Reader claims: "#OCCUPYWALLSTREET IS COINTELPRO"

I'm sure that nothing of that will succeed, no goals will be directly achieved. Power in western countries is too psychopathic for centuries now and holds everything very firmly, people are too much tired, scared and brainwashed. But even if there would be no direct consequences of the demonstrations, I'm sure that there will be more indirect changes, one tiny bit by one tiny bit that will help people who are up to it, to awake. Also I think that most of the people actually don't have a clue why are they protesting, maybe they just sense something, some change, draws something from the collective unconscious

I actually think they do. OWS is taking on fracking! Let me introduce you to - Occupy Well Street!

http://occupywellstreet.blogspot.com/p/occupy-well-street-101.html

quote from Alex Lotorto from Occupy Well Street:

Hey folks! It's been a while.

Occupy Well Street, Stop Fracking is a project to include rural communities' voices who are affected by fracking in the Occupy Wall Street movement. It started with a protest at the Martin gas well on October 15 in Benton, PA. Our goal is to help sustain a direct action campaign aimed at blockading fracking sites. We will be announcing general assemblies as they're scheduled. Expected general assemblies will be held in Trenton, NJ preceding the Delaware River Basin Commission special meeting on drilling, November 21.

We put up a website with resources including a brief guide to occupying well pads, general assemblies, PA legal and government resources, and an endorsement page. Don't forget to like us on Facebook!

www.occupywellstreet.blogspot.com

WE NEED:
- More groups to have general assemblies and demonstrations
- Endorsements! If your group supports an end to the use of hydraulic fracturing to procure oil and gas, please endorse our call.

Also support Occupy Mountains and a stop to Mountain Top Removal coal mining. http://www.facebook.com/OccupyMountains

-Alex

Please visit our wiki at http://oneonta-region.wikispot.org/

The young people from Occupy Wall Street helped us last night at Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Hearing last night. They helped fill the room and their testimonies on the issue showed a deep understanding of the issues. A number of the speakers come from rural communities and spoke with great passion. They knew exactly what their issues are and how to address them.

http://www.examiner.com/environmental-news-in-new-york/99-helps-occupy-west-village-pipeline-hearing
 
lid107 said:
Would it be that much of a suprise if the OWS movement was just a distraction? Anyone who has watched these "movements" just suddenly spring up knows they are almost always compromised by government agents long before they hit your city. Half of the group believes in what they are doing. A third is along for the sex and drugs and the rest are government agitators. Put no faith or stock into this movement. Do so at your peril.

Is this a reference to the 60's peace movement? Having read some of the series about the musicians who defined the movement it is true that it was already infiltrated from the get-go... It is hard to tell with OWS as we are currently in the eye of the storm so inside information is hard to come by. However, it is hard to believe that in this day and age we can have a spontaneous movement that goes global by its own(this thing came out of nowhere, I don't believe in miracles!).. Speaking as a young person, I can see what you mean about sex and drugs, these thoughts usually aren't that far away from any young person's mind(it's how you deal with it that counts I suppose) unless they are like special or something... Just walk into any college and see for yourself.

I actually think they do. OWS is taking on fracking! Let me introduce you to - Occupy Well Street!

One thing that has got me worried about the fracking movement is the inclusion of the actor mark ruffalo as an out spoken advocate against fracking... Yet despite his open dissent against fracking he is still going big in hollywood, being signed up to major movies - compare to Charlie sheen and his support for Alex Jones. He is also into OWS, plus sean penn. Infact alot of celebrities are coming out stating there support. Rewind back to Barack Obama and his celebrity endorsement and his appeal to young people. This occupy movement also has a huge appeal to young people.

_http://current.com/shows/countdown/videos/occupy-wall-street-actor-and-activist-mark-ruffalo-shares-his-first-person-account-of-the-movement

I think it is best to keep eyes wide open on this one. It has the potential to turn into a really insidious thing that will be labelled good and a stamp of approval for democracy and real change we can believe in but in reality it turns out to be the exact opposite... Excuse my skepticism, I was one of the few(Or many?) who actually believed barack Obama during his campaign, didn't know exactly how far he would backtrack on his promises.
 
luke wilson said:
Excuse my skepticism, I was one of the few(Or many?) who actually believed barack Obama during his campaign, didn't know exactly how far he would backtrack on his promises.

