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Two weeks into Occupy Wall Street protests, movement is at a crossroads

 
 
hingehead
 
  4  
Reply Wed 30 Nov, 2011 11:55 pm
The 1% are the very best destroyers of wealth the world has ever seen
Our common treasury in the last 30 years has been captured by industrial psychopaths. That's why we're nearly bankrupt

George Monbiot
guardian.co.uk, Monday 7 November 2011 20.30 GMT
Source

If wealth was the inevitable result of hard work and enterprise, every woman in Africa would be a millionaire. The claims that the ultra-rich 1% make for themselves – that they are possessed of unique intelligence or creativity or drive – are examples of the self-attribution fallacy. This means crediting yourself with outcomes for which you weren't responsible. Many of those who are rich today got there because they were able to capture certain jobs. This capture owes less to talent and intelligence than to a combination of the ruthless exploitation of others and accidents of birth, as such jobs are taken disproportionately by people born in certain places and into certain classes.

The findings of the psychologist Daniel Kahneman, winner of a Nobel economics prize, are devastating to the beliefs that financial high-fliers entertain about themselves. He discovered that their apparent success is a cognitive illusion. For example, he studied the results achieved by 25 wealth advisers across eight years. He found that the consistency of their performance was zero. "The results resembled what you would expect from a dice-rolling contest, not a game of skill." Those who received the biggest bonuses had simply got lucky.

Such results have been widely replicated. They show that traders and fund managers throughout Wall Street receive their massive remuneration for doing no better than would a chimpanzee flipping a coin. When Kahneman tried to point this out, they blanked him. "The illusion of skill … is deeply ingrained in their culture."

So much for the financial sector and its super-educated analysts. As for other kinds of business, you tell me. Is your boss possessed of judgment, vision and management skills superior to those of anyone else in the firm, or did he or she get there through bluff, bullshit and bullying?

In a study published by the journal Psychology, Crime and Law, Belinda Board and Katarina Fritzon tested 39 senior managers and chief executives from leading British businesses. They compared the results to the same tests on patients at Broadmoor special hospital, where people who have been convicted of serious crimes are incarcerated. On certain indicators of psychopathy, the bosses's scores either matched or exceeded those of the patients. In fact, on these criteria, they beat even the subset of patients who had been diagnosed with psychopathic personality disorders.

The psychopathic traits on which the bosses scored so highly, Board and Fritzon point out, closely resemble the characteristics that companies look for. Those who have these traits often possess great skill in flattering and manipulating powerful people. Egocentricity, a strong sense of entitlement, a readiness to exploit others and a lack of empathy and conscience are also unlikely to damage their prospects in many corporations.

In their book Snakes in Suits, Paul Babiak and Robert Hare point out that as the old corporate bureaucracies have been replaced by flexible, ever-changing structures, and as team players are deemed less valuable than competitive risk-takers, psychopathic traits are more likely to be selected and rewarded. Reading their work, it seems to me that if you have psychopathic tendencies and are born to a poor family, you're likely to go to prison. If you have psychopathic tendencies and are born to a rich family, you're likely to go to business school.

This is not to suggest that all executives are psychopaths. It is to suggest that the economy has been rewarding the wrong skills. As the bosses have shaken off the trade unions and captured both regulators and tax authorities, the distinction between the productive and rentier upper classes has broken down. Chief executives now behave like dukes, extracting from their financial estates sums out of all proportion to the work they do or the value they generate, sums that sometimes exhaust the businesses they parasitise. They are no more deserving of the share of wealth they've captured than oil sheikhs.

The rest of us are invited, by governments and by fawning interviews in the press, to subscribe to their myth of election: the belief that they are possessed of superhuman talents. The very rich are often described as wealth creators. But they have preyed on the earth's natural wealth and their workers' labour and creativity, impoverishing both people and planet. Now they have almost bankrupted us. The wealth creators of neoliberal mythology are some of the most effective wealth destroyers the world has ever seen.

What has happened over the past 30 years is the capture of the world's common treasury by a handful of people, assisted by neoliberal policies which were first imposed on rich nations by Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan. I am now going to bombard you with figures. I'm sorry about that, but these numbers need to be tattooed on our minds. Between 1947 and 1979, productivity in the US rose by 119%, while the income of the bottom fifth of the population rose by 122%. But from 1979 to 2009, productivity rose by 80%, while the income of the bottom fifth fell by 4%. In roughly the same period, the income of the top 1% rose by 270%.

