Hello All.
Just so you are aware, I am one of those "kids who had their parents pay their college tuition."
Except they do not. My father is a 100% Disabled Vet, and my remarried mother is a cancer patient. The First video that someone posted above has a
person instructing the General Assembly on the way that things go during one of our meetings - hand Gestures and the minutia of the consensus based
approach that we use to make decisions as a body. That person is me.
I suppose I wanted to make my self available to you all to answer any questions. I am not a leader in this movement (we have none by choice) and I do
not speak for the movement, except on matters that our Reno General Assembly have reached consensus on.
Among these items reached by consensus were our Values of Occupation:
* Our attitude will be one of openness and respect toward all we encounter in our actions;
* We will use no violence, verbal or physical, toward any person;
* We will harbor no anger but suffer the anger of an opponent;
* We will refuse to return the assaults of an opponent;
* We will refrain from insults and swearing;
* We will not destroy or damage any property;
* We will carry no weapons;
* We will not use any drugs or alcohol;
* We will not run or resist arrest;
* We will behave in an exemplary manner if arrested;
* We will remain accountable for our actions as a means of furthering our witness to the injustices of our society and government.
Also, a general consent was expressed towards educating our community in sustainable living, supporting local business and energy independence.
Personally, I worked in mining for 3 years, and then decided to pursue my dream of being an independent journalist by taking a job for a NPO to do a
documentary in Israel. After that job, I went to work in Idaho as a Production Assistant for a TV station.
I moved to Reno in August after my position was eliminated in a downsizing effort. I have not been able to find a job here yet. I do not want someone
to just hand me a job. The world owes me nothing. I work hard at my studies (I am a full time student) and would be glad to show you the letter of
reference from my previous employer.
As I was marching (I carried a sign that said, "Everything is under control") a man yelled a question at me.
"Do you even know what you are doing!?"
After a moment I replied "Yes!"
He turned away in disgust before I could finish.
Unfortunately, this has been typical in my conversations with those who have predetermined Ideas about what we are doing. A friend of mine was
ridiculed for carrying a "Don't Tread On Me" flag on another forum. They claimed he obviously didn't know what he represented.
I bring up these moments because they highlight a problem in our culture that I believe occupation serves to mend. In our everyday lives, we function
from a set of values, which is fine. Over the course of the past few decades though, our public discourse with one another has turned away from
conversation, to confrontation-to ridicule without evaluation. For the most part, people from leftist ideology and rightist ideology spend more time
fighting than discussing and listening.
What I love about this movement is its willingness to give everyone a voice. The General Assembly is a place to set aside ideologies and trade them
for ideas. We recognize that a just government derives its legitimacy and power from the Will of the people-Not just the one percent and not just the
99 percent either.
At this juncture in history though, social inequality is skyrocketing in America, participation in democracy is down. The president is unpopular, the
Congress is unpopular, and government in general is unpopular.
In cities across the nation, people are awakening to the realization that the problem may not be with one party or the other, but rather with the
system. I'm not necessarily talking about the system as a whole, but rather the ways that our political class have developed to game it in their
favor. Politicians have made a career out of being a politician! What a travesty it is when those who we elect to represent us spend millions and
millions on their own job security and then have the audacity to cut their state, federal, and local employees hours.
People accuse us of being puppets of the labor movement and all that jazz. Sure, we will accept the support of anyone trying to stand up for social
and economic justice. Simply put though, the labor movement has failed. In the eyes of some, it has become what it once regarded as evil: an entity
that does more harm than good. We are the post-labor movement.
Yes, its hard to narrow our focus down with our decentralized approach to democracy. Yes, we represent a huge cross section of beliefs and ideals. No
one asked us if we wanted to be the generation charged with doing this. After all, if the people in power were doing their jobs, we wouldn't have to.
I apologize. None of us have changed the world before.Ask.
edit on 17-10-2011 by ElementalCrash because: (no reason given)
edit
on 17-10-2011 by ElementalCrash because: Clarity
edit on 17-10-2011 by ElementalCrash because: Clarity...its late