This is something we can move closer to the great disappointment that were 14 years of the double seven-years term of François Mitterand:

"He is the longest-serving President of France and, as leader of the Socialist Party, the only figure from the left so far elected President under the Fifth Republic."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fran%C3%A7ois_Mitterrand

I was a teenager when François Mitterand became our president, but I remember the happiness and the jubilation growing in the hearts of all those people who believed everything would change for more sharing. And their disappointment have been very, very big and strong. I also had follow the american elections during 2008, standing up all the night (I live in France) following the results and the Obama's victory. I had bought all the Newspapers who talked about this "revolution", they were the last. I understood a short time after this event that Obama would disappoint a big part of his electorate and others people around the World. I was not exactly "aware" like I am today, and all this makes sense regarding psychopathy around us.
 
It was very obvious to me that Obama would not bring any change, COULD NOT bring any. At this point electoral politics is a complete dead end. No one who isn't in the pockets of and bound to/by the PTB/power elite even gets close to high office. And if one occasionally slips by which has become even more unlikely, they'll end up like J.F. Kennedy.

However, this is a movement that is showing some signs of community building and mutual support across a wide demographic. Sure they're infiltrated and there will be all attempts to co-opt it. But it's still too early to tell if some of this movement will become a new way of coping with the coming collapse of this "civilization." So I think it's too early to tell what else will develop from this movement/protests/demonstrations. It is still good to see people coming together and exchanging on so many levels for so long already without any violence and with successfully defusing any agents provocateur and infiltrators' mission to get things violent.
 
Please watch this interview from about 6 minutes and 10 seconds when he talks about occupywallstreet. It is an interview broadcast on RT and it goes into some government sponsored organisations that are involved in the movement. Very informative.

_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_R3C4Cw1oDc&feature=player_embedded

The bottom line is that this movement is in all likelyhood NOT a spontaneous movement!
 
I just found these links in English following links from a French Website:

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/sep/24/soros-funder-liberal-jewish-american-lobby/?page=all
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/09/22/the-soros-plot-to-topple-netanyahu/
http://www.cablegatesearch.net/search.php?q=Hedva+Radovanitz&qo=0&qc=0&qto=2010-02-28

I do not know Soros at all, it is the first time I see this name, if someone can help to understand (if it is the case) what would be suspect about him ...

I do not know if they will be able to help, but the French source here: http://infoguerilla.fr/?p=12306#more-12306 looks very interesting considering the content.
 
quote from Luke Wilson:

One thing that has got me worried about the fracking movement the inclusion of the actor mark ruffalo as an out spoken advocate against fracking... Yet despite his open dissent against fracking he is still going big in hollywood, being signed up to major movies - compare to Charlie sheen and his support for Alex Jones.

I don't think that Mark Ruffalo can be compared to Alex Jones. Mark Ruffalo lives in upstate New York, in the Catskills where fracking will be starting soon if some miracle doesn't stop it. His family lives there, his community is there. He's using his name to draw attention to the issue, not to draw attention to himself.

I don't have any evidence that he is connected to any other cause than fracking. It seems to me that he just wants to be an actor and continue living in the Catskills. I could be wrong, but that is my impression of him.

http://www.grist.org/natural-gas/2011-07-14-mark-ruffalo-on-fracking-gas-is-a-bridge-to-nowhere-video

I think that this movement is more likely not to be corrupted so easilythis time because it is about very concrete issues that directly impact people's lives in every way: health, home, community, water, forests, livestock, farming, wildlife economics, health, livelihood. People who are waking up to the ecological damage that the energy companies are wreaking on this planet can literally see what is happening in their own backyard, or boatyard.

Of course there are two sides: there are people who are bought and owned by the energy companies. You see them at hearings - they all arrive together in a bus paid for by some energy company or other; they all get to speak first no matter if other people have been waiting before they arrive, and they leave after they testify, and don't stay to hear what the other side is saying.

Everyone I speak to is aware of how the media is not covering the issue.

I agree that there is the possibility that the movement could be corrupted. But does that mean that the people who are not corrupt should do nothing?

Isn't doing nothing enabling those who wish to do harm to succeed?

In any case, because all sorts of drilling is happening all over the planet, I hypothesize, and I may be way, way off on this, but I hypothesize that there is some hyper-dimensional influence here. Fracking is going on in so many places now that the price of natural gas has gone way down to the point where they don't even harvest it anymore in some places because it's more cost effective to burn it off. And yet they want to drill more and more. This changes the composition of the air, soil, and of course, water. Who or what will live in such an atmosphere? In the U.S. where they're selling this technology with the lie that it will make America energy independent, they are building terminals to ship the gas overseas.

