Saturday, January 7, 2012

OCCUPY AND DEMOCRACY - THE REVOLUTIONARY POTENTIAL OF THE DIGITAL ERA

"Down with that sort of thing"

"Occupy doesn't know what it wants," or so we are told.
Allegedly Occupy is a global movement of i-phone wielding, privileged malcontents shouting "NO"
In an Irish context, it's a crusties meets Father Ted 'down with that sort of thing' affair.
A recent Vincent Browne show saw one of the movement's rare appearances on the Irish 'mainstream media.'
And the viewer was treated to variants of the above dismissals by panelist John McGuirk.
McGuirk, giving a polished performance, came across as the epitome of the slick conventional politician.

Robin Wilson, the Occupy spokesperson was not so polished.
Probed by Browne, Wilson said Occupy "wanted democracy."
Vincent pointed out we had just had an election, a democratic one.
Wilson said the government had betrayed us by not burning the bondholders.
Vincent claimed that the Fine Gael manifesto had never made such a promise.
To McGuirk's delight, the Occupy spokesperson faltered.
But empathetic to the Occupy cause, Vincent let the spokesperson off the hook
Because whatever about the details, the system had failed the people.
They were paying an unjust price.They had been had and they knew it.

Ex Fianna Fail, ex Fine Gael, ex Progressive Democrat, ex Libertas and unsuccessful Independent candidate labels Occupy as incoherent!

McGuirk, however, capitalised on Wilson's unsure performance to paint the Occupy movement as uninformed amateurs, novices out of their depth.
The ex Fianna Fail, ex Fine Gael, ex Libertas and unsuccessful Independent candidate implied Occupy was incoherent!
McGuirk is a poster boy for the traditional political world, an analogue world of either/or.
You were for something or against it. You were either for capitalism or you were for a worker's revolution
If you said NO, you were beholden to explain what you said YES to.
And if you could not clearly do this, the inference was 'leave it to the big boys, leave it to your betters.'
But the dawning digital age does not see the world in such simple divisions.
The simple either/or point of view is being overtaken by a more novel one of both/and.
According to McGuirk's rules, Wilson had lost the game.
But what he didn't seem to realise - and what the Occupy spokesperson failed to clarify - is that Occupy does not want to play by these rules.

It does not want to play the game, it wants to find an entirely different form of sport.

A coup d'etat by a corporate criminal class


Occupy does not claim to have the answers.
But it knows that the current system is broken. In the movement's parlance, the system places the interests of 1% above that of 99%.
And in the meantime it appeals for the restoration of law and order. For fairness. For social justice.
Curiously Chris Hedges of the New York Times sees the Occupy movement as the voice of "true conservatives"
Hedges argues that democracy has been hijacked by radicals. And the radicals are a criminal elite who have pulled off a corporate coup d'etat.
The true conservatives demand that law and order be restored by bringing the criminal class to book and that democracy be rescued from the corporate elite who have hijacjked it.

The view that a corporate criminal class is seeking to guard its ill gotten gain has been highlighted by some of the more infamous scenes from the Occupy movement.
Frenzied Madrid police beating peaceful seated protesters and the now infamous Lt Pike casually pepper spraying kids like he was watering roses have beamed out powerful images showing not just the delinquency of the system but the near psychopathic realms to which the 1% will stoop to defend its privileged position.
These are loud and powerful messages dramatising the forces Occupy is opposing.
Much less dramatic and less discernible is the novel, subtle way in which the movement is seeking to establish what it stands for.

What Occupy says Yes to cannot be captured in a youtube clip.
Tentatively, the Occupy movement is trying to find a way out of the quagmire and trying to discern a whole new way of playing the game.
The aim is a popular, collaborative new form of democracy which will be robust enough to resist being hijacked by special interests.
And that, to put it mildly, is no small or easy task.

Social Media

Much has been made of the role social media has played in both the Arab Spring and the subsequent Occupy movement.
Some argue that social media has been a revolutionary game changer. Others argue that Facebook and Twitter provided indispensable tools but that these were of a mere logistical nature. While they spread news of the revolution and rallied people around it, the genesis of revolt was entirely independent of them.
The truth, however, most probably lies in a convergence of both views.
To grasp the importance of logistical tools that bypass state control and allow control of one's own narrative, you just have to remember fax machines were banned as recently 1989 in the West Bank and Gaza
Social media proved indispensable in rallying crowds and providing a picture of a reality rarely seen on state or mainstream media.
Throughout history tyranny feeds off lies. The tyrant distracts his oppressed people by spewing propaganda that demonises some 'other'. But now truth can counter lies. People can communicate with each other. With communication comes empathy and understanding. Empathy and understanding erode the foundations of tyranny
The rise of Al Jazeera could be attributed to the fact that it was one of the very few conventional media outlets whose coverage was in sync with the reality portrayed by digital media.

