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    Currents

    Report from the occupation

    'One of the most beautiful moments of my generation'

    Photo: N/A, License: N/A, Created: 2011:10:07 17:41:29

    Occupy Wall Street protestors march down Broadway in New York City on Friday.

    Photo: N/A, License: N/A

    A Hula-hooping protestor at the edge of New York City’s Liberty Park

    Photo: N/A, License: N/A

    Protestors shake it to the beat of drums at the edge of New York City’s Liberty Park on Saturday


    By Ryan Felton

    Published: October 12, 2011

    New York — Although working, ironically enough, for a bankruptcy specialist in Troy, Justin Lecea still couldn't manage to afford his car and rent payments.

    Then the tough times got worse six months ago, when the 26-year-old Flint native lost his job at a law firm. With no prospects in sight after months of looking, he trekked to New York City's financial district for the ongoing Occupy Wall Street demonstration. 

    He entered the OWS home base at Zuccotti Park — now referred as Liberty Park — on Oct. 4, and immediately said to volunteers there, "I want to help."

    The offer landed him a position manning the "info center," which sits on the north side of the park facing Broadway Avenue in lower Manhattan. He's put in 12 hours a day since then, pointing people with questions in the right direction around the now fully functional community situated in lower Manhattan.

    "We've reached critical mass at the park," he said. 

    Lecea's story of low-wage struggle and joblessness were repeated, in one form or another, time and again during the weekend I just spent at Liberty Park. Whether it was suffocating student debt or an impossible job market to crack, the issue here is money. Or, more specifically, the way money in America keeps moving toward the top of the economic ladder, putting a squeeze on those not fortunate enough to be on the upper rungs. 

    "I went from having a savings to having to tap into my savings," he said. "There are a lot of people here who just don't have a voice. That's what this is about." Columnists and pundits have written off OWS participants as people who are "jobless because they don't want to work" and if they took "a shower they can get a job if they went to college," as Bill O'Reilly described the movement on his show The O'Reilly Factor.

    Harry Bowman, a Michigan State University grad who had just spent his first night at Liberty Park, told me just how wrong O'Reilly and others in the right-wing chattering class are. 

    "There are no jobs," he said. As for placing the blame for that situation, Bowman believes that the place to start is obvious. "If people can't agree that Wall Street sucks, then something is seriously wrong with the American people."

    It's absurd to label the movement as unfocused considering the overwhelming number of constructive conversations I heard while meandering through the park. Where critics see mostly unfocused anger and resentment of the rich, I saw a movement blossoming into one of the most beautiful moments of my generation. 

    The financial meltdown of 2008, the ensuing bailout of Wall Street, the ongoing foreclosure crisis, continued economic upheaval and the ever-expanding gulf between this country's richest people and the rest of us have combined to unite these people in a common feeling of betrayal. This is my generation, and this is something I needed to see firsthand. What I saw at OWS was an extremely diverse and educated conglomerate of people who have found solidarity in their quest for a government run the way it should be: by the people, for the people.

    If someone were to throw a stone in Liberty Park, it could hit doctors, the "Granny Peace Brigade," anarchists, communists, libertarians, socialists, teachers, security officers, students, the young, the old, the homeless, poets, artists, Asians, Europeans, blacks, former police officers, former firefighters. You name it and they're probably represented. 

    Because of the far-reaching diversity found here, there's also a collective flip-of-the-bird to everyone who's looking to slap a label on the community. Suggestions that OWS is the liberal response to the Tea Party are repeatedly shot down. Instead, what you hear are references to this being a much bigger movement than the one being mounted by the malcontents on the far right.

    But what are the actual demands? Why doesn't the movement have an identifiable leadership? 

    Those asking such questions miss the point. The movement is the message. People are being pushed to the breaking point, and are rising up to say the status quo is unacceptable.

    Within the past decade unemployment has doubled, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Maybe the only really surprising thing is that it has taken this long for all those being downsized and marginalized to rise up in widespread protest.

    In one month, the city-within-a-city at Liberty Park has become a center for inspiration. For once, instead of dwelling on the negative, people who are broken-spirited or just plain worried about the future have found hope by discussing solutions. 

     

    One of the remarkable things about the leaderless protest is how organized the community has become in such a short amount of time. 

    According to OWS media assistant and University of Michigan alum Bill Dobbs, the entire staff consists of volunteer workers. It's not a part-time schedule either; Occupy Wall Street is a full-time endeavor. 

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