It's like there is a spell over everyone - as though we've all been hypnotized to accept the unacceptable because of one big lie, or too discouraged to believe that anything can be done.

In any case, I have taken note of the observation that everything can be corrupted. The best course of action I think I can take to address that concern is to buy copies of Political Ponorology and bring it down to OWS. I just bought two used copies. Knowledge Protects. Activists didn't have that information in the 1960's. Let's see what happens
 
SeekinTruth said:
However, this is a movement that is showing some signs of community building and mutual support across a wide demographic. Sure they're infiltrated and there will be all attempts to co-opt it. But it's still too early to tell if some of this movement will become a new way of coping with the coming collapse of this "civilization." So I think it's too early to tell what else will develop from this movement/protests/demonstrations. It is still good to see people coming together and exchanging on so many levels for so long already without any violence and with successfully defusing any agents provocateur and infiltrators' mission to get things violent.

I think you summed it up quite well. I've been actively involving myself with the Occupy movement in the city I live in and that's essentially the same understanding I've come to. There is a community feel to the movement and it continues to grow with the addition of new people with new ideas, knowledge and skills. People are forming committees to deal with new issues as they arise.

Co-opting is occurring to some degree, mainly by a few people who are consistently causing disruptions and general melee's for their own ends. I see a significant group of people who seem to legitimately care about effecting a change, and they are pouring a lot of energy into it. Combined with a number of people who are supportive of this or curious about what is happening. Then there are other's who are generally apathetic and there to pass the time. They do not contribute to what is happening, but are generally non-disruptive. Finally, a select few that are actively causing disruption, whether they are consciously aware of it or not (Co-opting).

It was also pointed out that all of the active disrupters, at least in the Occupy movement here, are white males. It reminded me of the C's once saying that those of Aryan predisposition have a higher propensity for violence and agression (paraphrasing.) I think it's great that they are seeing individuals within that are trying to covet power (and very often these same people offer absolutely NO constructive ideas or criticisms at all), and I'm thinking of creating workshops to help create awareness about dealing with people like this. I was given a copy of 'In Sheep's Clothing' - and will hopefully use that as a template.

I'm curious to see where this movement is going, as some of the people there are actually starting to actively live the community approach of sharing resources, their time and giving of themselves for the people around them. :jawdrop:
 
Thanks for sharing this summary of your experience with the movement, Turgon. It IS interesting to see alternate approaches to a growing community. And I'm also curious to see what can develop from this movement. In any case, so far, it's a good counter-balance to the ponerized ways of doing things and relating to others in the dominant culture. People see alternatives to it and have different, unique human relations and dynamics.
 
Turgon said:
I'm curious to see where this movement is going, as some of the people there are actually starting to actively live the community approach of sharing resources, their time and giving of themselves for the people around them. :jawdrop:

This is very encouraging to hear! It will be interesting to see where this leads, but for now I think we are seeing the beginning of something new, something that could show a different and more caring type of community.

Thanks for the report and keep them coming. :)
 
Pure speculation - the perfect storm..!

False flag on occupy wallstreet. Blame whoever for attacking right at the heart of democracy - protesters exercising there free will. Popular movement = popular support. Use that energy to launch an open war with whoever at the same time sink the movement. Not to mention putting the alternative movement in a tough spot where they can't criticize and instead have to surrender there dissent... Take away the spotlight from the monsters on wallstreet... Win all round for the establishment!

Can they sink this low? I hope not.

Just a thought after reading some of the articles posted on SOTT about the desire for wider conflict.
 
manitoban said:
Turgon said:
I'm curious to see where this movement is going, as some of the people there are actually starting to actively live the community approach of sharing resources, their time and giving of themselves for the people around them. :jawdrop:

This is very encouraging to hear! It will be interesting to see where this leads, but for now I think we are seeing the beginning of something new, something that could show a different and more caring type of community.

Thanks for the report and keep them coming. :)

It is really encouraging to hear. It`s also encouraging to hear your plan for a workshop using In Sheep`s Clothing as a template. I think that is a great idea. It seems the one thing this movement is missing is a clear understanding of who the enemy is. They understand corporate greed and they understand there will be attempts at co-opting, but there isn`t a real understanding of the fact that those who they are protesting against truly have absolutely no compassion for them or anyone else, OSIT. They need to know about the existence of psychopaths - it is fundamental. I think you`re really onto something, Turgon.
 
