Thousands of Occupy Wall Street-related demonstrations are happening today, not only here in the U.S., but in at least 80 countries. (Chris Bowers at Daily Kos has the rundown.) Below, Steve Fraser provides a historical perspective, explaining that the OWS movement has tapped into a long and vibrant tradition.
A Century of Our Streets vs. Wall Street
By Steve Fraser, cross-posted from Tom Dispatch
Occupy Wall Street, the ongoing demonstration-cum-sleep-in that began
a month ago not far from the New York Stock Exchange and has since
spread like wildfire to cities around the country, may be a
game-changer. If so, it couldn’t be more appropriate or more in the
American grain that, when the game changed, Wall Street was directly in
the sights of the protesters.
The fact is that the end of the world as we’ve known it has been
taking place all around us for some time. Until recently, however,
thickets of political verbiage about cutting this and taxing that, about
the glories of “job creators” and the need to preserve “the American
dream,” have obscured what was hiding in plain sight -- that street of
streets, known to generations of our ancestors as “the street of
torments.”
After an absence of well over half a century, Wall Street is back,
center stage, as the preferred American icon of revulsion, a status it
held for a fair share of our history. And we can thank a small bunch
of campers in Manhattan’s Zuccotti Park for hooking us up to a
venerable tradition of resistance and rebellion.
The Street of Torments
Peering back at a largely forgotten terrain of struggle against “the
Street,” so full of sound and fury signifying quite a lot, it’s
astonishing -- to a historian of Wall Street, at least -- that the
present movement didn’t happen sooner. It’s already hard to remember
that only weeks ago, three years into the near shutdown of the world
financial system and the Great Recession, an eerie unprotesting silence
still blanketed the country.
Stories accumulated of Wall Street greed and arrogance, astonishing
tales of incompetence and larceny. The economy slowed and stalled.
People lost their homes and jobs. Poverty reached record levels. The
political system proved as bankrupt as the big banks. Bipartisan
consensus emerged -- but only around the effort to save “too big to
fail” financial goliaths, not the legions of victims their financial
wilding had left in its wake.
The political class then prescribed what people already had plenty
of: yet another dose of austerity plus a faith-based belief in a
“recovery” that, for 99% of Americans, was never much more than an
optical illusion. In those years, the hopes of ordinary people for a
chance at a decent future withered and bitterness set in.
Strangely,
however, popular resistance was hard to find. In the light of American
history, this passivity was surpassingly odd. From decades before the
Gilded Age of the late nineteenth century through the Great Depression,
again and again Wall Street found itself in the crosshairs of an
outraged citizenry mobilized thanks to political parties, labor unions,
or leagues of the unemployed.
Such movements were filled with a polyglot mix of middle-class
anti-trust reformers, bankrupted small businessmen, dispossessed
farmers, tenants and sharecroppers, out-of-work laborers, and so many
others.
If Occupy Wall Street signals the end of our own, atypical period of
acquiescence, could a return to a version of “class warfare” that would,
once upon a time, have been familiar to so many Americans be on the
horizon? Finally!
What began as a relatively sparsely attended and impromptu affair has
displayed a staying power and magnetic attractiveness that has taken
the country, and above all the political class, by surprise. A recent
rally of thousands in lower Manhattan, where demonstrators marched from
the city’s government center to Zuccotti Park, the location of the
“occupiers” encampment, was an extraordinarily diverse gathering by any
measure of age, race, or class. Community organizations, housing
advocates, environmentalists, and even official delegations of trade
unionists not normally at ease hanging out with anarchists and hippies
gave the whole affair a social muscularity and reach that was
exhilarating to experience.
Diversity, however, can cut both ways. Popular protest, to the
degree that there’s been much during the recent past -- and mainly over
the war in Iraq -- has sometimes been criticized for the chaotic way it
assembled a grab-bag of issues and enemies, diffuse and without focus.
Occupy Wall Street embraces diverse multitudes but this time in the
interest of convergence. In its targeting of “the street of torments,”
this protean uprising has, in fact, found common ground. To a
historian’s ear this echoes loudly.
Karl Marx described high finance as “the Vatican of capitalism,” its diktat
to be obeyed without question. We’ve spent a long generation learning
not to mention Marx in polite company, and not to use suspect and nasty
phrases like “class warfare” or “the reserve army of labor,” among many others.
In times past, however, such phrases and the ideas that went with
them struck our forebears as useful, even sometimes as true depictions
of reality. They used them regularly, along with words like “plutocracy,”
“robber baron,” and “ruling class,” to identify the sources of economic
exploitation and inequality that oppressed them, as well as to describe
the political disenfranchisement they suffered and the subversion of
democracy they experienced.
Never before, however, has “the Vatican of capitalism” captured quite
so perfectly the specific nature of the oligarchy that’s run the
country for a generation and has now run it into the ground. Even
political consultant and pundit James Carville, no Marxist he, confessed
as much during the Clinton years when he said the bond market
“intimidates everybody.”
Perhaps that era of everyday intimidation is finally ending. Here
are some of the signs of it -- literally -- from that march I attended:
“Loan Sharks Ate My World” (illustrated with a reasonable facsimile of
the Great White from Jaws), “End the Federal Reserve,” “Wall
Street Sold Out, Let’s Not Bail-Out,” “Kill the Over the Counter
Derivative Market,” “Wall Street Banks Madoff Well,” “The Middle Class
is Too Big To Fail,” “Eat the Rich, Feed the Poor,” “Greed is Killing
the Earth.” During the march, a pervasive chant -- “We are the 99%” --
resoundingly reminded the bond market just how isolated and vulnerable
it might become.
