A good example of such a failed
contemporary movement is the 911 truth effort. The groups, websites and
true believers keep on pushing their objectives a decade after the
historic event. But the goal of revealing what really happened, that the
official government story does not divulge, is like a moldy piece of
forgotten food in the refrigerator.
Movement
death by inattention happens despite good resources, charismatic
leaders and even great organization and communication skills. Critical
mass of public support simply never materializes, in large measure
because diverse segments of the population never buy into the central
arguments of the movement. The Internet is littered with websites of
activist groups that persist despite clear evidence of decay and wide
disinterest. True believers have a mission in life tied to their egos
that prevent them from admitting defeat. They do not move on.
The
biggest mistake that passionate advocates for a cause make is
overestimating their ability to reach critical mass and underestimating
the competition of other movements with greater appeal which rob them of
both attention and supporters.
Make
no mistake; I totally and enthusiastically support the Occupy movement
because it offers the prospect of producing reforms to fix our broken
government and attracting very wide public support for a nonviolent
Second American Revolution. What worries me, however, is that many of
its participants seem over confident, as if they cannot fail. On the
other hand, I have become impressed by a convergence of thinking about
what the next big step for the Occupy movement can and should be. I
will briefly identify examples of this convergent thinking.
Canadian author Erich Koch has written a compelling
article:
An Objective for the U.S. Occupy Movement: A Constitutional Convention.
He buys into the view that the Occupy movement could embrace the
thinking of Harvard Professor Lawrence Lessig who has presented the case
for amendments to fix Congress. Like others Koch is correct in saying
that “No one in the movement would disagree with its main point: the
fundamental problem is the corruption of Congress.” Unlike others, Koch
recognizes the path for obtaining reform constitutional amendments is
using the provision in Article V for a convention of state delegates,
having the same power as Congress in proposing amendments that still
must be ratified by three-quarters of the states. It has never been
used despite many hundreds of state requests for a convention because,
clearly, Congress and most status quo forces fear such a convention.
Koch cited a great
article
by Alesh Houdek: Has a Harvard Professor Mapped Out the Next Step for
Occupy Wall Street? Most is a review of Lessig’s book. Correctly noted
about using the convention option is “it bypasses the usual means of
reform (Congress, presidential elections, etc.) which the lobbyists and
other interested parties have learned so well to manipulate. And lastly,
such a convention would be free to propose solutions that would
otherwise be subject to be stricken as unconstitutional by the Supreme
Court.” This is critical to understand. Houdek concludes: “Properly
presented, the strategies and aims of Lessig's book could make it the
handbook the protesters have been looking for -- and provide a pathway
for them to ride out the winter ahead.”
Dan Froomkin also has presented the
same case
in: Lawrence Lessig's New Book On Political Corruption Offers
Protesters A Possible Manifesto. He quoted what Lessig himself had
said
in an article about the Occupy movement and the concern that I share,
namely that the Occupy movement “will become too diffuse and not
focused" on the root issue of corruption of government. And that the
movement will only grow "if a wide range of people can be part of it."
This requires coalescing around an issue "as fundamental as the
corruption of the system." Only a constitutional amendment can fix the
corrupting impact of money in politics. This is also the focus of Dylan
Ratigan’s fine
effort, except that the use of the convention path has not been emphasized.
A specific call for an Article V convention was
made
by the pro-Occupy US Day of Rage group: “We are organizing a
coordinated national campaign at local and state levels, including where
necessary the occupation of state capitols, in order to demand an
article V constitutional convention be called to restore representative
democracy to our nation.” A set of specific reforms to be fix the
corruption-money problem are presented.
