Occupy 2.0: The Great Turning

Occupy 2.0: The Great Turning

2012 April 10
Posted by BZ Riger

During the May 27, 2011 protests in Barcelona, protesters wore flowers and painted their hands white to reinforce their commitment to nonviolence. Photo by Caroline Bach

Occupy 2.0: The Great Turning

Building a movement to build a new reality

By Michael Nagler

April 5, 2012

http://www.yesmagazine.org/people-power/occupy-2.0-the-great-turning

The spinning wheel, and the spinning wheel alone, will solve the problem of  the deepening poverty of India.
—Mahatma Gandhi

Anyone who thinks consumption can expand forever on a finite planet is either insane or an economist.
—E.F. Schumacher

After a roaring start, the Occupy movement hit a wall in the form of rough-handling and evictions by the police. Occupiers could have given up on nonviolence—as a small faction will always try to get us to do—or just given up; but instead we have gone back to the drawing board, while continuing to occupy select spaces, this time with advance training. This is exactly the right response. As my former Berkeley colleague Todd Gitlin writes in The Nation, “To take on a warped state of affairs that has been decades in the making will take decades,” and for this purpose the encampment culture is “both necessary and inadequate.”

It’s time to step back, take stock of the situation we’re in, and work out a roadmap of the way home.

If our movement is about raising the dignity and value of the human being, we cannot use the method of violence, which degrades.

The worship of wealth that has brought corporations into a position of dominance in the world today has also brought in its wake two unexpected benefits. First, it planted in the minds of many the idea that some kind of world unity was possible: “Globalization from above” awakened the old dream of “globalization from below,” the dream of world unity without world domination. Secondly, by releasing many of the traditional constraints on greed (they were already pretty weak) it gave the one percent enough rope to really squeeze the economic middle class, taking away from them the false comfort of “a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage,” and thereby reawakening, though in new forms, the class struggles of the 1930s. This has finally exposed the inherent contradiction of an economy based on indefinitely increasing wants—instead of on human needs that the planet has ample resources to fulfill.

These new realities are what Walter Wink calls “gifts of the enemy,” a natural feature of nonviolent struggle. The sometimes rather brutal evictions from New York’s Zuccotti Park, Los Angeles, Oakland, Washington D.C., and other sites, along with the beating and pepper-spraying of students in California last November, could redound to our advantage. They might serve as a wake-up call revealing the militarization of America—though there are not many signs of such awakening yet in this numbed nation.

I was never among those who thought that the occupation of public sites was what a serious revolutionary movement should look like (Tienanmen Square is still fresh in my memory). Now that we have been pushed off the streets we have an opportunity—as many occupiers have recognized —to regroup, reframe, and rethink what this movement is really about, how it should proceed, and what historical precedents can help us bring it to fruition.

What it’s about is nothing less than the Great Turning. Occupy 1.0 was criticized for not putting forward a list of demands. Well, if we are to escape what the late Václav Havel recently called (again in The Nation) “the omnipresent dictatorship of consumption—which underlies all the dissatisfactions that launched Occupy—then we are called to a revolution in our very way of seeing the world and sensing who we are within it.

How to carry out this great change is, at least in part, equally clear. Throughout the waves of popular uprising that keep springing up where conditions are right, from India’s freedom struggle and the color revolutions to the “Arab spring” to the global manifestations of Occupy, nonviolence has become steadily more accepted as the preferred route to freedom, so that by now it is taken for granted by the vast majority of the 99 percent. How could it be otherwise? In fact, the highly regarded study by Erica Chenowith and Maria Stefan, Why Civil Resistance Works, shows that transitions to democracy are twice as successful if they’re nonviolent, and also are three times as rapid (that part surprised even me). And, as George Lakey has shown, the only revolutions that have managed not only to establish some sort of political democracy but also make sure that the one percent don’t reestablish their grip in another form were nonviolent, at least in the sense that they did not wield weapons.

