by Lori Spencer
"There are
combustibles in every state which a spark might set fire to." -- George Washington's letter to General Henry Knox concerning the Shay's Rebellion, 1786
One month ago, a group of
some 1000 demonstrators gathered in Manhattan 's Zuccotti Park to protest the pillaging of the
nation's economy by powerful corporations and international houses of high
finance. While these young activists were entirely peaceful, they also
made it clear that this would be no hippie-dippy flower-twirling love-in,
sit-in, teach-in, or even a camp-in; this was an occupation. The
demonstrators announced that they intended to Occupy Wall Street 24/7,
staying until hell freezes over if need be.
The New
York City police welcomed them warmly with pepper spray and more
than a few violent smack-downs, even going so far as to arrest some 700
protesters on the Brooklyn
Bridge who were lured
into a position where they could be charged with blocking traffic.
After video of
these outrages went viral on the Internet, a wave of righteous indignation
swept the land. Hastily-formed Occupy groups proclaiming themselves in
solidarity with the NYC protesters began to spring up in big cities and small
towns across America .
At first it was just a handful: 20-30 groups in the first week, growing to a
few hundred in the second week, then rapidly mushrooming to today's current
total of 1,947 cities around the globe.
The most common critique
leveled against the Occupy demonstrators is that they don't seem to have a
plan. "Disorganized," "unfocused," and "aimless"
are buzzwords the movement's detractors --both liberal and right-wing --
like to toss around. Last week former President Bush's key political adviser
Karl Rove cynically opined in the Wall
Street Journal that Democrats should distance themselves from
the Occupy Wall Street movement to avoid alienating potential voters in 2012.
And it's true that even
those Americans who are in fact part of the 99% and generally support OWS's
principles are themselves unclear as to what the protesters ultimately want and
how exactly they are going to accomplish it. What are their demands?
How long are they going to keep this up? Have they proposed any concrete
solutions? But that's an awful lot of pressure to put upon a
spontaneous social movement that is only little over a month old.
Certainly these are valid
questions. In defense of the revolutionaries, though, remember that the
last time we had a revolution in this country , it took 20 years to
start it, eight years to fight it, and still another six years to fully secure
and implement a new government. If the Occupy movement is indeed the genesis of
a Second
American Revolution , we should not expect its progenitors to simply
cough up a prefabricated quick fix. After all, if our elected
representatives couldn't seem to figure out how to correct the country's
multitude of problems over a few decades, is it reasonable to expect a
loosely-organized band of citizen activists to offer the solutions
within just a few months? We may be sowing the seeds of a revolution
now, but let's not forget that it usually takes many years to reap the
harvest.
History shows
that revolutions do not occur overnight. Reasonable humans always prefer
to work out their differences through lawful avenues and communication whenever
possible. It is only after many years of futile petitioning that the oppressed
are left with no other choice but to revolt. Some 236 years ago, the American
colonists signed a Declaration of Independence -- prepared to back it up
through force of arms if necessary -- but that unforgiving line in the sand was
only drawn after 22 years of peaceful attempts to negotiate with Britain had
failed.
The seeds of the American
Revolution were planted not in 1776, but in 1754 during the French and Indian
War. Colonists became further disenchanted when taxes were levied upon them to
pay the costs of that war. A number of other encroachments added fuel to the
fire : restrictions on settlement of the West, increased duties on imported
goods, the Stamp Act, the banning of colonial currency, outlawing town
meetings, quartering British troops among the citizenry, and closing Boston
Harbor, just to name a few. Discontent festered for nearly 20 years whilst the
Loyalists and Patriots argued amongst themselves as to whether or not they
dared to overthrow British rule.
When the first armed
conflict of the Revolutionary War began on April 19, 1775, only one-third of
colonists supported the cause. The Declaration of Independence was adopted by
the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, but it took another year for
all the delegates to actually sign their John Hancocks, quite literally putting
their lives on the line for what they believed in. Although the final battle
was fought in 1782, the state of war did not formally end until the Treaties of
Paris and Versailles
were ratified in 1784.
The U.S. Constitution was
written in 1787 but was not ratified until 1789. This delay was the result of
ongoing debate between Federalists and Anti-Federalists over just how much
power the new national government should have. Debates were so heated in fact
that they frequently turned into armed skirmishes, standoffs, and deadly
showdowns with authorities. One resonant example was Shay's Rebellion, a
populist uprising of debt-ridden New England
farmers who had served their country in the war, only to come home and
have their lands foreclosed upon. (A scenario all too familiar for today's
veterans of the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan ,
as well as the returned veterans of practically every war in the 20th
century.).