In the UK, the money earned by the poorest tenth fell by 12% between 1999 and 2009, while the money made by the richest 10th rose by 37%. The Gini coefficient, which measures income inequality, climbed in this country from 26 in 1979 to 40 in 2009.

In his book The Haves and the Have Nots, Branko Milanovic tries to discover who was the richest person who has ever lived. Beginning with the loaded Roman triumvir Marcus Crassus, he measures wealth according to the quantity of his compatriots' labour a rich man could buy. It appears that the richest man to have lived in the past 2,000 years is alive today. Carlos Slim could buy the labour of 440,000 average Mexicans. This makes him 14 times as rich as Crassus, nine times as rich as Carnegie and four times as rich as Rockefeller.

Until recently, we were mesmerised by the bosses' self-attribution. Their acolytes, in academia, the media, thinktanks and government, created an extensive infrastructure of junk economics and flattery to justify their seizure of other people's wealth. So immersed in this nonsense did we become that we seldom challenged its veracity.

This is now changing. On Sunday evening I witnessed a remarkable thing: a debate on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral between Stuart Fraser, chairman of the Corporation of the City of London, another official from the corporation, the turbulent priest Father William Taylor, John Christensen of the Tax Justice Network and the people of Occupy London. It had something of the flavour of the Putney debates of 1647. For the first time in decades – and all credit to the corporation officials for turning up – financial power was obliged to answer directly to the people.

It felt like history being made. The undeserving rich are now in the frame, and the rest of us want our money back.

A fully referenced version of this article can be found at http://www.monbiot.com/
0 Replies
 
wandeljw
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 10:04 am
New tactics that do not involve camping out:

Quote:
After raids, Wall Street protesters shift tactics
(Chris Hawley - The Associated Press - December 1, 2011)

The overnight police raids in Philadelphia and Los Angeles that dismantled two of the nation's biggest Occupy Wall Street encampments leave just a few major "occupations" still going on around the U.S. But activists are already changing tactics and warning of a winter of discontent, with rallies and marches every week.

The camps may bloom again in the spring, organizers said, and next summer could bring huge demonstrations at the Republican and Democratic conventions, when the whole world is watching. But for now they are promoting dozens of smaller actions, such as picketing the president in New York and staging sit-ins at homes marked for foreclosure.

"We intend to use this for what it is -- basically six months to get our feet underneath us, to get strong," said Phil Striegel, a community activist in San Francisco.

On Wednesday, masked sanitation workers hauled away 25 tons of debris from the lawns around Los Angeles City Hall after police raided the protesters' camp in the middle of the night and arrested more than 300 people. In Philadelphia, dozens of police patrolled a plaza outside City Hall after sweeping it of demonstrators and arresting 50.

In the past few weeks, police broke up encampments in such cities as Portland, Ore., Oakland, Calif., and New York, where the sit-down protests against social inequality and corporate excesses began in mid-September.

Demonstrators are still at it in places like Boston and Washington, D.C., which each had encampments of about 100 tents Wednesday. Dozens of protesters are fighting eviction from a community college campus in Seattle.

While some observers wondered whether the movement would wither without ground on which to make its stand, many protesters refused to concede defeat.

Protesters in Philadelphia planned a march from the city's well-to-do Rittenhouse Square to police headquarters Wednesday afternoon and also called for a "victory march" for Friday or Saturday.

"Occupy Philly is alive and well," said Katonya Mosley, a member of the group's legal collective. She said members have been communicating via list serves, text messages and email and planned to continue meeting in cafes and other spaces. Local groups have also offered to donate space for the protesters to continue meeting, Mosley said.

While one faction received a permit for a scaled-down protest across the street, she said, Occupy Philadelphia as a whole hasn't decided whether to go that route. The city has said any new permit would include a ban on camping

The Occupy movement is beginning to follow a familiar pattern, said Todd Gitlin, a sociologist at Columbia University and an authority on social movements. He noted that the 1960s anti-war movement grew gradually for years until bursting onto the world stage during the election year of 1968.

He predicted big rallies around the 2012 Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., and the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C.

Until then, "I think there will be some kinds of occupations, but I don't think they'll be as big and as central," Gitlin said.