But much more than this strategic calculus is involved. Occupiers sense that nonviolence is part of their message: If our movement is about raising the dignity and value of the human being, we cannot use the method of violence, which degrades. As a Kurdish man recently told an American woman who was visiting his part of Iraq as part of a peacekeeping delegation, “Sometimes you are happy in nonviolence because you are not losing your soul. You might lose hope, or get tired, but you are not losing your soul.”

In Yemen, protestors cried, “They can’t defeat us, because we left our weapons at home.” Fair enough; but for Gandhi at least, nonviolence was far more than a protest without weapons. What was it? Particularly, what would a sophisticated, fully rounded nonviolent movement for today look like? At the Metta Center, we have been debating this question for several years, and I think we’ve come up with something that converges nicely with what Joanna Macy, David Korten, Barbara Marx Hubbard and other visionaries have also seen about the way forward.

Eyes on the Prize: MLK's Lessons for Occupy At the time of his death, Martin Luther King, Jr. was planning a campaign around economic injustice—including a mass encampment of poor people in Washington, D.C.

We start from this proposition of Václav Havel: “Human beings have created, and daily create, this self-directed system through which they divest themselves of their innermost identity.” It is by reasserting that innermost identity—our innate empathy for the suffering of others, our sense of fairness, our concern for our children—that we begin to create a better system. As Saint Augustine said when he faced the “Great Turning” of his day, “duo amores faciunt duas civitates”—roughly, ‘there are two drives within us that would lead to two very different world orders.’

This brings us to the “outer jihad”—changing the world. Gandhi made a discovery very early in his career (1894), the power of which is again being recognized by many activists. He called it Constructive Programme (CP): building what you want rather than (or as preparation for) disestablishing what you don’t want. CP recognized that truth lay with the resisters, that their dependency on an outside oppressor (today, on corporations and financial institutions) was a lie that could be exploded through constructive projects (such as, most famously in his case, making homespun cloth rather than buying British imports). There is something inherently right about building what you want in a context of a nonviolent struggle, and in fact Gandhi asserted toward the end of his career, “my real politics is constructive work.”

But CP does not mean that you neglect resistance where it’s needed: you spin your own cloth and boycott British imports. More to the point, you make your own salt and defy the police to break your head for it, thus breaking their empire. The parallel for us might be to reach out to those who still cling to militarism and try to persuade them, but to also sign the Pledge of Resistance to offer massive civil disobedience if this country attacks Iran. We, like the satyagrahis of yore, should look to trap the government in what George Lakey has called a “dilemma action” whereby if the opponent lets you do what you want, you win, and if he has to use brutality to stop you, you win on another level. The brutality meted out to the satyagrahis who attempted to enter the salt works at Dharasana in 1930 basically doomed the Raj even as they succeeded in keeping the satyagrahis out.

It is good to keep in mind how much weight Gandhi put on constructive action. A 1977 survey by the Gandhi Smarak Nidhi (Gandhi Memorial Fund) found 1,845 institutions in 22 states still functioning that were founded by Gandhi and his close associate, Vinoba Bhave. It is not that we ourselves don’t have constructive projects underway; YES! Magazine has been reporting on them for years. What we don’t have is a consciousness that these innumerable projects are part of a coherent whole.

It is by reasserting our innermost identity—our innate empathy for the suffering of others, our sense of fairness, our concern for our children—that we begin to create a better system.

Recently I, with others from the Metta Center and activists from around the country, had the great privilege of hearing from someone who lived through the Salt Satyagraha and in fact spent the first 23 years of his life with Gandhi: Narayan Desai, the son of Gandhi’s lifelong secretary, Mahadev. This unforgettable weekend was the closest most of us will ever come to a living contact with the Mahatma. And his presentation of Gandhi’s legacy for us today took exactly the shape we have also reached for a revolution of peace from within: 1) personal transformation 2) constructive program, and then 3) protest — graduating, where required, to direct resistance.

From this point of view, Occupy at first picked up the stick by the wrong end. But no matter. The point now is to settle in for the long haul and draw up a cohesive strategy based on the compelling power of truth.