And it is in confronting this elemental, determining feature of our
society’s predicament, in gathering together all the multifarious
manifestations of our general dilemma right there on “the street of
torments,” that Occupy Wall Street -- even without a program or clear
set of demands, as so many observers lament -- has achieved a giant leap
backward, summoning up a history of opposition we would do well to
recall today.
A Century of Our Streets and Wall Street
One young woman at the demonstration held up a corrugated cardboard
sign roughly magic-markered with one word written three times: “system,”
“system,” “system.” That single word resonates historically, even if
it sounds strange to our ears today. The indictment of presumptive
elites, especially those housed on Wall Street, the conviction that the
system over which they presided must be replaced by something more
humane, was a robust feature of our country’s political and cultural
life for a long century or more.
When in the years following the American Revolution, Jeffersonian
democrats raised alarms about the “moneycrats” and their
counterrevolutionary intrigues -- they meant Alexander Hamilton and his
confederates in particular -- they were worried about the installation
in the New World of a British system of merchant capitalism that would
undo the democratic and egalitarian promise of the Revolution.
When followers of Andrew Jackson inveighed against the Second Bank of
the United States -- otherwise known as “the Monster Bank” -- they were
up in arms against what they feared was the systematic monopolizing of
financial resources by a politically privileged elite. Just after the
Civil War, the Farmer-Labor and Greenback political parties freed
themselves of the two-party runaround, determined to mobilize
independently to break the stranglehold on credit exercised by the big
banks back East.
Later in the nineteenth century, Populists decried the overweening
power of the Wall Street “devil fish” (shades of Matt Taibbi’s “giant vampire squid” metaphor
for Goldman Sachs). Its tentacles, they insisted, not only reached into
every part of the economy, but also corrupted churches, the press, and
institutions of higher learning, destroyed the family, and suborned
public officials from the president on down. When, during his campaign
for the presidency in 1896, the Populist-inspired “boy orator of the
Platte” and Democratic Party candidate William Jennings Bryan vowed that
mankind would not be “crucified on a cross of gold,” he meant Wall
Street and everyone knew it.
Around the turn of the century, the anti-trust movement captured the
imagination of small businessmen, consumers, and working people in towns
and cities across America. The trust they worried most about was “the
Money Trust.” Captained by J.P. Morgan, “the financial Gorgon,” the
Money Trust was skewered in court and in print by future Supreme Court
justice Louis Brandeis, subjected to withering Congressional
investigations, excoriated in the exposés of “muckraking” journalists,
and depicted by cartoonists as a cabal of prehensile Visigoths in
death-heads.
As the twentieth century began, progressive reformers in state houses
and city halls, socialists in industrial cities and out on the
prairies, strikebound workers from coast to coast, working-class
feminists, antiwar activists, and numerous others were still vigorously
condemning that same Money Trust for turning the whole country into a
closely-held system of financial pillage, labor exploitation, and
imperial adventuring abroad. As the movements made clear, everyone but
Wall Street was suffering the consequences of a system of proliferating
abuses perpetrated by “the Street.”
The tradition the Occupy Wall Street demonstrators have tapped into
is a long and vibrant one that culminated during the Great Depression.
Then as now, there was no question in the minds of "the 99%” that Wall
Street was principally to blame for the country’s crisis (however much
that verdict has since been challenged by disputatious academics).
Insurgencies by industrial workers, powerful third-party threats to
replace capitalism with something else, rallies and marches of the
unemployed, and, yes, occupations, even seizures of private property,
foreclosures forestalled by infuriated neighbors, and a pervasive sense
that the old order needed burying had their lasting effect. In response,
the New Deal attempted to unhorse those President Franklin Roosevelt
termed “economic royalists,” who were growing rich off “other people’s
money” while the country suffered its worst trauma since the Civil War.
“The Street” trembled.
“System, System, System”: It would be foolish to make too much of a
raggedy sign -- or to leap to conclusions about just how lasting this
Occupy Wall Street moment will be and just where (if anywhere) it’s
heading. It would be crazily optimistic to proclaim our own pitiful
age of acquiescence ended.
Still, it would be equally foolish to dismiss the powerful American
tradition the demonstrators of this moment have tapped into. In the
past, Wall Street has functioned as an icon of revulsion, inciting
anger, stoking up energies, and summoning visions of a new world that
might save the New World.
It is poised to play that role again. Remember this: in 1932, three
years into the Great Depression, most Americans were more demoralized
than mobilized. A few years later, all that had changed as “Our Street,
Not Wall Street” came alive. The political class had to scurry to keep
up. Occupy Wall Street may indeed prove the opening act in an
unfolding drama of renewed resistance and rebellion against “the
system.”
Steve Fraser is Editor-at-Large of New Labor Forum, a TomDispatch regular, and co-founder of the American Empire Project (Metropolitan Books). A historian of Wall Street, his most recent book on the subject is Wall Street: America’s Dream Palace. He teaches history at Columbia University.
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Wall Street: Icon Of Revusion
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