There is, however, another more subtle but perhaps far more revolutionary force at play behind this digital drama.
Just like the printing press in its day, social media is reshaping how we access and process knowledge and thereby our whole relation to society's constructs.
French philosophers Gilles DeLeuze and Felix Gauttari have argued that structure of Western knowledge and the power which stemmed from it was hierarchial, vertical in nature.
With limited access to knowledge, you arrived at a subject, planted yourself and then worked your way upwards to greater awareness; the dynamic was like a tree. This notion is conducive to the idea of the superior, of looking up to the leader
The digital age is changing all this. With the computer link one processes knowledge in a horizontal fashion. The French philosophers coined the term rhizomatic for what they saw as this new approach. You don't move above others in a horizontal trajectory. The idea of superiors, those on top, does not make sense here. The much vaunted 'leaderless' nature of the Occupy movement can be seen as a manifestation of this new reality.
Although in its infancy, some see the grounds for greater democratic promise within this new reality.
The either/or world view of the old hierarchial body politic is being replaced by the more inclusive both/and of the digital age's more democratic horizontal nature.
Others argue that there is revolutionary progressive potential in the unprecedented speed and scope of today's transmission of ideas.

Occupy as meme

BBC Newsnight Editor Paul Mason sees the nature of the Occupy movement as mirroring an internet meme.
A meme, Mason says, is an effective action that transmits itself independent of any democratic structures and party political hierarchies.
"A meme acts as a unit for carrying cultural ideas, symbols or practices....so what happens is that ideas arise, are very quickly "market tested" and either take off, bubble under, insinuate themselves or if they are deemed no good they disappear. Ideas self-replicate like genes".
Today's global village features the compression of both time and space and this plays a crucial role in how we, the global populace, share ideas, interact and conduct politics.
With internet-mediated forms of collective action we see a massive 'speeding up' of how social symbols and practices are produced, reproduced, adopted and internalised.
"We can think of the internet as a bank of ideas, and the really successful meme occurs when one of those ideas chimes massively with the population it encounters, summing up a shared or individual experience or viewpoint to the extent that users wish to perpetuate it as somehow representative of their position, often amending it slightly on it’s way."

The printing press'software' change


Some dismiss this notion of the Occupy movement as a meme as mere mystification of technology. Far from challenging the very nature of our body politic, cynics argue that digital innovation has given us little more radical than the ability to watch Glee on a smart phone sitting on the metro. But it is early days yet and trivial use by no means negates serious and revolutionary potential.
English writer Aaron Peters notes one could have adopted a similar dismissive attitude to the revolutionary nature of the printing press
"Bear in mind that after the arrival of the printing press the first pornographic novels came about within a few years, while the first regularised scientific journals took a little over a century," Peters says.
The last time we changed society's 'software' was when we 'switched over' to the printing press.
"The changes we will see with how the distributed network impacts the existing social and political apparatus through its impact on political, cultural and social memes could be as big as those it affected the last time the 'software' changed with the rise of typographic print and the printing press."

Like the internet today, the printing press led to a qualitative speeding up of memetic reproduction of symbols and practice.
"The consequences were the Reformation, the nation-state, scientific rationalism and the formation of the Habermasian public sphere."
The effects were seismic, giving us the modern world as we know it. And now the modern world is facing another seismic change.

we are on the threshold of something potentially epic as "the institutions built in previous eras of information scarcity will increasingly no longer make sense as we enter the era of the internet's information abundance."

A challenge to national, parliamentary democracy itself.

The Occupy movement is a picket line on the dysfunctional politics as we know it.
Whether Occupy will succeed is anyone's guess but one thing is pretty certain, it is throwing an unforgiving spotlight on how the current system has failed the people.
"My impression is that the last year, as well as subsequent years to come, will show that how the 'people' make demands on political power is changing beyond all recognition. Where it ends is possibly with a challenge to national, parliamentary democracy itself." Peters says
"The software is obsolete; things fall apart, the centre cannot hold."

No comments:

Post a Comment