Protesters themselves were trying to draw lessons from history. On Thursday a group of protesters from Occupy Washington planned to set out on a march from the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial on the National Mall to King's gravesite in Atlanta. Thursday is the anniversary of Rosa Parks's refusal to give up her seat on a Montgomery, Ala., bus in 1955. That led to the yearlong Montgomery bus boycott.

The long fight for civil rights shows "how long these things take," said Kevin Zeese, an organizer of the Washington occupation.

In New York, protesters have continued to meet in Zuccotti Park, where the Occupy movement began, even though police cleared out their tents on Nov. 15. They planned to protest outside a fundraising dinner by President Barack Obama on Wednesday and a conference of aerospace executives Thursday that they branded a meeting of "war profiteers."

On Monday, Occupy protesters disrupted a session of the Washington state Legislature in Olympia. State troopers used stun guns against at least three people and issued 30 trespassing citations. In Bloomington, Ind., police arrested five protesters who tried to block the entrance to a recruiting event by JPMorgan Chase Bank at Indiana University's business school Tuesday night.

In St. Louis, protesters whose camp was broken up by police on Nov. 12 planned to march to the Federal Reserve Bank office on Thursday. John Mills, a technical writer, called the dissolution of the camp a minor setback.

"It's dampened some spirits, but I think people are just as passionate, just as excited and just as ready for change as they were before," Mills said.

In Atlanta, where protesters moved to a homeless shelter after police drove them out of Woodruff Park in October, organizer La'Die Mansfield said the group will participate in an international day of action in support of Egypt this weekend and occupy a home marked for foreclosure next week, as part of a national Occupy protest on that issue.

On Dec. 12 protesters plan to blockade entrances to seaports along the West Coast. Others plan to march as a "human float" on the fringes of the New Year's Day Rose Parade under the slogan "Everything is not coming up roses."
0 Replies
 
wandeljw
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 10:44 am
Courts have recognized that local government can place reasonable restrictions on the "time, place, and manner" of free speech. In federal district courts, judges have ruled that local restrictions on camping out have been reasonable regarding the Occupy protests. The recent opinion in Occupy Minneapolis v. County of Hennepin again concludes that such restrictions are reasonable:

Quote:
They have now moved for a Temporary Restraining Order with respect to six specific restrictions imposed by the County: the bans on (1) placing structures of any kind on the Plazas; (2) using existing electrical outlets on the Plazas; (3) using sidewalk chalk on the Plazas; (4) affixing signs or posters to Plaza property; (5) leaving property “unattended” or “stored” on the Plazas; and (6) sleeping on Plaza property.

********************************************************************

...government need not make its utilities available to anyone seeking to advance a message; the First Amendment does not guarantee access to property for speech activities simply because it is government-owned. See, e.g., Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc., 473 U.S. 788, 803 (1985); City Council of L.A. v. Taxpayers for Vincent, 466 U.S. 789, 814 (1984) (“[T]he mere fact that government property can be used as a vehicle for communication does not mean that the Constitution requires such uses to be permitted.”) (emphases added); Wells v. City & Cnty. of Denver, 257 F.3d 1132, 1149 (10th Cir. 2001) (“The First Amendment . . . does not require the government to . . . enhance the strength of the speaker’s message in the marketplace of ideas.”). Accordingly, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs may not challenge the County’s decision to cut off electricity to the Plazas on free-speech grounds.

********************************************************************

...the Court concludes that the Resolution’s ban on sleeping on Plaza property, and its concomitant prohibition on erecting tents and similar structures, is a valid time, place, and manner restriction. Indeed, that conclusion is dictated by Clark.

This Court need not recite all of Clark’s pertinent facts. Suffice it to say, there the Supreme Court upheld as a reasonable time, place, and manner restriction a National Park Service regulation prohibiting camping in Lafayette Park in Washington, D.C., where “camping” was defined, inter alia, as “the use of park land for living accommodation purposes such as sleeping activities, or making preparations to sleep (including the laying down of bedding for the purpose of sleeping), . . . or using any tents or . . . other structure . . . for sleeping.” 468 U.S. at 290-91. The Court cannot perceive a reason not to apply Clark here, and Plaintiffs’ attempts to distinguish it are simply unavailing.


A pdf copy of the opinion can be downloaded at:
http://docs.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/minnesota/mndce/0:2011cv03412/123386/17/0.pdf?1322138659
0 Replies
 
reasoning logic
 
  4  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 10:58 am
Occupy your mind.