Just as an aside, the risk factor for any so-called false flag in this movement increases over the weekend as that is when all the neighbouring office buildings are empty of high-functioning personnel and the disgruntled are off-work so are free to attend thus providing an opportunity for maximisation of whatever objectives... Just putting that out-there! OWS cannot be allowed to stand forever, and it is clear oppressive police tactics will not get rid of the protesters since they have the higher PR ground, thus it is left to either people to get tired, or winter to drive them out(most likely), to dis-unite the movement as in following the example of the (drum debacle) or lastly national security interests interms of terrorist attacks... According to this youtube video, _http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ZXCf3SA0gU israel is the one to lose the most if OWS is successful and this whole thing is linked to the iran assassination plot... Plus there is that famous maxim from the psychopaths, "You can't let a good opportunity go to waste."

In all future probabilities, this is an open option but whether it is likely or not likely is still open but it is best to keep it in ones mental space given the times we live in and the elements involved and what they have been known to be capable off.

For more info about how absurd the iranian plot is, watch this _http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2k8KgF2dPXg, they are not stupid so you wonder if that wasn't the end game but part of a wider scheme and when that scheme will come into effect.
 
I've been going to the #ows at Liberty Plaza in Manhattan, on and off since week # 2. I've been marching and was on the Brooklyn Bridge when 700 people got arrested. I was there when there the evening all the arrests were made on Wall Street and have taken part in the General Assembly meetings at the park. My feeling is that it definitely is an organic legit thing, at the moment.

The interesting thing is that everyone takes part in the organization. There are no visible leaders, though certain people take on more work than others, as you'd expect. Without specific leaders to focus in on, I think it's going to be very hard to co-opt the organization which is a flexible, ever changing group of people.

Issues are taken up every evening and discussed, as a large group and voted on as a large group. Detailed business is done by smaller working groups (you can take part even over the net) who report to the larger assembly. All, is about the success of the protest and the safety of the people who make it up. It's democracy at its best.

When people come in to try to steer the group, they have to speak over the 'human mic'. So we all repeat a phrase at a time what each of the speakers are saying. In that process, I think that the group picks up on the intentions of the speakers. You repeat each phrase yelling it out for the crowd behind you to hear---and you can feel whether someone is self-concerned, or group concerned as you repeat their speech, through the energy of the crowd. When people come up (and it's been rare) who have an agenda that's not exactly pure-hearted, the group's energy seems to drop off in the repeating process---they do feel it. Many people there are well aware of the role of psychopathy, btw. It comes up in conversations and many of the signs reflect the psychopaths' role in the current state of the world.

Where's it all going? Don't know. But, I do believe that expressing the needs of the many against those of the few is worth the trouble of arrests and other discomforts. To compare it to the 60s movement is to not know what's going on there. It's not that. I know; I was there, too. That's not to say that some aren't there for the ride. But again, you'll find that in almost any group. Though, everyone's energy (whether doing legal work, serving food, running the internet presence, or just being a body taking up space and having a presence...) is useful. It isn't the hippy hangout that some of the media likes to fling around. And it's message is resonating and growing around the world, daily. Yes, some day it may be co-opted. So, what does that have to do with right now? And there's so much to do right now.
 
Pathology creeping into the system or necessary measures that have to be taken?

A Chill Descends On Occupy Wall Street; "The Leaders of the allegedly Leaderless Movement"

On Sunday, October 23, a meeting was held at 60 Wall Street. Six leaders discussed what to do with the half-million dollars that had been donated to their organization, since, in their estimation, the organization was incapable of making sound financial decisions. The proposed solution was not to spend the money educating their co-workers or stimulating more active participation by improving the organization’s structures and tactics. Instead, those present discussed how they could commandeer the $500,000 for their new, more exclusive organization. No, this was not the meeting of any traditional influence on Wall Street. These were six of the leaders of Occupy Wall Street (OWS).

Occupy Wall Street’s Structure Working Group (WG) has created a new organization called the Spokes Council. “Teach-ins” were held to workshop and promote the Spokes Council throughout the week of October 22-28. I attended the teach-in on Sunday the 23rd.[..]

