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megpie71

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Monday, October 17th, 2011 08:24 am
There's a lot being written about Occupy Wall Street, and a lot being written about the copycat protests which are now springing up in a lot of other countries (including Australia). There isn't as much spoken or written about where the movement to occupy city areas and public spaces, and calling for a renegotiation of the social contract as it is interpreted by the powerful, actually got started, and where it's been flourishing for the better part of a year.

It started in Egypt, in Tariq Square (where it's still ongoing, to the best of my knowledge). Occupation-style protests have been happening in Iceland, in Spain, in Greece, and in a lot of other European countries since at least June this year. And they're still going on there. See this list of articles from Pressenza to get a better idea of the scope of the actual demonstrating, both in terms of global spread, and temporal spread.

However, there appears to be this strong media (and now internet) -fed meme which says something isn't actually "real" until it affects white citizens of the USA - preferably white, middle-class, male, heterosexual Christian citizens of the USA. Unless they're affected, unless they're doing it, whatever's going on in the rest of the world doesn't matter. The global economic crisis didn't affect anyone (even though the economies of many countries were affected for months, or indeed years, before the US banking system was forced to own up to its iniquities at the end of 2008) until it affected the USAlien middle classes. Various World Wars didn't actually "start", in the opinion of hegemonic popular culture, (despite the involvement and devastation of multiple countries) until the USA sent troops. Poverty in the USA didn't exist until it started lapping at the toes of the middle classes (despite the presence of a growing underclass of persons who were born into poverty, and who have lived their entire lives in poverty, and who could not escape their poverty no matter how hard they tried, since approximately the Reagan years) and more particularly the white middle classes.

It's nice that the USAlien middle classes have apparently finally decided they're part of the world majority. It's nice that they're finally joining in with the rest of the people on the planet to demand a bit of equity, and a bit of fairness.

It would be even nicer if they would just, for once, publicly acknowledge that the problems existed before they'd noticed them or been affected by them; that the movement they've joined (and effectively hijacked) existed before they started to participate; that they were, once again, late to the party, and only joining in once other people had got things started. It would be really good to have this acknowledgement that not everything happens in a vacuum, and that the world outside the window of the USAlien white middle classes is actually present. It would be really good if the ongoing efforts of people outside the USA to renegotiate the social contract weren't erased, or ignored.
elf: Many Americans have all the virtues of civilized people (American virtues)
[personal profile] elf
Monday, October 17th, 2011 03:49 am (UTC)
I'd noticed that the media seemed to think that "protest against economic instability" started on Sep 17 this year, in New York, and I was scratching my head at that... didn't we have riots in London earlier this year? And protests in Egypt that turned their government inside-out? And protests in Israel that got mostly ignored by anyone not living there? (I have friends in Israel.) And, um, the World Bank stuff several years ago?

This is not a *new* crisis. What's new is that White USA can't ignore it anymore. And yay, maybe that means some serious changes will get made on Wall Street, which does indeed have an inordinate amount of influence on world economics... but it's not "our" problem; it's the world's problem, and we've been dodging awareness of it as long as possible. (It may be "our" problem in that much of it is caused by middle-to-upper-class USAns. (USAlien... I like that...) But it's not ours in the sense of "hitting us hardest.")
Monday, October 17th, 2011 11:49 am (UTC)
You've made several excellent pints here and I agree entirely!

Well, almost. I would just like to add that I've seen several places where the OWS movement has fully acknowledged itself as a continuation of the democratic protests in other countries, including the Iceland and Arab Spring protests. It's the secondary sources, specifically American news media giants, that are making it seem like it is a purely American original springing to life fully formed like Athena emerging from Zeus's head with no antecedent. And I suppose that in itself is a continuation of that very peculiar American delusion that is the American psyche and self-image.
Thursday, October 20th, 2011 01:54 pm (UTC)
Ahhh this makes more sense after the definition you gave. Because your examples of the depression and World wars didn't' make sense to me until I realized the context.

Though maybe I just had good history professors and actually paid attention in history class. Though thinking about it you maybe right as more than one public speaker has misremembered or changed history to suit them. *facepalm*