As Joanna Macy, and my own teacher, Eknath Easwaran, have emphasized, truth demands that we uphold a much higher vision of humanity than that currently circulating in the mass media (especially advertising media, with its dehumanizing materialism)—in other words that we uphold and embody what’s frequently called the “new story” (though it’s been around for millennia). We need to draw upon what new science and ancient wisdom are telling us: that we are conscious beings deeply interconnected with one another, indeed with “the whole of Nature in its beauty,” as Einstein said. That we are beings who can never be satisfied by consuming things but rather by building trusting relationships. And who instinctively understand that security can never come from locking up “criminals” or eliminating “enemies;” but only from building crime-free societies in which the occasional offender is restored to a life of dignity, and the goal of all conflict is to turn opponents into friends.

This is why, in the overall strategy that we’ve envisioned, with its six major problem areas, pride of place (top dead center in the diagram below) goes to New Story Creation, where we articulate and publicize the higher vision of humanity. But in another key area, militarism vs. peace, we would work on learning to transform our justifiable anger, into what Gandhi called “a power that can change the world”—for example through Unarmed Civilian Peacekeeping, and/or by acting on opportunities for direct action when we are ready for them, like the above mentioned pledge of resistance.

We are not calling on anyone to stop occupying, if they feel called to do so (as we ourselves sometimes are). What’s most important, though, is that before too long the movement attains a capacity for concerted action at the national level; that we understand ourselves, as the diagram below shows, to be part of a single movement for a new kind of reality; and that we can together show the rest of the world that they want that new reality as much as we do.

Brian's picture

Thanks LightWins

I found this inspiring and helpful in putting things in a context I can manage emotionally. Events are depressing me tremendously-my lost financial security, lost liberty, paranoia at the police state Congress has heaped upon us, having my penis and testicles groped by a TSA agent, by a monstrously corrupt supreme court. I am haunted by a dread most of the time. I'm scared it's too late. I have to do something or I will go insane. I'm participating in a training/empowerment thing this weekend, an extension of Occupy. It's happening countrywide if anyone's interested. Blessings all.

lightwins's picture

my brother, I can understand your response to the frightening and discouraging news the corporate media (and much of the internet media) is bringing us. I, too, find myself wavering at times from the positive vision/version of these times that I hold in my heart.

In 1981 I had a vision: I was taken into space; it was beautiful, silent and the stars were like diamonds in the velevty blackness. A light being approached me who I recognized as a teacher and a friend. They directed my attention down, to my left. There I saw the Earth, a beautiful blue-green jewel; I cried. They said, "You haven't seen enough." As I gazed, I became aware of an enormous amount of love and light pouring into the Earth from every direction; I cried! They said, "You haven't seen enough."

I was taken down to the surface. The light was going into every alleyway, every hidden and dark place and was pushing the darkness up to the surface; it was ugly, it was everywhere, it stank - instinctively, I turned away. They said, "You haven't seen enough."

We became small and I was taken down to the level where the light was pushing the dark out of its hiding places. When I looked closely, at the very interface between the light and the darkness, the light was revealing the light within the darkness. Again I cried. They said, "You haven't still seen enough."

We went back out to the surface - there was so much darkness; then we again went out, into space and there was so much light and love pouring in from all over the cosmos - no darkness could be seen. And then, something shifted and I could no longer tell what direction the light was moving; the Earth was radiating as much love and light as was pouring in! They said, "Now, you have seen enough."

RA in The Law of One (1987, I believe) predicted a brief period of global fascism just before the shift from 3rd density to 4th density. IMHO, we are in this phase and we are on the verge of a tremendous shift. Dear Brian, now more than ever, is the time to for each of us and all of us together to "keep our eyes on the prize; and, hold on!"

(It helps me to spend at least as much time as I do becoming aware of the darkeness and working to shift it, focusing on all the wonderful, beautiful and connected human things I am aware of. Millions of us are awakening. Our love is so powerful they cannot resist it for long. We are aligned with the structure of the Universe; we cannot fail.

Bless you more, brother man,

John

Bob07's picture

Thank you, John.  I, too, needed to hear that right now. 