Ms. Holmes also stated at the teach-in that five people in the Finance WG have access to the $500,000 raised by Friends of Liberty Plaza. When Suresh Fernando, the man taking notes, asked who these people are, the leaders of the Structure WG nervously laughed and said that it was hard to keep track of the “constantly fluctuating” heads of the Finance WG. Mr. Fernando made at least four increasingly explicit requests for the names. Each request was turned down by the giggling, equivocating leaders.[..]

Daniel, a tall, red-bearded, white twenty-something—one of the six leaders of the teach-in—said that the NYC-GA needed to be completely defunded because those with “no stake” in the Occupy Wall Street movement shouldn’t have a say in how the money was spent. When I asked him whether everybody in the 99% had a stake in the movement, he said that only those occupying or working in Zuccotti Park did. I pointed out that since the General Assembly took place in Zuccotti Park, everybody who participated was an occupier. He responded with a long rant about how Zuccotti Park is filled with “tourists,” “free-loaders” and “crackheads” and suggested a solution that the even NYPD has not yet attempted: Daniel said that he’d like to take a fire-hose and clear out the entire encampment, adding hopefully that only the “real” activists would come back.

The main obstacle to the creation of the Spokes Council was that the NYC-GA had already voted against it four times. One audience member observed that no organization would vote to relinquish its power. Some of the strongest proponents of the Spokes Council responded that they had taken this into account, and were planning on creating the Spokes Council regardless of whether the NYC-GA accepted the proposal. They claimed that, in the interests of non-hierarchy, neither the Spokes Council nor the General Assembly should have power over the other.

In the minutes of the teach-in on Saturday the 22nd, the leaders recognize that usurping power from the NYC-GA might make people uncomfortable. The Structure WG’s eventual proposal was to keep the General Assembly alive and functioning while the Spokes Council “gets on its feet.” Working Groups could still technically get funding through the NYC-GA, but the “GA may stop making those kinds of decisions because people [will] stop going… To officially take power away isn’t necessary,” especially because the NYC-GA works on the consensus model. A small group of people aiming to delegitimize the NYC-GA could easily attend each session merely to block every proposal. According to a member of the Demands WG, this is already occurring in several Working Groups.

To placate the rest of OWS, the Structure WG amended their original proposal and gave the NYC-GA power to dissolve the Spokes Council. This amendment is irrelevant, however, given the 90% majority requirement in the NYC-GA, and the ability of members of the Spokes Council to vote in the NYC-GA.

The “Spokes Council”

The newly formed Spokes Council claims to adhere to the “statement of principles” adopted by the New York City General Assembly, including “direct-democracy, non-hierarchy, participation, and inclusion.” The Spokes Council differs from the NYC-GA, however, in three main respects: the Spokes Council has the power to exclude new groups that don’t receive a 90% majority vote for admission; in the NYC-GA, everybody technically has the right to speak, whereas in the Spokes Council each Working Group has a spokesperson, who can be recalled only by a 90% majority; and the NYC-GA allows one vote per person, whereas the Spokes Council operates more indirectly, granting each Working Group one vote.

When I pointed out the contradictions these differences present to the Council’s stated principles, the leaders of Sunday’s teach-in insisted that the Spokes Council was the most participatory, democratic organization possible—the same slogan they repeated last month about the General Assembly. I felt like I was watching a local production of Animal Farm.

I’ve attended two mock Spokes Councils in the past month. At the Spokes Council in Washington Square Park on October 15, the unelected facilitators set the agenda: Occupy Washington Square Park. Then they set the terms of debate, breaking the group into three circles: those who wanted to occupy and possibly get arrested, those who wanted there to be an occupation and would assist those being arrested, and those who wanted to build the movement in other ways. I went with the third group.

The facilitators told each group to elect a facilitator, a note-taker, and a spokesperson who would read the notes from each group’s meeting. Almost immediately, one of the members of the OWS inner-circle asked my group if anybody had a problem if she facilitated. Nobody objected, so she was “elected.” Although she was in the one group that opposed occupying Washington Square Park, she lectured us about the need to occupy public parks.

I was vocal in my group, arguing that the fundamental problem in our hierarchical, bureaucratic society is the lack of a truly democratic, dialogic way of relating to one another—not that public parks close at midnight. I repeated the arguments I had raised in previous General Assemblies, concluding that OWS’ main goal should be to develop dialogic, democratic methods in the occupied areas, and to extend this way of life into every home, workplace and school, and in local, regional, national and international bodies.