The 99 Percent Declaration group has also presented an important
statement
centered on the call for a National General Assembly, where delegates
would formulate a petition of a list of grievances that would be
delivered to the main parts of the federal government on behalf of 99
percent of Americans. A suggested list of grievances includes the need
for constitutional amendments to achieve solutions, but only for a few
of the issues. Not explicitly acknowledged, however, is that
constitutional amendments, not ordinary laws, would be necessary for
other solutions, such as term limits for Congress and abandoning the
Electoral College. Moreover, there is no specific recognition that
serious amendment reforms will not be proposed by Congress, and that an
Article V convention is needed. Inattention to method was also the
shortcoming of a similar list of solutions by
Ralph Lopez.
Author Scott Turow has
presented:
How Occupy Wall Street Can Restore Clout of the 99%. His
recommendation to the Occupy movement is “work across the nation for a
constitutional amendment requiring Congress to regulate the expenditure
of private money on elections. … The best antidote to this imbalance of
income and influence would be to greatly reduce the role of private
funding in our elections. …As for the Occupy Wall Street movement, it
has been criticized by some for not having a realistic agenda, even
though polling shows that millions of Americans, including me, are
sympathetic to the basic message of the protests.” His prescription:
“rally around a single goal and reinvigorate their movement.” Fine, but
missing from his analysis is the recognition that Congress will never
propose reform amendments, only an Article V convention will do the job.
This
sampling of recent writings clearly shows convergent thinking that the
Occupy movement can and should focus on key reform constitutional
amendments and, second, that some better informed critical thinkers
recognize, this requires advocacy for using the Article V convention
option that Congress has refused to honor.
As
to Occupy movement success, I want again to emphasize that there is
always competition for the attention and support of concerned Americans
who recognize how broken our system is. In particular, the well
financed Americans Elect
effort
is impressive. Because it is offering an alternative path to
nominating a presidential candidate in 2012, over 2 million Americans
have already signed up to be delegates for a web convention, with
millions more very likely as the mainstream media keeps giving this
effort attention. The Get Money Out campaign has over 250,000
signatories.
Disgust
with the two-party plutocracy is surely shared by Occupy participants
and supporters. But for movement success based on enticing many
millions of Americans, the Occupy movement cannot ignore competition
such as Americans Elect. This means that the Occupy movement must
explicitly start making the case to the broad public why their effort
can achieve more of what is needed. This is easily done.
Here
are some key concepts that the Occupy movement could use. No matter
who is nominated by Americans Elect, the odds are that either the better
financed Democrat or Republican candidate will win the presidency.
This may just require spending even more millions of dollars on
campaigns. And whoever is nominated by the group will likely be
strongly linked to one of the two major parties, rather than some
courageous reformer and enemy of the status quo. Moreover, this group
does not offer a realistic path to getting the key reforms of the system
that most of us see critically needed, such as constitutional
amendments, already recognized by many Occupy supporters.
A sign of trouble for the Occupy movement is a recent
national poll
that found: “In the latest survey, 33 percent voiced support for Occupy
Wall Street, down from 35 percent in a previous poll, while opposition
to the movement climbed from 36 percent to 45 percent. Twenty-two
percent were unsure.” These results are worse than
earlier polls. From the left, Chris Bowers
commented:
“the decline in Occupy Wall Street's image is probably more connected
to the increasingly negative coverage of the clashes between protesters
and police than it is to declining support for movement's message.” Now
is the time to move the message from what is wrong to solutions, using
an
Occupy Congress approach. Otherwise, this view from the
conservative right
might prevail: “OWS will linger … but I’d argue we’ve seen the
movement’s high tide. It will now recede into a mere annoying shadow of
itself as support is withdrawn by political figures and organizations.”
True,
Occupy movement success is not inevitable. The movement must better
define what success means and how it can be achieved if it is to attract
and keep the support of many millions of Americans. It needs
specificity for its solutions that ordinary Americans can relate to.
Never underestimate the power and commitment of status quo forces to
maintain control over the political, government and economic system that
has so harmed most Americans. The fight against the Occupy movement
mostly seen as local police violence against peaceful demonstrators and
protesters as well disinformation from some news outlets and pundits are
nothing compared to what could be mounted if the movement is viewed as
more threatening to the status quo delusional democracy with its
delusional prosperity.