"You say you want a revolution...well, you know...we'd all love to see the plan."-- The Beatles, "Revolution"
Revolutions are a process of
trial and error, of discarding what doesn't work and eventually figuring out
what does. Of course you can always count on revolutionaries to make some
massive screw-ups along the way (such as George Washington's bright idea to exclude
blacks from the Continental Army, thus driving more than 20,000 African
Americans to pick up guns for the British and turn them against their
countrymen, for example). In truth, the original 13 American colonies were
rarely in agreement on anything . W hile everyone could agree that the country
was out of joint, reaching consensus on what to do about it proved far more
difficult.
Even when all 13 colonies
finally signed on the dotted line in 1776, they still didn't have a plan for a
new system of government to replace the old. And while the Declaration may have
been a poetic statement of collective principles and grievances, it offered
nothing in terms of solutions.
The Continental Army was a
ragtag, disorganized, unruly band of volunteers who seemingly didn't stand a
snowball's chance against the crushing might of Britain 's superior forces. These
men fought an eight-year war without so much as a blueprint for what the hell
they were going to do with their hard-earned freedom should they emerge
victorious. Once the war was won, it took another six years of bickering,
compromise, and re-tooling the Constitution before we finally had a supreme law
of the land. All the while, Congress ran the United States because there was no
leader; the new nation didn't elect its first president until 1789.
All in all, the process of
the American Revolution comprised 35 years--a generation.
What is happening in the
streets today is being hailed by some as the Second American Revolution, and it
may very well be that our tree of liberty is beginning to bloom anew. By that
historical comparison, the agitators who are taking it to the streets would be
the modern day Patriots. The majority who tell them to just sit down, shut up,
get a job, and stop whining already are the Loyalists. All of these empty
arguments being made today against the Patriots as a bunch of naive,
ungrateful, disorganized fools are nothing new under the sun. We Americans have
heard that old saw somewhere before. Washington, Adams, Jefferson and even
Tom Paine didn't have all the answers in the beginning, either.
Not until 1774 did the First
Continental Congress convene to draft an official list of grievances, a
statement of principles, and plans for organized resistance to England within
the colonies. This bold first step towards independence had been 20 years in
the making.
Today's revolutionaries
actually seem to be moving forward much, much faster. Already,
an Occupy Wall Street
working group is calling for the election of a National
General Assembly to meet on July 4, 2012 in Philadelphia . According to the 99%
Declaration, " 870 Delegates shall set forth, consider and vote upon a
PETITION OF GRIEVANCES to be submitted to all members of Congress, The Supreme
Court and President and each of the political candidates running in the
nationwide Congressional and Presidential election in November 2012." Now that sounds
like a plan!
It took many decades of
unsustainable excess and deep-rooted corruption for America to reach this critical
stage of mass unrest. So no one should expect us to get out of this mess
tomorrow.
We're done with trusting
politicians to sort it out for us. We have finally come to the inevitable
conclusion that if we want the job done right, we'll have to do it ourselves.
We The People will fix this, even if we don't know quite how to do it just yet.
We will win some, lose some, fall on our faces sometimes, and learn from our
mistakes as our forefathers did. If it took them at least 35 years to come up
with a system that worked . I nstant gratification is not something we can
expect this time around, either. Give it time. Better yet, roll up your sleeves
and help if you want change to happen faster. Many hands make light work, and
we've got a hell of a lot of work to do.
To borrow from President
Kennedy, who outlined the New Frontier's goals for the 1960s in his inaugural
address and called his fellow Americans to action: "All this will not
be finished in the first 100 days. Nor will it be finished in the first 1,000
days, nor in the life of this administration, nor even perhaps in our lifetime
on this planet. But let us begin."
LORI SPENCER is a veteran journalist and musician based in
Austin, Texas. She spent 25 years in the trenches of radio and print
newsrooms by day while playing her music by night. Most recently she became one
of the 99% when the mega media corporation she worked for laid off more
than 7,000 writers and editors, informing them via a cold and impersonal email
that their services would no longer be needed. Now just another unemployed
journalist, she's hitting the road to document the occupation as it
spreads across the American heartland. You may find her visiting your city
soon. If you see Lori at a rally and would like to help fund her quest for
reporting the truth, please toss some spare change in her guitar case. Lori
wrote this piece for ThisCantBeHappening and
will be continuing to report on the movement from the nation's heartland.
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