated and inspired what
has become an important U.S. Social Forum movement over the past five-six years.
The overall content of the GlobalMay Statement
is sound. It puts forward a vision
of the future for the world very different than what we are getting from the vast majority of the old
established political parties of all ideologies
worldwide.
The statement, however, puts forward in a couple
of sentences a perspective on
strategy to get us to a different world that I have problems with: "We do not make demands from governments,
corporations or parliament members, which some
of us see as illegitimate, unaccountable or corrupt. We speak to the people of the world, both inside and
outside our movements."
I appreciate the up-from-the-bottom,
build-popular-alternatives, anarchist-influenced
sentiment behind this perspective. But if this becomes a rigid approach, it will
unquestionably limit the reach, impact and possibilities
for this movement.
For years I've believed that there are three
essential components if we, the people
are to have a decent chance of taking power away from the 1%--which we absolutely must do if we are to
ever have a political and economic system that
is truly democratic and just.
Those three components are:
- thousands and thousands of grassroots based
organizations in communities and
at workplaces defending our rights, livelihoods and natural and work environments, and helping grassroots
people develop their consciousness, skills
and commitment to work together for fundamental change;
- a direct action, in-the-streets, popular
movement which, through its visible,
demonstrative actions, plays a key role in putting the 1% on the defensive and empowering the 99% (or a
solid majority of it); and,
- an electoral vehicle, independent of the political
and economic forces which
dominate both the Republican and Democratic parties, which can attract current office holders, elect solid
progressives to office at all levels, and
present a coherent, platform-based alternative to the parties of the 1%.
Without all three of these forms of organizing
and action, we have little chance
of accumulating the political momentum and power to overcome the systems of oppression, repression and
environmental devastation.
The electoral question in the US continues to be
a huge conundrum, primarily because
of the corporate-dominated, two-party undemocratic, winner-take-all nature of our electoral system. These
realities make it very difficult for electoral-oriented,
progressive political parties to survive, much less thrive.
This is why I'm convinced that what we need as
far as an overarching electoral
vehicle is not a third party but a third force within which Greens and other progressive third parties
would play an active role, along with progressive
Democrats, other independents and probably some grassroots Republicans.
During this Presidential election year,
shouldn't we be debating these critical
strategic questions?
Ted Glick has been an activist and organizer since 1968 who has focused on the climate issue since 2004. Past writings and other information can be found at http://tedglick.com, and he can be followed on twitter at http://twitter.com/jtglick.
Ted Glick has been an activist and organizer since 1968 who has focused on the climate issue since 2004. Past writings and other information can be found at http://tedglick.com, and he can be followed on twitter at http://twitter.com/jtglick.
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