My advocacy for radical democracy wasn’t particularly popular. Ironically, the predominantly middle-class, white men leading the movement claim that their hostility to democracy is in the interest of “protecting minorities,” referring to oppressed genders, races, classes, ages, and nations. Far from being “minorities,” these people make up the majority of the world’s population; the worldwide outcry for democracy vitiates the paternalistic notion that the oppressed need “protection.”

The discussion turned to which locations the movement should occupy, ignoring the question of whether occupation for the sake of occupation was a good idea. I suggested teaming with evicted tenants and former homeowners to occupy foreclosed homes, abandoned apartments and unsold condos—an act that would strike at the heart of the economic crisis, and endear the movement to the oppressed. This idea generated a lot of support, but was not repeated by my “spokesperson” when the groups reconvened.

At the teach-in on Sunday the 23rd, one of the leaders’ main gripes—rightfully so—was that the NYC-GA was inefficient and dominated by society’s vocal minorities, particularly middle-class white men. The underlying cause is not eliminated by the Spokes Council, but is in fact exacerbated by it. The major flaw of the General Assembly is the need for a 90% majority to pass proposals. This “modified consensus” ensures the continuation of the dominant culture through the passage of only the most conservative measures. In the Spokes Council, proposals can be blocked by 11% of the members of 11% of the Working Groups, meaning that a minority of 1.2% can stymie the will of 98.8% majority.

Instead of cutting to the structural and psychological core of oppression, the proponents of the Spokes Council merely apply a topical cream by demanding that no WG have the same spokesperson more than once a week. The leaders of OWS seem to understand that a genuinely revolutionary movement would lead to deepening involvement by oppressed communities. The leaders then try to reverse-engineer a revolution by consistently choosing among the few people of color and women involved in OWS to be its spokespeople and facilitators, as if this token involvement will guarantee a genuine revolutionary movement. In fact, tokenism obscures the need for systematic change by misrepresenting the demographics of OWS. Tokenism also gives the leaders of OWS an argument to fall back upon when confronted with the fact that they have thus far been unable to mobilize and involve most of the 99%.

The Spokes Council, in fact, doesn’t have enough regard for working people, students and people with dependents to have one of their three weekly meetings on a weekend afternoon. Instead of ensuring broad participation of traditionally marginalized and oppressed communities, OWS limits participation to individuals from these communities who are privileged enough to be able to spend three workdays a week at Zuccotti Park.

The participation of oppressed people in oppressive organizations is not a step towards liberation, but is the deepening of their complicity in their own domination. The unabated war on women and people of color in America, during Obama’s presidency, with Hillary Clinton as his Secretary of State, is a testament to the structural and psychological nature of oppression, and the inability for spokespeople to represent the oppressed.

My Address to the General Assembly

After the Structure WG’s teach-in ended, I put together a short summary of what I’d heard. I waited for two hours while the General Assembly slowly got to the announcements--the only part of the NYC-GA open for anyone to participate.

When my turn came to speak, I brought up the plans of “the leaders of the allegedly leaderless movement” to commandeer the half-million dollars sent to the General Assembly for their new, exclusive, undemocratic, representational organization. Before I could finish, the facilitators and other members of the OWS inner circle started shouting over me. Amidst the confusion, the human mic stopped projecting what I, or anybody was saying. Because silence was what they were after, the leaders won.

Eventually one of the facilitators regained control of the crowd and explained that I was speaking “opinions, not facts,” which is why I would not be allowed to continue. He also asserted untruthfully that I had gone over my allotted minute. Notably, the facilitators and members of the OWS inner circle regularly ignore time restrictions.

This reaction shouldn’t surprise anyone. It is reasonable to expect any undemocratic organization to be co-opted eventually by a vocal minority or charismatic individual. On Friday, October 29, the proposal to create the Spokes Council was put to the NYC-GA for a fifth time, and finally received a 90% majority. The facilitators assisted the process by denying two vocal critics of the Spokes Council their allotted time to speak against it.

Sometimes it snows before the leaves have fallen. The ineffective and increasingly symbolic NYC-GA will most likely continue to hang around as long as the people who congregate in Zuccotti Park hold out hope for a more participatory, democratic society. The Spokes Council will only be more effective in its exclusiveness.. Let’s hope the inclusive spirit driving the Occupy movement is not frozen out.
 
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