I don't know how to express this... just going to let it come as it will... Hoping it will be understood not as words, but as experience...

For me, "darkness" has been boiling up from within for weeks -- old, old stuff, corrosive like acid, the voice of limitation and fear.  We all have it.  Then there's what's "outside" in the world, too.  It's all the same -- inside, outside, who cares? 

Yes, it is easy to forget the light sometimes (lots of forgetfulness here lately).  But when I remember it I experience it as the light of my own awareness-openess of mind and heart.  We all share this light, too -- this neutral, loving Observer beyond all the turmoil.  It's Awareness, Love.  It's in all of us, is all of us.  The darkness (dark thoughts and emotions) is within the light, too.  There's light in the darkness, as you say, John, and there's light that contains the darkness as well.  When I believe in the darkness, I feel myself contracting.  When I remember to just experience the darkness as a neutral phenomenon, then a turnaround begins.  When I relax and let my being expand and keep on expanding, then there's light; only then does everything make sense.  It's our natural state of being... it's always there, waiting for us to recognize it, or leap into it with a decisive inner act of love and acceptance of ourselves and everything. 

Sorry... these words are inadequate, I know.  I'm encouraging myself as well as you (Brian and everyone) because it's so easy to forget and get lost.  Remember (to myself, too), you are Light and Love -- the awakened Awareness and Compassion.  But it's an experience in this moment, a letting go and a going beyond.

Bless us all... we'll make it.  No, we cannot fail.

 

lightwins's picture

in the books & trainings of BalancedView.org the awareness is refered to as the open intelligence and everything that appears within it is referred to as data. They say, "Short moment of open intelligence, repeated many times, become continuous." and "By relying on open intelligence, repeatedly, the data is outshone."

 

As Nyoshul Khen Rinpoche sang:

 

“Rest in natural great peace
This exhausted mind,
Beaten relentlessly
by karma and neurotic thoughts,
Like the unceasing fury
of the pounding waves
In the infinite ocean of samsara.
Rest in the natural great peace.”

For me, by consciously returning again and again to the clear, still space of the awareness of now it has gradually become more and more vivid and more and more continuous. And the data are increasingly transparent. So, in my experience, this works; I am now generally peaceful, happy and simply here.

Noa's picture

Brian, do you have a link to that Occupy empowerment weekend event?  A google search revealed a number of websites jumping on the Occupy bandwagon, so I can't tell one from the next.

 

To everyone in general...

It's easy to get discouraged these days with so much fear-based crap thrown at us.  One thing that keeps it in perspect for me is that this dung is intended to pray upon our doubts and fears.  It's created that way by design.  Just knowing that helps me see it for what it is. 

Another pick-me-up came for me by way of Lightwin's recent post:  http://www.gatheringspot.net/news-article/inspirationstransformational-stories/billionaires-arrested  The number of arrests and resignations is an encouraging sign that the tide is turning.

Remember, our physical bodies are electro-magnetic and everything in the universe is made of energy. In addition to the human drama playing out on the planet, there are numerous extra-terrestial factors at work, such as fluctuating magnetic fields, shifting poles, increased solar flares, and the Earth's journey towards the dark rift in the Milky Way Galaxy.   In the months ahead, we can expect an increased "wig-out" factor based upon these natural phenomena alone.  Add to that the psycho control-freak weirdness in play and things are bound to get a bit uglier before they get better (IMO).

But I agree with John.  I think the major craziness will be short-lived.  Forewarned is forearmed.  Just think how better prepared you will be (than most other people) simply by knowing what you know now.  Think of what an asset you can be by being a source of calm and reason within a sea of chaos.  Have you noticed that disasters seem to bring out the best in people?

Allow yourself the time to take care of yourself and regroup.  Go fishing; get a massage; meditate more; TURN OFF THE TV -- do whatever it takes to recharge yourself.  Soon, we may need all the steady hands we can get.

Then after the fall, the real fun begins.  I see paradise rising just above the horizon.

 

The Gathering Spot is a PEERS empowerment website
"Dedicated to the greatest good of all who share our beautiful world"