TheLeapist
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 11:11 am
@reasoning logic,
I've seen a couple of RSAnimate's videos before. They're highly enjoyable. Thanks for sharing.
reasoning logic
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 11:32 am
@TheLeapist,
Thank you. Very Happy I have always found them to be very educational myself.

0 Replies
 
Rockhead
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 11:43 am
@reasoning logic,
that was a very interesting video.

well worth ten minutes of my time...
0 Replies
 
H2O MAN
 
  -2  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 12:37 pm
@H2O MAN,


Laughing stinki hippies getting a well deserved eye full of accountability and the rule of law.

H2O MAN wrote:

https://fbcdn-sphotos-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/378824_225790510827183_100001887069782_548280_951681450_n.jpg
reasoning logic
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 12:48 pm
0 Replies
 
reasoning logic
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 02:52 pm
spendius
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 04:16 pm
@reasoning logic,
That cop in the "Just Watering" pic. looks real cool don't you think rl.

They're all lower-middle-class. A lot of kids get fractious at that age. Especially if they take an interest in social studies in order to learn how to manage people.
reasoning logic
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 04:24 pm
@spendius,
Quote:
That cop in the "Just Watering" pic. looks real cool don't you think rl.



I guess it would depend upon your neurological circuitry.
cicerone imposter
 
  0  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 04:27 pm
@reasoning logic,
spendi has
Quote:
neurological circuitry
?
reasoning logic
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 04:31 pm
@cicerone imposter,



Quote:
spendi has
Quote:

neurological circuitry

?


From what I understand we all do for the most part.

What seems to differ is how the circuits are wired like with spendius there could be a short circuit or 2
spendius
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 05:26 pm
@reasoning logic,
You didn't say whether you thought the cop looked cool or not. I daresay he has had it framed by now and it's standing on his bedside table.
reasoning logic
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 05:36 pm
@spendius,
When I hear you talk like that, I think that you may have a mural of it on your living room wall.
spendius
 
  1  
Reply Thu 1 Dec, 2011 06:15 pm
@reasoning logic,
"living room" is a bit Victorian rl.
0 Replies
 
wandeljw
 
  1  
Reply Fri 2 Dec, 2011 06:36 am
Clark v. Community Creative Non-Violence is a 1984 Supreme Court decision that has been used as a guideline to adjudicate cases involving the Occupy movement.

In 1984, the Supreme Court held:
Quote:
(a) Assuming that overnight sleeping in connection with the demonstration is expressive conduct protected to some extent by the First Amendment, the regulation forbidding sleeping meets the requirements for a reasonable time, place, or manner restriction of expression, whether oral, written, or symbolized by conduct. The regulation is neutral with regard to the message presented, and leaves open ample alternative methods of communicating the intended message concerning the plight of the homeless. Moreover, the regulation narrowly focuses on the Government's substantial interest in maintaining the parks in the heart of the Capital in an attractive and intact condition, readily available to the millions of people who wish to see and enjoy them by their presence. To permit camping would be totally inimical to these purposes. The validity of the regulation need not be judged solely by reference to the demonstration at hand, and none of its provisions are unrelated to the ends that it was designed to serve.
(b) Similarly, the challenged regulation is also sustainable as meeting the standards for a valid regulation of expressive conduct. Aside from its impact on speech, a rule against camping or overnight sleeping in public parks is not beyond the constitutional power of the Government to enforce. And as noted above, there is a substantial Government interest, unrelated to suppression of expression, in conserving park property that is served by the proscription of sleeping.
0 Replies
 
Fido
 
  1  
Reply Fri 2 Dec, 2011 06:36 am
@TheLeapist,
TheLeapist wrote:

That video makes me have violent thoughts towards those "protectors of the people."
Don't look at it... It will only get worse... Think happy thoughts... Sing the national anthem, or glory days, or my country tis of thee..
0 Replies
 
Fido
 
  1  
Reply Fri 2 Dec, 2011 06:39 am
@reasoning logic,
reasoning logic wrote:

Yes I know how you feel but not all police act out violently.

I do hope that all of this brings order to our police force in the end.
They all strap on a gun as the price of having their jobs, and it would be better for them to eat their guns before turning violent with the working class, still every bit of their presence spell violence and if they cannot find violence to quell with violence they will creat violence to quell with violence.
0 Replies
 
 

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